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" The Hindoo inhabitants are a race of men, generally speaking, not more distinguished by their lofty stature . . . than they are for some of the finest qualities of the mind ; they are brave, generous, and humane, and their truth is as remarkable as their... "
Speeches and Papers on Indian Questions, 1891 and 1902 - Page 108
by Romesh Chunder Dutt - 1902 - 203 pages
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Reports ... Together with the Minutes of Evidence ...

Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Select Committee on the East India Company - 1813 - 746 pages
...(1 speak more particularly of the Rajpoots, who form a considerable proportion of this population) than they are for some of the finest qualities of...and their truth is as remarkable as their courage ; the great proportion of the army of the Bengal establishment is composed of these men, and it is...
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The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, Volume 25

Great Britain. Parliament - 1813 - 808 pages
...(I speak more particularly of the Rajpoots, who form a considerable proportion of this population) than they are for some of the finest qualities of...and their truth is as remarkable as their courage ; the great proportion of the иппу of the Ненца! establishment is composed of these men, and...
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Reports ... Together with the Minutes of Evidence ...

Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Select Committee on the East India Company - 1813 - 826 pages
...the territories subject to the Company and the Nabob of Oude and the Douab, the Hindoo inhabitants are brave, generous and humane, and their truth is as remarkable as their courage ; most of the Bengal array consists of these men, and in that army there are few corporal punishments,...
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The Quarterly Review, Volumes 9-10

1813 - 1102 pages
...those of the interior, " are not more distinguished by their lofty stature and robust frame of body, than they are for some of the finest qualities of the mind;" that " they are brave, generous, and humane; and their truth as remarkable as their courage."J By a...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 9

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1813 - 540 pages
...those of the interior, " are not more distinguished by their lofty stature and robust frame of body, than they are for some of the finest qualities of the mind ;" that " they are brave, generous, and humane ; and their truth as remarkable as their courage."^...
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The Eclectic review. vol. 1-New [8th], Volume 30

1828 - 602 pages
...(I speak more particularly of the Rajpoots, who form a considerable proportion of this population,) than they are for some of the finest qualities of...and their truth is as remarkable as their courage. The great proportion of the army of the Bengal establishmcnt is composed of these men ; and it is remarkable...
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The Modern Traveller. A Popular Description, Geographical, Historical, and ...

Josiah Conder - 1828 - 412 pages
...(I speak more particularly of the Rajpoots, who form a considerable proportion of this population,) than they are for some of the finest qualities of...and their truth is as remarkable as their courage. The great proportion of the army of the Bengal establishment is composed of these men ; and it is remarkable...
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Lectures on British India: Delivered in the Friends' Meeting-house in ...

George Thompson - 1840 - 222 pages
...(I speak more particularly of the Rajpoots, who form a considerable proportion of this population,) than they are for some of the finest qualities of...and their truth is as remarkable as their co'urage ; the great proportion of the army of the Bengal establishmen is composed of these men, ami it is remarkable...
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The History of British India, Volume 1

James Mill - 1840 - 650 pages
...a race of men, generally speaking, not more distinguished by their lofty stature and robust frame, than they are for some of the finest qualities of the mind — they are brave, generous, humane, and their truth is as remarkable as their courage." At a subsequent examination he bears witness...
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British India, Its Races and Its History Considered with Reference ..., Volume 2

John Malcolm Forbes Ludlow - 1858 - 414 pages
...— the men of Benares, Oude, and the Dooab, but more- especially of the Rajpoots — says, that " they are brave, generous, and humane ; and their truth is as remarkable as their courage." Sir Thomas Munro notes amongst the Hindoos, " above all, a treatment of the female sex full of confidence,...
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