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T. E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of
Wisdom
BOOK FOUR
CHAPTER 44
A man missing - Relief work - Gasim found 24.5.17
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Auda arrives 24.5.17 - The desert crossed 24.5.17
I was too weary, and too little sporting, to go out
of the straight way for all the rare beasts in the world; so I rode
after the caravan, which my camel overhauled quickly with her longer
stride. At the tail of it were my men, walking. They feared that
some of their animals would be dead before evening, if the wind blew
stronger, but were leading them by hand in hope of getting them in.
I admired the contrast between Mohammed the lusty, heavy-footed
peasant, and the lithe Ageyl, with Farraj and Daud dancing along,
barefooted, delicate as thoroughbreds. Only Gasim was not there:
they thought him among the Howeitat, for his surliness offended the
laughing soldiery and kept him commonly with the Beduin, who were
more of his kidney.
There was no one behind, so I rode forward wishing to
see how his camel was: and at last found it, riderless, being led by
one of the Howeitat. His saddle-bags were on it, and his rifle and
his food, but he himself nowhere; gradually it dawned on us that the
miserable man was lost. This was a dreadful business, for in the
haze and mirage the caravan could not be seen two miles, and on the
iron ground it made no tracks: afoot he would never overtake us.
Everyone had marched on, thinking him elsewhere in
our loose line; but much time had passed and it was nearly midday,
so he must be miles back. His loaded camel was proof that he had not
been forgotten asleep at our night halt. The Ageyl ventured that
perhaps he had dozed in the saddle and fallen, stunning or killing
himself: or perhaps someone of the party had borne him a grudge.
Anyway they did not know. He was an ill-natured stranger, no charge
on any of them, and they did not greatly care.
True: but it was true also that Mohammed, his
countryman and fellow, who was technically his road-companion, knew
nothing of the desert, had a foundered camel, and could not turn
back for him.
If I sent him, it would be murder. That shifted the
difficulty to my shoulders. The Howeitat, who would have helped,
were away in the mirage out of sight, hunting or scouting. Ibn
Dgheithir's Ageyl were so clannish that they would not put
themselves about except for one another. Besides Gasim was my man:
and upon me lay the responsibility of him.
I looked weakly at my trudging men, and wondered for
a moment if I could change with one, sending him back on my camel to
the rescue. My shirking the duty would be understood, because I was
a foreigner: but that was precisely the plea I did not dare set up,
while I yet presumed to help these Arabs in their own revolt. It was
hard, anyway, for a stranger to influence another people's national
movement, and doubly hard for a Christian and a sedentary person to
sway Moslem nomads. I should make it impossible for myself if I
claimed, simultaneously, the privileges of both societies.
So, without saying anything, I turned my unwilling
camel round, and forced her, grunting and moaning for her camel
friends, back past the long line of men, and past the baggage into
the emptiness behind. My temper was very unheroic, for I was furious
with my other servants, with my own play acting as a Beduin, and
most of all with Gasim, a gap-toothed, grumbling fellow, skrimshank
in all our marches, bad-tempered, suspicious, brutal, a man whose
engagement I regretted, and of whom I had promised to rid myself as
soon as we reached a discharging-place. It seemed absurd that I
should peril my weight in the Arab adventure for a single worthless
man.
My camel seemed to feel it also, by her deep
grumbling; but that was a constant recourse of ill-treated camels.
From calfhood they were accustomed to live in droves, and some grew
too conventional to march alone: while none would leave their
habitual party without loud grief and unwillingness, such as mine
was showing. She turned her head back on her long neck, lowing to
the rest, and walked very slowly, and bouncingly. It needed careful
guidance to hold her on the road, and a tap from my stick at every
pace to keep her moving. However, after a mile or two, she felt
better, and began to go forward less constrainedly, but still
slowly. I had been noting our direction all these days with my oil
compass, and hoped, by its aid, to return nearly to our starting
place, seventeen miles away.
Before twenty minutes, the caravan was out of sight,
and it was borne in on me how really barren the Bisaita was. Its
only marks were the old sanded samh pits, across all possible of
which I rode, because my camel tracks would show in them, and be so
many blazes of the way back. This samh was the wild flour of the
Sherarat; who, poor in all but camel-stocks, made it a boast to find
the desert sufficient for their every need. When mixed with dates
and loosened with butter, it was good food.
The pits, little threshing floors, were made by
pushing aside the flints over a circle of ten feet across. The
flints, heaped up round the rim of the pit made it inches deep, and
in this hollow place the women collected and beat out the small red
seed. The constant winds, sweeping since over them, could not indeed
put back the flint surface (that would perhaps be done by the rain
in thousands of winters), but had levelled them up with pale blown
sand, so that the pits were grey eyes in the black stony surface.
I had ridden about an hour and a half, easily, for
the following breeze had let me wipe the crust from my red eyes and
look forward almost without pain: when I saw a figure, or large
bush, or at least something black ahead of me. The shifting mirage
disguised height or distance; but this thing seemed moving, a little
east of our course. On chance I turned my camel's head that way, and
in a few minutes saw that it was Gasim. When I called he stood
confusedly; I rode up and saw that he was nearly blinded and silly,
standing there with his arms held out to me, and his black mouth
gaping open. The Ageyl had put our last water in my skin, and this
he spilled madly over his face and breast, in haste to drink. He
stopped babbling, and began to wail out his sorrows. I sat him,
pillion, on the camel's rump; then stirred her up and mounted.
At our turn the beast seemed relieved, and moved
forward freely. I set an exact compass course, so exact that often I
found our old tracks, as little spurts of paler sand scattered over
the brown-black flint. In spite of our double weight the camel began
to stride out, and at times she even put her head down and for a few
paces developed that fast and most comfortable shuffle to which the
best animals, while young, were broken by skilled riders. This proof
of reserve spirit in her rejoiced me, as did the little time lost in
search.
Gasim was moaning impressively about the pain and
terror of his thirst: I told him to stop; but he went on, and began
to sit loosely; until at each step of the camel he bumped down on
her hinder quarters with a crash, which, like his crying, spurred
her to greater pace. There was danger in this, for we might easily
founder her so. Again I told him to stop, and when he only screamed
louder, hit him and swore that for another sound I would throw him
off. The threat, to which my general rage gave colour, worked. After
it he clung on grimly without sound.
Not four miles had passed when again I saw a black
bubble, lunging and swaying in the mirage ahead. It split into
three, and swelled. I wondered if they were enemy. A minute later
the haze unrolled with the disconcerting suddenness of illusion; and
it was Auda with two of Nasir's men come back to look for me. I
yelled jests and scoffs at them for abandoning a friend in the
desert. Auda pulled his beard and grumbled that had he been present
I would never have gone back. Gasim was transferred with insults to
a better rider's saddle-pad, and we ambled forward together.
Auda pointed to the wretched hunched-up figure and
denounced me, 'For that thing, not worth a camel's price....' I
interrupted him with 'Not worth a half-crown Auda', and he,
delighted in his simple mind, rode near Gasim, and struck him
sharply, trying to make him repeat, like a parrot, his price. Gasim
bared his broken teeth in a grin of rage and afterwards sulked on.
In another hour we were on the heels of the baggage camels, and as
we passed up the inquisitive line of our caravan, Auda repeated my
joke to each pair perhaps forty times in all, till I had seen to the
full its feebleness.
Gasim explained that he had dismounted to ease
nature, and had missed the party afterwards in the dark: but,
obviously, he had gone to sleep, where he dismounted, with the
fatigue of our slow, hot journeying. We rejoined Nasir and Nesib in
the van. Nesib was vexed with me, for periling the lives of Auda and
myself on a whim. It was clear to him that I reckoned they would
come back for me. Nasir was shocked at his ungenerous outlook, and
Auda was glad to rub into a townsman the paradox of tribe and city;
the collective responsibility and group-brotherhood of the desert,
contrasted with the isolation and competitive living of the crowded
districts.
Over this little affair hours had passed, and the
rest of the day seemed not so long; though the heat became worse,
and the sand-blast stiffened in our faces till the air could be seen
and heard, whistling past our camels like smoke. The ground was flat
and featureless till five o'clock, when we saw low mounds ahead, and
a little later found ourselves in comparative peace, amid sand-hills
coated slenderly with tamarisk. These were the Kaseim of Sirhan. The
bushes and the dunes broke the wind, it was sunset, and the evening
mellowed and reddened on us from the west. So I wrote in my diary
that Sirhan was beautiful.
Palestine became a land of milk and honey to those
who had spent forty years in Sinai: Damascus had the name of an
earthly paradise to the tribes which could enter it only after weeks
and weeks of painful marching across the flint-stones of this
northern desert: and likewise the Kaseim of Arfaja in which we spent
that night, after five days across the blazing Houl in the teeth of
a sand-storm, looked fresh and countryfied. They were raised only a
few feet above the Biseita, and from them valleys seemed to run down
towards the east into a huge depression where lay the well we
wanted: but now that we had crossed the desert and reached the
Sirhan safely, the terror of thirst had passed and we knew fatigue
to be our chief ill. So we agreed to camp for the night where we
were, and to make beacon fires for the slave of Nuri Shaalan, who,
like Gasim, had disappeared from our caravan to-day.
We were not greatly perturbed about him. He knew the
country and his camel was under him. It might be that he had
intentionally taken the direct way to Jauf, Nuri's capital, to earn
the reward of first news that we came with gifts. However it was, he
did not come that night, nor next day; and when, months after, I
asked Nuri of him, he replied that his dried body had lately been
found, lying beside his un-plundered camel far out in the
wilderness. He must have lost himself in the sand-haze and wandered
till his camel broke down; and there died of thirst and heat. Not a
long death - even for the very strongest a second day in summer was
all - but very painful; for thirst was an active malady; a fear and
panic which tore at the brain and reduced the bravest man to a
stumbling babbling maniac in an hour or two: and then the sun killed
him.
  
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