Early
next morning, having seen that the Hardinge was unloading without
friction, I went ashore to Sheikh Yusuf, and found him helping his Bisha
police, the frightened villagers and a squad of old Maulud's men to
throw a quick barricade across the end of the main street. He told me
that fifty wild mules, without halter or bridle or saddle, had been
loosed on shore that morning from a ship. By luck rather than skill they
had been stampeded into the market-place: the exits were now safely
barred, and there they must remain, ramping about the stalls, till
Maulud, to whom they were addressed, invented saddlery in the
wilderness. This was the second batch of fifty mules for the mounted
unit, and by the chance of our fear at Yenbo we, fortunately, had spare
ropes and bits enough for them on board the Hardinge. So by noon
the shops were again open, and the damage paid for.
I went up to Feisal's camp, which was busy. Some of
the tribes were drawing a month's wages; all were getting eight days'
food; tents and heavy baggage were being stored; and the last
arrangement for the march being made. I sat and listened to the chatter
of the staff: Faiz el Ghusein, Beduin sheikh, Turkish official,
chronicler of the Armenian massacres, now secretary; Nesib el Bekri,
Damascene land-owner, and Feisal's host in Syria, now exiled from his
country with a death-sentence over him; Sami, Nesib's brother, graduate
of the Law School, and now assistant paymaster; Shefik el Eyr,
ex-journalist, now assistant secretary, a little white-faced man, and
furtive, with a whispering manner, honest in his patriotism, but in life
perverse, and so a nasty colleague.
Hassan Sharaf, the headquarters' doctor, a noble
man who had put not merely his life, but his purse to service in the
Arab cause, was plaintive with excess of disgust at finding his phials
smashed and their drugs confounded in the bottom of his chest. Shefik
rallying him, said, 'Do you expect a rebellion to be comfortable?' and
the contrast with the pale misery of their manner delighted us. In
hardships the humour of triteness outweighed a whole world of wit.
With Feisal in the evening we talked of the coming
marches. The first stage was short: to Semna, where were palm-groves and
wells of abundant water. After that there was choice of ways, to be
determined only when
our scouts returned with reports as to ponded rain-water. By the coast,
the straight road, it was sixty dry miles to the next well, and our
multitude of footmen would find that long.
The army at Bir el Waheida amounted to five
thousand one hundred camel-riders, and five thousand three hundred men
on foot, with four Krupp mountain guns, and ten machine-guns: and for
transport we had three hundred and eighty baggage camels. Everything was
cut to the lowest, far below the standard of the Turks. Our start was
set for January the eighteenth just after noon, and punctually by
lunch-time Feisal's work was finished. We were a merry party: Feisal
himself, relaxed after responsibility, Abd el Kerim, never very serious,
Sherif Jabar, Nasib and Sami, Shefik, Hassan Sharaf and myself. After
lunch the tent was struck. We went to our camels, where they were
couched in a circle, saddled and loaded, each held short by the slave
standing on its doubled fore-leg. The kettle drummer, waiting beside ibn
Dakhil, who commanded the bodyguard, rolled his drum seven or eight
times, and everything became still. We watched Feisal. He got up from
his rug, on which he had been saying a last word to Abd el Kerim, caught
the saddle-pommels in his hands, put his knee on the side and said
aloud, 'Make God your agent'. The slave released the camel, which sprang
up. When it was on its feet Feisal passed his other leg across its back,
swept his skirts and his cloak under him by a wave of the arm, and
settled himself in the saddle.
As his camel moved we had jumped for ours, and the
whole mob rose together, some of the beasts roaring, but the most quiet,
as trained she-camels should be. Only a young animal, a male or
ill-bred, would grumble on the road, and self-respecting Beduins did not
ride such, since the noise might give them away by night or in surprise
attacks. The camels took their first abrupt steps, and we riders had
quickly to hook our legs round the front cantles, and pick up the
head-stalls to check the pace. We then looked where Feisal was, and
tapped our mounts' heads gently round, and pressed them on the shoulders
with our bare feet till they were in line beside him. Ibn Dakhil came
up, and after a glance at the country and the direction of march passed
a short order for the Ageyl to arrange themselves in wings, out to right
and left of us for two or three hundred yards, camel marching by camel
in line as near as the accidents underfoot permitted. The manoeuvre was
neatly done.
These Ageyl were Nejd townsmen, the youth of
Aneyza, Boreida or Russ,
who had contracted for service as regular camel corps for a term of
years. They were young, from sixteen to twenty-five, and nice fellows,
large-eyed, cheery, a bit educated, catholic, intelligent, good
companions on the road. There was seldom a heavy one. Even in repose
(when most Eastern faces emptied themselves of life) these lads remained
keen-looking and handsome. They talked a delicate and elastic Arabic,
and were mannered, often foppish, in habit. The docility and
reasonableness of their town-bred minds made them look after themselves
and their masters without reiterated instructions. Their fathers dealt
in camels, and they had followed the trade from infancy; consequently
they wandered instinctively, like Beduin; while the decadent softness in
their nature made them biddable, tolerant of the harshness and physical
punishment which in the East were the outward proofs of discipline. They
were essentially submissive; yet had the nature of soldiers, and fought
with brains and courage when familiarly led.
Not being a tribe, they had no blood enemies, but
passed freely in the desert: the carrying trade and chaffer of the
interior lay in their hands. The gains of the desert were poor, but
enough to tempt them abroad, since the conditions of their home-life
were uncomfortable. The Wahabis, followers of a fanatical Moslem heresy,
had imposed their strict rules on easy and civilised Kasim. In Kasim
there was but little coffee-hospitality, much prayer and fasting, no
tobacco, no artistic dalliance with women, no silk clothes, no gold and
silver head-ropes or ornaments. Everything was forcibly pious or
forcibly puritanical.
It was a natural phenomenon, this periodic rise at
intervals of little more than a century, of ascetic creeds in Central
Arabia. Always the votaries found their neighbours' beliefs cluttered
with inessential things which became impious in the hot imagination of
their preachers. Again and again they had arisen, had taken possession,
soul and body, of the tribes, and had dashed themselves to pieces on the
urban Semites, merchants and concupiscent men of the world. About their
comfortable possessions the new creeds ebbed and flowed like the tides
or the changing seasons, each movement with the seeds of early death in
its excess of rightness. Doubtless they must recur so long as the causes
– sun, moon, wind, acting in the emptiness of open spaces, weigh without
check on the unhurried and uncumbered minds of the desert-dwellers.
However, this afternoon the Ageyl were not thinking
of God, but of us, and as ibn Dakhil ranged them to the right and left
they fell eagerly into
rank. There came a warning patter from the drums and the poet of the
right wing burst into strident song, a single invented couplet, of
Feisal and the pleasures he would afford us at Wejh. The right wing
listened to the verse intently, took it up and sang it together once,
twice and three times, with pride and self-satisfaction and derision.
However, before they could brandish it a fourth time the poet of the
left wing broke out in extempore reply, in the same metre, in answering
rhyme, and capping the sentiment. The left wing cheered it in a roar of
triumph, the drums tapped again, the standard-bearers threw out their
great crimson banners, and the whole guard, right, left and centre,
broke together into the rousing regimental chorus,
'I've lost Britain, and I've lost Gaul,
I've lost Rome, and, worst of all,
I've lost Lalage –'
only it was Nejd they had lost, and the women of
the Maabda, and their future lay from Jidda towards Suez. Yet it was a
good song, with a rhythmical beat which the camels loved, so that they
put down their heads, stretched their necks out far and with lengthened
pace shuffled forward musingly while it lasted.
Our road to-day was easy for them, since it was
over firm sand slopes, long, slowly-rising waves of dunes, bare-backed,
but for scrub in the folds, or barren palm-trees solitary in the moist
depressions. Afterwards in a broad flat, two horsemen came cantering
across from the left to greet Feisal. I knew the first one, dirty old
blear-eyed Mohammed Ali el Beidawi, Emir of the Juheina: but the second
looked strange. When he came nearer I saw he was in khaki uniform, with
a cloak to cover it and a silk head-cloth and head-rope, much awry. He
looked up, and there was Newcombe's red and peeling face, with straining
eyes and vehement mouth, a strong, humorous grin between the jaws. He
had arrived at Um Lejj this morning, and hearing we were only just off,
had seized Sheikh Yusuf's fastest horse and galloped after us.
I offered him my spare camel and an introduction to
Feisal, whom he greeted like an old school-friend; and at once they
plunged into the midst of things, suggesting, debating, planning at
lightning speed. Newcombe's initial velocity was enormous, and the
freshness of the day and the life and happiness of the Army gave
inspiration to the march and brought the future bubbling out of us
without pain.
We
passed Ghowashia, a ragged grove of palms, and marched over a lava-field
easily, its roughnesses being drowned in sand just deep enough to smooth
them, but not deep enough to be too soft. The tops of the highest
lava-piles showed through. An hour later we came suddenly to a crest
which dropped as a sand slope, abrupt and swept and straight enough to
be called a sand-cliff, into a broad splendid valley of rounded pebbles.
This was Semna, and our road went down the steep, through terraces of
palms.
The wind had been following our march, and so it
was very still and warm at bottom of the valley in lee of the great bank
of sand. Here was our water, and here we would halt till the scouts
returned from seeking rain-pools in front of us; for so Abd el Kerim,
our chief guide, had advised. We rode the four hundred yards across the
valley and up the further slopes till we were safe from floods, and
there Feisal tapped his camel lightly on the neck till she sank to her
knees with a scrape of shingle pushed aside, and settled herself. Hejris
spread the carpet for us, and with the other Sherifs we sat and jested
while the coffee was made hot.
I maintained against Feisal the greatness of
Ibrahim Pasha, leader of Milli-Kurds, in North Mesopotamia. When he was
to march, his women rose before dawn, and footing noiselessly overhead
on the taut tent-cloth, unskewered the strips of it, while others
beneath held and removed the poles till all was struck and divided into
camel-loads, and loaded. Then they drove off, so that the Pasha awoke
alone on his pallet in the open air where at night he had lain down in
the rich inner compartment of his palace-tent.
He would get up at leisure and drink coffee on his
carpet: and afterwards the horses would be brought, and they would ride
towards the new camping ground. But if on his way he thirsted he would
crisp his fingers to the servants, and the coffee man would ride up
beside him with his pots ready and his brazier burning on a copper
bracket of the saddle, to serve the cup on the march without breaking
stride; and at sunset they would find the women waiting in the erected
tent, as it had been on the evening before.
To-day had a grey weather, so strange after the
many thronging suns, that Newcombe and I walked stooping to look where
our shadows had gone, as we talked of what I hoped, and of what he
wanted. They were the same thing, so we had brain-leisure to note Semna
and its fine groves of
cared-for palms between little hedges of dead thorn; with here and there
huts of reed and palm-rib, to shelter the owners and their families at
times of fertilisation and harvest. In the lowest gardens and in the
valley bed were the shallow wood-lined wells, whose water was, they
said, fairly sweet and never-failing: but so little fluent that to water
our host of camels took the night.
Feisal wrote letters from Semna to twenty-five
leaders of the Billi and Howeitat and Beni Atiyeh, saying that he with
his army would be instantly in Wejh and they must see to it. Mohammed
Ali bestirred himself, and since almost all our men were of his tribe,
was useful in arranging the detachments and detailing them their routes
for the morrow. Our water-scouts had come in, to report shallow pools at
two points well-spaced on the coast road. After cross-questioning them
we decided to send four sections that way, and the other five by the
hills: in such a fashion we thought we should arrive soonest and safest
at Abu Zereibat.
The route was not easy to decide with the poor help
of the Musa Juheina, our informants. They seemed to have no unit of time
smaller than the half-day, or of distance between the span and the
stage; and a stage might be from six to sixteen hours according to the
man's will and camel. Intercommunication between our units was hindered
because often there was no one who could read or write, in either.
Delay, confusion, hunger and thirst marred this expedition. These might
have been avoided had time let us examine the route beforehand. The
animals were without food for nearly three days, and the men marched the
last fifty miles on half a gallon of water, with nothing to eat. It did
not in any way dim their spirit, and they trotted into Wejh gaily
enough, hoarsely singing, and executing mock charges: but Feisal said
that another hot and barren midday would have broken both their speed
and their energy.
When business ended, Newcombe and I went off to
sleep in the tent Feisal had lent us as a special luxury. Baggage
conditions were so hard and important for us that we rich took pride in
faring like the men, who could not transport unnecessary things: and
never before had I had a tent of my own. We pitched it at the very edge
of a bluff of the foot-hills; a bluff no wider than the tent and
rounded, so that the slope went straight down from the pegs of the
door-flap. There we found sitting and waiting for us Abd el Kerim, the
young Beidawi Sherif, wrapped up to the eyes in his head-cloth and
cloak, since the evening was chill and threatened rain. He had
come to ask me for a mule, with saddle and bridle. The smart appearance
of Maulud's little company in breeches and puttees, and their fine new
animals in the market at Um Lejj, had roused his desire.
I played with his eagerness, and put him off,
advancing a condition that he should ask me after our successful arrival
at Wejh; and with this he was content. We hungered for sleep, and at
last he rose to go, but, chancing to look across the valley, saw the
hollows beneath and about us winking with the faint camp-fires of the
scattered contingents. He called me out to look, and swept his arm
round, saying half-sadly, 'We are no longer Arabs but a People'.
He was half-proud too; for the advance on Wejh was
their biggest effort; the first time in memory that the manhood of a
tribe, with transport, arms, and food for two hundred miles, had left
its district and marched into another's territory without the hope of
plunder or the stimulus of blood feud. Abd el Kerim was glad that his
tribe had shown this new spirit of service, but also sorry; for to him
the joys of life were a fast camel, the best weapons, and a short sharp
raid against his neighbour's herd: and the gradual achievement of
Feisal's ambition was making such joys less and less easy for the
responsible.