Page 230 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
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                                         GERTRUDE BELL
                   in a country under military occupation. She also said they had
                   sent for Hogarth to help form a solid block with Lawrence, so as
                   to present a united opinion of ‘Near Easterns’. ‘I’m filling up my
                   time by getting into touch with the French ... The Mesopotamian
                   settlement is so closely linked with the Syrian that we can’t  con-
                   sider one without the other, and in the case of Syria it’s the French
                   attitude that counts.’
                     By the end of March Wilson had arrived and Gertrude  was
                   preparing to leave for a well-earned holiday with her father. They
                   had dinner with Wickham Steed, the editor of The Times, ‘I don’t
                   like him but he was very useful’, and they were taken by Domnul
                   and Lawrence to see French political journalists. ‘After dinner
                   TEL explained exactly the existing situations between Faisal and
                   his Syrians on the one hand and France on the other ... He did
                   it quite admirably. His charm, simplicity and sincerity made a
                   deep personal impression and convinced his listeners ... ’ Wilson
                   was not so enchanted. In April, after Gertrude had gone on a
                   motoring holiday through Europe with her father, he had lunched
                   with Lloyd George and met Chaim Wcizmann, and had tea with
                   Balfour and Lord Robert Cecil, the ‘moving spirit in the League
                   of Nations movement’. He left Paris in May, ‘having done all I
                   could’. Before returning to Baghdad he wrote:

                     Miss Bell, who was in Paris when I arrived, left before I did and
                     passed through Paris on April 22nd on her way to Algiers ...
                     I saw a good deal of Colonel T E Lawrence whilst in Paris; he
                     originally came with Sharif Faisal, but stayed on after the
                     latter had left Paris and returned to Syria. He is about to retire
                     into private life; he seems to have done immense harm and our
                     difficulties with the French in Syria seem to me to be mainly due
                     to his actions and advice. I also saw Sharif Faisal twice—at his
                     house —a florid Louis XVI mansion, and once at the Majestic
                     where he had tea with Miss Bell and I. He was the centre of a
                     net of French intrigue ... as the self constituted champion of
                     Syria ... The conflict of the ideals of Zionism with the hard facts
                     of Muhammedan predominance in Palestine is another matter
                     with which the proposed International Commission will have to
                     deal and for which there is no obvious solution ... Curzon was
                     enormously overworked, rather depressed and pessimistic...
                     Lord Hardinge is at Paris but is now a nonentity ... I saw a
                     good deal of Sir Arthur Hirtzel who is as good as ever, but
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