Thousands of British women lived in India during Victorian
times. They first went out as wives, mothers, sisters; others
followed as teachers, doctors, missionaries. What they did and how
they responded to their strange environment were seldom thought
worthy of record, and writers have handed down to us a fictional
image of the typical 'memsahib' as a frivolous, snobbish and
selfish creature flitting from bridge to tennis parties 'in the
hills'. For the most part, these cliches bear little resemblance to
the truth; many women loyally and stoically accepted their share of
the responsibility with endurance, courage and resilience.
This story is developed around a number of women who wrote in an
entertaining and intelligent fashion about their Indian
experiences, starting with the arrival on the scene of one of the
wittiest and cleverest of them all - Emily Eden, sister of Lord
Auckland who was Governor-General from 1836 to 1842. It ends with
Maud Diver, who maintained that the random assertion made by
Kipling about the 'lower tone of social morality' in India was
unjust and untrue. The "dramatis personae" of the book include
Vicereines, wives of Civil Servants and missionaries struggling to
break down the subservience of women throughout the vast
sub-continent. Through women's eyes we witness the principal
historic events at the time - the Afghan conflicts, the Mutiny - as
well as the daily routines in very different cantonments and some
of the British personalities who made their mark on
nineteenth-century India - Honoria Lawrence, Flora Steel, Lady
Sale. In this vivid account, Pat Barr evokes the sights and smells
of Victorian India, its teeming masses, its problems so impossible,
it seemed, for Englishwomen to solve.
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