| Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - India - 1905 - 444 pages
...poor endure" and are with us yet • be Thy name a sure /efuge for Thy poor whom men's eyes forget." It is the Indian poor, the Indian peasant, the patient,...suffer by their results, and whom men's eyes, even the eye's of their own countrymen, too often forget, to whom I refer. He has been in the background of... | |
| Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - Great Britain - 1906 - 736 pages
...thy poor endure And are with us yet ; Be thy name a sure Refuge for thy poor, Whom men's eyes forget. It is the Indian poor, the Indian peasant, the patient,...results, and whom men's eyes, even the eyes of their own countrymen, too often forget — to whom I refer. He has been in the background of every policy... | |
| Ramananda Chatterjee - India - 1913 - 422 pages
...what Lord Curzon describes him to be : "The Indian poor, the Indian peasant, the patient, humbled, silent millions, the 80 per cent who subsist by agriculture, who know very little of politics but who profit or suffer by their results, and whom men's eyes, even the eyes of their countrymen,... | |
| George Nathaniel Curzon Marquis of Curzon, Marquess George Nathaniel Curzon Curzon of Kedleston - India - 1907 - 134 pages
...of the people— " But thy poor endure And are with us yet; Be thy name a sure Refuge for thy poor, It is the Indian poor, the Indian peasant, the patient, humble, silent millions, the eighty per cent, who subsist by agriculture, who know very little of policies, but who profit or suffer... | |
| Vickerman Henzell Rutherford - Great Britain - 1927 - 292 pages
...brilliant oratorical efforts Lord Curzon spoke of " the real people of India " in the following terms : " It is the Indian poor, the Indian peasant, the patient,...who subsist by agriculture, who know very little of politics, but who profit or suffer by their results, and whom men's eyes, even the eyes of their own... | |
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