Authors: Georgina Howell
228
“
I can work here all day long”
: GLB to Chirol, 16 Dec.
228
“
Some rather complicated business”
: GLB letter
229
“
In spite of dirt and gloom”
: GLB to Chirol, 20 Jan. 1915, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 23
229
“
I hear that on Xmas Day”
: GLB letter, 27 Dec. 1914
230
“
At midnight”
: GLB letter, 1 Jan. 1915
230
“
It was full of errors”
: GLB to Chirol, 20 Jan. 1915
231
“
I feel tired”
: GLB to Chirol, 27 Dec. 1914
232
“
They have put all the correspondence”
: GLB to Chirol, 12 Jan. 1915
232
“
My work goes on”
: Ibid.
233
“
They reckon the average duration”
: GLB to Chirol, 2 Feb.
234
“
The Pyrrhic victory”
: GLB to Chirol, 2 Feb.
235
“
Don't let anyone know I'm coming”
: GLB letter, 22 Mar. 1915
235
“
I love Lord Robert”
: GLB to Chirol, 1 Apr.
235
“
I get rather tired”
: GLB letter
236
“
I could not possibly get away”
: GLB letter, 5 Aug.
236
“
It's very dear of you”
: GLB letter, 25 Aug.
236
“
It is of vital importance”
: GLB letter, 20 Aug.
237
“
I've heard from David”
: Recalled by Janet Courtney in an article on Gertrude in the
North American Review
, Dec. 1926
239
“
I'm getting to feel”
: GLB letter, 3 Jan. 1916
240
“
an oasis of peace and quiet”
: GLB letter, 6 Dec. 1915
242
the shrewd Hashemite Sharif of Mecca
: History in Lawrence,
Seven Pillars of Wisdom
243
On the eve of the world war
: Abdullah's visit to Sir Ronald Storrs in Ronald Storrs,
Orientations
; John Keay,
Sowing the Wind: The Mismanagement of the Middle East 1900â1960
, p. 41
246
“
biff the French out of all hope”
: T. E. Lawrence to D. G. Hogarth, 22 Mar. 1915
246
“
I wonder, if I could choose”
: GLB letter, 1 Jan. 1916
248
“
Political union is a conception unfamiliar”
: Undated paper, GLB Archives, Miscellaneous Collection, RL
249
As one commentator
: Keay,
Sowing the Wind
251
“
I devoutly hope”
: Charles Hardinge, letter to the Foreign Office, in Wallach,
Desert Queen
, p. 154
251
“
It is essential”
: GLB to Captain R. Hall, 20 Feb. 1916
252
“. . .
the people in India cling”
: Gilbert Clayton, from General Staff Army Headquarters, Cairo, 28 Jan. 1916
253
“
It was at this time”
: Lord Hardinge of Penshurst,
My Indian Years 1910â1916
, p. 136
253
“
When I got Lord H's message”
: GLB letter, 24 Jan.
253
“
I'm off finally at a moment's notice”
: GLB letter, 28 Jan.
255
“
They get so bored”
: GLB letter, 1 Feb.
255
“
It was very wonderful seeing it”
: GLB letter, 18 Feb.
256
“
I have . . . talked about Arabia”
: Ibid.
257
“
The V. is anxious”
: Ibid.
257
“
She is a remarkably clever woman”
: Lord Hardinge,
Old Diplomacy
257
“
I warned her”
: Hardinge,
My Indian Years
259
“
I wish I ever knew”
: GLB letter, 18 Mar.
261
“
Today I lunched”
: GLB letter, 9 Mar.
261
“
To the south”
. . .
“I need not say”
. . .
“There are many things”
: GLB to Chirol, 12 June 1916
263
“
Nothing happens”
: GLB letter, 27 Apr.
263
“
This week has been greatly enlivened”
: GLB letter, 9 Apr.
264
“. . .
we rushed into the business”
: GLB letter, 27 Apr.
265
“
It never occurred”
: GLB to Chirol, 13 Sept.
265
“
He is . . . a most remarkable creature”
: GLB letter, 24 May 1918, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 87
266
When he was fifteen
: Account of the capture of Riyadh from Keay,
Sowing the Wind
267
“
Ibn Saud is barely forty”
: GLB, “A Ruler of the Desert,” in
The Arab of Mesopotamia
268
“. . .
the phenomenon of one of”
: Sir Percy Cox of GLB's work, in Florence Bell,
Letters
268
“
Last night I woke”
: GLB letter, 15 July
268
“
one's bath water”
: GLB letter, 29 July
269
“
One wears almost nothing”
: GLB letter, 27 Apr. 1916
269
“
A box has just arrived”
: GLB letter, 20 Jan. 1917
269
“
Do you know”
: GLB letter, 20 Sept. 1916
269
“
The amount I've written”
: GLB letter, 2 Mar. 1917
270
“
Happy to tell you”
: GLB letter, 13 Jan. 1917
270
“
Officialdom . . . could never spoil”
: Kinahan Cornwallis, introduction to Gertrude Bell,
The Arab War: Confidential Information for GHQ Cairo, Dispatches for the Arab Bulletin
271
“
The only interesting letters I have”
: GLB to Chirol, 13 Sept. 1917
272
“
I had a letter from Sir Percy”
: GLB letter, 10 Mar. 1917
The descriptions of the rule of the Ottoman Empire and of the British administration derive from
Review of the Civil Administration of Mesopotamia
prepared by GLB for the India Office, 1920.
274
“
I unpacked my box”
: GLB letter, 20 Apr. 1917
275
“
I confess”
: Ibid.
275
“
Oh my dearest ones”
: GLB letter, 17 May 1917, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 60
276
“
General Maude”
: GLB letter, 22 Nov., ibid., p. 67
278
“
Nowhere in the war-shattered universe”
: GLB letter, 18 May
280
“
Today there rolled in”
: GLB letter, 2 Feb., in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 54
282
“
Fahad Beg and I”
: GLB letter, 26 May, ibid., p. 58
283
“ â. . .
I summoned my sheikhs' ”
: GLB letter, 1 June
284
“
Our office”
: GLB letter, 24 May 1918
284
“
I had a difficult time”
: GLB letter, 24 Apr. 1917, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 84
285
“
I don't really care”
: GLB letter, 26 Oct.
286
“
Please, please don't supply”
: GLB letter, 6 Sept.
288
“
[She] had all the personnel”
: Sir Percy Cox, in Florence Bell,
Letters
, p. 428
289
“
The question of regulation of pilgrim”
: GLB,
Review of the Civil Administration of Mesopotamia
290
“
It has resulted”
: Ibid.
291
“
We are put to it”
: GLB to Chirol, 9 Nov. 1918, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 67
293
“
The Turkish educational programme”
: GLB,
Review of the Civil Administration of Mesopotamia
294
“
We were all sitting”
: Florence Bell,
Letters
, p. 402
295
“
What I need”
: GLB letter, 25 Jan. 1918, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 75
295
“
I regret to say”
: GLB letter, 26 May 1917
296
“
The nuns are making me”
: GLB letter, 14 June 1918
296
“
O Father Dearest”
: GLB letter, 15 Feb. 1918, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 77
296
“
the drawback”
: GLB letter, 22 Feb., ibid., p. 78
296
“
I have been wishing”
: GLB to Chirol, end 1917, ibid., p. 71
297
“
Dearest Mother”
: GLB letter, 28 Mar. 1918, ibid., p. 81
298
“. . .
two most beautiful Arab greyhounds”
: GLB letter, 30 Nov. 1919
298
“
It's a most attractive little beast”
: GLB letter, 20 July 1920
299
“
Last week you told me”
: GLB letter, 2 Mar. 1917, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 55
299
“
One of my few consolations”
: GLB letter, 5 Sept., ibid., p. 63
299
“
there arrived a jeweller's shop”
: GLB letter, 25 Sept., ibid., p. 65
300
“
The Devil Worshippers”
: GLB letter, 28 June 1918, ibid., p. 89
301
“
The underlying truth”
: GLB letter, 10 Oct. 1920
302
“. . .
I might be able”
: GLB letter, 17 Jan. 1919
303
“
For the first quarter of an hour”
: Ibid.
303
“
When I come back”
: GLB to Hon. Mildred Lowther, 6 July 1918
304
“
I can't tell you”
: GLB letter, 16 Mar. 1919
308
“
If we wish to apply”
: GLB, “Self-Determination as Applied to the Iraq”
309
“
If the Arab Nation assist England”
: Telegram no. 233 from Kitchener, in Winstone,
Gertrude Bell
, pp. 243, 452
309
“
I propose to assume”
: GLB, “The Political Future of Iraq”
310
“
[Maude] did not see his way”
: And the story of Khanikin, GLB,
Review of the Civil Administration of Mesopotamia
310
“
In no part of Mesopotamia”
: Ibid.
311
“
We have taken on Khanikin”
: GLB to Chirol, Dec. 1917
311
“
Experts on Western Arabia”
: A. T. Wilson, in Burgoyne,
Bell, 1914â1926
, p. 110
312
“
a Kurdish independent state”
: GLB letter, 14 Aug. 1921
312
“
Beloved Mother”
: GLB letter, 16 Mar. 1919
313
“
I've never been so well dressed”
: GLB letter, 26 Sept. 1919
313
“
Heaven knows”
: GLB letter, 1 June 1917
314
“. . .
Fattuh looks older”
: GLB letter, 17 Oct. 1919
315
“
Marie has been invaluable”
: GLB letter, 7 Dec. 1919
316
“
I wonder how anyone can complain”
: GLB letter, 6 May 1920
316
“
I had a ladies' tea party”
: GLB to Chirol, 10 May 1918
317
“
I find social duties rather trying”
: Gordon,
Gertrude Bell
317
“
I really think I am beginning”
: GLB to Chirol, 12 Feb. 1920
318
“
I think we're on the edge”
: GLB letter, 10 Apr. 1920
318
“
We are at our wits' end”
: In Margaret MacMillan,
Peacemakers: The Paris Conference of 1919 and Its Attempt to End War
, p. 419
318
“
I do not understand this squeamishness”
: Martin Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill
, companion vol. 4, part 1
319
“
If only [the rebel tribes]”
: GLB letter, 8 Aug. 1920
320
“
The Nationalist propaganda increases”
: GLB letter, 14 June 1920
320
“
There they sit”
: GLB letter, 14 Mar. 1920
321
“
I was acutely conscious”
: Ibid.
321
At the end of 1919
: For the incident at Dair, Ibid.
323
“
We share the blame”
: GLB letter, 1 Feb. 1920
324
“
The tribes down there”
: GLB letter, 4 July 1920
325
“
He was visibly put out”
: GLB letter, 26 July 1920
325
“
We are now in the middle”
: GLB letter, Feb. 1920
325
“
It's touch and go”
: GLB letter, 2 Aug. 1920
325
“
Well, if the British evacuate”
: GLB letter, 26 July 1920
326
“
Rather a trying week”
: GLB letter, 20 Dec. 1920