Page 67 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 67

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      She set out for the Middle East again in November 1899 at the
      invitation of the Rosens who by now represented the Kaiser in
      Jerusalem. She stopped on the way at Smyrna, the busiest trading
      town of Asia Minor dien, making the last part of the voyage
      in a Russian vessel, the s.s. Rossia, which carried about four
      hundred Christian pilgrims. She wrote to her stepmother: ‘The
      pilgrims are camped out all over the deck. They bring their own
      bedding and their own food and their passage from Odessa costs
      them 12 roubles. They undergo incredible hardships: one woman
      walked from Tobolsk, she started in March.’
        She did not stay at the German consulate but at the Hotel
      Jerusalem, presumably because the Rosens lacked the space to
      accommodate her, but she had most of her meals with them.
      Almost her first action on arrival was to hire a horse and an
      Arabic teacher, Khalil Dughan. ‘My horse is much admired,’
      she wrote to Florence. ‘My teacher, also, is a success.’ She was,
      nevertheless, having a surprisingly difficult time with her Arabic —
      surprising in view of her earlier protestations and the ease with
      which she had learnt Persian. She told Elsa, ‘I must go to bed
      quickly so as to be up early and prepare my lesson before my
      Arab comes (I may say in passing that I don’t think I shall ever
      take to Arabic, but I go on struggling with it in the hope of
      mortifying Providence by my persistence 1 I now stammer a few
      words to my housemaid—him of the fez—and he is much
      delighted ... ’
         She spent most of her time in Jerusalem touring with Dr
      Rosen’s sister-in-law, Charlotte Roche, armed with a large
      Kiepert map of Palestine, keeping her family informed of her
      progress with a procession of vividly descriptive and sometimes
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