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Journal of the T. E.
Lawrence Society
ISSN 0963-1747
Vol. I, No. 1, Spring 1991
Edited by
Jeremy Wilson
Book review:
Oriental Assembly
Sir Ronald
Storrs
Originally
published in 1939.
Oriental Assembly is an
admittedly mixed bag which many Lawrence fans all over the world will desire to
possess; if only because few documents are more revealing than the early,
unrehearsed, unrevised jottings of the great, before greatness has imposed upon
them its inevitable stimulus - and limitations. And truly these first
hundred-odd pages recording one month's diary, from July 12 to August 12, 1911,
do predict, illustrate and so confirm many, though far from all, of the varied
contours and aspects of what was destined to become a world- famous portrait.
Foremost will be noted the
extent - assumed rather than explained - to which Lawrence could 'keep under his
body and subdue it.' Neither aching bones, blistered hands and feet, attacks of
dysentery, nor fainting fits deterred him from completing his arduous and
self-imposed archaeological programme. Even had he enjoyed fair health, the
extra infuriating effort involved by daily recording will be realised by anybody
who has attempted to keep a journal, however simple, after a hard day's work in
a Mesopotamian summer. Nor was the strain allowed to diminish his meticulous
accuracy of method:
. . . a long walk of about
twenty-seven miles, with the goat-track thrown in: feet a little sore, but
no other damage. Average length of pace after first hour 2ft 7in.;
afterwards lengthened, till in last hour 2ft 9½ in.
Dust on the Plain
As an example of his natural and constantly perfecting taste for observation
and description: 'In the plain was interested these last two days to watch how
the wind twists in spirals, often throwing up a thin column of dust many
hundreds of feet'; the self-same feverish-violent whirling which was remarked by
Dante six hundred years before:
Come la rena quando a turbo
spira
and which in spring gathers
suddenly and towers high over the Mount of Olives. He drinks in the 'wind-noise,
rustling up and down the trees. Like Blake's "innumerable dance of leaves"'; and
continues, under that intolerable yearning for a particularly unprocurable book
that haunts the wanderer in waste places, 'Thought a good deal of his
Jerusalem, must have a copy sent out for the winter.' His literary range
must always have been high, and broad as well as wide, for, a few pages later,
'Packed also my Rabelais, Holy Grail, Rossetti and Roland,'
attaining, as he maintained to the end, the full gamut of the Shakesperian
outlook.
His patience is great but, like
his admired Doughty's, not unlimited: 'In the evening felt a little better, and
got down to dinner all right: there summed up enough irritation to tell my
vis-à-vis he was a pig.'
The essay on 'The Changing
East,' though rendered partially obsolete by the tremendous achievement of
Mustafa Kemal (the only modern Dictator who has preserved his glory by ceasing
to expand it), is nevertheless worth studying for its brilliance of Arab
characterisation: 'There is no record of any force except success capable of
breaking them.'
The predictions for Zionism,
though apparently written after the Easter riots of 1920, are optimistic, and
oddly coupled with the probable 'course of events in Russia.'
Study of Revolts
But the most important section of the whole book remains, beyond doubt, 'The
Evolution of a Revolt,' which develops with inexorable logic Lawrence's original
conception and working out, not only of his own handling of the Arab revolt, but
of revolts in general theory and practice, and which should find a permanent
place, off the shelves of Staff and Staff College libraries all over the world.
(This chapter also provides a gloomy but not, I think, altogether despairing
commentary upon the recent and present situation in Palestine.) No such
importance can be attributed to the suppressed introductory chapter for Seven
Pillars of Wisdom. Here I am unable to see that the editor has shown cause
why the suppression, under the patriotic advice of Mr. Bernard Shaw, should not
have been indefinitely prolonged.
Lawrence's rare and arresting
blend of protagonist and artist-recorder is once more exemplified in the
instinct for balance and design revealed by the hundred-odd photographs which
close the 'Assembly,' and with which many owners of The Revolt or of
Seven Pillars will be tempted to grangerise their copies - undaunted by the
combination of the bibliophile upon all who slice books without putting them out
of their pain by destroying the mutilmted trunk.
It has been objected that
Oriental Assembly is little more than a re-hash of old or previously
published Lawrenciana: that there is a growing danger of a noble subject being
buried so deep in paper, not always of the utmost significance, as to become an
item of bibliographical research rather than of biographical interest. Too many
such books have indeed been written, about him and about; but I cannot admit the
objection here. More than half of the 'Assembly' is new to the public; and for
the rest, who has the time, chance, or knowledge to disinter articles, sometimes
unsigned, from the back files of highly specialised magazines? Above all, this
stuff is not 'what the soldier said,' but from beginning to end the authorised,
authentic, authoritative writing of Lawrence himself.
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