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Court métrageTranscription
00:00:00Music
00:00:30Well, there you have it, that's what live TV is all about, that's what the game is all about.
00:00:51and I will be among those who will miss Commander Louis Richon and Mr. André Allard
00:00:56But that's how it is, they had to play, and they played.
00:01:00And that's why we're starting a little earlier tonight.
00:01:05And there's been a lot of correspondence regarding the Petiot case.
00:01:08Lots of letters, information, some of it interesting.
00:01:14correspondences have also been established,
00:01:19information, people who knew Petiot
00:01:22and which specify how attractive, kind, and amiable this doctor was.
00:01:28Others also insist on these abnormal aspects.
00:01:31which apparently go back a very long way, according to some witnesses.
00:01:35And then there was also an anonymous letter.
00:01:37I'm not used to dealing with anonymous letters.
00:01:40But this one interests me, I tell you,
00:01:43because it contains information
00:01:45which seem serious to me regarding the arrest of Doctor Petiot.
00:01:48So, I say to this correspondent,
00:01:51Give me your name, give me your address,
00:01:54get in touch with me
00:01:55and I will be happy, if necessary, to report on it here,
00:02:00information that you would be willing to give me,
00:02:02but openly.
00:02:03From Petiot to Lawrence of Arabia,
00:02:11no common ground, no connection whatsoever.
00:02:14Then you will allow me to not seek any connection.
00:02:19Regarding Lawrence of Arabia,
00:02:23Winston Churchill said
00:02:24that he was one of the greatest men of his time.
00:02:30And I think that's it.
00:02:34a judgment
00:02:38which commits us
00:02:42from the outset to go further.
00:02:46Say the name Lawrence of Arabia and you dream, it's inevitable.
00:02:49Me, I'm dreaming, anyway.
00:02:51Immediately, these are images of the desert.
00:02:55This is a unique story,
00:02:57endearing, attractive
00:02:59of this white,
00:03:00of this English
00:03:01who, all of a sudden,
00:03:04clings to the desert,
00:03:06embodies
00:03:06to Arab nationality,
00:03:09becomes Arab
00:03:12seeks to obtain
00:03:13the victory of the Arabs,
00:03:16arouses
00:03:17victory
00:03:18and the war.
00:03:21Yes, say the name Lawrence of Arabia
00:03:23And you dream.
00:03:26It's a beautiful story.
00:03:27All the more beautiful
00:03:29that he told it himself
00:03:31in a book
00:03:31which is a masterpiece,
00:03:32The seven pillars of wisdom.
00:03:37But here's the thing,
00:03:39this beautiful story
00:03:40has taken on the air of a legend.
00:03:41a film,
00:03:44a famous film
00:03:45that you may have seen
00:03:46allowed the legend
00:03:52to be confirmed.
00:03:55History,
00:03:56legend
00:03:57or in the wild.
00:04:00You know,
00:04:00when a legend is created,
00:04:03well,
00:04:03there are immediately people
00:04:05who come
00:04:06in response,
00:04:07there is action
00:04:08And then there's the reaction.
00:04:11SO,
00:04:11there are quantities
00:04:12historians
00:04:13who leaned over
00:04:14regarding Laurence's case
00:04:15and who wondered
00:04:16if all of this
00:04:17In the end, it was also beautiful.
00:04:19that we had believed it.
00:04:20Some took it
00:04:23caught red-handed
00:04:25error.
00:04:28Some have
00:04:29convinced
00:04:30of lies.
00:04:32At the very least,
00:04:33he distorted
00:04:33events.
00:04:36SO,
00:04:39there is even
00:04:40a writer,
00:04:42an Englishman,
00:04:42Richard Aldington
00:04:43who wrote
00:04:44Laurence the imposter.
00:04:48GOOD,
00:04:48You know,
00:04:49as in everything,
00:04:49the truth must
00:04:50to look for themselves elsewhere
00:04:52than in the legend
00:04:53and elsewhere
00:04:56than in defamation.
00:04:59The truth must be sought
00:05:00in the documents
00:05:01and that's what we're going to
00:05:03try to do it together
00:05:04This evening
00:05:05as honestly as possible
00:05:07starting
00:05:08major works
00:05:09that exist
00:05:10like those
00:05:10of Bérovillard
00:05:11or of Armitage,
00:05:13of the big book
00:05:14by Mr. Benoît Méchain
00:05:15And
00:05:17also documents
00:05:20new
00:05:20archival documents,
00:05:24reports,
00:05:24correspondences
00:05:25who remained
00:05:26unknowns
00:05:26until
00:05:27in recent years.
00:05:30And two researchers
00:05:31British,
00:05:33Philip Knightley
00:05:34and Colin Simpson,
00:05:37leaned over
00:05:37in these archives,
00:05:39on these documents.
00:05:40And the harvest
00:05:42that they reported
00:05:43perhaps allows us
00:05:44to try
00:05:45discover the real
00:05:49Laurence.
00:05:52So this story,
00:05:53she begins
00:05:53through a story
00:05:54of a woman.
00:05:57An Englishman
00:05:58lives in Ireland,
00:05:59he married
00:06:00a woman
00:06:01whose name is Edith,
00:06:02His name is
00:06:03Thomas,
00:06:03Thomas Chapman.
00:06:05They have four daughters
00:06:06and to raise
00:06:08the four girls,
00:06:09well,
00:06:09they hire
00:06:09a young governess,
00:06:11a nurse,
00:06:11who is about twenty
00:06:12years,
00:06:13which is called
00:06:13Sarah Meden.
00:06:16SO,
00:06:17Edith,
00:06:18the wife of
00:06:19Mr. Chapman,
00:06:19apparently
00:06:20a dragon.
00:06:22Sarah Meden
00:06:22is an angel
00:06:23of gentleness.
00:06:25You begin
00:06:25to understand
00:06:26the rest.
00:06:28A liaison
00:06:29commits,
00:06:30it remains secret
00:06:32until the moment
00:06:33where Sarah Meden
00:06:34announcement
00:06:34that his family
00:06:35she reminds us,
00:06:35she leaves
00:06:36and even
00:06:36Mrs. Chapman
00:06:37gives him a gift.
00:06:39and then a servant
00:06:42find Sarah Meden
00:06:43in Dublin,
00:06:47he follows her
00:06:47and sees
00:06:49that she finds
00:06:50in a house
00:06:50who gives
00:06:52Thomas Chapman.
00:06:53Yes, indeed.
00:06:53Thomas Chapman
00:06:54who installed it there,
00:06:55they will also
00:06:55have their first child
00:06:57and Mrs. Chapman
00:07:01will learn it.
00:07:03SO,
00:07:03she gives
00:07:04to choose
00:07:05to her husband
00:07:07and Thomas Chapman
00:07:07Choose that.
00:07:10And even
00:07:10to be
00:07:10all to herself,
00:07:11so that there is no
00:07:12more common ground
00:07:13with the old
00:07:14Chapman family,
00:07:15He changed his name.
00:07:16His name is
00:07:16Lawrence
00:07:17And here's how
00:07:19our Lawrence
00:07:20to us
00:07:20will be called
00:07:22Lawrence.
00:07:23It's not a name,
00:07:26It's an assumed name.
00:07:28SO,
00:07:29the Lawrence family
00:07:30journey,
00:07:32Sarah will give
00:07:32five sons
00:07:33to her husband,
00:07:36four girls,
00:07:36five sons,
00:07:37It looks like revenge.
00:07:41They are traveling
00:07:41across England,
00:07:42they change location
00:07:43because,
00:07:43it seems,
00:07:44well,
00:07:45they are afraid
00:07:45that we discover
00:07:47that they are not married,
00:07:48They will never get married
00:07:49because
00:07:50Mrs. Chapman
00:07:50will refuse the divorce.
00:07:53They're even going to France
00:07:53a moment with Dina.
00:07:55And then,
00:07:55in 1896,
00:07:57they are leaving for Oxford
00:07:59and there,
00:08:04they settle there
00:08:04for education
00:08:05children
00:08:06for among the five sons,
00:08:08well,
00:08:08There is
00:08:09a certain
00:08:10Thomas Edward
00:08:11who is eight years old
00:08:12and who is the second
00:08:15Lawrence's son,
00:08:17His name is Ned.
00:08:18And it's ours.
00:08:20He's our hero.
00:08:24When this little boy
00:08:25that it is him,
00:08:28well,
00:08:28we know that he lives
00:08:29in a happy family
00:08:30but a family
00:08:33very strict
00:08:35because,
00:08:37exactly,
00:08:37like Sarah suffers
00:08:39due to his irregular situation,
00:08:41she wants it all the more
00:08:42that his family
00:08:43locks himself in
00:08:44in a morally rigorous manner
00:08:46very narrow.
00:08:47That's what it will be.
00:08:48family climate
00:08:49Lawrence.
00:08:51When every child,
00:08:52little Lawrence,
00:08:54well,
00:08:55discovers a passion.
00:08:57He
00:08:58is crazy about archaeology
00:09:01old
00:09:02and in particular
00:09:03from that of the Middle Ages.
00:09:05He will
00:09:05to take measurements
00:09:08pottery,
00:09:09registrations
00:09:10which are, moreover, ours
00:09:11preserved
00:09:12that we have.
00:09:12and then his classmates
00:09:15they tell us
00:09:16that
00:09:16his pockets
00:09:19are
00:09:19full of
00:09:20shards,
00:09:21of antique pottery
00:09:22which are also located near each other
00:09:23with accessories
00:09:24bicycle
00:09:24because he loves cycling
00:09:25And that's all the better for him.
00:09:26Well done.
00:09:28And he is constantly
00:09:29on his bike
00:09:29and it's even on his bike
00:09:30that he goes far away
00:09:31in the countryside
00:09:31to point out
00:09:32the traces
00:09:33of medieval archaeology.
00:09:36He is 12 or 13 years old
00:09:40when he breaks his leg
00:09:43in the playground
00:09:46and even
00:09:48He is a little boy.
00:09:50brave
00:09:53He didn't tell anyone.
00:09:56and on one foot
00:09:57enters the classroom
00:09:58mathematics
00:09:58follows the class
00:09:59entire
00:10:00and that's only at the end
00:10:01of the class
00:10:01when it's time to go home
00:10:02at home
00:10:02that he says he cannot
00:10:03to walk
00:10:03we put him on his bike
00:10:05and we wear it
00:10:06and we drag it
00:10:07all the way home.
00:10:08And then comes the convalescence.
00:10:09will last a very long time
00:10:10and it seems that
00:10:12that's because
00:10:14the leg did not
00:10:15easily calcified
00:10:16that he has stopped growing.
00:10:18He will not grow any taller.
00:10:19and it will always measure
00:10:20now 1.66 m.
00:10:22He will suffer from his small size.
00:10:24because he believes
00:10:24that it's a small size
00:10:26and indeed at that time
00:10:27the average size
00:10:28students from Oxport
00:10:29It's 1.76 m
00:10:30but the average size
00:10:32English
00:10:32It's 1.66 m.
00:10:33So it is smaller
00:10:35that people of his caste
00:10:36but he has the size
00:10:37Ultimately
00:10:37good average English.
00:10:41As soon as he can leave again
00:10:42There he is again on his bike
00:10:44He's everywhere again
00:10:45he rolls
00:10:45he runs
00:10:46he traces
00:10:47he works
00:10:49he will even leave
00:10:50through this passion
00:10:51that he has for
00:10:52the history of fortified castles
00:10:54the fortifications
00:10:55he will even leave
00:10:56on his bike
00:10:57at 18 years old
00:10:57In France
00:10:58he will make 3 trips to France
00:11:00he will travel at 18 years old
00:11:02Brittany
00:11:02and then he goes home
00:11:05and he must soon
00:11:07return to university
00:11:08and yet
00:11:11there is something
00:11:13who will not
00:11:14because
00:11:16suddenly
00:11:19he made it from his home
00:11:19What's wrong?
00:11:22that's not very good
00:11:22he made it from his home
00:11:23one night
00:11:23he can't be found anymore
00:11:24He joined the army
00:11:25to the royal artillery
00:11:26and his parents
00:11:28will take time
00:11:29to find him
00:11:29we don't know
00:11:30how long
00:11:31he stayed
00:11:31some say
00:11:32weeks
00:11:33other months
00:11:33finally he stayed
00:11:34a good long while
00:11:35So what hasn't been
00:11:37So, is it?
00:11:38the revelation
00:11:39that his parents
00:11:40are in a situation
00:11:41illegitimate
00:11:43as we used to say
00:11:44in the time of Queen Victoria
00:11:45maybe
00:11:47sometimes
00:11:49he said
00:11:49that he had known that
00:11:50at 10 years old
00:11:50other times
00:11:51he said
00:11:51that he had known
00:11:52at 17
00:11:53sometimes
00:11:53he said
00:11:53that it hadn't
00:11:54It's neither hot nor cold
00:11:54nor cold
00:11:55sometimes
00:11:56he said
00:11:56that he had
00:11:57suffered bitterly
00:11:58Is that it?
00:11:59Is it something else?
00:12:00Finally, he left.
00:12:00and his father
00:12:01go look for him
00:12:02bring him home
00:12:03buys him
00:12:03as they say
00:12:04and he goes to university
00:12:06at Jesus College
00:12:07and to this Jesus College
00:12:12where he will continue
00:12:14studies
00:12:15military history
00:12:17of the Middle Ages
00:12:18and other eras
00:12:19he will meet
00:12:21a professor
00:12:22which is called
00:12:24Ogars
00:12:24and this meeting
00:12:27is capital
00:12:29this meeting
00:12:31This is the beginning
00:12:33that's the origin
00:12:34of history
00:12:34of Lawrence of Arabia
00:12:35Why ?
00:12:37well, because
00:12:38Ogars
00:12:39is one of the most prominent
00:12:41orientalists
00:12:43of his time
00:12:43he executed
00:12:45numerous missions
00:12:47in the East
00:12:47he spent time there
00:12:48a part of his life
00:12:49he speaks, moreover
00:12:50French
00:12:51German
00:12:52Italian
00:12:53Greek
00:12:53the Turk
00:12:54Arabic
00:12:54and then
00:12:57He is a man
00:12:59who embodies well
00:13:02his era
00:13:02because
00:13:04his reason for living
00:13:05It's the Empire
00:13:06the British Empire
00:13:08we cannot understand
00:13:10the story of Lawrence of Arabia
00:13:12if we don't talk
00:13:12of the British Empire
00:13:13So, for Ogars
00:13:15there is an entity
00:13:17which is the Empire
00:13:19you know that at that time
00:13:20a fifth
00:13:21land
00:13:24of the globe
00:13:24depend
00:13:25of the British Empire
00:13:26So there is
00:13:28men
00:13:30of these men
00:13:32that has done so well
00:13:33sung by Kipling
00:13:35who live
00:13:35for this empire
00:13:36Ogars
00:13:36is
00:13:37and he is very influenced
00:13:40through theories
00:13:40of a school
00:13:41which is called
00:13:42the round table
00:13:43which also includes
00:13:44people
00:13:44who are passionate
00:13:45for the Empire
00:13:46and who say
00:13:47So what is it?
00:13:48the Empire
00:13:48It's a Commonwealth
00:13:50of a free people
00:13:51so the goal to achieve
00:13:52that is, there is
00:13:53more and more
00:13:54other peoples
00:13:54which come together
00:13:56to this Commonwealth
00:13:56of a free people
00:13:57And that's why.
00:13:59that Ogars will dream
00:14:00at some point
00:14:01of an Arab dominion
00:14:03in the British Empire
00:14:04And that's why.
00:14:05that Ogars
00:14:07will arouse
00:14:08Lawrence of Arabia
00:14:09For now
00:14:10Ogars
00:14:14look at
00:14:14this young Laurence
00:14:16and this young Laurence
00:14:18interests him
00:14:18he has a theory
00:14:23First, he doesn't like it
00:14:26democracy
00:14:26and he thinks
00:14:29that history
00:14:29is the fact
00:14:29of a few individuals
00:14:31who act
00:14:32choose
00:14:34handpick
00:14:35people
00:14:37who don't bother
00:14:37not too much
00:14:38scruples
00:14:39or principles
00:14:41people
00:14:42which can go far
00:14:44and Ogars
00:14:46is convinced
00:14:47Laurence
00:14:47is made to go far
00:14:50then Laurence
00:14:53He doesn't know.
00:14:54he admires
00:14:56Ogars
00:14:56but he continues
00:14:58his travels
00:14:59by bicycle
00:14:59In France
00:15:00He is 20 years old
00:15:02when suddenly
00:15:03having done his round
00:15:04of France
00:15:05covering 160 kilometers
00:15:06per day
00:15:07which is not bad
00:15:07having passed through Carcassonne
00:15:12well
00:15:14it happens
00:15:16in front of Egmorte
00:15:17admirable Egmorte
00:15:19he considers
00:15:20the enclosure
00:15:21and then he will
00:15:24a little further away
00:15:24he sees the sea
00:15:25the Mediterranean
00:15:27this is the first time
00:15:28that he sees her
00:15:30and there he experiences
00:15:33a shock
00:15:35it's a meeting
00:15:38indisputably
00:15:38it was necessary that
00:15:40Laurence meets
00:15:41the Mediterranean
00:15:42because
00:15:42suddenly
00:15:44this water is too blue
00:15:46that sky is too blue
00:15:48these shores
00:15:49too red
00:15:50well
00:15:55it's like a revelation
00:15:57of something
00:15:57that exists
00:15:58and towards what
00:16:00he feels that
00:16:01the whole door
00:16:02And that's very important.
00:16:04this meeting
00:16:05he returns
00:16:08to prepare his thesis
00:16:11and his thesis
00:16:11he chose to do it
00:16:12on
00:16:13architecture
00:16:17military
00:16:17crusaders
00:16:18so perhaps it would be
00:16:20Not bad
00:16:21to go and see
00:16:21that's what I think
00:16:23Augers
00:16:24and Augers
00:16:27sends to the Middle East
00:16:29with letters
00:16:29recommendation
00:16:30young Laurence
00:16:31who took lessons
00:16:32from Arabic
00:16:33with a priest
00:16:36Lebanese
00:16:37And here it is!
00:16:41who arrives
00:16:42in this Middle East
00:16:43He has very little money.
00:16:46Also
00:16:46he will live
00:16:47like a resident
00:16:48he will travel
00:16:501600 kilometers
00:16:52on foot
00:16:52in the large
00:16:54Turkish Syria
00:16:55it's the equivalent
00:16:56roughly
00:16:56from Syria
00:16:57of today
00:16:57of Lebanon
00:16:58from Jordan
00:16:59and Israel
00:17:00and here too
00:17:03it's a shock
00:17:04but
00:17:04larger
00:17:06more excessive
00:17:07that
00:17:07of the Mediterranean
00:17:08it's a shock
00:17:09landscape
00:17:10it's a shock
00:17:12light
00:17:12it's a shock
00:17:14of a mentality
00:17:15in a way
00:17:16to live
00:17:17and he will feel
00:17:23From now on
00:17:24in itself
00:17:25for this entire region
00:17:26a passionate love
00:17:30And that's true.
00:17:30He loves this country
00:17:32He loves Syria
00:17:34and this love
00:17:37for Syria
00:17:38will be one of the levers
00:17:39who later
00:17:40will make them act so much
00:17:42so that France
00:17:43don't follow
00:17:44he will hate France
00:17:46he will hate France
00:17:47he will consider
00:17:48that France
00:17:48should not be in Syria
00:17:50because he loves Syria
00:17:51So it's 100 kilometers
00:17:55adventures
00:17:56a bandit attacks him
00:17:58steals his watch
00:17:59he wants to kill him
00:18:00He is saved by a shepherd
00:18:01but all that
00:18:01are travel incidents
00:18:02which are magnificent
00:18:03something to tell when we get back
00:18:05and above all
00:18:06he perfected
00:18:07already his Arabic
00:18:08he speaks better
00:18:09he makes himself understood
00:18:10he understands
00:18:10he inserted himself
00:18:12in everyday life
00:18:13he lived with
00:18:15these people
00:18:16and when he comes home
00:18:18Well, he's defending his thesis.
00:18:19with praise, moreover
00:18:20That's it.
00:18:21His studies are finished.
00:18:22well done
00:18:22What is he going to do?
00:18:23and that's Hogarth
00:18:25Again
00:18:25who takes care of him
00:18:26Hogarth is in charge
00:18:29of an archaeological mission
00:18:30in Carkemich
00:18:31in Asia Minor
00:18:32it's about finding
00:18:34the traces
00:18:35of the Ethic civilization
00:18:36and he desires
00:18:39that
00:18:39Lawrence becomes an archaeologist
00:18:42and let him go
00:18:44in Carkemich
00:18:45and Lawrence agrees
00:18:47And off he went!
00:18:48he stops in Constantinople
00:18:49to take classes
00:18:50more Arabic
00:18:51He definitely wants
00:18:52that his Arabic is perfect
00:18:53and this Arabic will be perfect
00:18:54and then he will be there
00:18:57on this Carkemich site
00:18:59Carkemich
00:19:02It is a Turkish possession.
00:19:03like the rest of this region
00:19:04this entire region
00:19:05of Arabia
00:19:06from Syria
00:19:06of what is today
00:19:09Israel
00:19:09of Mesopotamia
00:19:12the Turks are here
00:19:13everywhere
00:19:13they have been here since
00:19:15always since
00:19:17the Turkish conquest
00:19:17and we must not forget
00:19:18what Turkey was
00:19:20we must not forget
00:19:21that Turkey
00:19:21went as far as Morocco
00:19:23It has even spread to Morocco.
00:19:25all the way to the Adriatic
00:19:26that she threatened Vienna
00:19:28and then since
00:19:31the 19th century
00:19:33This is decadence
00:19:33you know that the tsar
00:19:34from Russia said
00:19:35Turkey is man
00:19:36sick of Europe
00:19:37and everyone
00:19:37Europe is watching
00:19:38this sick man
00:19:39which is falling apart
00:19:41gradually
00:19:42whose power is weakening
00:19:43and this Middle East
00:19:45is a nursery
00:19:46of interests
00:19:47contradictory
00:19:48there is Russia
00:19:50who still dreams
00:19:52of Constantinople
00:19:53the dream of Constantinople
00:19:55and who builds
00:19:55a railway
00:19:56in northern Turkey
00:19:57as if by chance
00:19:57there is Germany
00:20:00who is looking for opportunities
00:20:01for its formidable
00:20:03economic expansion
00:20:04and who is currently
00:20:05to colonize Turkey
00:20:06she builds
00:20:06she makes railways
00:20:07everywhere
00:20:07she is doing
00:20:08a great company
00:20:09the Berlin-Baghdad train
00:20:11there is France
00:20:14traditionally
00:20:17interested in Syria
00:20:19and Lebanon
00:20:19since the crusades
00:20:20There is England
00:20:22who is thinking about India
00:20:24and who thinks
00:20:24to the Red Sea
00:20:26in Suez
00:20:27and who wants to make sure
00:20:29in case of collapse
00:20:30Turkish
00:20:31territories
00:20:32who protect
00:20:32this path
00:20:33and this region
00:20:35is therefore at the moment
00:20:36Or
00:20:37Laurence succeeds
00:20:39an anthill
00:20:42agents
00:20:42of all kinds
00:20:44notably
00:20:46many English agents
00:20:47and you see
00:20:49we take
00:20:51to ask oneself a question
00:20:52this construction site existed
00:20:53for a long time
00:20:54the Karkebisch construction site
00:20:55but it had been closed
00:20:55or we reopened it
00:20:58very precisely
00:20:58at the moment
00:20:59where the German line
00:21:00Berlin-Baghdad
00:21:02passes very close to there
00:21:03so we finish
00:21:04by wondering
00:21:05Of course
00:21:05They are archaeologists.
00:21:06we're not going
00:21:07say the opposite
00:21:08there is the Wouley
00:21:09who is a great archaeologist
00:21:10these are people
00:21:11who are looking
00:21:11but one might wonder
00:21:12if these people
00:21:13are only archaeologists
00:21:15They are English
00:21:15let's not forget
00:21:16and they must act
00:21:18for glory
00:21:19from England
00:21:20so that they are also
00:21:21a tiny bit
00:21:22spies
00:21:23That's not out of the question.
00:21:25You know
00:21:25we think a little
00:21:26to these cultural foundations
00:21:28circumcomandables
00:21:30which we notice
00:21:31suddenly
00:21:31with some astonishment
00:21:33that they are subsidized
00:21:33by the CIA
00:21:34GOOD
00:21:34That's pretty much it.
00:21:37And
00:21:39if Laurence is here
00:21:41as an archaeologist
00:21:41it might also
00:21:42that we want to train him
00:21:43something else
00:21:43then
00:21:44He will be happy
00:21:45the years
00:21:47that he will pass
00:21:47there
00:21:48because Kemiche
00:21:48dug into the earth
00:21:49he will say so
00:21:50They are the happiest
00:21:51of his life
00:21:51because he lives with
00:21:53Arab workers
00:21:54there are 100 or 200 Arab workers
00:21:56he is with them
00:21:56he is constantly with them
00:21:57he eats with them
00:21:58he sleeps with them
00:21:59he integrates with them
00:22:00Already
00:22:01you see
00:22:01now the most
00:22:03language problem
00:22:04he speaks exactly
00:22:05Arabic
00:22:05colloquial Arabic
00:22:07We can't even hear it
00:22:08that he is a foreigner
00:22:08He knows all the subtleties
00:22:10he laughed with them
00:22:11he is their friend
00:22:12They forget that he is English
00:22:14and among these Arabs
00:22:17there is one
00:22:18for which he takes himself
00:22:19of a very strong affection
00:22:20and this Arab
00:22:22is called
00:22:23Daoum
00:22:23it's a sheep
00:22:25a sheep that carries
00:22:26the pottery
00:22:27and the shards
00:22:28that we find
00:22:29And
00:22:31Laurence sympathizes with him
00:22:34and we possess
00:22:34photos
00:22:35a photo
00:22:36of
00:22:36Daoum
00:22:38by Lawrence of Arabia
00:22:39and then
00:22:40after this photo
00:22:41well
00:22:42Laurence and Daoum
00:22:44changed clothes
00:22:45Laurence donned
00:22:47Daoum's clothes
00:22:48and that's Daoum
00:22:48who photographed him
00:22:49and summer
00:22:53when we close the construction site
00:22:54well
00:22:55Laurence and Daoum
00:22:56they go off on the roads
00:22:57they leave
00:22:59to escort camels
00:23:00on the fraternity
00:23:02or
00:23:03they leave
00:23:04in Port Said
00:23:05where Laurence
00:23:05commits
00:23:06to wear
00:23:08coal
00:23:09Yes
00:23:11like a simple sauce
00:23:12as
00:23:12the docker
00:23:13the humble
00:23:14and he lives with his people
00:23:16he sleeps with them
00:23:17on the docks
00:23:18He's in the filth
00:23:20in their vermin
00:23:21and we say
00:23:22but why
00:23:22because Laurence
00:23:23doesn't need that
00:23:24it seems that there is
00:23:27in him
00:23:27a trend
00:23:28irresistible
00:23:31why not say the word
00:23:32who pushes him
00:23:33towards
00:23:34humility
00:23:36towards a negation
00:23:38of what it is
00:23:39towards
00:23:41something
00:23:42where he will get lost
00:23:43he wants to get lost
00:23:44in these things
00:23:45that's why
00:23:46that it becomes grout
00:23:48covered in coal
00:23:50suffering
00:23:51struggling
00:23:53and then after
00:23:54he comes to take back
00:23:55his task
00:23:56in the construction site
00:23:58excavations
00:23:59of Carcemich
00:24:00in 1913
00:24:02big surprise
00:24:04in Oxford
00:24:05Laurence returns
00:24:07see his parents
00:24:08that he did not see
00:24:08for some time
00:24:10and he brings back
00:24:12at home
00:24:12of Aoum
00:24:13Yes
00:24:13and even with
00:24:14another Bedouin
00:24:14SO
00:24:15we're staying
00:24:16in a small pavilion
00:24:18of the garden
00:24:18who was the one
00:24:19by Laurence
00:24:20we're staying
00:24:21the two Arabs
00:24:21and needless to say
00:24:22that's a lot
00:24:23noise in the family
00:24:23and then in January 14
00:24:25Of course
00:24:26he left
00:24:27January 14
00:24:29we confide
00:24:31to Laurence
00:24:32his first mission
00:24:33first mission
00:24:35secret
00:24:36This is
00:24:38browse
00:24:39the desert
00:24:40of Sinai
00:24:40to highlight
00:24:43a precise map
00:24:44we do not own
00:24:45accurate map
00:24:46And that's how it is.
00:24:48than with the captain
00:24:49Newcomb
00:24:50Laurence
00:24:52will sink
00:24:53in this desert
00:24:54with Wule
00:24:55the archaeologist
00:24:56and with Daoum
00:24:57Of course
00:24:57who never leaves them
00:24:58Never
00:24:58And that's how it is.
00:24:59that they will train
00:25:00these maps
00:25:01which will serve
00:25:01both later
00:25:02Of course
00:25:04There are Turks
00:25:04also this way
00:25:05and when they approach
00:25:07from Akaba
00:25:08which is a port
00:25:09well
00:25:10The Turks are threatening them
00:25:11we're going to arrest you
00:25:12What are you doing here?
00:25:13We must retreat.
00:25:15but there
00:25:15reckless
00:25:16Laurence approaches
00:25:17with Daoum
00:25:18and takes the latest readings
00:25:19under the walls of Akaba
00:25:22a little later
00:25:24he will undertake another mission
00:25:25in the Taurus Mountains
00:25:26where the Germans do
00:25:27fantastic work
00:25:28and it's about going to see
00:25:29what emerges
00:25:30and then he leaves again
00:25:32for England
00:25:34He is in England
00:25:35at the time of August 4, 1914
00:25:36war breaks out
00:25:37and he is disappointed
00:25:39he is disappointed
00:25:39because
00:25:40Turkey is not
00:25:42in this war
00:25:43Turkey, however
00:25:44subservient to Germany
00:25:45we thought
00:25:46that she would be at war
00:25:47alongside Germany
00:25:48from the beginning
00:25:48She's not there
00:25:49and Laurence regrets it
00:25:50because he said
00:25:51I, who know so well
00:25:52these countries
00:25:53I could have done something
00:25:55against Turkey
00:25:56and in October
00:25:59suddenly he exults
00:26:01Turkey
00:26:02has just entered the war
00:26:03and immediately
00:26:04He runs to see Hogars
00:26:05it's necessary
00:26:06He needs to be appointed there.
00:26:08that he be appointed there
00:26:09he wants it
00:26:09he smells
00:26:10that he can do
00:26:11quantities of things
00:26:12important there
00:26:13and thanks to Hogars
00:26:17he is named
00:26:17he is named
00:26:19to the intelligence service
00:26:20from the Cairo General Staff
00:26:21Here he is in Cairo
00:26:23He is the officer
00:26:26the worst dressed
00:26:28the most neglected
00:26:29from the Cairo General Staff
00:26:30and these gentlemen
00:26:33of the general staff
00:26:33are outraged
00:26:34what is this
00:26:34that little lieutenant
00:26:36because he is a lieutenant
00:26:36and then we come to
00:26:39still
00:26:40to estimate it greatly
00:26:40because this lieutenant
00:26:42is the one
00:26:42who does not leave
00:26:43at his office
00:26:43He will stay there for 18 hours.
00:26:45per day
00:26:46He has endurance
00:26:48extraordinary
00:26:49he works
00:26:50he works
00:26:50he works
00:26:51he expresses ideas
00:26:52very interesting
00:26:53He has clear views
00:26:55about the events
00:26:55he has plans
00:26:58He addresses them to Hogars
00:26:59and by Hogars
00:27:00these projects pass
00:27:01at the top
00:27:01which makes
00:27:03let's begin
00:27:03to be pronounced in London
00:27:04the name of this little one
00:27:05Lawrence
00:27:05who looks
00:27:06not stupid
00:27:07my God
00:27:07and in 1916
00:27:13he is entrusted
00:27:15the mission
00:27:15the most extraordinary
00:27:17maybe
00:27:17whoever
00:27:21that has ever been
00:27:22sold
00:27:23a member
00:27:25of a general staff
00:27:26British
00:27:27at that time
00:27:30the English
00:27:32coming from India
00:27:34had tried
00:27:34to take the Turks
00:27:35reverse
00:27:36Unfortunately
00:27:38It had gone very badly.
00:27:39and for the moment
00:27:4010,000 English
00:27:41were locked up
00:27:43in a city
00:27:43on the fraternity
00:27:44at Kout
00:27:45and the Turks
00:27:49surrounded this city
00:27:50and the English
00:27:51were very threatened
00:27:52there was
00:27:52a Turkish general
00:27:54who was called
00:27:55to Pasha Island
00:27:56And
00:27:58we could feel that Kout
00:28:00would eventually
00:28:01to fall
00:28:02and then
00:28:03who came up with this idea
00:28:04We got it anyway
00:28:05we decided
00:28:07to send Lawrence
00:28:08since he was speaking
00:28:09so well Arabic
00:28:09since he knew
00:28:10so the region
00:28:11see
00:28:13to Pasha Island
00:28:14and offer him
00:28:16if he lifted the seat
00:28:17one million
00:28:18pounds sterling
00:28:18we are colossal
00:28:21at the time
00:28:22and Lawrence leaves
00:28:25he arrives in Basra
00:28:26He was very poorly received
00:28:28by British officers
00:28:29who are here
00:28:29who say
00:28:30But anyway, you do
00:28:30something dishonorable
00:28:32It's dishonorable.
00:28:33for the British uniform
00:28:34completely equal to Lawrence
00:28:36it happens
00:28:37he sees his Pasha
00:28:38offers him a million
00:28:39The Pasha refuses
00:28:41he offers two million
00:28:41of his own accord
00:28:42Besides, he's not allowed to.
00:28:43The Pasha also refuses
00:28:44definitely
00:28:45this Pasha
00:28:45Turkish is an honest
00:28:47And so it's Lawrence
00:28:50who will have to
00:28:50seeing that there is no
00:28:51another solution
00:28:52to negotiate the surrender
00:28:53and he will ask
00:28:54that we save
00:28:55the civilian population
00:28:56very threatened
00:28:57of relentless repression
00:28:58and he obtains it
00:28:59there are only a few hangings
00:29:00but he's still here
00:29:03Bassara
00:29:03He did not return
00:29:06and we write to him
00:29:08find out more
00:29:09see how possibly
00:29:13a ferment of Arab nationalism
00:29:15could be lifted
00:29:17Couldn't we
00:29:18use dirty
00:29:19Arab nationalism
00:29:20against the Turks
00:29:21For now
00:29:22Arabs are subjects
00:29:23Turks
00:29:24and why not
00:29:25to make them dream
00:29:27independence
00:29:28and Lawrence wonders
00:29:31and he is looking
00:29:32d'Ambassara
00:29:32he writes a report
00:29:34disillusioned
00:29:34saying
00:29:34You know
00:29:35Arab nationalists
00:29:36are not very numerous
00:29:37I only found 12
00:29:38in Bassara
00:29:38but in the same report
00:29:42or in another
00:29:43which will follow
00:29:45he writes
00:29:48It's not from that side.
00:29:52that we should look at
00:29:53think of a man
00:29:56which exerts an influence
00:29:59immense on Islam
00:30:00It's Hussein
00:30:03Hussein
00:30:06which descends directly
00:30:08of Muhammad
00:30:09Hussein the Sheriff
00:30:12of Mecca
00:30:13the pilgrimage city
00:30:15of all Muslims
00:30:16from all over the world
00:30:17Hussein
00:30:20who with his sons
00:30:21he has men
00:30:26on whom
00:30:27rely
00:30:28the Arabs
00:30:29if there is a day
00:30:32Arab revolt
00:30:33It's this way
00:30:35that she will have to begin
00:30:36and it's a view
00:30:39of a lucidity
00:30:40extraordinary
00:30:41precisely because
00:30:44these are the threads
00:30:49of the Seine
00:30:50Abdallah and Fessal
00:30:54Who
00:30:56in Medina
00:30:57the holy city
00:31:00of Islam
00:31:01will do
00:31:04suddenly
00:31:05desert
00:31:05several hundred
00:31:07Arab soldiers
00:31:08Turkish soldiers
00:31:09Arabs
00:31:11remove them
00:31:12and send
00:31:16a message
00:31:17to the Turkish authorities
00:31:18by declaring
00:31:18that now
00:31:19them Arabs
00:31:20They are in revolt
00:31:21open
00:31:21against the Turks
00:31:22They are in a state of war
00:31:23and five days later
00:31:24their old father
00:31:25the old sheriff
00:31:27of Mecca
00:31:27Hussein
00:31:28of his palace
00:31:30fires a shot
00:31:31towards a Turkish barracks
00:31:32him too
00:31:33he declares war
00:31:33and initially
00:31:35the Arabs
00:31:36who are regrouping
00:31:37the Arabs of the Edjaz
00:31:39achieve success
00:31:41against the Turks
00:31:42but these successes
00:31:44are without a future
00:31:45because
00:31:45in Medina
00:31:47Where are the Turks?
00:31:48who are now
00:31:48securely installed
00:31:49firmly entrenched
00:31:51but there is a way
00:31:53iron
00:31:53which brings
00:31:53from Damascus
00:31:54who crosses
00:31:55the entire desert
00:31:56who brings troops
00:31:57who brings equipment
00:31:58and soon
00:32:01These are the Arabs
00:32:02who are in danger
00:32:02and then old Hussein
00:32:04call
00:32:05the English
00:32:09to his rescue
00:32:09and that's what
00:32:11the English
00:32:12were waiting
00:32:12and yet
00:32:17the English
00:32:17they will not
00:32:17Help
00:32:18of Hussein
00:32:18they leave
00:32:21the months
00:32:22pass
00:32:23and we don't understand
00:32:24why
00:32:25they are called
00:32:26like liberators
00:32:27they are not coming
00:32:28But no
00:32:29but
00:32:29they say
00:32:31that
00:32:31Hussein is not
00:32:32in immediate danger
00:32:33but
00:32:34that the more months
00:32:35pass
00:32:36and more
00:32:36he will feel
00:32:37terrified
00:32:39scared
00:32:40and that
00:32:42when we go
00:32:43Finally
00:32:43well
00:32:45it will be more
00:32:45accommodating
00:32:46That's politics.
00:32:47that's what we call
00:32:48politics
00:32:49and when they smell
00:32:52that the situation
00:32:53is ripe
00:32:53well, the English
00:32:54send a senior official
00:32:55which is called
00:32:56Storr
00:32:56to meet
00:32:58Hussein and his sons
00:32:59and Storr
00:33:02embarks
00:33:03for Jeddah
00:33:04and with him
00:33:07There is
00:33:07a young officer
00:33:08who did
00:33:09feet and hands
00:33:10to be part of the trip
00:33:11And that's Lawrence.
00:33:13they arrive in Jeddah
00:33:17and there
00:33:17they meet
00:33:18all the wires
00:33:19by Hussein
00:33:20there is
00:33:21Jaiz
00:33:21there is
00:33:22Abdallah
00:33:22there is
00:33:23Ali
00:33:23He didn't do that
00:33:25there
00:33:25and Lawrence
00:33:29look around him
00:33:30to know
00:33:30who will lead the revolt
00:33:32because for the moment
00:33:33the revolt
00:33:33She is in limbo.
00:33:34and he smells
00:33:34that a leader will be needed
00:33:35for this revolt
00:33:36So it's not Hussein
00:33:37he is too old
00:33:38then for the others
00:33:40we know from a text
00:33:41Lawrence
00:33:43that he eliminated them
00:33:45because one
00:33:46is too honest
00:33:47ah
00:33:47the other
00:33:49is too intelligent
00:33:50GOOD
00:33:51the other
00:33:54the other good
00:33:58it is of no interest
00:33:59then there's a fourth one
00:34:04It's Fessal
00:34:05He's not here
00:34:07Lawrence doesn't know him
00:34:09and Lawrence
00:34:11will ask
00:34:13to meet
00:34:13this Fessal
00:34:14we're going to tell him
00:34:14but he is on the other side
00:34:15desert
00:34:15it doesn't matter
00:34:17I'm going
00:34:17it will be necessary
00:34:20request permission
00:34:21of the Seine
00:34:21who will grant it to you
00:34:22with difficulty
00:34:23what is this
00:34:23that this intruder
00:34:25this English
00:34:25who wants to impose
00:34:27and finally
00:34:28he accepts
00:34:29and on
00:34:30a dromedary
00:34:32Lawrence
00:34:35sinks into the desert
00:34:36with two years
00:34:37he runs for
00:34:38three days and three nights
00:34:39let's not forget
00:34:40that he just passed
00:34:40two years in an office
00:34:41he is not trained
00:34:42yet he goes faster
00:34:43Bedouins
00:34:44and he arrives at the camp
00:34:46of Fessal
00:34:46he is led in front
00:34:47a low house
00:34:48he enters
00:34:49and there
00:34:50Fessal is here
00:34:51Fessal
00:34:54Lawrence
00:34:55will depict
00:34:56like a column
00:34:57high
00:34:58and thin
00:34:59and he looks
00:35:02curious
00:35:03this English
00:35:04who arrives
00:35:04and asks him
00:35:07how long
00:35:08he put
00:35:08Lawrence said so
00:35:09You acted quickly
00:35:10and then he asks him
00:35:13if he likes his camp
00:35:14How does he find it?
00:35:15and Lawrence
00:35:15spear
00:35:17It's superb
00:35:19but that's a long way off
00:35:20damask
00:35:21and right from the start
00:35:24Lawrence beat
00:35:27his cards
00:35:28what he dreams of
00:35:30It's Damascus
00:35:31Damascus, which is far away
00:35:33to the west
00:35:34and to the north
00:35:34but Damascus
00:35:36towards what he wants
00:35:39that the Arabs
00:35:40walk
00:35:41Damascus
00:35:43that he wants to release
00:35:43Turks
00:35:44it's a project
00:35:46almost impossible
00:35:46at the moment we are
00:35:48and yet
00:35:49Fessal
00:35:50keep silent
00:35:56the others too
00:35:57the others retain
00:35:58their breath
00:35:58is it that
00:35:59Fessal will take that
00:36:01as an insult
00:36:02No
00:36:03Fessal smiled.
00:36:05and said
00:36:08Thank God
00:36:09Praise be to God
00:36:10the Turks
00:36:11are closer
00:36:12SO
00:36:16Lawrence will leave again
00:36:19for Cairo
00:36:20and there he will say
00:36:20I found the man
00:36:21It's Fessal
00:36:22we are going to
00:36:23the Arab revolt
00:36:24with Fessal
00:36:24I'm not asking
00:36:25that one thing
00:36:26point me out
00:36:28near him
00:36:29absolutely not
00:36:30intervention force
00:36:32the French want it
00:36:33the French have already
00:36:34landed
00:36:35a detachment
00:36:37with the colonel
00:36:37Brémont
00:36:38Lawrence said
00:36:39that he should re-embark
00:36:40do not send
00:36:41of English troops
00:36:42leave the Arabs
00:36:43between them
00:36:43Arab nationalism
00:36:44will be a ferment
00:36:45Magnificent
00:36:46I take responsibility for that.
00:36:47and I will be there
00:36:48on your behalf
00:36:50all alone
00:36:50with money
00:36:53and the most astonishing
00:36:56that's what we accept
00:36:57and we see him again
00:36:59as an advisor
00:37:00of Fessal
00:37:01to carry out
00:37:03the Arab revolt
00:37:04with money
00:37:05because none of that
00:37:07will not be done
00:37:08without much money
00:37:09and the pockets
00:37:10Lawrence
00:37:11will be full of gold
00:37:12for a few months
00:37:14the months that will follow
00:37:15he will spend
00:37:1611 million
00:37:16of Pound Sterling
00:37:17and already
00:37:22NOW
00:37:22he joined
00:37:23Fessal
00:37:24And
00:37:27their camp
00:37:29is in Elwed
00:37:30I would like
00:37:31that we were watching
00:37:32that on the map
00:37:33because without that
00:37:34that doesn't speak
00:37:35imagination
00:37:35you see
00:37:40This is Mecca.
00:37:43Mecca
00:37:44It is
00:37:46that's where Hussein lives
00:37:47Here is Medina
00:37:49the holy city
00:37:52and here
00:37:53Elwed
00:37:54This is the railway.
00:37:55the railway
00:37:57which goes from Damascus
00:37:58in Medina
00:37:58and which supplies
00:37:59Turkish troops
00:38:00from Medina
00:38:01in manpower and equipment
00:38:03And
00:38:05For now
00:38:07Fessal
00:38:08is with
00:38:09Lawrence
00:38:11to Elwed
00:38:12and here
00:38:15is located
00:38:15Fessal's brother
00:38:18Who is Abdallah?
00:38:20and Abdullah is in charge
00:38:21to undertake an operation
00:38:23against Medina
00:38:24and against the Turks
00:38:24And Abdullah doesn't move.
00:38:25SO
00:38:27what will do
00:38:31Lawrence
00:38:32impatient
00:38:33well
00:38:35Lawrence
00:38:35will decide to leave again
00:38:38and he crosses the desert again
00:38:40to go to Abdallah's
00:38:41and it also goes fast
00:38:42and he suffers infinitely
00:38:44on the road
00:38:45when he arrives
00:38:49in front of Abdallah
00:38:50he urges him
00:38:51he told him
00:38:51that's your brother
00:38:52who sent me
00:38:53It's Fessal
00:38:53who sent me
00:38:54Why don't you attack?
00:38:55and it falls
00:38:57in a semi-coma
00:38:58we drag him
00:38:59on the floor of his tent
00:39:00And then he starts going crazy.
00:39:01for ten days
00:39:02he is so exhausted
00:39:05we support him
00:39:07with milk
00:39:07fermented camel
00:39:09and then one afternoon
00:39:12he wakes up
00:39:12and all that
00:39:16like camel milk
00:39:18fermented
00:39:20in his mind
00:39:21and suddenly
00:39:23he sees clearly
00:39:23and he said to himself
00:39:25but why
00:39:25but why
00:39:28take Medina
00:39:29we are in Elwes
00:39:30we can block
00:39:32the railway
00:39:33there is no need
00:39:34to take Medina
00:39:35Medina will fall
00:39:36of oneself
00:39:36the Turks are in
00:39:37a dead end
00:39:38here in Medina
00:39:39Let's forget about Medina
00:39:41why do
00:39:43a front-line war
00:39:43the Arabs
00:39:45the desert Bedouins
00:39:46must not
00:39:47front-line warfare
00:39:47they must do
00:39:48the flank war
00:39:50the desert war
00:39:51And he's right.
00:39:52And that is power.
00:39:54of the imagination
00:39:55and the power
00:39:56of a leader of men
00:39:57and he will regain
00:39:58Elwes
00:39:59And
00:40:00he will convince
00:40:03Fessal
00:40:03to let go
00:40:04his army
00:40:05of a thousand men
00:40:07across the desert
00:40:09towards Acabara
00:40:11here
00:40:11Why Acaba?
00:40:15well, because in Acababa
00:40:16the Turks are strongly
00:40:17entrenched
00:40:18and that
00:40:20from there
00:40:21they can cut
00:40:23the road
00:40:25to every body
00:40:26expeditionary
00:40:27English
00:40:27trained in Egypt
00:40:28who would want
00:40:29marching on Jerusalem
00:40:31because
00:40:32if this body
00:40:33march on Jerusalem
00:40:34the Turks of Aqaba
00:40:35cut across the path
00:40:36as long as there is
00:40:37Turks in Aqaba
00:40:38impossible
00:40:39to go to Jerusalem
00:40:40and that's what
00:40:42Lorraine felt
00:40:44And that's why.
00:40:45that these two thousand men
00:40:47he trains them
00:40:48towards Acabara
00:40:49on the road
00:40:50he will leave
00:40:51this army
00:40:51which moves slowly
00:40:52And
00:40:54in an expedition
00:40:55crazy
00:40:56pointed towards Damascus
00:40:57all alone
00:40:57on the return
00:41:00will blow up a train
00:41:02doubts were raised
00:41:03this expedition
00:41:05with arguments
00:41:06who seemed serious
00:41:07we said
00:41:08that's still
00:41:09an invention
00:41:09of Lorraine
00:41:10However, that's the case.
00:41:10his diary
00:41:12found recently
00:41:13confirms this trip
00:41:14in Damascus
00:41:15since he writes
00:41:16I'm so scared
00:41:17I'm so scared
00:41:19to leave alone
00:41:19for Damascus
00:41:20he joined the army
00:41:22on the way
00:41:22and July 5th
00:41:23they arrive
00:41:25It is July 5, 1917
00:41:27they arrive
00:41:28above Acaba
00:41:29Acaba
00:41:30which is very well defended
00:41:32on the sea side
00:41:32But who's talking about it?
00:41:34no one has ever thought
00:41:35that we would come from above
00:41:37is free from any defense
00:41:40and when the Turks
00:41:40see them surge
00:41:41the 2000 Arabs
00:41:42who come down from the top
00:41:43pancakes
00:41:43So they are terrified
00:41:44They surrendered the next day.
00:41:46It is
00:41:47it has to be said
00:41:48a victory
00:41:48absolutely incredible
00:41:50a victory
00:41:51unpredictable
00:41:52SO
00:41:53with 8 men
00:41:55Lawrence
00:41:57will cross the desert
00:41:59250 km of desert
00:42:02in 49 hours
00:42:02and he arrives in Cairo
00:42:05where he makes his report
00:42:06and now
00:42:08he is a
00:42:08he is a national hero
00:42:10He is a hero in Cairo
00:42:14Or
00:42:15He's all anyone is talking about anymore.
00:42:17we do it major
00:42:19we propose
00:42:20for the order of the bath
00:42:21obviously
00:42:22it's all of a sudden
00:42:23glory
00:42:23glory
00:42:24the glory he loves
00:42:24glory
00:42:26that he does not refuse
00:42:27he wrote it
00:42:28he said it
00:42:28he loves glory
00:42:29and then he goes back to Aqaba
00:42:32for Aqaba
00:42:33Aqaba where he will first settle
00:42:37his general staff
00:42:39his area of operation
00:42:41and where he will meditate
00:42:43on the continuation of the revolt
00:42:45so of course
00:42:47he is
00:42:47with the Arabs
00:42:50like an Arab
00:42:51He is an Arab
00:42:53he is dressed in Arab clothes
00:42:55from the beginning
00:42:56of the countryside
00:42:56And
00:42:59some thought
00:43:02that Aqaba
00:43:03was a turning point
00:43:04than before Aqaba
00:43:07He was English.
00:43:08and that after Aqaba
00:43:09he was Arab
00:43:10it's beautiful
00:43:12But that's wrong.
00:43:14a text was found
00:43:18written after the capture
00:43:19from Aqaba
00:43:19a text in 27 articles
00:43:22which is a kind
00:43:24memo
00:43:24where he exposes
00:43:26how it should
00:43:28manipulate the Arabs
00:43:29he exposes
00:43:3227 articles
00:43:34everything is there
00:43:35he explains
00:43:37that we must play them
00:43:37comedy
00:43:38and that
00:43:40the best way
00:43:41it's about putting on
00:43:42their clothes
00:43:42but it's very hard
00:43:43because there
00:43:45you have to make
00:43:45an actor
00:43:46the one who would not
00:43:47a great actor
00:43:47does not have the right
00:43:48to put on his clothes
00:43:50because it was stolen
00:43:52you have to act
00:43:54the day
00:43:54night
00:43:55And that's how it is.
00:43:56that they will be manipulated
00:43:57these Arabs
00:43:58for the greater good
00:44:00of the British Empire
00:44:01that's what
00:44:02black on white
00:44:02in these 27 articles
00:44:03and suddenly
00:44:04the figure of Lawrence
00:44:05modify a little
00:44:06the legend
00:44:08my God
00:44:11disappears a little
00:44:12and we say
00:44:13but then he cheated
00:44:14the Arabs
00:44:15Yes, he cheated on them.
00:44:19But he deceived them.
00:44:22by loving them
00:44:22That's why.
00:44:24that it is not
00:44:25so simple
00:44:26he first
00:44:29was an English agent
00:44:30and I believe
00:44:31that now
00:44:31That's for sure.
00:44:32the documents
00:44:33prove it
00:44:34absolutely
00:44:34He is an English agent
00:44:35which has never ceased
00:44:36to be an English agent
00:44:37but that he took
00:44:41also of immense sympathy
00:44:44for the Arabs
00:44:45that's very likely
00:44:46and when he can do
00:44:48coincide
00:44:48the interests of the English
00:44:49and the interests of the Arabs
00:44:51Well, he does it.
00:44:52So now is the time
00:44:54where General Allenby
00:44:56will be able to
00:44:56since now
00:44:57Akaba's mortgage
00:44:59is lifted
00:44:59now is the time
00:45:00where General Allenby
00:45:01will be able to rush forward
00:45:02towards Jerusalem
00:45:03he would like that
00:45:04Lawrence of Arabia
00:45:06since it's already called
00:45:07Lawrence of Arabia
00:45:08that of Lawrence of Arabia
00:45:09gives him his hand
00:45:11Laurence boasted
00:45:13to be able to raise
00:45:1412,000
00:45:14Arabs
00:45:17and Laurence
00:45:18evades
00:45:19it seems so indeed
00:45:19that he could not
00:45:20raise 12,000 Arabs
00:45:21he prefers to open up
00:45:22to guerrilla operations
00:45:24why he is
00:45:24better done
00:45:25and meanwhile
00:45:28Allenby is going back
00:45:29in Jerusalem
00:45:29call Laurence
00:45:31near him
00:45:31and the two men
00:45:32will be side by side
00:45:33when they return
00:45:34in Jerusalem
00:45:35and there is immense joy
00:45:37there around Jerusalem
00:45:39but Laurence
00:45:40he is sad
00:45:42he does not share
00:45:43this general joy
00:45:44because him
00:45:45It's Damascus
00:45:46what he's thinking
00:45:48then he multiplies
00:45:51the shares
00:45:52in the desert
00:45:53and there is
00:45:55a railway junction
00:45:56to Derea
00:45:57who tempts him
00:45:59particularly
00:46:00there are the Turks
00:46:01are strongly established
00:46:03and before I could
00:46:04possibly
00:46:05attack this node
00:46:05railway
00:46:06which would disrupt
00:46:07Turkish defense
00:46:08He decides to go there
00:46:10alone
00:46:11Again
00:46:11as he went
00:46:12in Damascus
00:46:12then he gets dressed
00:46:17of rags
00:46:17night journey
00:46:20and at dawn
00:46:21one day at dawn
00:46:23enters the city
00:46:24de Derea
00:46:25catches sight of the train station
00:46:28Look at the railway tracks
00:46:30and then two police officers
00:46:34they catch sight of him
00:46:36he is not as
00:46:39brown than other Arabs
00:46:43he has a paler complexion
00:46:44despite the desert sun
00:46:45and he doesn't have a beard
00:46:47no
00:46:48that he never wished
00:46:50to let his beard grow
00:46:51he cannot
00:46:51He has no beard
00:46:52she never grew
00:46:53so we take it
00:46:57for an Anatolian
00:46:58an Anatolian deserter
00:46:59we arrest him
00:47:00we drive him
00:47:00in front of the commander
00:47:01of the square
00:47:01and the commander
00:47:03receives him in his room
00:47:04he is sitting
00:47:05in his pajamas on his bed
00:47:06He is a big man
00:47:07who sweats
00:47:08and who seeing
00:47:11Lawrence
00:47:12very thin
00:47:13in his Arab attire
00:47:14his Bedouin attire
00:47:17gives him a big smile
00:47:19the call
00:47:22near him
00:47:23and begins to stroke it
00:47:24They don't like it at all.
00:47:26to Lawrence
00:47:28who struggles
00:47:29and who delivers a knee strike
00:47:30in the belly
00:47:31of the commander
00:47:32who is not at all happy
00:47:33and who orders
00:47:36to the soldiers who are here
00:47:37undress him
00:47:39so we tear off his clothes
00:47:41He sees him there completely naked
00:47:42and the bay
00:47:46taking a bayonet
00:47:48he begins to slash him
00:47:49the skin along the ribs
00:47:51blood flows
00:47:51he collects this blood
00:47:52he throws it on her stomach
00:47:54Then he bit his neck again.
00:47:57and then
00:47:59he said to the soldier
00:48:02teach him a lesson
00:48:04so we take him
00:48:08in another room
00:48:09we throw it on the ground
00:48:11and then with a whip
00:48:13The men begin to whip him
00:48:17blood spurted from his back
00:48:20he screams
00:48:21he shouts
00:48:22he begs
00:48:22but he shouts in Arabic
00:48:24he shouts in Arabic
00:48:25he begs in Arabic
00:48:26then we pick it up
00:48:29and then with a final lash
00:48:32one of the men whipped him
00:48:33in the lower abdomen
00:48:35That's an excruciating pain.
00:48:38he thinks he is dying
00:48:39he falls onto his stomach
00:48:41and there the soldiers
00:48:45one after the other
00:48:48will rape him
00:48:49he's a human wreck
00:48:52that we bring back in front of the bay
00:48:54who doesn't want it anymore
00:48:56He said, "Oh well, I didn't ask for that."
00:48:57look at the state he is in
00:48:59so he sends him to prison
00:49:01in the night
00:49:03having somewhat regained his senses
00:49:04He will manage to escape.
00:49:05and he will be reunited with his small escort.
00:49:10that he waits in the desert
00:49:12I believe that it is necessary
00:49:17to believe this story
00:49:19even if it might not have been the commander of the garrison
00:49:21but from another
00:49:22she made a deep impression
00:49:25Lorence
00:49:26she touched him
00:49:30deep within his being
00:49:33and he said it
00:49:34for two or three people
00:49:38that he loved
00:49:38He spoke of this humiliation.
00:49:42which changed the meaning of his life
00:49:43And that is a true thing.
00:49:47authentic
00:49:49then he recovers
00:49:51and continues to participate in the war
00:49:53he fights several times
00:49:55against the Turks
00:49:56He was injured five times.
00:49:58guerrilla actions
00:50:00blow up trains
00:50:01railway lines
00:50:03and now
00:50:04There are organized columns
00:50:06mixed columns
00:50:08official
00:50:09which include both English
00:50:10French
00:50:12Muslims from North Africa
00:50:15Muslims from Nepal
00:50:18Indians
00:50:20Australians
00:50:22and this column
00:50:24is even armed with vehicles
00:50:26automobiles and armored vehicles
00:50:28she has two planes
00:50:30and Lorence is astonished
00:50:32is frightened
00:50:33and said
00:50:33Well, what about it?
00:50:35the desert is no longer normal
00:50:39The desert is in fashion
00:50:40and then Lorence's book
00:50:42this column
00:50:43a great battle
00:50:44in Tafila
00:50:45where Lorence participates
00:50:46with others
00:50:47It's a victory
00:50:49Lorence decorated herself
00:50:50of the DSO
00:50:50and we approach
00:50:54irresistibly
00:50:54damask
00:50:55the Turks are
00:50:59crushed
00:51:00cattle battle
00:51:03The Turks are retreating
00:51:04the Turks are retreating
00:51:05and one evening
00:51:08he leaves Damascus
00:51:09and in the night
00:51:10Already
00:51:10patriots
00:51:11display the flag
00:51:13achemite
00:51:14the flag of the Seine
00:51:15and proclaim
00:51:16independence
00:51:16from Syria
00:51:17in the night
00:51:18Indian troops
00:51:20and Australian
00:51:20return to the city
00:51:21and at 6 a.m.
00:51:22Lorence, who was warned
00:51:24arrived
00:51:24not on his dromedary
00:51:25but by car
00:51:27in his Rolls
00:51:28and he enters the city
00:51:30that's his dream
00:51:30who succeeded
00:51:31He is in Damascus
00:51:32remember
00:51:33he had told Fessal
00:51:34but it's far from Damascus
00:51:35and now he is in Damascus
00:51:36and he will put men
00:51:38to him
00:51:38at the head of business
00:51:41men
00:51:42favorable to Fessal
00:51:44and Fessal
00:51:44in turn
00:51:45will make his entrance
00:51:46Fessal is at home
00:51:47Fessal won
00:51:49And then came the interview.
00:51:52between Alain Bi
00:51:54Fessal
00:51:54And
00:51:57Lorence
00:51:59because in the meantime
00:52:01the diplomats spoke
00:52:03in the meantime
00:52:05the English
00:52:05and the French
00:52:06have
00:52:07work
00:52:08and the alliance
00:52:10who had
00:52:10tied to the fields
00:52:11battle of France
00:52:12has materialized
00:52:13by an agreement
00:52:14the French
00:52:16and the English
00:52:16decided
00:52:17to share
00:52:17the Middle East
00:52:18then England
00:52:20will have Palestine
00:52:21and Iraq
00:52:22and something else
00:52:23while France
00:52:25Syria will have
00:52:26and Lebanon
00:52:26These are the agreements
00:52:28Sykes-Picot
00:52:29Sykes is English
00:52:31Picot
00:52:32Georges Picot
00:52:32It's French
00:52:33and these are the agreements
00:52:34that exist
00:52:35and Lawrence knew them
00:52:37and the tragedy of Lawrence
00:52:39that's because he couldn't
00:52:40act
00:52:42near the Seine
00:52:44and his sons
00:52:44as
00:52:45if he didn't know them
00:52:49he never said anything
00:52:52when Fessal
00:52:54one day he told him
00:52:55but it seems
00:52:55that there are agreements
00:52:56he said no
00:52:57and now
00:53:01Alanby must say
00:53:02the truth in Fessal
00:53:03You know
00:53:03You are in Damascus
00:53:05but Damascus
00:53:05This is for the French
00:53:06and Lebanon
00:53:08Fessal's request
00:53:09the French
00:53:10will be in Lebanon
00:53:11but then
00:53:12what I was promised
00:53:13and Alanby surprised
00:53:15turns back to Lawrence
00:53:16he said
00:53:16but finally
00:53:17you hadn't spoken to him
00:53:18French citizens in Syria
00:53:19and Lawrence
00:53:20who says
00:53:21I don't know anything, sir.
00:53:22I knew nothing, sir.
00:53:24That's not true.
00:53:25but he cannot lose face
00:53:26vis-à-vis Fessal
00:53:28and Lebanon
00:53:29I don't know anything, sir.
00:53:30I knew nothing, sir.
00:53:31and Fessal
00:53:33who believed in Lawrence
00:53:35who believed in the English
00:53:37who no longer knows
00:53:37Who to believe?
00:53:38what to believe
00:53:39and Fessal
00:53:40who withdraws
00:53:41desperate
00:53:42and Lawrence
00:53:44exhausted
00:53:45he is so weak
00:53:46after this whole campaign
00:53:47that he now weighs only 33 kilos
00:53:49Lawrence
00:53:50exhausted
00:53:51which affects nervous depression
00:53:52in his final days
00:53:54said at that moment
00:53:55in Alanby
00:53:55Sir, I have the right
00:53:56I think it's a permit
00:53:57So I'm going to take it
00:53:58in England
00:53:59and he takes her
00:54:01and he leaves
00:54:01and in England
00:54:03he fights
00:54:03he fights
00:54:04so that we keep the promise
00:54:05And that's a big page.
00:54:07Lawrence's story
00:54:08everything that happens
00:54:09in the months
00:54:09from 1918
00:54:11we are at the end of the war
00:54:12and from 1919
00:54:13It is
00:54:13This is a battle of Lawrence
00:54:15who wants
00:54:15that the promise be kept
00:54:17to the Arabs
00:54:17who also wants
00:54:19that we drive out the French
00:54:20because he doesn't want it
00:54:21the French
00:54:22He hates the French.
00:54:23there are texts
00:54:24where he talks about the French
00:54:25as if from the enemy
00:54:26then he is called
00:54:30to the British council
00:54:31to the British Empire Council
00:54:33he will be
00:54:33at the peace conference
00:54:35and then he will call Fessal
00:54:36and how moving it is
00:54:38to see these two men
00:54:39the photo of these two men
00:54:40side by side
00:54:41Fessal
00:54:42who comes
00:54:42tell people
00:54:44of the peace conference
00:54:45but I was promised
00:54:46I raised my army
00:54:48because I had been promised
00:54:49and now
00:54:49What are you going to do?
00:54:50and next to him
00:54:51this officer
00:54:52this colonel
00:54:53Lawrence
00:54:54who always wears
00:54:55the hairstyle
00:54:56Arabs
00:54:58on his English uniform
00:54:59and who is here
00:55:01to advise
00:55:02to support him
00:55:03working with him
00:55:04and finally
00:55:06Fessal will get nothing
00:55:07then Lawrence
00:55:09enters into a sort
00:55:11anonymity
00:55:13Lawrence aspires rather
00:55:15to anonymity
00:55:16That's what he wants.
00:55:17that he is looking for
00:55:18and yet
00:55:19He has never been so famous
00:55:20He's all anyone talks about.
00:55:21in England
00:55:22there is an American journalist
00:55:24Thomas Lowell
00:55:25who everywhere
00:55:26gave lectures
00:55:27illustrated with photographs
00:55:29and crowds
00:55:30entire towns and cities
00:55:31will listen to this American journalist
00:55:33he sings the praises of Lawrence
00:55:34Lawrence of Arabia
00:55:35he even says things
00:55:36completely imaginary
00:55:37which shows Hussein
00:55:38made Lawrence of Arabia
00:55:39the prince of Mecca
00:55:41He speaks of the liberator of the Arabs
00:55:43He speaks of the fabulous epic
00:55:44in the desert
00:55:45And we come and we dream
00:55:46as we have
00:55:46we dreamed
00:55:47let's say it later
00:55:48at first
00:55:48upon seeing this first photograph
00:55:50and that's glory
00:55:53and the legend
00:55:54that never form
00:55:55Lawrence
00:55:56has never been so great
00:55:58and it's at the moment
00:56:00where it is also large
00:56:01that he no longer wants to be anything
00:56:02and we think of Porçaid
00:56:04and we think
00:56:05to attraction
00:56:07humiliation
00:56:07and yet
00:56:10Churchill
00:56:11who becomes minister
00:56:11of the British Empire
00:56:12calls on Lawrence
00:56:13call
00:56:14his advice
00:56:15ask him
00:56:16and Lawrence advises
00:56:19to establish a kingdom
00:56:21in Iraq
00:56:21to do that
00:56:22and we follow
00:56:23Lawrence's advice
00:56:24and he advises
00:56:25to attribute to Abdallah
00:56:26Transjordan
00:56:27and we follow
00:56:27Lawrence's advice
00:56:28And that's Lawrence.
00:56:29who returns to the Middle East
00:56:30to convince first
00:56:32these two men
00:56:32to accept
00:56:33and then enthrone them
00:56:34and finally get them to sign
00:56:36to old Hussein
00:56:37a treaty
00:56:37who recognizes
00:56:40its borders
00:56:42his new kingdoms
00:56:44and when he comes home
00:56:47he writes
00:56:50he writes
00:56:52the seven pillars
00:56:53wisdom
00:56:53this masterpiece
00:56:54and yet
00:56:57this book
00:56:57he will not publish
00:56:58during his lifetime
00:56:59except in edition
00:57:00numbered
00:57:00a few copies
00:57:02these copies
00:57:04They're flying off the shelves.
00:57:05they pay a premium
00:57:06we copy them
00:57:08we pass them around
00:57:08and Lawrence's glory
00:57:10increases again
00:57:11and now is the time
00:57:13that he chooses
00:57:14to commit
00:57:16in the RAF
00:57:17in the RAF
00:57:18Royal Air Force
00:57:20as second class
00:57:22under a supposed name
00:57:25the name Ross
00:57:26it was necessary
00:57:29obviously
00:57:30quantities
00:57:30recommendations
00:57:31because
00:57:32It's not easy
00:57:32to change your name
00:57:33And besides, he's too old.
00:57:34and then he is not
00:57:35healthy
00:57:36he would be refused
00:57:36so the minister needs
00:57:37intervene
00:57:38the general here
00:57:39all political personnel
00:57:40is interested
00:57:41to this little second class
00:57:43because he wants to
00:57:44of being lost
00:57:45in the RAF
00:57:46and he is lost
00:57:46And there he is in the room
00:57:48and nobody knows
00:57:49who he is
00:57:50he is happy
00:57:51because in this room
00:57:52no one knows anymore
00:57:53who he is
00:57:54there are people there
00:57:54particularly simple
00:57:56even very crude
00:57:57it's not the flower of the peas
00:57:59because it is weak
00:58:01Lawrence
00:58:01we tease him quite a bit
00:58:03He is not treated very well
00:58:04and then the non-commissioned officers
00:58:06they don't have it right
00:58:07so we insult him
00:58:08we yell at him
00:58:09he will write later
00:58:10what it was
00:58:11than life in the barracks
00:58:12to hire them
00:58:12at that time in England
00:58:13It wasn't very pleasant.
00:58:15It was even atrocious.
00:58:16but he likes it
00:58:18in this atrocity
00:58:19he likes it
00:58:21in chores
00:58:21cleaning
00:58:23sweeping
00:58:24peelings
00:58:25It's incredible
00:58:26he could ask for anything
00:58:28we would have given him everything
00:58:31the position
00:58:33the most important load
00:58:34the most important mission
00:58:37he is here
00:58:37second class
00:58:38in a barracks
00:58:39And why did he do that?
00:58:43he wonders
00:58:44and he confides in him
00:58:46to a friend
00:58:47at that time
00:58:48he thinks
00:58:49about the reasons
00:58:50of his action
00:58:50he wanted to serve
00:58:51the British Empire
00:58:52Of course
00:58:53he sought glory
00:58:55Of course
00:58:56it was an intellectual curiosity
00:58:58Of course
00:58:59but there was something else
00:59:00and that's the first reason
00:59:01and he admits it
00:59:02I loved it deeply
00:59:05an Arab person
00:59:07so I found
00:59:09that would be a lovely gift
00:59:12to make him
00:59:12that Arab freedom
00:59:14Who is this Arab person?
00:59:18amazed by Arab art
00:59:19it's neutral
00:59:20I don't know if it's a man
00:59:21She is a woman
00:59:22but there was never a woman
00:59:24in Lawrence's life
00:59:25when he was a student
00:59:26his friends
00:59:27they have never known a woman
00:59:28when he was a soldier
00:59:29his classmates
00:59:30they have never known a woman
00:59:32He has never been on any road trips.
00:59:33So we talked a lot
00:59:36of this love
00:59:39Lawrence
00:59:40And now we know who it is.
00:59:42it was
00:59:44Daoum
00:59:45yes
00:59:47little Agnes
00:59:49Daoum
00:59:51whose name was Selim Ahmed
00:59:53in reality
00:59:54and the seven pillars of wisdom
00:59:56are dedicated to S.A.
00:59:57Daoum was hired
01:00:01in the Arab revolt
01:00:02by Lawrence
01:00:03and Daoum is dead
01:00:04before Damascus
01:00:06and we know that
01:00:09when Daoum died
01:00:10It was utter despair.
01:00:11now is the time
01:00:12where exactly
01:00:12he is dealing with this depression
01:00:13nervous system I was talking about
01:00:15and he said
01:00:15He cried, saying
01:00:16I loved that boy
01:00:17And
01:00:20now that he's in the army
01:00:22there is another boy
01:00:23a young man
01:00:26whose name is Bruce
01:00:27very simple
01:00:29very frustrated
01:00:30who respects
01:00:33who respects
01:00:35Lawrence
01:00:37who admires him
01:00:38and we also know
01:00:40that some days
01:00:41in a small cottage
01:00:43which was located not far
01:00:44of the barracks
01:00:45well
01:00:46Bruce
01:00:47flagellated
01:00:49Lawrence
01:00:50at length
01:00:52until his back
01:00:54to be nothing more than a bloody wound
01:00:56Why
01:00:59What did he want to punish himself for?
01:01:03Is this about the death of Daoum?
01:01:05is it rather
01:01:08this requirement
01:01:09did not dive
01:01:10his reasons
01:01:12in the deepest
01:01:13of his being
01:01:13to these dark regions
01:01:16that
01:01:17no one will ever know
01:01:19who knows
01:01:21then after
01:01:24the Royal Air Force
01:01:25he will
01:01:25stay in time
01:01:27that he will change his name
01:01:28His name is Shaw
01:01:28perhaps out of respect
01:01:30for George Bernard Shaw
01:01:32because during
01:01:32that there is so little of Shaw
01:01:34well it matches
01:01:35with George Bernard Shaw
01:01:36with his wife
01:01:37Charlotte
01:01:37with a lot of people
01:01:38with Lady Astor
01:01:39with Churchill
01:01:41but nobody knows
01:01:43he is humble
01:01:44he is lost
01:01:45his only joy
01:01:46to a motorcycle
01:01:47he rides a motorcycle
01:01:49when he can
01:01:50He's speeding along.
01:01:51on English roads
01:01:53and then
01:01:56after the times
01:01:59that he return
01:02:00in the Royal Air Force
01:02:01It lasts 11 years
01:02:03think about what it is
01:02:06that 11 years
01:02:06humility
01:02:07voluntary
01:02:09in this life
01:02:11in 1935
01:02:14maybe
01:02:15has he finally found
01:02:16peace with himself
01:02:17towards what he aspires
01:02:20because he leaves
01:02:22the army
01:02:23Finally
01:02:24and he joins
01:02:27his little cottage
01:02:28Claude Hills
01:02:30near the barracks
01:02:32and there
01:02:3710 weeks
01:02:38after his release
01:02:39he takes his motorcycle
01:02:45to go and wear
01:02:46a telegram
01:02:47in the village
01:02:47He is a writer
01:02:50named Williamson
01:02:51who wrote to him
01:02:52Williamson is an admirer
01:02:56Hitler
01:02:56Hitler has since
01:02:57two years in power
01:02:58and Williamson dreams
01:03:00to a dictatorship
01:03:01in England
01:03:04and he thinks of Lawrence
01:03:05Lawrence's glory
01:03:08Lawrence's past
01:03:09why not
01:03:10and he prepares
01:03:13an interview
01:03:13Lawrence Hitler
01:03:14and he wants to talk about it
01:03:17to Lawrence
01:03:17and curious thing
01:03:21Lawrence
01:03:21just posted to him
01:03:23a telegram
01:03:24to tell him
01:03:24All right
01:03:25come
01:03:25it's necessary
01:03:28remember
01:03:30to Hogarth
01:03:31remember
01:03:33and his contempt
01:03:36of democracy
01:03:37and he returns
01:03:40NOW
01:03:40on his motorcycle
01:03:40all the way to his home
01:03:41there are
01:03:44bumps
01:03:45on the road
01:03:46he drives fast
01:03:48then at the summit
01:03:50of a hump
01:03:50suddenly
01:03:51two bicycles
01:03:52then he
01:03:55brakes
01:03:56he
01:03:57try to avoid them
01:03:59He's going off the rails.
01:04:00his motorcycle
01:04:01falls to the ground
01:04:02he is thrown
01:04:03on the asphalt
01:04:04his skull
01:04:04hits the ground
01:04:05skull fracture
01:04:07double
01:04:08he is
01:04:11dead
01:04:12six days after
01:04:13he will be
01:04:15buried
01:04:16In
01:04:19a little
01:04:20graveyard
01:04:21anonymous
01:04:24very close to there
01:04:29and there
01:04:31if we
01:04:31we will see
01:04:33the soldiers
01:04:35of the camp
01:04:36former comrades
01:04:37Ross
01:04:38and Shaw
01:04:38completely astonished
01:04:39come and attend
01:04:40at the funeral
01:04:41we will also see
01:04:41the greatest personalities
01:04:43British
01:04:43Churchill
01:04:45will be there
01:04:46Lady Astor
01:04:47Lionel Curtis
01:04:48Lord Lloyd
01:04:52the king
01:04:54the king will send
01:04:54a message
01:04:55your brother's name
01:04:57a message
01:04:58At
01:04:58to the professor
01:05:00Lawrence
01:05:01Lawrence's brother
01:05:02your brother's name
01:05:03will remain
01:05:04in history
01:05:05So who is
01:05:09Lawrence
01:05:10I don't know
01:05:13And you
01:05:15to whom I have
01:05:18terminal
01:05:19to give
01:05:19milestones
01:05:20Do you know?
01:05:23and himself
01:05:25Thomas Edward Lawrence
01:05:29Lawrence of Arabia
01:05:32himself
01:05:35did he know
01:05:35who he was
01:05:37and himself
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