Review commentary by Jeremy Wilson on Lawrence,
the Uncrowned King of Arabia by Michael Asher (London, Viking, 1998)
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Chapter 3: Nothing Which Qualified Him to be an Ordinary
Member of Society |
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| 35/1/6 |
9. "[He would] confess to having lied even in his official dispatches and reports" This is a specific instance of (7) above, not really a separate point; but it merits the comment that Lawrence down-played his own role in some of his reports, as we know from independent evidence. Verdict: this is, if anything, a case against Asher's argument. |
| 35/1/6 |
10. "[He would add] 'I must have some
tendency, some aptitude, for deceit, or I would not have deceived men so
well.'
Here again the reference is incorrect, which may well be significant. The remark comes from one of the bitterest paragraphs in Seven Pillars, at the end of Chapter 100. Lawrence is talking about the fraudulence of his role and his sense of guilt. Here, he is accusing himself bitterly of having the immoral merit of fulfilling his orders successfully, as was required, by persuasive lying. Verdict: Asher's use of the quote outside its context strikes me as appalling. In reality it does not support his argument. Question: why does Asher give an incorrect source-reference? |
| 35/1/11 |
11. Asher quotes Ronald Storrs saying that TEL
would state "as facts things which he knew nobody could or would
accept."
First, the source reference that Asher
gives for this is wrong. He cites "Ronald Storrs, Daily Telegraph"
(apparently a press-cutting seen in the Bodleian, because he gives an MS
Res location). In reality, the quotation is from the BBC radio review by
Storrs of
Richard Aldington's Lawrence of Arabia. This was published in The
Listener on 3 February 1955. As both the format and the typography of The
Listener and the Daily Telegraph were unlike one another, it
is hard to excuse the misleading reference. |