Page:The Earl of Mayo.djvu/24

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THE EARL OF MAYO

On the contrary, he regarded it as a powerful impulse towards consolidation on the only basis possible for a vast empire — the basis of Provincial initiative and Provincial responsibility subject to a firm central control.

In narrating the principal measures of this viceroyalty, I have freely used my larger Life of Lord Mayo, published fifteen years ago. But I would express my obligations to the authorities in the India Office for the facilities now afforded me, especially by the Political Department, for tracing the subsequent history of those measures in the official records, and thus enabling me to estimate their permanent results. I would also express my gratitude to members of the family: especially to the Countess Dowager of Mayo, not only for materials originally supplied[1], but also for valuable suggestions during her perusal of the proof-sheets of the present volume, and for the portrait which forms its frontispiece.

  1. A Life of the Earl of Mayo, fourth Viceroy of India, 2 vols, 2nd edit. 1876.