
Yet at the optimistic opening of the conference, the urbane Faysal was in rare form. James T. Shotwell, one of the American experts (a well-connected Columbia University historian), later described the dinner. In his conference journal, he recorded the following impressions of the great Arab statesman: "His face was one of the most attractive I have ever seen, beautifully shaped, with clear, dark eyes that struck us all as being those of a man who, although he has been facing constant danger for many years, retains an irresistible sense of humor. He carries a golden dagger in his girdle, which is woven of gold thread, and when someone remarked on it said that the Parisians said he was only half civilized because he carried a dagger--but their officers carry swords! This descendant of Mohammed was cracking jokes all evening, even in the midst of his most serious argument for the Arab cause. When he was asked what his right title was, he said that the Western Powers were imagining that they had conferred a favor on his father by calling him king; but his father was only amazed at their impertinence, seeing that a man who was the descendant of the Prophet and Sherif of Mecca bore so proud a title that it could not matter to him whether men called him, in addition, King, Emperor, President, or Donkey. His ancestors had been Sherifs of Mecca for 900 years, and no other title in the world compared in splendor." (See Shotwell, At The Paris Peace Conference)
(In the photo of Faysal and his entourage at the Conference, T. E. Lawrence is seen to the immediate right of Faysal.)
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