...don't believe that I'll be a famous man." - A 21 November 1919 autograph letter signed by T. E. Lawrence, noteworthy for capturing Lawrence on the cusp of the overwhelming celebrity that would indelibly render him "Lawrence of Arabia"
by Thomas Edward Lawrence, T. E. "Lawrence of Arabia
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- Signed
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San Diego, California, United States
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About This Item
Unknown, 1919. Letter. This is a 21 November 1919 autograph letter signed by T. E. Lawrence of Arabia to an admirer who apparently requested his autograph. Lawrences letter is noteworthy for a number of reasons, among them for being signed with his surname Lawrence rather than the Shaw surname he would soon assume and use for the rest of his life; for capturing Lawrence on the cusp of the fame he would spend the rest of his famously short life struggling to reconcile and reject; and for explicitly mentioning the man who was making a fortune by making Lawrence uncomfortably famous even as this letter was being written.
At the time, Lawrence was still fifteen-and-a-half years away from his untimely death. That summer, Lawrence had taken the first steps to realizing his pre-WWI ambition to set up a private press with his Oxford Friend, Vyvyan Richards, by purchasing a property on the edge of Epping Forest. He had only just begun the famously long and tortuous process of writing his account of the Arab Revolt, Seven Pillars of Wisdom, and was only beginning to realize that the rest of his life would not be the retired and retiring printer of books, but rather would be defined by his First World War role in Arabia.
Lawrence was no stickler for stationery, and would write on almost anything; we once discovered an unpublished letter from him written on the back of an RAF Application for Mechanical Transport! Characteristic of Lawrence, this letter is on an unadorned, undistinguished sheet of wove paper measuring 7 x 4.5 inches (17.8 x 11.4 cm), which shows evidence of having been trimmed along the left edge (notionally before Lawrence penned his missive). In eleven lines in Lawrences hand in black ink on one side of the sheet, he wrote 21. XI. 19 | Yes, old son, heres my signature, | but dont believe that Ill be a | famous man. Its just an | American cinematograph artist | who found out that I was a | novelty in a Fehalai [sic] war, and | is making a lot of money out | of it. | T E Lawrence | P.S. I wish I was making something too!
Condition of the letter is very good. The paper is complete, with no loss or tears, the side upon which Lawrence penned his letter shows only slight soiling, and the ink in Lawrences hand remains distinct. The sheet shows two horizontal folds, almost certainly from original posting. The blank verso shows minor adhesive scarring along the perimeter and folds, suggesting the letter may once have been gently secured in an album. This is consonant with the known provenance; the same party who previously owned this letter also owned a collection of Victoria Cross winner autographs. The Boy Scout who reportedly solicited those VC winners for their autographs also apparently wrote to T. E. Lawrence, eliciting this reply. The letter is protected within a clear, removable mylar sleeve and housed in a rigid crimson cloth folder.
T. E. Lawrence's (1888-1935) remarkable odyssey as instigator, organizer, hero, and tragic figure of the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire during the First World War transformed him from an eccentric junior intelligence officer into "Lawrence of Arabia." But that would not have happened without an American cinematograph.
By late 1919, then 31-year-old Lawrence had experienced the failure of the Paris Peace Conference to achieve the security and sovereignty he had sought for Prince Feisal and his Arab compatriots. Lawrence was affected deeply by his sudden political isolation and the failure to win a better settlement for Feisal By the autumn the strain had taken its toll By a supreme irony, while Lawrence was trying to come to terms with the failure in Paris, London audiences were being treated to a romanticized version of his wartime career (Wilson, Lawrence of Arabia, pp.621-2)
This was the result of the relentless and relentlessly effective promotional efforts of Lowell Thomas (1892-1981). In 1917, when the United States entered the First World War, Lowell Thomas and his cameraman Harry Chase (1883-1935) were sent to Europe to find stories that would build American public support for the war. The Western Front understandably failed to inspire, so Thomas embarked for Palestine, drawn by Allenbys campaign to wrest Jerusalem from the Ottomans.
Jerusalem had been under Muslim control since the crusaders were ejected in 1187. For Britain the fall of Jerusalem was a notable propaganda coup (ODNB) Likewise, Allenby was a coup for Thomas, who would have a hand in Allenbys subsequent portrayal as a modern-day Richard Lionheart. (Punch, 19 Dec 1917) Already preloaded with literary and religious associations, Palestine and the holy city of Jerusalem, along with its liberators, was the story Thomas was seeking. But there was a bigger prize than Allenby and Jerusalem, where, in early 1918, Lowell Thomas also met T.E. Lawrence (1888-1935), who consented to let Thomas capture him in photographs and on film.
This proved fateful. Returning to America, Thomas began giving popular lectures on the war in Palestine, replete with dramatic film and images he and Chase had captured. Thomas was invited to take his lecture and film extravaganza to Britain and, in August 1919 just a few months before Lawrence wrote this letter began a tremendously successful run at Covent Garden. Thomas thereafter also toured England. Gradually, the show that had begun as With Allenby in Palestine evolved to and Lawrence in Arabia or And Colonel Lawrence in Arabia. Eventually Lawrence achieved top billing and became simply of Arabia.
Lawrences feelings about the resulting fame were famously complicated. Even this short letter is revealing. Lawrences personal courage and commitment to the cause of the Arab Revolt are beyond dispute. And yet in this letter he belittles both himself and his Arab comrades-in-arms, saying I was a novelty in a Fehalai war Lawrences misspelling does not conceal the sentiment; fellah (plural fellaha) is a peasant in Arabic-speaking countries - hardly a fulsome portrayal. Lawrence also twice mentions money both that Thomas is making a lot of money and his wish that he, Lawrence, was making something too! In a contemporary letter, Lawrence wrote of Thomass promotions They are making life very difficult for me, as I have neither the money nor the wish to maintain my constant character as the mountebank he makes me. (Wilson, p.625)
Lawrences biography said of him that, in 1919, One consequence of this sudden fame was that Lawrence began to receive large numbers of unsolicited letters Understandably he wanted none of this, and he replied to few of the letters. (Wilson, p.626) Fortunately, Lawrence did reply to some, as evidenced by this letter; we cannot know what prompted Lawrence in this specific case, but we do not need to know in order to be grateful that he did, and that his reply has survived.
Lowell Thomass glamorous and romantic image of Lawrence permanently alloyed with the man and his accomplishments. In the years after he wrote this letter, Lawrence would work with Winston Churchill to achieve a settlement that kept faith with the Arabs for whom he had fought. Lawrence would write, destroy, rewrite, suppress, and endlessly fret his written account of the Arab Revolt. Lawrence would even change his surname to Shaw and enlist in the RAF in an attempt to distance himself from the indelible celebrity thrust upon him by an American cinematograph artist. Nonetheless, he would become and remain Lawrence of Arabia. This letter is an artifact of the earliest days of that indelible, inexorable fame.
At the time, Lawrence was still fifteen-and-a-half years away from his untimely death. That summer, Lawrence had taken the first steps to realizing his pre-WWI ambition to set up a private press with his Oxford Friend, Vyvyan Richards, by purchasing a property on the edge of Epping Forest. He had only just begun the famously long and tortuous process of writing his account of the Arab Revolt, Seven Pillars of Wisdom, and was only beginning to realize that the rest of his life would not be the retired and retiring printer of books, but rather would be defined by his First World War role in Arabia.
Lawrence was no stickler for stationery, and would write on almost anything; we once discovered an unpublished letter from him written on the back of an RAF Application for Mechanical Transport! Characteristic of Lawrence, this letter is on an unadorned, undistinguished sheet of wove paper measuring 7 x 4.5 inches (17.8 x 11.4 cm), which shows evidence of having been trimmed along the left edge (notionally before Lawrence penned his missive). In eleven lines in Lawrences hand in black ink on one side of the sheet, he wrote 21. XI. 19 | Yes, old son, heres my signature, | but dont believe that Ill be a | famous man. Its just an | American cinematograph artist | who found out that I was a | novelty in a Fehalai [sic] war, and | is making a lot of money out | of it. | T E Lawrence | P.S. I wish I was making something too!
Condition of the letter is very good. The paper is complete, with no loss or tears, the side upon which Lawrence penned his letter shows only slight soiling, and the ink in Lawrences hand remains distinct. The sheet shows two horizontal folds, almost certainly from original posting. The blank verso shows minor adhesive scarring along the perimeter and folds, suggesting the letter may once have been gently secured in an album. This is consonant with the known provenance; the same party who previously owned this letter also owned a collection of Victoria Cross winner autographs. The Boy Scout who reportedly solicited those VC winners for their autographs also apparently wrote to T. E. Lawrence, eliciting this reply. The letter is protected within a clear, removable mylar sleeve and housed in a rigid crimson cloth folder.
T. E. Lawrence's (1888-1935) remarkable odyssey as instigator, organizer, hero, and tragic figure of the Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire during the First World War transformed him from an eccentric junior intelligence officer into "Lawrence of Arabia." But that would not have happened without an American cinematograph.
By late 1919, then 31-year-old Lawrence had experienced the failure of the Paris Peace Conference to achieve the security and sovereignty he had sought for Prince Feisal and his Arab compatriots. Lawrence was affected deeply by his sudden political isolation and the failure to win a better settlement for Feisal By the autumn the strain had taken its toll By a supreme irony, while Lawrence was trying to come to terms with the failure in Paris, London audiences were being treated to a romanticized version of his wartime career (Wilson, Lawrence of Arabia, pp.621-2)
This was the result of the relentless and relentlessly effective promotional efforts of Lowell Thomas (1892-1981). In 1917, when the United States entered the First World War, Lowell Thomas and his cameraman Harry Chase (1883-1935) were sent to Europe to find stories that would build American public support for the war. The Western Front understandably failed to inspire, so Thomas embarked for Palestine, drawn by Allenbys campaign to wrest Jerusalem from the Ottomans.
Jerusalem had been under Muslim control since the crusaders were ejected in 1187. For Britain the fall of Jerusalem was a notable propaganda coup (ODNB) Likewise, Allenby was a coup for Thomas, who would have a hand in Allenbys subsequent portrayal as a modern-day Richard Lionheart. (Punch, 19 Dec 1917) Already preloaded with literary and religious associations, Palestine and the holy city of Jerusalem, along with its liberators, was the story Thomas was seeking. But there was a bigger prize than Allenby and Jerusalem, where, in early 1918, Lowell Thomas also met T.E. Lawrence (1888-1935), who consented to let Thomas capture him in photographs and on film.
This proved fateful. Returning to America, Thomas began giving popular lectures on the war in Palestine, replete with dramatic film and images he and Chase had captured. Thomas was invited to take his lecture and film extravaganza to Britain and, in August 1919 just a few months before Lawrence wrote this letter began a tremendously successful run at Covent Garden. Thomas thereafter also toured England. Gradually, the show that had begun as With Allenby in Palestine evolved to and Lawrence in Arabia or And Colonel Lawrence in Arabia. Eventually Lawrence achieved top billing and became simply of Arabia.
Lawrences feelings about the resulting fame were famously complicated. Even this short letter is revealing. Lawrences personal courage and commitment to the cause of the Arab Revolt are beyond dispute. And yet in this letter he belittles both himself and his Arab comrades-in-arms, saying I was a novelty in a Fehalai war Lawrences misspelling does not conceal the sentiment; fellah (plural fellaha) is a peasant in Arabic-speaking countries - hardly a fulsome portrayal. Lawrence also twice mentions money both that Thomas is making a lot of money and his wish that he, Lawrence, was making something too! In a contemporary letter, Lawrence wrote of Thomass promotions They are making life very difficult for me, as I have neither the money nor the wish to maintain my constant character as the mountebank he makes me. (Wilson, p.625)
Lawrences biography said of him that, in 1919, One consequence of this sudden fame was that Lawrence began to receive large numbers of unsolicited letters Understandably he wanted none of this, and he replied to few of the letters. (Wilson, p.626) Fortunately, Lawrence did reply to some, as evidenced by this letter; we cannot know what prompted Lawrence in this specific case, but we do not need to know in order to be grateful that he did, and that his reply has survived.
Lowell Thomass glamorous and romantic image of Lawrence permanently alloyed with the man and his accomplishments. In the years after he wrote this letter, Lawrence would work with Winston Churchill to achieve a settlement that kept faith with the Arabs for whom he had fought. Lawrence would write, destroy, rewrite, suppress, and endlessly fret his written account of the Arab Revolt. Lawrence would even change his surname to Shaw and enlist in the RAF in an attempt to distance himself from the indelible celebrity thrust upon him by an American cinematograph artist. Nonetheless, he would become and remain Lawrence of Arabia. This letter is an artifact of the earliest days of that indelible, inexorable fame.
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Details
- Seller
- Churchill Book Collector (US)
- Seller's Inventory #
- 007663
- Title
- ...don't believe that I'll be a famous man." - A 21 November 1919 autograph letter signed by T. E. Lawrence, noteworthy for capturing Lawrence on the cusp of the overwhelming celebrity that would indelibly render him "Lawrence of Arabia"
- Author
- Thomas Edward Lawrence, T. E. "Lawrence of Arabia
- Format/Binding
- Letter
- Book Condition
- Used
- Quantity Available
- 1
- Place of Publication
- Unknown
- Date Published
- 1919
- Weight
- 0.00 lbs
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Churchill Book Collector
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San Diego, California
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