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T. E. Lawrence to B. H. Liddell Hart
13
Birmingham St.
Southampton
17 May 1934
Always
I owe you two letters! Hard luck. I'm very sorry about the lunch with
Ll.G. It struck me when I read it as a pleasant dream, and I should have
liked to come: but then I forgot. These five new armoured boats fill the
foreground, apparently; at least I am busy on them always. One is
run-in, and waiting for the armour. The second has done the first 8 of
its 20 hours, and all minor engine defects have been put right. In the
last ten hours I do not expect anything to happen. Just one puts the
polish on the pistons and bores. Then there are three more to do. They
have not yet finished building.
Did you
see a bad fake of an interview with me in the Daily Chronicle?
Its local reporter fell into talk with me, promising not to repeat
anything - and then spat out a travesty of what I said and he imagined.
The Editor disowned him to the Air Ministry, and so averted trouble from
my head!
Now
about this other bloke - If you see the blighter do rub into him that I
never have signed myself as Lawrence since 19 twenty something. He is
years out of date. In fact he doesn't sound the right sort of man at
all. Do you feel that I ought to do something? It is rather hard to
catch him by post. However, there is Eliot; the Hon. E. Eliot... He is a
very balanced solicitor, who looks after the legal interests of
Revolt in the Desert. My trouble is that I cannot well risk legal
expenses: but Eliot might feel able to assume that a 'T. E. Lawrence' in
being today was an infringement of his trust property, for the Revolt
Trust owns the property in that name. If so, he could ask the bloke to
stop his games, and charge his trouble to the fund. I'd pay a small
bill, up to 3 or 4 pounds, but couldn't risk the promising of more. Will
you send on the suggestion (or perhaps this note) to Eliot and see if he
can square his conscience to the idea? I can conceive of its seeming to
him as if he might legitimately be drawn in, if the affair developed -
and to prevent that he might stall the fellow off now.
Failing
Eliot, I can't think of anybody else who would do - unless you tell the
Daily Express of the existence of a bogus Colonel L.! That would
properly boil it-
[2
lines omitted]
This is
very kind of you. There must be many impersonators, I think, judging by
the number of letters I get from stranger-acquaintances, many of them
women of whom I appear to have taken some advantage. Sometimes when they
get too urgent I have got the police to help me out by asking them to
make the correspondence cease. Only this chap hasn't written to me, so I
can't well do that, now... can I? [omission]
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