Cultural History
Cultural History
Cultural History
BY
A*
YUSUF
ALI,
C.B.E., M.A.,
LL.M. (Cantab.)*
etc. etc
60MBAY
.
B.
Copyright l&4d.
PUBLISHERS NOTE
9
much
It is very
regretted
has been
the author
unable
to
himself , owing
to his absence
that
printed;
but
by the
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CONTENTS
PAGE
PREFACE
y
SECTION
1.
What
the British
Took Over
SECTION
II
Early British
Culture
Contributions
.
3.
Chap.
4.
Learning,
Education,
.
SECTION
28
. .
Chap.
Literature
Indian
to
Journalism
47
and
...
70
III
5.
Chap. 6.
Chap*
7.
New
Journalism, Social
105
130
Reform, Economics
and Politics
150
SECTION IV
176
PAGE
SECTION V
General
Chap. 10.
Education, Religion
Features,
and Literature
195
Economics
219
SECTION VI
Politics,
Religion,
Literature
Education
.
and
241
SECTION VII
Politics,
Literature
Chap* 13.
Appendix:
1908-1939
Books Referred To
266
298
319
PREFACE
attempt is made in the following pages to trace
the cultural evolution of India during the British period.
"Culture" is a difficult word to define, but I have taken it
in the broadest sense, to include all those movements which
have to do^with a people's mind and its social organisa-
An
tion.
literature,
The matters
am
We
mortar,
the
documents.
VI
My
matters
matters
paths.
thought.
British Indian culture is dominated
by
British ideas, which lurk even beneath the
protests of those
who are in revolt against what
term
ideas.
The evolution of
they
For
foreign
my
bed-rock of
human
nature.
indicated in notes
A,
YUSUF
SECTION
CHAPTER
WHAT THE
tical.,
it
accentuated
and Muslims
in India.
the territory of Bengal had its repercussions on the mental and moral life of the people.
The period between 1757 and 1773 in Bengal cannot be
practically
laid waste
We
WHAT THE
few preliminary
reverses, proved
(it
must
than
be confessed)
in
craft,
of
the
the
into
its
servants.
combinations
varying
'
made
the
cultural disorder
still
WHAT THE
BRITISH
TOOK OVER
breaking point.
RtflN OF
his best he
wanted
to
fasten the
Company's yoke on
The
interests of
was safe
in the circumstances.
country,
and
its
Next
SOCIAL
AND
its
trade
MORAL
the
economic
and
these
can be
startling,
measured in tangible terms. Bengal had been the most
fertile and the most prosperous province of the Mughal
Empire. It had been called the granary of the Empire.
In these few years it was depopulated.
Ryots ran away.
to
hard
to
and
had
be
to cultivate
were
coaxed
find,
They
under
the land.
of
the
the
new system
Zamindars,
Many
of severe demands
and
without
the
enforced,
strictly
nexus
which
had
made
the
old
were
system work,
personal
ruined and disappeared. The dreadful famine of 1770 left
its marks on the country for many years. In the memoirs of
William Hickey, attorney, who was in India for the third
time from 1782 to 1808 and returned to England with a
fortune of 13,000, we find a description of the famine
of 1789. There was a stream of miserable wretches pourDead and dying were lying in every
ing into Calcutta.
street.
For many weeks together no less than 50 died
daily; yet the people were patient and long-suffering, and
there was no act of violence.
On the 18th September,
1789, Lord Cornwallis in his Minute had to say: "I may
to
revolutions
the
revolutions,
political
away
-onwards.
peasantry.
system.
Now
they were
Where temporary
WHAT THE
BRITISH
TOOK OVER
and tended
to displace
the abuse
But there was a further monopoly within the ComThe inland trade in salt, betel-nut,
pany's monopoly.
tobacco, and rice was very profitable, as they were articles
of general consumption. The Company's servants made a
private monopoly of this trade, and pocketed huge profits.
Oil, fish, straw, bamboos, etc., were added to the lists of
articles of daily use in which the market was rigged.
The
scandal of the Company's servants buying and
selling
forcibly at their own prices went so far that the Directors
of the Company intervened in 1764 and forbade
private
trade altogether.
But the Company's servants calmly disobeyed these orders. The superior servants of the Company, including Clive, formed (1765) what they called
The Society of Trade, selecting for their field salt, betelnut and tobacco, the most lucrative items of trade. The
monopoly was so profitable that Clive sold his five shares
in 1767 for
These were promotion shares,,
32,000.
of which five were
without payment. In
the profit had been 45
not trade, but robbery
allotted
political
supremacy had
WHAT THE
BRITISH
TOOK OVER
torch
and branch-light
10
necessary
head-banyan."
is
skill
and hardships have been practised towards the poor manufacturers and workmen of the country, who are, in fact,
as so
slaves
....
many
monopolised by the Company
Various and innumerable are the methods of oppressing
-the poor weavers, which are duly practised by the Comin the country; such as by fines,
pany's agents and gomastas
bonds from them, etc. ;
imprisonments, floggings, forcing
the country has been
in
weavers
which the number of
by
whereof
The natural
consequences
greatly decreased.
have been, the scarcity, deamess, and debasement of the
manufactures as well as a great diminution of the
revenue."
WHAT THE
wished
He
Raja
no doubt through the good offices of the BriHe was a Lutheran. The rest of the people were to
tish.
him not Hindus, Muslims, or Roman Catholics, but mere
"heathens, Moors, or Romish." He no doubt sincerely
jore's son,
he saw very
(2)
little
good
in India.
why
The Carmelite
Roman
interesting
12
much
easier in
Malabar
WHY THE
OFFICIALS FORMED A
servants
who had been the British Resident at Murshida1758, published an account of the people in 1763,,
which is fairly balanced in its judgment, though some of
his generalisations are too wide. He describes the
Scrafton,
bad
in
intrigues,,
realism.
incentives to great
he mentions in
Company
Kumar, the
WHAT THE
BRITISH
when
to
TOOK OVER
abandon Chandranagore,
'"ONCE FLOURISHING
13
it.
failed,
The consequence
lands did not increase.
unable to pay the interest of the mortgages,
the rents were seized by rapacious usurers. The government,
finding the revenues fall shorter every year, at last sent collectors and farmers of revenue into the provinces. Thus the
lord of the land was divested of the power over his country,
and the tenants exposed to merciless plunderers, till the
farmer and manufacturer, finding the more they laboured
the more they paid, the manufacturer would work no more,
and the farmer cultivate no more than was necessary for
the bare subsistance of his family. Thus this once flourish-value of
was
the
that at last,
*S. C. Hill
Bengal
1756-7
I.
xxiii.
14
WEALTH
and the
trade,,
These dreadful conditions were progressively aggraunder the Company's early administration, until
Lord Cornwallis's land reforms had had time to mature..
Whatever faults economic theorists may find in them,,
vated
demand.
SCRAFTON'S SOCIAL PICTURE
of India,
\X
15
with
women
or children
From
details about
decorations.
16
their
countrymen
of
the
at
India.
people
Johnson referred (in 1778),, with his usual blunt plainness: "A man who had acquired his fortune by such crimes
that his consciousness of them compelled him to cut his
own
throat."*
"Nabobs"
these
law.
if not
We
ofj this
picture
PEOPLE AS A
Now
of
WHOLE
the
earlier
POOR, THRIFTY,
AND LAW-ABIDING
ourselves,
traits
are
really
the
antithesis
of
the
traits
of
the
tradition.,
lation of wealth.
III. 350.
WHAT THE
BRITISH
TOOK OVER
17
society than
We
his Administration, to be submissive, and there is abundant testimony to show that we were law-abiding in circum-
SEX MORALS
tion.
Our sex morals may perhaps require careful examinaOur respectable women's chastity was never called
When
the
English factory at
On this the
captured English ladies to their husbands.
remark of the French Agent in Chandranagore was: "The
Moors (Muslims) are very respectful to women."
When Calcutta was taken subsequently by the Nawab, the
privacy of Mrs. Watts's apartments was respected, and she
and her children were allowed to retire to the French
This was the lady, who when widowfactory unmolested.
ed, married again, and was known by the title of Begam
She kept a brilliant salon in Calcutta. But we
Johnson.
had institutions that required reform: various phases of
prostitution, (e. g., the devadasi system), and the want of
confidence in the relations between the sexes.
COURAGE AND CONTEMPT OF DANGER
set of
men, incapable
13
of manly exertion.
He mentions
of
the
soldier of fortune,
career
he fought with
early
much distinction on the side of the English, at
Trichinopoly
(1752-4) and Madras (1758-9).
This is how Mr. Hill
sums up his character. He
"began life as a humble
peasant; raised himself by his military talents to
high
rank in the East India
Company's service; then by his
administrative ability, reduced to order the two most
torbulent provinces of Southern India
already mentioned.
In his
(Madura and
Tmnevelley)
says, to
and
rebel
finally,
against
when compelled,
the
Nawab
as
James Mill
managed
*S. C. Hill:
to
x.
WHAT THE
BRITISH
TOOK OVER
19
CONVULSIONS OF DESPAIR
They became
widest variety.
Bigots, decrepit
his
Troops of Houris
come and
him."
-20
own
particularly
poets
he says:
the physician writes his prescriptions
"It is not a pen,
It kills
A man of
"C
sense
is
distracted if
he hears him."
and
His biting wit pours out embittered invective,
been
have
must
very
trying
of
his
Delhi
the
day
certainly
He was courted by
to a man of his talent and spirit.
and who graduin
to
1760,
who
reign
Shah Alam,
began
rise of the English
the
before
into
faded
nothingness
ally
Shah Alam offered to make Sauda his Poet
power.
Sauda retorted that it was not the Emperor but
Laureate.
his own talent that could confer the Laureateship on him.
It
was about
Mukhammas
Empire.
(1753-1775) and died
How
long as a vagabond
WHAT THE
21
Some
Confusion
crept over
from
extracts
"
will
the
illustrate
heart
the
nerveless; his
the
army
is
"
City
Hindustan.
of
a
rabble;
of
Terror
dismay
The Emperor
his
city lies
flight:
No
bark
of
the
jackal:
If
ghoul.
sjs
What
Whose
sight
thirst?
See them
was enough
to
its
life:
Where
is
dead, in
If but in
and
which had
utter
22
Here
lies
pillar,
and there a
split arch.
Shah Jahan's
wrath?
City,
didst thou
deserve this
false.
to pick precious
pearls.
Now
silence,
more?
What
No
That
this
beyond
words.
in
"0
that in such
company
ARTIFICIALITY OF
LUCKNOW
Aiout the year 1782 he
migrated to Lucknow at the
invitation of
Asaf-ud-Daula, after Sauda had passed from
(
0)
^^fore Warren Hastings visited the
lfs 5
M
'
was of a retiring
disposition, and he did not
much care to frequent Darbars or seek
the favours of Courts.
But he must have come into contact
with English influences in
Lucknow, though he was too old to receive
any impressions
<5ity (1784).
lr
WHAT THE
23
When
from them.
This artificiality
ficiality.
appears also
in
the
Court
LAMENT
The lines in which he addressed the people of
Lucknow (the "denizens of the East" relatively to Delhi)
MIR'S
are well-known :6
why
ask about
my
home?
Ye know
am
and mock me ?
Delhi, which was once a city
world,
That
is
am a citizen."
much
know and
not
24
full.
His verse
himself.
view
different
of
is
life
verses of
Those
arrogant and selfish.
Mir which have almost become
often-quoted
proverbs, express the quintessence
of Delhi
spirit of the dying culture
"This
is
why
criest
thou?
laggard,
Why
Never does
sleepest thou?
'
heart
Why vainly
NO HINDU-MUSLIM QUESTION
Mir has left us a valuable but all too brief autobiography, which connects him with the events of his day. It
has been recently edited with a critical Introduction by
Maulvi Abdul Haq, of the Anjuman-i-Tarraqqi-i-Urdu,
Aurangabad. In all his vicissitudes and wanderings we are
struck with the fact that the Hindu-Muslim question did not
exist in his day, in the form which it has taken since.
Among
we
shall find,
in
Sir
WHAT THE
BRITISH
TOOK OVER
25
which we proceed
''THEIR HEARTS
to quote.
"In the life of Mir, we find a glimpse of many poliand social facts relating to the period. It was clear
that at that time there was no Hindu-Muslim question.
What could be a worse period than one in which the
tical
country was a prey everywhere to selfishness, internal disand the last stage of decay
common
sideration!
Look
at the
nobility
with the
high-handedness and
he boldly left the fort, but not
without taking with him the twenty thousand households,
Hindu and Muslim, when he had settled there and who mostly
relied upon him.
Though the country was in a dreadful
Disgusted
Nagar Mai.
inhumanity of the Jats,
state of
had not
the
26
BRITISH TESTIMONY
We
can
cite the
rity
certain that
SECTION
II
1773-1818
CHAPTER
II
The period 1773-1818 was one of political consolidations on the part of the British power, and the establishment
supremacy over the whole peninsula. Its interest is
mainly political, and its chief feature is the territorial
But it also saw
expansion of the East India Company.
most
the
of
cultural revolutions
important kind. The new
differentiated
the Hindus from the
set of conditions sharply
the
both
attention
of
It
turned
Muslims.
away from their
on
had
which
the
whole
tended to the
classical traditions,
communities
within
these
of
each
itself, and had,
unity of
a
two
evolved
modus vivendi
the
as between
communities,
and
of
contact
centuries
conflict.
It depressed
seven
through
the position of the older and more traditional kind of
leaders in Indian society, and encouraged the rise, economic and cultural, of newer classes more amenable to
British influence, and more docile to its suggestions.
of
its
south and
The Muslim
saint,
cultural influence
through the length
29
people
began
to
MEN
to
and
The
their Jesuit priests constantly residing in Goa.
French had sent out their philosopher Fran?ois Bernier,
a doctor of medicine in the University of Montpellier, and
a disciple of the famous philosopher Gassendi. He was
in Delhi for five or six years from 1659, and discoursed
with the noblemen of Aurangzib's Court on Persian
Literature and the works of the famous French philoon Hindu
sopher Descartes, and with the Hindu Pandits
had
Danes
The
and institutions.
learning, religion,
had
30
Missionaries*
sent out to Tranquebar, the first Protestant
culture of
the
in
interested
were
in India in 1706.
They
Dr. Fryer
Southern India and contributed to its study.
Robert
and
India
East
the
of
Company,
and other surgeons
a
of
the
son
in
Company's
1728,
Orme, born in Malabar
The surgeons were mostly
surgeon, are no exceptions.
interested in their professional duties, and Orme was
interested in current history than in Indian culture.
more
^>
satirist
Churchill,
Company
in India.
modem
period of
They were mostly in Persian or Sanskrit, as the vernaculars had not yet developed prose literature of any great,
Some of them show how the new influence
importance.
was already working on the Eastern mind.
For example,,
Siyar-ul-Mutaakhkherin> written by Saiyid Gulam
Husain Khan Tabatabai in 1783, describes contemporary
the
history in a spirit of
which
for
is
honourable
whom
it
was
friendly but
to the writer
written.
He
independent
and
to
criticism-,
Warren Hastings
1852, p.593.
-32
His
in the early days of British rule.
in
them
to
refer
we
that
magf
interesting
comments are so
some detail.
our
institutions,
manners,
and customs,
and
to
our
of her
appointed to
spirit
institutions,
that
the Indians
whom
they
day
to litigants.
called the
could
Darogha
so
new
33
(6) They took away the trade of IJMt country and left
livelihood to the natives of the;; country.
(7) The
Zamindars were given exorbitant powers, which they used
in order to oppress their subjects
and tenants.
(8) The
Governor- General and his Council were so congested with
other business that they could not give speedy decisions
in appeals or complaints made to them by individuals.
(9) The rule of
seniority in promotion to offices
detracted from efficiency.
This apparently referred to
little
cedure of the Supreme Court at Calcutta worked prejudicially against the poor and ignorant.
(12) The British
decided in private what ought to be decided in open darbar
before all the people.
ATTITUDE TOWARDS THE BRITISH
This kind of criticism throws light on the contemporary view of an enlightened Indian on the new administration.
There is no subservience; there is no prejudice;
there is a fair desire to arrive at a balanced
judgment;
there is certainly no eagerness to welcome the new
system
as a heaven-sent gift, though there is a
disposition to take
it as an
And it
accepted fact and make the best of it.
will be noticed that the
Saiyid nowhere draws a line
between Hindus and Muslims. From anything that we can
gather from his pleading, Bengal in his day might have
been a unified country. In fact the Hindus and the Muslims had been played off against each other before and
were to be played off against each other frequently later,
but the better class of mind could still view questions from
a higher standpoint.
to
34
Mr. Charles Wilkins (afterwards Sir Charles) (17501836) left India in 1786. Though he continued his
work in Oriental scholarship for half a century after
he left India, his pioneer work was done in India,,
and it prepared the way for the development of the
work of
He came
out quite
Bengali
improvements
of different
projectors,
only was
printing.
Not
its
descendants used in the
type or
official printing of laws and regulations and in the works
turned out by the Fort William College in Calcutta
this
in
England (established
modifications in their letters as would cheapen their typeprinting, they have taken to lithography and continued to
print by that process, although it is dearer and less accurate in the mass production of books.
It may be
added
that Arabic moveable type was used in printing in Europe
as early as the beginning of the sixteenth century. *
TYPE FOR
SANSKRIT,
BENGALI,
36
STUDY OF INSCRIPTIONS
Besides casting Oriental type and translating Oriental
the first to
works, Wilkins was among
investigate
Indian inscriptions scientifically. He translated a Mongbyr
copper-plate grant in 1781 and soon afterwards an inscription on a stone pillar from the Dinajpur District.
Both
these were records of the Pala dynasty of Bengal (750art has been more recently studied, showing
a gradual transition from Buddhism to the Tantric ideas
so prevalent in Bengal.
1200), whose
may be
unity
yet been
worked
out.
classical languages of
Europe,
had undoubted
affinities,
37
A RAJA AS AN ANTIQUARIAN
Rallied mentions a certain Raja of Kishnagar as
"by
much the most learned and able antiquary which Bengal
has produced within this century." Though the claim made
on his behalf in deriving the culture of ancient Egypt
from India may appear extravagant, it was a gain that the
comparative study of the culture of different nations was
leading to an idea of the cultural unity of civilisation,
to
the thinking
minds of
the
SIR
He
38
was
President.
first
its
The
Society
was
from
the
"When
It gave me
inexpressible pleasure to find
myself in the midst of so noble an amphitheatre, almost
encircled by the vast regions of Asia, which has ever been
esteemed the nurse of sciences, the inventress of
delightful
eastern world.
and useful
the scene
the productions of
human
complexions,
could not help
remarking how important and
extensive a field was yet
unexplored, and how many solid
advantages unimproved; and when I considered, with
pain, that in this fluctuating, imperfect, and limited
condition of life, such
inquiries and improvements could
only be made by the united efforts of
many, who are not
easily brought, without pressing inducement or
strong
impulse, to converge in a common point, I consoled
myself
with the hope, founded on
opinions which it might have
the appearance of
flattery to mention, that, if in any
country or community, such an union could be
effected,
men.
it
was among
my
whom
39
-
motto of
many
this
trees
as
the Indian
strike roots,
name thee,
Sakuntala!
And all at once is said."
Ruckert
German.
(in
Indier).
And
itself
the middle
of the
nineteenth
German
century
will be found at
Moniez Monier- Williams "
40
of his ideas in
Many
and
we
smile
may
antiquated
at
"superiority
of European talent."
But he judged from what he
saw of our decadent society.
He spoke of the East
with great respect, and never let fly pointed darts of
wit at our expense like Macaulay.
His interest was not
merely
in
scholarship as narrowly
Orientalist societies.
A
understood by the
programme which he
sketched out and which was found among his
papers after
modern
2.
botanical
description
On
6.
On
9.
On
the Ancient
of
Indian plants
etc.
ancient Indian
algebra.
13.
On
the
Indian
constellations,
with
their
Some
made
in these
investigations since
Thomas
Henry
Colebrooke
(1765-1837) was a
three we have already mentioned.
helpless.
of
humanity."
its
Government or
not, thev
certainly been a
cupboard in the history of the British
administration.
The early British days in Bengal were
marked with fabulous fortunes that men like Clive took
away from India. It was not the Company that was
It was its servants that
getting rich.
preyed on the people.
In those early days, Indian noblemen and
soldiers,
zamindars and ryots, men of letters and artisans, all
skeleton in the
suffered.
lent
themselves
to
the
42
-and
day
movements of
all
Hindu
ms
V^
W^S^^
fc^
43
governed
wills, or uninstructed
HOW
IT
to
argue that
if
they
possessed
could not be refused a similar concession under a British
It would be a grievance to
,and Christian government.
the protection of their own laws, but it
deprive them of
wanton
would be
tyranny to require their obedience to
He then
others of which they were wholly ignorant.
a
in
England specimen of the
offered to the learned Judge
laws themselves, explaining to him the system of two sets of
courts,
44
the
Code
in Sanskrit.
MUSLIM LAW
45
ij
f**!T
?"IO 1
IT**
William Jones, on
whom
devolved
the
task
of
This branch
(the Sira/zya), and added a commentary.
of the law had not been touched in the
a.
Jones was
eddy
more than a Judge of the Supreme Court at Calcutta. As a
jurist he had a matchless talent for comparative law. We
may quote a celebrated historian's opinion of him as
referred to in Sir John Shore's speech to the Asiatic
Society of Bengal (1794), to which we have already
referred: "He is perhaps the only
lawyer equally
conversant with the Year-books of Westminster, the
Commentaries of Ulpian, the Attic pleadings of Isaeus, and
the sentences of Arabian and Persian Quazis,"
in other
marriage, caste, and religious usages and instiThis last phrase is elastic and has been rendered
more precise by subsequent legislation and judicial
decisions; and the position of custom has been much
discussed and investigated by the Courts.
These early
heritance,
tutions.
46
own
prudence, and yet provided in English with the basicnotions of Hindu and Muslim law, might be able to build
up a progressive system. Hastings had hoped that his
work would help "towards the legal accomplishment of a
new system which shall found the authority of the British
government in Bengal on its ancient laws, and serve to
point out the way to rule his people with ease and moderation according to their own ideas, manners, and prejudices." But gradually professional lawyers., in obtaining,
In some cases, as in the
precision, sacrificed elasticity.
law of Waqf, their interpretations of Muslim law went
wide of the Muslims' own "ideas, manners, and prejudices" and has had to be corrected by legislation.
A
similar remark applied to the law of marriage.
In
many cases the adaptation of law to modern needs and
conditions was prevented by a series of carefully recorded
older decisions.
It is just a
question whether the ultimate
result of this policy has not been to leave law far behind
and thus
to
hinder cultural
CHAPTER
III
His widow
agent at Kasimbazar, was Zubdat-ut-Tujjar.
remarried and became Mrs. Johnson, but, as stated in
Both EnglishChapter I, was known as Begam Johnson.
men and Englishwomen smoked the huqqa. In the Calcutta
Gazette
of
who appreciated
the luxuries of
the East:
to this luxury.
43
CORALS, GAMBLING
AND LOTTERIES
18th century.
Many Public Works were constructed out
of the proceeds of public lotteries.
Lottery Commissioners were officially recognised. In 1794 they advertised
Streets and
a lottery of 10,000 tickets at Rs. 32 each.
funds.
The Town
churches were constructed out of these
influence,
in
1793
to
receive lottery
patronage of the
back
In
old
Yudhishlhira, the
hero of the Mahabharata, gambled away his all, including
his wife, on the chances of dice.
In the Sutras it would
to
have
been
one
of
the
duties of the King to
appear
maintain a public gambling hall for the use of his
tradition in India.
15
subjects/
ELEMENT OF SELF-RECUPERATION
1
I
With
all that
can
be said in criticism
of English
weaknesses.
recuperation.
traditions of
was
and
had within itself the element of selfThe individuals who lapsed from the best
their nation had these traditions in their
It
j^,^
severe,
krt
it
vol.
I,
p.237.
49
For,
class that came to the front of the stage was not necesof the
sarily the class that formed the back-bone
Warren Hastings had been placed in positions
nation.
'
and forbearance."
50
line of eminent
men
have
left
these words:
we hope
to
make our
benefit to-'
government a blessing to them and a durable
for
ourselves, we must realise our hope, not by wringing
Asiatic,
our
the present the largest possible revenue from
wealth than the
subjects, but by taking no more of their
to the utmost,
it
will
1*1
descend to their heirs; when. their laws of property, which
to
they literally hold sacred, shall in practice be secured
that
when
the
be
so
land-tax
they
shall
moderate,
them;
cannot have a colourable pretence to rack their tenants,,,
and then they shall have a well-grounded confidence, that
the proportion of it will never be raised, except for a time
sistent with
necessary deliberation; then will the
population
mia? Tennant's
ft
23
millions
in 1803 (Indian
Recreations, II.2-3)
51
The celebrated Fifth Report, made by the Select Committee of the House of Commons on the affairs of the East
India Company, dated 28th July 1812, is of great value
(1)
Monday
for
month with a
(2)
1st
death.
.52
(3)
December 1806,
Alexander
(1).
Moore, soldier, killed
soldier in a duel in Muttra; sentenced ior
to be imprisoned for one
year
another
manslaughter
and
to
pay a
fine of
twenty
was
not
the
Ghulam
(1783)
new
Courts, either in
their personnel or in their
procedure. In the Fifth Report
ot the Select Committee of
the House of Commons
(1812)
which we have
already referred, there is abundant evidence that the
Company's British servants, judges as well
withthe results
'f/101118111
to
^^
rin?
Tm^
SB
common. Drunkenness,
54
MORALS
as drawn by the
for
three
reasons.
In
the
first
Missionaries,
place they
came with a bias against non-Christian religions, which
made them see things in a false light. In the second place,
their contact was mainly with the most submerged classes
in India, and they transferred the picture of what
they saw
to the whole of the people of India, who were all included
politics.
3y
the
the
55
-city
have
Jhistory
lour capacities.
in
Member
in-
of these virtues.
56
to
the
education.
was
book of
his experiences.
Speaking of Indians of inferior
"I did not indeed expect to find a
he says:
resemblance to the grotesque representations which I had
seen on the London stage; but neither was I prepared for
a total absence of all barbarity and coarseness, for
station,
strong jack-fruit, the delicate papaw, the luscious custardapple, the delicious and abundant mango in its choicest
varieties, the Chinese lichi, and the loquat, another fruit
5
of China, grateful to the
and taste/
The bananas
eye
inhabitants
attendantshigh
carried shields and Talwars
(swords), but not matchlocks,
on
visits
of ceremony.
to the
Emperor. The Khil'at
(robe of honour) which he received was a
splendid robe
of muta embroidered with
There were golden
gold.
sandals to match, and a
turban of fine
muslin.
A
gold
57
with-
right
portrait
I.
was
compare the
of Siraj-ud-Daula (S. C. Hill's Bengal in 1756-7,
with the portrait of Maharaja Nub Kissen Baha-
in theory the
xliv.)
Mughal Empire.
We may
The
fell
PRESTIGE OF
The
MUGHAL EMPIRE
58
remarked
to
his
to
Academy
in 1789.
He
Monuments
of
As an
India, and also published a book of travels.
artist, he was quick to note the small and delicate hands
of Indians- the gripe of Indian sabres was too small for
European hands, at least in the Southern Presidency. The
ordinary dress of the country was a long muslin jama,
worn by both Hindus and Muslims. Calcutta was a
long
city on the river-bank without much breadth.
It extended
from the western point of Fort William (it must have been
the new Fort finished in 1773) to
Cossipore, about 4J
Thus Calcutta from north to south has extended
miles,,
very little, for Alipore and Garden Reach are still suburbs.
The conveyances in ordinary use were coaches
(like those
in London), phaetons,
single-horse chaises (two-wheeled),
palankins and hackeries (chhakras).
He notes that the
first
59
period.
The
Muslim
scheme was so
It was in a
characteristic that we may note some details.
The cloisters were
large square, each side about 70 feet.
divided into single rooms crowned with a dome and lighted
by a window. The centre of the opposite side was
occupied by a Mosque. Near Bhagalpur he saw a cloth
weaver at his loom. In the cool shade of the banyan
tree he plied his trade, with a friend playing music by
Such scenes, he remarks, represented "the
his side.
happy times of the Mughal government," before the
country was devastated by anarchy. He found the villages
and sand
clean, the streets were swept and watered,
seminary in
ruins.
architectural
He was struck by
strewn before the doors of houses.
the simplicity and the model character of the women.
PAINTERS FROM ENGLAND
We
60
Room
his
Thomas Hickey
artists
who
paiiited
his wellin
1799,
used
elected to the
both subsequently
Royal Academy in
London. Their Oriental Scenery in four large folios
(1795, 1797, 1801 and 1807), afterwards reduced to an
Octavo Part 5 (1815), and the series of Oriental Annuals
inaugurated by William Daniell in five volumes in
1834-1838 and continued after William Daniell's death
1838
illustrated
and
and
the Princess
Victoria
of Akbar Shah II
one,
(1806-1837),
jhe portrait
done by a "Persian painter," which means a Muslim
painter in the Court of Delhi (Oriental Annual, 1840).
at least
pigment
paper before
(Indian
61
PORTRAIT PAINTING
These
artists
ARCHITECTURE
As
ditions
in painting, so in architecture; the political conmade it necessary that Indian art should be
England was decidedly weak at the time, with the exception of the work of the brothers Adam.
There were four
.brothers of that name, all architects.
The most famous
of them was Robert Adam (1728-1792), who built the
Adelphi in London, by the Strand, overlooking the river
Thames, besides numerous country houses for noblemen
all over England.
Alas, the Adelphi in London is rapidly
disappearing, owing to the craze for huge modern blocks
of buildings. Robert Adam also built Lord Scarsdale's
seat, Kedleston Hall, in Derbyshire, which partly furnished
the designs for the Government House in Calcutta, commenced by the Marquess Wellesley in 1799 and completed
* See India Office Records, Home Miscellaneous, Vol. III (6). An
excellent Catalogue of these Records, by S. C. Hill, is available, published
in Lon<lon, 1927.
62
1804
in
outside, which was reflected in the private English residences built in Calcutta about that time, many of which
and
To continue
the
story
we may mention
further,
politan
in
built in
Delhi.
It
stands as a silent
cutta, of so
many
features
the
very
CONDITIONS OF SUCCESS
Architecture as
fulfil
its
mission
whom
they
sympathise with the
surroundings, cultural and social, as well as those provided by climate and nature. Even in the
general anarchy
of the eighteenth
century, wherever there was efficient rule
in Indian hands, we find that artistic
work was done.
building
this
Government House
63
many
Chhatri
still
LUCKNOW ARCHITECTURE
Although Lucknow has some meritorious buildingsdating from Akbar's reign, for example, the Nandan Mahal
and Ibrahim Chishti's Tomb, both in Yahyaganj, its rise
from the reign of Asaf-ud-Daula (1775who
moved
his capital here from Faizabad. Asaf1797),
as a capital dates
64
Good
built.
Saadat
taste
AH Khan
later
Nawabi
architecture
drama
later.
The
the
great
.architect Kifayatullah,
solved
the many
and artistic,
problems, technical
which he had to face. There were two outer gates,
only
one of which, the Rumi Darwaza, still remains,
recalling
the
association
of
Lucknow with Constantinople
with the then New Turkey which was
vainly struggling
in its birth-throes after the disastrous
Treaty of Kuchuk
Kainarji (1774) put an end to Imperial Turkey as a Great
Power. Before we enter the two inner courts, we
pass
65
style
test
The pseudo-Italian
was well built and
it
of time.
APPLIED ARTS
In the decorative and applied arts, again, Lucknow
There is a very
figures prominently during this period.
beautiful piece of enamel work, made in Lucknow, in the
Museum at Calcutta. It has been illustrated and described
by Mr. Percy Brown in Indian Arts and Letters (IV. I,
Plate III).
The muslins of Dacca, the brocades (Kamkhwabs} of Benares and Surat, and other beautiful textiles
still held the field.
The jeweller's and goldsmith's arts
turned out extraordinarily beautiful work with very simple
The swords and armour of the period have
implements.
much artistic merit. While older arts were still holding
their own,
newer
arts
were coming
in,
according to
the
An
opportunities which our artists got to learn them.
ingenious artist named Muhammad Ghaus made a coppe^plate engraving to illustrate Persian caligraphy.
specimen of his work, dated A. H. 1200 (=1785-6), is
reproduced by Sir William Jones (Works, I, 226, plate VI),
In the same place will be found an interesting Urdu ghazl
written by a lady, Gunna Begam, wife of Ghaziuddin
66
DARBAR EQUIPMENTS
variety
"A troop
English airs with considerable taste and skill."
of nautch girls were introduced, who danced and
sang;then tumblers, and finally, a theatrical
representation;
When breakfast was finished, the Nawab led his
Lordship
and suite into an appartment formed of Kanats and a
Shamiana, spread with white carpets, where a variety of
trays were displayed containing shawls and gold and silver
tissue.
At one end of the apartment was a
transparency^
representing the portrait of Lord Moira, an excellent
likeness, copied
night.
On
Among
67
All Bengal
Delhi, and the Ganges as far as Allahabad.
Akbar
east of the Hugli is a perfect net-work of rivers.
maintained an important department of the navy. When
the British took over Bengal, they succeeded to the Mughal
pirates,
AND DESIGNERS
fame
of the
Bombay dockyard
that
in
1814
Imam
and again
of Muscat,
68
1.93-4).
fine
first
His ship,
he had built for the Royal Navy.
with five other small vessels of war,
and twelve valuable merchantmen under their convoy, were
beset by the ice in the Baltic Sea in the winter of 1808-9.
The Bombay-built ship was the only one that escaped
frigates
H. M.
S. Salsette,
shipwreck.
MUSIC
number
in Persian
It
reign, 1783,
time.
spiritual music.
the
Golden Temple
at
Benares Warren
Hastings
*The
incorrect
Encyclopaedia
69
CHAPTER
IV
AND LITERATURE
He
diseases in a
JL.
treatment of
leprosy.
moogra
01 1, is
especially in the
cathartic,
are
due
to
India
(See
71
Mr.
adopted,
both in England and India, and indeed all over the world.
We find in the Calcutta Gazette (June 19, 1806), that "the
principal Inhabitants of Calcutta and its Dependencies"
sent Dr. Jenner a testimonial of their gratitude, with a
subscription of three thousand pounds, and a promise
The Committee consisted of Englishof more to follow.
men, but the subscriptions no doubt came from Indians
as well as Englishmen.
as
it
72
to the Foundling Hospital in London, is somewhat surprising. He knew nothing of the Foundling Hospital, or its objects or its work; and he would not have felt
complimented at his description in the list of benefactors
as "a black merchant of Calcutta."
Clive had been more
than a match for his treachery.
But he no doubt worshipped power, and he must have found it easy to forgive
Omichund)*
own expense*
was
chiefly confined to outbreaks of small-pox. He acknowledged that he could do nothing after the eruptions had
It was
appeared.
mainly a process of prevention, or
"rendering it easy." "From the matter of the pustule on
the cow," said the Chaube, "I
keep a thread drenched,
which enables me, at pleasure, to cause an
easy eruption
on any child; adoring at the same time Bhawani
(who is
otherwise called Debi, Mata, and Sitla, and who has the
direction of this malady) as well in
my own person, as by
causing the father of the child to perform the like ceremonies; after which I run the drenched string into a
needle,
and drawing it through between the skin and flesh of the
child's upper arm, leave it
there, performing the same
operation in both arms, which always ensures an easy
eruption." f
lUA^K
-OT
lsit
f deVOti n to Maldawaj, winch would have been meanineless to a <?ifcti
have been a good euphemism for
ba^shment for a H/
Probably Anur Chand was a Khatri settled in
Most of
Bengal.
"
as aDove
wld
11.
durins
l12-3) ; see
II. 374-S79.
-toncon 1834;
(written in
73
at
considerable expense,
its
able, and
adoption in.
England and the world generally after Dr. Tenner's experiments arid improvements, led to its introduction in.
its new form to India, and it became popular at once..
Mr. James Forbes wrote in 1812-13: "The English have
among
all descrip-
In this
humane undertaking
and
the
Brahmans have
under their
risen
and
Hindus have adopted
the practice.
Many letters on this subject, from eminent
Brahmans to medical gentlemen in India, do them honour;,
they contain the most liberal sentiments, and have been
followed by a corresponding practice." In the Calcutta.
Native Hospital, 1,461 patients were inoculated for cowsuperior to
prejudice,
powerful influence,
extensive
pox
that this
74
of the
to the extent
and washed
leaves.
This
for a disease
.surprising
especially
circle of the
orbit, at going
to
rest,
off in the
that
so
remedy
causes blindness; a
natives are entirely blind,
repeatedly
number of the
among the poor. I have oftenseenaMahomedan
of
the operation
removing a
a small puncture with the point of a
the iris, into which he introlancet, immediately behind
duced a particular instrument, so guided as to depress the
This operation I prefer to any other mode yet
-cataract.
it occasions less injury to the eye/'
as
practised,
practitioner
-cataract.
perform
He made
whose
we have
a detailed record,
written by himself, was Mirza Abu Talib Khan, also of
.Lucknow, but with connections in Bengal and Murshidabad.
.He travelled in western Asia, round Africa, and through
-of
intellectual curiosity
Europe
(September,
heavy
75
two years
III. 159.
76
Hindus"
ed.
the instruction of
77
.services
College as
its
CRITICISM OF
Sanskrit Department.
that
the
cultivation of
non-Christian
knowledge
by Government.
religious
be encouraged
In other quarters
we come
to discuss the
Jiext period.
FAILURE OF
ORIENTAL
CLASSICAL
EDUCATION
CONTRASTED
78
It was,
of out-of-date systems in any case impossible.
who
did
not
when
attempted by people
doubly impossible
of
Fort
success
The
William
believe in those systems.
missionaries (such as it was)College, and of the Serampore
was
those aimed
a direction entirely
unexpected.
in 1800.
at the
dawn
of
the*
to
seemed
to
19
SHORT CAREER
on a
many
years afterwards.*
STUDY OF HINDUSTANI
fGilchrist's
pp. 21-27) .
is
.80
vernacular,
with
the
widest
geographical
develop a prose which
.should serve as the universal official language in India.
.Lord Wellesley's idea was to collect learned men from all
parts of India, as Indian Princes used to do, to hold dispu-
developed
it
to
grand Darbar,
in
fine
Fort William.
Men
sense.
like
in the
new idiom
in the Introduction
to
his
Bagh
* Lord
Wellesley' s notes on the foundation of Fort William College
and bis Regulations will be found in Martin's
Wellesley Despatches,
II 325*&61. See also the Annual Asiatic
Register, Vol. II, p! 104. I have
behind
the
gone
colourless official phraseology, which I have
:in the light of events.
interpreted
81
HOW URDU
The
real foundation of
purposes was
Urdu prose
was deposed
in
1839 from
position as the language of law, administration, diplomatic correspondence with Indian Darbars, and local
its
records.
still
remained the
Law and
FAILURE OF THE
and Arabic and Persian to the Muslims, meant the languages of learning and literature. Verse in the vernaculars
embodied ballads or legends, or combats of wit, or love
themes, or religious songs, or songs of ceremony. The
vernaculars were only used in prose in familiar or bazar
All of them except one were locally confined to
talk.
definite areas, which were called countries
(Z)es's).
* Saiyid Abdul Latif (Influence of English Literature on Urdu
p. 80)
follows the more orthodox view that the Fort William College productions "have contributed in no small measure to the very high standard of
$rose which Urdu writers have attained during recent years." As a
matter of fact the Fort William translations are not free from prose
rhymes. There were hardly any prose works published, apart from these
before 1832 or a good deal later.
6
82
among
idea was
Muslim Courts,
make it the
to
trators
of
Hindustani guftagil men jo Urdu ke log, Hindu Mussalman, aurat mard, larke bale, khds o am, dpas men bolte
If Persian had been abandoned then instead of in
hain).
1839 as the official language, it is possible that Urdu could
have taken its place, and we should have to-day a vernacular language of common intercourse throughout India,
By 1839 the idea of vernaculars had been provincialised.
Urdu
"
in that case
'
^rm
>
'
-.
--L
..._.
_ *It was Urdu ki 8aban> not Urdu Zaban, as the term is used
BykoBahar. That meant the language spoken in camp and
in the
bazar*
its
success
upon a
among
83
the
more markedly
differentiated as between the two comIt may be that this sharp differentiation was
munities.
natural or inevitable in the circumstances of the nineteenth,
It is for consideration among the leaders of
century.
now
The Serampur missionaries indirectly laid the foundamodern Bengali literature. As India owes to this
literature such names as Pandit Ishwar Chunder VidyaBankim Chunder Chatterji and Rabindranath
sagar,
tions of
84
printing
the publication of vernacular translations, not
only of
the Bible, but of other useful works.
They also taught
English, and were interested in establishing western ideas
in India.
They were missionaries of a very different type
from the general run of missionaries hitherto seen
in
India.
As Baptists they had the evangelistic
outlook,
They believed, not in a priesthood, or in mystical doctrine,'
but in appealing to the people in their own
vernaculars, in
using their own heritage of literature and
and
knowledge, and
in imparting western education of a
practical type. Their
work better reflected the practical direct methods of
the
average earnest Englishman than did the statecraft of the
men in high places. As their success
depended less on
money or organisation than on the personality of their
three leaders, we
might cast a rapid glance at the lives of
Carey,
Sf
*T?
Apprenticed
h^l
^ionaries
S
SsourSf but he
resources,
^T
worked
He had no material
an indigo factory in Malda
territories -
at
Sr
nn
Serampur,
Ut
to
the
Danish
settlement
of
The Danish
missionary work *
^
Sanskrit
-ii
h"- 'rftppfcv^JLJiv V*
JLJLV
was also keenly interested in zoology. He died in Serampur in 1834. His wife assisted him in all his work*
and established the Serampur Native Female Education
Society, which managed at one time fourteen girls' schools.
may be
S6
When we come
journalism,
as
that postal
adhesive postage
stamp in
pu;rposes
87
.the
Hansi-Hisar.
As
the first
been in English,
The first Englishman to
India, and that was the case*
start a newspaper in India was James Augustus Hicky.
He was a trade adventurer, became insolvent, and was in
*
See
88
arrested,
examined the
was mostly of
files
of the
"Settlement," as he calls
items of Indian interest.
1780, we
interest to the
Calcutta,
but
Under dates
two items.
there
May
6th
are some
to
13th,
woman was
seized by
poor
a tiger in a tope (a little thicket or spinney) a mile from a
European house in Calcutta. The servants demanded even
find
ASIATIC MISCELLANY
character.
other
literary
contained
gentlemen
translations
now
and
resident
imitations
in India."
It
from Oriental
some news, very
Madras Intelligence (as early as December 1785), theMadras Courier (February 1786), the Indian Gazette of
'
"Lahore Ukhbars," (3rd December 1812), "Lahore newspapers" (8th September 1814), and "Ukhbars" frontHolkar's camp (same date), which must mean Persian
The
of a public or semi-public nature.
correspondence included newsletters (probably in Persian)
from Delhi and other places up-country, as well as
The advertisements throw
extracts from private letters.
on
varied
matters:
food, drinks, prices, rents*
very
light
wages, books in vogue, pictures, run-away slaves, lotteries,
news-sheets
amusements, and other things that interested AngloThe Calcutta Gazette changed itsIndian
society.
character from June 1815, when it became the Government Gazette, still however retaining some features of
an ordinary newspaper. After 1823 it was published
In 1832, it ceased to exist as a newspaper,
twice a week.
the
Government
Gazette assumed its modern form,,
and
with purely
official contents.
It is interesting to
note
that
the
official matter.
BRITISH INDIA
CULTURAL HISTORY OF
-90
IN INDIA
DOUBLES OF BRITISH JOURNALISTS
the history of Angloneed not pursue further
those
early days the Calcutta
In
T j-.n innrnalisrn.
that had official countenance,
r l^-was theory paper
We
s
go
so, iit got
too ?rouhle
in
into trouble
otner papers, which got
for the
at
wonder
this,
not
time to time. We must
Irorn
iromumc
difficult time in England itself,
eanu
^S
rfk reactionary
of
there
there
were
ferment.
There was
Newspaper
was
numerous measures under
the rigorous
the
Act
Pitts
Times,
was in such circumstances that
born in London
the
of
world,
the most famous newspaper
but independent
n 1788, set up a tradition of steady
m
tisements
It
first
to
com-
91
.Bengal
as
its
is
interesting
to
note
that
fi
It
92
as
I
of a varied kind.
first
printed
It
may,
newspaper
in a
printed
of Bengal and
1818,
postage
Tarikh i 'Alamgir.
The Urdu supplement lasted barely two years, but the
Persian paper flourished, and in 1828 had a press of its
containing an
own
in
Urdu
Calcutta.
translation of the
Sikandari, Calcutta,
the
ascertain accurately
the precise date of the
the
or
or
precise year
years when Surur was in
paper,
able to
It is
93
paper developed
vigorous Qasdrat) journalistic style, and that he ventured to criticise police administration and government
measures. We can quite well understand that Surur's
a.
to
his
Samachdr
is
India.
*The date of the Fasana i 'Ajaib was 1828, not 1845 as noted in Tanha's
Siyar-ul-Musannifin, I. 149. The date 1845 is given by Garcin de Tassy,
Histoire de la Litterature Hindoue et Hindoustanie 2nd ed., III. 188,
but it must be the date of the earliest lithographed copy used by De
the first year of the reign of NasirTassy. The Fasana was completed
ud-din, King of Oudh, 1828 (Hijri, 1244) : see Scale's Oriental Biographical Dictionary, 1894, p. 394. De Tassy's date for Surur' s death is
1869. Tanh. says that he found in Tazkira that Surur was in Lucknow
till 1843, but he does not think he could have left Lucknow before 1856.
Zutshi, in his Guldasta i A dab (p. 14), Quoting Garcin de Tassy
says Surur was in Lucknow till Ib47, and from another authority that he
went to Calcutta in 1863. Shahinshah Husain's date for the Sultan ul
Akhbar (ur supra, p. 30) is 1830. Can it be that after writing the
Fasana
have mixed up
his notes.
94
journalistic enterprise:
(2) a practical
diffused
among
helm of
affairs in various
were
departments of
life.
None
period, and
Indian journals of this period are mere
curiosities, though they are interesting as the first-fruits of
a movement that has gathered strength since.
LITERARY INDIA: THREE VOICES
of these conditions
fulfilled
in this
therefore the
dying India, (2) the voice of a new India that was being
born under foreign influences, and (3) the voice of an
India which still spoke in its old accents and according
to the old conventions, but which was
being insensibly
transformed by forces from within, of which it was hardly
conscious.
Some
we considered
in connec-
who themselves
and
idolatry,
to
observe their
died in 1748).
delkhand, similarly tried a synthesis between the two religions, permitting each member to follow the customary
His patron was Chhatar Sal, the
rites of his own family.
founder of Chhatarpur (who died in 1732). These move-
ments and earlier Panths (sects) founded in previouswere in consonance with the spirit of the times,
and only took a more modern form in the next generationcenturies
century.
PROSE OF
governing class
in
He was
.he
banks,
its
its
97
LEARNING, EDUCATION, JOURNALISM & LITERATURE
"the
peasants impressed him:
he remarks, "are rich compared to
peasants of India/'
he found
among
the Irish
them."
He sets
more freedom
opinion. Though the common people enjoyed
than in any other well-regulated State, the equality was
The difference
more in appearance than in reality.
between the comforts enjoyed by the rich and the poor was
much greater in England than in India. In the same
way
much
prosperity.
LTJCKNOW POETRY
we
of Insha.
life
and work
98
of a family of
Saiyid Insha-Allah Khan Insha came
the confusion
In
Delhi.
of
Court
physicians to the Mughal
father
his
migrated
of the middle of the eighteenth century
to the Court of Murshidabad, and Insha was born in that
the year 1756-7.* From his earliest
city, somewhere about
and
days he showed great originality, a lively intelligence,
He was
interested in everything,
music, poetry, languages, sciences, arts, and the manners
of men. Among languages he mastered the usual Muslim
wonderful
versatility.
classics in Arabic
^^^
"
The poets in
to India by way of Bengal.
Delhi lived in a world of their own. He was young and
He was seeking new ways and they were
they were old.
dignity.
How
*Noneof theTazkiras
know mentions
birth.
His
that I
Ab i Hayai* was
99
this flexibility
AND LUCKNOW
Perhaps the
jealous.
An
acrimonious
was
new-comer
insolent.
wordy
young
war ensued, and Insha's position became quite impossible
It may be also that the impecunious Court at
in Delhi.
Delhi repelled him and drew him to the glitter of the
Nawabi court at Lucknow. Insha soon moved over to
Lucknow some time about the end of Asaf-ud-Daula's reign
(1797), or early in Saadat Ali Khan's reign (1798-1814).
He became a favourite of Saadat Ali Khan, but he assailed
his rivals with the same bitter tongue that had made Delhi
impossible for him. As long as he retained the Nawab's
confidence, he reigned like a literary despot, and most of
his lasting work was done during this period.
About 1810
he fell from the Nawab's favour, and spent his last days
in loneliness and misery.
The loss of a young son also
preyed on his mind, which was already unhinged with the
Perhaps the greybeards were
disgrace at court.
He
died in
His
this trait
the
their
work by the
intellectual
100
in Hindustani
of
or
admixture
Persian
Arabic
without
any
prose,
words,
"One
to
me
day, as
'Let
me
tell
to
talk
it!
said..,*If
it?... Whatever I
say
could not
I will
indeed
pressions,
got
An
if
he can only
rather
102
The
honours,
it
for
and
still
more
so Nazir,
whom we
can only
notice in
passing.
Nazir
deduced a few
cently issued critical studies of him and
facts about him. He certainly lived in Agra (Akbarabad),
and his speech reflects the Hindustani actually spoken in
that neighbourhood.
Though he calls the city his own, it
doubtful if he was born there.
Agra with his words:
is
He
Now
my
He
City!
He
praises
certainly
We
do not even
takhallus
see that he
"was in touch with all sorts and conditions of men and all
phases of life, and his tastes were catholic. His vocabulary
is not the limited vocabulary of a Court
poet but the living
vocabulary of a
man who
everything
"interested the
man
in the street.
And
his refrains
e.g.
find
Ab
yet he
* This
chapter and chapter VI (where I notice the rise of the Urdu
Drama) were written before I had seen Mr. Ram Babu Saksena's
History of Urdu Literature. I am glad to find his views in general
SECTION
III
CHAPTER V
THE BEGINNING OF PUBLIC EDUCATION,
1818-57
Hindu
and
made
upon England.
But
it
Marsiya
The originality and the catholic poetical
outlook of the Marsiya faded after the annexation of
Oudh. But the Hindustani drama continued to
develop
and flourish on the foundations laid in Lucknow. Parallel
movements in other vernaculars attained all-India
import-
ance later.
106
absorbed and
The
assimilated the
plastic Bengali intellect
creation
of
the new race
The
with
new influences
avidity.
Permanent
Revenue
the
-of Zamindars through
Settlement,
Drafts at
We
of the
first
at the
1818-57
107
They
and
lators in Courts
and
offices,
employed by Government,
it
A Mr.
108
apart from
scholars.
and promotion of
literature,
the
notice
MISSIONARIES, GOVERNMENT
in Calcutta
still
character.
large
proportion
of
the
children were
as
suspicion
like
Raja
Ram
1818-57
109
110
collected
whole movement.
of
girls.
foundations.
INITIATIVE OF BENGALI LEADERS:
in
of India.
It
is
Englishmen
in
official
who worked behind the scenes and did all the hard
They sometimes even purposely suppressed their
names for the good of the cause. The idea of establishing
While Ram
the Hindu College was mooted in 1816.
Mohan Roy was inveighing in a meeting against idolatry,.
Hare came in uninvited, and, anxious as he was to identify
duals,
work.
1818-57
111
IDEAS'
PREDOMINANCE OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND ENGLISH
it
that
112
College.
He
Nyaya
"be
Shastra^
fitted to be
better."
CLAIMS OF SCIENCE
system
which
may
owed
1818-57
the Provincial
by
Masons
Grand Master of
113
new
the
the
presence of
gressives
it
supplied
its
readers
Down
with
* Calcutta
55
orthodoxy!
Review,
They requested
the
teachers
114
to
them
to
notions of propriety/
especially in matters of eating
and drinking. In 1831 Derozio was forced to resign
his position, and he died of cholera a few months
We
(1)
(2)
1818-57
115
Two new
Delhi and
literature.
They were established before
Lord Amherst left India in 1828. But the
asserted itself in
centres also, and the English colleges
have thriven and recently become universities
while the
oriental institutions have quietly
these
Benares
in
became
small.
(5)
is
we
ere
breasting in bolstering
up
116
This background
if
we wish
to estimate
to the picture
must be borne
in
OF
mind
definitely enunciated
policy.
It was the culmination of an urge from the middle
classes
of the people themselves. The Muslims were too
stupefied
by the loss of their power to have any appetite yet for
clerkships
engineering,
university professorships, the law, or the army or navy.
In the first half of the nineteenth
century, the prizes in
these professions were either not
open to Indians or the
to
special castes
or
in the
classes^ or,
some of them,
Ram Mohan
service.
like
1818-57
117
OUTLOOK
to
language began, however, gradually to change the menof the intellectual classes, and created
tality and outlook
And yet the passion for English education, so pronounced in Calcutta, spread but slowly to the upper ProThe reason why it was so pronounced in Calcutta
vinces.
was also the reason why it was absent in (say) a town like
Fatehgarh, in what are now called the United Provinces.
The English-educated clerk in Calcutta at once got a good
post, either under the Government or in the various mercantile or shipping offices in Calcutta,
There was no such
opening in Fatehgarh, and the demand was for traditional
9'
and religious learning for the select few.
"At present,
wrote Mr. Shore, Judge of Fatehgarh in 1834, "few if
any would learn English, as long as it leads to no office
118
^IACAULAY'S VIEWS
English education had been the subject of much discussion and much difference of opinion in the Committee
of Public Instruction. The Orientalists, and under their
at the proposal as
leading to
with
the eastern mind.
The vested
something incongruous
interests considered the growth of an Indian
intelligentsia
1818-57
119
students
were not
It
It
life.,
Among
120
higher plane.
MEDICAL EDUCATION MODERNISED
England
unselfish
watchmaker
w"
ath
in
His father
personality.
London, and he was brought up in
S
WA visited England more
He
,
chit
J^?'
1818-57
121
to
Mauritius, which
122
Began
lars
in
The question of mass education through the vernacuwas systematically taken up by Government much later
true,
Missionaries and
themselves to
had addressed
private enterprise,
this question from the beginning, but the results were local
of Calcutta,
The old village
mostly in the neighbourhood
schools and Maktabs were fast decaying, in spite of valient
the
efforts to stem
decay.
could
knowledge
practical
in the vernaculars than
It
be
was obvious
given
either
in
that
sound
much more
oriental
easily
classical
vernaculars.
even at that
assumption could only have been justified
of
the
the
vernaculars, as regards
development
stage in
in the sciences.
Elementary instruction
higher education
been
had
medicine
in modern
given in Hindustani
already
first
annual
the
In
some
Report after the
for
very
years.
of Public
Committee
the
of
Resolution
1835,
Government
"We conceive the formation of a
Instruction said:
vernacular literature to be the ultimate object to which all
59
This view was approved
our efforts must be directed.
by Government.
DIFFUSION
OF
INJURY
The more
Chand Mittra.
1818-57
123
new
conditions.
124
it
to the
knowledge which would have enabled our workers to transform their arts and industries, as happened in the next
generation in Japan; and it was not systematised through
the vast network of villages in rural India
to
the
With regard
complicated by the
pose.
pur-
to
the
Provinces.
Hindi (apart from poetry in Brij
Bhasha)
had not yet been standardised. Urdu was the official
language, and the Lieutenant-Governor in his remarks on
the Report considered it a practicable
proposition that it
should "become the general medium for
and
acquiring
VERNACULARS
1818-57
125
education his
educa-
much
He
JAIL EDUCATION
made
126
tribute
success
"The Seminaries"
tutions)
may
ful.
In
the
vernacular
attempts
instruction,
to
improve
the
and
extend
British
government,
not been
equally
successful.
The best results attained have been in
the North-West Provinces, where the new
revenue
settlement, under which the rights of every individual interested in the land became matter of
record,
afforded precisely the stimulus
required. The
has^
rights,
people
has not
been justified by later history.
the
North-Western
Though
Provinces (now in the United
Provinces) were, the first
to inaugurate a
system of vernacular education, they
are still among the most backward
provinces in India
Their first apparent success was due to
educationally.
their meeting the immediate
practical needs of the day,
connected with Mr. Thomason's revenue and
public works
Their failure was due to the fact that
policy.
they failed
1818-57
127
REACTION OF ENGLISH
ON VERNACULAR EDUCATION
education
its
the
what
body of the
he called a
That his
"class of interpreters," his instinct was true*
a
for
of
idea mainly failed
century was due
three-quarters
fact that official English education in India remained
More recently, when
a mere frame-work, without a soul.
to the
it
has become
dynamic,
its
total
inadequacy has
been
will
128
SIR
the
period
may
Wood's great
fitly
be
educa-
close
1818-57
129
education
came
in
modern
1854, which
CHAPTER VI
SEW FORCES
IN RELIGION
AND LITERATURE,
1818-57
RELIGION
The
NEW FORCES
IN RELIGION
1818-57
131
by
Anglo-Hindu
LITERARY AND PHILOSOPHICAL IDEAS OF THE WEST
last resort,
be called
SOCIAL,
AND LITERATURE,
from
Apart
legislative
or
judicial
influence
on
act.
Education
CHRISTIAN MISSIONARIES
the influences brought by the new rulers
during
period? The Christian missionaries were
allowed after 1813 to preach and teach in British India.
What were
this
by
but
132
most
notable early figure was Bishop Heber,
was in India from 1823 to 1826. His Journal shows that
he performed his journeys and his duties in a missionary
His predecessor had established Bishop's College
spirit.
in Calcutta and his successors have sometimes claimed
Bishops have a semi- missionary character.
But it cannot be claimed, in spite of a number of noble
and devoted men who have served the missionary cause in
India for over a century, that their direct influence on
Indian religion has been remarkable.
that Indian
SECULAR INFLUENCES
It
must be
remembered
that
the
atmosphere
of
British society in India has, on the whole, not been reliThis was even more so in the early
gious but secular.
days than it is now. And it is these non-religious and
FREEMASONRY
the
masonry established itself in India long before the intercourse of British and Indians as fellow-subjects could be
thought of. It would seem that a Masonic Lodge (English
Constitution) was opened in Bengal as early as 1728-30,
which is remarkable, considering that the early authentic
history of Freemasonry from records, in England itself,
begins only in 1717.
Roger Drake, Governor of Calcutta
at the time of the Black Hole, was recorded to have filled
the highest local Masonic offices before 1755.
The first
Lodge in Madras was opened in 1752 and in Bombay in
NEW FORCES
IN RELIGION
AND LITERATURE,
1818-57
133
Moira,
We
in Bengal.
Similarly the foundation-stone of the new
building for the College in Benares was laid with Masonic
honours (2nd November 1847) by His Highness the Raja
of Benares and the Deputy Provincial Grand Master of the
Masonic body in the North- Western Provinces. Since then
IDOLATRY
The
Bengal.
this
Modern
India, p. 174.
134
He
Before he began
perfected his Sanskrit in Benares.
the study of English, he had already launched at the
age
of fifteen his attack on idolatry in Bengali. His
was
argument
BIS
LIFE
Home
__
NEW FORCES
IN RELIGION
AND LITERATURE,
1818-57
135
He now
him a
annual
Bristol and
of
visit
their reception
that town.
RELIGIOUS REFORM AS
Though
turn
missionaries
bring
to
but
Ram
when he
them,
Precepts of Jesus
in
in
the
1820,
Bengali
published
Serampur missionaries
were angry and attacked him. A bitter controversy followed which threw Ram Mohan more and more back on
Even Bishop Heber, who, according to his
Hinduism.
lights, was not narrow-minded, referred contemptuously
to these "deistical Brahmins".
But he looked down from
the high stand-point of the established Church of England,
both on the deists and on the non-conforming Christians
like those of Serampur.
This is what he wrote on the
16th December 1823: "Our chief hindrances are some
deistical Brahmins, who have left their old religion, and
desire to found a new sect of their own, and some of those
who are professedly engaged in the same work with ourThese last are, indeed, very civil
selves, the Dissenters.
and affect to rejoice at our success; but they, somehow or
other, cannot help interfering, and setting up rival schools
denied the divinity
of
Christ
in
his
iii.
247,
136
DEVELOPMENT OF ROY
own
^*^
.^__.
"^
of worship.
No form
of worship venerated
by other
sects
was
to
be
executed,
Roy
left for
he never returned.
whom
he
left
behind in Calcutta
1818-57
137
Rabindranath Tagore)
Devendranath Tagore (father of
Trust
Deed
had left temporal
The
took it up in 1842.
of
of
men
Trustees,
position and men
affairs in the hands
the
maintained
who
continuity of the moveof the world,
The spiritual aff airs
view.
of
secular
point
ment from a
of
a
"Resident
hands
the
Superintendent," (or
were left in
Minister), who was to be under the Trust Deed "a person
of good repute
to it the
advantages
HIS DOCTRINES
AND ORGANISATION
He developed
doctrines
on evolutionary
lines,
dis-
God.
"I desire"
worship Brahma.
he
said
I therefore
138
so.
But
recourse t
those
any simple method of giving themselves up to the contemplation of God." These last words sum up Maharshi
Devendranath Tagore's idea of worship.
Pilgrimages
ceremonials, and penances were discountenanced. The
Maharahi lived a mystical, saintly life, somewhat
isolated
from the world. The vigour and passion of
religious
devotion were supplied by a younger man, Keshub
Chunder
Sen (1838-1884), who joined the Somaj in 1857. The
work of the two was in many respects
complementary
OTHER MOVEMENTS
With the introduction of English education,
cussion of religion had been fashionable
among
cated youth of Bengal.
In later days,
when
the dis-
the
edu-
journalism,
politics
Hindu Theophilanthropic
Bengali
tracts,
essays
and
reports.
ORTHODOX HINDUISM
* Vol.
ii f
(No.
a.
1818-bV
started
who was opposed to social and religious reforms,
Hindu
Orthodox
1838.
in
society
the Dharrna Sabha
an orthodox paper, the Sambdd Timira Nashak
supported
to Raja Ram Mohan Roy's Sambdd
as a counter-blast
Hinduism spoke
Kaumudi, started in 1819. Orthodox
customs
time-honoured
whenever
voice
with no uncertain
on
a
constriction
it
and
public
always put
were attacked,
good example is provided by
events favourable to itself.
Radha Kant Deb (afterwards
the distinguished educationist
Kant
Radba
Sir
Deb) 9 a descendant of
Bahadur
Raja
of Calcutta,
meeting was held by the Hindu gentlemen
on
his leaving
Lord
vote an address of thanks to
Hastings
the
to
an amendment that
Bengal, Radha Kant Deb proposed
be
Lord Hastings should
particularly thanked for the
and encouragement he had afforded to the ancient
protection
140
power of the Sikhs in the Pan jab at the same time that
the Afghans were torn by internal
dissensions, gave rise
to a political movement which had also, as its
counterpart
a religious movement in Islam. The political
movement
was led by Saiyid Ahmad, of Bareli, who opened a Jihad
against the Sikhs in 1826.
He
He
manners, customs,
away
the superstitions
sapped
the purity
ing disciples.
no doubt came
into contact
in Arabia.
Though Abd-ul-Wahhab had died in 1791,
the first widespread successes of the movement had heen
won under the Ibn Sa'ud family of Central Arabia about
1802 to 1818. The movement did not die, though for a
century afterwards it remained pent up in Nejd, obtaining
its release again as a
pan- Arabian force after the World
War of 1914-18.
Commentary on
NEW FORCES
IN RELIGION
AND LITERATURE,
1818-57
141
on with so
of the
with their opponents in the vernapreaching, disputations
the
and
newly-introduced art of printing were freely
cular,
The translation was published in 1822 by
employed.
Saiyid Abdullah, a prominent disciple of Saiyid Ahmad.
edition published at
I have seen a copy of the second
It is printed with moveable type, not
Calcutta in 1829.
lithographed.
interlinear
as is also the
type
is
The
Urdu
text is
translation
in
is
of poor quality,
favour.
142
Wahhabis
Saiyid
rejected.
Ahmad
Barelavi
writer.*
so
WHY THE
The two
that
kingdom.
It is
scarcely
1818-57
143
two
Maulana Shibli
the
Great
to hold the balance even between them.
poets tries
is
Urdu
it
is
in
his
literature,
permissible
authority
though
to point out that he misses the real significance of these
It is not enough merely to examine critically their
poets.
similes and metaphors, their command of
their
style,
language, their graphic powers of description, and their
They both introduced
ability to soar high in imagination.
hearers,
HOW THEY
Garcin
^B"^^^^^^^^^^^^^W^PW*"^^*^^^^M^^M^^^^^^^BMM^MM^^B^M^HBM^^^M^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^HB^^B^^^^^B^^^^^^^B^^^^^^Mrt^^^^^MMM^M^W^MIV^Ml^M^^^^
II. 333-4.
144
human.
out to
From
lives
.ANIS'S
DESCRIPTIONS:
MORNING IN
SPIRITUAL KING
THE
CAMP
OF
THE
there
When
the
its
gates:
Sun did
raise
And
Each
star
rendered up
Its
own
nightly account,
And
the
Dawn
like
an accountant
NEW FORCES
IN RELIGION
AND LITERATURE,
1818-57
145
The morning of the day when the Imam and his little
is thus
band were cruelly cut off from their water supply
of
and
abundance
the
to
contrast
in
beauty
described,
water in nature
were jealous
on the drops of water;
In the midst flowed the Euphrates
Like a veritable Milky Way.
On every tree and its dewdrop, shone
The light as from the summit of Sinai,
As if the heavens themselves poured out
In abundance a shower of light.
The very
Of the
stars
light
man and
NO WEALTH BETTER
THAN A SOK
And
his family.
?
LOVE
happy metaphors
146
That
man
Who
That
man
Who
is
dead in
life,
mere stone
wonderful
to his
own
hereditary
genius of
Urdu
poetry.
of sincerity.
Scenes of nature, scenes of
heroic deeds of valour against odds, praise
of the warrior's horse and sward, gentle musings on duty,
the quality
domestic
life,
HINDUSTANI DRAMA
When
FORCES IN RELIGION
AND LITERATURE
1818-57
147
of the successful
form
drama, especially
in the
in
to the
only incidental
own purposes.
148
play, where full scope was given to dances, and the popular
country airs were incorporated. These included the Chaubola and Chhand, the Thumri and Basant, the Holi and
Sawan, the Sha'r and the Ghazl, thus taking in the cultural
characteristics of both Hindus and Muslims.
Oudh
Court.*
DRAMA
Such plays might, in time, if the tradition had been
But
established, have led to a true Comedy of Manners.
the conditions which produced it were
at
the
swept away
British annexation of Oudh.
The later plays had to look
*See my
article
on The Modern Hindustani Drama in the Transacof Literature, Second Series, vol. xxv
NEW FORCES
IN RELIGION
The
AND LITERATURE,
18l8-bV
of a pseudo-English
mechanical devices,
and
tradition of gorgeous scenery
of
the
the
with
companies and the
poverty
combined
of the dramatic art, have retarded further
depression
lines. On the other hand the growth
growth on indigenous
in
of the Bengali stage
importance and literary excellence^
a
later
in
note
shall
we
as
period, must be a source of
to
other
models.
influence
CHAPTER
VII
scheme,
when
power and
period,
the
to
recognition.
AGENCIES
FOR THE
The
and
its literature
attained
that literature;
life.
& ETC.
JOURNALISM, SOCIAL REFORM, ECONOMICS
151
circles
that
habits
The development
attain earlier maturity.
the
need
created
of indigenous
education
and
of public
also earlier in Bengal than in the Upper
journalism
Provinces.
Although the earlier successes of Bengali
in English, they laid the foundation for
were
journalism
vernacular journalism and the current use of the printing
all purposes of cultural growth and expansion.
press for
The Bengal Zamindars grew rich, important, and influen-
enabled
to
it
life
tial,
and their
new
the
status
of their
language.
LITHOGRAPHY
the
Urdu
daily
To
commanding influence in the whole country. The introduction in 1837 of lithography for the purpose of printing
Urdu books supplied a cheap medium for the multiplication of Urdu manuscript writing, but its limitations can
never
make
it
Considering
than
earlier
Urdu printing
India within forty years shows a certain amount of
enterprise as well as the utter unsuitability of the types so
in
The shape of
letters for
the cursive
writing to
from the
letters
in
152
by
multiplied indefinitely.
This removes
one serious drawback of ordinary
lithography, that only
a few hundred really good copies can be printed from
one
copy written by the scribe, and that for the production of
more copies the scribe has to write it over and over
again
A second improvement resulted from the rotary machine
Instead of the flat stones from which impressions were
Urdu
gradually
presses.
EDUCATION,
available in India,
multiply. As was
first
On
print.
the
diffusion of education.
tion
of public
Press.
On
the other
education created
the
hand
JOURNALISM,
RISE OF
153
workable,
causes
began
to
operate
with
considerable
force only
lasting
work
periods.
in vernacular education
prose
religious
Above
Persian and Arabic authors of the age of decline.
restricthe
with
died
and
all it had no message to convey,
ted educational
benefit
it
was called
into being.
the
witk
literature.
and
critical
For the
first
account of monuments
the
new Delhi.
The author's
official
154
-|
URDU JOURNALISM
newspaper printed
by Maulvi
Muhammad Baqir, the father of Muhammad Husain Azad
who afterwards became so famous in Urdu literature. The
date given is 1856.
But there were several Urdu
in
Delhi,
the
Urdu
Akhbdr, was
started
papers
also C.
F.
Andrews
is
ly cultivated."*
JOURNALISM IN BENGAL
In Bengal, too, the real journalistic movement among
Indians began in the middle of the nineteenth century.
for which
Grish
in its
proper place.
FREEDOM AND RESTRICTIONS OF THE PRESS
established
to
Government
f Alexander Duff
156
The high
racial feelings
Lytton's restrictions in
moral order.
terious
of a strange, mys-
was accentuated by
and political reform.
the
lb/
to the
2.
3.
Surat
1.
4.
Patna
5.
Madras
Dacca
6.
7.
Bombay
8.
Delhi
9.
Murshidabad
600,000
500,000
450,000
312,000
300,000
180,000
170,000
150,000
150,000
158
inhabitant;
Bengal there was little more than one acre for every
inhabitant.
Today Bengal has scarcely half an acre of
cultivated land for every inhabitant.
The manufactures
had been continually going down during the period
under the stress of British competition. By the time that
Thornton wrote, the extensive art muslin manufactures of
Dacca and the cotton manufactures of Balasore had nearly
come to an end. What happened in the big manufacturing
centres also happened in the thousands of small manuThe hand industries
facturing centres throughout India.
succumbed; both those which had supplied art products and
those which had supplied the daily needs of the people.
Manufactures became more and more the monopoly of the
The pressure on land increased.
foreign import trade.
India became more and more a producer of raw material.
in
159
old
official
only
open
still
fresh
to
ground.
nineteenth century
is
Selections
from
life
by a story
a Lecture at the
illustrated
Chunder
160
of the
the market.
for
Hindu
Brahman
settled
one of the
in
Delhi,
Munshi Mohan
Lai.
He was
161
He was
among
his
their
* Journal
^^
ii.
84).
162
father's kingdom.
opportunity.
STEAMSHIP SERVICE
the changes introduced into India by
printing in the intellectual outlook of the people, were the
introduced into general life by the revolution in
changes
The early
route through Egypt.
enterprise in steam navigation suffered losses.
Government intervened, and under their auspices river
steam navigation became an established means of commu-
the
private
steamers
India remained
the P.
and
&
still
0.
remains backward.
Company
165
The capital and the working of steamer communicain British hands and its development was rapid*
were
tion
But the profits went out of the country, and this remains
to a large extent true to the present day.
The development of Indian railways was slower; and in the earlier
days they were a dead loss to the Indian finances, while
the British companies, which were granted favourable
terms of guarantee, flourished and built up a profitable
vested interest.
In recent times the railways have come
more and more under State ownership, and now yield, in
prosperous years, a handsome return to the Indian
Government. Though the first railway in England (and
in the world), between Stockton and
Darlington was opened
in 1825, the first railway in India, between
Bombay and
Thana, 21 miles, was not opened till 1853. Lord Dalhousie,,
then the Governor- General, had dealt with the
question
of railways in England in his two terms of offices at the
Board of Trade. He planned a comprehensive scheme in
India, not only for local needs, but for the whole country^
In his Railway Minute of 1853 he discussed the
social,,
political, and commercial advantages of railways, though
it must be said that
strategic considerations and those for
British trade held the predominant
place in "India's
rather
than
India's
Development"
indigenous needs. The
line
was
Bombay
intended, among other things, to link up
the port with the rich cotton districts of Berar for
export
In spite of certain doubts expressed whether
purposes.
164
to
was higher.
all
till
the
economic
p.
445.
165
ed
Among the new crops introduced or old crops improvmay be mentioned tea, coffee, potatoes, American cotton,.
Mauritius
as
staples of India
of
its
166
India,
to
improve
the
the
different
interests involved:
those of the
intricately
1923 onwards.
policy
in
India from
elimi-
JLLUMINANTS
In the matter of illuminants India has passed through
In the first, the universal illuminant was
three stages.
some form of vegetable oil.
Some of these gave very
^beautiful, cool,
illuminants
one
ENGLISH FASHIONS
10 i
A profound change in
changes in ideas and outlook.
religious thought was evidenced by the early theistic movement and its development in the Brahmo Somaj.
But the
outward life and fashions change more readily than the
inward thoughts of society, and outward changes are
accepted with less resistance even by those who cling to
the old ways in religious thought and social
In
practices.
1824 (Nov. 18) Babu Rup Lai Halik's house in Chitpore
Road, Calcutta, showed Corinthian pillars on the outside,
and celebrated a nautch and a Hindu festival,
probably
Diwali, inside.*
is
Heber wrote
in
an obvious and
Many
itself
more
a growing
a
merely
willingness, but an
send their children to our schools, and a desire
neglect of caste
in not
beneficially, in
168
There
European.
behind such
the
the
political
reasons
NEW
home
with thirteen
INTERESTS
CLASSES
wherever
people with intellectual traditions,
Among
the
political
influence penetrated,
the
Nawab
literature
intellectual
fashions
it.
well as
Oriental
philology.f
He
art
CHANGED IDEAS OF
* Emily
Eden
Letters,
from
India,
1.
p. 49,
340-1.
among
the
And he urged a
by the exercise of
British executive authority rather than by legislation.
But the evil grew and grew in Bengal.
Lady Amherst
saw a distressing case in October 1825, which she thus
that cases
ed,
of Sati were
common.
5 '
plea for
its
"peaceful abolition,
i.
e.,
resolved to
PROHIBITED BY
LAW
Memoirs.
II. 373.
63-4.
170
the
interpreta-
Hindu
proposed
Adalat thought that the practice ought to be suppressed.
The most positive opposition came from Orientalists like
Dr. Henry Horace Wilson, who allowed no scope for interpretation in religious practices and raised the alarm about
But Lord William Bentinck got the
extensive discontent.
legislation
passed on the 4th December, 1829.
prohibitory
Sati henceforward became illegal and punishable in the
Criminal Courts, whether it took the form of burning
widows or burying them alive. *
OTHER QUESTIONS OF SOCIAL REFORM
'
discussed
Women's liability
disqualify the convert for inheritance.
for offences against sex morality was not enforced in the
criminal courts.
SLAVERY
The formal
made
little
the East.
Domestic slavery had been known, but arose
mostly from wars. The Portuguese had been slave-raiders
in India, and had come into collision with both Shah
is
printed in
D. C.
to the enslavement
Boulger's
When Hamilton
IV I
in British India "were not so few as to be of no consideramany as to form a notable part of the
tion, nor so
British had never recognised the
The
traffic
population.'*
In 1789 they forbade the export of
India.
in
slaves
in
slaves from British India by a Proclamation, which recites
that both Indians and Europeans had indulged in "the
of purchasing or collecting natives of both sexes*
practice
children as well as adults, for the purpose of exporting
them as slaves in different parts of India, or elsewhere."
A corresponding Regulation was passed in 1811 for
preventing the importation of slaves from foreign countries
and the sale of slaves in the Bengal Presidency, and a
similar Regulation was passed for the Bombay
Presidency
The British Parliament had declared the traffic
in 1813.
in slaves to be a criminal offence in 1811. This
piecemeal
legislation was not entirely effective, until the Indian Act
of 1843 made the status of slavery itself illegal.*
The
British Parliament had abolished the
status in 1833,
allowing a transition period of seven years from that
date, but doubts were raised about its application to India.
to associate the
appoint-
and Indians
training and in
ein na
n India' sres
J * mes ?
sCries too British
rts
T rt
i
vrify
London,
1832, made an impassioned appeal against
Ghat murders, Sati, and Slavery, and advocated Infanticide, Idolatry
European colonisation
e mte s
f Christianity.
See also Wm. Adam: Law and
*?$
in
? British
.
of Slavery
India,
London 1840
172
it
took
many
this
qualifications.
he was the
first
disapproved
and executive functions in the Commissioners of Revenue
and Circuit, and urged the appointment of Indians to
in the administration.
Collectorships and other high posts
THE MASS OF THE PEOPLE: THEIR CONDITION AND THEIR
ATTITUDE TO GOVERNMENT
The condition of the cultivators, he thought, wasmiserable,
systems.
173
was
lower in
to Bengal
In the Upper
particularly.
(about which he did not speak) there were no
rich merchants or Zamindars., and therefore no class actively
in favour of Government.
In the Bombay and Madras
This
applied
Provinces
the
statistics
been maligned.
have much to do with evils attributed to the climate.
In 1820 Hamilton considered India "a
very healthy
country," compared with the West Indies and other tropical countries.
Plague was not then known. In so far
as the masses of the
people lived in the open air in the
living
This
people.
that epidemics
those early
is probably true.
But we must not forget
when they came caused enormous havoc in
days, in the absence of any organised means
174
men and
cattle.
The cholera
that started
among
the Bengal
Bombay.
reached Europe by way of Persia and Russia in 1830But cholera was not contagious in India, nor was it attended with fever. Dysentery was common, but Typhus was
rare in India.
Diseases of the spleen occurred in tracts
like Bengal, where there was a humid atmosphere and
variable temperature, but not where there was a dry sandy
soil and dry winds as in Upper India.
It
SECTION
IV
CHAPTER
VIII
if
terrible,
commemorated
expression of the
are not concerned here, either with
the narration of events or with the purely political and
military causes and consequences of that dreadful catasas exhibiting the finest
British character.
We
trophe.
subsequently.
BRITISH NARRATIVES, BUT NO EXPLANATION OF MOTIVES FROM
THE BEATEN
The
SIDE
not easy.
Though a great deal of literathe Mutiny, it has chiefly
round
gathered
concerned itself with ascertaining concrete facts from the
British point of view.
From the nature of the case there
is no narrative from the other side,* which could throw
ture
task
is
has
light
asbdb
baghaivat
Khan
a
wrote_
Mutiny (Risdla
in
1859.
and
the
at
Mutiny
their families
177
Bijnaur
and save
under the
lives.
And
Mutiny.
merely sent
men.
If that
from starvation.
ASSUMPTIONS OF BRITISH HISTORIANS
Mutiny
connection
with
Lord
Dalhousie's
administration,
he
* Altai
Husain Half: Hayat i Jawed, p. 71. The Pamphlet was
reprinted many years afterwards at Agra, in 1903. An
English translation was published by Sir Auckland Colvin and
General G.F.I. Graham
<5ir Saiyid's English
in 1873.
biographer)
1, p. xi.
178
remarks
the
the
Mutiny period.
RACIAL FEELING AND HATRED
in his
speech
at
the
no
the Indian
Mutiny
I.
as
263.
in
It
theories,
George Forrest's
179
history,
the
THE SENSE IN
The cultural significance of the Mutiny lay in a culBut that conflict must not be imagined in
tural conflict.
terms of a hatred between all members of a race culture
as against all members of another race culture, or even
against different cultures evolved
by
different races.
If
180
laws, and
who
rebel."
The study of
the
Mutiny
is
only
profi-
table if
we
quick
yet
been done by the Company's government. They were not
active assisonly not hostile but in many cases rendered
had
been so
The Sepoy Army
tance to the Government.
touched; and so were the expropriated governing classes,
not only in annexed territory but in territory directly
administered by the British.
They therefore readily
Sir Saiyid was
joined in the insurrectionary movement.
dear that "there was no general conspiracy of the people
181
the
movement
either
Emperor's
It
enlisted
rapidly
^^^^*^
Oudh.
their
,*r
population
182
to his
King!"*.
It
RELIGIOUS
Ahmed Khan
to
great
REBELLED,
AND WHY
causes
brought about the Mutiny. The deep-seated
the want of confidence between India and England, which
had been progressively increasing during the first half of
the nineteenth century, and which was brought to a bead
When we say "India" and "England" we
In 1857.
183
mean
a
What were
Army.
Its
faulty
organisation
and
distribution
were
Indian Sepoys.
the personal
completely
since
those days-
No army could
184
The
certainly
British
feeling
185
many men of
and
as
India ha&
the first
military life,
hereself
and
for
then
their
native
first trained
given to
"which within a given time had produced so
talents, in civil
country"*
(z. e.
Great Britain).
RACIAL CONTEMPT
King of
tender mercies
of
the
for the people from whose country they drew their training
and their emoluments. Lord Dalhousie wrote on the
1853
"The King of Oudh seems disposed
I wish he would be.
be bumptious.
To swallow him
The old King of
before I go would give me satisfaction.
not
been
for
is
If
it
the
had
effete folly of
Delhi
dying.
18th August
to
i.
393-4.
I.
276, note.
186
DEGRADATION
Political
mixed up
and
social
in India.
IN-
considerations get
inextricably
it is not
my intention to deal
Though
it
stronger
in
power
understandings, and
that
it
status quo,
.ATTRIBUTES OF SOVEREIGNTY
REASONS
The Mughal
Company stepped
controlled
Delhi
into
in the
the
name
in
Mm
in English
Emperor
Delhi.
-of
* Colonel
Hugh Pearse,
p. 203.
187
Mughal Emperors
the
first
coins were
in the
In that year,
of the Vakils (representatives) of
its sanction,
the
Court of Delhi.
Powers
at
Nazars continued
country
IV.
without
oust
his death.
Company
the
II. 16.
188
Mr. F. W. Buckler in an
article
in the
Diwani
to the
Company
in 1765.
7,
1924-
189
approved
by
his
con-
officers.
Of
of the Delhi
the
mind
September
of so emi-
opened
have you come here? All are
You will be killed also." For five days she
being killed.
had been living on the horses's
grain, and for three days
she had had no water. She was in
great privation, in company with an old woman, who died even in the very act of
the rescue.
The Saiyid's uncle and cousin, unarmed, were
killed by the Sikhs.
There was much pillage in the city.*
Many priceless manuscripts were lost in the loot. In the
of the poet Zauq,
by Ahmad Husain Khan, we read
life^
In the revolution of 1857 hundreds of women
(p. 5.):
who had committed no fault were burnt alive like fireworks, and hundreds of innocent children were killed
by
59
the sword of
This is not
cruelty.
contemporary evidence,
and cannot be advanced as evidence of facts.
Zauq died
before the Mutiny.
But it is a good index to the
the door,
crying out,
of the people,
"Why
among whom
feeling
The
good literary
he describes the
feeling of terror and insecurity after the
capture of Delhi, and the prospect of unrelieved
gloom
with which men like him faced
the future.
"The (moral)
climate of this city
(Delhi)/' he says, "is no longer agreeable to our wounded
hearts."f
And popular
created a wholly
legendary version of the
feeling has
Mutiny in such
*Major-General G.F.I. Graham Life
of Sir Saiyid Ahmed Khan, p. 21
Altai
:
Ghalib, p. 38.
190
works as
name
Matam Shah
i
Bahadur Shah.*
URDU NEWSPAPERS DURING THE MUTINY
There were several Urdu newspapers in Delhi
during
the Mutiny.
There was Bahadur Shah's own paper Sirajof the ill-fated
the Palace.
Tantia
Company's well-equipped
1908.
generals.
191
Kunwar
Singh
REBEL INSTITUTIONS
AND ORGANISATION
the Court
Court,
etc.
192
were
arms.*
antithesis of these
adopted
life.
the
IDEAS
men was
to
be found
in the
They used
the English
language and
and when
it
machinery, but could not see that the men behind it were
better than themselves.
Indeed they saw the failings
and shortcomings of their new rulers even better than the
men of the older culture, because of the new light in which
With the new light they could
they could see them.
glorify themselves or exalt their own past and thus build
a bridge between themselves and the most pronounced reactionaries.
Two generations were needed to accomplish
any
this transformation.
WHY THE
,^
*
*ised:
For the
(1)
usual histories,
have
in the Imperial
cutta,
when we examine
we
it
But
closely
He says: "every one
a great deal of reason behind it.
for
the
is
it
that
necessary
stability, efficiency,
admits
conduct of a Government, that the people
and
proper
It
o-overned should be associated with it.
the people that the rulers can understand
is only from
whether their
On
the Government.
9'
No Government can
AND INDIA
new
civilisations
even
is possible, and
after sanguinary
individuals.
Subjection must
When
in a
cultural
composite
it is
SECTION V
1858-1885
CHAPTER
IX
NEW
ASCENDANCY OF
LITERATURE AND
ORGANISATION
IDEAS IN
RELIGIOUS
post-Mutiny
We
Their dazzling
apostles of a new civilisation.
in life also recommended their
example for
acceptance.
the new-born
certain gulf
intelligentsia
now began
to
success
popular
yawn between
196
The
education.
its
the
having for
many
as
communities
the
Muslims
generations
began
to
rear their
fessional classes.
The
life
We may
influential men in
religious sentiment among the circles of
communaa
and
its
latitudinarian,
India,
replacement by
marked
more
was
This
sentiment.
or
nationalistic
listic,
in the subsequent period, but its roots lie embedded in the
'
MAHARSHI
We
saw
in Chapter
iyv
But Tagore's
its Acharya or minister.
(1838-1884) as
of
an
aristocrat
that
and
conservative.
essence
in
mind was
for
ancient
India
to
back
looked
purity of morals
He still
of
his
was
the
Brahma of the
God
The
worship
and religion.
new
India that had arisen at the call of
The
Upanishads.
It cried out for
British culture had little appeal for him.
in
the
social
Hindu
reform
immediate
system; for the
remarriage of
for
widows;
as
barriers hitherto
the
EESHUB'S PRINCIPLES
Extracts
Somaj
(including Bddhist), Muslim,
from
services
all
the
Scriptures
Christian,
Hindu
These
In practice
198
the
Christianity.
Its
to Free
Church
insistence
on
the
special
position of
it a potent social
force, and female
Keshub organised
missionaries.
definitely announced (January 1881) his New Dispensation (Nava Vidhan), of which he claimed to be the inspired
There are thus
Apostle. He died in January 1884.
199
bodies
doctrines.
The
agency
ITS
POUNDER
For
fifteen
home
years,
from
1845
to
1860, he
200
wandered
all
He
Yoga,
forms of Hinduism, and wished to restore it to its ancient
Vedic purity. By 1870 his position as an expounder of
the Vedas was recognised in the Hindu world,
though his
views as to interpretation differed from those of Orthodox
Hindus. His Society or Samaj was definitely constituted
in Bombay, as already stated, in 1875, and two
years
The remaining six years of his life the
later in Lahore.
Swami spent in preaching, teaching, and writing books
and in fostering the infant Samaj and its branches. Is
Rajputana he won notable disciples in the Maharana of
Udaipur and in the late Maharaja Sir Partab Singh, of
His chief literary work was the Satydrtha Prakash
Idar.
(the True Exposition), of which at least two English
translations have been published.
As a preacher of the
unity of God and a repudiator of idolatry, he won the
good opinion of Sir Saiyid Ahmed Khan, who wrote a
favourable obituary notice of him in his Aligarh paper.
Swami
Dayanand's
He
Brahmans of
in history.
upon
all
modern
arts,
discoveries
z.
e.
Samaj worship.
of Vedic
texts*
201
SAMAJ ORGANISATION
The strongest point of the Arya Samaj is its organisaEvery local centre has its own Samaj or congregafive elected officers and an elected Committee.
with
tion,
Effective membership requires the payment by each member of one per cent of his income and the acceptance of
tion.
Niyams or
representative principles,
national organisation.
embodied
in^ a
fairly
strong
diet.,
*J
202
that
were
started.
had
its
tion
reactions in
unexpected quarters.
in
the
mind
Law
Courts.
The Vallabhcharya
Krishna.
ing bondage".
'TWO GREAT NAMES IN MUSLIM REFORM MOVEMENT
203
CHIRAGH
*ALI
the British
On
Sir Saiyid's
in
204
mystic
taam Ahl
the
which began
the
under the
experience and
20& :
own
206
the smallness of
his
knowledge, conceives
On
the 1st
soul,
to
be the
attributes
the
of
the
of his
Lord."
"simultaneous
who were
sensational horror
idolatry." Sir Rabindranath Tagore, in his autobiography,* describes two attitudes of mind towards religion
among the educated young men of India in the days of his
of
and luxury.
educated
in English,
generation.
In the general educational field the two remarkable movements were the growth and popularity of the
Universities and the Muslim educational movement centred
The three Presidency Universities of
round Aligarh.
Calcutta, Madras, and Bombay were established in 1857,
Their examination system immediately affected the Colleges
which had existed before them, and new Colleges began
to spring up to meet the growing demand for a unified and
purely English system of higher education. In Upper
its
India, however, Oriental learning continued to hold
_^_^^__
My Reminiscences, pp.
185-6.
^^^-^^^i
207
marked
out
its
work
as different
Presidency Universities.
Lahore, started in 1864,
When
became
from
the
work of the
208
He appealed
educa-
tion.
to
root in the
to
be unacceptable
to the
tion.
and
209
sciences.
While Primary Education was to be provided without reference to local co-operation, Secondary Schools, especially
for English teaching, were to be on the system of grantsIn all branches of education,
in-aid wherever possible.
and
collegiate, the aided system was
primary, secondary,
The
he
to
response of the people, both in
developed.
But
educational
in
and
effort, was remarkable.
finance
unfortunately the want of a sympathetic central direction
retarded, if it did not make impossible, the growth of a
The education of special classes
national system.
received
Even
in the
was so great that the EducaCommission devoted special attention to it and made
It is remarkable that artistic
special recommendations.
education did not enter into the horizon of the Commission,
although several art schools had been established, as we
facilities
tion
Nor did
already noticed in an earlier chapter.
in
nor
education
nor
technical
education,
music,
higher
have
THE PERIOD
210
performed
plays
the Belgachhia Theatre, with
guage. In 1858 was opened
and
a stage, scenery, music
acting,, according to modern or
The
western standards.
Play was in Bengali. It \vas an
a
not
translation, of the old Sanskrit Play
adaptation, but
of Ratnavali, of the seventh century, attributed to Bana.
The Bengali Play, in spite of its archaic plot, was, in tone
and spirit, modern. There was an orchestra on western
and Indian music, under
lines, but with Indian instruments
that
of
and
advice
great lover of Indian
the
patronage
The
Mohan
Sir
Tagore.
Jotindro
music, Maharaja
Michael Madhu
success of the experiment stimulated
Sudan Dutt (1824-73) to follow out his own ideas and
create a national drama, of which Bengal is deservedly
The writer was deeply
proud. It was a poetic drama.
read in European plays, including those of the Greek
himself a Christian, he had a deep
dramatists.
Though
BANDHU MITRA
Ghosh (1843-1911),
the
211
up,)
forty
the ryots.
(the Bishop of Calcutta) sympathised with
The Planters' Association prosecuted the translator the
Rev. James Long for libel in 1861, and a bitter controversy ensued.
Though Mr. Long was convicted and
fined,
opinion
T
"
^*^
Dm
The
Bengali stage to an honoured position in public life.
Thenceplay was staged with great success in 1878.
forward the
distinction to their
long stage career is Tara Sundari,
whose debut occurred at the age of seven at the "Star
Theatre" as early as 1884*
to facts
stories
life.
212
work.
He
served the
Government
on his Bengali
novels.
Durgesh Nandini* appeared in 1864. It was a
historical novel and took the Bengali-reading public fairly
by storm. His most celebrated novel was Ananda Math
(the Abbey of Bliss)
published about a decade later.
This refers to the Sanyasi rebellion of 1771-4, and contains
-a great deal of
adventure, romanticism, and patriotism,
but is hostile to the Muslims and acridly critical of the
British. Among his epigrams are such as these: "Mir Jafar
.smoked opium and slept; the English collected revenue and
wrote despatches; the Bengali wept and walked to ruin."
This novel contains the famous hymn Bande Mataram
(Hail Mother), which was used by the rebellious Sanyasis
in the Novel, and afterwards became the battle-cry of
revolutionary movements in the 20th century. The passion
of young Bengal to read history anew and give it a twist
fame
rests
.against the
Muslims tended
the communities.
From
to create a
this
It
Zamindar.
Sharar,
Abbey of Bliss,
p. vii.
Bamkim Chandra
Chatterjee's
215
Urdu
literature,
we
find
there also
Their
account in their own way in their writings.
some people
mental and literary stature was not less
may with good reasons claim it to have been greater than
to
Bengali contemporaries. But as their relaEnglish language were less intimate, and
their works were not translated into English
perhaps
they were less translatable
they obtained less vogue in
India as a whole or in the world at large.
This is not tosay that the foundations which they laid were not deep.
Some generations must elapse before we can estimate their
true worth in the movement for an all-India cultural
that of their
development.
GHALIB: LETTER- WRITING AS
A LITERARY ART
left by the Mutiny profoundly affected the lives of some of our foremost writers.
Ghalib
whom we
have already mentioned, practiand was broken in spirit after the destruction of the House of Timur. His verse was crammed full
of thought, but neither its philosophy nor its style suited
the post-Mutiny temper.
It was the loving hand of his
Hali*
of glory round his memory,
halo
that
wove
a
pupil
and the recent revivalf of Ghalib after a generation of
(1797-1869),
*See
illuminated
of Ghalib
much
too high.
214
neglect
is
of
letters,
new fashion
Urdu
called
They
in
prose.
very
prose and poetry, which became all the rage after his
death in 1869. If only his letters had been critically
edited and selected, with some particulars of the dates
and occasions on which they were written and the persons
to
AZAD
HISTORICAL
Muhammad
The
forcible
life of
way how
the great
journalism in Delhi.
He established a new centre of Urdu literature in Lahore, which has shown increasing vitality. Free
from the traditions of Lucknow or Delhi, it started on new
to be hidden.
& ETC.
GE^ ERAL FEATURES, EDUCATION, RELIGION,
7
215
now working
by
success,
it
linked itself
with
the
Aligarh
movement.
by him,
SASSHAR,
NAWAL KISHOR
PRESS,
to Urdu
dialogue, he opened a new world of imagination
the
enterreaders.
His triumphs were made possible by
was
which
established
Kishor
of
Nawal
the
Press,
prise
216
in
his hero
of the
interest
for the
note of
ZAICAULLAH
Wazir
was an
by Indian
artists,
& ETC.
GENERAL FEATURES, EDUCATION, RELIGION,
one
of
the
Dr. Nazir
early
students
217
AHMAD
lot fell in pleasant places. He occupied.
in
British India and in the Hyderabad
high positions both
State, and rendered yeoman's service to the Aligarh move-
Nazir
Ahmad's
TORU DUTT
218
own
HARISH CHANDRA
of
at
Queen's College
.Bengal.
CHAPTER X
JOURNALISM, PUBLIC LIFE, FINANCE
JIISE
OF THE INDIAN-OWNED
AND ECONOMICS
Councils in
their field
of vision;
Bengal.
organ of Indian views at the renewal of the ComIn 1855 he was ousted from it
by Hurrish
pany's Charter.
220
much
Banerjea
almost the leading Indian paper of his day in India, and
it became a Daily from February 1900.
Nor must we
omit to mention the Indian Mirror, which claims a connection with the honoured names of Mararshi Devendranath Tagore, Keshub Chunder Sen, and Mano Mohan
Ghose, and still continues on its placid course as a
Calcutta Daily.
REIS
Among
the Amrita
Bazar Patrika,
started as
& ECONOMICS
JOURNALISM, PUBLIC LIFE, FINANCE,
221
Madras
celebrated
its
aimed
at fostering
an all-India feeling.
among
field of
and
it
still
flourishes.
and Madras.
JMr.
English,
chiefly
222
to
of
though
HOW
by
Now
defunct.
Lahore raised
to
the status
223
of a High
1844-96)
was the
to the
first
Muslim
Bar in 1867.
The
first
Court was not a Barrister but a Vakil, a Kashmiri Brahman, Sambhu Nath Pandit, who had risen from a humble
post on Rs. 20 per month as assistant to a Sadr Court
Record-keeper., and acquired a profound knowledge of
land tenures and Hindu Law.
He was on the Calcutta
the Indians,
ITS
CULTURAL EFFECTS
:224
other vernaculars.
Their effect on the cultural
development of India was twofold. They were based on
th
principles of modern English law, but they were freed
from the technicalities of English law, and
adapted to
Indian conditions. This gave an impetus to the
filtration
of modern legal ideas into the Indian mind. We see
this
in some of the vernacular novels, and
especially in the
Urdu novels of Maulvi Nazir Ahmad. Secondly, it raised
the tone of the lower grades of pleaders and
agents in
Indian Courts, thus gradually extending the field of the
rule of law through many bye-ways of Indian
professional
life.
It has been made a reproach to the next
generation
of Indians that they were dominated by
lawyers. The
position had its drawbacks, but it cannot be denied that
its counter-balancing merits
brought with it the desire
for an ordered and democratic form of public and even
private life.
INDIAN PARTICIPATION IN LEGISLATIVE COUNCILS
the
.a
to create such
225
When
Government more responsive to the people's voice.
could
Piari
Chand
Mitra
like
reformers
(1814-83)
social
helped to pass legislation which an
Government,
alien
pledged to religious and social neutraHe entered the Bengal
to tackle.
hesitate
lity, might
in 1868, and helped in passing the
Council
Legislative
Similarly
Act for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
JSiawab Abdul Latif of Calcutta (1828-93) served on the
Bengal Legislative Council for several years and voiced
enter Councils, they
Muslim views.
EXECUTIVE SERVICES
Simultaneously
-administrative
15
front went
226
resulting Tenancy Act was prepared under Lord Ripon and passed under Lord Dufferin
The
corps raised
the general question of the eligibility of Indians for enrolment in such corps. The practical obstacles placed hv
the military department prevented any general
participa'-
tion
to
by Indians.
On
the
Bombay
side
the
Daji
worthy of commemoration. He was a selfmade man who came from the Muf assal, got his training
as a doctor, and established himself in a large and lucraBut his interests were
tive medical practice in Bombay.
himself
and
into
he
threw
all
kinds of social, humawide,
nitarian, and educational activities, at the same time that
he carried on researches in archaeology and the use of
Indian drugs. He was particularly interested in the cure
For the search of coins, inscriptions, and
of leprosy.
Sanskrit manuscripts, he sent his collaborators to travel far
and wide in the country, as far as Nepal. He was the
first Indian to hold the office of Sheriff of Bombay, and he
held it twice, in 1869 and 1871. He was a warm advocate
One of the original Fellows of the
of female education.
he
was an indefatigable worker in its
Bombay University,
his
and
is
associated with its endowments.
name
cause,
His large-hearted charities to the poor keep his memory
green in the city which he served so worthily and in so
(1821-74)
many
is
different capacities.
Nawab Abdul
in
227
Latif (1828-93) of
Calcutta
1863 founded the Muhammadan Literary and Scientific
It looked after
Society, which he served for many years.
in
Among
scientific.
of India,
it
Justice
Normon
did much public work in his younger days for the Muslims
of Bengal through the Central National Muhammadan
Association (1876-90) and through the Committee of the
PERIOD OF REACTION
AND BITTERNESS
Disraeli's rule in
228
almost half of
terrible
first
time
made
the
to
papers according
English or in the
distinction between newspapers run in English or Indian
It was responsible for a tremendous
interests.
impetus
to
the
given
Indo-English Press. The Act was repealed
Ly Lord Ripon in 1882.
the
formation of
the
Indian
National
Congress
in
The Hindu-Muslim riots in Southern India (JulyAugust, 1882) showed a spirit of uncompromising law1885.
lessness.
the
rule
& ECONOMICS
JOURNALISM, PUBLIC LIFE, FINANCE,
229
newspaper
official
Europeans
in Calcutta
in
Bitter
racial
feeling
1848.
ELECTIONS
AND
RESPONSIBILITY
local bodies
in the
in certain matters
the
Government of
230
tion.
to
were
of the franchise
wisely decided
What was
with.
in
carefully considered.
the
franchise fairly
keep
high
aimed at was, as Lord Ripon
It
was
to start
explained
a representation of the
people, of a
democratic type, but the gradual training of the
letter,* "not
European
best,
all
to
most
influential
men
in
the
rural
life
of
was undoubtedly
to start with.
But
the policy
first
link in the
later.
GOVERNMENT FINANCE
The biggest economic factor in India is Government
Before India was taken over by the Crown, no
The accounts were prepublic Budgets were prepared.
for
as
a
commercial
company. The Mutiny added
pared
40 millions of pounds sterling (over 40 crores of rupees)
to the debt of India, and military changes made after the
Mutiny permanently burdened India with a heavy addition
finance.
This necessitated a
to her annual military expenditure.
For this, as for the
reorganisation of Indian taxation.
our national
finance.
He
also created a
ii.
98.
paper currency.
JOURNALISM, PUBLIC
Llfc'E,
losses of
tions then existing, it was impossible to attack the root problems of Indian poverty, which went on being aggravated
and causing more and more dissatisfaction among Indian
Their criticisms, however, were not effective,
publicists.
because they had no economic or financial experience on
a large scale.
Lord Mayo's financial reforms (1869-72)
referred mainly to decentralisation as between the Govern-
of the country.
232
concurrence
RAILWAY POLICY
The English
We
interest
was guaranteed
to
263
the
Guaranteed and Assisted Railways were eventually purmany of them continued to be worked
234
seeds, or to
acquire or
command
the capital
"they
when
it is
given."
AND INDIGO
At
the
quinine
over the country. The phenomenal profits of the indigo
the labour troubles with
industry were reduced after
.all
other
ancient
Indian vegetable
dyes.
From
1880
235
Indigo cultiva-
JUTE:
Scotland, soon established a flourshing jute-weaving inCalcutta started the first steam-power jute mill,
dustry.
many
as
300,000.
only
displace-
antiquity.
236
weaving
to the
NOTABLE INVENTIONS
made improvements
to
England
factures.
tioned.
genius
trial
in
life
mechanics,
of the world.
in
of cotton fabrics, and soon the cheapened production
market
Indian
the
invade
to
it
made
possible
Lancashire
with cotton goods, both yarn and fabrics.
.INDIA'S
POSITION IN
the
first
half
as a supplier
competitors
238
cotton-growing
tracts.
The
first
its
proximity
Bombay
to the best
established
in
the
finer counts
it
found
its
way
in
mill-
could
grown
India's
in intensity since.
fiscal
The
Industrial Revolution
form
We
subsist partly
of developing
highly specialised skill in either. The economic conditions thus produced, taken with western education
and the discontent which it
with the
con-
produced
existing
The
political developments.
Indian National Congress was born in 1885, but it will be
more convenient to discuss that movement in the next two
ditions,
periods,
stage.
when
to
of the cultural
SECTION
VI
1885-1907.
CHAPTER XI
POLITICS, RELIGION,
the
or clerks,
large.
ITS
INFLUENCE
many ways,
of which
-we
may enumerate
five.
242
influencing
vernaculars were
the
five
universities,
the examina-
The
tions
visible starting point of all-India political aspiraconsidered to be the foundation of the Indian
may be
every day.
and
POLITICS, RELIGION,
EDUCATION
&
LITERATURE
243
as 10,000.
The excitement created the demand for
Keshub Chunder Sen, less
cheap vernacular newspapers.
than ten years before, had failed with his issue of a pice
Now the pice Bangobdsi of Babu Jogendranath
paper.
Bose, and the pice Sanjibani of Kristo Kumar Mitter,
large
purposes.
An
in
244
ment
Services.
recently
areas.
dis-
propaganda.
religious chants.
the
Ali, representing
some
the
Muslims.
It
seems that
there was
the
(X
Civil
POLITICS, RELIGION,
245
England
notable
till
Britishers
Sir William
Reformer, who also supported the Congress cause in Parliament, and carried the Temperance propaganda into India.
He visited the Calcutta Congress in 1890. Mr.
visited the
Bradlaugh
Bombay Congress
way.
BRITISH NAMES
iQ??
f oil
wL
Henry
member of the Indian Civil
Bombay in 1904.* The Congress
another retired
Cotton,
at
cha
J1
<-
y>
and
246
therefore
owed much
to
in the
first
its existence.
Poona
He
urged a
strong
the denial
RESOLUTIONS PASSED
POLITICS, RELIGION,
247
industrial
HINDU-MUSLIM RELATIONS
An
made
Muslims as a body
Mr. Badruddin
Mr. Rahmatullah Muhammad Sayani at Calcutta in 1896 made eloquent pleas in
But they were both from Bombay. The
that behalf.
attempt was
to get the
Presidents,
cordial
the cults of
and the
HOW
IT
BECAME
248
The estrangement of
preside over the Congress in 1894.
the people from the Government in connection with the
from a
Legislative
Lord
'
collect facts
his
own
mission
POLITICS, RELIGION,
249*
India.
in
all
its
aspects
as
AND BOYCOTT
Persia
became (1905)
.250
In such
an atmosphere
the Partition agitation of Bengal, led by so skilful a hand
as that of Surendranath Banerjea, had far more than local
.moral grounds.
CLEAVAGE IN CONGRESS GOKHALE
:
of
constitutional work,
POLITICS, RELIGION,
251
not actively
organise, underground
methods of murder and violence.
and
conspiracies
Mr. Gokhale had a constitutional mind, but he felt the
weakness of his movement in not having a Research
Secretariat behind him, which would enable him to meet
His Servants
the Government in argument on equal terms.
of India Society, founded in 1905, was partly to provide
such a Secretariat and centre of study and research.
Its active work was meant "to train national political
missionaries for the service of India and to promote by
all constitutional means the true interests of the Indian
if
with,
it
did
The Society frankly accepted the British connecand included economic study and social work in its
programme- This recognition of an all-round advance if
politics are to bear fruit has prevented it from working in
a barren field, though the enthusiasm behind it has waned
people."
tion
since
its
early days.
1907
to
constitutionalist
A free
252
A
the
English
to a
new
Among
movement.
In
my
opinion
its
POLITICS, RELIGION,
free
practical religion
caste distinctions,
found
who
(she
maintained)
still
communicated and
254
came
found
knowledge
schools of
movement,
Among
the
Muslim
religious
movements of
the period
the
Ahmad (1839-1908),
after
whom
the
movement calk
POLITICS, RELIGION,
255
(mystic
taken to be the
separate
promised Messiah
(Maslh
He
Mau'&d),
as
prophesied in
Ahmed,,,
Muslim theology.
This involved him in
with reference to Qur-dn^ Ixi. 6.
bitter controversies with Muslims, Arya Samajists, and"
In 1904 he claimed to be a manifestation
Christians.
(buruz} or Avatar (Incarnation) of the holy Krishna. The
movement gained many adherents, chiefly in the Panjab.
It does much educational and social work, and has estaIn 1913 there was a
blished missions far and wide.
The Lahore branch of the Ahmadiyas cut itself
schism.
off from the main body, and claimed for Mirza Ghulam
Ahmad
And
and working.
THE TWO NEW UNIVERSITIES OF THE PANJAB AND
ALLAHABAD: DENOMINATIONAL AND RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
Two new
OF'
the
:256
^different
.a
of
its
No synthesis, however, of
introduce religious education.
was
or
moral
education
attempted, or was indeed
religious
in actual practice
a
whether
And
it
is
question
possible.
denominationalism in religion did not retard or even prevent
the process of unification in public life, which has been
the great ideal of political leaders since 1885. Under the
Allahabad University, the Muslim College in Aligarh and
the Hindu College in Benares pursued their respective
points of view, but they became so divergent that they
ended by being separate universities altogether later on.
to
insist
standards.
on
POLITICS, RELIGION,
257
Bonder
The
mantle
of
Dr.
and Urdu literary criticism, stand out as monuments in the cultural history of India.
Shibli received no
university education of the Indian State type, but his work
history,
Calcutta
aesthetic
its
Province.
of
Lahore, Calcutta,
of Madras,
him
to
exhibited
won
who was on
visit to
the
the
Governor's
258
now went on
painting
mythological subjects.
in the next
period.
We
to
Lord Curzon's
Univer-
Commission of 1902.
of Education.
share
it
It
insufficient
paid
primary education and the inadequate
had received of public funds. It found Secondary
attention
to
Government.
the
still
Bombay
remembered for
University in 1909
POLITICS, RELIGION,
259
Calcutta
University
are
almost
proverbial.
He was
among the promoters in 1904 of the Association for theAdvancement of Scientific and Industrial Education, and
in 1905, of the National Council of Education in Bengal.
He was also President of the Bengal Technical Institute,
started in 1906, to which Sir Taraknath Palit gave a handsome endowment. Both Dr. Ghose and Sir Taraknath
Palit left munificent sums for education when they died.
Not only in Bengal, but all over India, a new spirit of
self-help had come over Indian thought in matters of
as of public administration.
The
of
Fergusson College
Poona, founded in 1884, on the
principle of self-sacrificing devotion to education, is
associated with the names of Mr. Tilak, Mr. Gokhale, and
education
as
well
Dr. Paranjpye.
little
to
the
Bhakti School
of
260
from
in
movement
highly developed,
POLITICS, RELIGION,
261
attention
fields.
of
poet
literary
work.
Urdu
(Essays)
scholar.
In historical criticism Shibli's Ras&il
In his religious biographies
take a high rank.
Al-Mdmun and Al-Ftiruq and the imcomnn Nabi (Life of the Prophet) showed a due
appreciation of the historical setting, combined with a
the
completed
plete Sirat
Maulvi 'Abdul Halim Sharar, of Lucknow, (18601926), occupies a large place among the masters of modern.
But he was also a journalist, an educationist*
prose.
a traveller, and a religious and social reformer- Unfortunately, in none of this numerous activities, did he
form a sufficiently large circle to form a school of
Urdu
His
them
262
literary traditions
much modern
him
and
He
benefit to
to the last.
Maulana
Shibli.
Shibli was
the
the
story,
.because
POLITICS, RELIGION,
263
had become
in novels and plays
atmosphere both
a pseudo-history that sought chiefly to glorify
with
charged
In one
Hinduism in its political and religious aspects.
that a very important one from the Indian
and
respect
Sharar yields the palm to his Bengali compeer.
standpoint
His novels
In
belong to past ages and other countries.
and living intimacy of time and place, which
the
close
are
essential
characteristics
in
is
of
England
264
in India
happen
European blood?"
is
more
results in
it finds expression.
Secondly, Akbar deplored
decline of faith and religion in India.
which
He
the
says:
"My
rivals have
station to report
That
am
ing God
Or again:
new civilisation,
difficulty to get over:
"In this
The
there is not
remain established;
religions
much
only faith
is lost."
down on
Whatever
my
Will,
little
sense there
'tis
most
yet be left in
may
people,
behind
it.
and ridiculous
to
to
offer
unsparingly.
also
criticises
SECTION
Vii
CHAPTER
POLITICS, ECONOMICS,
XII
'
1908-1931
FR03I
Congress Constitution.
Muhammad
Ali
POLITICS,
267
feeling.
the
commercial interests.
POSITION OF
of the
matters
interference by the
affairs.
pare their case; Sir Harcourt Butler's Committee, appointed by the Government of India, examined their contentions
future
Constitution
of British India;
and die
268
Princes themselves joined the first Round Table Conference in London (1930-1) to consider the feasibility of
their inclusion in the Federation.
open
highest
Legislative
Councils,
with
elected
non-official
to
create
It
responsible
became
arrangement*
We
of unsymmetrical
a chequer-board
are not discussing here the necessity
POLITICS, ECONOMICS,
269
or the
-effect
agitation
difference
and
and they subsequently won this supreme military distinction "for valour" in eleven cases during the Great War.
The removal of the Capital to Delhi, though liable to
criticism on financial and other grounds, brought the
centre of gravity of British India to
more
tated
was
the
Secretariats,
Indian arts
small
buildings comprising the three-fold Council ChamEastern feeling and traditions. But the artistic
and other direction of the whole enterprise remained in
domed
Bers, to
270
ANTI-BRITISH
FEELING,
form
anarchical crime.
with
Unlaws"
and
Lord
(as
unjust
fortunately the "invidious
Hardinge called them) against Indians in South Africa,
and to a smaller extent in other Dominions of the British
that
allied
itself
to the
anti- British
feeling in
271
occasion,
FEELING DURING
men
there
to the
MONTAGU-CKELMSFORD REFORMS
There was intense excitement
in India in 1917.
British statesmen in England, faced with the prospect of a
prolongation of the Great War, were gathering up all the
great
policy to
be
government
Empire." The self-governing Dominions of the Empire had
in
212
(then
Viceroy)
way
political reform
of self-government.
'The psycho-
were
reserved
difficulties
subjects
administration by
-EVENTS WITHOUT
AND WITHIN
,.
INDIA.'
HOW THE
EEFOEMS
BROKE DOWN
POLITICS, ECONOMICS,
273
of
Nations,
the
British
subordinate
Government
status was
at
Westminster.
When
such a
definitely
negatived for the
India's relative position within the
Dominions in 1926,
Empire became worse instead of better. This was felt as a
grievance, and it was accentuated by the inferior position
accorded to Indians in Kenya, which was not even a
Dominion. Meanwhile the affairs in India itself produced
The Rowlatt Acts of 1919 set up
the wildest excitement.
to
deal
with revolutionary crime, and
machinery
special
were much resented. The peace terms offered by the
Allies to Turkey, which destroyed the Turkish
Empire and
threatened the Khilaf at of the Turkish Sultan, caused the
organisation of the Khilaf at Movement (1919) under
Maulanas Muhammad AH and Shaukat Ali. This movement
joined hands with the Congress movement in its opposition
to Government and continued to work as an
auxiliary of
the Congress after the Khilaf at was abolished
by the Turks
themselves in March 1924,
In the Congress camp the
ascendancy of Mr. Gandhi gave a new form to the antiGovernment movement. The disorders in the Panjab, the
declaration of martial law, and the
tragedy of Jalianwala
Bagh in Amritsar (April 1919), where the casualties in
killed and
wounded exceeded 1600 of the unarmed
population, made the rupture between the people and the
Government complete.
MAHATMA. GANDHI'S PRINCIPLES
Mr. Mohandas Karamchand
Gandhi
(Mahatma
274
emancipation.
political
South Africa
to
in
of
the foremost
It
the
non-violence.
PHASES OF NON-COOPERATION
The Non-cooperation
phases and stages
MOVEMENT AND
Movement
at different times.
has
The
ITS REACTIONS
had
various
disillusionment
following the joint working of the civil disobedience movement, the Khilafat movement, and the Hi j rat movement,
(1920-22) led to a greater rupture between Hindus and
Muslims than ever before. The Moplah rising of August
1921 and the Akali movement among the Sikhs of the
Panjab in 1922 were sectional movements and added to
the
may
POLITICS, ECONOMICS,
275
now ruled the Congress. The Swarajists prepared a Constitution embodied in the Nehru Report (called after
Pandit Jawahar Lai Nehru, son of Pandit Moti Lai Nehru)
in consultation with all parties which agreed to work
The fundamental basis was full
matter.
together in this
Dominion Status, as understood, for example, in the case
The Congress of 1928 gave
of Canada or South Africa.
the British Parliament a year within which to accept the
constitution of the Nehru Report, failing which indeThe proclamation, in
pendence was proclaimed in 1929.
the- nature of things, remained a paper resolution.
SIMON REPORT, ROUND TABLE CONFERENCE,
NOW IN THE FIELD
AND THE
IDEAS
The
political
the
other interests
women
minorities,
and foreign
276
THAN
POLITICS
We
art,
science, and
literature.
social
Superficial
upon
__^__^_j^^^^^^^^ai>^
1917.
"Beneath
said:
all
distinctions
or,
more
to
very closely akin
is
277
of community, class^
a growing intellectual
which
what we
system
the
skill
The
traditional methods
278
agriculturists.
j-eported
industrialisation,
imports
and
exports
by means of
tariffs
has
POLITICS,
recently
come
more
and more
into
line with
279
Indian
The
enquiries have been carried out.
a
the
steel industry
sugar industry enjoy
large
The cotton industry has also
measure of protection.
been favoured in recent years, and the Budget of 1931
contained cotton duties against which Lancashire raised
In internal taxation the distribuits unavailing
protest.
tion and incidence cannot yet be considered satisfactory.
The Taxation Enquiry Committee was appointed in 1924
"to examine the manner in which the burden of taxation
is distributed... between the different classes of the popuscheme of
lation and to consider whether the whole
number of
tariff
and
is equitable,
Central, Provincial, and Local
and in accordance with economic principles."
This was
a task of tremendous magnitude.
It
could not be
adequately carried out, as land revenue systems were
excluded from its examination, except as incidental to
taxation
poorer classes,
280
<
ways
still
workmen who
into
force
from
It
POLITICS,
in factories,
in
mines
281
and
It
perhaps too
thirds of the
to
sweepingly.
workers in
finds
women's and children's labour; a better provision for thehealth, housing, and education of industrial labour; an
extension of the principle of pecuniary compensation to
of Trade
for the
settlement
joint
of
the
industrial
disputes between,
With regard
to inefficiency,,
of
inefficiency
labour, it also
of capital.
Mr. Whitley was theoriginator of the Joint Industrial Councils in England in
These are standing joint bodies, consisting of
1916.
it
recognises
Report
is
No one can
the remedies
;282
WOMEN'S MOVEMENTS
'
SOCIAL
a few
283
of Mr.
284
light,
population, including hospitals and schools. The Tata Company constructed it at a cost of over a crore of rupees, and
four lakhs of rupees are spent on its maintenance
annually
by that company and its subsidiary companies, with the
result that its inhabitants pay no municipal rates whatever.
The
third
great
that there is
of
vast
commonsense,
Turning
to education
interesting developments.
As far
POLITICS, ECONOMICS,
concerned, the pace
was
at Calcutta in
set
the
King-Emperor George
reply
Y's speech
Address on the 6th January 1912.
"
285
He
said:
Tiew
success
286
Mr. Mayhew who published in 1926 a study of British educational policy and its bearing on national life and problems
in India to-day, found cultural suspicion and discontent a
very active and vital force, and most of us will agree that
the hard, clear-cut formulae devised by the experience of
the west are not likely to carry us far in India. The
importance of women and the home seems to be ignored
in our education.
The communal antagonisms, instead of
POLITICS,
287
its
the-
criticisms.
NON-OFFICIAL EFFORTS,
But there
is
much encouragement
to
be derived
from
official figures are probably better than the real factsThe present writer has pointed out elsewhere*"
warrant.
some of the difficulties of adults education in India..
Muslim education
from
388
Governments are
universal
'Compulsory education.
NEW
UNIVERSITIES
instruction.
ties
circle
Calcutta
-in
POLITICS,
289
las not proved that the recomendations were really wellto Indian conditions.
The Calcutta University,
under the vigorous guidance of Sir Ashutosh Mukerji
suited
^t
and Malay alam) are held in view by the youngest university of all, the Annamalai University,
in 1929.
It is located in
JSfovo,
the
which seeks
290
may
Among
fit in with
the "national 5 *
started
in Aligarh in opposition to the statutory Muslim University in non-cooperation days, and since removed to Delhi
There has also been one at
(the Jami'a Milliya).
Ahmedabad under the segis of Mr. Gandhi. Professor
modern knowledge.
GREAT SCIENTISTS AND MATHEMATICIANS
There has been a remarkable growth in
in the study of modern science and in
research in India. Sir Jagdish Chunder
recent years
original
scientific
Bose (1858-1937)
earned world-wide fame by his studies of electrical response in plants, and his daring speculations about the
relations of the plant and animal worlds. He was the first
POLITICS,
291
Indian to be elected Fellow of the Royal Society in England. He dedicated the Bose Research Institute in Calcutta,
Sir Prafulla Chunder Ray (born
to the nation in 1917.
Madras
in
University (born
Prize in Physics
The old
activity.
the
and
what
have
been
called
Mughal painting,
and
the
to
have
died
seemed
Rajput
out,,
Kangra schools,
and the nineteenth century produced an effort of feeble
In
art,
also,
there
is
re-vivified
schools of
who was
Calcutta,
Art ia
ideals,
and
292
hails his
all
standard
is
satisfactory,
and (3)
limited
scope.
in
December 1921.
Italian
New
as
House
in
London, opened
in
New
British
Government
London,
1925,
voL
I,
POLITICS,
293
India are
still
artistic
plan or
TENDENCIES IN LITERATURE
In Literature the chief points to notice are: that
Bengali, thanks to the genius of Sir Rabindranath Tagore,
has attained to the dignity of a world literature; that the
Bengali drama continues to advance as a provincial instrument of Bengali culture, although (apart from Tagore) it
has exercised no all-India influence; that Hindustani (in a
form nearer to Hindi than to Urdu) as being the language
most used in the recent proceedings of Congress, is graduits way as an all-India language; that Urdu
now taking a wide sweep, and that Urdu poetry
turning more and more to national subjects; that the
ally
winning
prose
is
is
.294
terms, but their poetic beauty and mystical appeal are universal. His ode to Urvashi is an ode to Beauty,
"the unsurpassed in loveliness/' and yet the "cruel, deaf Urvasti "
sowing tears in her wake. His English Essays and
Lectures are a fine exposition of his philosophy of life and
thought.
Though his vision of Indian history
the
ignores
drama
Hindu
list
Bidrohi
is
full of fire
and originality.
Urdu
literature the
MUHAMMAD
IQBAL
prose as exemplified in
novels is truly remarkable.
In the modern novel the
fashion set by Sharar is being followed up,
not in historical novels of a distant setting, but in character-drawing,
in actualities, and in brisk story-telling.
In this matter
the fashion of detective novels, imported from the West,
has been,a great asset to the novelist.
It must be confessed, however, that the use of the supernatural and of
extraordinary coincidences has not yet been wholly discarded. Among numerous novels of wide circulation we may
mention Prem Chand's Chaugan-i-Hasti and Zaf ar Umar's
Nili Chhalri and Lai Kathor.
Urdu poetry seems to be
forsaking its old routes of imaginative abstractions and
turning more to political and philosophical themes. The
POLITICS, ECONOMICS,
295
tendencies:
(1)
Briefly it is a
the tendency to
the
eminent
thought.
Persian.
Our
URDU DRAMA
exist, to
in repute.
The commercial side of the Urdu stage is in
the hands of Parsi capitalists.
They are excellent men of
business,
and men
tiie
10-12.
296
He says
great vogue on the Urdu stage.
"To be dependent on the orders, tastes, or commercial point of
view of
the proprietors of a commercial
to
:
company,
make
these
HOW THE
And
tion
now paid
to the
Drama
in
Urdu
THE FUTURE
British
spots
forgetting
The
of
sense
past
of proportion
failures
is
nullified.
29T
forward
Muslim,
or
satisfaction
future.
British
descent,
and pride
in
CHAPTER
XIII
the
rivalries
-obtained,
there
was
the
desire
for
exclusiveness
for
the position.
at
least the
299
programmes
to progress
In
an atmosphere where
way
of an ordered progression
The
general public good.
landed us in this position.
on
from which
it
is
a radical alteration in
Even the
leaders.
of
Communal
our
the points of view
and
relations
amenities
Hindu-Muslim
individual friendly
and
rarer.
rarer
are
of the old days
becoming
Many of
of
the
fold
the
within
were
who
Muslims
the
Congress have
withdrawn from that body and have become members of
the Muslim League with its strong militant activities.
Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad, who may be considered
the leading Congress Muslim, now commands a very
small following. Hindu-Muslim riots have taken place in
nearly all the big cities of India and continue to be of
difficult to see
way
out without
frequent occurrence.
TERRORIST
MOVEMENTS
In the preparatory stages of the new Constitution which
-was enacted by the British Parliament in 1935, this want
of unity on the Indian side was very marked and resulted
in a very unsatisfactory piece of patch-work. Mr. Ramsay
MacDonald, the Prime Minister of England, was determined to give India a "democratic" Constitution. It cannot be
pretended that he understood the Indian conditions. His
horizon was bounded by the pronouncements of the Indian
National Congress party, but that party under Mr. Gandhi's
into the position of being an unlawful
Early in 1932 Mr. Gandhi had renewed his
He himself preached nonCivil Disobedience Movement.
Tiolent non-cooperation, but his activities encouraged the
lead had
drifted
association.
300
terrorist
The
India
from
in
Constitution, three
in
London, to which
Indian representatives were invited for consultation. The
first Conference, in the winter of 1930-31, was
boycotted
by the Congress, but was attended by the representatives
of other interests, including women not affiliated to the
Some principles were then outlined (see last
Congress.
and
they formed the basis of the Constitution as
chapter)
The Second Round Table Conference
in
1935.
passed
was held in London in the winter of 1931-32, and was
attended by Mr. Gandhi, who had by then been persuaded
by
the
Viceroy
(Lord Irwin) to abandon his nonand to place his views fully and
attitude
cooperation
He came with high
unreservedly before the Conference.
inclined
and
was
to
even
a
blank
hopes,
"give
cheque" to the
Muslims in the Hindu-Muslim discussions for evolving an
agreed share of representation for the two communities in
the proposed Indian Legislatures. His followers were however alarmed at that attitude.
No agreement could be
reached either between the Hindu and Muslim delegations
or between the Indian and the British points of view.
The Third and final Round Table Conference sat in
London
the
in
Prime Minister
301
the Governor-General,
is to
have
special responsibility in questions of Peace and Tranquillity, the stability of Finance and Credit, and the Protection
of Minorities.
This portion, relating to the Central Fedehas not yet come into force, owing to certain
-difficulties with the Indian States.
ration,
ITS
WORKING
The coming
302
the
more responsive
to Indian needs and Indian ideas; also theintroduction of compulsory primary education. In addition
there is desire to take all steps possible for fostering:
Indian industries.
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC COROLLARIES OF
THE PROGRAMME
nomic
in both
will arise.
ed with
the
between
will
get complicat-
303
Socialists
and
sory
304
making
work of
their
thorough and
scientific teaching
practical.
in
science
Tutorial work
is
being greatly
in such corps
is
indeed
authorities
Indian
and
the
officers.
Academy
at
of properly qualified candidates for Indian Army commisIn the schools the Boy Scout Movement has now
sions.
The Indian vernaculars are
.attained large proportions.
obtaining more and more footing in the universities, with
^perhaps a regrettable decline in the popularity of the
dub
The
movements
to a focus.
ITS
ORGANISATIONS
306
authorities.
At any
rate the
modern
student has
indepen-
ideals in education.
WOMEN'S MOVEMENTS
The
strength of the
Legislature
ledge and general
is
working
Welfare
Indian social life is being completely
served by women.
now take in
transformed by the part which Indian women
public affairs.
tions,
But there is
the larger life of the country.
and
old
peacefulness
a darker side to the picture. The
I he
to
life are tending
disappear.
simplicity of rural
not
has
yet
Education
drift to the towns continues.
link them
adapted
to
itself
to rural conditions.
307
the
the
308
'has
stable
develop into a happier and more peaceful city than the one
which is in ruins, Quetta is being rebuilt with earthquake-
looking
Persia.
human
physical hurt,
persons within the debris^ escorting of survivors to places
of safety or to persons who could take care of them,
and so on. Both official and non-official agencies were
-employed.
The
non-official agencies
consisted of young
men from Colleges and from other walks of life. They all
worked well and in cooperation. They learnt habits ^of
-quick decision,
to
control
her import
tariffs
her
industries
the Fiscal
by means of
Convention.
what
is
309
known as
More
Autonomy
recently she has
been able to participate in definite trade agreements with
England and Canada by tariff preferences on a reciprocal
basis. England changed over definitely from free trade toprotection about 1932; the rest of the Empire had been,
After 1932 it became a
protectionist for many years.
cardinal point of Empire trade policy to negotiate trade
agreements on the basis of reciprocal preferences on
The Ottawa Trade Agreement (1932)
specified articles.
was one in which India participated. The agreement wasnot popular with the Indian Legislative Assembly, which
resolved in 1939 to terminate it. A new Trade Agreement
has been negotiated between England and India by which
the Manchester cotton industry gets a certain amount of
preference as against Japan, but English opinion considers
In trade matters it is rash
that it unduly favours India.
But
to appraise advantages or disadvantages in advance.
there is no doubt that India is determined to develop her
cotton mill industry, and has already gone a long way tosuccess in that direction.
Her
is
situation
internal industrial
favourable^
and
cotton
as
steel,
sugar. Her mineral
regards
especially
production has also shown great expansion. According to
Dr. Meek,* compared with the five pre-War years, there
was an increase in the main industries in 1930 of 62 per
cent in value and 80 per cent in the number of employees..
In the same comparison mineral production increased in.
volume to 182 per cent. But in international trade she is
As such she
still mainly an exporter of raw materials.
raw
materials
of
her
has to safeguard the exports
surplus
effort
* See
T&*
New Indw, of
1937, p. 78.
310
-directional experience
and
sons
(3)
these
factors,
is
and such a
rise is
MARKETING SCHEMES
Both
the agricultural
producer and the small
Draftsman-producer in India have been very much handicapped in the past by the absence of any well organised
scheme of marketing. The absence, too, of any recognised system of grading and of facilities for ascertaining hour-to-hour prices in big centrfes very much
hampered the most efficient producers and left them at the
mercy of the middleman.
Many of the old-established
their
The
own marketing
-with the
the
first
officers
Central Staff.
surveys, covering agricultural produce, fruits, and livestock products. They have studied prices and the question
of grading produce.
tetween producers,
They seek
distributors,
etc.
The
to
establish
wholesalers,
object
is
to
contacts
manuimprove.
311
and problems
and
also corne
Before
little
is
TRADE UNIONS
field.
In 1929 the
more
312
moderate section
and
Postal
Union.
Unions)
Under
the
is
new
the
Ahmedabad
Constitution
Textile Labour
as such is
Labour
the
313
The Courts of Enquiry enquire into disputes referred to them by Government and make a report on its
The Boards of Conciliation would be set up to
findings.
of the dispute.
Neither the findings
settlement
secure a
of
the
advice
the
Board is binding on
nor
Court
of the
is
and
an
time
but
either party;
gained,
impartial verdict
on the points in dispute forms public opinion, which is the
As regards strikes in public
final arbiter in the matter.
fourteen
services,
days* notice in writing to the
utility
made
is
obligatory, failing which the strike beemployer
comes a penal offence. Strikes and lock-outs, with objects
other than the furtherance of a trade dispute within the
industry itself, and designed or calculated to inflict severe
occur.
Government
to
as in England.
DEVELOPMENT OF AVIATION
314
Air Force.
in India,
specially
in
Force.
Karachi
is
first-class
All
now
BROADCASTING
in India.
Wireless, too, has made rapid progress
stations
at the
short-wave
broadcasting
four
There are
of
a
number
and
whole
the
serve
to
country,
main centres
It is
areas.
rural
the
serve
to
stations
small- power
receivers used
difficult to estimate the number of wireless
by
the
people.
The number
is
not
yet
large in
clubs, and
very
propaganda
spread
in any
the multiplicity of languages and dialects used
for
used
are
six languages
being
given area. More than
arises
other
The
difficulty
broadcasts, besides English.
from the great variation in the tastes, standards, and
broadcast couched in a
leisure hours of the people.
to one section of the people may leave
to
way
appeal
some
another section cold or even be positively offensive to
The most popular vernacular broadcasts are
section.
On the whole it
those intended for amusement.
under
well that Government has so far kept broadcasting
comic
is
its
own
control*
315
LAW
We
more universal
principles of
Muslim Law
worked
as
It
enacts
that
in
all
questions
(save
questions
relating to agricultural
The foundation of
Order has introduced a
the
MODERN
SCHOOLS
Ramakrishna Vivekananda
universality
birth of
316
and
philosophies, religions,
moralities,,
economic
developments, measures for the control of poverty, health,
and educational organisations... etc. of the four quarters.
59
activities of Swami Vivekananda
The
of the globe.
crafts, sciences, literatures,
industries,
and
is
institutions
not less
Hindu
and
to
in spirit than
Hinduism
itself."
Bombay, or
pp. 297-98.
317
generated which runs through the deeper chanIn Hinduism caste is not dead, but is insenThe younger generation of modern
decaying.
sibly
The
Parsis sees life almost through European spectacles.
Maulvi type of Muslims exercises less and less influence
on the Muslim mind and Muslim modes of life. Social
Service and Welfare Campaigns are very much to the fore.
The Piparia Experiment (in the Central Provinces) has
Its comprehensive
-attracted a good deal of attention.
scope is indicated by such items as the impovement of
agriculture, the consolidation of fragmentary holdings,
the reorganisation of cooperative societies, the promotion
of adult schools, rural libraries, scout troops, the digging
of refuse pits in villages, the provision of bored-hole
latrines, the encouragement of vaccination and better
housing*. The solution of the question of chronic indebtedness, and the problems of the pressure of population and
ferment
nels of
is
life.
food planning are also receiving attentiontIMMENSE PROBLEMS BEFORE CULTUIL\L INDIA
The rapid survey which we have taken of cultural
problems has shown what immense possibilities lie before
In some respects these possibilities are not recogIndia.
Some are content with an
nised by our own people.
easy-going belief that education will solve many of our
But education has aggravated many of our
difficulties.
Others sound a pessimistic note and would
difficulties.
cut up India into sections, giving up the hope of cultural
miity as impossible of achievement. Dr. Tagore in his
Convocation Addressi to the students of the Calcutta
University on February 17th, 1937, said:
*4
We
India
are
in India, p. 392.
Millions*
318
Communal
despair,
alone progress
is
possible.
APPENDIX
PARTICULARS ABOUT BOOKS REFERRED TO
General
Mill and Wilson: History of British India, 9 vols., London, 1848..
J. C. Marshman's History of British India; 2 vols M Serampore, 1868*.
H. G. Rawlinson:
Indian
People^
Oxford, 1938.
vols.,
Wm.
Verney Lovett:
Ramsay Muir:
India, (Nations of
Today
The Making of
Series),
British
London 1923.
India,
1756-1858;
Manchester, 1915.
vols.
Oxford, 1922.
W.
S. C. Hill
1927 (A guide
2nd Ed.; 3
et
Hindous-
320
of
Education,
down
to
the tenth
CHAPTER
Affairs,
London, 1772.
vols.:
London, 1913-1925.
Travels of Mirza Abu Talib Khan, 1799-1803. Translated by
C. Stewart. 2 vols.; London, 1810.
.Zikr-i-Mir, edited by Maulvi Abdul Haq. Aurangabad, 1928.
(Mir's Autobiography in Persian, with Maulvi Abdul Haq's
Introduction in Urdu. Maulvi Abdul Haq has given good
reasons for believing that the date of Mir's birth was 1137H.
= 1724-5 C.) and not the earlier dates conjectured by previous
(
writers. He also clears up other dates).
Remains of the Rev. C. F. Schwartz, Letters and Journals, with
sketch of his life. 2nd Ed.
London, 1826.
Fra Paolino Bartolomeo: Voyage to the East Indies (1776-89).
English Translation, London, 1799.
Luke Scrafton: Reflections on the Government etc. of Indostan
and English Affairs to 1758. London, 1763.
|
Seir Mutaakherin,
Kulliyat
(
= 18S6C)
Inlikhab
Kalam
Aligarh, 1921.
its
323
in India, Engravings from Drawings by Win. Daniell, R. A., and Descriptive Account by the Rev.
Hobart Gaunter. London 1834-38. Later volumes of the Oriental
Annual, 1839-1840 are from other hands: (Letter-press by
Wm.
E. Finden),
CHAPTER IV
James Forbes: Oriental Memoirs, 2
Wm.
vols.,
vols. 3
London, 1834.
London, 1800-1801.
History
T. A. Wise:
Hindu System
ul
Musannifin,
(Urdu), by
Urdu
Thomas Roebuck
1819.
Selections from the Calcutta Gazettes, vols., 1784-1823; Calcutta
1864-69 (vols. 1-3 edited by W. S. Seton-Karr, and vols. 4-5,
by H. D. Sandeman; in the Preface to voL V, a sixth volume is
promised, but I have not seen it, nor is there a copy in the British
Museum. I have been able to see the original numbers of the
Museum
Library).
The Despatches, Minutes and Correspondence of the Marquess of Wellesley during his administration
in India; vol. II; London, 1836.
Montgomery Martin:
324
F. E. Keay:
1920.
Travels of Mirza Abu Taleb Khan in Asia, Africa and
Europe;
written by himself in Persian, and'translated by Charles
Stewart;
2 vols; London, 1810.
Nazlr,
Agra, 1922.
(Urdu)
(Lucknow Architecture
is
described in
II.
324-26).
Sushil
Ram Babu
An Account
to Tranquebar; Part
II,
Missionaries
London, 1710.
London, 1720.
CHAPTER V
Adam: Reports on Vernacular Education in Bengal and Behar,
submitted to Government in 1835, 1836 and 1838, edited, with
a review to date, by the Rev. J. Long; Calcutta, 1868.
"W.
Education of the
London, 1908.
Sir Richard Temple: James Thomson; Oxford, 1893.
S. C. Dutt: Historical Studies, 2 vols., London 1879 (See especially
chapter X in the 2nd vol., on The Progress of Education).
325
Sir
Chand Mittra:
Calcutta, 1877.
Peary
J.
Biographical
Sketch
David
of
Hare*
Edinburgh, 1911.
CHAPTER VI
R. F. Gould History of the Freemasonry 6 vols. ; London, 1884-87.
:
by
Rammohun Roy;
Calcutta, 1913.
Brahmo
Soxnaj
movement).
now
1921.
Anis (Urdu)
Lucknow (no
date).
Freemasons.
orrespondence with the Grand Lodge of English
Maulana Shah 'Abdul Qadir Dehlavi: Urdu Interlinear Transmovelation, with Urdu Commentary to the Quran; printed with
Ahmadi
able type.
Ram Babu
Saksena
History of
Urdu
Bengali
London, 1914.
326
Nicol Macnicol:
Making
of
CHAPTER
Sir Saiyid
VII
Manohar Lai
Edinburgh, 1911.
Bishop Reginald Heber: Journey through the Upper Provinces
of India, 1824-25 ; 3 vols., London, 1828.
D.
327
W.T.Thornton:
London, 1875.
CHAPTER
VIII
Ahmed Khan:
edition, Agra,
9)
Risala Asbab
Baghawat
Hind; 2nd
1903 (Urdu).
F.
London, 1913.
F.
G, F.
Lieut.-Col. G. H. D. Gimlette:
328
Matba
'Usmani; (Urdu)
CHAPTER IX
Dwijadas Datta: Behold the Man, or Keshub and the Sadharan
Brahmo Somaj Comilla (Calcutta), 1930.
Maharshi Devendranath Tagore's Autobiography, translated from
Bengali into English by Satyendranath Tagore and Indira Devi;
London, 1914.
Laj pat Rai: The Arya Samaj, an account of its origin, doctrines
and activities; with a biographical sketch of the founder;
London, 1915.
Altaf Husain Hali; Hayat i Jawed (Life of Sir Saiyid Ahmed
;
Tasanlf
first
Manmanath Ghosh
II,
Delhi, 1928.
Sir Rabindranath Tagore:
P. C.
My Reminiscences,
London, 1917.
Calcutta, 1882.
P. C.
of
Calcutta, 1887.
G. A. Natesau:
his life
and teaching;
Madras, N. D. (1912).
of
the
its
origin
and develop-
Bankim Chandra
English by M.
329
1895.
;
trans-
J.
S.
Ghalib's
Ghalib: Urdu
Yadgar
Ghalib (Urdu)
Aligarh, N. D.
C- F.
Paris,
1879
(French).
Lucknow, 1898.
Muhammad Husain Azad: Ab
AzSd: Urdu: 4
parts; 5tk
edition,
Darbar
Nairang
Klnvaja
Altaf
Bankipore, 1885.
Quran Sharif aur Darshan Quran Chakra; Hindi; Bankipore,
1897.
Hayat i Hafiz Nazlr Ahmad: Hayat, by Iftikhar Ahmad Bilgrami;
:
"Urdu;
Delhi, 1912.
CHAPTER X
Manmanath Ghosh:
Selections
330
F. H. Sfcrine:
An
Sambhu
C.
Calcutta, 1895.
MookeriVpJ
'
vols.,
London, 1921.
W. T. Thornton: Indian Public Works and cognate
Subjects;
London, 1875.
Sir
A Life of
the Earl of
Mayo
Mayo 2
London, 1875.
Commercial Products of India; London, 1908.
L. S. Wood and A. Wilmore: Romance of the Cotton Industry in
England; London, 1927.
Nawab Abdul Latif A Quarter-century of the Mahomedan Literary
Society of Calcutta, a rsum6 of its work from 1863 to 1889;
:
vols.
Calcutta, 1889.
Calcutta,
1909.
CHAPTER XI
Miss Vera Anstey Economic Development of India; London, 1929.
C. A. Natesan: Indian National Congress, 1885-1908; Madras, N.D.
:
Oxford, 1925.
1919.
Life and
Life
of
Swami Vivekananda, by
Almora, 1912-28.
,
Das Gupta:
and
Web
331
London* 1915.
Ahmadiya
(Urdu), 4 Parts;
Amritsar, 1880-84.
Mirza Ghulam
Chunder Pal
Bepin
Indian Nationalism,
its
Principles
and
the Reform
Ratcliffe: Sir William Wedderburn and
Movement; London, 1923.
Sir William Wedderburn Allan Octavian Hume, Father of the
S. K.
Madras, 1912.
S3
Shi'r-i
Firdaus
JJ
33
Hakim
tion of the
tendencies
(For
332
Failure of Lord
London, 1903.
Curzon, by
"Twenty-eight
years
in
India"*'
Public Meeting on the 10th March 1905, a ProLord Curzon's last Convocation Address and General
Proceedings of a
test against
CHAPTER
XII
1917.
1917.
C.
C. F.
Andrews
1930.
Development of
Prithwis Chandra
Committee; 3
vols.;
The Report
of
Sir
Thomas Holland's
Industrial
Commission;
London, 1918.
333
Women in Modern
India,
William Archer
A. Mayhew: The Education of India, a study of British Educational Policy in India, 1835-1920, and its bearing on national
life and problems in India today; London, 1926.
Interim Report of (^ir Philip Hartog's) Auxiliary Committee on
the Growth of Education; Indian Statutory Commission; London,
September 1929.
Bulletin of the World's Association for Adult Education, No. 47,
London, February 1931; Adult Education in India, by A. Yusuf
AH.
Quinquennial Reviews of Education in India: viz. Sixth, 1907-12,
by Sir H. Sharp, Calcutta 1914: Seventh, 1912-17, by Sir H.
Sharp, Calcutta 1918; Eighth, 1917-22, by J. A. Richey, Calcutta
1923: Nineth, 1922-27, by R. Littlehailes, Calcutta 1929; Tenth,
1927-32, by Sir George Anderson, New Delhi, 1934.
Education in India: the New Outlook, by A. Yusuf All; Nineteenth
Century and After; London, EJecember 1928.
J. H. Cousins: Notes and Historical Introduction to Jagan Mohan
Chitra-shala, Mysore, (Gallery of Indian Paintings founded in
1924) ; Mysore, 1927.
J."
Calcutta, 1923.
E B
Havell
"vol. 44, p.
J.
London, 1928.
334 ~ 6
My
History
of
Rajshahi, 1926.
Sir
Muhammad
2nd
ed., Sept.
Iqbal:
Bang-i-dira.
1926, Lahore.
history of
CHAPTER
XIII
in....(a series of
available, India
discontinued).
in
years,
published
Labour
Office,
Ganeva,
London, 1938.