Read Hero: The Life and Legend of Lawrence of Arabia Online
Authors: Michael Korda
231
“olive tree boles”:
Ibid., 274.
232
“I cannot print with you”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 132.
232
“from west to east”:
Ibid., 137.
234
“approach Kenyon”:
Ibid.
234
“Hogarth concurs in the idea”:
Ibid., 138.
235
“a picturesque little crusading town”:
Lawrence,
Home Letters, 281.
238
Newcombe was not dismayed:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 141.
238
“back to Mount Hor”:
Lawrence,
Home Letters, 286.
240
On March 21, Woolley and Lawrence:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 143-145.
240
A Circassian working for the Germans:
Ibid., 144.
241
“the only piece of spying”:
Ibid., 147.
241
More interesting still was the amount of information:
Ibid.
chapter six
Cairo: 1914-1916
248
“In Constantinople the seizure”:
Randolph Churchill and Gilbert,
Winston Churchill, 1914-1916,
Vol. 3, 192.
248
“As the shadows of the night”:
Churchill,
The World Crisis,
Vol. 1, 227.
250
COMMENCE HOSTILITIES
: Geoffrey Miller, “Turkey Enters the War and British Actions.” December 1999, http://www.gwpda.org/naval/turk mill.htm.
251
“He’s running my entire department”:
Graves,
Lawrence and the Arabs, 63.
251
“I want to talk to an officer”:
Aldington,
Lawrence of Arabia, 124.
252
“as an officer ideally suited”:
Ibid., 126.
253
“Clayton stability”:
Storrs,
Orientations, 179.
254
“a youngster, 2nd Lt. Lawrence”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 154.
254
“Keep your eye on Afghanistan”:
Lawrence,
Home Letters, 300.
255
“in the office from morning”:
Ibid., 301.
257
“bottle-washer and office boy”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 167.
257
He was well aware of events:
Ibid., 169.
258
“pieced together”:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder, 131.
259
Abdulla’s concern was that the Turkish government:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 164-165.
259
One son, Emir Feisal:
Antonius,
The Arab Awakening, 72.
260
“It may be”:
Wilson,
Lawrence, 165.
264
“The assault I regret to say”:
Lawrence,
Home Letters, 721.
264
“You will never understand”:
Ibid., 304.
265
“If I do die”:
Ibid., 718.
267
“To the excellent and well-born”:
Antonius,
The Arab Awakening, 167.
271
“a twenty-minute Parliamentary debate”:
Storrs,
Orientations, 229.
272
“a devout Roman Catholic”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 193.
273
“There is nothing so bad or so good”:
Shaw,
Man of Destiny, 87.
274
“every aspect of the Arab question”:
Wilson,
Lawrence, 235.
274
“bravura”:
Ibid., 235.
275
Picot was a master of detail:
Fromkin,
A Peace to End All Peace, 190.
279
It was hoped that a French zone:
Ibid., 192.
280
“the imaginative advocate”:
Lawrence, SP, 38.
281
“I’ve decided to go off alone”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 410.
282
“I have not written to you for ever”:
Lawrence,
Letters from T. E. Lawrence to E. T. Leeds, 110.
283
“I’m fed up, and fed up”:
Ibid., 109.
283
The Arab Bulletin was a secret news sheet:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 242.
283
The only one of them:
Lawrence,
Letters from T. E. Lawrence to E. T. Leeds, 109.
283
“to put the Grand Duke Nicholas in touch with”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 242.
285
The British Force in Egypt and the British Mediterranean Expeditionary Force:
Ibid., 252.
286
“to biff the French out of Syria”:
Knightley and Simpson,
Secret Lives of Lawrence of Arabia, 81.
288
“go free on parole”:
Aldington,
Lawrence of Arabia, 149.
289
Lawrence arrived to undergo a difficult interview:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 268-269.
289
Although Khalil was “extremely nice”:
Ibid., 272.
290
“about 32 or 33, very keen & energetic”:
Lawrence,
Home Letters, 326.
291
“a German field mission led by Baron Othmar von Stotzingen”:
Antonius,
The Arab Awakening, 191.
292
“pronging playfully at strangers”:
Storrs,
Orientations, 188.
293
“Long before we met”:
Ibid., 221.
chapter seven
1917: “The Uncrowned King of Arabia”
297
if Clayton “thought”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 419.
297
“he wanted Jerusalem as a Christmas present”:
Wavell,
Palestine Campaigns, 96.
299
“an obstinate, narrow-minded”:
Lawrence, SP, 351.
299
“gracious and venerable patriarch”:
Storrs,
Orientations, 213.
300
“as usual without obvious coherence”:
Lawrence, SP, 352.
300
“half-naked”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 1079.
300
“in the third little turning to the left”:
Ibid., 432.
302
“no spirit of treachery abroad”:
Lawrence, SP, 353-355.
302
“Many men of sense and ability”:
Arnold Lawrence (ed.),
T. E. Lawrence by His Friends, 115.
302
“idle to pretend”:
Ibid., 117.
305
“You very good man”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 441.
309
“a ladder of tribes”:
Lawrence, SP, 367.
309
“tip and run” tactics:
Ibid., 368.
311
It is a tribute to Lawrence’s skill:
Ibid., 367-383.
312
“in a chilled voice”:
Ibid., 387.
312
“a squadron of airplanes”:
Ibid., 388.
313
“his best man present”:
Ibid., 392.
313
“strange flat of yellow mud”:
Ibid., 398.
317
“Out of the darkness”:
Ibid., 407.
317
“a shambles of the group”:
Ibid., 408.
320
“I hope when this nightmare ends”:
Lawrence,
Letters from T. E. Lawrence to E. T. Leeds, 106.
321
“He who gives himself to the possession”:
Lawrence, SP, 11.
325
“African knobkerri”:
Ibid., 429.
325
“on a series of identical steel bridges”:
Ibid., 432.
326
“unfit for active service”:
Ibid., 433.
329
“could outstrip a trotting camel”:
Ibid.
330
“luscious”:
Ibid., 447.
331
“They had lost two men”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 450-455.
331
“war, tribes and camels without end”:
Lawrence, SP, 450.
331
“like the mutter of a distant”:
Ibid., 450.
332
“Beware of Abd el Kader”:
Ibid.
333
“held what might well be the world’s record”:
Ibid., 453.
333
“some 40,000 troops of all arms”:
Wavell,
Palestine Campaigns, 117.
333
“dismounted and cleaned up”:
Ibid., 123.
334
“General Allenby’s plan”:
Ibid.
334
“nothing would persuade”:
Lawrence, SP, 462.
334
“steeped in an unfathomable pool”:
Ibid., 464.
335
“I only hope TEL”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia, 455, citing
D. G. Hogarth to his wife, November 11, 1917, Hogarth Papers, St. Antony’s College, Oxford.
336
The fumes from the explosive:
Lawrence, SP, 471.
338
“pointing and staring”:
Ibid., 478.
339
“ran like a rabbit”:
Ibid., 481.
339
“in front of [him]”:
Ibid., 483.
340
“gashing his tongue deeply”:
Ibid., 485.
340
he searched for consolation:
Knightley and Simpson,
Secret Lives of Lawrence of Arabia, 263.
341
“an outlaw with a price”:
Lawrence, SP, 493.
341
“a trimmed beard”:
Ibid.
342
“a lame and draggled pair”:
Ibid., 495.
343
“The garrison commander at Deraa”:
Knightley and Simpson,
Secret Lives of Lawrence of Arabia, 217.