| Vincent Arthur Smith - India - 1904 - 460 pages
...and rules.' They were not troubled with passport regulations, or, as the pilgrim bluntly puts it : ' Those who want to go away, may go ; those who want to stop, may stop.' The administration of the criminal law seemed to him mild in comparison with the Chinese system. Most crimes... | |
| Abraham Valentine Williams Jackson - India - 1906 - 618 pages
...Cunningham.) They were not troubled with passport regulations, or, as the pilgrim bluntly puts it: " Those who want to go away, may go; those who want to stop, may stop." The administration of the criminal law seemed to him mild in comparison with the Chinese system. Most crimes... | |
| Annie Besant - India - 1915 - 794 pages
...the wealth, prosperity, virtue, and happiness of the people, and the great liberty they enjoyed. " Those who want to go away may go ; those who want to stop may stop." Most offences were punished by fines, and there was no capital punishment, and no judicial torture.... | |
| Annie Besant - Great Britain - 1925 - 202 pages
...admiration of " the wealth, prosperity, virtue and happiness of the people. As to their freedom, " those who want to go away may go, those who want to stop may stop". "Most offences," I wrote in 1916, summarising his general statements, "were punished by fines, and... | |
| Sailendra Nath Sen - India - 1999 - 672 pages
...without registration or official restrictions. Only those who till the king's land have to pay so much on the profit they make. Those who want to go away, may...stop. The king in his administration uses no corporal punishment; criminals are merely fined according to the gravity of their offences. Even for a second... | |
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