Thy Hand, Great Anarch! Explained

Thy Hand, Great Anarch!
Author:Nirad C. Chaudhuri
Country:England, India
Language:English
Subject:comparative - historical, cultural and sociological analysis of India and Britain
Genre:autobiographical, non fiction
Release Date:1987
English Release Date:1987
Media Type:book
Preceded By:Hinduism: A Religion to Live by (1979)
Followed By:Three Horsemen of the New Apocalypse (1997)

Thy Hand, Great Anarch! is a 1987 autobiographical sequel to Indian essayist Nirad C. Chaudhuri's The Autobiography of an Unknown Indian. Its title was inspired from the concluding couplet of Alexander Pope's The Dunciad which runs thus:[1]
Written when Chaudhuri was in his 80s, this book provides a perspective to the Indian political scene from the 1920s to India's independence. The book covers the writer's working life in India, first as a clerk in the Military Accounts Department, then as an editor, writer and publicist. While as a clerk, he came across Arnold's Scholar Gypsy which inspired him to leave his secure government job and become a writer, which he thought was his calling. Although always a severe critic of Mahatma Gandhi, Chaudhuri shows a remarkable respect for the Mahatma when the latter led the masses in the Civil Disobedience Movement.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Dunciad: Book IV, 655-6 . . Representative Poetry Online . 16 June 2012 . Editor: D. F. Theall.