London Times : The Times of London, started by John Walter in 1785 under the name Daily Universal Register, & designated The Times in 1788. In 1906 the control of the paper was secured by Alfred Harmsworth (see Harmsworth Trust).
... Bande Mataram under the Editorship of Sri Aurobindo 28.May-22.Dec.1907 Bande Mataram The Times Romancist 20-August-1907 The London Times has developed a new Newmaniac all to itself. The original Newmaniac of Calcutta had the National Volunteers for his special monomania: the Times specimen seems to have got the Arya Samaj on his brain. In a long ...
... appraisals, all lighted up the pages of the national press. The Madras Standard wrote as follows: Perhaps, few outside Bengal have heard of Mr. Aurobindo Ghose, so much so that even the London Times has persisted in saying that none but Mr. Bepin Chandra Pal could be the author of the able articles appearing in the Bande Mataram. ... In the history of press prosecutions in this country ...
... these notions have in their pronouncements seriously asserted and expressed a hope that, the passage of time will harmonise the inconsistent elements in India. A leading journal like the London Times, commenting on the Government of India Act of 1935, wrote that "undoubtedly the difference between the Hindus and Muslims is not of religion in the strict sense of the word but also of law and culture... to represent two entirely distinct and separate civilisations. However, in the course of time the superstitions will die out and India will be moulded into a single nation'. (So according to the London Times the only difficulties are superstitions). These fundamental and deep-rooted differences, spiritual, economic, cultural, social and political have been euphemised as mere 'superstitions'. But surely ...
... Dec.1907 Bande Mataram A Compliment and Some Misconceptions 12-August-1907 We extract in another column the opinions and interpretations of the London Times anent the Bande Mataram . It is gratifying to find the Thunderer so deeply impressed with the ability with which this journal is written and edited, even though the object of this generous ap ...
... systematically alternated with the arguments of fire and sword. When they cannot coax us into acquiescing in servitude, they want to argue us into it and failing that too, they brandish the sword. The London Times , its namesake in Bombay, the Pioneer , the Englishman , all tried to win over the Congress suddenly changing their attitude of supreme contempt towards the National Assembly of a quarter of a ...
... (Thomas Cranmer of Cambridge) to your country-house and there give him a study and no end of books to prove that I can marry your daughter." Such is the history of many an invention. The London Times and the Pioneer of Allahabad seem to have received a commission from the Government of India to take occasional excursions into the region of History and Political Economy to prove that the foreign ...
... Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol. 1 An Evolutionary Problem THE London Times Literary Supplement (July 27, 1946), in the course of a critical estimate of Bernard Shaw, writes: "Mr. Shaw pats Lamarck on the back and accepts his theory that 'living organisms change because they want to'. If you have no eyes and want to see and keep ...
... insists – and very rightly – upon the variety and diversity of individual and local growths in a unified humanity and not a dead uniformity of regimented oneness. He declares, as the reviewer of the London Times succinctly puts it: "Let us abolish our insensate worship of number. Let us repeal the law of majorities. Let us work for the unity that draws together instead of idolizing the multiplicity that ...
... The example given is: 'man's relation to the Divine.' " My latest discovery is the title "Depicting the divine in Nature" of a review of Early Poussain Exhibition in the weekly from London, The Times Literary Supplement, October 28-November 2, 1988, p. 1204. If you run into any helpful phrase - preferably in English literature - bearing on the bone of contention, do pass it on to... Mysterious" (Amal's book-title) "The Art of the Soluble" (title of Medawar's book) I was most intrigued by her looking askance at "the Divine", I have four times employed this locution in the first part of this very letter and we come across it every now and then in not only the Mother but also Sri Aurobindo. According to our friend, an English-speaking person ...
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