Page 135 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)_Neat
P. 135

ENCOUNTER                       ll9
        it. He was not an intellectual in any accepted sense but he was
        well aware of what was going on in the world at large and knew
        of the fame that now attached to Gertrude, for The Deserf and the
        Sown had already been acclaimed in the Press and Professor
        Hogarth had declared it to be not unworthy of a place alongside
        Doughty’s Arabia Deserf a: indeed, he pronounced it 'among the
         dozen best books of Eastern travel’. In any case her fame as a
         traveller in the East went before her by now, among the natives
         and the British communities of the Turkish coastal regions. His
         distinction was of a different kind. He was by common consent
         one of the bravest and most fearless of soldiers, and his presence
         in the diplomatic world at that time was brought about by the
         need for respite after a series of wounds which had won him
         medals and acclaim in almost every battle in which Britain was
         engaged from the time he joined the army in 1889 until the East
         African campaign of 1903. He had fought at Hazara, Chitral,
         Crete, and in the Nile Expedition, winning medals and clasps as
         he went. In the Boer War he received severe injuries and was
         awarded the Queen’s medal and three clasps. At Tientsin during
         the Chinese rebellion he raised a corps of mounted infantry and
         was again wounded. There were few more dashing or renowned
         men in the British army. He was the same age as Gertrude, born
         on July 23rd in 1868, nine days after her. And in 1904, a year
         before Gertrude’s first visit to the plains of Anatolia, he had
         married Lilian, the daughter of Mr John Wylie of Westcliffe
         Hall, Hampshire, and widow of Lt Henry Adams-Wylie of the
         Indian Medical Service. Doughty-Wylie was a hero figure,
         Gertrude a rich and brilliant woman with connections at the
         highest levels of government. The Doughtys of Theberton Hall,
         Leiston in Suffolk, ranked high enough in a world where accept­
         ability was the first hurdle in any acquaintanceship. There was
         no more to the matter in 1907.
            Then in the following year while Gertrude was between
          journeys, Doughty-Wylie as he had become (Lilian Wylie, who
          was always known as Judith, had insisted on her own surname
          being attached to those of both her husbands) found himself in
          the news. It was the year in which the mass-slaughter of the
          Armenians began once again in the Ottoman dominions, as an
          ugly accompaniment of the Young Turks’ rebellion. Mobs
          roamed the area of his consulship murdering Christians with a
          fanaticism bred of years of festering hatred and recrimination.
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