Missions in South India, Volume 10W.H. Dalton, 1854 - 191 pages |
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Page 2
... GIRLS , contain two thousand eight hundred girls . There are maintained one hundred and twenty - six ENGLISH day - schools giving a superior education to more than fourteen thousand SCHOLARS and STUDENTS . Female education is carried on ...
... GIRLS , contain two thousand eight hundred girls . There are maintained one hundred and twenty - six ENGLISH day - schools giving a superior education to more than fourteen thousand SCHOLARS and STUDENTS . Female education is carried on ...
Page 5
... girls , 6,639 Boarding - school girls , 1,470 GEOGRAPHICAL DIVISIONS OF THE PRESIDENCY . A few words premised on the Geography of South India , will help our readers to understand clearly the progress of its Christian Missions ...
... girls , 6,639 Boarding - school girls , 1,470 GEOGRAPHICAL DIVISIONS OF THE PRESIDENCY . A few words premised on the Geography of South India , will help our readers to understand clearly the progress of its Christian Missions ...
Page 19
... girls : the boarding schools number 43 boys and 110 girls : six English schools contain 340 boys . The New Testament has just been revised : and the Old Testament is nearly completed : a small stock of tracts and books has been prepared ...
... girls : the boarding schools number 43 boys and 110 girls : six English schools contain 340 boys . The New Testament has just been revised : and the Old Testament is nearly completed : a small stock of tracts and books has been prepared ...
Page 24
... girls ' day - schools with 130 girls . Five hundred boys are studying in the English schools . It will be seen from this statement that a great deal more might be done for the MYSORE , than what is doing at the present time . Only ...
... girls ' day - schools with 130 girls . Five hundred boys are studying in the English schools . It will be seen from this statement that a great deal more might be done for the MYSORE , than what is doing at the present time . Only ...
Page 37
... girls who have lost their husbands have their heads shaven and are doomed to perpetual degradation . The consequences of their ill - treatment are , they become prostitutes , and numbers of infants , the fruits of illicit intercourse ...
... girls who have lost their husbands have their heads shaven and are doomed to perpetual degradation . The consequences of their ill - treatment are , they become prostitutes , and numbers of infants , the fruits of illicit intercourse ...
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Common terms and phrases
agency amongst Badagas baptized Basle Bellary Bengal Bible Boad boarding schools boys brahmins brethren Calcutta Canarese Canarese mission Cape Comorin Capt caste catechists Catholic character chief Chinna Kimedy Christ church coast congregations contains converts Cuddapah demons devils Dharwar districts doctrine efforts endeavoured especially established European evil extensive ghauts girls Goomsur gospel Government greatly heathen hills Hindu Hinduism hundred idolatry idols influence instruction intercourse Jesuit Khonds labours land language large number Lingaits London Missionary London Missionary Society Lord Madras maintained Máleálim Máliás Mangalore merias miles Missionary Society Musalman Mysore Nagercoil native christians occupy Orissa Oriya Paria plains population possess preaching present priests province Raja received religion religious residence rite rupees sacrifice Shánárs shew sionaries South India spread stations Sudras Syrian Tamil Tanjore Telugu temple things thousand Tinnevelly tion town tracts Tranquebar Travancore tribes Trichinopoly truth Vepery village visited Vizagapatam whole worship
Popular passages
Page 150 - These fertile plains, that softened vale, Were once the birthright of the Gael; The stranger came with iron hand, And from our fathers reft the land. Where dwell we now ? See rudely swell Crag over crag, and fell o'er fell. Ask we this savage hill we tread, For...
Page 36 - Finally, brethren, pray for us, that the word of the Lord may have free course, and be glorified, even as it is with you: 2.
Page 100 - We believe all that Paul meant, when he said, speaking of the general character of the heathen world in his time, " There is none that is righteous, no, not one; there is none that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God ; they have all gone out of the way, there is none that doeth good, or is a doer of good, no, not one...
Page 148 - With the isolated villages of the desert it is far otherwise. They have no such meetings; they are compelled to traverse the wilds, often to a great distance from their native village. On such occasions, fathers and mothers, and all who can bear a burden, often set out for weeks at a time, and leave their children to the care of two or three infirm old people. The infant progeny, some of whom are beginning to lisp, while others can just master a whole sentence, and those still...
Page 148 - ... infirm old people. The infant progeny, some of whom are beginning to lisp, while others can just master a whole sentence, and those still further advanced, romping and playing together, the children of nature, through the livelong day, become habituated to a language of their own.
Page 166 - The worhing of a moral change among the people BY THE PROGRESS OF GENERAL INSTRUCTION AND CONSEQUENT CIVILIZATION can alone eradicate from among them the inclination to indulge in rites so horrible. But though the entire suppression of the practice of human sacrifice among this wild and barbarous race must be the work of time, yet much may be done even now, and no proper exertion should be omitted towards checking the frequency of the crime by the terror of just punishment.
Page 149 - ... advanced, romping and playing together, the children of nature, through the live-long day, become habituated to a language of their own. The more voluble condescend to the less precocious, and thus, from this infant Babel, proceeds a dialect composed of a host of mongrel words and phrases, joined together without rule, and in the course of a generation the entire character of the language is changed.
Page 130 - ... by him : all their priests, all their scholars and students, were under his ecclesiastical authority. If any were obnoxious to him, or to the priests generally, by peculiar excellence or fidelity, he could refuse ordination, or he could forbid them to preach, or by himself he could keep up the error of ordaining boys as deacons. As head of the Mission, he could check, or alter, or refuse to sanction, measures for the improvement of the people. " In the course of time, all this opposition was...
Page 67 - Ocean, the first thing which strikes us is, that, the north-east and south-east monsoons, which are found the one on the north and the other on...
Page 148 - ... tribes of Africa numbers of a nomadic character, whose origin will throw light on the history of the Bushmen. A parallel is furnished by the following facts of the case, which have hundreds of times come under my own observation, during a residence of more than twenty years among the Bechuana tribes. Connected with each of the towns among that people, there are great numbers of what are called "Balala...