|
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. |
| Page heading |
date |
page |
|
The great water-pool |
21.1.17 |
|
| More adherents |
21.1.17 |
|
| Checks in the plan |
22.1.17 |
|
| Varied troubles |
23.1.17 |
|
Before
we quite reached the far bank the ground suddenly cleared at a clay
bottom, in which stood a deep brown water-pool, eighty yards long and
about fifteen yards wide. This was the flood-water of Abu Zereibat, our
goal. We went a few yards further, through the last scrub, and reached
the open north bank where Feisal had appointed the camp. It was a huge
plain of sand and flints, running to the very feet of Raal, with room on
it for all the armies of Arabia. So we stopped our camels, and the
slaves unloaded them and set up the tents; while we walked back to see
the mules, thirsty after their long day's march, rush with the
foot-soldiers into the pond, kicking and splashing with pleasure in the
sweet water. The abundance of fuel was an added happiness, and in
whatever place they chose to camp each group of friends had a roaring
fire - very welcome, as a wet evening mist rose eight feet out of the
ground and our woollen cloaks stiffened and grew cold with its silver
beads in their coarse woof.
It was a black night, moonless, but above the fog
very brilliant with stars. On a little mound near our tents we collected
and looked over the rolling white seas of fog. Out of it arose
tent-peaks, and tall spires of melting smoke, which became luminous
underneath when the flames licked higher into the clean air, as if
driven by the noises of the unseen army. Old Auda ibn Zuweid corrected
me gravely when I said this to him, telling me, 'It is not an army, it
is a world which is moving on Wejh'. I rejoiced at his insistence, for
it had been to create this very feeling that we had hampered ourselves
with an unwieldy crowd of men on so difficult a march.
That evening the Billi began to come in to us
shyly, and swear fealty, for the Hamdh Valley was their boundary.
Amongst them Hamid el Rifada rode up with a numerous company to pay his
respects to Feisal. He told us that his cousin, Suleiman Pasha, the
paramount of the tribe, was at Abu Ajaj, fifteen miles north of us,
trying desperately for once to make up the mind which had chopped and
balanced profitably throughout a long life. Then, without warning or
parade, Sherif Nasir of Medina came in. Feisal leaped up and embraced
him, and led him over to us.
Nasir
made a splendid impression, much as we had heard, and much as we were
expecting of him. He was the opener of roads, the fore-runner of
Feisal's movement, the man who had fired his first shot in Medina, and
who was to fire our last shot at Muslimieh beyond Aleppo on the day that
Turkey asked for an armistice, and from beginning to end all that could
be told of him was good.
He was a brother of Shehad, the Emir of Medina.
Their family was descended from Hussein, the younger of Ali's children,
and they were the only descendants of Hussein considered Ashraf, not
Saada. They were Shias, and had been since the days of Kerbela, and in
Hejaz were respected only second to the Emirs of Mecca. Nasir himself
was a man of gardens, whose lot had been unwilling war since boyhood. He
was now about twenty-seven. His low, broad forehead matched his
sensitive eyes, while his weak pleasant mouth and small chin were
clearly seen through a clipped black beard.
He had been up here for two months, containing
Wejh, and his last news was that the outpost of Turkish camel corps upon
our road had withdrawn that morning towards the main defensive
position.
We slept late the following day, to brace ourselves
for the necessary hours of talk. Feisal carried most of this upon his
own shoulders. Nasir supported him as second in command, and the Beidawi
brothers sat by to help. The day was bright and warm, threatening to be
hot later, and Newcombe and I wandered about looking at the watering,
the men, and the constant affluence of newcomers. When the sun was high
a great cloud of dust from the east heralded a larger party and we
walked back to the tents to see Mirzuk el Tikheimi, Feisal's sharp,
mouse-featured guest-master, ride in. He led his clansmen of the Juheina
past the Emir at a canter, to make a show. They stifled us with their
dust, for his van of a dozen sheikhs carrying a large red flag and a
large white flag drew their swords and charged round and round our
tents. We admired neither their riding nor their mares: perhaps because
they were a nuisance to us.
About noon the Wuld Mohammed Harb, and the mounted
men of the ibn Shefia battalion came in: three hundred men, under Sheikh
Salih and Mohammed ibn Shefia. Mohammed was a tubby, vulgar little man
of fifty-five, common-sensible and energetic. He was rapidly making a
name for himself in the Arab army, for he would get done any manual
work. His men were the sweepings of Wadi Yenbo, landless and without
family, or labouring Yenbo townsmen, hampered by no inherited dignity.
They were more docile than any other of our troops except the
white-handed Ageyl who were too beautiful to be made into labourers.
We were already two days behind our promise to the
Navy, and Newcombe decided to ride ahead this night to Habban. There he
would meet Boyle and explain that we must fail the Hardinge at
the rendezvous, but would be glad if she could return there on the
evening of the twenty-fourth, when we should arrive much in need of
water. He would also see if the naval attack could not be delayed till
the twenty-fifth to preserve the joint scheme.
After dark there came a message from Suleiman
Rifada, with a gift-camel for Feisal to keep if he were friendly, and to
send back if hostile. Feisal was vexed, and protested his inability to
understand so feeble a man. Nasir asserted, 'Oh, it's because he eats
fish. Fish swells the head, and such behaviour follows'. The Syrians and
Mesopotamians, and men of Jidda and Yenbo laughed loudly, to shew that
they did not share this belief of the upland Arab, that a man of his
hands was disgraced by tasting the three mean foods - chickens, eggs and
fish. Feisal said, with mock gravity, 'You insult the company, we like
fish'. Others protested, 'We abandon it, and take refuge in God', and
Mirzuk to change the current said, 'Suleiman is an unnatural birth,
neither raw nor ripe'.
In the morning, early, we marched in a straggle for
three hours down Wadi Hamdh. Then the valley went to the left, and we
struck out across a hollow, desolate, featureless region. To-day was
cold: a hard north wind drove into our faces down the grey coast. As we
marched we heard intermittent heavy firing from the direction of Wejh,
and feared that the Navy had lost patience and were acting without us.
However, we could not make up the days we had wasted, so we pushed on
for the whole dull stage, crossing affluent after affluent of Hamdh. The
plain was striped with these wadies, all shallow and straight and bare,
as many and as intricate as the veins in a leaf. At last we re-entered
Hamdh, at Kurna, and though its clay bottoms held only mud, decided to
camp.
While we were settling in there was a sudden rush.
Camels had been seen pasturing away to the east, and the energetic of
the Juheina streamed out, captured them, and drove them in. Feisal was
furious, and shouted to them to stop, but they were too excited to hear
him. He snatched his rifle, and shot at the nearest man; who, in fear,
tumbled out of his
saddle, so that the others checked their course. Feisal had them up
before him, laid about the principals with his camel-stick, and
impounded the stolen camels and those of the thieves till the whole
tally was complete. Then he handed the beasts back to their Billi
owners. Had he not done so it would have involved the Juheina in a
private war with the Billi, our hoped-for allies of the morrow, and
might have checked extension beyond Wejh. Our success lay in bond to
such trifles.
Next morning we made for the beach, and up it to
Habban at four o'clock. The Hardinge was duly there, to our
relief, and landing water: although the shallow bay gave little shelter,
and the rough sea rolling in made boat-work hazardous. We reserved first
call for the mules, and gave what water was left to the more thirsty of
the footmen; but it was a difficult night, and crowds of suffering men
lingered jostling about the tanks in the rays of the searchlight, hoping
for another drink, if the sailors should venture in again.
I went on board, and heard that the naval attack
had been carried out as though the land army were present, since Boyle
feared the Turks would run away if he waited. As a matter of fact, the
day we reached Abu Zereibat, Ahmed Tewfik Bey, Turkish Governor, had
addressed the garrison, saying that Wejh must be held to the last drop
of blood. Then at dusk he had got on to his camel and ridden off to the
railway with the few mounted men fit for flight. The two hundred
infantry determined to do his abandoned duty against the landing party;
but they were out-numbered three to one, and the naval gun-fire was too
heavy to let them make proper use of their positions. So far as the Hardinge knew, the fighting was not ended, but Wejh town had been
occupied by seamen and Saleh's Arabs.