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Letter from Charles Doughty-Wylie to Gertrude Bell

Summary
There is currently no summary available for this item.
Reference code
GB/1/2/1/2/13
Recipient
Bell, Gertrude Margaret Lowthian
Creator
Wylie, Charles Hotham Montagu Doughty-
Creation Date
Extent and medium
1 letter plus envelope, paper
Language
English
Location
Coordinates

8.9806034, 38.7577605

Adis Ababa.
7 May.
My dear Gertrude.

To you I begin in the intervals of typing my views as to an extension of the Abyssinian telegraph system to the Sudan frontier and the Italian opposition - & in planting abstramerias [?] and decoding Cairo wires - In the intervals I said, but there aren’t any, Queen of the Desert – I must go at once & decode for fear lest being swept away by the [?] devils to you and the abiding glory of you I forget the rest of the world altogether – no I go now but I’ll come back having decoded – And since then having settled certain things about currency & the Bank at Gambela, & written some advice to the Consul there – a good man – to the effect that it is well to make friends & use every scoundrel just so far as he is useful - I come back to you & peace –

I’d love to tell you all about Abyssinia – to make you as you me – oh delightful long letter – a theatre for my actions – But I can’t – you don’t know the mise en scene – while with you at Baghdad Babylon, Mysagih, Mesiner Pasha, & Alexander the Great – not to mention the vivid day in the launch & the river & the palms – with all those settings I find you I know you and I’d love to be with you - yes it was a most delightful letter – it lies now on my desk – The other one, - where she of the garden wrote to me of the garden – (the one I won’t talk about now, its another world of ours) that one I have still locked up with my secret papers –

My dear when people love each other there are things for them alone and times – but not less than public meeting, the road of the world, where we walk like the sect and yet with the secret of happiness held close –

So we’ll walk like the rest – I with you in a way better in the desert or in Bablyon than you with me in the road of mine –

Why shouldn’t you come here someday? There is only one reason why not – which is that by Christmas I shall be gone – or so I think – till then or nearly then you will be busy – there will be people to see – many things to do - & the new book to write and a great book it will be “met den Winendon zu stelen” –

Of course you were pleased with Koldewey – but how much more he with you my dear – he for ten years past of the old dust of Babylon – oh yes I know the dust of dreams, but still dust - & then come you out of the desert but touching life at how many points – so it was Koldewey who envied – if people of the magic dust do envy –

It is most interesting that view of the railway and the river – I expect you’re right you usually are – If it was easy to beat the railway by the river, then Messner & Co are idiots – if the other way then its Inchcape – unless & in so far as there is or there is going to be too much for either route to carry all alone – Surely it would be cheaper for one competitor to but the other out, with rights reserved, goodwill etc – Perhaps that is where Inchcape is to make his money – he’ll sell –

I remember Tod –

Its a lamentable picture you draw of our Consul General – Its so often like that – I remember when I was there in the time of one Col. Newmarch, who had never heard tell of Bashid or Sa'ud – and didn’t care in the very slightest for the whole of Arabia – But your man must be a bigger fool still, as he had only to sit awhile at your feet - & get Arabia into focus – Its like going to a window, and seeing the chiefs and Hayil and the roots whence shall grow interests and affairs – but the idiot sees nothing but his desk and his bankbook and perhaps his wife –

The Turkish C.G. from Itarar, a Constantinople acquaintance of mine, whose name woe on it eludes me, is coming here – He may stay with me, if the Habesh do not give him some Ras’ house - But the curious thing to me is the real lining for Turks which these fanatical Christians have – The Turk who gives them privileges in Jerusalem the beloved – The Turk who in some way unknown to them stands with them against Europe – Its queen and I remember once thinking that Abyssinia might be useful as a little help in that vast Moslem revival which is to drive us out of Africa. It isn’t so – Africa for the Africans would pull them harder – one must have a saint & the power of God and death & blood and heaven to win - & all that long ago left Christianity – we don’t burn people anymore & virtue has gone out of us –

Things fade so quick – I mean the landscapes we walk through – Turkey, Albania, are already dim, dimmer still Baghdad & the Euphrates, except that you, companion of so many ways, you have painted them afresh – I am now an Abyssinian – but out of Abyssinia as out of all the rest, there us still the short road, the swift flight – a moment, a thought, and one is back secure serene in the garden of the goddess – to which you have the key.
Dick.

Evolving Hands is a collaborative digital scholarship project between Newcastle University and Bucknell University which explores the use of Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR) and Text Encoded Initiative (TEI XML) to enhance cultural heritage material. In this project, we have applied these methods to a selection of letters from the Gertrude Bell Archive.


IIIF Manifest
https://cdm21051.contentdm.oclc.org/iiif/info/p21051coll46/12198/manifest.json
Licence
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/