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Hero: The Life and Legend of Lawrence of Arabia PDF

687 Pages·2010·17.86 MB·English
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MICHAEL KORDA HERO of Lawrence of Arabia The Life and Legend For Margaret, again and always And not by eastern windows only, When daylight comes, comes in the light, In front the sun climbs slow, how slowly,     But westward, look, the land is bright. —Arthur Hugh Clough, “Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth” I do not pretend to have understood T. E. Lawrence fully, still less to be able to portray him; there is no brush �ne enough to catch the subtleties of his mind, no aerial viewpoint high enough to bring into one picture the manifold of his character…. I am not a tractable person or much of a hero-worshipper, but I could have followed Lawrence over the edge of the world. I loved him for himself, and also because there seemed to be reborn in him all the lost friends of my youth…. If genius be, in Emerson’s phrase, “a stellar and undiminishable something,” whose origin is a mystery and whose essence cannot be de�ned, then he was the only man of genius I have ever known. —John Buchan (Lord Tweedsmuir), Pilgrim’s Way The will is free; Strong is the soul, and wise and beautiful; The seeds of godlike power are in us still; Gods are we, bards, saints, heroes, if we will! —Matthew Arnold, written in a copy of Emerson’s Essays He was indeed a dweller upon mountain tops where the air is cold, crisp and rare�ed, and where the view on clear days commands all the Kingdoms of the world and the glory of them. —Winston S. Churchill, on Lawrence Oh! If only he had died in battle! I have lost my son, but I do not grieve for him as I do for Lawrence…. I am counted brave, the bravest of my tribe; my heart was iron, but his was steel. A man whose hand was never closed, but open…. Tell them…. Tell them in England what I say. Of manhood, the man, in freedom, free; a mind without equal; I can see no �aw in him. —Sheikh Hamoudi, on being told of Lawrence’s death Contents Cover Title Page List of Maps Preface : “Who Is This Extraordinary Pip-Squeak?” CHAPTER ONE : Aqaba, 1917: The Making of a Hero CHAPTER TWO : “The Family Romance” CHAPTER THREE : Oxford, 1907–1910 CHAPTER FOUR : Carchemish: 1911–1914 CHAPTER FIVE : Cairo: 1914–1916 CHAPTER SIX : 1917: “The Uncrowned King of Arabia” CHAPTER SEVEN : 1918: Triumph and Tragedy CHAPTER EIGHT : In the Great World CHAPTER NINE : “Backing into the Limelight”: 1920-1922 CHAPTER TEN : “Solitary in the Ranks” CHAPTER ELEVEN : Apotheosis CHAPTER TWELVE : Life after Death EPILOGUE Notes Bibliography Index Acknowledgments About the Author Advance Praise for HERO ALSO BY MICHAEL KORDA Illustration Credits Copyright About the Publisher List of Maps The Arab area of the Ottoman Empire in 1914 Turkey’s Lifeline: Schematic map of the vital railway lines in the Ottoman Empire Aqaba-Maan zone The Hejaz Railway The Northern Theater: The area of the advance of Allenby and the Arab army on Damascus The Battle of Ta�leh Sketch map of the Middle East, showing the divisions proposed in the Sykes-Picot agreement Lawrence’s own map of his proposals for the Middle East, which he prepared for the war cabinet in 1918, and for the Paris Peace Conference in 1919 Preface It has been ninety-two years since the end of World War I, known until September 1939 as the Great War. Of the millions who fought in it, of the millions who died in it, of its many heroes, perhaps the only one whose name is still remembered in the English-speaking world is T. E. Lawrence, “Lawrence of Arabia.” There are many reasons for this—even during his own lifetime Lawrence was transformed into a legend and a myth, the realities of his accomplishments overshadowed by the bright glare of his fame and celebrity—and it is the purpose of this book to explore them, as objectively, and sympathetically, as possible, for Lawrence was from the beginning a controversial �gure, and one who very often did his best to cover his tracks and mislead his biographers. Since the British government began to open its �les and release what had hitherto been secret documents in the 1960s, Lawrence’s feats have been con�rmed in meticulous detail. What he wrote that he did, he did—if anything he underplayed his role in the Arab Revolt, the 1919 Paris Peace Conference that followed the Allies’ victory, and the British e�ort to create a new Middle East out of the shards of the defeated Ottoman Empire in 1921 and 1922. Many of the problems that confront us in the Middle East today were foreseen by Lawrence, and he had a direct hand in some of them. Today, when the Middle East is the main focus of our attention, and when insurgency, his specialty, is the main weapon of our adversaries, the story of Lawrence’s life is more important than ever. As we shall see, he was a man of many gifts: a scholar, an archaeologist, a writer of genius, a gifted translator, a mapmaker of considerable talent. But beyond all that he was a creator of nations, of which two have survived; a diplomat; a soldier of startling

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.