[78] W. S. Lilly, India and Its Problems, p. 243 (London, 1902).
[79] Cromer, op. cit., Vol. II., p. 231.
[80] Ibid., p. 228.
[81] J. Ramsay Macdonald, The Government of India, pp. 171-172 (London, 1920). On the evils of Westernization, see further: Bukhsh, Cromer, Dodwell, Mukerjee, already cited; Sir W. M. Ramsay, "The Turkish Peasantry of Anatolia," Quarterly Review, January, 1918; H. M. Hyndman, The Awakening of Asia (New York, 1919); T. Rothstein, Egypt's Ruin (London, 1910); Captain P. Azan, Recherche d'une Solution de la Question indigène en Algérie (Paris, 1903).
[82] E. J. Dillon, "Persia," Contemporary Review, June, 1910.
[83] Ramsay Muir, "Europe and the Non-European World," The New Europe, June 28, 1917.
[84] The Earl of Cromer, Political and Literary Essays, p. 5 (London, 1913).
[85] For a full discussion of these changes in Western ideas, see my Rising Tide of Colour against White World-Supremacy, especially chaps. vi. and vii.
[86] Sidney Low, "The Most Christian Powers," Fortnightly Review, March, 1912.
[87] On this point see also A. Vambéry, Western Culture in Eastern Lands (London, 1906); W. S. Blunt, The Future of Islam (London, 1882); also the two articles by Léon Cahun on intellectual and social developments in the Islamic world during the nineteenth century in Lavisse et Rambaud, Histoire Générale, Vol. XI., chap. xv.; Vol. XII., chap. xiv.