Page 63 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 63

II
                          ROUND THE WORLD                      49


      By mid-January 1897 Gertrude was  in Berlin. On the 22nd she
      wrote to her sister Elsa: *1 made my bow to the Kaiser Paar  on
      Wednesday. It was a very line show. We drove to the Schloss in
      the glass coach and were saluted by the guard when we arrived.
      Wc felt very swell ... We all hastily arranged one another’s
      trains and marched in procession while the band played the
      march out of Lohengrin. The Emperor and Empress were stand­
      ing on a dais at the end of the room as we walked through a sort
      of passage made by rows and rows of pages dressed in pink. The
       “Allerhochst” looked extremely well in a red uniform—I couldn’t
      look at the Empress much as I was so busy avoiding Aunt Mary’s
       train. She introduced me and then stood aside while I made two
       curtseys. Then I wondered what the dickens I should do next,
       but Aunt Mary made a little sign to go out behind her, so I
      enjambedher train and fled!’
         All over Berlin there was Kwist mid Knltnr to mark the sixtieth
       year of sovereignty of Wilhelm II’s grandmother Victoria: plays,
       music, banquets; the British in Berlin were, for the moment,
       favoured guests. Gertrude and cousin Florence spent hours on               1:
       end at concerts and plays and the opera, followed usually by
       dancing late into the night. ‘Do you know they are giving John             i
       Gabriel tonight!’ The same morning the two young women went
       to a concert. ‘They played a quartet of Mendelssohn’s quite
       deliciously and a great Beethoven quartet, do you know it,
       Op. 132—it needed a lot of knowing I thought and far more
       intelligence than I could give it.’
         They were lent a sledge and went for a snow-ride into the
       Grunwald — ‘it is really a magnificent forest... it looked too
       lovely under the snow. All the pine trees were covered with a
       thin white frost... too delicious.’ And another concert: ‘We
       heard a thing of Haydn’s and a thing of Brahms ... There were
       not many people, mostly students from the Hochschule, and oh
       how those men played! I never enjoyed music more.’
         Then came an invitation from die Emperor to share the royal
       box at a performance of Henry IV. Gertrude went with her
       cousin Florence, chaperoned by Countess Keller, a lady-in-
       waiting at the Court. ‘The play was very well done. The Falstaff
       excellent and the whole thing beautifully staged,’ Gertrude wrote.
       In the interval after the second act, the two young   women were
       sent for and they were conducted to the Kaiser Paar. ‘We made





                                                                                 A
   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68