Page 170 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 170

150                   GERTRUDE BELL
                   has brought a motor car over with him so for the moment that’s
                   all we want,’ she replied. ‘But I can’t be certain that we may not
                   want one later, for this whole thing is in the course of organisa­
                   tion ... and I wish you could hold your hand till I see what
                   happens ... Will you ask General Bethunc to send us out as
                   complete a list as he can of the Territorial Battalions — something
                   corresponding to the Army List for regulars ... ’ Gertrude was
                   seldom far from high-up sources of assistance when the occasion
                   demanded. She told Doughty-Wylie: ‘I had a hideous interview
                   with the passport people at die Red Cross ... age 46, height
                   5 ft 5 J ... no profession ... mouth normal... face, well... I
                   looked at the orderly: “Round,” she said ... ’
                     She worked in Boulogne for three months, throwing herself
                  into the tasks of organisation necessary to keep track of the
                  missing and wounded in the terrible conditions of war in Europe
                  in the late days of 1914 and the ensuing year. ‘In time I think we
                   ought to have one of the best run offices in France. We are already
                  scheming to get into closer touch with the front which is our weak
                  point. Lord Robert asked the Adj. General to let us have a
                  representative and he refuses categorically ... We have the most
                  pitiful letters and we see the most pitiful people ...’
                     By January 1st, 1915 she was writing to her stepmother: ‘A
                  happy New Year. What else can I wish you? Diana and I caught
                  ourselves wondering last night whether the next 31st Dec. would
                  find us still sitting at our desks here ... ’ In fact, Gertrude was
                  back home in March reorganising the London office for the
                  missing and wounded, which was in a chaotic state. She was
                  joined there by her cousin Sylvia Stanley. But already more
                  congenial work was beginning to materialise. In September 1914*
                  just after the outbreak of war, the Director of Military Operations
                  had been in touch with her for a report on her views on Syria
                  which had been requested by Wyndham Deedes of Intelligence
                  in Cairo. On September 9th, the D.M.O. sent a copy of her
                  confidential report to Sir Edward Grey:

                     Syria, especially Southern Syria, where Egyptian prosperity is
                     better known, is exceedingly pro-English. I was told last winter
                     by a very clever German named Loytved and an old friend of
                     mine now at Haifa, that it would be impossible to exaggerate
                     the genuine desire of Syria to come under our jurisdiction. And
                     I believe it. Last Autumn an additional impulse was given to
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