Page 258 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 258

*34                   GERTRUDE BELL

                    mightily at their tasks, he working close to Talib, she canvassing
                    the opinions and support of all and sundry. But there was still
                    considerable confusion in the minds of those who worked so hard
                    for a stable government. In October 1920 Gertrude had written:
                    ‘But I also think that Sayid Talib will go under.’ In December,
                    ‘Today ... Talib came and I must confess that he made a favour­
                    able impression on me. He told me frankly that he wished to be
       ;
                    Amir of Iraq ... I thought he showed wisdom and good sense ... ’
                    By the end of the year he had resigned and wanted to go to
                    England with his children. A few days later he was back. The
                    effort to find a suitable ruler resulted in the canvassing of strange
                    names. Two pro-Turkish notables, Hikmat Beg and Sasun Effendi,
                    were invited to lunch and asked what they thought of a son of the
                    Sultan of Turkey as ruler. They thought it a bad idea. The Aga
                    Khan was considered. The Naqib was a favoured choice but he
                    was old and weak and Gertrude’s main concern was that he should
                    survive until an election could be fixed. Even Ibn Saud was
                    thought of and as quickly dismissed.

                    Gertrude was far from well at this time. In October 1920 she had
                    written to her father: ‘I mentioned bronchitis last week—well it’s
                    won.’ The effects of malaria, a constant chesty cold, the climate
                    and overwork were beginning to tell on her. She was not easily
                    oppressed by illness, however, and even as she lay in bed with
                    bronchitis her room swarmed with Arab shaikhs and political
                    aspirants. By the new year she seemed fully recovered.
                      She left for Churchill’s Cairo Conference late in February 1921,
                    aboard H.M.S. Hardinge. The Colonial Secretary had gathered to­
                    gether anyone who might have a contribution to make to the
                    proceedings. With Cox’s contingent from Iraq were Sir Aylmer
                    Haldane the G.O.C., Sasun Effendi the Minister of Finance in
                    the Provisional Government, Jafar Pasha the Minister of Defence,
                    Major-General E. H. Atkinson adviser to the Ministry of Works,
                    Lt-Colonel S. Slater the financial adviser, Major-General Sir
                    Edmund Ironside commander of the British army in Persia, Sir
                    Edgar Bonham Carter the judicial adviser, and Gertrude. Churchill
                    took Sir Reginald Wingate, Hogardi, Young, Storrs, Clayton,
                    George Lloyd and Lawrence with him.
                      She wrote from Cairo on 12th March: ‘We arrived yesterday.
                    I got Father’s telegram at Aden saying he is coming-it really is
                    splendid of him ... T. E. Lawrence and others met us at the station
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