Page 71 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 71

JERUSALEM                        57

     letters did not always conceal the shadows of distant events. In
     January she received news of the death of one of her best-loved
     and most devoted aunts, Ada, who had looked after her following
     her mother’s death when she was three years old, and who had
     married an officer of the Yorkshire Regiment, Lt-Colonel Arthur
     Fitzpatrick Godman. They lived near the Bells at Smcaton Manor
     in Northallerton, and Gertrude had seen her in the agony of a
     long-drawn-out illness. The Boer War, the first real test of
     Britain’s imperial power and the capabilities of its generals since
     the Crimea, was not going well; and Maurice was about to leave
     for South Africa in command of the Volunteer Service Company
     of the Yorkshire Regiment. Her letters show a constant concern.
     Early in February 1900 came the announcement of General
     Bullcr’s retreat, just as Maurice’s company set off, but news of
     the relief of Ladysmith came as her brother was on the high seas
     and so, for a while, Gertrude and the family were able to concen­
     trate on less worrying matters. Elsa and Molly, her half-sisters,
     were now grown young women, enlivening a social circle of
     which Gertrude had already become a familiar member. It has
     been said of them that they were archetypal ladies of ‘good
     family’, impressive in appearance, utterly correct in behaviour
     and with upright postures which even in Victorian England,
     where all ladies of breeding sat and walked with a plumb-line
     erectness, were remarkable. They seem to have had less of
      Gertrude’s earnestness about them. Both were said by many
      people who met them (and who were able to recall them in the
      latter half of the twentiety century) to have been brilliant and
      delightful conversationalists; an impression borne out by
      Virginia Woolf who, as Miss Stephens, wrote to Emma Vaughan,
      her ‘beloved Todelkrancz’, in June 1900: ‘Since I wrote ... we
      have been to Cambridge for the May week and I have danced at
      my first Ball. It was the Trinity ball, and the largest of all...
      Florence and Boo were there, and Alice Pollock and the Hugh
      Bells (If you know them —MAP calls them “the most brilliant
      girl conversationalists in London”—and Thoby was much
      attracted by them and them by him) ... ’ Three years earlier the
      girls had started a magazine called the Monthly Cousin which was
      produced partly on a typewriter and partly by hand and to which
      all members of the family and their friends were expected to
      contribute. Gertrude sent her sisters some picturesque eastern
      essays for editorial consideration.
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