
These speeches capture a pivotal moment when British policymakers were confronting the sheer scale of governing India. Delivered in the House of Commons between 1907 and 1909, they lay out the challenges of budgeting, administration and the delicate balance between authority and emerging public aspirations. The orator stresses the responsibility of careful judgment, warning that missteps could waste both British and Indian resources and destabilise the whole system.
Beyond the numbers, the talks reveal how Parliament’s debates were heard across the subcontinent—from princely states to the ordinary citizen—highlighting the complex web of interests at play. Listeners will hear candid reflections on issues such as opium revenue, the role of moral considerations in fiscal policy, and the broader question of how democratic principles might be applied to a vast, diverse empire. The collection offers a window into the deliberations that shaped early twentieth‑century Indian governance.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (236K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1838–1923
A leading Victorian liberal voice, he moved easily between literature and politics, writing influential studies of major thinkers while also serving at the center of British public life. His work brings together clear argument, moral seriousness, and a deep interest in ideas.
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