Leaving
Hamra as dusk fell, we marched back down Wadi Safra until opposite
Kharma, where we turned to the right up the side valley. It was closely
grown with stiff brushwood, through which we drove our camels
strenuously, having tucked up the streamers of our saddle-bags to save
them from being shredded by the thorns. Two miles later we began to
climb the narrow pass of Dhifran, which gave evidence even by night of
labour expended on the road. It had been artificially smoothed, and the
stones piled at each side into a heavy wall of protection against the
rush of water in the rains. Parts had been graded, and were at times
carried on a causeway built seemingly six or eight feet high, of great
blocks of uncut stone: but it had been breached at every turn by
torrents, and was in terrible ruin.
The ascent lasted perhaps for a mile; and the steep
descent on the other side was about the same. Then we got to the level
and found ourselves in a much broken country of ridges, with an
intricate net of wadies whose main flow was apparently towards the
south-west. The going was good for our camels. We rode for about seven
miles in the dark, and came to a well, Bir el Murra, in a valley bed
under a very low bluff, on whose head the square courses of a small fort
of ashlar stood out against the starry sky. Conceivably both fort and
causeway had been built by an Egyptian Mameluke for the passage of his
pilgrim caravan from Yenbo.
We halted there for the night, sleeping for six
hours, a long luxury upon the road, though this rest was broken twice by
challenges from half-seen mounted parties who had found our bivouac.
Afterwards we wandered among more small ridges until the dawn showed
gentle valleys of sand with strange hills of lava hemming us about. The
lava here was not the blue-black cinder-stone of the fields about
Rabegh: it was rust-coloured, and piled in huge crags of flowing surface
and bent and twisted texture, as though played with oddly while yet
soft. The sand, at first a carpet about the foot of the dolerite,
gradually gained on it. The hills got lower, with the sand banked up
against them in greater drifts, till even the crests were
sand-spattered, and at last drowned beyond sight. So, as the sun became
high and painfully fierce, we led out upon a waste of dunes, rolling southward
for miles down hill to the misty sea, where it lay grey-blue in the
false distance of the heat.
The dunes were narrow. By half-past seven we were
on a staring plain of glassy sand mixed with shingle, overspread by tall
scrub and thorn bushes, with some good acacia trees. We rode very fast
across this, myself in some discomfort; for I was not a skilled rider:
the movement exhausted me, while sweat ran down my forehead and dripped
smartingly into my gritty, sun-cracked eyelids. Sweat was actually
welcome when a drop fell from the end of a tuft of hair, to strike on
the cheek cold and sudden and unexpected like a splash; but these
refreshments were too few to pay for the pain of heat. We pressed on,
while the sand yielded to pure shingle, and that again hardened into the
bed of a great valley, running down by shallow, interwoven mouths
towards the sea.
We crossed over a rise, and from the far side
opened a wide view, which was the delta of Wadi Yenbo, the largest
valley of Northern Hejaz. It seemed a vivid copse of tamarisk and thorn.
To the right some miles up the valley, showed darkly the palm-groves of
Nakhl Mubarak, a village and gardens of the Beni Ibrahim Juheina. In the
distance, ahead of us, lay the massive Jebel Rudhwa, brooding always so
instantly over Yenbo, though more than twenty miles away. We had seen it
from Masturah, for it was one of the great hills of Hejaz, the more
wonderful because it lifted itself in one clear edge from flat Tehama to
crest. My companions felt at home in its protection; so, as the plain
was now dancing with unbearable heat, we took shade under the branches
of a leafy acacia beside the path, and slumbered through the middle
day.
In the afternoon we watered our camels at a
brackish little water hole in the sand bed of a branch watercourse,
before a trim hedge of the feathery tamarisk, and then pushed on for two
more happy hours. At last we halted for the night in typical Tehama
country of bare slowly-swelling sand and shingle ridges, with shallow
valleys.
The Sherifs lit a fire of aromatic wood to bake
bread and boil coffee and we slept sweetly with the salt sea air cool on
our chafed faces. We rose at two in the morning, and raced our camels
over a featureless plain of hard shingle and wet sand to Yenbo, which
stood up with walls and towers on a reef of coral rag twenty feet above
our level. They took me straight through the gates by crumbling, empty
streets - Yenbo had been half a city of the dead since the Hejaz Railway
opened - to the house of Abd el Kader, Feisal's agent, a well-informed,
efficient, quiet and
dignified person, with whom we had had correspondence when he was
postmaster in Mecca, and the Survey in Egypt had been making stamps for
the new State. He had just been transferred here.
With Abd el Kader, in his picturesque rambling
house looking over the deserted square, whence so many Medina caravans
had started, I stayed four days waiting for the ship, which seemed as if
it might fail me at the rendezvous. However, at last the Suva appeared,
with Captain Boyle, who took me back to Jidda. It was my first meeting
with Boyle. He had done much in the beginning of the revolt, and was to
do much more for the future: but I failed to make a good return
impression. I was travel-stained and had no baggage with me. Worst of
all I wore a native head-cloth, put on as a compliment to the Arabs.
Boyle disapproved.
Our persistence in the hat (due to a
misunderstanding of the ways of heat-stroke) had led the East to see
significance in it, and after long thought their wisest brains concluded
that Christians wore the hideous thing that its broad brim might
interpose between their weak eyes and the uncongenial sight of God. So
it reminded Islam continually that God was miscalled and misliked by
Christians. The British thought this prejudice reprehensible (quite
unlike our hatred of a head-cloth) one to be corrected at any price. If
the people would not have us hatted, they should not have us any way.
Now as it happened I had been educated in Syria before the war to wear
the entire Arab outfit when necessary without strangeness, or sense of
being socially compromised. The skirts were a nuisance in running up
stairs, but the head-cloth was even convenient in such a climate. So I
had accepted it when I rode inland, and must now cling to it under fire
of naval disapproval, till some shop should sell me a cap.
In Jidda was the Euryalus, with Admiral
Wemyss, bound for Port Sudan that Sir Rosslyn might visit Sir Reginald
Wingate at Khartoum. Sir Reginald, as Sirdar of the Egyptian Army, had
been put in command of the British military side of the Arab adventure
in place of Sir Henry McMahon, who continued to direct its politics; and
it was necessary for me to see him, to impart my impressions to him. So
I begged the Admiral for a passage over sea, and a place in his train to
Khartum. This he readily granted, after cross-questioning me himself at
length.
I found that his active mind and broad intelligence
had engaged his interest in the Arab Revolt from the beginning. He had
come down again and
again in his flagship to lend a hand when things were critical, and had
gone out of his way twenty times to help the shore, which properly was
Army business. He had given the Arabs guns and machine-guns, landing
parties and technical help, with unlimited transport and naval
co-operation, always making a real pleasure of requests, and fulfilling
them in overflowing measure.
Had it not been for Admiral Wemyss' good will, and
prescience, and the admirable way in which Captain Boyle carried out his
wishes, the jealousy of Sir Archibald Murray might have wrecked the
Sherif's rebellion at its start. As it was, Sir Rosslyn Wemyss acted
godfather till the Arabs were on their feet; when he went to London; and
Allenby, coming out fresh to Egypt, found the Arabs a factor on his
battle front, and put the energies and resources of the Army at their
disposal. This was opportune, and a fortunate twist of the whirligig;
for Admiral Wemyss' successor in the naval command in Egypt was not
considered helpful by the other services, though apparently he treated
them no worse than he treated his own subordinates. A hard task, of
course, to succeed Wemyss.
In Port Sudan we saw two British officers of the
Egyptian Army waiting to embark for Rabegh. They were to command the
Egyptian troops in Hejaz, and to do their best to help Aziz el Masri
organise the Arab Regular Force which was going to end the war from
Rabegh. This was my first meeting with Joyce and Davenport, the two
Englishmen to whom the Arab cause owed the greater part of its foreign
debt of gratitude. Joyce worked for long beside me. Of Davenport's
successes in the south we heard by constant report.
Khartum felt cool after Arabia, and nerved me to
show Sir Reginald Wingate my long reports written in those days of
waiting at Yenbo. I urged that the situation seemed full of promise. The
main need was skilled assistance; and the campaign should go
prosperously if some regular British officers, professionally competent
and speaking Arabic, were attached to the Arab leaders as technical
advisers, to keep us in proper touch.
Wingate was glad to hear a hopeful view. The Arab
Revolt had been his dream for years. While I was at Khartum chance gave
him the power to play the main part in it; for the workings against Sir
Henry McMahon came to a head, were successful, and ended in his recall
to England. Sir Reginald Wingate was ordered down to Egypt in his stead.
So after two or three
comfortable days in Khartoum, resting and reading the Morte d'Arthur
in the hospitable palace, I went down towards Cairo, feeling that the
responsible person had all my news. The Nile trip became a holiday.
Egypt was, as usual, in the throes of a Rabegh
question. Some aeroplanes were being sent there; and it was being argued
whether to send a brigade of troops after them or not. The head of the
French Military Mission at Jidda, Colonel Bremond (Wilson's counterpart,
but with more authority; for he was a practising light in native
warfare, a success in French Africa, and an ex-chief of staff of a Corps
on the Somme) strongly urged the landing of Allied forces in Hejaz. To
tempt us he had brought to Suez some artillery, some machine-guns, and
some cavalry and infantry, all Algerian Moslem rank and file, with
French officers. These added to the British troops would give the force
an international flavour.
Bremond's specious appreciation of the danger of
the state of affairs in Arabia gained upon Sir Reginald. Wingate was a
British General, commander of a nominal expeditionary force, the Hejaz
Force, which in reality comprised a few liaison officers and a handful
of storemen and instructors. If Bremond got his way he would be G.O.C.
of a genuine brigade of mixed British and French troops, with all its
pleasant machinery of responsibility and despatches, and its prospect of
increment and official recognition. Consequently he wrote a guarded
despatch, half-tending towards direct interference.
As my experience of Arab feeling in the Harb
country had given me strong opinions on the Rabegh question (indeed,
most of my opinions were strong), I wrote for General Clayton, to whose
Arab Bureau I was now formally transferred, a violent memorandum on the
whole subject. Clayton was pleased with my view that the tribes might
defend Rabegh for months if lent advice and guns, but that they would
certainly scatter to their tents again as soon as they heard of the
landing of foreigners in force. Further, that the intervention-plans
were technically unsound, for a brigade would be quite insufficient to
defend the position, to forbid the neighbouring water supplies to the
Turks, and to block their road towards Mecca. I accused Colonel Bremond
of having motives of his own, not military, nor taking account of Arab
interests and of the importance of the revolt to us; and quoted his
words and acts in Hejaz as evidence against him. They gave just
plausible colour to my charge.
Clayton
took the memorandum to Sir Archibald Murray, who, liking its acidity and
force, promptly wired it all home to London as proof that the Arab
experts asking this sacrifice of valuable troops from him were divided
about its wisdom and honesty, even in their own camp. London asked for
explanations; and the atmosphere slowly cleared, though in a less acute
form the Rabegh question lingered for two months more.
My popularity with the Staff in Egypt, due to the
sudden help I had lent to Sir Archibald's prejudices, was novel and
rather amusing. They began to be polite to me, and to say that I was
observant, with a pungent style, and character. They pointed out how
good of them it was to spare me to the Arab cause in its difficulties. I
was sent for by the Commander-in-Chief, but on my way to him was
intercepted by a waiting and agitated aide, and led first into the
presence of the Chief of Staff, General Lynden Bell. To such an extent
had he felt it his duty to support Sir Archibald in his whimsies that
people generally confounded the two as one enemy. So I was astonished
when, as I came in, he jumped to his feet, leaped forward, and gripped
me by the shoulder, hissing, 'Now you're not to frighten him: don't you
forget what I say!'
My face probably showed bewilderment, for his one
eye turned bland and he made me sit down, and talked nicely about
Oxford, and what fun undergrads had, and the interest of my report of
life in Feisal's ranks, and his hope that I would go back there to carry
on what I had so well begun, mixing these amiabilities with remarks of
how nervous the Commander-in-Chief was, and how worried about
everything, and the need there was for me to give him a reassuring
picture of affairs, and yet not a rosy picture, since they could not
afford excursions either way.
I was hugely amused, inwardly, and promised to be
good, but pointed out that my object was to secure the extra stores and
arms and officers the Arabs needed, and how for this end I must enlist
the interest, and, if necessary (for I would stick at nothing in the way
of duty), even the excitement of the Commander-in-Chief; whereupon
General Lynden Bell took me up, saying that supplies were his part, and
in them he did everything without reference, and he thought he might at
once, here and now, admit his new determination to do all he could for
us.
I think he kept his word and was fair to us
thereafter. I was very soothing to his chief.