Read Hero: The Life and Legend of Lawrence of Arabia Online
Authors: Michael Korda
491
“bear a brave face”:
Lawrence,
Home Letters
, 304.
491
At times he broke out of his depression:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 287.
493
“Bow Street was jammed”:
Lowell Thomas to “Ronnie,” March 29, 1956, Lowell Thomas Papers, Marist College.
493
“he would blush crimson”:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 276.
493
“Thomas Lawrence, the archaeologist”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 624.
494
“In the history of the world”:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 287.
495
“Colonel C. E. Florence”:
Aldington,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 352.
496
The truth is quite simple:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 627.
496
an “official” one:
Ibid.
497
“95% of the book in thirty days”:
Ibid., 628.
497
At one point he wrote 30,000 words:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 84.
499
“flying suit”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 629.
500
“the book had now assumed”:
Ibid., 630.
501
“boy-scout”:
Ibid., 635.
501
Among the dozen or so alternative ideas:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 284.
502
His scholarship from All Souls:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 637.
502
Thomas Lawrence had left:
Ibid., 637-638.
503
Perhaps because he had overestimated:
Ibid., 637.
503
Neither Will nor Frank had lived:
Ibid., 637-638.
504
make him look “silly”:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 65.
504
This did not prevent him from buying rare:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 641.
505
“too sparsely peopled”:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 291.
505
“learning opportunities”:
Ibid., 634.
506
“one never knows how many”:
Storrs,
Orientations
, 505.
506
Far from being extreme:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 293.
507
Some idea of the aura of celebrity:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 633.
509
“to relieve Curzon”:
Graves and Liddell Hart (eds.), T. E.
Lawrence to His Biographers
, 354.
510
he had “a virgin mind”:
Young,
The Independent Arab
, 324.
511
Churchill’s omnipresent private secretary:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 643.
511
Though it was not appreciated at the time:
Ibid., 644.
513
“little Lawrence”:
Meinertzhagen,
Middle East Diary
, 55-56.
513
Lawrence became a civil servant:
Graves and Liddell Hart (eds.),
T. E. Lawrence to His Biographers
, 143.
513
“Talk of leaving things”:
Ibid.
514
“You must take risks”:
Ibid.
515
“Lawrence can bear comparison”:
Liddell Hart,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 384.
515
“Our most trusted”:
Graves and Liddell Hart (eds.),
T. E. Lawrence to His Biographers
, 131.
517
The western border with Syria:
Fromkin,
A Peace to End All Peace
, 503.
518
“with 30 officers and 200 Bedouins”:
Ibid., 504.
518
“living with Abdulla”:
Lawrence,
Letters
, Brown (ed.), 197.
518
“suspicious of his influence”:
Abdullah,
Memoirs
, 170.
518
“He was certainly a strange character”:
Ibid., 170-171.
518
“Lawrence was the man”:
Thompson,
Assignment Churchill
, 30.
519
“I know Abdullah”:
Fromkin,
A Peace to End All Peace
, 510.
519
“shrewd and indolent”:
Ibid.
520
“The atmosphere in the Colonial Office”:
Meinertzhagen,
Middle East Diary
, 99-100.
520
“consternation, despondency”:
Ingrams,
Palestine Papers
, 105.
521
“a typewritten receipt”:
Storrs,
Orientations
, 391.
521
“E.&O. E.”:
Samuel,
Memoirs
, 154.
522
“Their cries became a roar”:
Mack
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 304.
523
“the Greek epitaph of despair”:
Storrs,
Orientations
, 527.
523
With a typically British manifestation:
Fromkin,
A Peace to End All Peace
, 508.
523
“against his own people”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 650.
524
“I take most of the credit”:
Ibid., 651.
525
“quit of the war-time Eastern adventure”:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 314, attributed to Lawrence’s notes in SP, 276.
525
“to negotiate and conclude”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 655.
527
Reading Lawrence’s report:
Ibid., 660.
528
Lawrence took a steamer:
Ibid.
529
“for in Trans-Jordan”:
Mack,
A Prince of Our Disorder
, 308.
529
“I leave all business to Lawrence”:
Ibid., 309, quoting from Philby’s Forty Years in the Wilderness, 108.
530
This refers to the fact that his father’s younger sister:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 944.
chapter eleven
“Solitary in the Ranks”
539
He would laboriously correct the copies:
Jeremy Wilson, “Seven Pillars of Wisdom: Triumph and Tragedy,” T. E. Lawrence studies Web site, telawrencestudies.org.
540
“to leave the payroll of the Colonial Office”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia
, 674.
541
“God this is awful”:
Lawrence,
The Mint
, 19.
542
“With regard to your personal point”:
Hyde,
Solitary in the Ranks
, 46.
542
“considerably embarrassed”:
Ibid., 48.
542
“secrecy and subterfuge”:
Swann, quoted ibid.
542
“disliked the whole business”:
Ibid.
542
“One would think from [his] letters”:
Lawrence,
Letters
, Garnett (ed.), 363.
546
Johns resourcefully found a civilian doctor:
Hyde,
Solitary in the Ranks
, 52.
547
“with the memory of a cold”:
Ibid., 53.
547
“As they swiftly stripped for sleep”:
Lawrence,
The Mint
, 25.
550
“a strict disciplinarian”:
Hyde,
Solitary in the Ranks
, 57.
551
“I must hit him, I must”:
Ibid., 58.
551
“Let the old cunt rot”:
Ibid., 76-77.
551
“and see him privately”:
Ibid., 65.
552
Lawrence had been writing:
Ibid.
552
“consistently dirty”:
Breese, quoted ibid., 66.
552
“that he had always felt”:
Ibid.
552
“I think I had a mental breakdown”:
Ibid., 62.
553
“There are twenty-thousand airmen”:
Lawrence,
The Mint
, 98-99.
554
“mummified thing”:
Ibid., 184-185.
555
“I’d like you to read”:
Lawrence,
Letters,
Garnett (ed.), 362.
556
“It seems to me that an attempted work”:
Wilson,
Lawrence of Arabia,
686. See 1126, n 21, as V. W. Richards to T. E. Lawrence, September 24, 1922, Bodleian Library transcript.
557
“Of the present Ministry”:
Quoted ibid., 688.
560
“was appointed to the Adjutant’s office”:
Hyde,
Solitary in the Ranks
, 67-68.
560
“why A/c2 Ross”:
Ibid., 69.
560
“was not at all sympathetic”:
Ibid.
560
“frankly perplexed”:
Ibid.
560
“His blue eyes were set”:
Ibid.
561
“‘Yes, Lawrence of Arabia!’”:
Ibid.
562
“I am afraid you are rather making a labour of it”:
Lawrence,
Letters
, Brown (ed.), 226.
562
“road tubthumping round”:
Holroyd,
Bernard Shaw
, Vol. III, 85.