Discovering The Original Suitable Boy On Father's Day

Leila Seth’s On Balance has a clue to why Vikram Seth’s Lata chose the suitor she did in A Suitable Boy

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Leila Seth’s On Balance has a clue to why Vikram Seth’s Lata chose the suitor she did in A Suitable Boy

Today is Father’s Day, a great day to revisit A Suitable Boy. Now, if you have read Vikram Seth’s 1993 magnum opus, I am sure you are wondering what this day dedicated to dads has to do with this doorstopper. Didn’t the story unfold as it did because the Mehra family lacked a father?

While that may be true, I am going back to my favourite book of all time today,because I have recently read another book, and discovered the “original” Suitable Boy, and he has much to do with being a father, and a fabulous one at that.

In 1950, a young fatherless 19-year-old girl, whose mother was constantly fretting about her marriage, was summoned to Delhi by her mother “on a holiday”. But the unsuspecting girl was actually being called to see, and be seen by, prospective grooms.

One young man among them, an orphan raised by his uncle and aunt, had particularly caught the mother’s fancy with his simple ways and straight talk. He worked at the Cawnpore Tannery. He had studied at St. Stephen’s College with this girl’s family friend, and then put himself through a course in Boot and Shoe Manufacture in England. But he spoke with an Indian accent, chewed pan, and wore co-respondent shoes. He was in love with a Sikh girl, but they couldn’t marry because such were the times. He was very much interested in marrying this 19-year-old, when the family friend wrote to him.

This is not a summary of Haresh Khanna, one among Lata Mehra’s three suitors in A Suitable Boy, this is the story of Premo Seth, as recounted by Justice Leila Seth in her memoir On Balance. Premo and Leila Seth, are, of course, Vikram Seth’s parents.

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