Page 138 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 138

122                   GERTRUDE BELL
                   friends -I’ve gained so much and I want to hold it. The lone­
                   liness—why we are ail born alone die alone really live
                   alone —and it hurts at times —Is this nonsense or preach­
                   ments? I don’t care —I must write something, something to
                   show you how very proud I am to be your friend. Something
                   to have meaning, even if it cannot be set down, affection, my
                   dear, and gratitude and admiration and confidence, and an
                   urgent desire to see you as much as possible ... All the good
                   luck in the world, Yours ever, R.

                 On August 16th he wrote to her from his club, telling her that he
                had accepted a post with the International Boundary Commission
                in Albania. Then on August 20th, when he returned to London
                from a visit to his Suffolk home: * ... your letters waiting for me
                 ... wonderful letters my dear, which delight me. Bless you. But
                there can be no words to answer you with. Well — let’s talk about
                other diings — do you know this ?
                               Men say they know many things
                               But lo, they have taken wings
                               The Arts and the sciences
                               And a thousand appliances —
                               The wind that blows
                               Is all that anybody knows.
                He went on: ‘My wife is in Wales. She’ll come up when I wire to
                her and go with me — till we see the hows and whys and wheres ...
                I have turned into my old bachelor quarters in Half Moon Street,
                no 29. Write to me there ... while I am alone, let’s be alone. Ah
                yes, my dear, it’s true enough what I said about solitude, on
                every hill, in every forest, I have invoked and welcomed her ...
                And you, too, know the goddess well, for no one but a worshipper
                could have written what you did about the hush of dawn in the
                garden.’ Then there was a strange recall of Rounton, a reference
                to a  lone woman that was to have a strange, almost macabre
                significance in the future. ‘ ... Did I say all this to you before? Or
                dream I did? By the way, talking of dreams — Rounton ghosts
                visited me the next night also. Is there any history of them ...?
                some  shadowy figure of a woman, who really quite bothered me,
                so that I turned on the light. It wasn’t your ghost, or anything
                like you; but something hostile and alarming ... ’ For the first
                time he signed a letter by his familiar name, Dick.
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