Lines in the sand

Winston Churchill wrote of Seven Pillars of Wisdom 'It ranks with the greatest books ever written in the English language. As a narrative of war and adventureit is unsurpassable.
Lines in the sand
Lines in the sand

Ned Lawrence. John Hume Ross. G B Shaw&rsquos Colonel Meek. Thomas Edward Shaw. In the end, he would be known simply as &ldquoLawrence of Arabia&rdquo, as the Anglo-Irishman who donned the flowing robes of an Arab and fought hard, if unsuccessfully, for the cause of Arab independence.

For those weaned on the Lawrence legend via David Lean&rsquos movie, the book that placed T.E. Lawrence alongside the gods of literature can come as a blast of bitter heat, a corrective to the romantic wateriness of the legend. This is the first paragraph of Seven Pillars of Wisdom, the account of his role in the Arab rebellion during World War I that he began writing in 1919 and finished in 1926

 &ldquoSome of the evil of my tale may have been inherent in our circumstances. For years we lived anyhow with one another in the naked desert, under the indifferent heaven. By day the hot sun fermented us and we were dizzied by the beating wind. At night we were stained by dew, and shamed into pettiness by the innumerable silences of stars. We were a self-centred army without parade or gesture, devoted to freedom, the second of man&rsquos creeds, a purpose so ravenous that it devoured all our strength, a hope so transcendent that our earlier ambitions faded in its glare.&rdquo

In its abridged version, Revolt in the Desert, Seven Pillars of Wisdom did very well in the Boy&rsquos Own market. It was a dazzling tale of desert adventure, starring a renegade archaeologist who took his place beside Feisal and Auda Abu Tayi in the capture of Akaba, who swept down upon the Turks fighting alongside his Arab friends, who survived the desert heat and, in a famously sadomasochistic episode, torture and rape inflicted by Fakhri Bey, the governor of Medina.

If that were all, T.E. Lawrence would still be feted as the author of one of the most stirring adventure stories of all time. Anthony Quinn, who played the part of Auda Abu Tayi in Lean&rsquos film, testified to the impact of the legend. Quinn had himself costumed and made up as the Arab leader, intending to surprise Lean by appearing out of the sands on foot. He had not bargained for the presence of about four hundred locals. &ldquoThey spotted me on the horizon and began to chant &lsquoAbu Tayi, Abu Tayi, Abu Tayi&hellip. Lean asked one of his assistants about the ruckus. &lsquoIt&rsquos just the Arabs, sir,&rsquo the assistant replied. &lsquoThey&rsquore chanting for Abu Tayi.&rsquo &lsquoWell,&rsquo Lean said. &lsquoScrew Anthony Quinn. Let&rsquos hire that guy instead.&rsquo&rdquo

Lawrence&rsquos own account was both more and less flamboyant. In the middle of a downhill camel charge on the enemy, his beast tripped. &ldquoI lay there, passively waiting for the Turks to kill me, continuing to hum over the verses of a half-forgotten poem&hellip After a long time I finished my poem, and no Turks came, and no camel trod on me&hellip there was a great noise in front. I sat up and saw the battle over.&rdquo The line Lawrence enthusiasts prefer to quote is slightly more dramatic &ldquoThe sword also means clean-ness and death.&rdquo

By 1920, it was clear that Lawrence&rsquos dreams for Arab independence had been harshly belied. The French wanted Syria, the British wanted Iraq and America wanted nothing to do with the mess. Lawrence was bitterly disappointed, but then he had set down his opinion of war in Seven Pillars. &ldquoPhilosophically, it was idiotic, for while opinions were arguable, convictions needed shooting to be cured.&rdquo He would have undoubtedly classified the American action in Iraq as an example of a &ldquomurder war&helliponly an exterminative variety, no more absolute than another&rdquo.

The book into which Lawrence had poured his passions, his convictions and not a small quantity of his cynicism as well didn&rsquot do for the Arab nations what the author had hoped. But it achieved something else, a distinction recognised by men like E.M. Forster and Winston Churchill. The latter wrote of Seven Pillars of Wisdom &ldquoIt ranks with the greatest books ever written in the English language. As a narrative of war and adventure&hellipit is unsurpassable.&rdquo That verdict, unlike most passed on the books of one&rsquos times, will stand.

Related Stories

No stories found.
logo
Outlook Traveller
www.outlooktraveller.com