Introduction: The English poet Wystan Hugh Auden wrote "Partition" in 1966. Though it never mentions him by name, the poem describes Cyril Radcliffe: the British lawyer who was tasked with drawing the boundaries during the 1947 Partition of India, which divided the country into a Hindu-majority India and a Muslim-majority Pakistan. "Partition" was published in Auden's 1969 collection, City Without Walls. The poem "Partition" by W. H. Auden deals with the historical event of the partition of the sub-continent into India and Pakistan. More Information: Around 12 million people displace and millions were left homeless. Cyril Radcliffe arrived in India on July 8, 1947. This was an epic dimension task but it was done in such haste, and carelessness that it resulted in a monumental tragedy. Partition along the Radcliffe Line ended in violence that killed one million people and displaced 12 million. Radcliffe burnt his papers, refused his Rs 40,000 fee, and
Take Materials: Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Francis Bacon, Feminist Fiction, Master's Degree English, English Literature, Victorian Age, First Tragedy in English, and Literary Criticism.