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T. E. Lawrence to Edward Garnett
[Karachi]
7.VII.27
That Minister's Daughter by Hildur Dixelius, is a very very
very excellent book: one of the rarest and ripest things I've
met for the last couple of years. The real stuff. It is going
to rest amongst my permanent collection of books, (which are
being kept and used by one Richards, a Welsh metaphysician in St.
John's Wood, against the hypothetical and probably-never-to-come
-day when I'll have a whole room of my permanent own in which to
read permanent books again): but before that I'll have to get it
bound quietly. This present cover is too bounding altogether.
Is that Yank taste? Doran has made my Revolt a proper yellow
dog, at his end, despite Cape's example. Rosa I did not much
like.
Your exploration of Pembrokeshire must have been enjoyable
for you. Its southern part has somehow avoided the remaining
Welsh. Some Fleming colony, I believe they said it was. They
talk a beautiful soft English, and build white cottages with
chimneys as big as abutments. The coast line is also beautiful,
in my recollection. I remember the green of the land running
down nearly into the sea. What was lovely about Galilee, in
Palestine, was that green grass grew, in Genesaret, right into
the very (sweet) water. But cottages aren't for me, now. Didn't
I tell you what I hope for, when I come out of the R.A.F.? Robin
Buxton, my banker, and now Trustee, is going to try and get me a
night job in the city, either as a watchman in a Bank, or
caretaker in a group of offices. They pay fairly: it is a quiet
employment, whose only necessary qualification is honesty: and
the work is not hard. I expect, you know, to fall into age quite
suddenly, as I did into middle age on landing here. My eyes are
troubling me, so that I can't read much, or see clearly what I
write. I'm going a bit deaf: and they say (I can't see my own
head) that my hair is now thick with white hairs. I take it that
quite likely by 1935 I'll require an occupation which is slow,
and full of sitting down. On the other hand, return to England
might cheer me up to a few more years of motor-cycle madness.
Who knows?
That Barker Fairley book on Doughty spoiled itself, by trying
to do too much. He maintained that the form of A.D. and of
Dawn
in Britain was subtle, and designed, and balanced, and
cumulative. I think it was accident; and a bad accident.
Doughty seems wholly to have lacked the strategic eye which plans
a campaign, as the sub-commander plans a battle, or the company
officer a trench raid, or the soldier a bayonet-thrust. A.D. is
hampered by its lack of form, less only than Dawn, because there
was a basis of fact to follow, and life isn't as shapeless as
unassisted and undisciplined art. Why I think The Seven Pillars,
that untidy general-provider, is better planned than A.D.!
That's saying nothing much, either. Both are rotten bad: but A.D. has the merits of magnificence in its materials, its vision,
its attitude, its prose, its poetry, its author. Whereas the
poor S.P.!
Yet your son seems to like
The S.P. Why not give him your
second copy for a Christmas present? Thanks to the speculative
booksellers it's become a decent present.
T.E.S.
Lucifer and Eve? No:
I've never thought of them. Bother all women. They seem to upset the
people I like.

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