The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing … With an introductory Sketch …
The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing … With an introductory Sketch …
The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing … With an introductory Sketch …
The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing … With an introductory Sketch …

OSBORNE, William Godolphin, Lord. The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing … With an introductory Sketch of the Origin and Rise of the Sihk State.

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OSBORNE, William Godolphin, ~i~Lord</i>. The Court and Camp of Runjeet Sing … With an introductory Sketch of the Origin and Rise of the Sihk State. ~i~London, Henry Colburn,~/i~ 1840.

8vo. Original illustrated and decorated cloth (expert restorations to hinges and spine ends), housed in a custom-made slipcase; pp. xliv, [45]-236, [4, publisher's catalogue], 16 lithographic plates after drawings by the author; a little spotting to plates and double-page 128/9; otherwise a very attractive copy in the beautiful publisher's binding.
~b~Very rare first edition of this cornerstone of every Sikh book collection~/b~, written and illustrated by the military secretary to the Governor General, his uncle Lord Auckland. In May 1838, Osborne was sent to Ranjit Singh's court in Lahore to make arrangements for the later British mission there. 'First published in 1840 in London, [this] is a journal recording events in the Punjab of the period from 19 May to 13 July 1838 and the author’s personal impressions. The author visited Lahore First as a member of Sir William H. Macnaghten`s mission in May 1838, and then in December of the same year with the Governor General during his meeting with Maharaja Ranjit Singh at Firozpur. The journal is preceded by an introduction about the origin and rise of the Sikh people and is followed by a few letters of the author to the Maharaja and one from the Maharaja to the author. The book is illustrated with sixteen beautiful lithographic portraitures drawn by the author himself. Ostensibly the journal was written "to beguile the tedium of a camp life, and without the remotest intention of publication," but a careful study of the text would reveal that the purpose was to draw the attention of the English people to the state of affairs in the northwest frontier and to the possibility of annexing Punjab after the death of the ailing Ranjit Singh. Osborne’s account of the discipline and efficiency of the Sikh army carries the suggestion that it was inferior to the British army, though superior to the forces of other princes of India. The book contains a vivid account of the person and character of Ranjit Singh, his habits and idiosyncrasies, and his virtues and foibles. The Maharaja was, observes Osborne, one of that order of men who seemed destined by nature to win their way to distinction and achieve greatness. Cool and calculating by nature, the Maharaja kept a just proportion between his efforts and objectives. Unable to read and write, he was amply compensated for this deficiency by an accurate and retentive memory, an extraordinarily agile mind and fertile imagination' (The Sikh Encyclopedia, online).

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