The Coming Struggle for India: Being an Account of the Encroachments of Russia in Central Asia, and of the Difficulties Sure to Arise Therefrom to EnglandCassell, 1885 - 214 頁 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 25 筆
第 11 頁
... Britain . Vitkovitch was listened to with particular attention ; but owing to the great distance Russian outposts then stood from Afghanistan , all that the Envoy could afford to give at that time consisted in empty pro- mises , totally ...
... Britain . Vitkovitch was listened to with particular attention ; but owing to the great distance Russian outposts then stood from Afghanistan , all that the Envoy could afford to give at that time consisted in empty pro- mises , totally ...
第 12 頁
... Britain in the East . The Khans , Emirs , and Begs exulted with joy over the victory of their co - religionists , the Afghans . Mohammedan barbarism thought itself again safe against the threatening attacks of our western culture , and ...
... Britain in the East . The Khans , Emirs , and Begs exulted with joy over the victory of their co - religionists , the Afghans . Mohammedan barbarism thought itself again safe against the threatening attacks of our western culture , and ...
第 57 頁
... Britain in that ominous darkness in which she is now actually groping . When , in the beginning of the present century , Napoleon I. united with Russia , and the plan of crippling England through an attack on India first appeared , the ...
... Britain in that ominous darkness in which she is now actually groping . When , in the beginning of the present century , Napoleon I. united with Russia , and the plan of crippling England through an attack on India first appeared , the ...
第 60 頁
... Britain , whose power and greatness he knew so well , if Russia , by her secret and public missions , had not fomented his hatred and encouraged the otherwise cautious ruler of Afghanistan to measure swords with England . During this ...
... Britain , whose power and greatness he knew so well , if Russia , by her secret and public missions , had not fomented his hatred and encouraged the otherwise cautious ruler of Afghanistan to measure swords with England . During this ...
第 65 頁
... Britain . Prince Gort- schakoff having been asked by Lord Clarendon about the ulterior plans of Russia , gave full assur- ance that his sovereign , the Czar , looked upon åf- ghanistan as completely outside the sphere within which ...
... Britain . Prince Gort- schakoff having been asked by Lord Clarendon about the ulterior plans of Russia , gave full assur- ance that his sovereign , the Czar , looked upon åf- ghanistan as completely outside the sphere within which ...
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常見字詞
able Afghan Afghanistan Akhal-Tekke Alikhanoff amongst Andkhoi annexation arms army Ashkabad Asiatic Badghis become Bokhara Britain British Caspian Caspian Sea Caucasus Central Asia century civilisation conquered conqueror conquest Cossacks culture Czar defence desert district Djenghis East eastern Emir England English Ersari ethnical Europe European fact famous fanatic foreign frontier gate of India Geok-Tepe Government Gurgan Herat Heri-Rud Hindoo hitherto idea Kabul Kandahar Khan Khiva Khokand Khushk Kirghises left bank Lessar Liberal means Merv miles military Mohammed Mohammedan Moslem Mountains Murghab Muscovite nation native nearly neighbour nomads Oxus Paropamisus party Penjdeh Persia Petersburg political politicians portion possession Prince railway rival rule ruler Russian officers Sarakhs Sarik secure Shir Ali Khan Sir Peter Lumsden so-called soon speak statesmen Suleiman range sympathies Tartar Tashkend three khanates Timur tion trade travellers Turko Turkoman country Turkomans Uzbegs western whilst whole Yaxartes Yomuts
熱門章節
第 60 頁 - to push forward its encroachments as fast and as far as the apathy or want of firmness of other Governments would allow it to go, but always to stop and retire when it was met with decided resistance, and then to wait for the next favourable opportunity to make another spring on its intended victim. In furtherance of this policy, the Russian
第 61 頁 - Petersburg Government adopts them as a fait accompli which it did not intend, but cannot in honour recede from. If the local agents fail, they are disavowed and recalled, and the language previously held is appealed to as a proof that the agents have overstepped their instructions. This was exemplified in the treaty of Unkiar-Skelessi, and in the exploits of
第 61 頁 - in Persia. Orloff succeeded in extorting the treaty of Unkiar-Skelessi from the Turks, and it was represented as a sudden thought, suggested by the circumstances of the time and place, and not the result of any previous instructions; but, having been done, it could not be undone. On the other hand,
第 176 頁 - annas) each, or about the average earnings of five working days. Traders pay 3s. 3d. (26 annas) each. But any native of India who does not trade or own land, and who chooses to drink no spirituous liquor or to use no English cloth or iron, need pay in taxation only about 7d. a year on account of the salt he consumes
第 84 頁 - to the Persian frontier, in the neighbourhood of Sarakhs, should be formally and definitely laid down, and that he had instructed Prince Lobanoff to endeavour to induce her Majesty's Government to agree to the adoption of measures for that purpose.
第 147 頁 - It will be in the end our duty to organise masses of Asiatic cavalry, and to hurl them into India, under the banner of blood and pillage, as a vanguard, as it were, thus reviving the times of Tamerlane.
第 157 頁 - in India, except that great majority of the cultivators who will go on cultivating without talking politics till the crack of doom ? Every Englishman, from the Governor-General downwards, will be disquieted ; they will feel that a great foreign Power has
第 61 頁 - failed in getting possession of Herat, in consequence of our vigorous measures of resistance ; and as they had failed they were disavowed and recalled, and the language previously held at
第 63 頁 - of 53 companies of infantry, 25 sotnias of Cossacks, 54 guns, 6 mortars, 2 mitrailleuses, 5 rocket divisions, and 19,200 camels, with a complement of about 14,000 men,
第 157 頁 - on his own side of the fence, and he may make no seeming attempt to come over; but you know he is there for no good, and you do your best to dislodge him, and do not rest