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Chapter 2 INDIAN HOSPITALITY

Word Count: 1252    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

Indian Christians; their generosity to each other. Indian respect for the mother; retained through l

ucing their legitimate result, restricts their hospitable efforts, within their own dwelling, to the sometimes narrow limits of their own particular caste. Invitations to members of castes above their own would not be accepted. And if, in some case

fashion on a large scale by those who are wealthy. Such feasts, however, do not come exactly under the laws of hospitality, because they are held according to

vy one. A well-to-do Hindu in Poona city built a new three-storied house in a corner of his large compound. As he had already got a house of apparently ample dimensions, I asked him w

duration is quite usual. I asked if it was not possible to hint that it was time that the visit came to a close. But he said that to do so would be considered very rude, and a great breach of hospitality, and that it was never d

l forage about in search of free meals, and will drop in here and there just about dinner time without much thought as to whether their company is welcome or not. Even the poorest persons will cheerfully produce all that they have got in order to feed these chance comers, with whom perhaps they have only a slight acquaintance. Christians are also generous with their

boy is often wilful and disobedient and rude to his mother, but he makes up for this by his dutiful conduct when he grows to manhood. It is almost comical to find Hindus of mature years referring everything to their mother, and eve

ve taken place, the final and most bitter struggle has nearly always been when the lamentations and entreaties of the mother had to be faced, and some men have no

r sons very much as a matter of course, and that if she looks upon them with equal af

na was about to be married in Bombay, where his bride resided, 120 miles away. His mother was a curious, cross-grained old woman, not yet a Christian. As he had not much money, I sugge

ould be for ever branded as an undutiful son. She was not at all grateful for his kind consideration, and made herself very disagreeable all through the wedding-day, b

ations in family life, trivial misunderstandings between friends of long standing, or amongst Christians some little hitch with the authorities of a mission, will sometimes result in life-long separations or bitter animosity between those who, for

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Contents

India and the Indians
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTORY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 2 INDIAN HOSPITALITY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 3 THE INDIAN VIEW OF NATURE AND ARCHITECTURE
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 4 INDIAN EMPLOYERS OF LABOUR
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 5 THE INDIAN POSTAL SERVICE
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 6 INDIANS AND ENGLISH CUSTOMS
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 7 INDIAN UNPUNCTUALITY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 8 INDIAN POVERTY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 9 INDIAN ART
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India and the Indians
Chapter 10 THE INDIAN VILLAGE
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India and the Indians
Chapter 11 INDIAN ENTERTAINMENTS
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India and the Indians
Chapter 12 THE CONVERSION OF INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 13 MISSION WORK IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 14 INDIAN MUSIC
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India and the Indians
Chapter 15 INDIAN MEALS
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 16 HINDU PHILOSOPHY
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 17 HINDUS AND RELIGION
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 18 RELIGIOUS PHASES IN INDIA
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 19 GAMES IN INDIA
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 20 INDIAN WRESTLERS
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 21 BOOKS IN INDIA
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 22 INDIAN PAGEANTS
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 23 THE INDIAN CHARACTER
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 24 RELIGIOUS CONTROVERSY IN INDIA
01/12/2017
India and the Indians
Chapter 25 WILD BEASTS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 26 SOME INDIAN ANIMALS
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India and the Indians
Chapter 27 THE INDIAN WORLD OF NATURE
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India and the Indians
Chapter 28 INSECTS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 29 THE INDIAN ASCETIC
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India and the Indians
Chapter 30 THE INDIAN WIDOW
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India and the Indians
Chapter 31 WRONGDOING IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 32 PROPERTY IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 33 EAST AND WEST TRAVELLING
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India and the Indians
Chapter 34 CUSTOMS OF EAST AND WEST
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India and the Indians
Chapter 35 SERVANTS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 36 THE EDUCATED HINDU
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India and the Indians
Chapter 37 UNFINISHED PLANS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 38 GIFTS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 39 PROVERBIAL SAYINGS ABOUT INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 40 INDIAN UNREST
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India and the Indians
Chapter 41 THE ENGLISH IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 42 DISHONESTY IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 43 INDIAN MOHAMMEDANS
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India and the Indians
Chapter 44 NIGHT ALARMS IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 45 THE INDIAN WASHERMAN
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India and the Indians
Chapter 46 AGRICULTURE IN INDIA
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India and the Indians
Chapter 47 EAST AND WEST ON BOARD SHIP
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