As one would deduce from the title, this book is about the British ruling establishment바카라s response to the rising strength of the national movement. The main line of the author바카라s argument is that influential circles in Britain practised a dual approach: on the one hand, arguing that Indians바카라 national aspirations were precisely the product of Britain바카라s own good work in India, and, on the other, doing everything to thwart and neutralise those aspirations. This was reflected in proclamations of intent to pass on power (often made in words open to varied interpretation) and then so acting or legislating as to deny or delay any actual transfer of power even in a limited field. For students of India바카라s 바카라constitutional history바카라 from Ripon바카라s experiment in 바카라local self-government바카라 in early 1880s to the Government of India Act, 1935, who have long been familiar with the story of 바카라progress바카라 at snail바카라s pace of even a limited devolution of power, this is not a sensational discovery. The importance of Reid바카라s book still lies in his detailed examination of the British side of the story, principally the interplay of different shades of orientation and ambitions of British politicians of the time, aspects with which we in India naturally tend to be unfamiliar.