Page 240 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 240

21 8                   GERTRUDE BELL
                     of considerable concern to me here and arc not a little resented
                     by the Political Officers. She will have finished the Blue Book
                     by the end of the month, after which there will really be nothing
                     for her to do.


                  There can be little doubt that Gertrude had set out to promote
                  her own policies, policies which had been discussed, formulated
                  and sharpened by her meetings with Hogarth, Lawrence, Faisal
                  and the rest of the Sharifite lobby at Paris. She had access to the
                  most important men of government and she saw no reason why
                  she should not use those contacts. It has been said in her defence
                  that it was ca typically woman-like thing’ to correspond over her
                  chief’s head with his superiors. But it is not a defence that she
                  would have welcomed. She inhabited a man’s world without
                  asking or giving quarter, and if indiscreet correspondence has
                  been characteristic of many women in history, so has it been of
                  men. Her letters were not malicious and were probably not in­
                  tended to defy Wilson so much as to put her own point of view.
                  All the same, they were indiscreet and caused Wilson great annoy­
                  ance at a time of peculiar difficulty in his temporary and unsought
                  job. One thing is certain, Gertrude helped to destroy her own
                  high standing among the ‘Politicals’ by her disloyalty to Wilson.
                  Much can be said on the other side. Opinions which Wilson came
                  to hold later hardly accorded with his description of himself as a
                  born democrat and liberal. His unbending religious orthodoxy
                  was  laughable to many people, and offensive to others. His Latin
                  tags in the Political Office and the Mess, sometimes misquoted,
                  and Ills super-patriotism — Cromwell’s ‘We are a people with the
                  stamp of God upon us’ was his favourite quotation—became
                  something of a joke. Yet he was, without a shadow of doubt, the
                  hero-figure of the young Political Officers who came to Iraq after
                  the war. They and many others in the community admired him
                  beyond measure for his unfailing support for the underdog and
                  his unwillingness to submit to the tyranny of Whitehall and the
                  military. Whenever a Political Officer was  in difficulty or there
                  was  fighting in his territory, Wilson was there within hours, often
                  using an aeroplane to get to the scene. By the same token,
                  Gertrude was ridiculed for what was often called her ‘status
                  snobbery’, her dislike of her own sex and her hob-nobbing with
                  the elite. On one occasion she wrote to Chirol: ‘I really think I am
                  beginning to get hold of the women here, I mean  the women of
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