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ear as Sovereigns and Governors change their Abodes CHAPTER 64 Murder of Mr. Fraser, and Execution of the Nawab Shams-ud-din CHAPTER 65 Marriage of a Jat Chief CHAPTER 66 Collegiate Endowment of Muhammadan Tombs and Mosques CHAPTER 67 The Old City of Delhi CHAPTER 68 New Delhi, or Shahjahanabad CHAPTER 69 Indian Police--Its Defects--and their Cause and Remedy CHAPTER 70 Rent-free Tenures--Right of Government to Resume such Grants CHAPTER 71 The Station of Meerut--'Atalis' who Dance and Sing gratuitously for the Benefit of the Poor CHAPTER 72 Subdivisions of Lands--Want of Gradations of Rank--Taxes CHAPTER 73 Meerut-Anglo-Indian Society CHAPTER 74 Pilgrims of India CHAPTER 75 The Begam Sumroo CHAPTER 76 ON THE SPIRIT OF MILITARY DISCIPLINE IN THE NATIVE ARMY OF INDIA Abolition of Corporal Punishment--Increase of Pay with Length of Service--Promotion by Seniority CHAPTER 77 Invalid Establishment Appendix: Thuggee and the part taken in its Suppression by General Sir W. H. Sleeman, K.C.B., by Captain J. L. Sleeman Supplementary Note by the Editor Additions and Corrections INDEX Notes: 1. A blunder for 'Sweepers' and 'Washermen' 2. Chapters 37 to 46, inclusive, are not reprinted in this edition. 3. A mistake. See _post_, Chapter 52, note 1. EDITOR'S PREFACE (1893)[1] The _Rambles and Recollections of an Indian Official_, always a costly book, has been scarce and difficult to procure for many years past. Among the crowd of books descriptive of Indian scenery, manners, and customs, the sterling merits of Sir William Sleeman's work have secured it pre-eminence, and kept it in constant demand, notwithstanding the lapse of nearly fifty years since its publication. The high reputation of this work does not rest upon its strictly literary qualities. The author was a busy man, immersed all his life in the practical affairs of administration, and too full of his subject to be careful of strict correctness of style or minute accuracy of expression. Yet, so great is the intrinsic value of his observations, and so attractive are the sincerity and sympathy with which he discusses a vast range of topics, that the reader refuses to be offended by slight formal defects in expression or arrangement, and willingly yields to the charm of the author's genial and unstudied conversation. It would be difficult to name any other book so full of instruction for the you
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