Table Of ContentThe superb biography of the unconquerable, 
self-driven T. E. Lawrence, one of the twentieth 
century's  most  fascinating  heroes ...." A 
remarkable book ... more startling and contro 
versia I than anything arrived at hitherto by 
Lawrence's biographers." - LONDON SUNDAY TIMES 
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THOMAS 
EDWARD 
LAWRENCE 
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victory? 
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impossiabnldew ,h otu rned awayf rom 
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recognitwiaosan t h andr,e tiring into 
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•  •
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:Acr ONE by Moss Hart 
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THE NIGHT THEY BURNEDTH E MOUNTAIN 
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B.T.C. 
LAWRENCE 
OF 
ARABIA 
THE MAN  AND  THE MOTIVE 
by  Anthony Nutting 
A  SIGNET BOOK 
PUBLISHED BY 
'IllE  NEW AMERICAN  LmRARY
@ANTHONY NUTTIN G,1 961 
All rightsr eserveNdo.  parto ft hibso okm ay ber eproduced 
in anyf orm withowuritt tepne rmissiforno mt hep ublisher. 
Forinf ormationa ddreCslsa rksNo.n P otteIrn,c ., 
56E ast6 6thS treeNte,w Y ork2 1,N ew York. 
FIRSTPRIN TING, DECEMBER, 1962 
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 
The authowri shest oe xprehisss t hanktsot  hef ollowing: 
ProfessA.or W . Lawrence 
Dr. M. R. Lawrence 
Mrs. EricK ennington 
Dr. Ernest Altounyan 
M. JeanB erauVdil lars 
Sir AlecK irkbride 
Mr.W renH oward 
CaptaBinas ilL iddeHllart  
ColonFe.l P eake 
Mr.D aviGdarn ett 
Mr.L owellT homas 
TheRi ght Hon.T heL ordW ard 
The authoarl saoc knowledwgietshg  ratituthdee  permissiono f 
T.E .L awrencep'usb lishe(rsJ onatChaapne L,o ndonan,d  Double
day&  Company, Inc.N,e w York)t oq uotfreo m TheL etteorfs  
T.E .L awrencee,d itbeydD  avid Garnett (Co1p9y38ri, g1h93t9  
byD oubled&a Cyo mpany,I nc.an)d  The SePvielnl oafrW sis dom. 
A hardbouenddi tioofLn a wrenocfeA  rabiisa p ublisbhyeC dl ark
sonN .P otteIrn,c . 
BJGNllT  TB&DBHABK  BBG. u.e.P AT. on . .lND .OBBION OOUNTB illl 
BJllGIB'l'!IB111DT BADllHAB:S::-KABO.l  BBIGIBTB.ADA 
BBOBO BN OBIOAGO. D.B.A. 
SIGNETB OOKS arep ublisbhye d 
TheN ew AmericLainb raoryf W orlLdi teratIunrce.,  
501 MadisoAnv enueN,e w York2 2,N ew York 
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
CONTENTS 
PROLOGUE  7 
1  REVOLT  IN  ARABIA  14 
2  IN  SEARCH  OF  A  PROPHET  19 
3  LAWRENCE  MEETS  FEISAL  24 
4  THE  KINGMAKER'S  DREAM  28 
5  A  TURKISH  REVERSE  34 
6  ADVANCE  IN THE  HEJAZ  41 
7  WEJH  CAPTURED  46 
8  GATHERING  THE  TRIBES  51 
9  ABDULLA  DISAPPOINTS  59 
10  GOING  IT  ALONE  63 
11  AKABA  CAPTURED  71 
12  ALLENBY  MEETS LAWRENCE  81 
13  RAILWAY  RAIDING  86 
14  NORTH  TO  AZRAK  95 
15  FAILURE  AT  YARMUK  101 
16  CAPTURE  AND  TORTURE  108 
17  BATTLE  AT  TAFILEH  114 
18  ATTEMPTED  ABDICATION  121
19  ADVANCE  AND  WITHDRAWAL  128 
20  FEISAL  DISOWNED  135 
21  SELF-ANALYSIS  141 
'
22  CLIPPING  THE  ENEMYS  ARTERIES  147 
23  MASSACRE  AND  COUNTER-MASSACRE  153 
24  DAMASCUS  159 
25  EXIT  AND  RE-ENTRY  169 
26  CONFUSION  IN  CONFERENCE  175 
27  A  SYRIAN  TRAGEDY  183 
28  BACKING  INTO  THE  LIMELIGHT  193 
29  ATONEMENT  IN ARABIA  198 
" " 
30  SEVEN PILLARS  OF  WISDOM 205 
31  REDUCED  TO  THE  RANKS  215 
" " 
32  PER ARDUA  AD  ASTRA 223 
33  THE  MOTIVE  230 
BIBLIOGRAPHY  241 
INDEX  243
oooooooooooooo�PROLOGUE 
On 16th August 1888 at Tremadoc in Wales a second 
son  was born to  a Mr.  and  Mrs.  Lawrence.  Named 
Thomas Edward, he was in fact the illegitimate child 
of Sir Thomas Robert Chapman, 7th Baronet of West
meath  in  Ireland,  who  had  left  his  wife  and  four 
daughters to elope with the children's governess, a Miss 
Sara  Maden.  Chapman  changed  his  name  to  Law
rence  and  moved  from  Ireland  to  Wales  and  from 
then on he and Sara Maden lived together as husband 
and wife. 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Lawrence  had  five  sons-B- ob 
(M.R.), who became a medical missionary in China 
until 1935, after which he devoted his life to looking 
after his mother; Ned (T.E.), who became the legend
ary  and  controversial  "Lawrence  of  Arabia";  Will 
(W.G.) and Frank (F.H.), who were killed in action 
in World War I; and Arnold  (A.W.), who became a 
professor  of  archaeology at Cambridge and is  today 
T.E.'s literary executor. Bob, the eldest, and Arnold, 
the  youngest,  are  the  only  members  of  the  family 
still  alive.  T.E.  died  of  injuries  from  a  motor-cycle 
accident  in  1935,  the  father  succumbed  to  the  in
fluenza epidemic in 1919 and the mother died in 1959 
only two years short of a hundred years of age. T.E. 
was a  year  old  when  the  family  moved to  Scotland 
and then later to the Isle of Man, Jersey and France. 
When  he  was  eight  they  finally  settled  in  Oxford 
where  the  boys  were  educated  at  the  High  School 
and later at the University. 
A precocious youngster known for his omnivorous 
7
8  LAWRENCE OF ARABIA 
reading, T .E. early acquired an interest in archaeology 
and in such  related  subjects  as  ancient architecture, 
heraldry, armour, old manuscripts, pottery and relics 
of  all  kinds.  Gradually  his  interest  concentrated  on 
mediaeval  castles  and  fortifications. 
According to his own account, related in later years 
to intimate friends, he was about ten years old when 
his  father  told  him  the  facts  of  his  birth-that  his 
parents were not and could not  be  married,  because 
Lady  Chapman  would  never  consent  to  divorce  her 
husband. This discovery seems to have instilel d in T.E. 
an obsession to prove himself better than his fellows, 
to show  that  in  spite of  his  background-which  set 
him  apart  from  all  his  friends  and  associates.-he 
could excel them in every way. This compulsion was 
in part responsible for  driving him throughout three 
quarters  of  his  life  to  make  superhuman  demands 
upon his mind and body. 
Yet the shadow of shame that, in this era of Vic
torian  morals,  lay  across  the  Lawrence  family's 
origins did not manifest itself in any way to the out
side world, to which they gave the impression of being 
a most respectable as well as affectionate and closely
knit  family.  This  was  due  in  large  part  to  Sara 
Lawrence,  a  Scotswoman  with  an  outstanding char
acter,  a  commanding  personality  and  an  iron  will 
which T .E.  inherited  from  her  more  than  any  other 
of her sons. A tremendous puritan, Sara was haunted 
throughout her life by the sin she had committed and 
sought to make amends by bringing up her children 
with  love  and  affection  but  with  the  strictest  disci
pline, reinforced by regular attendance at church and 
Sunday school. 
The  father,  although  a  well-educated  man,  never 
took  up  a  job,  being  born  and  raised  among  the 
squirearchy of Ireland to believe that his task in life 
should be  to  devote himself to  good family manage
ment  and a  proper  pursuit  of  sport in  one form  or 
another. He was a keen yachtsman, and a crack shot. 
In the latter part of his life he developed a craze for