Akshay Deshpande

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As he had done at Harrow, Jawaharlal worked hard at his briefs, but his confidence faltered when he had to argue his cases in court, and he was not considered much of a success. It did not help that his interest in the law was at best tepid and that he found much of the work assigned to him ‘pointless and futile’, his cases ‘petty and rather dull’.
Nehru: The Invention of India
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