Page 246 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 246

224                   GERTRUDE BELL

                   But Lawrence had written a letter to the Sunday limes on August
                   22nd, 1920 suggesting that the rebellion was a spontaneous rising
                   against British oppression in the country. It was just one of a
                   series of letters to the Press from the old Arab Bureau brigade
                   which incensed Wilson at a time when he was coping with insur­
                   rection, along with the Kurdish problem where an early attempt
                   at autonomy had been abandoned by the administration. The
                   military authority was unwilling to support him, especially since
                   General Sir Aylmer Haldane had taken over from MacMunn as
                   G.O.C. in March, and soon another problem came to the fore —
                   the rising strength and insistence of Ibn Saud. Wilson’s was not
                   a light burden and he was at no great pains to conceal his irritation
                   from the India Office. According to his biographer he comforted
                   himself at the time by putting a new Latin motto over his desk,
                   Aequam memento rebus in arduis servare menfem, which he rendered
                   rather freely — ‘AH men, when prosperity is at its height, should
                   consider within themselves in what way they would endure
                   disaster’. He beseeched the India Office, in die words of Cromwell,
                   ‘in die bowels of Christ, consider it possible that ye may be
                   mistaken’. The quarrel between Wilson and Gertrude came to its
                   unfortunate climax at the height of the revolt.
                     Gertrude seems to have known that she was in danger of being
                   dismissed. In June she wrote in explanation of her admitted in­
                   discretions, ‘I had an appalling scene last week widi AT ... I gave
                   one of our Arab friends here a bit of information I ought not
                   technically to have given. It wasn’t of much importance, and it
                   didn’t occur to me I had done wrong until I mentioned it casually ...
                   He told me my indiscretions were intolerable and that I should
                   never see  another paper in the office. I apologised for that par­
                   ticular indiscretion ... but he continued: “You’ve done more
                   harm here than anyone. If I hadn’t been going away myself I
                   should have asked for your dismissal months ago - you and your
                   Amir.” I know really what’s at the bottom of it—I’ve been right
                   and he has been wrong.’
                     She was certainly stretching her chief’s patience to an extreme
                   limit when, at the start of the rebellion in July, she wrote a letter
                   to Haldane the G.O.C. which expressed her belief that the bottom
                   had dropped out of the agitation, an impression gained from
                   ‘many heart-to-heart interviews’. Haldane took her word for it
                   and delayed military action, and afterwards cited Gertrude’s letter
                   to Wilson as an excuse. Wilson deserves the last word: ‘...it was,
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