The rebel government found it increasingly difficult to function because it hardly had any access to resources. Wealthier sections of the city were unwilling to give money to them as they did not have sufficient confidence in the sipahi leadership. Soon there were growing differences between Mirza Mughal and Bakht Khan, leading to the emergence to two rival centres of power. The emperor sided with Bakht Khan in this tussle, which is an important indication of the manner in which his ideological position had evolved. Whatever doubts he might have had earlier about identifying with the cause of the sipahis, these seem to have been overcome by July. That Bahadur Shah should have reposed faith in Bakht Khan’s capability is significant since the contradictions between the princes and the sipahi leadership were a reflection of the antagonism between the more uncompromising rebels on the one hand, and the conservative sections of the elite who were in favour of maintaining the status quo, on the other. In his path-breaking essay on the court of administration, based on the ‘Mutiny Papers’, the eminent journalist Satinder Singh writing under the pseudonym ‘Talmiz Khaldun’, stated that these contradictions were the outcome of ‘a struggle between the dying aristocracy and the new force of peasant proprietors’ (published in P.C. Joshi, edited, Rebellion 1857: A Symposium, 1957). The more reactionary sections of the old aristocracy and their adherents, in alliance with many of the big traders and financiers of the city who had been targeted due to their refusal to cooperate with the new regime, constantly encouraged the princes to defy Bakht Khan and the radical sipahi leaders, thereby undermining rebel efforts to effectively defend the city. The British did not lack sympathisers, some of whom were willing to assist the field force stationed on the ridge even by risking their lives. William Hodson who handled the intelligence wing of the Delhi Field Force was able to put together a network of spies to gather information about the activities of the rebels. To this network may be attributed the deliberate spread of misinformation about ‘secret’ contacts between Bahadur Shah and the British. These rumours were intended to discredit the sipahi regime, demoralize the rebels and engineer defections. There is no reliable evidence whatsoever to suggest that the emperor colluded, or tried to negotiate, with the British. He remained firmly committed to the struggle of the sipahis right till the end.