SUPPRESSED INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
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In his
1926 subscribers' edition of Seven Pillars of Wisdom,
Lawrence placed dates in page headings rather than the body
of the text. Using the linked page numbers in this table you
can see exactly where he placed each date.
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The story which
follows was first written out in Paris during the Peace Conference, from
notes jotted daily on the march, strengthened by some reports sent to my
chiefs in Cairo. Afterwards, in the autumn of 1919, this first draft and
some of the notes were lost. It seemed to me historically needful to
reproduce the tale, as perhaps no one but myself in Feisal's army had
thought of writing down at the time what we felt, what we hoped, what we
tried. So it was built again with heavy repugnance in London in the
winter 1919-20 from memory and my surviving notes. The record of events
was not dulled in me and perhaps few actual mistakes crept in - except
in details of dates or numbers - but the outlines and significance of
things had lost edge in the haze of new interests.
Dates and places are
correct, so far as my notes preserved them: but the personal names are
not. Since the adventure some of those who worked with me have buried
themselves in the shallow grave of public duty. Free use has been made
of their names. Others still possess themselves, and here keep their
secrecy. Sometimes one man carried various names. This may hide
individuality and make the book a scatter of featureless puppets, rather
than a group of living people: but once good is told of a man, and again
evil, and some would not thank me for either blame or praise.
This isolated
picture throwing the main light upon myself is unfair to my British
colleagues. Especially I am most sorry that I have not told what the
non-commissioned of us did. They were inarticulate, but wonderful,
especially when it is taken into account that they had not the motive,
the imaginative vision of the end, which sustained the officers.
Unfortunately my concern was limited to this end, and the book is just a
designed procession of Arab freedom from Mecca to Damascus. It is
intended to rationalise the campaign, that everyone may see how natural
the success was and how inevitable, how little dependent on direction or
brain, how much less on the outside assistance of the few British. It
was an Arab war waged and led by Arabs for an Arab aim in Arabia.
My proper share was
a minor one, but because of a fluent pen, a free speech, and a certain
adroitness of brain, I took upon myself, as I describe it, a mock
primacy. In reality I never had any office among the Arabs: was never in
charge of the British mission with them. Wilson, Joyce, Newcombe, Dawnay
and Davenport were all over my head. I flattered myself that I was too
young, not that they had more heart or mind in the work. I did my best.
Wilson, Newcombe, Joyce, Dawnay, Davenport, Buxton, Marshall, Stirling,
Young, Maynard, Ross, Scott, Winterton, Lloyd, Wordie, Siddons, Goslett,
Stent, Henderson, Spence, Gilman, Garland, Brodie, Makins, Nunan, Leeson,
Hornby, Peake, Scott-Higgins, Ramsay, Wood, Hinde, Bright, Macindoe,
Greenhill, Grisenthwaite, Dowsett, Bennett, Wade, Gray, Pascoe and the
others also did their best.
It would be
impertinent in me to praise them. When I wish to say ill of one outside
our number, I do it: though there is less of this than was in my diary,
since the passage of time seems to have bleached out men's stains. When
I wish to praise outsiders, I do it: but our family affairs are our own.
We did what we set out to do, and have the satisfaction of that
knowledge. The others have liberty some day to put on record their
story, one parallel to mine but not mentioning more of me than I of
them, for each of us did his job by himself and as he pleased, hardly
seeing his friends.
In these pages the
history is not of the Arab movement, but of me in it. It is a narrative
of daily life, mean happenings, little people. Here are no lessons for
the world, no disclosures to shock peoples. It is filled with trivial
things, partly that no one mistake for history the bones from which some
day a man may make history, and partly for the pleasure it gave me to
recall the fellowship of the revolt. We were fond together, because of
the sweep of the open places, the taste of wide winds, the sunlight, and
the hopes in which we worked. The morning freshness of the world-to-be
intoxicated us. We were wrought up with ideas inexpressible and
vaporous, but to be fought for. We lived many lives in those whirling
campaigns, never sparing ourselves: yet when we achieved and the new
world dawned, the old men came out again and took our victory to re-make
in the likeness of the former world they knew. Youth could win, but had
not learned to keep: and was pitiably weak against age. We stammered
that we had worked for a new heaven and a new earth, and they thanked us
kindly and made their peace.
All men dream: but
not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their
minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of
the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes,
to make it possible. This I did. I meant to make a new nation, to
restore a lost influence, to give twenty millions of Semites the
foundation on which to build an inspired dream-palace of their national
thoughts. So high an aim called out the inherent nobility of their
minds, and made them play a generous part in events: but when we won, it
was charged against me that the British petrol royalties in Mesopotamia
were become dubious, and French Colonial policy ruined in the Levant.
I am afraid that I
hope so. We pay for these things too much in honour and in innocent
lives. I went up the Tigris with one hundred Devon Territorials, young,
clean, delightful fellows, full of the power of happiness and of making
women and children glad. By them one saw vividly how great it was to be
their kin, and English. And we were casting them by thousands into the
fire to the worst of deaths, not to win the war but that the corn and
rice and oil of Mesopotamia might be ours. The only need was to defeat
our enemies (Turkey among them), and this was at last done in the wisdom
of Allenby with less than four hundred killed, by turning to our uses
the hands of the oppressed in Turkey. I am proudest of my thirty fights
in that I did not have any of our own blood shed. All our subject
provinces to me were not worth one dead Englishman.
We were three years
over this effort and I have had to hold back many things which may not
yet be said. Even so, parts of this book will be new to nearly all who
see it, and many will look for familiar things and not find them. Once I
reported fully to my chiefs, but learnt that they were rewarding me on
my own evidence. This was not as it should be. Honours may be necessary
in a professional army, as so many emphatic mentions in despatches, and
by enlisting we had put ourselves, willingly or not, in the position of
regular soldiers.
For my work on the
Arab front I had determined to accept nothing. The Cabinet raised the
Arabs to fight for us by definite promises of self government
afterwards. Arabs believe in persons, not in institutions. They saw in
me a free agent of the British Government, and demanded from me an
endorsement of its written promises. So I had to join the conspiracy,
and, for what my word was worth, assured the men of their reward. In our
two years' partnership under fire they grew accustomed to believing me
and to think my Government, like myself, sincere. In this hope they
performed some fine things, but, of course, instead of being proud of
what we did together, I was continually and bitterly ashamed.
It was evident from
the beginning that if we won the war these promises would be dead paper,
and had I been an honest adviser of the Arabs I would have advised then
to go home and not risk their lives fighting for such stuff: but I
salved myself with the hope that, by leading these Arabs madly in the
final victory I would establish them, with arms in their hands, in a
position so assured (if not dominant) that expediency would counsel to
the Great Powers a fair settlement of their claims. In other words, I
presumed (seeing no other leader with the will and power) that I would
survive the campaigns, and be able to defeat not merely the Turks on the
battlefield, but my own country and its allies in the council chamber.
It was an immodest presumption: it is not yet clear if I succeeded: but
it is clear that I had no shadow of leave to engage the Arabs,
unknowing, in such hazard. I risked the fraud, on my conviction that
Arab help was necessary to our cheap and speedy victory in the East, and
that better we win and break our word than lose.
The dismissal of Sir
Henry McMahon confirmed my belief in our essential insincerity: but I
could not so explain myself to General Wingate while the war lasted,
since I was nominally under his orders, and he did not seem sensible of
how false his own standing was. The only thing remaining was to refuse
rewards for being a successful trickster and, to prevent this
unpleasantness arising, I began in my reports to conceal the true
stories of things, and to persuade the few Arabs who knew to an equal
reticence. In this book also, for the last time, I mean to be my own
judge of what to say.