Page 120 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 120

104                   GERTRUDE BELL
              Lady Ramsay look it on herself to minister to his practical needs,
              but Gertrude had to look after him in matters of work and to keep
              a constant   eye on his notes, drawings and rubbings, which he
              was  always liable to leave under a heap of rubble. In addition she
              commanded a workforce of thirty-one Turks who were detailed
              to clean out parts of the churches she and Sir William wished to
              investigate. All day long the air  was  thick with ‘Ejfcndm!
              Effeudm! come and look at this’, or ‘EJfcndiw, this is good’, only
              to find that their discoveries were usually of the most insignificant
              kind. Still, she was devoted to her Ottoman workforce, writing
              to her ‘Beloved Hugo’ in July: ‘They are perfectly charming ...
              we are all on the most friendly terms.’ The biggest blow came in
              July after a month of excavation when her ever-present Armenian
              companion Fattuh became seriously ill. When he was with
              Gertrude in Konia two years before he had suffered the inevitable
              consequence of trying to keep up with her in the near delirium
              which always accompanied a new discovery or a memorable sight.
               She had rushed madly into a church and Fattuh, trying dutifully
              to share her enthusiasm, rushed after her and gave his head a
              terrible blow on a low doorway. Ever since he had suffered from
              acute pains in the head and on this visit he collapsed. ‘I fear there
              must be something wrong. I cannot of course leave him in this
              state to go back to Aleppo,5 she told Lady Bell in mid-July. She
              thereupon telegraphed the British Ambassador in Constantinople
              and the Grand Vizier, telling them that she wished to take Fattuh
              with her to the capital to receive specialist attention, making
              mental reservation of the fact that there was a German doctor at
               Smyrna who would be able to tend the patient in emergency.
              Fattuh would not receive much of a welcome among Turks with
              a long and vicious record of persecuting the Armenian race.
                 She nearly gave up at one stage. She wrote confidentially to
               Chirol expressing doubts about the country, the people and her
               own  ability. ‘This is not my country —I must break the news
              gently to the good Ramsay. I have not the training for it... No
              I shall go back to Arabia, to the desert, where I can do things and
              see  things that Ramsay and his learned like could scarcely do and
               see .  .. 5 But the depression did not last, and she was soon digging
              and note-taking again. She also mentioned to Chirol the helpful­
              ness of the young vice-consul at Konia, Captain Doughty-Wylie,
              who had shown some interest in her and her work, ‘a charming
              young soldier with a quite pleasant little wife5.
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