Page 26 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)_Neat
P. 26

12                   GERTRUDE BELL
                   beautiful little burn. Aunty Florence is learning galic, she says
                   that it is very difficult.’ The redoubtable Miss Klug still gave
                   Gertrude instruction and fought a losing battle with her spelling
                   and her high spirits: ‘The other day when I was playing with
                   Arthur and Bunting [Aunt Ada’s children] in the garden, Arthur
                   was swinging the swing, and, before I could catch him, Bunting
                   rushed across and the swing knocked him on the eyelid and made
                   it swell very much.’ By the summer of 1881 her antics were
                   becoming alarming. To Florence she writes: ‘Dearest Mother,
                   when are you coming home? We shall be so glad to see you. I
                    throw Fay [the dog] into the pool every day, he docs hate it so
                    much.’ Again: ‘I’m having such fun with the dirt... I am learning
                    Euclid with Horace.’
                      By now two children of Hugh’s second marriage had been
                    born, a son Hugh Lowthian who, in the family tradition, was
                    known by another name altogether, Hugo; and Florence Elsa
                    who was known by her second name. It was with Elsa and Hugo,
                    two and three years old respectively, that Gertrude was ‘having
                    such fun with the dirt’. In the summer of 1881 the third and last
                    child of the marriage, Mary Katherine (Molly), was on the way.
                    In 1882 Horace Marshall went away to Eton while Maurice was
                    at preparatory school. Gertrude kept in touch with them, telling
                    them of her own boisterous activities which in that year consisted
                    mainly of leading her young brother and sister, Hugo and Elsa,
                    in climbing expeditions up and over the scaffolding at Red
                    Barns where Hugh was making additions to the building. She
                    spent much of the summer with aunt Katie at Leeds and she went
                    to her first political meeting at which the Liberal Prime Minister
                    and his son Herbert were the chief speakers. She wrote to her
                    mother:

                      I saw Mr Gladstone as he was driving away from the Great
                      Mass Meeting. Of course he was very tired when I saw him,
                      but he struck me as looking so very old and grey. Aunty
                      Katie went 3 times to hear him speak and he only spoke 4
                      times. She said she had never heard anything like it. At the
                      great mass meeting there were 30,000 people. Gladstone was
                      very tired so they tried to put on some other people to speak for
                      half an hour, but the people would hear nobody but Gladstone.
                      At last Herbert Gladstone rose, the people were delighted and
                      listened to him for half an hour. Every time he said he was
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