Page 207 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 207

ORIENTAL SECRETARY                   i87
          son Faisal took up the cudgels in company widi the men of the
         Bureau, and set out on a path that was to make him Gertrude’s
          protdgd in Iraq, as post-war Mesopotamia came to be named.
          Mark Sykes produced a regular summary of the Arab Bureau’s
          intelligence reports for the benefit of Britain’s military and civil
          leaders. It was invariably hotheaded and usually studied in its
          insolence. On one occasion he remarked: ‘In it (Arabian Report
          No. XV) Sir Henry McMahon tells Lord Grey that the Sirdar has
          told him (Sir Henry McMahon) that he (the Sirdar) proposed to
          tell Colonel Wilson to tell the Sharif certain things, but that he
          (Sir Henry McMahon) has made certain alterations in the text
          which the Sirdar desires Colonel Wilson to convey to the Sharif,
          and that the Sirdar concurs in the amendments ... It is very lucky
          for us that for the moment nothing is happening in Arabia that
          requires either thought or decision...’ By September, the India
          Office was so fed up with his sarcastic intervention that it decided
          no longer to send copies of the Arab bulletin to the Viceroy unless
          they contained essential information, and it put a total ban on
          Sykes’s summaries — ‘They are exasperating even in a temperate
          climate,’ wrote Hirtzel. There was a final and appropriately
          bizarre drama attached to the Sharif’s revolt. The Viceroy Lord
          Chelmsford read about the event in the Press and, indirectly, in
          communications from the India Office, but he wondered if he
          might see a copy of the proclamation. Nodiing arrived for a
          month and he complained to London. It was eventually discovered
          that someone in the Foreign Office had confused ‘Simla’ with
          ‘Sirdar’ and his copy had been lying on Wingate’s desk.

          As the ‘illicit adventure’ unravelled itself in the Hijaz, Gertrude
          was recovering from jaundice, and helping Sir Percy to prepare
          for a durbar in Kuwait at which Ibn Saud was to be the guest of
          honour and to be made a Knight Commander of the Most
          Honourable Order of the Indian Empire. Meanwhile, she went up
          to Nasiriyah again, chiefly to inspect the ziggurat of Ur which
          she was busily protecting from ‘the ravages of Generals and rail­
          way engineers’. In a description of the journey she wrote: ‘From
          its summit you can see another immense mound, and then the
          desert, and the desert, and the desert. Loftus dug at Ur a long time
          ago, but no doubt there is much yet to be explored. The brick
          wall is, if I remember, Parthian, though the site goes back to the
          beginning of historic time.’ On November 25th she wrote: ‘Sir



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