Plate 4.1
Plate 7.3
Telescope
Dragon fruit
Active Eye
Diana and Her Companion
Spinoza
Geographer
"Molyneux's Problem" / Shapes
Cork
‘Cavalier and Young Woman,’
The Milk Maid
Flower of Ladies finger / Okra
A wilted leaf
Monstera Deliciosa / Swiss cheese plant
“WOMAN IN BLUE READING A LETTER”
Plate 1.2
Plate 3.1
Rambutan
Information for the wayfarer
Angled Luffa, Silk squash ~ Chinese Okra
Plate 2.6 ~ East Offering riches
Plate 2.5
Plate 2.3
Angled Luffa, Silk squash ~ Chinese Okra
Thus wrote Wallace
Pins
Time for a snack!!
Ejecting an intruder
Audience / Marraige
Sindhoor
Winter morning
Farmer's Market
I respect you.....
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Keywords
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The Terrible massacre, the worst in the history of British Raj, was an isolated incident, yet it became a symbol of colonial injustice, remembered in speech, song, and drama. Plate 6.1 shows the title page of a Hindi play written shortly after the event. It depicts ‘Martial Law’ as a policeman above the female figure of ‘Punjab’ praying for help, the law book of colonial promise set aside, while ‘Satyagraha’, representing Gandhi, looks on in despair. For many among the British, the massacre confirmed widely held assumptions about the Indians ought to be governed. Dyer, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_O%27Dwyer for one, was not repentant. The firsing was justified, he later said, for it’s ‘moral effect’ in the Punjab. Indians are like children, when naughty, needed to be severely punished. They were not capable of governing themselves. Opposition to the established order could lead only to anarchy. Although the Government of India forced Dyer to resign his commission, and Montagu staunchly opposed this recourse to violence, Dyer’s reception on his return to England, where he was received like a conquering hero and awarded a purse of Pounds 30,000, undercut the effects of the censure. Throughout the years leading up to independence English opposition to constitutional reform remained always a powerful force that government could not ignore. At its center stood the popular figure of the Conservative leader Winston Churchill, who resigned from the government than support the subsequent 1934 reform measure. ~ Page 169
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