BY
M. K. GANDHI
FIFTH EDITION
AS. 6
GANESH & Co., MADRAS
Books by C. F. Andrews
The Claim for Independence
Within or without the British Empire
Price As. 8.
Non-Co-operation
The Whys and Wherefores
Price As. 8.
Indians in South Africa
Helots within the British Empire
Price As. 8.
The Drink and Opium Evil
Miss La Molte says: "A nation that can subjugate 300,000,000helpless Indian people, and then turn them into drugaddicts, for the sake of revenue, is a nation, which commitsa cold-blooded atrocity unparalleled by any atrocity committedin the rage and heat of war."
Price As. 4.
How India can be Free
"India has no need to take the sword in order to be free: Shehas a much more powerful weapon ready to her hand. Ifonce her people unitedly decide to be free they can be free."
Price As. 4.
Indian Independence:
The immediate need
To be in subjection to a band of foreign rulers, if Seeley'shistorical maxim is true, cannot but lead to nationaldeterioration. This is why the need for independence is soimmediate. This is why it cannot be postponed. The verdictof the most sober English Historians is this, that India,without a single hand being lifted to strike a single blow,can determine her own destiny. The sheer weight ofnumbers,—three hundred and twenty millions against a fewthousands,—is so great, that if these numbers could oncespeak with one mind, their will must be carried out.
Price As. 8.
GANESH & Co., Publishers, Madras.
INDIAN HOME RULE
BY
M. K. GANDHI
Reprinted with a new foreword by the author
FIFTH EDITION
GANESH & Co., MADRAS
1922
MADRAS:
THE MODERN PRINTING WORKS, MOUNT ROAD.
NOTE
The doctrine of violence is more widely believedin than is generally realised. The votaries ofviolence can be divided into two classes. Some,a small and dwindling class, believe in it and areprepared to act according to their faith. Others, avery large class always, and now, after bitter experiencesof the failure of constitutional agitation,larger than ever, believe in violence, but that beliefdoes not lead them to action. It disables themfrom work on any basis other than force. Thebelief in violence serves to dissuade them from allother kinds of work o