| Robert Montgomery Martin - 1832 - 432 pages
...trade of India to England, — a trade which (as the Court of Directors justly say) — " exhibits the gloomy picture of the effects of a commercial revolution productive of much present suffering to numerous classes in India; chase, the Company establish a character for British... | |
| 1842 - 498 pages
...pieces of like goods. The consequence is that the report of the Governor General of India says : " The sympathy of the court is deeply excited by the...board of trade, exhibiting the gloomy picture of the eft'ects of a commercial revolution, productive of go much suffering to numerous classes in India,... | |
| Benjamin Edwards Green, Duff Green - 1866 - 266 pages
...famine than were emancipated in the West Indies. The governorgeneral of India, in his report, said : " The sympathy of the court is deeply excited by the...of a commercial revolution, productive of so much suffering to numerous classes in India, and hardly to be paralleled in the history of commerce." WHY... | |
| Duff Green - 1866 - 294 pages
...famine than were emancipated in the West Indies. The governorgeneral of India, in his report, said : " The sympathy of the court is deeply excited by the report of the board of trade, esliibiting the gloomy picture of the effects of a commercial revolution, productive of so much suffering... | |
| Romesh Chunder Dutt - 1904 - 658 pages
...Home Consumption. For Re-export. 1838 . . . Pieces. l6,OOO Pieces. 310,000 1839 . . . 38,000 352,000 that India ought to be admitted as one of our own...hardly to be paralleled in the history of commerce."] 1 But Mr. Brocklehurst was not convinced. The use of Indian silk handkerchiefs in England troubled... | |
| Romesh Chunder Dutt - 1908 - 666 pages
.... . . For Home Consumption. Pieces. l6,OOO For Re-export. Piecea. 310,000 1839 . . . 38,000 352,000 that India ought to be admitted as one of our own...suffering to numerous classes in India, and hardly to bs paralleled in the history of commerce."] 1 But Mr. Brocklehurst was not convinced. The use of Indian... | |
| Ainslie Thomas Embree, Carol Gluck - 1997 - 1048 pages
...Cotton piece goods, for so many ages the staple manufacture of India seem thus forever lost. . . . The sympathy of the Court is deeply excited by the...Trade exhibiting the gloomy picture of the effects of the commercial revolution, productive of so much suffering to numerous classes in India, and hardly... | |
| Romesh Chunder Dutt - 2000 - 656 pages
...[And then the witness quoted the views of the Court of Directors, stated in Lord William Bcntinck's minute of May 30, 1829: "The sympathy of the Court...hardly to be paralleled in the history of commerce."] l But Mr. Brocklehurst was not convinced. The use of Indian silk handkerchiefs in England troubled... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons - 1832 - 510 pages
...the diminished cost of the raw material in England, and of the rivalry of British silk handkerchiefs. The sympathy of the Court is deeply excited by the...hardly to be paralleled in the history of commerce. If all the ancient articles of the manufacturing produce of India are swept away, and no new ones created... | |
| 1841 - 588 pages
...diminished cost of the raw material in England, and of ' the rivalry of British silk handkerchiefs. The sympathy of the ' Court is deeply excited by the...the gloomy picture of the effects of a commercial re' volution, productive of so much suffering to numerous classes ' in India, and hardly to be paralleled... | |
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