Skip to content

T.E. Lawrence on Sherif Ali ibn El Hussein.

provigil without prescription “The greatest asset of Feisal’s cause in this work up North was Sherif Ali ibn el Hussein.  The lunatic competitor of all the wilder tribesmen in their wildest feats was now turning all his force to greater ends.  The mixed natures in him made of his face and body powerful pleadings, carnal, perhaps, except in so far as they were transfused by character.  No one could see him without the desire to see him again; especially when he smiled, as he did rarely, with both mouth and eyes at once.  His beauty was a conscious weapon.  He dressed spotlessly, all in black or all in white; and he studied gesture.

http://kaminakapow.com/seamless-crochet-donkey-pattern/?unapproved=9911 “Fortune had added physical perfection and unusual grace, but these qualities were only the just expression of his powers.  They made obvious the pluck which never yielded, which would have let him be cut to pieces, holding on.  His pride broke out in his war-cry, ‘I am of the Harith’, the two-thousand-year-old clan of freebooters; while the huge eyes, white with large black pupils slowly turning in them, emphasized the frozen dignity which was his ideal carriage, and to which he was always striving to still himself.  But as ever the bubbling laugh would shriek out of him unawares; and the youth, boyish or girlish, of him, the fire and deviltry would break through his night like a sunrise.

“Yet, despite this richness, there was a constant depression with him, the unknown longing of simple, restless people for abstract thought beyond their minds’ supply.  His bodily strength grew day by day, and hatefully fleshed over this humble something which he wanted more.  These besetting strangers underlined his detachment, his unwilling detachment, from his fellows.  Despite his great instinct for confession and company, he could find no intimates.  Yet he could not be alone.  If he had no guests, Khazen, the servant, must serve his meals, while Ali and his slaves ate together.”  – T.E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of Wisdom, p. 437-8

One Trackback/Pingback

  1. […] Ali in the film is a composite character, based in part (and in name) on Sherif Ali ibn Hussein of the Harith and, probably more so, on Sherif Nasir. Sherif Ali ibn Hussein (by Eric Kennington, from Seven […]

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *
*
*