Page 298 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 298

272               NOTES TO PAGES 39-43
                            1893 and continue with a few interruptions until October
                            I9I9* They arc often scribbled and illegible.
                   39       GLD in England, BL, CEB.
                   39       Letter from Canterbury, BL, is dated Aug. 13th, 1892,
                            which cannot be correct since she was in Persia then.
                            Probably 1893.
                   39       In London, BL, CEB.
                   40       Hugo. See Hugh Lowthi an Bell, by FB and Elsa Richmond,
                            part 2, and EBL.
                   40       Journey to Algiers, CEB and UBL, from Avignon,
                            Basle, Geneva, Potsdam, Berlin and Weimar, April-May
                             1893.
                   4i       Stepmother’s play, Alan's Wife. Sec Theatre notes by
                            Archer and Grein and other material in British Library,
                            listed under Alan's Wife (shelf-mark 2303 C9). See also
                            contemporary reviews. Play published by Henry & Co.,
                            Bouveric Street, London, 1893.
                   4i        Works by Lady Bell. Florence’s literary output was con­
                            siderable between the years 1890 and 1917. Over forty
                            works arc listed by the British Library, several for children,
                            in French, English and German, and a four-act play The
                             Dean of St Patrick's, in addition to Alan's Wife.
                   42        Bernard Shaw, Collected Letters, 1898-1910, ed. Dan H.
                             Laurence.
                   42        Shaw to Archer, Jan. 24th, 1900: ‘What I supplied is not
                            what you wanted: well, follow up Alan’s Wife: even if you
                            fail, it will freshen you for other successes. There that’s my
                            advice to you and Miss Elizabeth ... ’ And another letter,
                             Jan. 27th, 1900: ‘... Alan’s Wife is the only seed that has
                             come up as you wanted it.’
                   43        Letter, July 3th, 1889, BL.
                   43        Hugh Bell’s writings and speeches. He was a prolific writer
                             of pamphlets, letters and articles to the Press (his letters to
                             The Tims and other newspapers between the 1880s and 1930
                            are too numerous to list), and speech-maker. Characteristic
                            viewpoints are to be found in his Preface to Baines,
                            Industrial North, and an address to the National Association
                            of Merchants and Manufacturers, reprinted in the Contempor­
                            ary Review for December 1920, on High Wages: their cause and
                            effect. A favourite quotation was from Herbert Spencer:
                             ‘Any arrangements which in a considerable degree prevent
                            superiority from profiting by the rewards of superiority, or
                            shield inferiority from the evils it entails - any arrangements
                            which tend to make it as well to be inferior as to be superior,
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