This work presents a method for visual text recognition without using any
paired supervisory data. We formulate the text recognition task as one of
aligning the conditional distribution of strings predicted from given text
images, with lexically valid strings sampled from target corpora. This enables
fully automated, and unsupervised learning from just line-level text-images,
and unpaired text-string samples, obviating the need for large aligned
datasets. We present detailed analysis for various aspects of the proposed
method, namely - (1) impact of the length of training sequences on convergence,
(2) relation between character frequencies and the order in which they are
learnt, (3) generalisation ability of our recognition network to inputs of
arbitrary lengths, and (4) impact of varying the text corpus on recognition
accuracy. Finally, we demonstrate excellent text recognition accuracy on both
synthetically generated text images, and scanned images of real printed books,
using no labelled training examples