Page 57 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)_Neat
P. 57

FAMILY MATTERS                      43
        and claw’. Life presents us occasionally with cases of unspeak­
        able calamity for which there can be no compensation; wrongs
        that can never be righted; hopeless, heartless, odious things
        which put the glib commonplaces of the pulpit and the copy­
        book to rout, and leave poor, mocked mankind shaking their
        fists in impotent rage at the sky ... a case without consolation
        or redress. It is the case which has been represented at the
        Independent Theatre by the anonymous author of Alan's Wife,
        and presented with no attenuation, but rather persistent
        aggravation of its horrible circumstances ...

      Gertrude returned at the height of the storm and she, like her
      stepmother and the rest of the family, kept a resolute silence about
      sllaris Wife. There is something very revealing about the episode.
      The parents Gertrude so admired, whose precepts she so readily
      embraced, exhibited in an unusual degree the classical Victorian
      dilemma of trying to uphold outmoded social proprieties in an
      age addicted to reason and rationality. Gertrude sensed the incon­
      sistency just after Oxford. She wrote to her stepmother from
      London in July 1889: ‘We drove in a hansom to the exhibition
      and Captain      brought me home, I hope that doesn’t shock
      you; I discussed religious beliefs all the way there and very meta­
      physical conceptions of truth all the way back ... I love talking
      to people when they really will talk sensibly and about things
      which one wants to discuss. I am rather inclined to think however
      that it is a dangerous amusement, for one’s so ready to make
      oneself believe that the things one says and the theories one
      makes are really guiding principles of one’s life whereas as a
      matter of fact they are not at all.’
        The Bells, civic and industrial leaders and local benefactors
      through three generations, looked upon a changing world from
      a position of free thought and social insulation. As Florence
      shied away from the stage that was her real witier, so Hugh looked
      at industry with academic detachment. He spent a fortune building
      offices and local monuments which became showpieces of the
      Gothic revival. He travelled up and down the country addressing
      his meticulously marshalled arguments to meetings of the
      Liberal Party, businessmen’s gatherings and ‘free’ trades unions,
      in a piping, professorial voice. He often went to local engage­
      ments in his first motor car, a ‘baby’ Austin, and he wore a top
      hat on important occasions, especially during his period of office
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