Page 93 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)
P. 93

COURAGE AND DETERMINATION                   77
      and nest on the chandelier l’ There were two kindly old Americans
      staying at the same hotel, professors of divinity, and Gertrude
      could not resist the temptation of putting them together with her
      Persian instructor Mirza Abdullah, who promptly asked one of
      the Americans what he considered were the proofs of Christ s
      being God. ‘The American answered in the most charming
      manner/ writes Gertrude, but Mirza Abdullah was not satisfied.
      Tie speaks as a lover, but I want the answer of the learned/ said
      the Persian. The two men debated for an hour and at the end
      Abdullah was unable to understand why the professor accepted
      one  prophet and rejected another. ‘I am  bound to say I quite
      sympathised with him/ remarked Gertrude. This was  cosmo-
      politan Syria, swarming with sightseers and students of divinity
      and horse traders of all nationalities, some of whom Gertrude had
      already met in the course of her travels. She rode every afternoon,
      read for between five and seven hours a day, had Persian and
      Arabic lessons, entertained parties of European and Oriental
      notables to tea and still found time to write the most explanatory
      and descriptive letters home. Having read the back copies of The
      Tims which were sent to her by her father each day wherever she
      happened to be, she wrote to her stepmother: ‘Read old Timeses
      all the evening. Though I haven’t alluded much to politics, I am
      really thrilled by the Liberal split. I wonder if Lord Rosebery will
      be strong enough to re-form the party?’ Her politics seem to have
      been undergoing some re-appraisal at this time. In her letters to
      Valentine Chirol, which were almost as copious as those to her
      parents, she entered into long discussions about the rise in the
      power of organised labour and the increasing influence of the
      trades unions, and seems on the whole to have taken a favourable
      view of those developments.
        In another letter home from Haifa she remarked: ‘I have called
      on all the missionaries! Heaven preserve us, what a collection of
      scarecrows!’ On another occasion: ‘Two clerics to dinner, one a
      Syrian, and the other the vicar of an East End parish.’ Again:
       ‘Dearest Mother, I now take my meals with a black. He’s a fellow
      lodger in this hotel. He’s a very pleasant black, and since he talks
      Arabic to me his colour leaves me quite indifferent/
         She rode the length of Mount Carmel to the Druse villages at
       the south-east, and there she received news of her old friends
       among the Druses of the Hauran. She rode over to Acre and
       along the Nazareth road where she was joined by a guide called
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