Page 225 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 225

The Mandate






        The armistice of November 1918 found her recuperating from her
        last bout of malaria, which came on in October. Meanwhile the
        world’s politicians buzzed around the hotels of Paris and prepared
        for the Peace Conferences at Versailles and Sevres.
          Much of her time was spent with the G.O.C., General MacMunn
        — the successor of General Maude who died from cholera in the
        previous year—and the C.-in-G, General Sir William Marshall.
        T spend most of my mornings in talk. The C.-in-C. has been a
        great help. He is very wise and moderate and I take his counsel
        not having Sir Percy. I am quite the politician at present!’
          At the end of the year she had even gone so far as to tell her
        father, Tm second choice for High Commissioner here, so I’m
        told! what would all the Permanent Officials say if we suggested
        it?’ She added: ‘Had a delicious day out with Evelyn Howell
        (sent over from India to look into the country’s finances) and
        Frank Balfour.’ Gertrude had been instrumental in arranging
        a series of lectures by Professor George Margoliouth, the
        Oxford Arabist, to which all the Political Officers in die Baghdad
        vicinity were expected to go. ‘It was an extraordinary tour deforce,’
        she wrote, ‘he lectured for fifty minutes on the ancient splendours
        of Baghdad, in classical Arabic and without a note.’ Some of the
        young ‘Politicals’ were not so impressed. They mixed with the
        local Arabs who spoke a far from classical version of the tongue
        and they learnt to converse in the dialects of their own neighbour­
        hoods. In such places life was still primitive and language had not
        caught up with the terms of the twentieth century. At one lecture
        an intrepid spirit interrupted the learned professor to ask, ‘How
        do you say in Arabic—Do you drive a motor car?’ Margoliouth
        was not amused.
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