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T. E. Lawrence to F. N. Doubleday
14.5.20.
Effendim,
A fine pen, for this will be an inordinately long letter.
First of all, very many thanks for your luscious Kipling. It's very good
to have the three volumes in one in such excellent type, and on good
paper. Did you print it from plates, or was it re-set? It's beautifully
done anyhow.
Then the binding. I'm very glad to see your Frenchmen's work. I took it
to Bain who was much puzzled at it, and finally confessed he did not
know them. He felt this as a personal loss, for it was his pride to
recognise every binder. I think it's very pleasantly done, technically
as good as anyone ever wants, and the style of tooling is so quiet and
respectable. One is ashamed of a Cobden Sanderson on one's shelves: it
shouts out its virtue so loudly. This is a self-respecting binding,
which will mellow and improve every year it is handled. In fact, as I
said once before, very many thanks indeed. It stands between two vellum
books, and looks as good as they do, or better. You seem, despite your
lament, to get good leather still in U.S.A.
I sent you a little Ricketts binding in white pigskin two days
after Kipling came: and have a florid de Santy Xmas-present sort of
thing still in hand. It is so hard to get corrugated packing-paper! I
hope you will like the Ricketts. It's a feminine sort of thing, I'm
afraid.
What I really wanted to write about was Doughty's
Arabia Deserta. It's a long book in two volumes (some 500,000
words, I should think) published by the Cambridge Press thirty years
ago: full of little cuts and very wise. They printed 240 copies, and
broke up the type. A copy now costs £30 in England, and is very hard to find. Duckworth (a publisher in
London) produced an abridgement about 10 years ago, and has reprinted it
three or four times since: the abridgement was of about 2/3 of the original.
The whole book is a necessity to any student of Arabia, but is more than
that. It's one of the greatest prose works in the English language, and
the best travel book in the world. Unfortunately it's solidly written
(not dull at all, but in a queer style which demands care at first), and
because of its rarity is far too little known.
Now I'd like to get it out again. I hoped to do it at the Cairo Press:
but then Egypt became riotous, and they are vastly in arrears. To do it
in England would cost £1,500 for type setting only, and Duckworth won't
do it, because it would kill his abridgement. Doughty owns the
copyright, and is willing to let it out again for nothing or
thereabouts. Do you think any wise man in America would undertake it? I
think I could get about 500 subscribers at 2 or 3 guineas a copy -
perhaps more: but it would mean a lot of correspondence, and I'm a lazy
person by nature. So I thought I'd ask your advice, as a publisher: it's
a very great work, and it's a shame it should be so rare: and I like it
better than almost any other book. It has of course an immense
reputation amongst the elect. Please tell me what you think: and give my
regards (as last time) wholly and entirely to Mrs.
Doubleday.
Yours sincerely,
T. E. Lawrence
A jest about my own screed. One [name of publisher omitted] and a dull
fellow came to see me after some persistent correspondence. I told him
I'd not publish in England at any price, but hope to do something for
America. He said it was an
impossible idea, as it would be pirated, and hinted that I knew nothing
of copyright law. I don't - but no one ever heard of a law which could
not be avoided by either side, when necessary. So then I said you would
probably publish for me in U.S.A., and that the Clarendon Press or
someone would do it in England, only the American edition would cost a
shilling or so, and the English one be published at £1000 a copy. This
sent him off silent, but very angry. As I said, a dull man, and greedy.
I think my MSS may be ready for abridgement about 1921 autumn
- or 1922:
and I'm aiming to give you about 150,000 words of it: I hope it comes
off.
L.

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