Appendix I
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2011
Summary
Raja Rammohan Roy's Letter to Lord Amherst on Western Education
(Source: Indian-English Prose: An Anthology, Edited by D. Ramakrishna)
Year: 1823To
His Excellency the Right Hon'ble William Pitt, Lord Amherst
My Lord,
Humbly reluctant as the natives of India are to obtrude upon the notice of the government the sentiments they entertain on any public measure, there are circumstances when silence would be carrying this respectful feeling to culpable excess. The present Rulers of India, coming from a distance of many thousand miles to govern a people whose language, literature, manners, customs, and ideas are almost entirely hew and strange to them, cannot easily become so intimately acquainted with their real circumstances, as the natives of the country are themselves. We should therefore be guilty of a gross dereliction of duty to ourselves, and afford our Rulers just ground of complaint at our apathy, did we omit on occasions of importance like the present to supply them with such accurate information as might enable them to devise and adopt measures calculated to be beneficial to the country, and thus second by our knowledge and experience their declared benevolent intentions for its improvement.
The establishment of a new Sangscrit School in Calcutta evinces the laudable desire of the government to improve the Natives of India by Education—a blessing for which they must ever be grateful; and every well-wisher of the human race must be desirous that the efforts made to promote it should be guided by the most enlightened principles, so that the stream of intelligence may flow into the most useful channels.
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- The Story of English in India , pp. 186 - 187Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2006