Page 168 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 168

148                   GERTRUDE DELL
                  Shakespear say and think, but what Lord Crewe says and thinks,
                  and that his Lordship is uncommitted.’
                    Although Gertrude and Shakespear were naturally keen to
                  meet, for they shared a common knowledge of the tribal dispo­
                  sitions and conflicts of Arabia which was unique among their
                  contemporaries, there is no evidence that they did so. They
                  certainly corresponded, however, and they both spent a lot of
                  time at the Royal Geographical Society where the director, Dr
                  Scott Keltic, pressed them into giving accounts of their journeys
                  while they worked in the map room and sorted through their
                  unique photographic records of central Arabia. But they were
                  too busy in other directions to prepare detailed and illustrated
                  lectures. Shakespear was fighting a daily battle with the India and
                  Foreign Offices, writing long reports which stressed the urgent
                  need for a treaty with the rising star among the desert princes,
                  Ibn Saud, and being told that such an agreement was neither
                  desirable nor possible. He also spent a good deal of time at his
                  parents’ home in Brighton, while Gertrude travelled between
                  Sloane Street and Rounton. She also devoted herself once more
                  to the activities of the suffragettes, joining Janet Courtney,
                  Millicent Garrett Fawcett and others, to warn that ‘militant
                  victory is empty if it demonstrates the effectiveness of lawless
                  violence’. And Doughty-Wylie still occupied her mind. Never­
                  theless, the two travellers found time to play a protracted game
                  of hide-and-seek with Dr Keltie.
                    On June 13th, Keltie had written to Gertrude:
                    Dear Miss Lothian Bell, I am very much interested to see your
                    letter in to-day’s ‘Times’. I did not know you were back ...
                    May we look forward to your giving us a paper at the beginning
                    of next session at one of our meetings ... with maps and slides?
                  A week or so later she wrote to acknowledge the Society’s
                  decision to award her its gold medal and the attendant monetary
                  prize: ‘Dear Dr Keltie, The Geographical Society is doing me far
                  too much honour and I feel profoundly that my travels have not
                  deserved the recognition which they are about to make to me.
                  But since they are determined about it I must express my very
                  grateful thanks. Yes, of course I will come to the meeting on
                  Aug 26th. I think I should probably like to have the money in
                  the form of an instrument, but will you let me have a day or two
                  to consider the matter?’
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