Page 80 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 80

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                           Courage and Determination






                        Before she and Maurice left on their round-the-world voyage at
                        the end of the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee year, the family had
                        spent a brief holiday in the Hautes Alpes. They stayed at La
                        Grave under the shadow of the Meije, a mountain which chal­
                        lenged the most experienced of Alpine climbers. Gertrude
                        wandered off one night and slept at the refuge, striding back the
                        next morning with her first serious mountaineering ambition
                        fixed firmly in her mind. She had to wait until the summer of
                        1899 before she could undertake the mission however.
                          Meanwhile she contented herself with a stay at Redcar with her
                        sisters and Hugo; a brief sojourn in London spent mainly with the
                        Russells of Audley Square; a visit to northern Italy on her own;
                        a few weeks in Bayreuth with Hugo, the Lascelles and Chirol;
                        and a journey to Greece with her father and her uncle Thomas
                        Marshall, a classical scholar who had published a translation of
                        Aristotle’s works. In Athens she met for the first time her friend
                        Janet’s archaeologist brother, Dr David Hogarth, who showed
                        them some recent finds - pots of 4,000 b.c. from Melos. ‘Doesn’t
                        it make one’s brain reel!’ They had travelled to Athens by way of
                        Corfu, a cheerful threesome despite the disparity of their ages.
                        She found her uncle Tom a ‘most amenable and agreeable’ com­
                        panion as they made their way along the coastline of Greece by
                        horse-drawn carriage and eventually by train on the last stage to
                        Athens. They stopped at several sites of ancient Greece on the
                        way, she and Marshall spending a ‘delicious’ time amid the ruins
                        of a Doric temple. But Gertrude wondered how her uncle managed
                        when he travelled alone. ‘He is absolutely ignorant and incap­
                        able about ways and means, added to which he has the
                        untravelled Englishman’s incapacity for making himself under-
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