159 years later to the day, on a pleasant autumn evening in the capital city, memories of the faded grandeur of imperial Delhi hung heavy in the air as William Dalrymple sat down for a discussion on his most famous work, "The Last Mughal".
The event which celebrated the Hindustani edition of Dalrymple's magnum opus was also attended by its translator Zakia Zaheer and singer Vidya Shah.
Dalrymple described how Bahadur Shah 'Zafar', the last of the Mughals, was someone who was "quite magnificiently unsuited to lead a revolution" of the scale of the 1857 mutiny.
"The face off was between two different worlds," Dalrymple said.
A doomed romantic figure like Zafar on one side of the ring against the East India Company -- a force that was four times the size of the British Army in the year of the mutiny.
"For the last 100 years, we have been taught to think about colonialsim as the british coming here. But it is much worse than that -- it is a multinational corporation, like Union Carbide with armies, Google with weapons, Rio Tinto with infantry regiments," he said.
The scale of killings on that fateful day was on a level that was infinitely greater than the massacre at Jalianwala Bagh, Dalrymple said.
English troops proceeded to systematically murder every able citizen at gunpoint, leaving the city of half a million people an empty ruin.
The readings were intersperesed with soulful vocals by singer Vidya Shah, who has also worked with Dalrymple earlier in a concert based on the book.
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