42 THE ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE V 15. The Importance of the Law in the Development of 16. Codification of Laws in British India : Sir Courtenay 17. The Anomalies of the Supreme Court: James Mill. 18. The Relations between Europeans and Indians in the Courts : Board of Directors 19. Agitation in Calcutta : T. B. Macaulay 21. The Training of Civil Servants at Haileybury: ✓ 22. The Training of Civil Servants in India : (i) Lord William Bentinck, (ii) Sir Charles Metcalfe 23. The Efficiency of the Civil Service: Lord William 24. The Competitive System : T. B. Macaulay 25. The Employment of Indians in the Public Services : (i) Sir Thomas Munro, (ii) Sir John Malcolm, 26. The Removal of Disqualifications : Court of . PAGE 96 THE SUPPRESSION OF INHUMAN CUSTOMS-continued 30. The Profession of Thugi : J. W. Kaye 31. Thugs at Work : Sir W. Sleeman IIO THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM 34. The Introduction of Western Learning : Raja Ram 35. Education in Bombay: Mountstuart Elphinstone . 36. A Great Departure in Educational Policy : (i) T. B. Macaulay, (ii) Government Resolution, (iii) 37. Western Learning and Political Discontent: Sir 38. The Organisation of the New System: Annual Report of the Committee of Education 39. Vernacular Education : W. Adam 40. Discipline in a Vernacular School : Calcutta 42. Strict Control over the Press : Government Cor- 43. Dangers of a Free Press in India : (i) Mountstuart Elphinstone, (ii) Sir Thomas Munro 44. The Press in India in 1831 : James Sutherland 45. The Benefits of a Free Press : Raja Ram Mohan Roy 49. Justification of the System of Double Govern- ment : Petition of the East India Company 50. Criticism of the System of Double Government : 51. A Defence of the Company's Government : J. Mill 52. The Future Government of India : John Bright . 1858 171 175 NOTE. Messrs. Chatto and Windus (Mr. R. C. Dutt's England and India). The Delegates of the Clarendon Press (Sir Courtenay Ilbert's The Government Messrs. Longmans, Green and Co. (Sir G. 0. Trevelyan's Life and Letters Messrs. Macmillan and Co., Ltd. (M. Chailley's Administrative Problems THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN INDIAN POLICY CHAPTER I THE FOUNDATIONS OF AN INDIAN POLICY It was not until the long struggle between the Mahratta and the British powers came to an end in 1818 that there was any real opportunity of evolving an Indian policy. Hitherto, the British in India had been employed for the most part in defending their territory against attacks from outside and in establishing the rule of law and order without which progress of any kind was impossible. But, after the battle of Kirkee, a long period of peace ensued such as had not been known in India for centuries, and which was not seriously interrupted until the outbreak of the first Sikh war in 1845. There were wars at that time, it is true, in Afghanistan, in Sind, and in Burma, but these scarcely affected the life of the country. It was during this period that the British rulers in India applied themselves to the formulation of an Indian policy, which was remarkable not only for its insight but also as being the work of a number of men who combined the gifts of statecraft and scholarship. They had both the power to act and the capacity to write. The records of the period therefore are replete with incident and wisdom. And it happened that there were also in England statesmen who were anxious to bring forward measures of reform which had long been delayed by years of warfare. The similarity between the B history of the two countries has been emphasised by Mr. Romesh Chander Dutt in the following words : An Age of Peaceful Progress (Chatto & Windus.) Never was there any period when Europe and India made more real progress within the lifetime of one generation than during the twenty years which succeeded the Napoleonic wars and the last Mahratta wars. Castlereagh? destroyed himself in 1822. He was succeeded as leader in the House of Commons by the noble-minded Canning, a great statesman, a gifted orator, a true Liberal at heart. His appointment as leader of the House of Commons, under Lord Liverpool, who was still Prime Minister, marks a turning-point in English history, and is the first official recognition of that Liberalism which was growing in England. Reforms which had been delayed so long came trooping in. The barbarous criminal laws of England, which inflicted the punishment of death on slight offences, were being slowly modified. The equally barbarous laws which kept the working classes bound as serfs to the British soil, and in convenient subordination to their employers, were repealed, and combinations of workmen to obtain better wages were no longer forbidden. Last, though not least, was the subject of the emancipation of the Catholics, who were still debarred from sitting in the House of Commons or holding important offices under the Crown. Canning fought nobly for the complete emancipation of Catholics from all disabilities. * The years which followed the Reform Bill of 1832 were years of activity in the direction of reforms and of Liberal legislation. Education was in a backward state in England, and in 1833 there was one person in eleven of the population attending school. A small grant was now made to promote national education. The employment of children in factories was restricted in the same year. The laws which encouraged lazy pauperism and discouraged honest industry were reformed in 1834. The heavy and prohibitive tax of fourpence on each copy of a newspaper was reduced to a penny, and the fetters 1 Lord Liverpool was Prime Minister from 1812 to 1827; but, in reality, power was vested in the hands of Lord Castlereagh, the leader of the party in the House of Commons until the time of his death. |