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T. E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of
Wisdom
BOOK FOUR
CHAPTER 43
Fejr well 21.5.17 - Gazelle meat 22.5.17 -
Growing tired 23.5.17 - The first ostrich 24.5.17
Before dawn the following day we started down the bed
of Seil Abu Arad till the white sun came up over the Zibliyat hills
ahead of us. We turned more north to cut off an angle of the valley,
and halted for half an hour till we saw the main body coming. Then
Auda, Nasir and myself, unable longer to endure passively the hammer
strokes of the sun upon our bowed heads, pushed forward at a jerky
trot. Almost at once we lost sight of the others in the lymph-like
heat-vapour throbbing across the flat: but the road was evident down
the scrubby bed of Wadi Fejr.
At the height of noon we reached the well of our
desire. It was about thirty feet deep, stone-steyned, seemingly
ancient. The water was abundant, slightly brackish, but not
ill-tasting when drunk fresh: though it soon grew foul in a skin.
The valley had flooded in some burst of rain the year before, and
therefore contained much dry and thirsty pasturage: to this we
loosed our camels. The rest came up, and drew water and baked bread.
We let the camels crop industriously till night-fall, then watered
them again, and pounded them under the bank a half-mile from the
water, for the night: thus leaving the well unmolested in case
raiders should need it in the dark hours. Yet our sentries heard no
one.
As usual we were off before dawn, though we had an
easy march before us; but the heated glare of the desert became so
painful that we designed to pass the midday in some shelter. After
two miles the valley spread out, and later we came to a low broken
cliff on the east bank opposite the mouth of Seil Raugha. Here the
country looked more green, and we asked Auda to fetch us game. He
sent Zaal one way and rode westward himself across the open plain
which stretched beyond view, while we turned in to the cliffs and
found beneath their fallen crags and undercut ledges abundant shady
nooks, cool against the sun and restful for our unaccustomed eyes.
The hunters returned before noon, each with a good
gazelle. We had filled our water-skins at Fejr, and could use them
up, for the water of Abu Ajaj was near: so there was feasting on
bread and meat in our stone dens. These indulgences, amid the slow
fatigue of long unbroken marches, were grateful to the delicate
townsfolk among us: to myself, and to Zeki, and Nesib's Syrian
servants, and in a lesser degree to Nesib himself. Nasir's courtesy
as host, and his fount of native kindliness made him exquisite in
attention to us whenever the road allowed. To his patient teaching I
owed most of my later competence to accompany tribal Arabs on the
march without ruining their range and speed.
We rested till two in the afternoon, and reached our
stage, Khabr Ajaj, just before sunset, after a dull ride over a
duller plain which prolonged Wadi Fejr to the eastward for many
miles. The pool was of this year's rain, already turned thick; and
brackish; but good for camels and just possible for men to drink. It
lay in a shallow double depression by Wadi Fejr, whose flood had
filled it two feet deep over an area two hundred yards across. At
its north end was a low sandstone tump. We had thought to find
Howeitat here; but the ground was grazed bare and the water fouled
by their animals, while they themselves were gone. Auda searched for
their tracks, but could find none: the wind-storms had swept the
sand-face into clean new ripples. However, since they had come down
here from Tubaik, they must have gone on and out into Sirhan: so, if
we went away northward, we should find them.
The following day, despite the interminable lapse of
time, was only our fourteenth from Wejh; and its sun rose upon us
again marching. In the afternoon we at last left Wadi Fejr to steer
for Arfaja in Sirhan, a point rather east of north. Accordingly, we
inclined right, over flats of limestone and sand, and saw a distant
corner of the Great Nefudh, the famous belts of sand-dune which cut
off Jebel Shammar from the Syrian Desert. Palgrave, the Blunts, and
Gertrude Bell amongst the storied travellers had crossed it, and I
begged Auda to bear off a little and let us enter it, and their
company: but he growled that men went to the Nefudh only of
necessity, when raiding, and that the son of his father did not raid
on a tottering, mangy camel. Our business was to reach Arfaja alive.
So we wisely marched on, over monotonous, glittering
sand; and over those worse stretches, 'Giaan', of polished mud,
nearly as white and smooth as laid paper, and often whole miles
square. They blazed back the sun into our faces with glassy vigour,
so we rode with its light raining direct arrows upon our heads, and
its reflection glancing up from the ground through our inadequate
eyelids. It was not a steady pressure, but a pain ebbing and
flowing; at one time piling itself up and up till we nearly swooned;
and then falling away coolly, in a moment of false shadow like a
black web crossing the retina: these gave us a moment's breathing
space to store new capacity for suffering, like the struggles to the
surface of a drowning man.
We grew short-answered to one another; but relief
came toward six o'clock, when we halted for supper, and baked
ourselves fresh bread. I gave my camel what was left over of my
share, for the poor animal went tired and hungry in these bad
marches. She was the pedigree camel given by Ibn Saud of Nejd to
King Hussein and by him to Feisal; a splendid beast; rough, but
sure-footed on hills, and great-hearted. Arabs of means rode none
but she-camels, since they went smoother under the saddle than
males, and were better tempered and less noisy: also, they were
patient and would endure to march long after they were worn out,
indeed until they tottered with exhaustion and fell in their tracks
and died: whereas the coarser males grew angry, flung themselves
down when tired, and from sheer rage would die there unnecessarily.
After dark we crawled for three hours, reaching the
top of a sand-ridge. There we slept thankfully, after a bad day of
burning wind, dust blizzards, and drifting sand which stung our
inflamed faces, and at times, in the greater gusts, wrapped the
sight of our road from us and drove our complaining camels up and
down. But Auda was anxious about the morrow, for another hot
head-wind would delay us a third day in the desert, and we had no
water left: so he called us early in the night, and we marched down
into the plain of the Bisaita (so called in derision, for its huge
size and flatness), before day broke. Its fine surface-litter of
sun-browned flints was restfully dark after sunrise for our
streaming eyes, but hot and hard going for our camels, some of which
were already limping with sore feet.
Camels brought up on the sandy plains of the Arabian
coast had delicate pads to their feet; and if such animals were
taken suddenly inland for long marches over flints or other
heat-retaining ground, their soles would burn, and at last crack in
a blister; leaving quick flesh, two inches or more across, in the
centre of the pad. In this state they could march as ever over sand;
but if, by chance, the foot came down on a pebble, they would
stumble, or flinch as though they had stepped on fire, and in a long
march might break down altogether unless they were very brave. So we
rode carefully, picking the softest way, Auda and myself in front.
As we went, some little puffs of dust scurried into
the eye of the wind. Auda said they were ostriches. A man ran up to
us with two great ivory eggs. We settled to breakfast on this bounty
of the Biseita, and looked for fuel; but in twenty minutes found
only a wisp of grass. The barren desert was defeating us. The
baggage train passed, and my eye fell on the loads of blasting
gelatine. We broached a packet, shredding it carefully into a fire
beneath the egg propped on stones, till the cookery was pronounced
complete. Nasir and Nesib, really interested, dismounted to scoff at
us. Auda drew his silver-hilted dagger and chipped the top of the
first egg. A stink like a pestilence went across our party. We fled
to a clean spot, rolling the second egg hot before us with gentle
kicks. It was fresh enough, and hard as a stone. We dug out its
contents with the dagger on to the flint flakes which were our
platters, and ate it piecemeal; persuading even Nasir, who in his
life before had never fallen so low as egg-meat, to take his share.
The general verdict was: tough and strong, but good in the Biseita.
Zaal saw an oryx; stalked it on foot, and killed it.
The better joints were tied upon the baggage camels for the next
halt, and our march continued. Afterwards the greedy Howeitat saw
more oryx in the distance and went after the beasts, who foolishly
ran a little; then stood still and stared till the men were near,
and, too late, ran away again. Their white shining bellies betrayed
them; for, by the magnification of the mirage, they winked each move
to us from afar.
  
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