Anita Anand’s “Sophia” tells
the story of the youngest Princess of the royal ruling family of the Punjab. Yet this biography opens, not in India, but at a suffragette meeting in Caxton
Hall, Westminster,
on Friday 18th November 1910.
On the platform in the crowded hall
sit the leading suffragettes: Emmeline Pankhurst, Elizabeth Garrett Anderson,
Christabel Pankhurst and more. At the back of the stage was a small,
dark-skinned figure dressed in Parisian couture. That small, fierce face
belonged to Princess Sophia Duleep Singh, activist and suffragette.
Who was Sophia, and what
was a young Indian woman doing there anyway?
The meeting ended with a march to
the gates of Westminster,
the mother of Parliaments. All that the women wanted was the right to vote but
many thought that an irrational demand. The marchers – Sophia among them - were
brutally attacked, groped and beaten by uniformed and undercover police as well
as crowds of jeering onlookers. Sophia, witnessing a vicious beating, took down
the constable’s number and wrote so many letters of complaint that Winston
Churchill refused to reply any more. That was his only way of stopping the
Princess. Sophia, the admirable subject of this book, was never one to step
back when someone needed her help.
“Sophia” is a book that covers
a span of history as much as it covers a single life. Born in 1876, Sophia had Queen Victoria as a godparent.
By the time of Sophia's death, in 1948, King George was on the throne, and the
Empire was ending. The subject - no, the heroine of this book lived through so many events that I appreciated the way
Anand gave the full story, whether it was what happened to
the Koh-I-Noor diamond, or the cold-hearted massacre at Amritsar, or Asquith’s derailment of the
women’s suffrage bills, or the story behind Gandhi’s hunger strikes and more. Many of the stories I half-remembered, but the emotional impact was greater for having them fully retold.
Although Sophia lived in the
heart of British society, she was in many ways an
outsider. Sophia and her siblings were proudly aware of their royal lineage. Their grandfather, Maharajah
Ranjit Singh, had been known as “The Lion of the Punjab”.
After his death, the British forced his eleven-year old son, Duleep to give his kingdom to the Crown. The young Sikh
was re-educated as Christian gentleman and, being a favourite of Queen Victoria, brought to live in London. All too soon the handsome Indian prince became a society playboy,
shooting, hunting and gambling in the company of the Prince of Wales, and
decorating his Suffolk
home, Elvedon Hall, in extravagant Moghul style. Meanwhile Duleep's neglected Maharani struggled with a succession of squabbling children. All had
strong personalities: Victor, imperious; Frederick, obstinate; bad-tempered Bamba and secretive Catherine. Sophia was born after a five year gap, and was such an easy baby that she drew the siblings together, already the family mediator.
Trouble lay
ahead. Their father Duleep had ignored
warnings about his extravagant spending, even from the Queen herself. His attitude was understandable:
had he not handed Britain
his valuable kingdom? How could they not give him what he needed? At last, offended
by the Government’s refusal to pay his debts, Duleep stripped Elevedon Hall,
selling everything. To Queen Victoria’s
distress, he renounced Christianity and set off for the Punjab.
British officials halted the family when they reached Egypt. Furious at the endless delay, Duleep abandoned his wife and
young family, and set off for Paris and his new mistress.
The picture that Anita Anand
gives of Sophia’s early life and family background is fascinating, but it is
clear that the constant tension must have felt intolerable. She shows the
siblings lives were full of contradictions: they had servants to order
about but were themselves regularly spied upon and reported to the Government;
they could indulge in extravagant fashions but their money was granted by the
India Office; their presence in Britain was dependent on the Queen’s goodwill,
as well as on matters of national security, and although as rich aristocrats they
were welcomed at society occasions, their Indian heritage made them outsiders.
Growing up, Victor embraced
his father’s dissolute lifestyle and was eventually sent to America, while Frederick turned into an extremely conservative
Anglophile. For a period, the society whirl claimed Duleep’s daughters. They
had been offered a grace-and-favour residence at Hampton Court, and “came out” into
society. Sophia embraced her new life: she was keen on horse-riding, bicycling,
dog-breeding, photography and Turkish
cigarettes, as well as indulging in extravagant fashions and in seasonal
European travel. Yet they were still not
permitted to travel to India.
The rush of aristocratic
guests for the Delhi Durbar gave the sisters their opportunity to travel
quietly. (Anand gives a wonderful description of the magnificence of this event
– and the fact that much of India
was starving at the same time.) The sisters arrived, but were disappointed. The
expected “introductions” did not come, nor any offers of seats or tents or
views for the princesses. The British in Delhi
did not “recognise” the trio of Indian sisters. Only when they travel towards
the Punjab did they receive a proper welcome. Afterwards, Bamba stayed on
in Lahore, Catherine returned to Germany and her
beloved governess, and Sophia returned alone to Hampton Court. There, apart from her
dogs, there seemed to be nobody who needed her. Sophia, as she often did at
such times, fell into a profound depression.
Anand’s biography shows Sophia constantly searching out new causes. Witnessing the plight of Lascars - the
lowliest ship-hands – on a voyage, Sophia arranged better shelter and financial
aid. As a Red Cross nurse, Sophia looked after wounded Indian troops in France. On a
second visit to India,
she attended revolutionary meetings with Bamba.
Then there is the cause that opens the book: Sophia's involvement with women’s suffrage has, until this biography, largely been hidden. Sophia
was from aristocratic circles so she was never imprisoned, even when she flung
herself across the Prime Minister’s car, waving “Votes For Women” banners. Her name is rarely recorded. Anand
shows that even though Sophia may have been shy, she was determined: Sophia even
stood outside her grace-and-favour residence, dressed in her best furs, loudly proclaiming
the cause and offering the Suffragette paper to passers-by. She so annoyed the neighbours
that they sent messages to the palace officials asking for the troublesome
Princess to be removed from her home.
Anand depicts Sophia as an
intriguing woman, kind and fiercely loyal to her family, proud of her position
and heritage yet uncertain of her place in society. Sophia is a determined
letter-writer and petitioner; often awkward with strangers yet devoted to her
dogs and anyone who needs help.
I found the last part of Sophia’s
life sad. As she grew older, and further away from the interest of the “new”
royals, she retired to Coldhatch House in Penn, Buckinghamshire where her
imperious attitude made her new servants dislike her. On the other hand, there
are glimpses of happiness. Anita Anand describes Sophia’s relationship with
young evacuees and her affection for her housekeeper’s daughter Drovna. These
offer some clue to the life Sophia might have led if it had been possible for
her to marry and have children of her own.
My hope is that this review should
not make “Sophia” sound daunting. I found this biography as readable as novel
and full of many wonderfully described incidents and events. In fact, I often
paused, picturing one or another of the scenes again in my own imagination. The
book told a very rich story indeed! “Sophia: Princess, Suffragette,
Revolutionary” by Anita Anand is a most remarkable biography.
Review by
Penny Dolan
Coldhatch House - a sad-sounding setting for the end of a remarkable life! Thanks for introducing me to her - I'd not heard of her before -
ReplyDeleteYes, thanks for this, Penny - a wonderful, thoughtful review of a fascinating book.
ReplyDeleteThanks. One point the book stresses is that - having seen what it cost so many women to get the vote - Sophia made young Drovna promise she would always use her vote.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a fascinating life and book!
ReplyDeleteVery interesting, and I must read the book! Thanks for pointing it out, Penny.
ReplyDelete