Authors: Georgina Howell
109
“You know, dearest Father”
: GLB letter
109
“I am so wildly interested”
: GLB letter
109
“I am much entertained”
: GLB letter
111
she became a skilled photographer
: Photographic details from Mr. Jim Crow, School of Historical Studies, Newcastle University
112
“Yesterday . . . in the evening I went”
: GLB letter, one Saturday, Oct. 1907
113
“I went shopping with the Stanleys”
: GLB letter, Monday, 7 Nov. 1904
114
“Reinach has simply set”
: GLB letter
114
“the mud was incredible”
: GLB letter, 1 Feb. 1905
115
“My host”
: GLB letter
116
“I produced the Muallakat”
: GLB letter
116
“I could not help regretting”
: GLB letter
116
“I too contributed”
: GLB letter
116
“Tomorrow the Druzes are going forth”
: GLB letter
117
“ âOh Lord our God! Upon them!' ”
: GLB letter
117
“. . .
it was more abominable than”
: GLB letter
117â18
“The real triumph of eloquence”
: GLB letter
118
“
Islam is the greatest republic”:
GLB letter
118
“Tiresome, for I was never”
: GLB letter
118
“The devil take all Syrian inscriptions!”
: GLB letter
119
“There was nothing for it”
: GLB letter
119
“Fattuh, bless him!”
: GLB letter
120
“We fell into each other's arms”
: GLB letter
120
“Race, culture, art”
: GLB letter
120
“Did I tell you I was writing”
: GLB to Chirol
124
“I need not have hidden the cartridges”
: GLB letter, Jan. 1909
124
“No one knows of it”
: GLB letter
125
“
An interesting boy”
: GLB letter, 18 Apr. 1911
126
“
The whole world shone like a jewel”
: From Gordon,
Gertrude Bell
, “Desert Journeys and Archaeology,” RL
127
“
Braver soldier”
: Tribute by Sir Ian Hamilton to Doughty-Wylie, in Diana Condell,
Lieutenant Colonel Charles Doughty-Wylie VC CMGâSedd el Bahr and Hill 141
,
www.iwm.org.uk
128
“
The seas and the hills”
: GLB letter, 28 Apr. 1907
128
“
It was surrounded by”
: GLB letter, 1 May 1907
128
“I did all I knew”
: Ibid.
129
“
We think we have a Hittite settlement!”
: GLB letter, 25 May
129
Dick Doughty-Wylie had been educated
: Facts about Doughty-Wylie from Army List
133
“
The nearer I came to it”
: GLB to Chirol, Jan. 1913, DUL
137
â
55
“
My Dear Gertrude”
. . . 13 Aug. 1913 to 24 Apr. 1915,
“So many memories, my dear queen, of you”
: Letters from Doughty-Wylie until the day before he was killed at Gallipoli. There is a smaller number of letters from GLB to him, returned to her on the eve of the battle, RL
153
“
My dear Jean”
: From Doughty-Wylie to Mrs. H. H. Coe, in the papers of Mrs. L. O. Doughty-Wylie, Department of Documents, Imperial War Museum
157
Elsa, now Lady Richmond
: Elizabeth Burgoyne,
Gertrude Bell from Her Personal Papers, 1914â1926
157
Towards the end of 1915
: For accounts of the missing days: L. A. Carlyon,
Gallipoli
; Michael Hickey,
Gallipoli
; Eric Wheeler Bush,
Gallipoli
157
L. A. Carlyon
: In his book
Gallipoli
158
different version of events
: Hickey,
Gallipoli
158
According to her diaries
: The Department of Documents, Imperial War Museum
160
“
I think it more than likely”
: This letter is excluded from Florence Bell,
Letters
, but appears in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 29
On her trip to Hayyil, Gertrude kept two diaries, one for Doughty-Wylie (D-W) and the other as a reminder to herself of dates, facts, and events. She was also writing frequent letters to her parents and the occasional letter to Chirol. Her love letters to Doughty-Wylie probably continued, but were destroyed by him later so that they should not fall into the hands of his wife in the event of his death.
163
“
If you knew the way”
: GLB to Chirol, Dec. 1913, DUL
166
For a century the enmity
: History of the Sauds and Rashids from T. E. Lawrence,
The Seven Pillars of Wisdom
167
Charles Huber . . . Baron Nolde
: From H. V. F. Winstone,
Gertrude Bell
; and Zahra Freeth and H. V. F. Winstone,
Explorers of Arabia from the Renaissance to the Victorian Era
169
“
Miss Bell passed straight through”
: T. E. Lawrence to his brother, 10 Dec. 1913
169
a somewhat sensational biography
: Thomas Lowell,
With Lawrence in Arabia
170
“
Muhammad says”
: GLB letter, 27 Nov. 1913
170
“
I hope you will not say No”
: GLB letter
171
“
This is not a gift for which I am asking”
: GLB letter
171
“
I don't know that it is an ultimate”
: GLB to Chirol, Dec. 1913
171
“
A curious figure”
: GLB letter, 12 Dec. 1913
173
“
We struggled on”
: An account of the incident on 21 Dec., GLB letter
174
“
A preposterous and provoking episode”
: GLB letter
174
“
The stony hills”
: GLB letter
175
“
Extremely nasty dinner”
: GLB letter
175
“
a mountain of evils”
: GLB diary for D-W, 16 Feb. 1914
176
“
I was an idiot”
: GLB letter, 9 Jan. 1914
177
“
It's all rather comic”
: Ibid.
179
“
Decided to run away”
: GLB (personal) diary, 14 Jan. 1914
179
“
There is something in the written word”
: GLB diary for D-W, 16 Jan. 1914
180
“
My troubles are over”
: GLB letter, 11 Jan. 1914
180
“
I have known loneliness in solitude”
: GLB to Chirol
181
“
I have cut the thread”
: GLB diary for D-W, 16 Jan. 1914
182
“
The Beduin has been born”
: T. E. Lawrence, in preface to
Arabia Deserta
by Charles M. Doughty, p. 15
182
“
a certain hierarchical conception”
: Albert Hourani,
A History of the Arab Peoples
, p. 102
182
“
The Arab is never safe”
: Gertrude Bell,
The Desert and the Sown
, p. 66
183
“
Your safest course of action”
: Ibid., preface, p. xxii
185
“
When we were little”
: GLB diary for D-W, 24 Jan. 1914
185
“
There are no words to tell you”
: GLB diary for D-W, 23 Jan. 1914
187
“
A formidable looking person”
: GLB diary for D-W, 2 Feb. 1914
187
“
I saw his jurisdiction”
: Ibid.
187
“
the price of which . . . enchanting little beast”
: GLB diary for D-W, 29 Jan. 1914
189
“
Abandoned of God and man”
: GLB diary for D-W, 2 Feb. 1914
191
“
[It] springs from a profound doubt”
: GLB diary for D-W, 16 Feb. 1914
192
“
Princes and powers of Arabia”
: Ibid.
192
“
This morning we reached”
: GLB letter, 19 Feb. 1914
197
“
In short, I was not to come further”
: GLB diary for D-W, 2 Mar. 1914
197
“
In Hayil, murder”
: Ibid.
198
“
[It was] a very splendid place”
: Ibid.
199
“
And then followed”
: Ibid.
199
“
Turkiyyeh says”
: GLB (personal) diary, 28 Feb.
200
“
Wind and dust, a little rain”
: GLB (personal) diary
200
“
I have just £40”
: GLB diary for D-W, 2 Mar.
201
“
I spent a long night”
: Ibid.
202
was planning to murder
: For the murder of Zamil ibn Subhan, see H. V. F. Winstone,
Gertrude Bell
, p. 210, and H. V. F. Winstone,
The Illicit Adventure
, ch. 5
202
“
I passed two hours”
: GLB diary for D-W, 6 Mar.
203
“
I spoke to him”
: Ibid.
204
“
And why they have now given way”
: Ibid.
204
“
Everyone was smiling and affable”
: GLB diary for D-W, 17 Mar.
204
“
I went, and took an affectionate farewell”
: GLB diary for D-W
205
“
I fancy they meant”
: GLB diary for D-W
205
“
[The journey is] so wearying”
: GLB diary for D-W
205
“
Not one grown man”
: GLB diary for D-W
206
“
I fear when I look back”
: GLB diary for D-W, 16 Feb.
207
“
On a careful analysis of my feelings”
: GLB diary for D-W, 26 Mar.
207
“ â
In all the years”
: GLB diary for D-W, 17 Apr.
208
“
He does not get up till 12”
: GLB diary for D-W, 28 Mar.
209
“
I think the only things”
: GLB diary for D-W, 26 Mar.
209
“
He is too holy”
: GLB diary for D-W, 28 Mar.
210
“
The muddy waters of Tigris flood”
: Ibid.
210
“
Baghdad shimmered”
: GLB diary for D-W, 12 Apr.
210
description of the court of the Caliph
: Baghdad in the time of al-Muqtadir, from the account of al-Khatib al-Baghdadi, in Hourani,
History of the Arab Peoples
211
“
Baghdad has taken to”
: GLB diary for D-W, 13 Apr.
211
“
Out under the open sky again”
: Ibid., 13, 15, and 22 Apr.
212
“
We went on boldly”
: GLB diary for D-W, 16 Apr.
212
“
They brought it to me”
: GLB diary for D-W, 19 Apr.
213
“
He received me with a kindness”
: GLB diary for D-W, 22 Apr.
213
“
We ate and the dusk fell”
: GLB diary for D-W
214
“
There are people camped in the hills”
: GLB diary for D-W, 19 Apr.
214
“
A great storm marched across our path”
: GLB diary for D-W, 25 Apr.
215
“
So here I am in a garden”
: GLB diary for D-W, 1 May
215
“
He looked at me in silence”
: Later undated letter from GLB to Doughty-Wylie
219
“
On the Baghdad side”
: Report by GLB to Wyndham H. Deedes of the Military Operations Directorate, sent on to Sir Edward Grey, Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, WO 33 doc 48014
219
The magazines were full of photographs
: Georgina Howell,
In Vogue 1916â1975
220
“
I have asked some of my friends”
: GLB letter, Nov. 1914
220
“
St. Loe remarked”
: GLB letter, 17 Nov.
222
She stepped onto the quay
: Description of Boulogne from
Red Cross
(periodical), Feb. 1915, p. 39
223
“
I had a hideous interview”
: GLB to Doughty-Wylie, in Winstone,
Gertrude Bell
, p. 229
224
“
I think I have inherited”
: GLB letter
224
Her first object was to create
: The working of the W&MED, from a report to the Joint War Committee, spring 1915
224
“
I've very nearly”
: GLB letter, 16 Dec.
225
“
It is fearful the amount”
: GLB letter, 26 Nov.
226
“
The cooks [were]”
: GLB letter, New Year, 1915
226
“
There is a recent order”
: GLB to Chirol, 11 Dec. 1914
227
“
Where we are under a cross fire”
: GLB to Chirol