Show UNHAPPY indian N V lle toles mho ro Flu atel la in 1 1 t attl the and ind princes thug thus t do to not become gindlin nobles a und and princes sibs the london spectator in i majority of cases the de develop into englishmen of color although h their filthy ire never neier inter interfered feied with mth anil and pains are biln to all nii i c e culi of biste Bonit sonic thing iliah they nor their thoroughly ex explain plIn divider them thenceforward d from their subjects and dependents mal ing in thorn them almost toi eigners in their heredi estates estites and ind de developing eloping in i some a profound pio found melancholy or oe of if there wen suh a word nord in others an inner scorn tor for those among whom the have hie to ll 11 alvi ind in all in to pla play the part most to be desired tint thit of men capable of reconell nr ng idest est and east and a 0 w leading leding their subjects toward a higher thoi ih still an in asiatic Livi ivillia liza tion we heard i ery iery fei fe years ears ao ato the complaint uttered by b one of them a most successful collegian colleg hn to an in english friend and ind could not but think it very ery pathetic I 1 lam ini the prince sit sill 1 a t hopeless hope lel lesl isolated min ni in no one in ra in family or within nil m dominion uil my m thoughts nor la Is there any one to fathom A hom I 1 can cin I 1 myself my illy house or as we should say the ladies of 0 my house ilgard me when I 1 speak with straining ears as it they were trying to catch the sounds of P foreign lan language I 1 have haie no filene and can have hie none aly M minister though alie thea obey me and till look up tip to me regard me as I 1 should regard a suna ee as ruled bv by motives mothes which they the do not comprehend and warn varn me that thit the changes I 1 should like best to introduce would shake shahe mv my authority to its base bise I 1 am ant conan consumed ed all day da b ennui I 1 can find no enjoyment in the nati national onil amusements and I 1 can seo that the english amusements which I 1 still enjoy strike in people as both tire onie bome and undignified our report Is as aa nearly verbatim as ve ie can manage and the prince who ho spoke thus dius after governing well for a ear or two give up the struggle v with ith his fate took to drinking abandoned the relus of 0 hia his administration to whoever hil cier would take them and but for an occurrence occur renCA romantic even cen for asia and utterly outside 01 would hive imie ended b ruining his estate which indeed he did render in his search for excitement nearly insolvent hia ilia was nas it may be n history hi stor but the circumstances cum stances which upon his mind must prey als upon a majority of his ills con comrades ter the would upon english lade lads of the same position it educated throughout south in foreign habits hibits foreign literatures foreign wava nas of thought and above aboe all foreign aspirations |