Page 150 - Life of Gertrude Bell
P. 150

136                  GERTRUDE BELL

                  raiding and an uncle of his is left in charge.’ Hogarth was to write
                  of her visit to the Rashid: ‘No European, other than a Turkish
                  officer, was known to have been seen in Hail for over twenty
                  years, and no European woman for more than thirty. The all-
                  powerful Amir Muhammad ibn Rashid, who protected more than
                  one western visitor, had died half a generation ago; and since his
                  death murder after murder had thinned the princely house. Its
                  power had been waning for some time in comparison with that of
                  the Amirate of Southern Najd; and one result of the growing
                  preponderance of the Ibn Sauds in central Arabia was likely to
                  be the accentuation of Wahhabism, heretofore lukewarm. Miss
                  Bell might well be doubtful how she would be received.’
                     In fact, Hail was a veritable metropolis of trade and was in
                  regular communication with the outside world. The Turks
                  visited the place in considerable numbers and Shakespear,
                  travelling in the opposite direction, met numerous people in the
                  desert who had passed Europeans on their way to the capital of
                  the Rashids. Lady Anne Blunt, the only other woman to penetrate
                  to central Arabia up to that time, had left a colourful description
                  of the place. And of course two of the finest writers in the entire
                  world of travel literature, Palgrave and Doughty, had given
                  accounts of it generations before. But Gertrude’s powers of
                  description were in no way diminished by the knowledge of
                  famous precedents:


                     And now I must relate to you the strange tale of my visit...
                     When we had been on the road for about an hour we met Ali
                     on his camel, all smiles. They had seen Ibrahim, the uncle in
                     charge. He was most polite and ha! ha! there were three slaves
                     of his household come out to receive me ... So we came up to
                     the walls of Hail in state ... At the doorway of the first house
                     stood Muhammad al Murawi ... I walked up a long sloping
                     passage ... to an open court and so into a great room with a
                     roof borne on columns and divans and carpets round the walls.
                     It was the Roshan, the reception room. Here I sat and one of
                     the slaves with me. These slaves, you must understand, are
                     often very important personages. Their masters treat them like
                     brothers and give them their full confidence. Also when one of
                     the Rashids removes the reigning prince and takes his place
                     (which frequently happens) he is careful to murder his slaves
                     also, lest they should avenge the slain ... Thereupon there








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