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T. E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of
Wisdom
BOOK THREE
CHAPTER 32
Hill tracks 13.3.17 - Increasing sickness - A
lava-field -
Arab guesting - At last 15.3.17
DAWN found us crossing a steep short pass out of Wadi
Kitan into the main drainage valley of these succeeding hills. We
turned aside into Wadi Reimi, a tributary, to get water. There was
no proper well, only a seepage hole in the stony bed of the valley;
and we found it partly by our noses: though the taste, while as
foul, was curiously un1ike the smell. We refilled our water-skins.
Arslan baked bread, and we rested for two hours. Then we went on
through Wadi Amk, an easy green valley which made comfortable
marching for the camels.
When the Amk turned westward we crossed it, going up
between piles of the warped grey granite (like cold toffee) which
was common up-country in the Hejaz. The defile culminated at the
foot of a natural ramp and staircase: badly broken, twisting, and
difficult for camels, but short. Afterwards we were in an open
valley for an hour, with low hills to the right and mountains to the
left. There were water pools in the crags, and Merawin tents under
the fine trees which studded the flat. The fertility of the slopes
was great: on them grazed flocks of sheep and goats. We got milk
from the Arabs: the first milk my Ageyl had been given in the two
years of drought.
The track out of the valley when we reached its head
was execrable, and the descent beyond into Wadi Marrakh almost
dangerous; but the view from the crest compensated us. Wadi Marrakh,
a broad, peaceful avenue, ran between two regular straight walls of
hills to a circus four miles off where valleys from left, right and
front seemed to meet. Artificial heaps of uncut stone were piled
about the approach. As we entered it, we saw that the grey
hill-walls swept back on each side in a half-circle. Before us, to
the south, the curve was barred across by a straight wall or step of
blue-black lava, standing over a little grove of thorn trees. We
made for these and lay down in their thin shade, grateful in such
sultry air for any pretence of coolness.
The day, now at its zenith, was very hot; and my
weakness had so increased that my head hardly held up against it.
The puffs of feverish wind pressed like scorching hands against our
faces, burning our eyes. My pain made me breathe in gasps through
the mouth; the wind cracked my lips and seared my throat till I was
too dry to talk, and drinking became sore; yet I always needed to
drink, as my thirst would not let me lie still and get the peace I
longed for. The flies were a plague.
The bed of the valley was of fine quartz gravel and
white sand. Its glitter thrust itself between our eyelids; and the
level of the ground seemed to dance as the wind moved the white tips
of stubble grass to and fro. The camels loved this grass, which grew
in tufts, about sixteen inches high, on slate-green stalks. They
gulped down great quantities of it until the men drove them in and
couched them by me. At the moment I hated the beasts, for too much
food made their breath stink; and they rumblingly belched up a new
mouthful from their stomachs each time they had chewed and swallowed
the last, till a green slaver flooded out between their loose lips
over the side teeth, and dripped down their sagging chins.
Lying angrily there, I threw a stone at the nearest,
which got up and wavered about behind my head: finally it straddled
its back legs and staled in wide, bitter jets; and I was so far gone
with the heat and weakness and pain that I just lay there and cried
about it unhelping. The men had gone to make a fire and cook a
gazelle one of them had fortunately shot; and I realized that on
another day this halt would have been pleasant to me; for the hills
were very strange and their colours vivid. The base had the warm
grey of old stored sunlight; while about their crests ran narrow
veins of granite-coloured stone, generally in pairs, following the
contour of the skyline like the rusted metals of an abandoned scenic
railway. Arslan said the hills were combed like cocks, a sharper
observation.
After the men had fed we re-mounted, and easily
climbed the first wave of the lava flood. It was short, as was the
second, on the top of which lay a broad terrace with an alluvial
plot of sand and gravel in its midst. The lava was a nearly clean
floor of iron-red rock-cinders, over which were scattered fields of
loose stone. The third and other steps ascended to the south of us:
but we turned east, up Wadi Gara.
Gara had, perhaps, been a granite valley down whose
middle the lava had flowed, slowly filling it, and arching itself up
in a central heap. On each side were deep troughs, between the lava
and the hill-side. Rain water flooded these as often as storms burst
in the hills. The lava flow, as it coagulated, had been twisted like
a rope, cracked, and bent back irregularly upon itself. The surface
was loose with fragments through which many generations of camel
parties had worn an inadequate and painful track.
We struggled along for hours, going slowly, our
camels wincing at every stride as the sharp edges slipped beneath
their tender feet. The paths were only to be seen by the droppings
along them, and by the slightly bluer surfaces of the rubbed stones.
The Arabs declared them impassable after dark, which was to be
believed, for we risked laming our beasts each time our impatience
made us urge them on. Just before five in the afternoon, however,
the way got easier. We seemed to be near the head of the valley,
which grew narrow. Before us on the right, an exact cone-crater,
with tidy furrows scoring it from lip to foot, promised good going;
for it was made of black ash, clean as though sifted, with here and
there a bank of harder soil, and cinders. Beyond it was another
lava-field, older perhaps than the valleys, for its stones were
smoothed, and between them were straths of flat earth, rank with
weeds. In among these open spaces were Beduin tents, whose owners
ran to us when they saw us coming; and, taking our head-stalls with
hospitable force, led us in.
They proved to be Sheikh Fahad el Hansha and his men:
old and garrulous warriors who had marched with us to Wejh, and had
been with Garland on that great occasion when his first automatic
mine had succeeded under a troop train near Toweira station. Fahad
would not hear of my resting quietly outside his tent, but with the
reckless equality of the desert men urged me into an unfortunate
place inside among his own vermin. There he plied me with bowl after
bowl of diuretic camel-milk between questions about Europe, my home
tribe, the English camel-pasturages, the war in the Hejaz and the
wars elsewhere, Egypt and Damascus, how Feisal was, why did we
seek Abdulla, and by what perversity did I remain Christian, when
their hearts and hands waited to welcome me to the Faith?
So passed long hours till ten at night, when the
guest-sheep was carried in, dismembered royally over a huge pile of
buttered rice. I ate as manners demanded, twisted myself up in my
cloak, and slept; my bodily exhaustion, after those hours of the
worst imaginable marching, proofing me against the onslaught of lice
and fleas. The illness, however, had stimulated my ordinarily
sluggish fancy, which ran riot this night in dreams of wandering
naked for a dark eternity over interminable lava (like scrambled egg
gone iron-blue, and very wrong), sharp as insect-bites underfoot;
and with some horror, perhaps a dead Moor, always climbing after us.
In the morning we woke early and refreshed, with our
clothes stinging-full of fiery points feeding on us. After one more
bowl of milk proffered us by the eager Fahad, I was able to walk
unaided to my camel and mount her actively. We rode up the last
piece of Wadi Gara to the crest, among cones of black cinders from a
crater to the south. Thence we turned to a branch valley, ending in
a steep and rocky chimney, up which we pulled our camels.
Beyond we had an easy descent into Wadi Murrmiya
whose middle bristled with lava like galvanized iron, on each side
of which there were smooth sandy beds, good going. After a while we
came to a fault in the flow, which served as a track to the other
side. By it we crossed over, finding the lava pocketed with soils
apparently of extreme richness, for in them were leafy trees and
lawns of real grass, starred with flowers, the best grazing of all
our ride, looking the more wonderfully green because of the
blue-black twisted crusts of rock about. The lava had changed its
character. Here were no piles of loose stones, as big as a skull or
a man's hand, rubbed and rounded together; but bunched and
crystallized fronds of metallic rock, altogether impassable for bare
feet.
Another watershed conducted us to an open place where
the Jeheina had ploughed some eight acres of the thin soil below a
thicket of scrub. They said there were like it in the neighbourhood
other fields, silent witnesses to the courage and persistence of the
Arabs. It was called Wadi Chetf, and after it was another broken
river of lava, the worst yet encountered. A shadowy path zigzagged
across it. We lost one camel with a broken fore-leg, the result of a
stumble in a pot-hole; and the many bones which lay about showed
that we were not the only party to suffer misfortune in the passage.
However, this ended our lava, according to the guides, and we went
thence forward along easy valleys with finally a long run up a
gentle slope till dusk. The going was so good and the cool of the
day so freshened me that we did not halt at nightfall, after our
habit but pushed on for an hour across the basin of Murrmiya into
the basin of Wadi Ais and there, by Tleih, we stopped for our last
camp in the open.
I rejoiced that we were so nearly in, for fever was
heavy on me. I was afraid that perhaps I was going to be really ill,
and the prospect of falling into the well-meaning hands of tribesmen
in such a state was not pleasant. Their treatment of every sickness
was to burn holes in the patient's body at some spot believed to be
the complement of the part affected. It was a cure tolerable to such
as had faith in it, but torture to the unbelieving: to incur it
unwillingly would be silly, and yet certain; for the Arabs' good
intentions, selfish as their good digestions, would never heed a
sick man's protesting.
The morning was easy, over open valleys and gentle
rides into Wadi Ais. We arrived at Abu Markha, its nearest
watering-place, just a few minutes after Sherif Abdulla had
dismounted there, and while he was ordering his tents to be pitched
in an acacia glade beyond the well. He was leaving his old camp at
Bir el Amri, lower down the valley, as he had left Murabba, his camp
before, because the ground had been fouled by the careless multitude
of his men and animals. I gave him the documents from Feisal,
explaining the situation in Medina, and the need we had of haste to
block the railway. I thought he took it coolly; but, without
argument, went on to say that I was a little tired after my journey,
and with his permission would lie down and sleep a while. He pitched
me a tent next his great marquee, and I went into it and rested
myself at last. It had been a struggle against faintness day-long in
the saddle to get here at all: and now the strain was ended with the
delivery of my message, I felt that another hour would have brought
the breaking point.
  
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