links_
M. Anantanarayanan
"By
career a judge, he retired as Chief Justice of the Madras High Court
in 1969, but the law was not his main métier. He was more a votary
of literature, philosophy, psychology, Sufism, medicine, traditional
as well as modern, and the arts, especially Karnatic music and painting....." Read
more
Excerpt from his autobiographical article " To Cambridge and back"
"Cambridge in my days was a very puritanical place. Its savants were noted misogynists. One of the deepest influences of my life is the period of two years that I spent at Cambridge. I had a Hamlet-soliloquy with myself, and came to what I still feel was a wise decision for a young man. I said to myself that I would probe English life, English culture, ways of thought, feeling, food, dress as deeply as possible. I was not aloof from Indian contemporaries, but I did not huddle with them. Beyond the 'Backs' I wandered along country paths where cherry trees were hung with bloom, "wearing white for Eastertide", even attended a midnight Mass in a Catholic church in the Isle of Wight. ..."
Read related articles

