Sonia Orwell
Sonia Mary Brownell (25 August 1918 – 11 December 1980), better known as Sonia Orwell, was the second and last wife of writer George Orwell, whose real name was Eric Arthur Blair. Sonia is believed to be the model for Julia, the heroine of Nineteen Eighty-Four.[1][2][3]
Early life
Brownell was born in Calcutta,[4] the daughter of a British colonial official. Her father died when she was four years old.[5] When she was six, she was sent to the Sacred Heart Convent in Roehampton (now part of Roehampton University), in England. She left at 17 and, after learning French in Switzerland, took a secretarial course.[5] As a young woman, Sonia Brownell was responsible for transcribing and editing the copy text for the first edition of the Winchester Malory as assistant to the eminent medievalist at Manchester University, Eugene Vinaver.
Orwell
Brownell first met Orwell when she worked as the assistant to Cyril Connolly, a friend of his from Eton College, at the literary magazine Horizon. After the death of his first wife Eileen O'Shaughnessy, Orwell became desperately lonely. On 13 October 1949, he married Brownell, only three months before his death from tuberculosis.
George Orwell's friends, as well as various Orwell experts, have noted that Brownell helped Orwell through the painful last months of his life and, according to Anthony Powell, cheered Orwell up greatly. However, others have argued that she may have also been attracted to him primarily because of his fame.[4]
Nineteen Eighty-Four
T. R. Fyvel, who was a colleague and friend of George Orwell during the last decade of the writer's life, and other friends of Orwell, have said that Sonia was the model for Julia, the heroine of Nineteen Eighty-Four, the "girl from the fiction department" who brings love and warmth to the middle-aged hero, Winston Smith.[6]
As Orwell wrote in Nineteen Eighty-Four, "the girl from the fiction department... was looking at him... She was very young, he thought, she still expected something from life... She would not accept it as a law of nature that the individual is always defeated... All you needed was luck and cunning and boldness. She did not understand that there was no such thing as happiness, that the only victory lay in the far future, long after you were dead."
Archivist
Together with David Astor and Richard Rees, George Orwell's literary executor, Brownell established the George Orwell Archive at University College London, which opened in 1960.[7]
Brownell was fiercely protective[4] of Orwell's estate and edited, with Ian Angus, The Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters of George Orwell (4 volumes, Secker & Warburg, London, 1968).
After George Orwell
Brownell married Michael Pitt-Rivers in 1958,[4] and had affairs with several British painters, including Lucian Freud, William Coldstream and Victor Pasmore. The marriage ended in divorce in 1965. She also had an affair with the French phenomenological philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty, whom she described as her true love;[8] she hoped he would leave his wife for her.
Brownell had several godchildren and was very close to some of them. Her godson Tom Gross has written in The Spectator magazine that “although Sonia had no children of her own, she became almost like a second mother to me.”[9]
Sonia was also close friends with many writers and artists, including Picasso who drew a sketch in her honor which Picasso marked "Sonia."[10]
Death
Brownell died in London of a brain tumor in December 1980, penniless, having spent a fortune trying to protect Orwell's name and having been swindled out of her remaining funds by an unscrupulous accountant. Her friend the painter Francis Bacon paid off her outstanding debts. At her funeral, Tom Gross read the same passage from Ecclesiastes about the breaking of the golden bowl that she had asked Anthony Powell to read at Orwell's funeral thirty years earlier.[11]
References
- Notes
- ↑ "Dedicated follower of passions". The Guardian. 19 May 2002.
- ↑ "The Widow Orwell". The New York Times. 15 June 2003.
- ↑ "What is George Orwell’s 1984 about, when was the novel released and why have sales soared?". The Sun. 20 April 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 Diski, Jenny (25 April 2002). "Don't think about it". London Review of Books. 24 (8): 32–33. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
- 1 2 Lewis, Jeremy (19 May 2002). "Review: The Girl from the Fiction Department and Orwell's Victory". The Observer. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
- ↑ Fyvel, T. R. (1982). Orwell: A Personal Memoir. London: Weidenfled & Nicolson. p. 3. ISBN 9780297780120..
- ↑ "Orwell Papers: Sonia Orwell (Blair) papers". AIM25. 2015. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
- ↑ Spurling (2002).
- ↑ Spurling (2002), p. 131.
- ↑ Spurling (2002), p. 2.
- ↑ Spurling (2002), p. 175.
- Reynolds, Jack (2008). Merleau-Ponty: Key Concepts. Stockfield: Acumen Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 9781844651160.
- Bibliography
- Kermode, Frank (11 August 2003). "The Horizon Girl". The New Republic. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
- Spurling, Hilary (2002). The Girl from the Fiction Department: A Portrait of Sonia Orwell. London: Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 9780241141656..