|
T. E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of
Wisdom
BOOK THREE
CHAPTER 38
Auda abu Tayi - A costly dinner - Auda at home - A
great offensive - Great difficulties - A turning movement
Cleanliness made me stop outside Wejh and change my
filthy clothes. Feisal, when I reported, led me into the inner tent
to talk. It seemed that everything was well. More cars had arrived
from Egypt: Yenbo was emptied of its last soldiers and stores: and
Sharraf himself had come up, with an unexpected unit, a new
machine-gun company of amusing origin. We had left thirty sick and
wounded men in Yenbo when we marched away; also heaps of broken
weapons, with two British armourer-sergeants repairing them. The
sergeants, who found time hang heavily, had taken mended Maxims and
patients and combined them into a machine-gun company so thoroughly
trained by dumb show that they were as good as the best we had.
Rabegh also was being abandoned. The aeroplanes from
it had flown up here and were established. Their Egyptian troops had
been shipped after them, with Joyce and Goslett and the Rabegh
staff, who were now in charge of things at Wejh. Newcombe and Hornby
were up country tearing at the railway day and night, almost with
their own hands for lack of helpers. The tribal propaganda was
marching forward: all was for the best, and I was about to take my
leave when Suleiman, the guest-master, hurried in and whispered to
Feisal, who turned to me with shining eyes, trying to be calm, and
said, 'Auda is here'. I shouted, 'Auda abu Tayi', and at that moment
the tent-flap was drawn back, before a deep voice which boomed
salutations to Our Lord, the Commander of the Faithful. There
entered a tall, strong figure, with a haggard face, passionate and
tragic. This was Auda, and after him followed Mohammed, his son, a
child in looks, and only eleven years old in truth.
Feisal had sprung to his feet. Auda caught his hand
and kissed it, and they drew aside a pace or two and looked at each
other - a splendidly unlike pair, typical of much that was best in
Arabia, Feisal the prophet, and Auda the warrior, each filling his
part to perfection, and immediately understanding and liking the
other. They sat down. Feisal introduced us one by one, and Auda with
a measured word seemed to register each person.
We had heard much of Auda, and were banking to open
Akaba with his help; and after a moment I knew, from the force and
directness of the man, that we would attain our end. He had come
down to us like a knight-errant, chafing at our delay in Wejh,
anxious only to be acquiring merit for Arab freedom in his own
lands. If his performance was one-half his desire, we should be
prosperous and fortunate. The weight was off all minds before we
went to supper.
We were a cheerful party; Nasib, Faiz, Mohammed el
Dheilan Auda's politic cousin, Zaal his nephew, and Sherif Nasir,
resting in Wejh for a few days between expeditions. I told Feisal
odd stories of Abdulla's camp, and the joy of breaking railways.
Suddenly Auda scrambled to his feet with a loud 'God forbid', and
flung from the tent. We stared at one another, and there came a
noise of hammering outside. I went after to learn what it meant, and
there was Auda bent over a rock pounding his false teeth to
fragments with a stone. 'I had forgotten,' he explained, 'Jemal
Pasha gave me these. I was eating my Lord's bread with Turkish
teeth!' Unfortunately he had few teeth of his own, so that
henceforward eating the meat he loved was difficulty and after-pain,
and he went about half nourished till we had taken Akaba, and Sir
Reginald Wingate sent him a dentist from Egypt to make an Allied
set.
Auda was very simply dressed, northern fashion, in
white cotton with a red Mosul head-cloth. He might be over fifty,
and his black hair was streaked with white; but he was still strong
and straight, loosely built, spare, and as active as a much younger
man. His face was magnificent in its lines and hollows. On it was
written how truly the death in battle of Annad, his favourite son,
cast sorrow over all his life when it ended his dream of handing on
to future generations the greatness of the name of Abu Tayi. He had
large eloquent eyes, like black velvet in richness. His forehead was
low and broad, his nose very high and sharp, powerfully hooked: his
mouth rather large and mobile: his beard and moustaches had been
trimmed to a point in Howeitat style, with the lower jaw shaven
underneath.
Centuries ago the Howeitat came from Hejaz, and their
nomad clans prided themselves on being true Bedu. Auda was their
master type. His hospitality was sweeping; except to very hungry
souls, inconvenient. His generosity kept him always poor, despite
the profits of a hundred raids. He had married twenty-eight times,
had been wounded thirteen times; whilst the battles he provoked had
seen all his tribesmen hurt and most of his relations killed. He
himself had slain seventy-five men, Arabs, with his own hand in
battle: and never a man except in battle. Of the number of dead
Turks he could give no account: they did not enter the register. His
Toweiha under him had become the first fighters of the desert, with
a tradition of desperate courage, a sense of superiority which never
left them while there was life and work to do: but which had reduced
them from twelve hundred men to less than five hundred, in thirty
years, as the standard of nomadic fighting rose.
Auda raided as often as he had opportunity, and as
widely as he could. He had seen Aleppo, Basra, Wejh, and Wadi
Dawasir on his expeditions: and was careful to be at enmity with
nearly all tribes in the desert, that he might have proper scope for
raids. After his robber-fashion, he was as hard-headed as he was
hot-headed, and in his maddest exploits there would be a cold factor
of possibility to lead him through. His patience in action was
extreme: and he received and ignored advice, criticism, or abuse,
with a smile as constant as it was very charming. If he got angry
his face worked uncontrollably, and he burst into a fit of shaking
passion, only to be assuaged after he had killed: at such times he
was a wild beast, and men escaped his presence. Nothing on earth
would make him change his mind or obey an order to do the least
thing he disapproved; and he took no heed of men's feelings when his
face was set.
He saw life as a saga. All the events in it were
significant: all personages in contact with him heroic. His mind was
stored with poems of old raids and epic tales of fights, and he
overflowed with them on the nearest listener. If he lacked listeners
he would very likely sing them to himself in his tremendous voice,
deep and resonant and loud. He had no control over his lips, and was
therefore terrible to his own interests and hurt his friends
continually. He spoke of himself in the third person, and was so
sure of his fame that he loved to shout out stories against himself.
At times he seemed taken by a demon of mischief, and in public
assembly would invent and utter on oath appalling tales of the
private life of his hosts or guests: and yet with all this he was
modest, as simple as a child, direct, honest, kind-hearted, and
warmly loved even by those to whom he was most embarrassing - his
friends.
Joyce lived near the beach, beside the spread lines
of the Egyptian troops, in an imposing array of large tents and
small tents, and we talked over things done or to do. Every effort
was still directed against the railway. Newcombe and Garland were
near Muadhdham with Sherif Sharraf and Maulud. They had many Billi,
the mule-mounted infantry, and guns and machine guns, and hoped to
take the fort and railway station there. Newcombe meant then to move
all Feisal's men forward very close to Medain Salih, and, by taking
and holding a part of the line, to cut off Medina and compel its
early surrender. Wilson was coming up to help in this operation, and
Davenport would take as many of the Egyptian army as he could
transport, to reinforce the Arab attack.
All this programme was what I had believed necessary
for the further progress of the Arab Revolt when we took Wejh. I had
planned and arranged some of it myself. But now, since that happy
fever and dysentery in Abdulla's camp had given me leisure to
meditate upon the strategy and tactics of irregular war, it seemed
that not merely the details but the essence of this plan were wrong.
It therefore became my business to explain my changed ideas, and if
possible to persuade my chiefs to follow me into the new theory.
So I began with three propositions. Firstly, that
irregulars would not attack places, and so remained incapable of
forcing a decision. Secondly, that they were as unable to defend a
line or point as they were to attack it. Thirdly, that their virtue
lay in depth, not in face.
The Arab war was geographical, and the Turkish Army
an accident. Our aim was to seek the enemy's weakest material link
and bear only on that till time made their whole length fail. Our
largest resources, the Beduin on whom our war must be built, were
unused to formal operations, but had assets of mobility, toughness,
self-assurance, knowledge of the country, intelligent courage. With
them dispersal was strength. Consequently we must extend our front
to its maximum, to impose on the Turks the longest possible passive
defence, since that was, materially, their most costly form of war.
Our duty was to attain our end with the greatest
economy of life, since life was more precious to us than money or
time. If we were patient and superhuman-skilled, we could follow the
direction of Saxe and reach victory without battle, by pressing our
advantages mathematical and psychological. Fortunately our physical
weakness was not such as to demand this. We were richer than the
Turks in transport, machine-guns cars, high explosive. We could
develop a highly mobile, highly equipped striking force of the
smallest size, and use it successively at distributed points of the
Turkish line, to make them strengthen their posts beyond the
defensive minimum of twenty men. This would be a short cut to
success.
We must not take Medina. The Turk was harmless there.
In prison in Egypt he would cost us food and guards. We wanted him
to stay at Medina, and every other distant place, in the largest
numbers. Our ideal was to keep his railway just working, but only
just, with the maximum of loss and discomfort. The factor of food
would confine him to the rail-ways, but he was welcome to the Hejaz
Railway, and the Trans-Jordan railway, and the Palestine and Syrian
railways for the duration of the war, so long as he gave us the
other nine hundred and ninety-nine thousandths of the Arab world. If
he tended to evacuate too soon, as a step to concentrating in the
small area which his numbers could dominate effectually, then we
should have to restore his confidence by reducing our enterprises
against him. His stupidity would be our ally, for he would like to
hold, or to think he held, as much of his old provinces as possible.
This pride in his imperial heritage would keep him in his present
absurd position – all flanks and no front.
In detail I criticized the ruling scheme. To hold a
middle point of the railway would be expensive, for the holding
force might be threatened from each side. The mixture of Egyptian
troops with tribesmen was a moral weakness. If there were
professional soldiers present, the Beduin would stand aside and
watch them work, glad to be excused the leading part. Jealousy,
superadded to inefficiency, would be the outcome. Further, the Billi
country was very dry, and the maintenance of a large force up by the
line technically difficult.
Neither my general reasoning, however, nor my
particular objections had much weight. The plans were made, and the
preparations advanced. Everyone was too busy with his own work to
give me specific authority to launch out on mine. All I gained was a
hearing, and a qualified admission that my counter-offensive might
be a useful diversion. I was working out with Auda abu Tayi a march
to the Howeitat in their spring pastures of the Syrian desert. From
them we might raise a mobile camel force, and rush Akaba from the
eastward without guns or machine-guns.
The eastern was the unguarded side, the line of least
resistance, the easiest for us. Our march would be an extreme
example of a turning movement, since it involved a desert journey of
six hundred miles to capture a trench within gunfire of our ships:
but there was no practicable alternative, and it was so entirely in
the spirit of my sick-bed ruminations that its issue might well be
fortunate, and would surely be instructive. Auda thought all things
possible with dynamite and money, and that the smaller clans about
Akaba would join us. Feisal, who was already in touch with them,
also believed that they would help if we won a preliminary success
up by Maan and then moved in force against the port. The Navy raided
it while we were thinking, and their captured Turks gave us such
useful information that I became eager to go off at once.
The desert route to Akaba was so long and so
difficult that we could take neither guns nor machine-guns, nor
stores nor regular soldiers. Accordingly the element I would
withdraw from the railway scheme was only my single self; and, in
the circumstances, this amount was negligible, since I felt so
strongly against it that my help there would have been half-hearted.
So I decided to go my own way, with or without orders. I wrote a
letter full of apologies to Clayton, telling him that my intentions
were of the best: and went.
  
|
|