[Gold, Sport, And Coffee Planting In Mysore by Robert H. Elliot]@TWC D-Link book
Gold, Sport, And Coffee Planting In Mysore

CHAPTER III
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It is, however, only fair to add, as an excuse for Mr.
Dadabhai Naoroji and his misguided associates, that they have, after all, only followed on the track of the Irish agitators, and no doubt consider that the preaching of sedition against the Government to whom they owe so much is the proper course to pursue when aiming at political power.

And as an extenuation of their action it should also be considered that the members of the Congress, who at first were acting in a perfectly legitimate manner, eventually fell under the guidance of a retired member of the Indian Civil Service--a certain Mr.Hume--who seems to have lodged some of his own extravagant ideas in the heads of the raw and inexperienced members of the Congress, and who is supposed to be the author of the seditious pamphlets.

And now let me give a brief account of the Congress, and its aims and views.
The first Congress, which met in Bombay in December, 1885, consisted of seventy-eight persons, who came from twenty-five places.

They were neither elected nor delegated, and how they came together does not appear in the published proceedings of the Congress.

The principal resolution passed on the occasion related to the reforms of the various Indian Councils.
The second Congress, which was composed of 440 persons, who were partly elected and partly delegated, and of persons who could produce no evidence of being one or the other, met in Calcutta in December, 1886, and (p.


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