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T. E. Lawrence ftontispiece The bungalow at No. 2 Polstead Road, Oxford, facing page 48


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Well . . . Nor was this story one of those Lawrence poured into the ears of his easily impressed friend, Richards, who was told by Lawrence -- he did not himself witness it as Major Young did -- a rather different version of a similar episode. Lawrence, having crossed a stretch of desert, had paid off his camel-man, only to hear him crying in distress as three Turkish gendarmes tried to steal his money under pretence of various dues. Lawrence, instantly returned, protested, and when that failed "with a signal to the camel-man he suddenly attacked the gendarmes." Needless to say, Lawrence "was good for two at least" and the camel-man for the other, and the Turks were disarmed of their carbines and marched unresisting to the governor's room. When the governor realised who his visitor was (in spite of his wearing Arab costume) he "collapsed" (why ?) and protested that his policemen should be "degraded, deprived of their arms." Lawrence interrupted
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him: "I have done that, and here are the arms, and outside in the road are the gendarmes themselves. Don't let it happen again." 56 It was very unfortunate he hadn't that plucky camel-man around when tackling the Kurds, for one can't help thinking that Young by his professional attitude of strict neutrality rather let the Qonsolos down.
Major Young's mention of the presence in Carchemish of Lawrence's younger brother William, calls attention to a letter he wrote to a friend in October of 1913, which relates une ténébreuse affaire which is hard to make clear owing to its curious mixture of testimony. At the same time, it gives a glimpse of what a genuine British Qonsolos of those days was prepared to do or was credited with allowing -- the same gentleman, by the way, who is alleged to have regretted that Woolley and Lawrence had not shot the Turkish governor and magistrate. William Lawrence tells his correspondent that one of his brother's greatest friends was the Kurd, Buswari, who, only four months earlier had massacred 8,000 people at Urfa, Adan and Nisib, at the last of which T. E. Lawrence had been present in disguise. During the Balkan War of 1912-13 (when the Bulgarians seemed on the point of capturing Constantinople) this Buswari and another Kurd "planned the sack of Aleppo, actually arranging which should have the loot of which houses, and apportioning two bankers' houses, great collectors of objets d'art, to Ned," i.e., T. E. Lawrence. The young man is clearly relating not what he witnessed himself but what his brother had told him, for the style of the anecdote is unmistakable. 57 Woolley tells us that the Kurds at that time had planned to sack Aleppo, killing the Germans at Jerablus on their way. Whereupon Woolley anxiously sent for Buswari, who lavishly promised him a guard of 2,000 men. In Aleppo Woolley met Buswari's son and another Kurd making a list of the richest houses to rob. Now, as David Garnett points out, the massacres referred to had happened before Lawrence ever landed in Syria, so he could not have been in Nezib in disguise; and Woolley in his tale does not mention Lawrence's name even. 58 From which it may be inferred that Lawrence, having heard of the massacres and learning the Buswari story from Woolley, put them together in a brotherly tale to his own greater glory, by attributing them all to himself.
This, however, is not the end of the Tale. The British Consul in Aleppo is said to have been warned by Lawrence and Woolley of this
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"He would turn away when he saw the lens pointing in his own direction. . . . Frequently Chase snapped pictures of the Colonel without his knowledge, or just at the instant that he turned and found himself facing the lens and discovered our perfidy." LOWELL THOMAS ( 1924) in With Lawrence in Arabia "We never had the slightest difficulty persuading T. E. to pose for Harry Chase's camera." LOWELL THOMAS ( 1937) in T. E. Lawrence by His Friends

One of the illustrations that appeared in Lowell Thomas's With Lawrence in Arabia over the caption "Lawrence occasionally visited enemy territory disguised as a gipsy woman of Syria."

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approaching sack -- but Woolley does not mention any of this story. According to the Consul's wife, the chance of the Consulate being defended by the Turks was slight, so at Lawrence's suggestion the Consul agreed to allow Lawrence to smuggle in rifles from a British gun-boat at Beirut. With two naval officers Lawrence managed the gun-running without being discovered. She goes on to say that she had rifles under all her divans, but nevertheless thought that Woolley and Lawrence might have been "pulling their Consul's leg." She adds that it was a sound scheme, and that the rumour that the British Consulate was so armed would have frightened off the Kurds. But if Buswari and his men were such friends of Lawrence that they had allotted him two houses to plunder where was the necessity for arming? Where the naval officers got the rifles, and who paid for them is not stated; and the fact that gun-running is illegal doubtless did not worry a Qonsolos of those spacious days. 59
In later life Lawrence spoke of these Carchemish years as the happiest he ever knew. Carchemish was "the perfect life." 60 Even if allowance is made for the human tendency to idealise the epoch of lost youth and the obvious contrast between post-war chaos and prewar tranquillity, we can see that here at least he was telling the truththe Carchemish life did suit his peculiar temperament and alleviated the unhappy conditions of his existence. At Carchemish he was wholly free (except for letter-writing) of the home life he found so unendurable and of his mother's expectations of him which he could not meet, however much he wished. He was devoted to Hogarth and got on well enough with Woolley, who did all the real intellectual work of the expedition while allowing Lawrence to do much as he wished, yet without excluding him from such work as pottering with the ceramics and photography which really interested him. What Lawrence himself called his "Oxford pose," 61 of stheticism and dressing up was not interfered with. In the off season he could wear his Arab bachelor's girdle with the extra-large tassels of celibacy, amuse himself with Dahoum, and treat the villagers "in lordly fashion," 62 as the sole representative of the distant English authority which employed them on easy labour and distributed lavish baksheesh. Lawrence must have enjoyed his holiday excursions with Dahoum, though they cannot have been anything like so extensive or frequent as he implies and his panegyrists assert.
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Lawrence as we have seen, later allowed Liddell Hart to say that he had travelled "always with someone from our Carchemish digging gang" (obviously Dahoum) taking "a few camels on hire-carrying, sailing down the Syrian coast, bathing, harvesting, and sight-seeing in the towns." 63 His letters, on the other hand, show him settled at Carchemish or visiting his English-speaking friends at Jebail and Aleppo, so that there is difficulty in finding time for these other activities unless indeed they occurred at no great distance from Jerablus. He did not really have "five years" 64 of wandering about the Middle East, but, (apart from his walking tour in 1909), merely the off-seasons of two and a half years, made the basis of his claim that he "came to know Syria like a book, much of North Mesopotamia, Egypt and Greece." 65 The available evidence shows that before August, 1914, Lawrence had spent one day each in Athens, Naples and Smyrna, about a month with Petrie in Egypt, a week in Constantinople, and did not wander farther east of the Euphrates than Harran. The "sailing down the Syrian coast" story was told to Vyvyan Richards where it became "a journey by boat up the Palestine coast" with the picturesque addition of Lawrence's collapse in delirium from malaria, only to regain consciousness "in an Eastern hall stretched luxuriously in a deck-chair listening to a Beethoven sonata echoing divinely through the large spaces." 66 Time must also be found for Lawrence in these off-seasons to supplement his income by "casual earnings of a queerly varied kind," 67 including the two weeks at Port Said as a coal checker, his "getting in touch with the members of the various Arab Freedom societies," and a visit to Kitchener in Cairo to warn that unwary soldier of the danger to the British Empire of allowing any other European power to control Alexandretta. 68 It should perhaps be added that Lawrence's "basic intention" on these wanderings "was always to write a strategic study of the Crusades," and that his anti-Turkish sympathies were not limited to the Arabs. The Kurds had "encouraged him to ride in their ranks" while Armenian revolutionaries "had come to him for help and advice and he had dipped far into their councils." 69
Altogether, he must have been a much sought after and most self-important young man as well as a happy one during this epoch of his life. At the Jebail American Mission School, which he made his second home, Lawrence was known as "the Encyclopdia" from his wide knowledge. 70
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At Carchemish (Jerablus) he came out of his "absorbed and discomforting aloofness" and devoted himself to his guests, on whom he made different impressions. A woman visitor speaks of his "intensely blue eyes" and "gold hair," and thought he looked "a young man of rare power and considerable physical beauty." 71 On the other hand, an Armenian of his own age thought him "a frail, pallid, silent youth" with a "shut-up Oxford face," and found him "impressive, disturbing, disagreeable" in the "exquisite temple of culture created by himself and Wolley. 72 When Major Sir Hubert Young, spent the week of 1913 with Lawrence at Carchemish they passed the days "in clambering over the mound, bathing in the Euphrates, carving figures out of the soft limestone, and above all talking." They tried vainly to make out the meaning of Hittite inscriptions, and practised revolver shooting with a matchbox for a target at thirty paces, at which accomplishment Lawrence easily beat the professional soldier. Many years later Young expressed his surprise that in their all-day talks they never mentioned "strategy and the art of war," though they were uppermost in Young's mind, and Lawrence, as he subsequently told Liddell Hart, had been closely studying all the best-known writers on warfare since he was sixteen. This friendship with a regular officer is the more interesting since Lawrence afterwards came to dislike the type so much, though Young thought that he earned Lawrence's highbrow friendship by his casual use of the word "boustrophedon," a Greek word which literally means "Turning like oxen in ploughing," but is used of ancient methods of writing which go alternately from left to right and right to left. 73
Whether Lawrence was really "in touch with the members of the various Arab Freedom societies," 74 or had "dipped deep" in anybody's secret political councils remains a question. It is obviously useless to look for any contemporary evidence since nobody would put into writing dangerous information which might be betrayed. The story of Buswari and the alleged plan to loot Aleppo seems to have been taken over by Lawrence from Woolley with numerous embellishments, and seems to be the chief basis for his supposed alliance with the Kurds, unless indeed, Captain Hart refers to the Qonsolos episode. What help the Armenian committees thought to obtain from a junior archologist of pronounced sthetic tastes and meagre income is not stated, and the other hints are too slight to take
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hold of. In Seven Pillars, Lawrence describes the secret societies -- the Ahad and the Fetah -- but there makes no claim to being in touch with them, and on a later page merely says that he had "seen something of the political forces working in the minds of the Middle East." 75 Indeed, the chief if not the only pre-war pronouncement of Lawrence's about the topic of "Arab freedom" (which we are given to understand had been the main object of his life since schooldays) is a chance remark in a letter written in April, 1913, at the end of the first Balkan war; "As for Turkey, down with the Turks! But I am afraid there is, not life, but stickiness in them yet. Their disappearance would mean a chance for the Arabs, who were at any rate once not incapable of good government. One must debit them with algebra though." The tone of these remarks does not appear to indicate either high hopes or lofty admiration for "Arab freedom." 76
In contrast to these uncertainties, there is considerable information about the expedition made by Woolley and Lawrence, with Captain (afterwards Colonel) Newcombe of the Royal Engineers in January and February of 1914, along the then Turkish-Egyptian frontier. Under threat of war England, in 1906, had compelled the Turks to give up to Egypt a large quadrilateral of desert land north of the Suez Canal, between the Mediterranean and the Gulf of Akaba. A military survey and maps of this area had been nearly completed in 1913 by the British War Office and the Survey of Egypt, the field work being done by military officers. 77 When it came to the point of carrying the survey to the other side of the Turkish frontier, a difficulty arose. It could hardly be that the Turks would allow map-making by British officers in Turkish territory, 78 and they might with some justification consider such activities as espionage. Honesty being the best policy, the decision was made to call on the Palestine Exploration Fund to send an archologist to make a survey of this Bible land (to be written up later in their "slightly devotional" annual publication) under cover of which Captain Newcombe could continue his military work. Woolley was first selected for the task, but as he could not be spared for three months, Lawrence was added to divide the work with him. 79
None of the intellectuals writing on Lawrence has expressed the faintest regret or indignation at this official abuse of science and religion in order to screen politico-military activities in the underhand
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manner that has since become so deplorably frequent, though the Director General of the Survey of Egypt attempts to apologise for it on the grounds that it was equally valuable for "peaceful" as for "defensive" purposes; 80 and Captain Newcombe received orders from Kitchener himself to cease surveying when the Turkish officials discovered the real nature of the survey and ordered the governor of Akaba to forbid it. Nor is any explanation given of why these two junior archologists were asked to go on the survey instead of one of the genuine specialists in Biblical archology. How far the alleged archological survey was in fact only a piece of camouflage, 81 is indicated by the admissions in Lawrence's preface that he and Woolley were not "Semitic specialists," that they were so ignorant of the subject that they arrived in Sinai without having even heard of the names of the scholar-travellers who had preceded them, and consequently duplicated their work. 82 Yet this connection with the Egypt Survey and the maps Lawrence prepared for their joint report were essentially useful to him in the autumn of 1914, serving as an introduction to the War Office which enabled him to start his war service as a commissioned officer on the Staff instead of as an officer cadet or in the fighting ranks. When after the outbreak of war Lawrence described the survey as "a very fortunate stroke," 83 he was thinking of it perhaps from a military point of view, but it was also a very fortunate stroke in his own career.
From Woolley's narrative and Lawrence's map, the first part of their journey can be closely followed. They took Dahoum with them from Carchemish, and reached Gaza on the 6th January, 1914. They remained at Gaza only one day to buy the equipment needed, and on the 7th met Newcombe at Beersheba, but without reporting to the Survey headquarters in Cairo. The little expedition spent three days at Beersheba, then on January 11th moved south to Khalasa where they stayed four days; from the 16th to the 23rd they were at the ruined Byzantine town of Esbeita, from which they moved south-west to El Auja which is just on the Turkish side of the frontier. They then doubled back, re-crossing the Darb el Shur, (the old caravan route from Palestine to Egypt) and moving just inside the Turkish frontier to Bir Birein, where Woolley and Lawrence temporarily lost their camels. After further wandering on either side of the frontier, Woolley and Lawrence separated on the 8th February
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near the Egyptian Government post of Kossaima. 84 Newcombe says they spent only four or five days in his camp, during which all his daylight hours were given to surveying, and after dark until midnight in listening to the discussions of the two archologists. 85 He was particularly interested in their investigation of Ain Kadeis, thought by some to be the Kadesh-Barnea of the Old Testament, on which there is a note by Lawrence in their report. 86 This report tentatively places Kadesh in the region of Kossaima, which includes Ain Kadeis, after ruthlessly jeering at the American, Trumbull, for his description of the place, 87 which might possibly have been better supplied with water in 1882, than in 1914.
When Lawrence takes up the narrative after his separation from Woolley at Kossaima all dates cease, so that we do not know how long he and Dahoum were in walking the hundred miles or so on the Egyptian side of the frontier to the coast and Akaba -- I say "walking" because Newcombe says that at this period Lawrence preferred walking to riding either horse or camel. 88 Obviously it was some time in February when Lawrence joined Newcombe at Akaba, where the Turkish governor informed Newcombe that he had definite orders from Constantinople to forbid the surveying in his district. Lawrence, Newcombe adds, was "surprised and even hurt" that the officer obeyed the order; but evidently complaint had been made to Cairo, since Kitchener by telephone called off the military survey. 89
At the same time Lawrence was forbidden to take photographs and "to archologise," and was not allowed a boat to visit the island called by the Crusaders, Graye, and now Kureijeh, or Jeziret Firaun (Pharaoh's Island), which lies off the Egyptian coast opposite Akaba according to Lawrence, near Wadi Taba, but according to the 1912 Baedeker "opposite the mouth of the Wadi Kureijeh," an hour and a quarter farther south. This prohibition he took as a challenge, and contrived to cross the 400 yards to the island with Dahoum on empty ten-gallon water tanks borrowed from Newcombe.
Lawrence wrote a careful account of the island ruins, only to find that he had been anticipated by "the French Fathers." 90 The next day he and Dahoum were expelled from the district by a Turkish policeman, from whom they managed to escape in Wadi Araba. The two boys took that route in preference to the usual trip ( Baedeker, Route
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22) up the old Roman road through Wadi Ithm or Yetem to Maan. The escort must have stuck to them for sixty or seventy miles if, as Lawrence says, they only got rid of him (or them) "in the ravines about Mount Hor," or Jebel Harun, the burial place of Aaron according to Sitic mythology. Lawrence's official account of this journey is vague, and not easy to follow on his own map. He had arranged to meet Woolley in Aleppo on the 1st March, but had to borrow the railway fares for himself and Dahoum from two English tourists at Petra. 91
An embellished version of these events is contained in Lawrence's letter "to a friend," written from Damascus on the last day of February, 1914. The camels which, according to Newcombe and Woolley were lost near Ain Kadeis on the 27th January, are here lost on the way to Akaba, where Lawrence arrived "alone and on foot, since my idiot camels went astray," but "By Jove, I was glad to see a tent." To reach "Pharaoh's Island" Lawrence "puffed a zinc tank full of air" (how is that done?) and accompanied by Dahoum, splashed his way with planks as paddles, across half a mile (400 yards in his official version), of sea infested with "hungry sharks." The escorting policeman of Newcombe's version becomes "a lieutenant and half a company of soldiers," whom they "dodged" and "slipped" until "the desired happened, and the last one left us, and I spent a splendid morning all in peace on top of Aaron's tomb in Mount Hor." Lawrence then speaks of shooting a partridge and of spending a "bitterly cold" night "with a huge wind" curled up with Dahoum. "in a knot under sheepskin cloaks." 92 Jebel Harun is well over 4,000 feet high, so that a strong wind in a February night must have been very uncomfortable and fully justified their feeling "cold and cross as bears."
Lawrence and Woolley had only just returned to Carchemish at the beginning of March, to start what proved to be Lawrence's last season as a working archologist, when they became involved in the riot of the Kurdish and Arab railway workers against their German employers, already briefly referred to earlier in this chapter. Woolley has given an account of this in his Dead Towns book, and there is an even longer description by Lawrence in a letter written to the poet, J. E. Flecker, with whom Lawrence had made friends at Beirut in
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August, 1911, shortly after Flecker's marriage. In June, 1914, Flecker was very ill and depressed, dying in fact of consumption in a Swiss sanatorium, and Lawrence's letter was written (from Englandy) in response to an appeal for news. Apart from Lawrence's usual inability to give figures correctly there is no serious discrepancy between the two accounts, though he writes in a schoolboyish vein of partizanship for his side against the other side, with even such schoolboy phrases as "an awful rotter," "shoot the bounder," "the German idiots," "to biff that," "we of course were inwardly chortling." The dispute arose from a mistake about a man's pay, and in the subsequent shooting a man was killed and many wounded. The dead man had belonged to Buswari's Kurds, and Woolleyeventually arranged with Buswari for the payment of blood money for the murder, and compensation to the wounded. A comic touch in these ugly happenings is alleged from the fact (?) that the Aleppo authorities misunderstood a telegram about "the firing" and sent out the Fire Brigade instead of the soldiers. But both Woolley and Lawrence were in some danger from rifle fire as they and their headmen ( Haj Wahid and Hamoudi) tried to prevent the riot from spreading -- one of the wounded was a boy to whom Lawrence was speaking when he was hit. 93
At the end of that season both archologists left for England. In 1919 Woolley returned to Jerablus as political officer, and in December of that year continued his work as archologist at Carchemish, after more than a five-year interval. 94 Lawrence never saw the place again.
I have not been able to determine how much Lawrence contributed to the British Museum published Report on Carchemish. The text of Vol I ( 1914) was written by Dr. Hogarth with a short preface by Sir Frederick Kenyon. The text of Vol II ( 1921), "The Town Defences" was written by Sir Leonard Woolley. The title-page of the whole work mentions that the excavations were "conducted by" Woolley and Lawrence. Sir Frederick says that Woolley and Lawrence "co-operated with" Hogarth in producing the book. Hogarth (Vol I. p. 24) quotes a story told to Lawrence by unnamed person or persons about the origin of the modern tribes round Jerablus. Woolley says he had Lawrence as assistant from 1912-14 and that a "Jerablusi, Dahum, was trained by Lawrence to act as photographer,
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and as such did excellent work." After 1920 the photographer was P. L. O. Guy. Although the published texts seem to be entirely the work of Hogarth and Woolley, it is a fair inference that they may have used Lawrence's notes to an extent which cannot now be determined. Moreover, some if not most of the photographs may have been the work of Lawrence or his pupil, Dahoum.


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CHAPTER SEVEN


NOW THAT we have brought Lawrence to the brink of the 191418 war, of which he became eventually the great popular British hero, it seems advisable to halt for a moment to consider what we have learned about him. That he was physically stronger than his low height and slight body suggested; that he took little or no care of his health but had great endurance in resisting the numerous illnesses which resulted; that he was an Oxford sthete and something of a scholar, assistant to Leonard Woolley, and skilful with his hands; that he liked wearing bright clothes and Arab costume, could drop his feeling of racial superiority and get on terms with Arabs and some Kurds, liked making excursions in Syria with his Arab boy, Dahoum -- all these have their significance. More fundamental is that he was the illegitimate son of an Anglo-Irish baronet, bitterly resented his social inferiority, and longed to compensate for it by some great achievement. If he was what is called "a born soldier," the frustration through his birth and poverty of a career as a regular officer would account for many things in his make-up. Behind his self-consciousness, the diffident Oxford manner and schoolboy behaviour was a watchful adventurer of intense ambition, a mind of versatility and skill, an unscrupulous will-to-power, a wilfulness impatient of control, a self-assertiveness which was allied with contempt. We must add to this that in his carefully calculated relationships which seemingly never became intimacies he kept each in a watertight compartment and presented himself in a certain predetermined rôle; 1 and that he possessed what is called "Irish charm" or as he once put it "some quality that he could turn 'on or off like a tap' which appealed to people." 2
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