Page 176 - Life of Gertrude Bell
P. 176

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  '                     i58                   GERTRUDE DELL
   U,
                        quite know what I did for the first sixty seconds. Something
   '
                        seemed to tear at the region of my heart. All my life was so much
                        of his life, all his life mine. I suppose I shall have to pick up the
                        pieces ... just a lonely widow ... ’
                           On November 17th a woman is said to have landed at Gallipoli
                        and laid a wreath on his grave. Though hostilities were still in
 $                      progress the Turks ‘fired neither bullet nor shell’ during the
 y
  -                     ceremony, according to the report of two British naval officers
 U                      who said they witnessed the event. Gertrude boarded a troopship
                        on tiiat very day, bound for Cairo. Doughty-Wylie’s ghostly
                        dream seems to have pursued him beyond the grave.

                        Field-Marshal Lord Kitchener, when he was British Resident in
                        Cairo before the outbreak of war, had engaged in secret talks with
                        Abdullah the son of Husain the Sharif of Mecca, the exact details
                        of which were never disclosed, though it is known that Abdullah
                        sounded out the Resident on Britain’s attitude should the Arabs
                        rebel against their Turkish overlords. Kitchener, the leonine,
                        imperious bachelor on whom an ill-prepared British Empire
                        looked as saviour and guide in the war, had been a law unto
                        himself in Cairo. Succeeding Sir Eldon Gorst but inheriting
                        Cromer’s mantle he was virtually the ruler of that country whose
                        importance to the Powers lay not in itself but in the Suez Canal
                        which divided it from Sinai and the Arabian peninsula and
                        provided access from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea. Great
                        though his power in Egypt was, Kitchener regarded it as a
                        second-best prize for his valiant work in the Boer War and other
                        notable campaigns of the British army. He had expected to be
                        made Viceroy of India after Curzon with whom he fought an
                        unceasing and vitriolic batde during his time as Commander-in-
                        Chief of the Indian army; it is said that he even built himself a
                        private residence in Simla to await his return. But he was offered
                        Cairo and he made do with it. From his vantage point at the north
                        of the Arabian peninsula he set out to devise an ‘Islamic’ policy
                        of his own in total disregard of all the schemes of the Indian
                        Government connected with Arab lands, and he gathered round
                        him a group of admiring assistants of whom the chief were
                        ‘Fitz’, Colonel Oswald Fitzgerald his devoted Secretary, and
                        Ronald Storrs his Oriental Secretary. When war was imminent
                        in the summer of 1914 Kitchener was home on leave. As soon as a
                        declaration of hostilities seemed inevitable he decided to hurry
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