Page 84 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 84

7°                    GERTRUDE BELL
                     reasonably expect to be, she seemed to feel less need for circum­
                     spection in her letters home, though she maintained the somewhat
                     farcical habit of asking her father’s permission to move on from
                     place to place, even in those lawless parts of the East to which
                     she was attracted and of which Hugh Bell knew little or nothing.
                      She announced that she would be dining with a young man, a
                     fellow climber, on the way home and that they would be joined
                     by anodier mountaineer whom she had ‘picked up’ casually in
                     Paris.
                        The rest of the year 1900 was spent mostly at Rcdcar in the
                      company of Hugo, her parents and sisters then being in London.
                      She had brought some cedars with her from Lebanon —‘Shall
                     we try to make them grow at Rounton? It would be rather fun to
                     have a real Cedar of Lebanon —only I believe they don’t grow
                      more than about 20 feet high in 100 years, so we at least will not
                     be able to bask much under their shadow.’ She supervised the
                      planting of one on the lawn at Rounton and gave others to
                      members of the family. She spent Christmas with Hugo, and her
                      young brother seems to have been put through a severe pro­
                      gramme of physical training. Hunting figured largely in her
                      scheme. ‘I looked after him to the best of my ability,’ she told her
                      parents, ‘which is a difficult tiling to do in the middle of a run.’
                      He fell off his horse at one stage and appears to have lost a few
                      teeth for a litde later she reports that at the beginning of the
                      month there was another hunt in which ‘Hugo fell off... but lost
                      no more teeth’. According to Gertrude he ‘bore himself like a
                      man’.
                        In the absence of Florence, Gertrude stepped into the breach
                      at Middlesbrough and arranged teas, lectures and Christmas
                      festivides for the families of the workpeople at the Bell factories.
                      On Christmas Eve she wrote to her stepmother: ‘Hugo and I are
                      very happy. He’s delightful to be near, and we feel extremely
                      peaceful and comfy.’ She wrote almost daily letters to her brother
                      Maurice in South Africa, and she kept in constant touch with
                      Chirol who had just succeeded Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace as
                      director of the Foreign Department of The Times after twenty-
                      eight years in the Foreign Office, in which period he had served
                     in several parts of the world.
                        The death of Queen Victoria in 1901 left almost everyone of
                     whatever degree of prosperity with a feeling of personal loss and
                     profound uncertainty. Even Gertrude, who was seldom thrown
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