Page 100 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 100

84                    GERTRUDE BELL
                    must be derived from a fresh revelation, posterior to the time
                    of Muhammad, since the Muhammadan revelation  was
                    posterior to the Christian.’
                      ‘The Christian revelation was itself one which could not be
                    supplanted. It was expressly for all times-besides which it
                    seems to me to be in accord with what is best in human
                    nature.’
                      ‘Then you arc accommodating it to fit in with your views
                    on human nature ... ’


                 So the discussion proceeded as the s.s. China ploughed eastward,
                 Gertrude and her brother hardly pausing for breath. Even the
                 letters home which would normally have occupied several pages
                 each day were few and far between. But there was no animosity
                 as yet, ‘Hugo is the most delightful of travelling companions,’
                 she told Florence early in December. ‘We spend a lot of time
                 making plans with maps in front of us. We are chiefly exercised
                 as to how many of the Pacific Islands we shall visit.’
                   They arrived in Bombay on December 12th. ‘You can’t think
                 how charming and amusing and agreeable the Russells have
                 been,’ she wrote to Florence, adding: ‘Our servant met us at the
                 quay; he seems a most agreeable party and he’s going to teach us
                 Hindustani.’ Within a few days she was telling her stepmother:
                 ‘We have become almost unrecognisably Indian, wear pith
                 helmets —and oh! my Hindustani is remarkably fluent... We
                 are addressed as Your Highness.’ They were in Bombay within a
                 year of the great plague epidemic in that city but life seems to
                 have returned to normal, though it is unlikely that Gertrude
                 would have been put out had the disease been rampant. The
                 Governor, Lord Northcote, she found ‘charming, delightful to
                 talk to, and she is even more charming’. While her companions
                 sat in the English club or in their hotels writing letters home and
                 taking cool drinks, Gertrude rushed around the city observing
                 and describing its buildings and people. Two excited elderly
                 Parsees grabbed her as they passed and told her that ‘the ceremony
                 had begun’ and before she could protest she was in a courtyard
                 witnessing a marriage ceremony.
                   Gertrude and Hugo went on to Agra and Jaipur and arrived
                 in Delhi at the end of December, where they were guests of the
                 Viceroy in his visitors’ camp. ‘Dearest Mother, Where shall I
                 begin in this tale of our wonderful days?’ They had completed
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