Page 166 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
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                                        GERTRUDE BELL
                  leading article in the newspaper conjectured as to the explorer’s
                  route, and remarked on Gertrude’s trek. She responded with a
                  letter published on the 13th of the month:
                     Sir, I heard recently in Damascus that Captain Shakespear’s
                    intention was to travel north from al-Riyadh, leaving Hail to
                     the west and touching the wells of Laina visited by Captain
                     Leachman in 1912; thence to Jauf and to the head of the Gulf
                    of Aqaba. It is, however, useless to speculate as to his route,
                    as we shall shortly have a description of it from himself, and all
                    who arc interested in the exploration of Arabia may rest
                    assured that one so well qualified as he will give us information
                    of singular value. Since you make allusion to my more modest
                    journey, will you permit me to describe the course I took? ...
                  She went on to give an account of her journey from Damascus to
                  Hail and the return along the pilgrim route to Najaf and Baghdad.
                  She ended with a brief reference to the current conflict in central
                  Arabia.

                    My belief is that Ibn Saud is now the chief figure in central
                    Arabia, although the Ottoman Government was still pursuing
                    its traditional policy of subsidising and supplying arms to the
                    Rashids. Captain Shakespear will be able to give us more
                    certain information as to the relative positions of the pro­
                    tagonists.
                  The Tims railed at Britain’s spineless and confused approach to
                  eastern problems at this juncture and in a leading article on June
                  29th it made a pertinent attack on the Asquith Government’s
                  attempt, shared by its Liberal predecessors, to take power away
                  from the Government of India and place it in the hands of a Foreign
                  Office preoccupied with European and domestic affairs and in­
                  capable of taking a genuinely ‘imperial’ view. Under the heading
                  ‘Council of India Bill’, it observed:
                    One of the deplorable results of the intense preoccupation of
                    the country in the Ulster problem is that many often gravely
                    important issues, both Imperial and foreign, are receiving
                    insufficient attention ... The attempts to undermine the Council
                    began as soon as the Liberal Party entered office. From the
                    moment when Lord Morley became Secretary of State for
                    India, he set himself up to belittle and to contract the functions
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