Page 43 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
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EUROPE AND LONDON                     29
     halcyon years as quickly as they made them and had gone into
     oblivion. Sir Lowthian Bell owned Washington Hall (he gave it
     away as an orphanage in 1891), Rounton Grange and ArnclifFe
     Hall in Yorkshire, as well as a London home. There was also Red
     Barns, while Lowthian’s brother John had a magnificent home
     called Rushpool Hall at Saltburn, with a heated indoor swimming
     pool and his yacht moored nearby, and a comparable house in
     Algiers known as Mustapha Rais, which Lizzie Bell inherited on
     his death. Lowthian’s family all enjoyed a standard of living of
     that order, as did the Bolckows, Dormans and other iron-making
     dynasties. The masters of the district were not above competition
     in such matters as the size of their respective establishments, the
     splendour of their carriages or the number of their mistresses.
       When Florence had completed her programme of enquiry, over
     a period of nearly thirty years, she called it A.t the Works and
     dedicated it to Charles Booth, the author of Life and Labour of the
     People of London, in recognition of his ‘wise and sympathetic coun­
     sel’. One passage in particular defines her own attitude to life:
       We move through a world filled with labels, and we are most
       of us content to accept the mere name on the label for that
       which it represents ... Commerce, Prosperity, Industry, the
       Iron Trade, War, Peace—what do these all mean? I confess
       that as I try to grasp them I can represent them to myself,
       always and ever, in terms only of human beings: they all mean
       the lives, the daily actions, of thousands of our fellow creatures.

     The vapid social life of the salons and dining tables of London
     still beckoned Gertrude during the diree years between her first
     European tour and her next journey abroad. By 1890 she had
     become friendly with another family which was to play an
     important part in her future life, the Mallets. Louis du Pan
     Mallet, whom she met at the Russells’ Audley Square home along
     with his father and namesake Sir Louis Mallet, had just joined the
     Foreign Office. He was later to become precis-writer to Lord
     Lansdowne, private secretary to Sir Edward Grey and Permanent
     Under-Secretary, and ambassador at Constantinople. Gertrude
     wrote to her stepmother on February 15th, 1890 from Audley
     Square, reporting on the latest society prank in which the
     Mallets were playing a crucial part, the ‘Pessimist Society’ and
     its associated magazine the Mausoleum, to which she was asked to
     contribute. She went on, ‘It’s so nice being here!’ Dinner guests
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