LECTURE VIII.
In the British Empire there is but one land frontier on which warlike preparation must ever be ready. It is the Northwest Frontier of India. True that there is another boundary, even longer, drawn across the American Continent, but there, fortunately, only customs houses are necessary and an occasional police guard. The Northwest Frontier of India, on the other hand, lies through a region whose inhabitants have been recruited throughout the ages by invading warlike races. Except for the Gurkha mountaineers of Nepal, the best soldiers of the Indian Army are derived from the northwest, from the Rajputs, the Sikhs, the Punjabi Musulmans, the Dogra mountaineers north of the Punjab, and the Pathan mountaineers west of the Punjab. The provinces along the frontier, and the Afghan land immediately beyond it, are the one region in all India from which, under some ambitious lead, the attempt might be made to establish a fresh imperial rule by the overthrow of the British Raj. It would not be the freedom of India which would ensue, but an oriental despotism and race domination from the northwest. Such is the teaching of history, and such the obvious fate of the less warlike peoples of India, should the power of Britain be broken either by warfare on the spot, or by the defeat of our navy. Beyond the northwest frontier, moreover, at a greater or less distance are the continental Powers of Europe.
|1.
Political Map of
Northwest India.|
The Indian army and the Indian strategical railways are
therefore organized with special reference to the belt of
territory, extending from northeast to southwest, which lies
beyond the Indian desert and is traversed from end to end
by the Indus River. This frontier belt divides naturally
into two parts. Inland we have the
Punjab, where the rivers, emerging from
their mountain valleys, gradually close
together through the plain to form the
single stream of the lower Indus;
seaward we have Sind, where the Indus divides into
distributaries forming a delta. Sind, as already stated, is a
part of the Bombay Province, with which it is connected by
sea from the Port of Karachi. Of late a railway has
been constructed from Ahmadabad in the main territory
of Bombay, across the southern end of the Desert, to
Hyderabad at the head of the Indus delta. The Punjab
is a separate Province with its own Lieutenant-Governor
resident at Lahore. It was conquered from the Sikhs by a
British army based on Delhi, and therefore ultimately on
Calcutta.
|2.
Map of Lower Asia.|
To understand the significance of the
Northwest Frontier of India we must
look far beyond the immediate boundaries
of the Empire. We have here a map of
Lower Asia. Upon it we see a broad
tract of upland which, commencing in Asia Minor, extends
through Armenia and Persia to include Baluchistan and
Afghanistan. There is thus one continuous belt of plateau
stretching from Europe to the boundary of India. The
eastern end of this belt, that is to say, Persia, Afghanistan,
and Baluchistan, is known as Iran. On all sides save
the northwest and the northeast, the Iranian plateau
descends abruptly to lowlands or to the sea. Southward
and southwestward lie the Arabian Sea and the Persian
Gulf, and the long lowland which is traversed by the rivers
Euphrates and Tigris. Northward, to the east of the
Caspian Sea, is the broad lowland of Turkestan, traversed
by the Rivers Oxus and Jaxartes, draining into the
Sea of Aral. Eastward is the plain of the Indus. The
defence of India from invasion depends in the first place
on the maintenance of British sea power in the Persian
Gulf and along the south coast of Baluchistan, and in the
second place on our refusal to allow the establishment of
alien bases of power on the Iranian plateau, especially on
those parts of it which lie towards the south and east.
|3.
Map of the
Northwest
Frontier.|
In the next map we have on a larger
scale the detail of that part of Iran which
lies nearest to India. Here we see, west
of the Punjab, a great triangular mass of
mountain ridges which splay out westward
and southward from the northeast. These ridges and
the intervening valleys constitute Afghanistan. Flowing
from the Afghan valleys we have on the one hand the
Kabul river, which descends eastward to the Indus, and,
on the other hand, the greater river Helmund, which flows
southwestward into the depressed basin of Seistan, where
it divides into many channels, forming as it were an inland
delta from which the waters are evaporated by the hot air, for
there is no opening to the sea. The valley of the Kabul river
on the one hand, and the oasis of Seistan on the other, might
in the hands of an enemy become bases wherein to prepare
the invasion of India. Therefore, without annexing this
intricate and difficult upland, we have declared it to be the
policy of Britain to exclude from Afghanistan and from
Seistan all foreign power.
Further examination of the map will show that there are two lines, and only two, along which an invasion of India might be conducted. On the one hand, the mountains become very narrow just north of the head of the Kabul River. There in fact a single though lofty ridge, the Hindu Kush, is all that separates the basin of the Oxus from that of the Indus. As we see from the map, low ground is very near on the two sides of the Hindu Kush. The way into India over the passes of the Hindu Kush is known as the Khyber route, from the name of the last defile by which the track descends into the Indian Plain.
If we now look some five hundred miles to the southwest of Kabul, we see that the Afghan mountains come suddenly to an end, and that a pathway leads round their fringe from Herat to the Indus Basin, passing along the border of Seistan. From Herat to beyond Kandahar, this way lies over an upland plain and is easy, but the last part of the journey is through a mountainous district down to the lowland of the Indus. This is the Bolan route, so called from the last gorge towards India. It will be noticed that the Bolan route debouches upon the Indus opposite to the great Indian Desert. Therefore it is that the Khyber route has been the more frequented. It leads directly between the desert and the mountain foot, upon the inner gateway of India at Delhi.
We conquered the Punjab from the Sikhs, but for many centuries it had been ruled by the Musulmans. In the break up of the Mogul Empire invaders had come, during the eighteenth century, from Persia and from Afghanistan, who carried devastation even as far as Delhi. Thus it was that with relative ease the Sikhs as contemporaries of the Marathas established a dominion in the helpless Punjab. They extended their rule also into the mountains of Kashmir, north of Lahore.
Let us commence our survey of the northwest at Dehra Dun, which is placed in a mountain valley among the foot hills of the Himalayas, not far from the hill station of Mussoorie, of which we heard in the last lecture. Then from Dehra Dun we will travel two hundred miles northwestward, crossing the Beas, one of the five rivers of the Punjab, to Amritsar, the holy city of the Sikhs. Fifty miles west of Amritsar, on the Ravi, another of the Indus tributaries, is Lahore, the traditional capital of the Punjab. From Lahore onward we traverse irrigated strips of fertile ground, with sandy plains intervening, with a scanty herbage for a few camels. Then follows a broken and more desolate country in the north of the Punjab. So we come to the Indus itself, and beyond this, nearly three hundred miles from Lahore, to the military station of Peshawar, the last Indian city on the great track leading northwestward from Calcutta, through Allahabad and Delhi. Not far from Peshawar is the Khyber Pass.
The Khyber is protected by its own hill tribes. We have enlisted them on the side of law and order by enrolling them into military forces, just as the Scottish Highlanders were enrolled in the British army in the 18th century.
Then leaving Peshawar we will visit Quetta, some five hundred miles southwestward, and see there the second great centre of British force on the Frontier. It has been established to command the Bolan route to Kandahar and Herat. The whole army in India is organised with reference to these two points, Peshawar and Quetta, or in other words, the Khyber and the Bolan. There are many other passes in the frontier mountains, but they offer merely loopways from the two main routes.
|4.
12th Bengal
Infantry.|
|5.
Bombay
Mountain
Battery.|
|6.
Heavy Battery
in Elephant
Draught.|
The Indian forces are now grouped into a Northern
and a Southern army. The Northern army is distributed
southeastward from Peshawar past Delhi
and Allahabad to Calcutta, so that all the
forces along that long line may be regarded
as supporting the brigades on the Khyber
front. The Southern army is similarly
posted for the reinforcement of Quetta.
It is distributed in the Bombay Presidency
and immediately around. The conditions
of the defence of India have of course
been vitally changed by the construction
of the Northwestern Railway from the
port of Karachi through the Indus basin,
with its two branches towards the Bolan and the Khyber.
To-day that defence could be conducted over the seas
directly from Britain through Karachi, so
that the desert of Rajputana would lie
between the defending forces and the
main community of India within.
|7.
18th P. W. Tiwana
Horse.|
|8.
Gurkha Rifles:
Physical Drill.|
|9.
The Same—Bayonet
Practice.|
|10.
32nd Mountain
Battery, Advancing
Down Hill.|
|11.
The Same—Retiring
Up Hill.|
|12.
Battery in Action.|
As we start for Dehra Dun let us stop
for a moment on the ridge at Delhi to
see a squadron of the 18th Prince of
Wales’s Tiwana Horse, recruited partly
from among the Sikhs and partly from
the Musulmans. Then at Dehra Dun
we have the Gurkha Rifles. We see
them at physical drill and then at bayonet
practice. At the same place we visit a
battery of Mountain Artillery, for Dehra
Dun is in the Terai, at the foot of the
Himalayas. Mountain batteries are much
utilised in operations over the broken
and hilly country towards the Northwest
Frontier. The men are Punjabis;
and it will be noticed that the guns are
carried by mules. Here we see the
battery advancing down hill, and here we
see it retiring up hill. Then we have a
mountain gun in action.
From Dehra Dun we proceed to Amritsar, the chief centre of the Sikh religion, which resulted from a reformation of Hinduism in the middle of the fifteenth century. It is therefore modern indeed as compared with the parent religion itself. The Sikhs abandoned idolatry, and also distinctions of caste. The word Sikh means “disciple.” In their origin a religious sect, the Sikhs developed into a powerful military commonwealth, which rose to great position in the Punjab and surrounding lands as the Mogul strength decayed at Delhi. The Sikhs only succumbed to the British after two wars, fought in 1846 and 1849, which were among the severest in the whole history of British India. Yet they remained loyal during the Mutiny.
|13.
The Causeway and
the Golden Temple,
Amritsar.|
|14.
The Golden Temple,
Amritsar.|
|15.
The Akal Bungah,
Amritsar.|
The Emperor Akbar granted to the Sikhs a site for their
capital by the shore of a sacred tank, and this capital, Amritsar,
has now grown to be a city of over 150,000 inhabitants, the
third most wealthy and populous of the Punjab. It is
surpassed only by Delhi and Lahore, and Delhi has been
included in the Punjab only in recent times, and for
convenience of administration. In this view we see the
famous Golden Temple, built in the
centre of the sacred tank. The
bridge across the water leading to the
entry is of marble. The doors of
the gateway are of silver without, and on
the inner side of wood inlaid with ivory.
The lower part of the walls of the temple itself are of white
marble inlaid with jaspar and mother-of-pearl, but the upper
part is plated with gilded copper. In the middle of the
temple, under a canopy, is the Grant Sahib, the sacred
book of the Sikhs, covered with a cloth
of gold. Here we have another view
of the Golden Temple seen across
the tank, and behind it is the Clock
Tower. Opposite the chief entry to
the temple is a square surrounded by
public buildings, of which the most
important is the Akal Bungah, wherein
are performed the ceremonies of initiation
and investiture of the Sikhs.
|16.
School of Sikh and
Hindu Children.|
|17.
Street Scene,
Amritsar.|
|18.
Street Conjurer,
Amritsar.|
A few scenes follow showing phases of life at Amritsar.
Here we see a part of the tesselated
pavement which surrounds the sacred
tank, and a school of Hindu and Sikh
children. Next is a street scene showing
the gateway leading to another sacred tank,
and here is a conjurer with a cobra
entwined about his neck. Amritsar has
to-day become an important manufacturing
city. From raw materials brought
by the Khyber route, from the central
Asian markets, are here manufactured
shawls of the famous Kashmir design,
and also fine silks, embroideries, carpets,
carvings, and metal work of various kinds.
|19.
Lahore, from roof of
Shish Mahal.|
|20.
West Gate, Jama
Masjid, Lahore.|
Let us now go on to Lahore, the ancient and the modern
capital of the Punjab. Here is a view taken
from the roof of the Shish Mahal, or Palace
of Mirrors, in the Fort of Lahore,
looking towards the southwest, over the
Jama Masjid, towards the River Ravi, on whose left bank the
city stands. Next is seen the fine west
gate of the Jama Masjid, a mosque built
by the Emperor Aurangzeb, which contains
relics of Muhammad.
|21.
Zamzamah,
Lahore.|
|22.
Sarai, Lahore.|
|23.
The Same,
showing Wazir
Khan’s House.|
|24.
Old Houses,
Lahore.|
Do you remember “Kim” in Rudyard
Kipling’s book? We have in this view
the Zamzamah, the old gun under the
tree on which Kim sat in the first chapter.
Astride on its muzzle is an urchin, just like what Kim
must have been. Here is the Sarai, a
quadrangle about sixty yards square, with
round arched verandahs on all sides.
Note the well in the centre. Next is the
actual house where Wazir Khan, Kipling’s
Mahbub Ali, used to sleep. Beyond
may be seen horses brought for sale.
The Sarai belongs to-day to the Maharaja of Kashmir, who
obtains a revenue from the fees paid by the horsedealers
using it. Near by we have a busy
street scene, showing old houses belonging
to Hindu merchants.
|25.
The Court of
Justice, Lahore.|
|26.
Mayo School of Art,
Lahore.|
|27.
The same—Wood-working.|
|28.
The Same—Metal-working.|
|29.
Statuette of
Buddha.|
At Lahore there are a number of really
handsome modern buildings. We have in
this view the Court of Justice, situated in
the chief street, the Mall. Next is the
fine building of the Lahore School of
Art, showing students sketching out of
doors, and then a number of Punjabis in
the wood-working room of the school.
Here is the metal-working department.
At the back of the room some senior
students are finishing a large lamp in
hammered brass-work, which was afterwards
exhibited in London. The Lahore Museum, a corner
of which we saw just now in the view of the “Kim” gun,
is another fine building, containing among other curiosities a
statuette of Buddha after his forty-nine
days’ fast, excavated at Sikri near Peshawar.
This statuette, some three feet high
and two feet broad, is one of the finest
examples of ancient sculpture found in India. It is carved
with extreme delicacy and refinement, and is supposed to
date back to about the first century of the Christian era.
|30.
Bridge of Boats
over the Ravi, near
Lahore.|
|31.
Jehangir’s tomb.|
We will drive out from Lahore to the west of the city
on the high road to Peshawar. We pass the Musulman
cemetery and the Hindu burning ground, and then reach
the banks of the Ravi. A bridge of boats
crosses the river a little below the railway
bridge. Here we turn aside from the
Peshawar road and reach Shahdara, where
is the tomb of the Emperor Jehangir. In
this picture we have a close view of part
of it, showing the inlaid marble. Near
by is the ruined tomb of Jehangir’s wife,
Nur Jehan. It was probably never finished, and has
been neglected.
|32.
Edwardes Gate,
Peshawar.|
|33.
Kissa Kahani,
Peshawar.|
|34.
Police Station,
Peshawar.|
|35.
Silk Market,
Peshawar.|
|36.
In the Silk Market,
Peshawar.|
From Lahore we travel by the Northwestern Railway
to Peshawar, a distance of nearly three hundred
miles. Peshawar, as we have already learned, is the most
important garrison city on the Northwest Frontier,
and the capital of the recently created Northwest
Frontier Province. It has about a
hundred thousand inhabitants, chiefly
Musulmans. Here we see the Edwardes
Gate, with its fine pointed arch, and
passing through it we enter the Kissa
Kahani, the Lombard Street of Peshawar.
The Edwardes Gate may be
seen from within at the end of the
street. Here is the Kotwali, or Police
Station, and just within the gateway of
the Kotwali is the Silk Market. Peshawar
is a most important commercial centre
on the great road from Samarkand and
Bokhara in Central Asia, through Kabul
and the Khyber, to Lahore and Delhi.
In the bazaar we find representatives
of many Asiatic races. Here we see
skeins of Chinese silk, red and white
and yellow, hung out in the sun to dry
after being dyed. Near by are the stalls of bankers
and money-changers, which are sometimes raided by the
wild tribesmen visiting Peshawar from the neighbourhood
of the Khyber Pass.
|37.
Ghor Khatri,
Peshawar.|
|38.
Peshawar from the
Ghor Khatri,
looking north.|
|39.
The Same, looking
west.|
In the northeastern corner of Peshawar
is the famous Ghor Khatri, which stands
on a piece of rising ground commanding
a fine view over the whole city. Here is
a part of the building, with a bullock cart in front. The
Ghor Khatri was successively a Buddhist Monastery and
a Hindu temple, and is now used as
municipal offices and as the official
residence of the agents of the Ameer
of Afghanistan when they visit Peshawar.
We climb to the roof and look upon
the city beneath. A second view is in
the direction of Jamrud and the Khyber.
|40.
Gymnastic Class,
Government High
School, Peshawar.|
|41.
Lowest Class, same
School.|
Here in Peshawar, on the very border of British rule, it
is interesting to see the progress of western education.
This is the Government High School.
A class is in the playground under
gymnastic instruction. The boys are
mostly Musulmans, though a few Hindus
may be distinguished by their caps
in the place of turbans. This is the
lowest class of the school, and is being
taught reading and writing by a native
master. Notice that the boys’ shoes have been taken off.
|42.
Jamrud.|
|43.
Khyber Rifles
drilling.|
|44.
Khyber Rifles
marching.|
|45.
Zakka Khel Afridis.|
|46.
The Sarai, Jamrud.|
|47.
Caravan, near
Jamrud.|
|48.
Ali Masjid.|
|49.
Ali Masjid, nearer
view.|
|50.
A Subadar, 59th
Sind Rifles.|
Jamrud, at the immediate entrance to
the Khyber, lies some nine miles west of
Peshawar. Here is a distant view of it
from the Peshawar road. To the right
can just be seen the Fort, and to the
left Jamrud Village. Next we see a
company of the Khyber Rifles, photographed
at Jamrud, and here the same
company marching. By way of striking
contrast, are a group of the Zakka Khel
Afridis in their native dress. They are
the raw material from which the Khyber
Riflemen are made. Typical wild tribesmen
of the hills, they have been enlisted in the British Army
to keep them out of mischief, and also to assist in repelling
raids by their fellow-tribesmen, who continue to dwell amid
the hill fastnesses of the region. The Afridis, of whom the
Zakka Khel is a clan, seem perfectly well content, provided
that there is fighting, which they love for its own sake. Here
we see the Sarai at Jamrud, where all
caravans going into India or returning to
Central Asia halt for the night. The
men in this picture are mostly Kabulis,
with long-haired Bactrian camels from Central Asia,
stronger and finer than the Indian species. These camels
are laden with tea, sugar, and general
supplies. Outside Jamrud we see a
caravan of Indian camels taking stores
back to Peshawar after operations in the Khyber against the
hill tribes. Beyond Jamrud the road
enters the Khyber, with the sweeping
curve seen in this view. The Fort of Ali
Masjid, nearly three thousand feet above
sea level, crowns a steeply sloping hill on
the crest of the path between Jamrud
and Landi Kotal, where begins the descent
into Afghanistan. Here is a nearer view,
with the tents of an expeditionary force at the foot
of the Fort. It shows the continuation of the way in
the direction of Landi Kotal. Notice how steep are the
cliffs and how narrow the Pass at this point. Beneath the
Fort, in the face of the hill, are seen caves
in which dwell during the winter months
the wild clan known as the Kuchi Khel.
Finally, we have a portrait, painted in the
camp at Ali Masjid, of Nasar Khan, a Subadar, or native
officer, of the 59th Sind Rifles.
We now leave the Khyber region and, following the Indus for some six hundred miles, we travel southward through a land which was not very long ago a desert. To-day, as the result of a great investment of British capital, irrigation works have changed the whole aspect of the country. The provinces of the Punjab and Sind have hitherto been regarded as significant chiefly in relation to the defence of the Northwest Frontier of India. They have now no less importance when considered in their economic development. The plain of the Indus has become one of the chief wheatfields of the British Empire, for wheat is the principal crop in the Punjab, in parts of Sind, and outside the basin of the Indus itself, in the districts of the United Provinces which lie about Agra. The wheat production of India on an average of years is five times as great as that of the United Kingdom, and about half as great as that of the United States. In one recent year at least, the export of wheat from India to the United Kingdom has exceeded that from the United States to the United Kingdom.
The brown waste of the plains of the Punjab becomes after the winter rains a waving sea of green wheat extending over thousands of square miles. Cultivation now spreads far beyond the area within which the rainfall alone suffices. The lower Punjab and the central strip of Sind have been converted into a second Egypt. Though the navigation of the Indus is naturally inferior to that of the Ganges, yet communication has been maintained by boat from the Punjab to the sea from Greek times downward. The Indus flotilla of steamboats has, however, suffered fatally from the competition of the Northwestern Railway, and the wheat exported from Karachi is now almost wholly rail-borne.
|51.
The Lansdowne
Bridge.|
|52.
The Same.|
|53.
Khwaja Khizir
Island.|
Running southward through the fertile strip, not very far
from the left or western bank of the river, the railway
leaves the Punjab and enters Sind. At Rohri, one of
the hottest places in all India in the summer time, a
line branches northwestward to Quetta and Chaman, on
the frontier of Afghanistan. Sukkur stands opposite to
Rohri on the right bank of the river, and the Lansdowne
Railway Bridge between these two towns is perhaps the
most remarkable bridge in India. It was built between
1887 and 1889, and about three thousand tons of steel and iron
were employed in its construction. It is eight hundred and
forty feet in length, with two magnificent
spans. We see in this slide a view of the
Rohri end of it, taken from Suttian, an old
nunnery founded for women who preferred
seclusion rather than the funeral pyre. The Hindu custom
was to burn the wife or wives with the husband’s body,
until the British Government intervened to prevent the
practice. One end of the town of Rohri, with its tall
grey wattle and daub buildings, can be seen under the
bridge. A train is upon the bridge, and in front are
some Pala fishers, sailing on metal chatties into which
they put the fish as they catch them. This is another
view of the bridge seen from Rohri
itself. We are here in the very heart of
the rainless region. During twelve years
there have only been six showers at Rohri! A great
engineering scheme is now under consideration for
damming the Indus near this point so as to raise the level
of the water in the upper reaches of the river. In this
manner the irrigation canals would be fed not only in time
of flood, as at present, but in the dry season as well. Near
Rohri, in the middle of the Indus channel,
is Khwaja Khizir Island, on which stands
an ancient Hindu temple. In the foreground
of the picture near the water’s
edge are Sindi boatmen mending their sails.
From Sukkur, passing through Shikarpur and Jacobabad, the railway traverses the desert to the foot of the hills, and then ascends to Quetta either by the Mashkaf—the actual line of the Bolan having been abandoned—or by a longer loop line, the Harnai, which runs to the Peshin valley. The latter is the usual way. By the Mashkaf route the line is carried over a boulder-strewn plain about half a mile broad in the bottom of a gorge with steeply rising heights on either side. Here and there the strip of lower ground is trenched and split by deep canyons. At first the line follows the Mashkaf river, and the gradients are not very severe, but once Hirok, at the source of the Bolan river is passed, a gradient of one in twenty-five begins, and two powerful engines are required to drag the train up. The steep bounding ridges now close in on either side with cliffs rising almost perpendicularly to several hundred feet. Occasional block-houses high up amid the crags defend the Pass.
|54.
The Chappar Rift.|
|55.
The Same.|
The gradients of the Harnai route are not quite so steep as
those of the Mashkaf. Should either way be blocked or
carried away by landslips or floods the other would be
available. The Harnai line passes through
the Chappar Rift, a precipitous gorge in a
great mass of limestone. In this view we
are approaching the Rift from Mangi, and
then we have a view looking back from
the middle of the Rift. As will be
seen, the railway runs across high bridges and through
tunnels in the mountain masses.
|56.
Native Bazaar,
Quetta.|
Quetta occupies a very important strategical position,
about a mile above sea level, in the midst of a small plain
surrounded by great mountain ridges rising to a height of
two miles and more. Irrigation works have been constructed
in the Quetta plain, which is now an oasis among desert
mountains, and has a population of some thirty thousand,
including many Afghans. The Agent General for British
Baluchistan resides there. The town, with its outposts,
is of course very strongly fortified, commanding as it does
the railways leading southeastward to the Indus, and
the Khojak Pass leading northwestward to Chaman and
Kandahar. Here we have a scene in
the native bazaar, with Hindus performing
a festival dance.
|57.
Street in Chaman.|
From Quetta the railway is carried northwestward,
through the Khojak tunnel, for another hundred and
twenty miles to Chaman on the frontier, where is a
British outpost. Here is a street in
Chaman, with two old Pathans. Chaman
is at present the terminus of the railway.
The material is, however, kept ready for
its continuation, in case of need, to Kandahar, in Afghanistan,
seventy miles further. From Kandahar through
Herat to the rail-head of the Russian Trans-Caspian
Railway is some four hundred miles. By this route, did
circumstances allow, a connection might be made, giving
through railway communication between Europe and India.
|58.
The Proclamation
of the Queen-Empress
at the
Delhi Durbar,
1st Jan., 1877.|
At this last outpost of British Power we complete our
journey through the great Indian Empire. It was with no
intention of Empire that a few London merchants formed
themselves into an East India Company in the days of
Queen Elizabeth. It was with no great force of white
soldiers that the conquest was in after centuries effected,
but by the organisation of Indian strength in a time of
disorder, due to the downfall of the Mogul Empire at
Delhi. Province was added to province under the British
Raj of no set design and ambition, but for defensive
reasons under the threat of French or Maratha or Sikh
rivalry. In the great Mutiny the system of power and
administration, thus upbuilt almost casually, was tested,
and it survived the test, but with a fundamental change.
The East India Company was dissolved, and the
British Government made itself directly responsible for
peace and order in the Indian Continent.
The proclamation by which Queen Victoria
assumed the rule of India solemnly
promised that in the administration of
the country due regard should be paid
to the ancient rights, usages, and customs
of India. The change which was made in 1858, after
the Mutiny, was completed in 1877, when at a great durbar
of the princes of India, held at Delhi, Queen Victoria was
proclaimed Empress of India.
|59.
The Same.|
The British Raj in India is an organisation
unparalleled in history, for the
Roman Empire consisted of provinces
grouped round the Imperial City, but
Britain is a quarter of the globe removed
from India. Our power ultimately rests
on our command of the seas and on the
justice of our administration. When either of these fail, the
British position in India will crumble. Within our duty of
justice is included the generous but firmly-directed readjustment
of the methods of Indian government, so as to
adapt them to the now changing conditions of oriental
society.
|60.
The Same.|
The responsibility for India is, indeed, a great one. It
is idle to ask whether our forefathers should have assumed
it. We could not withdraw now without throwing India
into disorder, and causing untold suffering among three
hundred million of our fellow human beings. Yet the
administration of such an Empire calls for virtues in our
race certainly not less than those needed for our own self-government.
Above all, we require knowledge of India,
and sympathy with the points of view begotten of
oriental history.
| Viscount Canning, to March, | 1862 |
| Earl of Elgin, | 1862-3 |
| Sir John Lawrence, | 1864-9 |
| Earl of Mayo, | 1869-72 |
| Lord Northbrook, | 1872-6 |
| Lord Lytton, | 1876-80 |
| Marquess of Ripon, | 1880-84 |
| Earl of Dufferin, | 1884-88 |
| Marquess of Lansdowne, | 1888-94 |
| Earl of Elgin, | 1894-99 |
| Lord Curzon of Kedleston, | 1899-1905 |
| Earl of Minto, | 1905-1910 |
| Lord Hardinge, | 1910 |
Note (I).—Many of the artistic and other objects mentioned in the preceding pages can be better appreciated after a visit to the Indian Museum at South Kensington.
Note (II).—The thanks of the Committee are due for a few of the slides to Colonel Frederick Firebrace, R.E., Managing Director of the Great Indian Peninsula Railway Company, and to Mr. A. L. Hetherington, of the Board of Education.
- Transcriber’s Notes:
- Additional line spacing has been added before paragraphs with side notes to make more room for the them.
- Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant form was found in this book.