:48:02
	Then you must deny it to them.
:48:04
	You are an Englishman.
Are you not Ioyal to England?
:48:08
	To England and to other things.
:48:11
	To England and Arabia both?
:48:14
	And is that possible?
:48:22
	I think you are another of these
desert-Ioving English.
:48:26
	Doughty, Stanhope...
:48:29
	...Gordon of Khartoum.
:48:31
	No Arab loves the desert.
:48:34
	We love water and green trees.
There is nothing in the desert.
:48:39
	And no man needs nothing.
:48:45
	Or is it that you think we are
something you can play with...
:48:49
	...because we are a little people,
a silly people...
:48:52
	...greedy, barbarous and cruel?
:48:57
	Or do you know, lieutenant,
in the Arab city of Cordoba...
:49:00
	...were two miles of lighting
in the streets...
:49:03
	...when London was a village.
:49:04
	Yes, you were great.
:49:07
	Nine centuries ago.
:49:10
	Time to be great again, my lord.
:49:12
	Which is why my father made this war
upon the Turks.
:49:15
	My father, Mr. Lawrence,
not the English.
:49:20
	But my father is old...
:49:23
	...and I...
:49:26
	...I long for the vanished
gardens of Cordoba.
:49:32
	However, before the gardens
must come the fighting.
:49:36
	To be great again, it seems that we
need the English...
:49:40
	...or....
:49:41
	Or?
:49:43
	What no man can provide, Mr. Lawrence.
:49:47
	We need a miracle.