First trade edition, first impression, number 314 of 750 copies from the limited issue, this copy presented in a fine binding by Shepherds. This limited issue has four plates in colour which were printed in monochrome in the standard, and includes three additional plates, facsimiles from earlier manuscript or printed versions of the work. "Lawrence had taken part in the preliminary planning of the Arab uprising and, in October 1916, was ordered to Jiddah to assess the military situation. What followed is recorded in Seven Pillars of Wisdom, a personal, emotional narrative of the Arab Revolt in which Lawrence reveals how by sheer willpower he made history. It was a testimony to his vision and persistence and a fulfilment of his desire to write an epic which might stand comparison in scale and linguistic elegance with his beloved Morte d'Arthur and C. M. Doughty's Arabia Deserta. Subtitled 'A triumph', its climax is the Arab liberation of Damascus, a victory which successfully concludes a gruelling campaign and vindicates Lawrence's faith in the Arabs" (ODNB). This trade edition follows the unprocurable Oxford Times edition of 1922, of which there were just eight copies printed, and the 1926 Cranwell edition, of which only 170 copies were designated complete for subscribers. An abridged edition, Revolt in the Desert, was published in 1927. O'Brien A041. Quarto (250 x 188 mm). Finely bound in contemporary blue morocco by Shepherds of London, spine lettered and decorated in gilt, interlocking rectangular and diamond frames on covers in gilt, board edges and doublures ruled in gilt, blue moir� silk endpapers, top edge gilt, other edges uncut. Photogravure portrait frontispiece of Lawrence from the plaster bust, 47 plates (4 colour), 3 facsimiles, 4 folding maps, and several in-text line drawings; the majority by Eric Kennington. Spine sunned to green, foxing on edges not affecting clean contents: a near-fine copy.