The Life of My ChoiceWilfred Thesiger is the last of the great British eccentric explorers, a legendary figure, renowned for his travels through some of the most inaccessible places on earth. As a child in Abyssinia he watched the victorious armies of Ras Tafari returning from hand-to-hand battle, their prisoners in chains; at the age of twenty-three he made his first expedition into the country of the Danakil, a murderous race among whom a man's status in the tribe depended on the number of men he had killed and castrated. His widely acclaimed books, 'Arabian Sands' and 'The Marsh Arabs' tell of his two famous sojourns in the Empty Quarter and the Marshes of southern Iraq. But Thesiger's true character and motives have until now remained an enigma. In this, his autobiography, he highlights the people who most profoundly influenced him and the events which enabled him to lead the life of his choice. "One of the very few people who in our time could be put on the pedestal of the great explorers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries." "A treasure galleon built to the same specifications as 'Arabian Sands' and 'The Marsh Arabs' ... it is the record of a man magnificently and unabashedly out of step with his times." "He is, unquestionably, one of the greatest travellers the British have ever produced, the last of our recognizable primitives. He also writes with much distinction and honesty." |
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... Wingate's eyes : certainly Wingate emerged from this encounter dedicated to the liberation and inde- pendence of Abyssinia . Wingate took me round various offices at Headquarters . As he shambled from one to another , in his creased ...
... Wingate paid no attention . He strode past , selected a revolver which he intended to give to someone , and walked out . Shortly after this Wingate was ordered to report to Cunningham at his headquarters in Harar . The general was ...
... Wingate's conviction that we were going to let down the Abyssi- nians affords an interesting analogy with Lawrence and the Arabs . Lawrence's apprehension was justified ; Wingate's was not , as he could have discovered by making a few ...
Contents
List of Maps | 7 |
Introduction | 15 |
Arrival in Addis Ababa | 23 |
Copyright | |
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