The Commonweal (periodical): Difference between revisions
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We would fain be the voice of the dumb, the defender of the oppressed, the reformer of evil, the | We would fain be the voice of the dumb, the defender of the oppressed, the reformer of evil, the | ||
upholder of righteousness. It is a great ambition; but "it is better to try nobly and to fail, than | upholder of righteousness. It is a great ambition; but "it is better to try nobly and to fail, than | ||
ignobly not to try at all."<ref>C. Hayavando Rao,''The Indian Biographical Dictionary''(Adyar: Pillar & Co.,1915),vi. Available online at [http://archive.org/details/indianbiographic00raoc Archive.org.] | ignobly not to try at all."<ref>C. Hayavando Rao, ''The Indian Biographical Dictionary'' (Adyar: Pillar & Co.,1915), vi. Available online at [http://archive.org/details/indianbiographic00raoc Archive.org.] | ||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> |
Revision as of 15:12, 24 April 2013
The Commonweal, subtitled "a weekly journal of national reform," was edited by Annie Besant. This is its policy as stated by the editor:
We would fain be the voice of the dumb, the defender of the oppressed, the reformer of evil, the upholder of righteousness. It is a great ambition; but "it is better to try nobly and to fail, than ignobly not to try at all."[1]
Supplements were issued bi-monthly, including such topics as these:
- Co-operation and Agriculture
- Sanitation and Medical Relief
- Education
- Social Reform
- Industries and Trade
Subscriptions cost Rs. 6 per year, and the periodical was printed at the Theosophical Publishing House in Adyar, Madras, India.
Notes
- ↑ C. Hayavando Rao, The Indian Biographical Dictionary (Adyar: Pillar & Co.,1915), vi. Available online at Archive.org.