THE DURBAR.
(Continued from Page'}). purple robe, a surceat of purple, with white Satin breeches tind silk stockings, the collar of the Order of the Garter and the Star of the Order of the Star of India. On his brow was the Imperial crown, consisting of a bend of diamonds, studded with four large emeralds and four large sapphires. Above This innd were four crosses patea with ruby exures, alternated by four fleurs de lys with enterald centres. – From these sprang right diamond, arches Supporting the or monde, which was surmounted by a Maltese Cross in diamonds, with a large square emerald in the centre. His ap was af purple velvet, turned up with cine. The dress of the Queen Empress was of white design of gold satin, embroidered with roses, thistles and shamrocks, with a border of lotus flowers. The Stor of India was broilered in front of the dress and the robes were of purple velvet, trimmed with an ermine beriler, and gold braid. Her orders wer the Gamer and the Crown of India, and a dimood and emerald diadem glittered on her exquisitely fair hair. Diveonds and emeralds racirried her neck. Before seating themselves Their Imperial Majesties bowed graciously to the right and to the left, in Fesponse to the renewed plaudits that rang through the amphitheatre.
THE DURBAR OPENED.
THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 5TH, 1912.
To all present, Feudatories and sub. jects, I tender my loving greetings. The sonorous tones ceased. There was a momentary pause, for the Message, and the simple directness of the closing passage, spokeh from the heart, had aroused emotions which struggled for expression. Then, a spontaneous tribute of homage, the assembly rose and broke into a volume of cheering
gain and again renewed,
CEREMONY OF HOMAGE.
Now commenced the ceremony
of the
homage, the formal public acknowledgment of allegiance. His Excellenty General approached the Throne, bowed, drew nearer, howed again, then finally ad wanted, mad: deep obeisance and returned
Then ca
M
the sounded
To. India the
TIÍK PROCLAMATION. This high Imperial gote was echined in the
summons 10 the Heralds, succeeding ceremonial. The Massed Bands resonant, clunorous insistent call of silver trumpets and muffled drums. The Herakis obeyed. From ilir posts without the amphitheatre they responded with a flourish of trumpets.
the aurenta,
Mandalay runs his writ. Crown is the guarantee of stability, of fixity of purpose and continuity of policy in t
To administration of bewildering change. India the Crown is the pledge of tolerance and liberality, the principles Queen Victosla wove into her Proclamation have passed unchanged to her son and grandson. To each of the estates represented in the amphitheatre to-day the Crown stood as special protector to the Princes-of-their- traditional rights and privileges to the the natural outcome of Indian polity, of middle classes whose growing Influence is equality of opportunity to the profetariat, of sympathy. The unity of Empire centres in the Crown: the unity of India is en- to his seat. He was followed by His Ex.wrapped in the Crown: the fact of the cloney the Commander-in-Chief, and the crowned King announcing his coronation in ordinary members of the Governor-General's person to his Indian proples was a declan- tion of the oneness of India with the for- Executive Canocit in a body, the Ruling Chiefs in political relations with thung dominions under the Crown. the Government of India and the Agents is the Governor-General and Residents in territorial offer. His Highness the Nizam of Hyderabad, distinguished as usual Spartan severity of his attire, nas in the vin, ve virtue of his position as ruler of the Premier Native State, followed by H. H the Gaekwa of Baroda, H. H. the Maha
Advancing up the amphi rajah of Mysore and H. 11. the Maharajah of Kashmir Rajputana ked the Territorial theatre, again the clarion, notes rang on. whilst the golden tabards and gleaming Chiefs, sumeeded by Central India, Balu- chistan, and the picturesque representatives instruments of the twenty-four trumpeters, of Sikkim and Bhutan," Followed the re- English and Indian in equal proportion, Sir Henry Macmahon, the Master of the
presentative of British India, Sir Lawrence formed a vivid splatter of colour on the Cervinonies, now approached the sovereign Jenkins, Chief Justice, and Puisne Judge of plain. Then dividing into two single raakts, and craved leave to open the Durbor.
the High Court of Bengal, and all the memile trumpeters trotted round Imperial Majesty having intimated his assentbers of the Governor-General's Legistative reunited in the centre road, formed rank the clarion notes of the trumpets rang out
Council. His Excellency the Governor of before the Thrones and blew a third and Commanded to read the up again and a great roll of drums went
Madras was succeeded by his Exerulve final fanfare.
Proclamation amouncing the from the Massed Bands. The Durbar was
Counel, the Ruling Chic's in political rela, Royal now open. The King Emperor having an
tions with the Governor of Madras and the solemnity of His Imperial Majesty's 'Corona- Jung the zind, Brigadier- nounced his intention of addressing de Provincial Representatives of Madras and tion in London asserübinge, rose, and taking a roll of manuscript prepared to deliver. The message this precedent was followed throughout the General Peyton, the Herald-in-Chief, a Homage. It was a very long ceremony,plendid figure on a great horse, his tabard that all ladia has been waiting with an eager
lasting nearly an hour, for the introduction stiff with gold and blazoned with the arms expectancy buttressed by conlidener 11 of the next feature which is the distinguise of his Sovereign, made known to all in far. stood, a slight figure, full of dignity and firming note of this Durlar, the formal and dis reaching stentorian, tones the solemn rite ness, yet withall there was that our of hurt plave of the representatives of British at Westminister, a message rouched in the sonorous, archaic English of the College of intimacy and personal farm which King both at the State Entry where they
Heralds: The Assistant Herald, the Hon.. George the Fifth infuses into the most slate-
received Tirir Imperial Majestions on the ly seremary,
His crugn scintillated with Ridge, and at the Durbar where they joined Malik Omar Hyat Khan, C.1.E., reprated many faceted gems, his robes swept bark
in the homige, protracted the proceedings, the proclamation in, liquid Urdu. from his shoulders in rich purple folds, the
It gave us space, however, to ponder, on the emblems of the most cherished Order of
significance His Imperial Majesty's Chivalry
Christendom, the Garter, message, and the interval was bridged by snatched the sun's rays and gave them
the playing of Schubert's" Ave Maria" and Back in full measure. Beside him stood the
other soft music by the Missed Bands. Queen Empress, a regal figure of ineffable Owing to the Hngth of the proceedings the splendour and power, her exquisite fairness
attention ofthe spectators, even immediately Seeming the embodiment of the spirit of
in front of the Shamiána, was not to wander western womanhood ilimining the 'Orient.
from the constant stream of Chiefrains to Bearded native officers, impassive of mien,
perform their homage, but at intervals out their breasts aglow with the tokens of many
bursts of cheers and clapping showed that fights, ir embroidered coats and turbans
the crowd recognised and appreciated the stiff with gold held aloft the eastern cm-
person bowing to the King Emperor: The Blems of royalty, the fringed chhatri, Begum of Bhopal and those. Princes who marcha of peacock's leather, the suraj have not yet grown up were signalled cut and the thesuri of flaxin yaks' uils, or firmly for special marks of the spectators' favour, grasped golden gs surmuted by the
and the many sporting friends, of the Jam English symbol of sovereignty, the Cresin.
Saheb gave him a noisy greeting. The On the right of lis Imperial Majesty, and
homage over, the way was made clear for a late to the rear, stood the great servant
The crowning moment of the Durbar. of the Crown to whom the King Emperor has entrusted the governane of his Indian peoples, and wise has already earned their confidere bekend were grouped his fas einated pages, the officers of his household. and the Staffs. Facing him word teler thousand of the elect of the Indian Empire The chosen officers who are responsible under the Crown, for the good goverment of a fifth of the human race, the Feudatories and Chicfs to whom Providence has cum-
BEFORE THE PROTLEJ
THE CORONATION BOONS.
the Gyncrs
vice, and that the special allowances now assigned for three years only to the widows of deceased members of the Indian Order of Merit shall, with effect from the date of this Durbar, hereafter be continued to all such widows until death or marriage, Graciously appreciating the devoted and successfui labours of his Civil Service, His Imperial Majesty has commanded me to declare the grant of half a morth's pay -to-all--permanent servants-in-the civil employ of Government whose pay may not exceed the sum of fifty rupees monthly.
Further, it is His Imperial Majesty's Gracious behest that all persons to whom may have beon, or hereafter may be, granted the tales of Dewan Bahadur, Sardar Bahadur, Khan Bahadur, · Rai Bahadur, Khan Sahib, Rai Sahib or Rao Sahib, shall receive distinctive badges as a symbol of respect and honour and that On all holders present or to come of the
WM. POWELL,
LTD.
TELEPHONE 346.
Gentlemen's Outfitters.
venerable titles of Muhamah padhyaya NEW
and Shums-uĻElmar shall be conferred some annual pension for the good report. of the ancient karting of lidia.
Moreover, is confitemoration of this Durbar and as a reward for conspicuous public service, rertain grants of land, free of revenue, enable for the lie of the grantee, or in the discretion of the local administration for one further life, shalt be bestowed or restored in the North Western Frontier Province and in Balu- chistan.
In gracious solicitude for the welfare of his Royaly Indion Princes, - His Imperial Majesty has commanded, me to proclaim that from henceforth no nesam pay- ments shall be made upon succession to their States, and sundry debts owing to the Government by the non-jurisdictional estates in Kathiawar and Gujerat and also by the Bhuna Chiefs of Mewar will be cancelled and remitted in whole or in part, nader the orders of the Government of India.
In teken of his appreciation of the Imperial Service troops, certain super~* unerary appointments in the Order of British I will be nadci
In the exercise of his Royal and Im- perial clemeng and compassion, His Most Excellent Majesty has been graciously pleased to ordain that certain prisoners now suffering the penalty of the law for crimes and misdemeanours shall be re- Jeused from imprisonment, and that all those civil debtors now in prison whose debts may be small and due not to fraud but to real poverty shall be discharged and that their debts shall be paid,
The persons by whom and the terms and conditions on which these grants, con- cessions and benefactions shall be enjoyed will be heresiter declared.
GOD SAVE THE KING EMIHAK.
The
His Imperial Majesty had now accom- plished the main purpose of his visit he tad made known, in person, to his Indian subjects his Coronation in the Mother Cily, To mark this climax of the Roval visit the trumpeters sounded another Nourish; the Massed Bands again crashed out the familiar strains of the National Anthem, the troops presented arms, and all stood silently, respectfully. Barely had the last bars of the Anthem died down than, Boom! From the steel throats of a six gun Battery broke out the first stages of a Royal Salute of u hundred and one guns, Thrice whilst the His Excellency bowed and resumed his salvors were rending the air from three place in the steps to the Throne.
Heralds and trumpeters now called atten- points outside the arena,
tion anew. nod immediately upon the paused in their task, whilst the honour of
clamorous command of their instruments saluting the King Emperor was taken up be
the Chief Herad rose to his full height and the troups. The feu de joie broke into sound at the entrance to the arena. died
in ringing tones called for three cheers for to the faintest whisper, as it ran, in spits the King Emperor, then three for the Queen The King Emperor and the Queen Em-
A this invitation the pent up 'press rase slowly from their seats and moved of fire along the line to the King's Camp, Empress."
then rippled back, first like a purling brook, emotions of the hour breke bonds.
The in procession from the Durbar Shamiana to The Royal Pavilion land in hand Fleygrowing stronger and stronger until it whole vast body of the audience leapt up, advanced along the broad open walk. Indian asped out like an angry sea on the Chesil and roared. Dwir loyal acclaim from the In deeper diapason rolled out the offers carrying golden mees preceded them, Beach. The guns sank into inaction: the heart. the scions of the noblest houses in Hindustan troops stood at ease. A fresh phase of the massed homage of the men in the King's uniform. Flags and scarves were waved bore their flowing trains, more NativeDurbar was now began
One more the Heralds and the Trumpet frantically aloft, helmets were thrust on Officers raised aloft the oriental insignia of
His Excellency the from eighty thousand liege throats, and and Lady Hardinge followed, with blew a silvery blast. large company of English ladies and of
The Minister in attendance, Lord Crewe, His Governor-General advanced to make such thrice again, burst a tempest of sound which bright red Indian worsen behind the veil Highness the Duke of Teck, and the Misafnopticements His Imperial Majesty awakened the rehses in Imperial Delhi and
71 may command." This was the Durbar The troops stood silently to arms; the huge ress of the Robes, the Duchess of Devon-.
in the Old Delhis which strew.our Indian throng on the Spectator's and thoughtshire then, after a interval, the other boon the secret of which had been so well Appian Way
The pomp and panoply, the stately cere --if we could only know, how much easier
members of the suite. A quiver wert round kept and somewhat irrational expectation the task of the governance of India would the aniphitheatre as the vast audience based upon it. Facing the distant Specta-monial and ordered ritual these were the The cheers which sprang to its feet, and whilst the massed tors Mound as he had perforey to do, Lord trappings of Kingship.
rent the 'welkin were not only for the King KING EMPEROR'S SPRECHE
bands thundered out the strains of Frederick Hardinge was audible only to those in the The almost painful silence was faroken by
Emperor and Queen Empress they were composed Coronation immediate vicinity as he read this soli Cliffe's specially
for the man and the woman, called by Pro- the first words of the Imperial Message March, weiched with strained eyes the regal Gention :
vidence to lofty station, striving nobly to Full, irh, resonant, they gripped his procession, the embodiment of stately dignils.
discharge its responsibilities,
who had ener instantly and held it enwrapped The trench slowly the path 10 the Royal Pavilion
travelled six thousand miles to show their King Emperor is our of the finest speakers and ascend the steps to the Thrones. On
deep and abiding interest in all who are of the English language, yet never has his
the topmost tier of the triple platform stood
doing the Empire's work in India. This wonderful voice carried further than when
the Thrones. On the next platform were
personal thought must have been present to itore, from horn to horn of the semi-circle,
placed the Governor-General and. Lady the wise and simple words of his speech, Harding, Lord Crewe, the Duke of Teck.
Their Imperial Majesties for they bowed to the Duchess of Devonshire, the charged with such vibrant earnestness, and with
all again and again. They stood, happy and smitiry, whilst the cheering was taken up sympathy. His Majesty spoke as follows:-
Countess of Shaftesbury and, the Honourable
by the troops outside the amphitheatre. It is with genuine feelings of "thankful.
Venetia Baring. Lord and Lady Hartinge ness and satisfaction that stand here
on the right, the others on the left, with the The This year has been to-day among you.
pagus grouped around the Thrones. to the Queen Empress and imyself one of
Staffs a place on the next lowest plat- many great ceremonies and of an unsurd, form. So were the King Emperor and though happy, burden of toil. But it Queen Empress seen of the people, facing spite of the and distance, the grateful the intense concourse on the Mounds, recollections of our last visit to India wearing their flashing Crowns, robed in have drawn us again to the land which their Coronation Robes, surrounded by the we then learned to kive and we started Eastern and Western emblems of royals, with bright hopes on our long journey to attended by the Imperial and constitutional revisit the country in which we had Ministers of State, yet high above all already met the kindness of a home. In Something of the red signifiance of this doing so, I have fulfilled the wish, express moment seemed to dawn on these slow. ed in my message of last July, to announce witted if sturdy men of the North. They to you in person my Coronation, celebroke into a hoarse rear of declamation, braint on the 22nd of June, in West-
again and again renewed, before Their
mitted the care of seventy millions of people. I c His Excellency the Tavernerers raised their clarious to their lips and hayonets and twirled in the air, whilst thrice
be?.
BOND OF ENTIRE.
minster Abbey, when by the Grace of || Imperial Majesties were seated, God the Crown of my forefathers was pland on my head with solema form auch ancient ceremony. By my presence with the Queen Empress I am also anxious to show our affection for the loyal Princes and faithful people of India and how dear to our hearts is the welfare and happiness of the Indian Empira.
What was signified by the presence here of His Imperial Majesty the King, Emperor of India, monarch of ibi mightiest empire. the world has ever seen, an Empire won by the word any be, "but held by the steady, unfaltering pursuit of peace, inter- ance and progress? But the other day the King recived in the ancient Abbey of West- minister the homage of his own people, and of the Daughter Nations beyond the Sans: day, in the splendid capital of the Mochuls, Houses which never owned the Moghul allegiance gladly acknowledged his overlordship States which the strongest of The. Indinn Kings could not break, joined in the graceful art of homage, What Jav behind his splendid pageantry, what forse was symbolised in the quiet, dignified figure receiving the acclaim of his Indian subjects? Surely one other than this-the boid of Empire is the Crown! Parliaments pay nie nad gn: Minivies are borne (a high I am deeply impressed with the thought places and pass: the Throne is fixed, jmmut- that a spirit of sympathy and affectionate Lable, and carries from one generation Jo goodwill unites the Princes and people another the principles which have made the with ine on this historic decasion. Ja British Empie the marvel of the world.
his, moreover, my desire that those who could not be present at the soleculty of the Coronation should have; the opportunity of taking part in its com memoration at Delhi. It is a sincere pleisure and gratification to myself and to the Queen Empress to behold the vast assemblage, and in it my Governors and Trusty officials, my great Princes, the re- persentatives of the people, and deputh- tions from the military forces of my Indian Dominion." I shall reprise" in with heartfelt satisfaction the person homage and allegiance which they loyally
clesire to render.
token of these sentiments I have decided | Step by Sted the British monarchy Eas r- to commemorate the event of my corona-conciled itself with feudidism, with the. dim by certain marks of my special favour- aristocnry, with the bourgeoisie, until now and consideration, and thes: 1 will later it is broad based on the demofar ou toulay cause to be announced by the Simultaneously the Monarchy has donor Governor-General to this assembly.
unio, itself those steel threads of sentiment Finally, I rejoice to have this opportunity and interest which knit the Empire lat of renewing in my own person those whole one and are indivisible. That is assignees which have been given you by relation of the Crown to the Empire. To my revered predecessors of the maintenance India, in special degree, the Crown is the of your rights and privileges and of my oridamme of unity. The King Emperor earnest concern for your welfare, peace rules a united India, an India so united that and contentment. May the Divine favour we can discern the seeds of nationality in of Providence watch over my people" and
To all to whom these presents may come! By the Command of His Most Excellent Majesty George the Fifth, the Grace of God, king of the United Kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland and of the British. Dominions beyond the Scas, Defender of the Faith, Eniperer of India. 1, his Governor-General, do hereby declare and notify the grants, concessions, reliefs and benefactions which His Im- perial Majesty has been graciously pleased to bestow upon this glorious and memor able occasion.
The sun of the Durbar had set, but there
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His Imperial Majesty took the Queen Em- press by the band; again the regal proces-- Humbly and dutifully submissive to lis Most Gracious Majesty's will and pleats,sion was formed: so it retraced the broad. the Government of India have resulved, with the approval of His ruperial Majesty's Secretary of State, to acknow. ledge the predominant claims of eluen tional advancement upon the resouros of the Indian Empire, and have decided, in
are commendaki de regnition of
mand, to devote themselves to making education in India as accessible and wide as possible. With this purpose they pro pose to devole at onee hy lakhs to the promotion of truly popular education, and it is the firm intention of Government to add to the grand now announced further generous grants in future years on scale.
Graciously recognising the signal and faithful services of his forces by laid and scas, the King Emperor has charged me to announce the award of half a month's all non-commissioned pay of rank to officers and men and reservists, bath of his British Army in India and his Indinti Army, to the equivalent ranks of the Royal Indian Marine, and to all pennan- ent employes of departaisntal or non- combatant establishments paid from the qiilitary estimates, whose pay runy net exceed the sum of fifty rupees monthly.
Furthermore, His Topperial Majesty has been graciously pleased to ordain':
path to the Shamania whilst the Massed Bands played German's Coronation March. Then ccurred she most dramatic episode of World-wide reputation. the day, for after Their Imperial Majesties had again taken their, seats in the Shamiana it beraine evident that the ceremony was not so near its condusion as by the official hand- book it should have been.
The King Em- might justly compare the event with what peror rose, holding in his hand a paper, from many competent critics believe to be the most which, evidently, he was to read again, but dramatic scene in fiction, the entry of the why and to what purpose the great audience unknown knight into the lists, in Ivanhoe. did not lennu.. There was some bewilder-Amid the babble of talle which followed, for ment, which increased to astonishment as in curiosity and interest get the better of good a clear voice the following message was manners, the Durbar came to a close. There was no room for an anti-climax to this brief delivered :-
A
That from henceforth the foval Native officers,, men and reservists of His Indian. Army, shall be eligible for the grant of the Victoria Cross for Valour;
That membership of the Order of British India shall be increases during the decade following this is Im Majesty's Coronation Durbar by fifty-we-point- -ments in the first class, and that in mak of these historic »ceremonies free new appointments in the first class and nine. teen new appointments in the second class shall forthwith be made.
10
our
We are pleased to announce our speerli, The Heralds, their task well per- were dismissed; they left after people that on the advice of our Ministers, form final flourish. The Master of tendered
with after consultation Governor Caneral-in-Council,
have the Ceremonies craved teave to close the We decided upon the transfer of the seat of Durbar, and permission was granted. The Massed Bands sounded the first bars of ind the Government of India from Calcutta to Save the King: all rose and joined in the
of Delhi, and
the ancient
Capital simultaneously, and as a consequence of singing Their Imperial Majesties entered that transler, the creation, it as early a their carriage; the splendid cavalcade was date as possible, of a Governorship for the reformed; and at a walk the Royal Pro Presidency of Bengal, of a new. Lieut. cession passed out of the Arena, whilst the enant-Governorship-in-Council administer guns fired a Royal salute and once more ing the arms of Behar, Chota Nagpur and salvoes of cheering punctuated each stage Orissa, and of a Chief Commissionership of the Progress. of Assant,
with such administrative changes and redistribution of boundaries as our Governor-General-in-Council, with the approval of our Secretary of State for India-in-Council, may in due course deter
mine.
these
In this mauner was held the Durbar at which the King, Emperor of a united India, first announced in person the solemn ceremony of his Coronation. Let all India understand what it means-Times of India.
It is our earnest desire that changes may condure to the better all. ministration of India and the greater prosperity and happiness of our beloved, to people.
EXTRAORDINARY SCENE,
SYNDICAT DU YUNNAN.
The report to June 30 saya it was apparent [the" board, at the commencement of the period under review, that the Chinese anthorities would not permit the syndicals to
therefore
દર્શન
The scene that followed was extraordinary,perats its rights in Yunan; Some cheered frantically: others entered into buried conversations, criticising the innova. That from henceforth Indian Officers tich; others more prudently kept silent,, try. of the Frontier Military Corps and the big to think what the great change would
·Military Police shall be deemed eligible can. the
Of one thing there is no doubt. "The for admission to the aforesaid order; Secret, had been well kept and very few of That special grants of land or assign- those present knew that this announcement ments or remissions of land revenue, as was to be made. It lacked, therefore, the case may be, shall now be conferred nothing of the element of surprise which is
these varied peoples and creeds: ffom
assist me in my utruest endeavour to pro- Comeri to Peshawar and Karachi to mote their happiness and prosperity."
board turned its attention to obtaining com. penstion from the suflorities, An offer was-an- atisfactory, and Mr. Collins fork the to Peking, and, with the assistance of the English and French Legations succeeded in obtaining from the Chirass Geernment the offer ta eive the sum of Tis 1.500.00 for the syndicate's rights and properte in Yunnan, as well as those of the Société d'Exploitation de Ling Nran,
on certain Native officers of His Imperialso essential to dramatic effect, and the the payment to be made by half-yearly instal
ments over a period of two sad a half years, and Majesty's Indian Army who may be dis- circumstances of its delivery were as remark- tinguished for long and honourable seraie as the nature of its contents. One this offer the board werpted. The first instal
ment of Tis. 250,000(£31,775) has been received.
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