Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PART III
- PART IV
- CHAP. I MARITIME CEYLON
- CHAP. II KANDY
- CHAP. III MADRAS TO CALCUTTA
- CHAP. IV BENARES
- CHAP. V CASTE
- CHAP. VI MOHAMEDAN CITIES
- CHAP. VII SIMLA
- CHAP. VIII COLONIZATION
- CHAP. IX THE “GAZETTE”
- CHAP. X UMRITSUR
- CHAP. XI LAHORE
- CHAP. XII OUR INDIAN ARMY
- CHAP. XIII RUSSIA
- CHAP. XIV NATIVE STATES
- CHAP. XV SCINDE
- CHAP. XVI OVERLAND EOUTES
- CHAP. XVII BOMBAY
- CHAP. XVIII THE MOHURRUM
- CHAP. XIX ENGLISH LEARNING
- CHAP. XX INDIA
- CHAP. XXI DEPENDENCIES
- CHAP. XXII FRANCE IN THE EAST
- CHAP. XXIII THE ENGLISH
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAP. V - CASTE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PART III
- PART IV
- CHAP. I MARITIME CEYLON
- CHAP. II KANDY
- CHAP. III MADRAS TO CALCUTTA
- CHAP. IV BENARES
- CHAP. V CASTE
- CHAP. VI MOHAMEDAN CITIES
- CHAP. VII SIMLA
- CHAP. VIII COLONIZATION
- CHAP. IX THE “GAZETTE”
- CHAP. X UMRITSUR
- CHAP. XI LAHORE
- CHAP. XII OUR INDIAN ARMY
- CHAP. XIII RUSSIA
- CHAP. XIV NATIVE STATES
- CHAP. XV SCINDE
- CHAP. XVI OVERLAND EOUTES
- CHAP. XVII BOMBAY
- CHAP. XVIII THE MOHURRUM
- CHAP. XIX ENGLISH LEARNING
- CHAP. XX INDIA
- CHAP. XXI DEPENDENCIES
- CHAP. XXII FRANCE IN THE EAST
- CHAP. XXIII THE ENGLISH
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
One of the greatest difficulties with which the British have to contend in Hindostan is how to discover the tendencies, how to follow the changes, of native opinion. Your Hindoo is so complaisant a companion, that, whether he is your servant at threepence a day, or the ruler of the State in which you dwell, he is perpetually striving to make his opinions the reflex of your own. You are engaged in a continual struggle to prevent your views from being seen, in order that you may get at his: in this you always fail; a slight hint is enough for a Hindoo, and, if he cannot find even that much of suggestion in your words, he confines himself to commonplace. We should see in this, not so much one of the forms assumed by the cringing slavishness born of centuries of subjection, not so much an example of Oriental cunning, as of the polish of Eastern manners. Even in our rude country, it is hardly courteous, whatever your opinions, flatly to contradict the man with whom you happen to be talking; with the Hindoo, it is the height of illbreeding so much as to differ from him. The results of the practice are deplorable; our utter ignorance of the secret history of the rebellion of 1857 is an example of its working, for there must have been a time, before discontent ripened into conspiracy, when we might have been advised and warned.
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- Information
- Greater Britain , pp. 206 - 220Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1868