Madras Standard : English daily; in 1915 Mrs Besant bought & named it New India.
... wriggle even after it has been cut into two, it has lost all life and all chance of carrying weight in the country. The temper of the Madras meeting, which a serious and influential paper like the Madras Standard asserts to have been composed mainly not of students but of adults, shows what the temper of the nation is likely to be. The deportation therefore has introduced a new element for the Moderate ...
... to this Anglo-Indian paper for publication, whereupon it advised the 'disloyal curs of the Madras Mahajana Sabha', to seek favour at the hands of the 'seditious Hindu and the fire brand Madras Standard'. The paper even said that the Sabha had cut its nose to spite its face. Such violent and boisterous attacks and pejorative language employed by pro-Governmental agencies were born out of a real ...
... shown us the first complete example of an Aryan reborn, and all honour to Madras which has produced such a man." Sri Aurobindo, writing in the Bande Mataram (23 March 1908) said, "The Madras Standard has undoubtedly hit the right nail on the head when it derives the Tinnevelly disturbances from the establishment of the Swadeshi Steam Navigation Company and the attempt to throw difficulties ...
... Editorship of Sri Aurobindo with Speeches Delivered during the Same Period 6.Feb-3.May.1908 Bande Mataram Anti-Swadeshi in Madras 23-March-1908 The Madras Standard has undoubtedly hit the right nail on the head when it derives the Tinnevelly disturbances from the establishment of the Swadeshi Steam Navigation Company and the attempt to throw difficulties ...
... 234; on the Risley Circular, 236, 248, 249; on Lajpat Rai's deportation, 237; on Minto-Morley Reforms, 240ff, 261, 340ff, 364; on Morley's biparita buddhi, 241; prosecution as editor, 244ff; Madras Standard on, 244; Indian Patriot on, 244; Mahratta on, 244; Rabindranath on, 244; failure in health, 248; on Govt. vs. National Education, 249; on Brahmacharya-Yoga, 251; dissatisfaction with "national" ...
... cleared up at last. Wires flashed, messages were splashed, Page 243 and appreciations, congratulations, animated 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 ...
... Ghose's arrest spread all over India like wildfire. And the nation grieved. On 22 August the Bande Mataram reprinted extracts from many newspapers, such as Indian Daily News, Empire, Maharatta, Madras Standard, Indian Patriot, etc. Thus the young man who was not so well known publicly outside Bengal, became an all-India household name overnight. So far people had been wont to think that the pithy and ...
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