Page 288 - Life of Gertrude Bell
P. 288

262
                                        GERTRUDE BELL
                    The nationalist newspaper Al1 Alam a! Arabi wrote: ‘The true
                  sincerity of her patriotism, free from all desire for personal gain,
                  and the zeal for the interests of her country which illuminated the
                  service of this noble and incomparable woman makes her an
                  example to all men of Iraq; especially at this time when Iraq is so
                  sorely in need of serving hands ... We pray from our hearts that
                  the sons of our country will follow her great example by serving
                  their country as she served hers.’
                    The Times wrote in a leader on July 13th: ‘Some power in her
                  linked her love of the East with a practical aim that became a
                  dominating purpose ... That she endured drudgery, was never
                  dismayed by continual disappointment and never allowed her
                  idealism to turn to bitterness, shows a strength of character rare
                  indeed among those of the English for whom the East has become
                  a passion. She was the one distinguished woman among them and
                  her quality was of the purest English mettle ... Miss Bell has left
                  the memory of a great Englishwoman.’
                    King George V wrote to Sir Hugh and Lady Bell: ‘The Queen
                  and I are grieved to hear of the death of your distinguished and
                  gifted daughter, whom we held in high regard. The nation will
                  with us mourn one who by her intellectual powers, force of
                  character and personal courage rendered important and what I
                  trust will prove lasting benefit to the country and to those regions
                  where she worked with such devotion and self-sacrifice
                    There were tributes from the new Colonial Secretary Leo Amery,
                  from distinguished archaeologists the world over, from Chirol,
                  Wilson, Cox and almost all who had served with her, whether in
                  amity or discord. All made handsome acknowledgment of her
                  part in the creation of the Kingdom of Iraq. More than twenty
                  years were to pass before that monarchy was drowned in blood
                  and the corpses of its political masters dragged through the streets
                  of Baghdad by republican mobs as a warning to others who might
                  be tempted to engage in the dangerous business of king-making.
                  At the moment of his early triumph in 1927, King Faisal suggested
                  that one of the principal rooms in the Baghdad Museum which
                  Gertrude created should be dedicated to her memory. A plaque
                  was  placed in it which read:
   283   284   285   286   287   288   289   290   291   292   293