Page 170 - Life of Gertrude Bell
P. 170

152                   GERTRUDE BELL
                     going nice and smoothly the India Office wired for me and
                     fired me out here ‘to get into personal touch* with Bin Saud.
                     It was a weary long voyage out... I had got as far as Karachi
                     when war with Turkey was announced ... Here I find immense
                     relief that we have turned the Turks out of Basra and not a
                     trace of any fanaticism or of feeling against the British. Bin
                     Saud is as pleased as possible. He is making preparations for
                     a big raid on Ibn Rashid with a view to wiping him out
                     practically and I shouldn’t be surprised if I reached Hail in the
                     course of next month or two as BS’s political adviser!! I
                     expect you are having a pretty busy time with a hospital or
                     something ... I am afraid Dr Keltie will be rather annoyed
                     with me—no lecture and no paper for the Journal... If you
                     aren’t too busy and can spare a line about your doings and how
                     the lecture went at the RGS you can help my loneliness out
                     here ... I trust you had a better Christmas and New Year than
                     I ... a 22 mile march and New Year’s Day my second bath in
                     20 days ...
                  Within tiiree weeks of writing that letter, Shakespear was dead,
                  killed in the battle that was to have wiped out the pro-Turkish
                  desert force of Ibn Rashid. With his death the British abandoned
                  Ibn Saud altogether. Shakespear’s maps and some of the most
                  detailed and valuable notes ever compiled on the Arabian
                  terrain were included along with Gertrude’s observations on the
                  War Office and Royal Geographical Society maps. In June she
                  was  approached by the Director of Naval Intelligence. Britain’s
                  policy in Arabia was about to take a dramatic turn and Gertrude’s
                  expertise was needed in that theatre of war.
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