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T. E. Lawrence to C. M. Doughty
All Souls College,
Oxford.
Aug. 7. 1920.
Dear Mr. Doughty,
I'm afraid I wrote too quickly: no doubt the business
men are still drawing up the precise clauses of their contracts. Still
I'll be in London on Tuesday, and will then go to Duckworth's and find
out.
The facts are roughly, that Mr. Lee Warner, of the Medici Society in
Grafton St., who has published bibliophile editions of the classics,
(Virgil, Horace, Caesar, Catullus) and a few English books (no new ones)
has agreed to do an Arabia Deserta, subject to your approval. He
proposes a limited edition of five hundred copies at £9. 9. 0. If these
sell he will have made ten per cent:
and in addition he will have the book set up, ready for further, and I
hope cheaper, editions. He wanted a new preface, and the use of my name
on an introduction, because America has an idea that I know more about
Arabia than anyone: and so I may advertise you. It's a topsy-turvy
world!
Your share was to be ten per cent. It is a poor return after so many
years, but I hope you will agree to it, for this edition should raise
the value of the book very much, and the subsequent editions ought to be
profitable. The contract you sign ought to reserve your rights in all
future editions, I think: but there is no one so little apt at business
as myself, and I hope you will not take my advice.
I'd like a first-class portrait as a frontispiece.
About my own book. I'm going in the next two or three months to re-write
it in short form, as a story of adventure, for
America. It will appeal to Boy Scouts, I hope. This will keep me in
Oxford, I'm afraid for the next time: otherwise I would have liked to
come down: perhaps in the autumn. Please give my regards to Mrs.
Doughty.
Yours sincerely
T E Lawrence

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