`The edition is valuable for many reasons, of which three are especially important. First, it presents more Burke with greater accuracy than any previous edition, and that in a handsome volume. Secondly, the reader is treated to ripe scholarship, for Professor Marshall has studied Burke and India now for 30 years. And although the series makes annotation austere, the introduction affords a wider view than the editor allowed himself in Volume 5. Thirdly, on these bases, cheery misrepresentations by those whose fame outweighs their scholarship are destroyed. This will be a standard work.'Ian Harris, Political Studies