Shakir
[tr ed p 198], pastel, Kennington
'Shakir' typeset brc. Main colours: reds in head-dress and lips, browns in face, brown, white and grey in robes, background orange/yellow.
pp 195/6 [tr ed p 214] - 'The outstanding figure of Abdulla's entourage was Sherif Shakir, a man of twenty-nine, and companion since boyhood of the four Emirs. His mother was Circassian, as had been his grandmother. From them he obtained his fair complexion; but the flesh of his face was torn away by smallpox. From its white ruin two restless eyes looked out, very bright and big; for the faintness of his eyelashes and eyebrows made his stare directly disconcerting. His figure was tall, slim, almost boyish from the continual athletic activity of the man. His sharp, decided, but pleasant voice frayed out if he shouted. His manner while delightfully frank, was abrupt, indeed imperious; with a humour as cracked as his cackling laugh.'
The order in which the illustrations are bound into the back of the book varies between copies to a limited extent. Copies certified as incomplete have less than the full set of illustrations in this section.