6. Lawrence, The Mint, p. 82.
7. Leeds Letters, p. 25.
8. ibid., p. 13.
9. HL, p. 144.
10. Friends, p. 115.
11. ibid.
12. HL, p. 141.
13. Friends, p. 87.
14. HL, p. 169.
15. ibid., p. 170.
16. ibid., p. 115.
17. ibid., p. 170.
18. Friends, p. 92. Neither Woolley nor Lawrence ever confirmed that Dahoum’s name was Salim Ahmad. This idea came from Tom Beaumont, who served with Lawrence as a machine-gunner in the Syrian campaign and whose testimony is dubious. However, whether or not Dahoum was actually called Salim Ahmad or Sheikh Ahmad he seems to be the best candidate for the subject of ‘To SA’ – Lawrence frequently changed names when it suited him.
19. C. Leonard Woolley, Dead Towns and Living Men, being Pages from an Antiquary’s Notebook, London, 1932, pp. 24–5, 18.
20. HL, p. 114.
21. ibid., p. 172.
22. Brown Letters, p. 40.
23. ibid.
24. SPW, 1935, p. 354.
25. ibid.
26. Friends, p. 92.
27. HL, p. 161.
28. ibid., p. 162.
29. ibid., p. 161.
30. Bell, Lady, The Letters of Gertrude Bell, London, 1927.
31. T. E. Lawrence, 1911 Diary, London, 1939, p. 31.
32. HL, p. 161.
7. The Baron in the Feudal System
1. HL, p. 181.
2. LH, p. 54.
3. HL, p. 190.
4. ibid., p. 195.
5. Woolley, Dead Towns, p. 152.
6. ibid., p. 156.
7. ibid.
8. Leeds Letters, p. 137.
9. Garnett Letters, p. 161.
10. Friends, p. 91.
11. Leeds Letters, p. 137.
12. HL, p. 218.
13. Woolley, Dead Towns, p. 171.
14. Leeds Lottery, p. 43.
15. Woolley, Dead Towns, p. 172.
16. ibid., p. 129.
17. HL, p. 125.
18. ibid., p. 229.
19. ibid.
20. ibid., p. 232.
8. Peace in Mesopotamia Such as Has Not Been Seen for Generations
1. Garnett Letters, p. 152.
2. Brown Letters, p. 51.
3. ibid.
4. RG, p. 67.
5. Leeds Letters, p. 76.
6. HL, p. 442.
7. ibid., p. 443.
8. Garnett Letters, p. 155.
9. SPW, 1935, p. 96.
10. Friends, p. 96.
11. ibid., p. 80.
12. Garnett Letters, p. 161.
9. The Insurance People Have Nailed Me Down
1. Friends, p. 105.
2. HL, p. 285.
3. Garnett Letters, p. 167.
4. Leeds Letters, p. 99.
5. Garnett Letters, p. 161.
6. Leeds Letters, pp. 102–3.
7. Garnett Letters, p. 185.
8. ibid., pp. 185–6.
9. ibid. p. 187.
10. RG, p. 81.
11. Richard Aldington, Lawrence of Arabia: A Biographical Enquiry, 1955, p. 124.
12. Baker, King Hussain and the Kingdom of the Hejaz, p. 43.
13. ibid.
10. Cairo is Unutterable Things
1. Mack, Prince, p. 132.
2. Friends, p. 160.
3. HL, p. 305.
4. Friends, p. 138.
5. Brown Letters, p. 72.
6. John Buchan, Greenmantle, p. 24.
7. HL, p. 302.
8. Brown Letters, p. 72.
9. SPW, 1935, p. 56.
10. Ronald Storrs, Orientations, London, 1944, p. 224.
11. ibid., p. 219.
12. Garnett Letters, p. 196.
13. George Antonius, The Arab Awakening, London, 1938, p. 158.
14. Garnett Letters, p. 196.
15. ibid., p. 197.
16. ibid.
17. James Morris, Farewell the Trumpets: An Imperial Retreat, London, 1978, p. 191.
18. Garnett Letters, p. 199.
19. Brown Letters, p. 72.
20. Lawrence, The Mint, p. 35.
21. MS. Res., 55/2.
22. James, The Golden Warrior, p. 198.
23. Garnett Letters, p. 198.
24. ibid., p. 197.
25. Elie Kedourie, In the Anglo-Arabian Labyrinth – the McMahon – Husayn Correspondence and Its Interpretations 1914–1939, Cambridge, 1976, p. 67.
26. ibid.
27. HL, p. 308.
28. ibid.
29. Brown Letters, pp. 78–9.
30. Antonius, The Arab Awakening, p. 175.
31. Wilson, Authorised, p. 259.
32. Friends, p. 123.
33. Sulayman Fayzi, interviewed by Suleiman Mousa, in MS. Res., c. 569.
34. ibid.
35. RG, p. 81.
36. From Wilfred Owen, ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’, Poems, 1918.
37. Eric Linklater, A Highland Regiment.
38. SPW, 1935, Introduction.
39. ibid., p. 58.
40. Garnett Letters.
11. The Biggest Thing in the Near East Since 1550
1. David Hogarth, ‘War and Discovery in Arabia’, Geographical Journal, March 1920.
2. Antonius, The Arab Awakening, p. 196.
3. Baker, King Hussain and the Kingdom of the Hejaz, p. 102.
4. Abdallah, King of Jordan, Memoirs, ed. Philip Graves, 1950, p. 147.
12. Fallen Like a Sword into Their Midst
1. Robertson–Murray Correspondence, British Librrary, 1 October 1916.
2. ibid., 17 October 1916.
3. Storrs, Orientations, p. 203.
4. SPW, 1935, p. 67.
5. James, The Golden Warrior, p. 175.
6. Wilson, Authorised, p. 302.
7. SPW, 1935, p. 446.
8. ibid. p. 92.
9. ibid.
10. LH, p. 188.
11. ibid., p. 189.
12. T. E. Lawrence, Secret Despatches from Arabia, ed. Malcolm Brown, London, 1991, p. 70.
13. Pierce Joyce Papers, King’s College, London, 27 September 1917.
14. LH, p. 189.
15. SPW, 1935, p. 63.
16. RG, p. 51.
17. J. L. Burckhardt, Notes on the Bedouins and Wahhabys, 2 vols., London, 1830, p. 133.
18. ibid., p. 134.
19. C. S. Jarvis, Yesterday and Today in Sinai, London, 1941, p. 18.
20. Pierce Joyce Papers, King’s College, London, 18 November 1917.
21. Alec Kirkbride, BBC interview, December 1962, in MS. Res., 55/2.
22. SPW, 1935, p. 64.
13. Not an Army But a World is Moving upon Wejh
1. T. E. Lawrence, ‘Evolution of a Revolt’ in Evolution of a Revolt: Early Postwar Writings of T. E. lawrence, ed. S. and R. Weintraub, Pennsylvania, 1968, p. 106.
2. Wilson, Authorised, p. 320.
3. Lawrence to Clayton, 5 December 1916, PRO FO, 882.
4. ibid.
5. ibid.
6. Wilson, Authorised, p. 342.
7. Wilson to Clayton, 7 December 1916, PRO FO, 882.
8. ibid.
9. SPW, 1935, p. 134.
10. PRO FO, 686.
11. N. N. E. Bray, Shifting Sands, London, 1934, p. 133.
14. I Do Not Suppose Any Englishman Before Ever Had Such a Place
1. Literally ‘Father of the Ostrich’.
2. SPW, 1935, p. 187.
3. Wilson, Authorised, p. 358.
4. PRO FO, 88/6 196.
5. Brown Letters, p. 103.
6. Richards, A Portrait of T. E. Lawrence, p. 97.
7. Friends, p. 87.
8. Joyce, BBC interview, 14 June 1941 and 30 April 1939, in MS. Res., 55/2.
9. British Library, Add. Mss. 45915.
10. Mack, Prince, p. 239.
11. SPW, 1935, p. 193.
12. ibid., p. 198.
13. Mousa, T. E. Lawrence: An Arab View, p. 56.
14. Lawrence to Joyce, PRO FO, 686/6.
15. British Library, Add. Mss., 45983a.
16. SPW, 1935, p. 216.
17. PRO FO, 686/6, 24 April 1917.
18. ibid.
19. PRO FO, 686/6, 150.
15. It is Not Known What are the Present Whereabouts of Captain Lawrence