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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Diary Without Dates, by Enid Bagnold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Diary Without Dates
+
+Author: Enid Bagnold
+
+Release Date: January 30, 2010 [EBook #31124]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A DIARY WITHOUT DATES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Martin Pettit and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A DIARY WITHOUT DATES
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOLDIERS' TALES OF THE GREAT WAR
+
+ MY '75. From the French of PAUL LINTIER. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ ON TWO FRONTS. By Major H. M. ALEXANDER, D.S.O. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ NURSING ADVENTURES. (ANON.) Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ FORCED TO FIGHT. By ERICH ERICHSEN. 2s. 6d. net.
+
+ IN GERMAN HANDS. By CHARLES HENNEBOIS. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ "CONTEMPTIBLE." By "CASUALTY." 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ ON THE ANZAC TRAIL. By "ANZAC." 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ UNCENSORED LETTERS FROM THE DARDANELLES. Notes of a French Army
+ Doctor. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ PRISONER OF WAR. By ANDRÉ WARNOD. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ IN THE FIELD (1914-15). The Impressions of an Officer of Light
+ Cavalry. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ DIXMUDE. A Chapter in the History of the Naval Brigade, Oct.-Nov.
+ 1914. By CHARLES LE GOFFIC. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ WITH MY REGIMENT. By "PLATOON COMMANDER." 3s. 6d. net.
+
+
+LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME
+
+THE LOVERS
+
+BY ELIZABETH ROBINS PENNELL
+
+"It is one of the most charming little books among the many that owe
+their genesis to the war. The letters might be described as a lyric of
+married love; and their beauty and passion are enhanced by the exquisite
+setting which Mrs. Pennell has given them."--_Yorkshire Post._
+
+
+LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN
+
+
+
+
+A DIARY WITHOUT DATES
+
+BY
+
+ENID BAGNOLD
+
+[Illustration: Logo]
+
+LONDON
+
+WILLIAM HEINEMANN
+
+
+_First printed January 1918_
+
+_Second Impression February 1918_
+
+
+_London: William Heinemann, 1918_
+
+
+ TO
+ THAT FRIEND OF MINE
+ WHO, WHEN I WROTE HIM
+ ENDLESS LETTERS,
+ SAID COLDLY,
+ "WHY NOT KEEP SOMETHING
+ FOR YOURSELF!"
+
+
+_I apologize to those whom I may hurt._
+
+_Can I soothe them by pleading that one may only write what is true for
+oneself?_
+
+_E. B._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I
+
+OUTSIDE THE GLASS DOORS
+
+ II
+
+INSIDE THE GLASS DOORS
+
+ III
+
+"THE BOYS ..."
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+OUTSIDE THE GLASS DOORS
+
+
+I like discipline. I like to be part of an institution. It gives one
+more liberty than is possible among three or four observant friends.
+
+
+It is always cool and wonderful after the monotone of the dim hospital,
+its half-lit corridors stretching as far as one can see, to come out
+into the dazzling starlight and climb the hill, up into the trees and
+shrubberies here.
+
+The wind was terrible to-night. I had to battle up, and the leaves were
+driven down the hill so fast that once I thought it was a motor-bicycle.
+
+Madeleine's garden next door is all deserted now: they have gone up to
+London. The green asphalt tennis-court is shining with rain, the blue
+pond brown with slime; the little statues and bowls are lying on their
+sides to keep the wind from putting them forcibly there; and all over
+the house are white draperies and ghost chairs.
+
+When I walk in the garden I feel like a ghost left over from the summer
+too.
+
+
+I became aware to-night of one face detaching itself from the rest. It
+is not a more pleasing face than the others, but it is becoming
+conspicuous to me.
+
+Twice a week, when there is a concert in the big hall, the officers and
+the V.A.D.'s are divided, by some unspoken rule--the officers sitting at
+one side of the room, the V.A.D.'s in a white row on the other.
+
+When my eyes rest for a moment on the motley of dressing-gowns,
+mackintoshes, uniforms, I inevitably see in the line one face set on a
+slant, one pair of eyes forsaking the stage and fixed on me in a steady,
+inoffensive beam.
+
+This irritates me. The very lack of offence irritates me. But one grows
+to look for everything.
+
+Afterwards in the dining-room during Mess he will ask politely: "What
+did you think of the concert, Sister? Good show...."
+
+How wonderful to be called Sister! Every time the uncommon name is used
+towards me I feel the glow of an implied relationship, something which
+links me to the speaker.
+
+My Sister remarked: "If it's only a matter of that, we can provide
+thrills for you here very easily."
+
+The name of my ... admirer ... is, after all, Pettitt. The other nurse
+in the Mess, who is very grand and insists on pronouncing his name in
+the French way, says he is "of humble origin."
+
+He seems to have no relations and no visitors.
+
+
+Out in the corridor I meditate on love.
+
+Laying trays soothes the activity of the body, and the mind works
+softly.
+
+I meditate on love. I say to myself that Mr. Pettitt is to be envied. I
+am still the wonder of the unknown to him: I exist, walk, talk, every
+day beneath the beam of his eye, impenetrable.
+
+He fell down again yesterday, and his foot won't heal. He has time
+before him.
+
+
+But in a hospital one has never time, one is never sure. He has perhaps
+been here long enough to learn that--to feel the insecurity, the
+impermanency.
+
+At any moment he may be forced to disappear into the secondary stage of
+convalescent homes.
+
+Yes, the impermanency of life in a hospital! An everlasting dislocation
+of combinations.
+
+Like nuns, one must learn to do with no nearer friend than God.
+
+Bolts, in the shape of sudden, whimsical orders, are flung by an
+Almighty whom one does not see.
+
+The Sister who is over me, the only Sister who can laugh at things other
+than jokes, is going in the first week of next month. Why? Where? She
+doesn't know, but only smiles at my impatience. She knows life--hospital
+life.
+
+It unsettles me as I lay my spoons and forks. Sixty-five trays. It takes
+an hour to do. Thirteen pieces on each tray. Thirteen times sixty-five
+... eight hundred and forty-five things to collect, lay, square up
+symmetrically. I make little absurd reflections and arrangements--taking
+a dislike to the knives because they will not lie still on the polished
+metal of the tray, but pivot on their shafts, and swing out at angles
+after my fingers have left them.
+
+I love the long, the dim and lonely, corridor; the light centred in the
+gleam of the trays, salt-cellars, yellow butters, cylinders of glass....
+
+Impermanency.... I don't wonder the Sisters grow so secret, so uneager.
+How often stifled! How often torn apart!
+
+It's heaven to me to be one of such a number of faces.
+
+To see them pass into Mess like ghosts--gentleman, tinker, and tailor;
+each having shuffled home from death; each having known his life rock on
+its base ... not talking much--for what is there to say?--not laughing
+much for they have been here too long--is a nightly pleasure to me.
+
+Creatures of habit! All the coloured dressing-gowns range themselves
+round the two long tables--this man in this seat, that man by the
+gas-fire; this man with his wheel-chair drawn up at the end, that man at
+the corner where no one will jostle his arm.
+
+Curious how these officers leave the hospital, so silently.
+Disappearances.... One face after another slips out of the picture, the
+unknown heart behind the face fixed intently on some other centre of
+life.
+
+I went into a soldiers' ward to-night to inquire about a man who has
+pneumonia.
+
+Round his bed there stood three red screens, and the busy, white-capped
+heads of two Sisters bobbed above the rampart.
+
+It suddenly shocked me. What were they doing there? Why the screens? Why
+the look of strain in the eyes of the man in the next bed who could see
+behind the screens?
+
+I went cold and stood rooted, waiting till one of them could come out
+and speak to me.
+
+Soon they took away the screen nearest to me; they had done with it.
+
+The man I was to inquire for has no nostrils; they were blown away, and
+he breathes through two pieces of red rubber tubing: it gave a more
+horrible look to his face than I have ever seen.
+
+The Sister came out and told me she thought he was "not up to much." I
+think she means he is dying.
+
+I wonder if he thinks it better to die.... But he was nearly well before
+he got pneumonia, had begun to take up the little habits of living. He
+had been out to tea.
+
+Inexplicable, what he thinks of, lying behind the screen.
+
+
+To-night I was laying my trays in the corridor, the dim corridor that I
+am likely often to mention--the occasional blue gas-lamps hanging at
+intervals down the roof in a dwindling perspective.
+
+The only unshaded light in the corridor hangs above my head, making the
+cutlery gleam in my hands.
+
+The swish-swish of a lame foot approached down the stone tiling with the
+tapping, soft and dull, of a rubber-tipped walking-stick.
+
+He paused by the pillar, as I knew he would, and I busied myself with an
+added rush and hurry, an added irritating noise of spoons flung down.
+
+He waited patiently, shyly. I didn't look up, but I knew his face was
+half smiling and suppliant.
+
+"We shall miss you," he said.
+
+"But I shall be back in a week!"
+
+"We shall miss you ... laying the trays out here."
+
+"Everything passes," I said gaily.
+
+He whistled a little and balanced himself against his stick.
+
+"You are like me, Sister," he said earnestly; and I saw that he took me
+for a philosopher.
+
+He shuffled on almost beyond the circle of light, paused while my lips
+moved in a vague smile of response, then moved on into the shadow. The
+low, deep quiet of the corridor resumed its hold on me. The patter of
+reflection in my brain proceeded undisturbed.
+
+"You are like me!" The deepest flattery one creature pays its fellow ...
+the cry which is uttered when another enters "our country."
+
+
+Far down the corridor a slim figure in white approaches, dwarfed by the
+smoky distance; her nun-like cap floating, her scarlet cape, the "cape
+of pride," slipped round her narrow shoulders.
+
+How intent and silent They are!
+
+I watched this one pass with a look half-reverence, half-envy. One
+should never aspire to know a Sister intimately. They are disappointing
+people; without candour, without imagination. Yet what a look of
+personality hangs about them....
+
+
+To-night ... Mr. Pettitt: "Sister!"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Pettitt."
+
+"Do you ever go to theatres? Do you like them?"
+
+At the risk of appearing unnatural, I said, "Not much."
+
+"Oh ... I thought.... H'm, that's a pity. Don't you like revues?"
+
+"Oh, yes...."
+
+"I thought you'd take me to a _matinée_ one afternoon."
+
+"Oh, charming! I can't get leave in the afternoons, though."
+
+"You often have a day off."
+
+"Yes, but it's too soon to ask for another."
+
+"Well, how about Wednesday, then?"
+
+"Too soon. Think of the new Sister, and her opinion of me! That has yet
+to be won."
+
+"Well, let me know, anyway...."
+
+(Staved off!)
+
+
+The new Sister is coming quite soon: she has a medal.
+
+Now that I know _my_ Sister must go I don't talk to her much; I almost
+avoid her. That's true hospital philosophy.
+
+
+I must put down the beauty of the night and the woman's laugh in the
+shadowy hedge....
+
+I walked up from the hospital late to-night, half-past eight, and hungry
+... in the cold, brilliant moonlight; a fine moon, very low, throwing
+long, pointed shadows across the road from the trees and hedges.
+
+As one climbs up there is a wood on the right, the remains of the old
+wooded hill; sparse trees, very tall; and to-night a star between every
+branch, and a fierce moon beating down on the mud and grass.
+
+I had on my white cap and long blue coat, very visible. The moon swept
+the road from side to side: lovers, acting as though it were night, were
+lit as though it was day.
+
+I turned into the wood to take a message to a house set back from the
+road, and the moonlight and the night vapour rising from the marshy
+ground were all tangled together so that I could hardly see hedge from
+field or path.
+
+I saw a lit cigarette-end, and a woman's laugh came across the field as
+naturally as if a sheep had bleated in the swampy grass. It struck me
+that the dark countryside was built to surround and hide a laugh like
+hers--the laugh of a lover, animal and protesting.
+
+I saw the glowing end of the cigarette dance in a curve and fall to the
+ground, and she laughed again more faintly.
+
+Walking on in the middle of the moonlight, I reached the gate I was
+looking for, ran up the pebbly drive to the dining-room window, gave my
+message, and returned.
+
+I slipped my cap off my hair and pushed it into my pocket, keeping under
+the shadow of the hedge and into the quiet field.
+
+They were whispering: "Do you?" "I do...." "Are you?" "I am...."
+crushed into the set branches of the hedge.
+
+
+The Mess went vilely to-night. Sister adds up on her fingers, and that's
+fatal, so all the numbers were out, and the _chef_ sent in forty-five
+meats instead of fifty-one. I blushed with horror and responsibility,
+standing there watching six hungry men pretending to be philosophers.
+
+The sergeant wolfed the cheese too. He got it out from under my very
+eyes while I was clearing the tables and ate it, standing up to it in
+the pantry with his back to me when I went in to fetch a tray.
+
+Whenever I see that broad khaki back, the knickered legs astride, the
+flexed elbow-tips, I know that his digestion is laying up more trouble
+for him.
+
+Benks, the Mess orderly, overeats himself too. He comes to the bunk and
+thrusts his little smile round the door: "Sister, I got another of them
+sick 'eadaches," very cheerfully, as though he had got something worth
+having. She actually retorted, "Benks, you eat too much!" one day, but
+he only swung on one leg and smiled more cheerfully than ever.
+
+The new Sister has come. That should mean a lot. What about one's
+habits of life...?
+
+The new Sister has come, and at present she is absolutely without
+personality, beyond her medal. She appears to be deaf.
+
+I went along to-night to see and ask after the man who has his nose
+blown off.
+
+After the long walk down the corridor in almost total darkness, the
+vapour of the rain floating through every open door and window, the
+sudden brilliancy of the ward was like a haven.
+
+The man lay on my right on entering--the screen removed from him.
+
+Far up the ward the Sister was working by a bed. Ryan, the man with his
+nose gone, was lying high on five or six pillows, slung in his position
+by tapes and webbing passed under his arms and attached to the bedposts.
+He lay with his profile to me--only he has no profile, as we know a
+man's. Like an ape, he has only his bumpy forehead and his protruding
+lips--the nose, the left eye, gone.
+
+He was breathing heavily. They don't know yet whether he will live.
+
+When a man dies they fetch him with a stretcher, just as he came in;
+only he enters with a blanket over him, and a flag covers him as he
+goes out. When he came in he was one of a convoy, but every man who can
+stand rises to his feet as he goes out. Then they play him to his
+funeral, to a grass mound at the back of the hospital.
+
+
+It takes all sorts to make a hospital.
+
+For instance, the Visitors....
+
+There is the lady who comes in to tea and wants to be introduced to
+every one as though it was a school-treat.
+
+She jokes about the cake, its scarcity or its quantity, and makes a lot
+of "fun" about two lumps of sugar.
+
+When she is at her best the table assumes a perfect and listening
+silence--not the silence of the critic, but the silence of the absorbed
+child treasuring every item of talk for future use. After she goes the
+joy of her will last them all the evening.
+
+There is the lady who comes in to tea and, sitting down at the only
+unlaid table, cries, "Nurse! I have no knife or plate or cup; and I
+prefer a glass of boiling water to tea. And would you mind sewing this
+button on my glove?"
+
+There is the lady who comes in and asks the table at large: "I wonder if
+any one knows General Biggens? I once met him...."
+
+Or: "You've been in Gallipoli? Did you run across my young cousin, a
+lieutenant in the...? Well, he was only there two days or so, I
+suppose...." exactly as though she was talking about Cairo in the
+season.
+
+To-day there was the Limit.
+
+She sat two paces away from where I sit to pour out tea. Her face was
+kind, but inquisitive, with that brown liver-look round the eyes and a
+large rakish hat. She comes often, having heard of him through the
+_padre_, to see a Canadian whom she doesn't know and who doesn't want to
+see her.
+
+From two places away I heard her voice piping up: "Nurse, excuse my
+asking, but is your cap a regulation one, like all the others?"
+
+I looked up, and all the tea I was pouring poured over the edge. Mr.
+Pettitt and Captain Matthew, between us, looked down at their plates.
+
+I put my hand to my cap. "Is anything wrong? It ought to be like the
+others."
+
+She leant towards me, nodding and smiling with bonhomie, and said
+flatteringly, "It's so prettily put on, I thought it was different."
+
+And then (horror): "Don't you think nurse puts her cap on well?" she
+asked Captain Matthew, who, looking harder than ever at his plate and
+reddening to the ears, mumbled something which did not particularly
+commit him since it couldn't be heard.
+
+The usual delighted silence began to creep round the table, and I tried
+wildly to divert her attention before our end became a stage and the
+rest of the table an audience.
+
+"I think it's so nice to see you sitting down with them all," she cooed;
+"it's so cosy for them."
+
+"Is your cup empty?" I said furiously, and held out my hand for it. But
+it wasn't, of course; she couldn't even do that for me.
+
+She shook hands with me when she went away and said she hoped to come
+again. And she will.
+
+There was once a lady who asked me very loudly whether I "saw many
+horrible sights," and "did the V.A.D.'s have to go to the funerals?"
+
+And another who cried out with emotion when she saw the first officer
+limp in to Mess, "And can some of them _walk_, then!" Perhaps she
+thought they came in to tea on stretchers, with field-bandages on. She
+quivered all over, too, as she looked from one to the other, and I feel
+sure she went home and broke down, crying, "What an experience ... the
+actual wounds!"
+
+
+Shuffle, shuffle, up the corridor to-night, as I was laying my trays.
+Captain Matthew appeared in the circle of light, his arm and hand bound
+up and his pipe in his mouth.
+
+He paused by me. "Well...." he said companionably, and lolled against a
+pillar.
+
+"You've done well at tea in the way of visitors," I remarked. "Six,
+wasn't it?"
+
+"Yes," he said, "and now I've got rid of 'em all, except one."
+
+"Where's the one?"
+
+"In there." He pointed with his pipe to the empty Mess-Room. "He's the
+father of a subaltern of mine who was killed."
+
+"He's come to talk to you about it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+But he seemed in no hurry to go in, waiting against the pillar and
+staring at the moving cutlery.
+
+He waited almost three minutes, then he sighed and went in.
+
+
+Biscuits to put out, cheese to put out. How wet this new cheese is, and
+fresh and good the little bits that fall off the edge! I never eat
+cheese at home, but here the breakings are like manna.
+
+And pears, with the old shopman's trick, little, bitten ones at the
+bottom, fine ones at the top. Soft sugar, lump sugar, coffee. As one
+stirs the coffee round in the tin the whole room smells of it, that
+brown, burnt smell.
+
+And then to click the light on, let down the blind, stir the fire, close
+the door of the little bunk, and, looking round it, think what
+exhilaration of liberty I have here.
+
+Let them pile on the rules, invent and insist; yet behind them, beneath
+them, I have that strong, secret liberty of an institution that runs
+like a wind in me and lifts my mind like a leaf.
+
+So long as I conform absolutely, not a soul will glance at my
+thoughts--few at my face. I have only to be silent and conform, and I
+might be in so far a land that even the eye of God had lost me.
+
+I took the plate of biscuits, the two plates of cheese, one in each hand
+and one balanced with a new skill on my arm, and carried them into the
+dining-room, where the tables were already laid and only one light kept
+on as yet for economy's sake.
+
+Low voices.... There in the dimmest corner sat Captain Matthew, his
+chin dug deep in his grey dressing-gown, and beside him a little elderly
+man, his hat on his knees, his anxious, ordinary face turned towards the
+light.
+
+A citizen ... a baker or a brewer, tinker, tailor, or
+candlestick-maker...?
+
+There had been the buying of the uniform, the visits to the camp in
+England, the parcels to send out--always the parcels--week by week. And
+now nothing; no more parcels, no more letters, silence.
+
+Only the last hungry pickings from Captain Matthew's tired memory and
+nervous speech.
+
+I turned away with a great shrinking.
+
+In a very few minutes the citizen went past my bunk door, his hat in his
+hand, his black coat buttoned; taking back to his home and his family
+the last facts that he might ever learn.
+
+At the end of the passage he almost collided with that stretcher which
+bears a flag.
+
+Of the two, the stretcher moved me least.
+
+
+_My_ Sister is afraid of death. She told me so. And not the less afraid,
+she said, after all she has seen of it. That is terrible.
+
+But the new Sister is afraid of life. She is shorter-sighted.
+
+The rain has been pouring all day.
+
+To-night it has stopped, and all the hill is steam and drizzle and black
+with the blackness that war has thrust upon the countryside.
+
+_My_ Sister has gone.
+
+Two nights ago I went up to a dinner at Madeleine's and to stay the
+night. My Sister said, "Go and enjoy yourself!" And I did. It is very
+amusing, the change into rooms full of talk and light; I feel a glow of
+pleasure as I climb to the room Madeleine calls mine and find the
+reflection of the fire on the blue wall-paper.
+
+The evening wasn't remarkable, but I came back full of descriptions to
+the bunk and Sister next day.
+
+I was running on, inventing this and that, making her laugh, when
+suddenly I looked up, and she had tears in her eyes.
+
+I wavered and came to a stop. She got up suddenly and moved about the
+room, and then with a muttered "Wash my hands," disappeared into the
+corridor.
+
+I sat and thought: "Is it that she has her life settled, quietly
+continuous, and one breaks in...? Does the wind from outside hurt?"
+
+I regretted it all the evening.
+
+Yesterday I arrived at the hospital and couldn't find the
+store-cupboard keys, then ran across to her room and tapped at the door.
+Her voice called "Come in!" and I found her huddled in an arm-chair,
+unnerved and white. I asked her for the keys, and when she gave them to
+me she held out her hand and said: "I'm going away to-morrow. They are
+sending me home; they say I'm ill."
+
+I muttered something with a feeling of shock, and going back to my bunk
+I brooded.
+
+The new Sister came in, and a new V.A.D. too, explaining that my former
+companion was now going into a ward.
+
+A sense of desolation was in the air, a ruthlessness on the part of some
+one unknown. "Shuffle, shuffle ... they shuffle us like cards!"
+
+I rose and began to teach the new V.A.D. the subtle art of laying trays.
+She seemed stupid.
+
+I didn't want to share my trays with her. I love them; they are my
+recreation. I hung over them idly, hardly laying down the spoons I held
+in my hand, but, standing with them, chivied the new V.A.D. until her
+movements became flustered and her eye distraught.
+
+She was very ugly. I thought: "In a day or two I shall get to like her,
+and then I shan't be able to chivy her."
+
+Out in the corridor came a tremendous tramping, boots and jingling
+metal. Two armed men with fixed bayonets arrived, headed by a sergeant.
+The sergeant paused and looked uncertainly this way and that, and then
+at me.
+
+I guessed their destination. "In there," I nodded, pointing through a
+closed glass door, and the sergeant marched his men in and beyond the
+door.
+
+An officer had been brought back under arrest; I had seen him pass with
+his escort. The rumour at tea had been that he had extended his two
+days' leave into three weeks.
+
+The V.A.D. looked at me questioningly but she didn't dare, and I
+couldn't bear, to start any elucidations on the subject.
+
+I couldn't think; she worried me. Her odds and ends of conversation
+pecked at me like a small bird. She told me a riddle which filled me
+with nausea, and finally a limerick which I had heard three times in the
+Mess.
+
+I left her and went into the bunk.
+
+Here the new Sister had installed herself, gentle and pink and full of
+quiet murmurs.
+
+The rain, half snow, half sleet, dabbled against the window-pane, and I
+lifted the blind to watch the flakes stick and melt on the glass.
+
+The V.A.D., her trays finished, appeared in the doorway. The little room
+seemed full of people.
+
+"There's a concert," I said, looking at the V.A.D. with distaste.
+
+She looked at me uncertainly: "Aren't you coming?"
+
+"No," I said, "I've a note to write," forgetting that the new Sister
+might not allow such infringements. She gave no sign.
+
+The V.A.D. gave in and disappeared concertwards.
+
+The Sister rose too and went out into the kitchen to consult with the
+_chef_.
+
+I slipped out behind her and down the steps into the garden--into the
+wet, dark garden, down the channels that were garden-paths, and felt my
+way over to the Sisters' quarters.
+
+My Sister hadn't moved. There by the gas-fire, her thin hand to her
+face, she sat as she had two hours before.
+
+"Come in," she offered, "and talk to me."
+
+Her collar, which was open, she tried to do up. It made a painful
+impression on me of weakness and the effort to be normal.
+
+I remembered that she had once told me she was so afraid of death, and I
+guessed that she was suffering now from that terror.
+
+But when the specialist is afraid, what can ignorance say...?
+
+
+Life in the bunk is wretched (except that the new V.A.D. tells fortunes
+by hands).
+
+The new Sister is at the same time timid and dogged. She looks at me
+with a sidelong look and gives me little flips with her hand, as though
+(_a_) she thought I might break something and (_b_) that she might stave
+it off by playfulness.
+
+
+Pain....
+
+To stand up straight on one's feet, strong, easy, without the surging of
+any physical sensation, by a bedside whose coverings are flung here and
+there by the quivering nerves beneath it ... there is a sort of shame in
+such strength.
+
+"What can I do for you?" my eyes cry dumbly into his clouded brown
+pupils.
+
+I was told to carry trays from a ward where I had never been
+before--just to carry trays, orderly's work, no more.
+
+No. 22 was lying flat on his back, his knees drawn up under him, the
+sheets up to his chin; his flat, chalk-white face tilted at the ceiling.
+As I bent over to get his untouched tray his tortured brown eyes fell on
+me.
+
+"I'm in pain, Sister," he said.
+
+No one has ever said that to me before in that tone.
+
+He gave me the look that a dog gives, and his words had the character of
+an unformed cry.
+
+He was quite alone at the end of the ward. The Sister was in her bunk.
+My white cap attracted his desperate senses.
+
+As he spoke his knees shot out from under him with his restless pain.
+His right arm was stretched from the bed in a narrow iron frame,
+reminding me of a hand laid along a harp to play the chords, the fingers
+with their swollen green flesh extended across the strings; but of this
+harp his fingers were the slave, not the master.
+
+"Shall I call your Sister?" I whispered to him.
+
+He shook his head. "She can't do anything. I must just stick it out.
+They're going to operate on the elbow, but they must wait three days
+first."
+
+His head turned from side to side, but his eyes never left my face. I
+stood by him, helpless, overwhelmed by his horrible loneliness.
+
+Then I carried his tray down the long ward and past the Sister's bunk.
+Within, by the fire, she was laughing with the M.O. and drinking a cup
+of tea--a harmless amusement.
+
+"The officer in No. 22 says he's in great pain," I said doubtfully. (It
+wasn't my ward, and Sisters are funny.)
+
+"I know," she said quite decently, "but I can't do anything. He must
+stick it out."
+
+I looked through the ward door once or twice during the evening, and
+still his knees, at the far end of the room, were moving up and down.
+
+
+It must happen to the men in France that, living so near the edge of
+death, they are more aware of life than we are.
+
+When they come back, when the postwar days set in, will they keep that
+vision, letting it play on life ... or must it fade?
+
+And some become so careless of life, so careless of all the whims and
+personalities and desires that go to make up existence, that one wrote
+to me:
+
+"The only real waste is the waste of metal. The earth will be covered
+again and again with Us. The corn will grow again; the bread and meat
+can be repeated. But this metal that has lain in the earth for
+centuries, the formation of the beginning, that men have sweated and
+grubbed for ... that is the waste."
+
+What carelessness of worldly success they should bring back with them!
+
+
+Orderlies come and go up and down the corridor. Often they carry
+stretchers--now and then a stretcher with the empty folds of a flag
+flung across it.
+
+Then I pause from laying my trays, and with a bunch of forks in my hand
+I stand still.
+
+They take the stretcher into a ward, and while I wait I know what they
+are doing behind the screens which stand around a bed against the wall.
+I hear the shuffle of feet as the men stand to attention, and the
+orderlies come out again, and the folds of the flag have ballooned up to
+receive and embrace a man's body.
+
+Where is he going?
+
+To the mortuary.
+
+Yes ... but where else...?
+
+
+Perhaps there is nothing better than the ecstasy and unappeasement of
+life?
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+INSIDE THE GLASS DOORS
+
+
+My feet ache, ache, ache...!
+
+End of the first day.
+
+
+Life in a ward is all scurry and rush. I don't reflect; I'm putting on
+my cap anyhow, and my hands are going to the dogs.
+
+I shall never get to understand Sisters; they are so strange, so tricky,
+uncertain as collies. Deep down they have an ineradicable axiom: that
+any visitor, any one in an old musquash coat, in a high-boned collar, in
+a spotted veil tied up at the sides, any one with whom one shakes hands
+or takes tea, is more important than the most charming patient (except,
+of course, a warded M.O.).
+
+For this reason the "mouths" of the pillow-cases are all turned to face
+up the ward, away from the door.
+
+I think plants in a ward are a barbarism, for as they are always
+arranged on the table by the door, it is again obvious that they are
+intended only to minister to the eye of the visitor, that race of gods.
+
+In our ward there are eighteen fern-pots, some in copper, some in pink
+china, three in mauve paper, and one hanging basket of ferns. All of
+these have to be taken out on the landing at night and in again in the
+morning, and they have to be soaked under the tap.
+
+The Sisters' minds are as yet too difficult for me, but in the minds of
+the V.A.D.'s I see certain salient features. I see already manifested in
+them the ardent longing to be alike. I know and remember this longing;
+it was present through all my early years in a large boarding-school;
+but there it was naturally corrected by the changes of growth and the
+inexpertness of youth. Here I see for the first time grown women trying
+with all the concentration of their fuller years to be as like one
+another as it is possible to be.
+
+There is a certain dreadful innocence about them too, as though each
+would protest, "In spite of our tasks, our often immodest tasks, our
+minds are white as snow."
+
+And, as far as I can see, their conception of a white female mind is
+the silliest, most mulish, incurious, unresponsive, condemning kind of
+an ideal that a human creature could set before it.
+
+At present I am so humble that I am content to do all the labour and
+take none of the temperatures, but I can see very well that it is when I
+reach a higher plane that all the trouble will begin.
+
+The ranklings, the heart-burnings, the gross injustices.... Who is to
+make the only poultice? Who is to paint the very septic throat of Mr.
+Mullins, Army Service Corps? Who is to--dizzy splendour--go round with
+the M.O. should the Sister be off for a half-day?
+
+These and other questions will form the pride and anguish of my inner
+life.
+
+
+It is wonderful to go up to London and dine and stay the night with
+Madeleine after the hospital.
+
+The hospital--a sort of monotone, a place of whispers and wheels moving
+on rubber tyres, long corridors, and strangely unsexed women moving in
+them. Unsexed not in any real sense, but the white clothes, the hidden
+hair, the stern white collar just below the chin, give them an air of
+school-girlishness, an air and a look women don't wear in the world.
+They seem unexpectant.
+
+Then at Madeleine's ... the light, the talk, the deep bath got ready for
+me by a maid, instead of my getting it ready for a patient....
+
+Not that I mind getting it ready; I like it. Only the change! It's like
+being turn and turn about maid and mistress.
+
+
+There is the first snow here, scanty and frozen on the doorstep.
+
+I came home last night in the dark to dinner and found its faint traces
+on the road and in the gutter as I climbed the hill. I couldn't see
+well; there were stars, but no moon. Higher up it was unmistakable; long
+white tracks frozen in the dried mud of the road, and a branch under a
+lamp thickened with frozen snow.
+
+Shall I ever grow out of that excitement over the first bit of snow...?
+
+I felt a glow of pride in the hill, thinking:
+
+"In London it's all slush and mud. They don't suspect what we've got
+here. A suburb is a wonderful place!"
+
+After a wet and muddy day in London I've seen the trains pull into
+Charing Cross with snow piled on the roofs of the carriages, and felt a
+foot taller for joy that I was one of those fortunates who might step
+into a train and go down into a white countryside.
+
+It is the same excitement to wake up early to an overnight fall and see
+down the Dover Road for miles no foot of man printed, but only the
+birds' feet. Considering the Dover Road has been a highway since the
+Romans, it really is a fine moment when you realize its surface has
+suddenly become untrodden and unexplored as any jungle.
+
+
+Alas, the amount of snow that has set me writing!... two bucketfuls in
+the whole garden!
+
+
+When a Medical Officer goes sick, or, in other words, when an M.O. is
+warded, a very special and almost cynical expression settles on his
+face. Also the bedside manner of the Visiting Officer is discarded as he
+reaches the bed of the sick M.O.
+
+"My knees are very painful," says the sick M.O., but it is a despondent
+statement, not a plea for aid.
+
+The Visiting Officer nods, but he does not suggest that they will soon
+be better.
+
+They look at each other as weak human beings look, and:
+
+"We might try...?" says the Visiting Officer questioningly.
+
+The M.O. agrees without conviction, and settles back on his pillows. Not
+for him the comfortable trust in the divine knowledge of specialists. He
+can endure like a dog, but without its faith in its master.
+
+The particular M.O. whose knees are painful is, as a matter of fact,
+better now. He got up yesterday.
+
+Mooning about the ward in a dressing-gown, he stared first out of one
+window into the fog and then out of another.
+
+Finally, just before he got back into bed, he made an epigram.
+
+"Nurse," he said, "the difference between being in bed and getting up is
+that in bed you do nothing, but when you get up there's nothing to
+do...."
+
+I tucked him up and put the cradle over his knees, and he added, "One
+gets accustomed to everything," and settled back happily with his
+reading-lamp, his French novel, and his dictionary.
+
+The fog developed all day yesterday, piling up white and motionless
+against the window-panes. As night fell a little air of excitement ran
+here and there amongst the V.A.D.'s.
+
+"How shall we get home...?" "Are the buses running?" "Oh no, the last
+one is stuck against the railings outside!" "My torch has run out...."
+
+By seven o'clock even the long corridor was as dim as the alley outside.
+No one thought of shutting the windows--I doubt whether they will shut
+... and the fog rolled over the sill in banks and round the open glass
+doors, till even the white cap of a Sister could hardly be seen as she
+passed.
+
+I am pleased with any atmospheric exaggeration; the adventure of going
+home was before me....
+
+At eight I felt my way down over the steps into the alley; the torch,
+held low on the ground, lighted but a small, pale circle round my shoes.
+Outside it was black and solid and strangely quiet.
+
+In the yard a man here and there raised his voice in a shout; feet
+strayed near mine and edged away.
+
+At the cross-roads I came on a lantern standing upon the ground, and by
+it drooped the nose of a benighted horse; the spurt of a match lit the
+face of its owner.
+
+Up the hill, the torch held low against the kerbstone, the sudden
+looming of a black giant made me start back as I nearly ran my head into
+a telegraph-post....
+
+I was at the bottom of the sea; fathoms and fathoms of fog must stand
+above my head.
+
+Suddenly a dozen lights showed about me, then the whole sky alight with
+stars, and naked trees with the rime on them, bristling; the long road
+ran up the hill its accustomed steel colour, the post office was there
+with its red window, the lean old lamp-post with its broken arm....
+
+I had walked out of the fog as one walks out of the sea on to a beach!
+
+Looking back, I could see the pit behind me; the fog standing on the
+road like a solid wall, straight up and down. Again I felt a pride in
+the hill. "Down there," I thought, "those groping feet and shouting
+voices; that man and that horse ... they don't guess!"
+
+I walked briskly up the hill, and presently stepped on to the pavement;
+but at the edge of the asphalt, where tufted grass should grow,
+something crackled and hissed under my feet. Under the torchlight the
+unnatural grass was white and brittle with rime, fanciful as a stage
+fairy scene, and the railings beyond it glittered too.
+
+I slid in the road as I turned down the drive; a sheet of ice was spread
+where the leaky pipe is, and the steps up to the house door were
+slippery.
+
+But oh, the honeysuckle and the rose-trees...! Bush, plant, leaf, stem,
+rimed from end to end. The garden was a Bond Street jeweller's!
+
+
+Perhaps the final chapter on Mr. Pettitt....
+
+In the excitement of the ward I had almost forgotten him; he is buried
+in the Mess, in the days when I lived on the floor below.
+
+To-night, as I was waiting by the open hatch of the kitchen for my tray
+to be filled with little castles of lemon jelly, the hot blast from the
+kitchen drawing stray wisps of hair from beneath my cap, I saw the
+familiar limping figure--a figure bound up with my first days at the
+hospital, evoking a hundred evenings at the concerts, in the
+dining-room. I felt he had been away, but I didn't dare risk a "So
+you're back!"
+
+He smiled, blushed, and limped past me.
+
+Upstairs in the ward, as I was serving out my jellies, he arrived in the
+doorway, but, avoiding me, hobbled round the ward, visiting every bed
+but the one I was at at the moment. Then he went downstairs again.
+
+I passed him on the stairs. He can't say he didn't have his opportunity,
+for I even stopped with my heavy tray and spoke to him.
+
+Half an hour later he was back in the ward again (not his ward), and
+this time he found the courage of hysteria. There in the middle of the
+ward, under the glaring Christmas lights, with the eyes of every
+interested man in every bed glued upon us, he presented me with a fan
+wrapped in white paper: "A little present I bought you, nurse." I took
+it, eyes sizzling and burning holes in my shoulders, and stammered my
+frantic thanks.
+
+"You do like it, nurse?" he said rapidly, three times in succession.
+
+And I: "I do, I do, I do...."
+
+"I thought you would. You do like it?"
+
+"Oh, just what I wanted!"
+
+"That's all right, then. Just a little Christmas present."
+
+We couldn't stop. It was like taking too much butter for the marmalade
+and too much marmalade for the butter.
+
+He leaves the hospital in a day or two.
+
+The fog is still thick. To-night at the station after a day off I found
+it white and silent. Touching the arm of a man, I asked him the
+all-important question: "Are the buses running?"
+
+"Oh no...."
+
+And the cabs all gone home to bed, and I was hungry!
+
+What ghosts pass ... and voices, bodyless, talking intimately while
+their feet fall without a stir on the grass of the open Heath.
+
+I was excited by the strange silent fog.
+
+But my left shoe began to hurt me, and stopping at the house of a girl I
+knew, I borrowed a country pair of hers: no taller than I, she takes two
+sizes larger; they were like boats.
+
+I started to trudge the three miles home in the boats: the slightest
+flick of the foot would have sent one of them flying beyond the eye of
+God or man. After a couple of miles the shoes began to tell, and I stood
+still and lifted up one foot behind me, craning over my shoulder to see
+if I could catch sight of the glimmer of skin through the heel of the
+stocking. The fog was too thick for that.
+
+Another half-mile and I put my finger down to my heel and felt the wet
+blood through a large hole in my stocking, so I took off the shoes and
+tied them together ... and, more silent than ever in the tomb of fog,
+padded along as God had first supposed that woman would walk, on the wet
+surface of the road.
+
+
+A warded M.O. is pathetic. He knows he can't get well quicker than time
+will let him. He has no faith.
+
+To-morrow I have to take down all the decorations that I put up for
+Christmas. When I put them up I never thought I should be the one to
+take them down. When I was born no one thought I should be old.
+
+While I was untying a piece of holly from the electric-light cords on
+the ceiling and a patient was holding the ladder for me, a young _padre_
+came and pretended to help us, but while he stood with us he whispered
+to the patient, "Are you a communicant?" I felt a wave of heat and
+anger; I could have dropped the holly on him.
+
+They hung up their stockings on Christmas night on walking-sticks
+hitched over the ends of the beds and under the mattresses. Such big
+stockings! Many of them must have played Father Christmas in their own
+homes, to their own children, on other Christmases.
+
+On Christmas Eve I didn't leave the hospital till long after the
+Day-Sisters had gone and the Night-Sisters came on. The wards were all
+quiet as I walked down the corridor, and to left and right through the
+glass doors hung the rows of expectant stockings.
+
+
+Final and despairing postscript on Mr. Pettitt.
+
+When a woman says she cannot come to lunch it is because she doesn't
+want to.
+
+Let this serve as an axiom to every lover: A woman who refuses lunch
+refuses everything.
+
+
+The hospital is alive; I feel it like a living being.
+
+
+The hospital is like a dream. I am afraid of waking up and finding it
+commonplace.
+
+The white Sisters, the ceaselessly-changing patients, the long passages,
+the sudden plunges into the brilliant wards ... their scenery hypnotizes
+me.
+
+Sometimes in the late evening one walks busily up and down the ward
+doing this and that, forgetting that there is anything beyond the drawn
+blinds, engrossed in the patients, one's tasks--bed-making, washing, one
+errand and another--and then suddenly a blind will blow out and almost
+up to the ceiling, and through it you will catch a glimpse that makes
+you gasp, of a black night crossed with bladed searchlights, of a moon
+behind a crooked tree.
+
+The lifting of the blind is a miracle; I do not believe in the wind.
+
+
+A new Sister on to-night ... very severe. We had to make the beds like
+white cardboard. I wonder what she thinks of me.
+
+Mr. Pettitt (who really is going to-morrow) wandered up into the ward
+and limped near me. "Sister...." he began. He _will_ call me "Sister." I
+frowned at him. The new Sister glanced at him and blinked.
+
+He was very persistent. "Sister," he said again, "do you think I can
+have a word with you?"
+
+"Not now," I whispered as I hurried past him.
+
+"Oh, is that so?" he said, as though I had made an interesting
+statement, and limped away, looking backwards at me. I suppose he wants
+to say good-bye.
+
+He sat beside Mr. Wicks's bed (Mr. Wicks who is paralysed) and looked
+at me from time to time with that stare of his which contains so little
+offence.
+
+It is curious to think that I once saw Mr. Wicks on a tennis-lawn,
+walking across the grass.... Mr. Wicks, who will never put his foot on
+grass again, but, lying in his bed, continues to say, as all Tommies
+say, "I feel well in meself."
+
+So he does; he feels well in himself. But he isn't going to live, all
+the same.
+
+Still his routine goes on: he plays his game of cards, he has his joke:
+"Lemonade, please, nurse; but it's not from choice!"
+
+When I go to clear his ash-tray at night I always say, "Well, now I've
+got something worth clearing at last!"
+
+And he chuckles and answers, "Thought you'd be pleased. It's the others
+gets round my bed and leaves their bits."
+
+He was once a sergeant: he got his commission a year ago.
+
+
+My ruined charms cry aloud for help.
+
+The cap wears away my front hair; my feet are widening from the
+everlasting boards; my hands won't take my rings.
+
+I was advised last night on the telephone to marry immediately before it
+was too late.
+
+A desperate remedy. I will try cold cream and hair tonics first.
+
+
+There is a tuberculosis ward across the landing. They call it the T.B.
+ward.
+
+It is a den of coughs and harrowing noises.
+
+One night I saw a negro standing in the doorway with his long hair done
+up in hairpins. He is the pet of the T.B. ward; they call him Henry.
+
+Henry came in to help us with our Christmas decorations on Christmas
+Eve, and as he cleverly made wreaths my Sister whispered to me, "He's
+never spitting ... in the ward!"
+
+But he wasn't, it was part of his language--little clicks and ticks. He
+comes from somewhere in Central Africa, and one of the T.B.'s told me,
+"He's only got one wife, nurse."
+
+He is very proud of his austerity, for he has somehow discovered that he
+has hit on a country where it is the nutty thing only to have one wife.
+
+No one can speak a word of his language, no one knows exactly where he
+comes from; but he can say in English, "Good morning, Sister!" and
+"Christmas Box!" and "One!"
+
+Directly one takes any notice of him he laughs and clicks, holding up
+one finger, crying, "One!"
+
+Then a proud T.B. (they regard him as the Creator might regard a
+humming-bird) explains: "He means he's only got one wife, nurse."
+
+Then he did his second trick. He came to me with outstretched black hand
+and took my apron, fingering it. Its whiteness slipped between his
+fingers. He dropped it and, holding up the hand with its fellow, ducked
+his head to watch me with his glinting eyes.
+
+"He means," explained the versatile T.B., "that he has ten piccaninnies
+in his village and they're all dressed in white."
+
+It took my breath away; I looked at Henry for corroboration. He nodded
+earnestly, coughed and whispered, "Ten!"
+
+"How do you know he means that?" I asked. "How can you possibly have
+found out?"
+
+"We got pictures, nurse. We showed 'im kids, and 'e said 'e got ten--six
+girls and four boys. We showed 'im pictures of kids."
+
+I had never seen Henry before, never knew he existed. But in the ward
+opposite the poor T.B.'s had been holding conversations with him in
+window-seats, showing him pictures, painfully establishing a communion
+with him ... Henry, with his hair done up in hairpins!
+
+Although they showed him off with conscious pride, I don't think he
+really appeared strange to them, beyond his colour. I believe they
+imagine his wife as appearing much as their own wives, his children as
+the little children who run about their own doorsteps. They do not
+stretch their imaginations to conceive any strangeness about his home
+surroundings to correspond with his own strangeness.
+
+To them Henry has the dignity of a man and a householder, possibly a
+rate-payer.
+
+He seems quite happy and amused. I see him carrying a bucket sometimes,
+sharing its handle with a flushed T.B. They carry on animated
+conversations as they go downstairs, the T.B. talking the most. It
+reminds me of a child and a dog.
+
+What strange machinery is there for getting him back? Part of the cargo
+of a ship ... one day ... "a nigger for Central Africa...."
+
+"Where's his unit?"
+
+"Who knows! One nigger and his bundle ... for Central Africa!"
+
+The ward has put Mr. Wicks to Coventry because he has been abusive and
+violent-tempered for three days.
+
+He lies flat in his bed and frowns; no more jokes over the lemonade, no
+wilfulness over the thermometer.
+
+It is in these days that Mr. Wicks faces the truth.
+
+I lingered by his bed last night, after I had put his tea-tray on his
+table, and looked down at him; he pretended to be inanimate, his open
+eyes fixed upon the white rail of the bed. His bedclothes were stretched
+about him as though he had not moved since his bed was made, hours
+before.
+
+His worldly pleasures were beside him--his reading-lamp, his Christmas
+box of cigars, his _Star_--but his eyes, disregarding them, were upon
+that sober vision that hung around the bedrail.
+
+He began a bitter conversation:
+
+"Nurse, I'm only a ranker, but I had a bit saved. I went to a private
+doctor and paid for myself. And I went to a specialist, and he told me I
+should never get this. I paid for it myself out of what I had saved."
+
+We might have been alone in the world, he and I. Far down at the other
+end of the room the men sat crouched about the fire, their trays before
+them on chairs. The sheet of window behind Mr. Wicks's head was flecked
+with the morsels of snow which, hunted by the gale, obtained a second's
+refuge before oblivion.
+
+"I'd sooner be dead than lying here; I would, reely." You hear that
+often in the world. "I'd sooner be dead than----" But Mr. Wicks meant
+it; he would sooner be dead than lying there. And death is a horror, an
+end. Yet he says lying there is worse.
+
+"You see, I paid for a specialist myself, and he told me I should never
+be like this."
+
+There was nothing to be said.... One must have one's tea. I went down
+the ward to the bunk, and we cut the pink iced cake left over from
+Christmas....
+
+
+I did not mean to forget him, but I forgot him. From birth to death we
+are alone....
+
+
+But one of the Sisters remembered him.
+
+"Mr. Wicks is still in the dumps," she remarked.
+
+"What is really the matter with him, Sister?"
+
+"Locomotor ataxy." And she added as she drank her tea, "It's his own
+fault."
+
+"Oh, hush, hush!" my heart cried soundlessly to her, "You can't judge
+the bitterness of this, nun, from your convent...!"
+
+Alas, Mr. Wicks!... No wonder you saved your money to spend upon
+specialists! How many years have you walked in fear of this? He took
+your money, the gentleman in Harley Street, and told you that you might
+go in peace. He blessed you and gave you salvation.
+
+And the bitterest thing of all is that you paid for him like an officer
+and he was wrong.
+
+
+How the blinds blew and the windows shook to-night...! I walked out of
+the hospital into a gale, clouds driving to the sea, trees bending back
+and fore across the moon.
+
+I walked till I was warm, and then I walked for happiness.
+
+The maddening shine of the moon held my eyes, and I walked in the road
+like a fool, watching her--till at last, bringing my eyes down, the
+telegraph-posts were small as blades of grass on the hill-side and the
+shining ribbon tracks in the mud on the road ran up the hill for ever.
+They go to Dover, and Dover is France--and France leads anywhere.
+
+To what a lost enchantment am I recalled by the sight of a branch
+across the moon? Something in childhood, something which escapes yet
+does not wither....
+
+As I passed the public-house on the crest of the hill, all black and
+white in the cold moonlight, a heavy door swung open and, with a cough
+and a deep, satisfied snuffle, a man coming out let a stream of gaslight
+across the road. If I were a man I should certainly go to public-houses.
+All that polished brass and glass boxed up away from the moon and the
+shadows would call to me. And to drink must be a happy thing when you
+have climbed the hill.
+
+
+The T.B. ward is a melancholy place. There is a man in a bed near the
+door who lies with his mouth open; his head is like a bird-cage beneath
+a muslin cloth. I saw him behind his screens when I took them over a
+little lukewarm chicken left from our dinner.
+
+There was a dark red moon to-night, and frost. Our orderly said, "You
+can tell it's freezing, nurse, by the breath," as he watched mine curl
+up in smoke in the icy corridor. I like people who notice things....
+
+Out in the road in front of the hospital I couldn't get the
+motor-bicycle to work, and sat crouched in the dark fiddling with
+spanners.
+
+The charwomen came out of the big gate in the dark talking and laughing,
+all in a bunch. One of them stepped off the pavement near me and stopped
+to put her toe through the ice in the gutter.
+
+"Nah, come on, Mrs. Toms!"
+
+"I always 'ave to break it, it's ser nice an' stiff," she said as she
+ran after them.
+
+
+To be a Sister is to have a nationality.
+
+As there are Icelanders urbane, witty, lazy ... and yet they are all
+Icelanders ... so there are cold, uproarious, observant, subservient,
+slangy, sympathetic, indifferent, and Scotch Sisters, and yet....
+
+
+Sister said of a patient to-day, "He was a funny man."
+
+A funny man is a man who is a dark horse: who is neither friendly nor
+antagonistic; who is witty; who is preoccupied; who is whimsical or
+erratic--funny qualities, unsafe qualities.
+
+No Sister could like a funny man.
+
+In our ward there are three sorts of men: "Nothing much," "nice boys,"
+and Mr. Wicks.
+
+The last looms even to the mind of the Sister as a Biblical figure, a
+pillar of salt, a witness to God's wrath.
+
+The Sister is a past-mistress of such phrases as "Indeed!" "That is a
+matter of opinion," "We shall see..." "It is possible."
+
+I have discovered a new and (for me) charming game which I play with my
+Sister. It is the game of telling the truth about the contents of my
+mind when asked.
+
+Yesterday Sister was trying to get some coal out of the coal-bin with a
+shovel that turned round and round on its handle; she was unsuccessful.
+
+I said, "Let me, Sister!"
+
+She said, "Why?"
+
+And I: "Because I think I can do it better."
+
+"Why should you think that?"
+
+"Because all human beings do," I said, and, luckily, she smiled.
+
+She was washing her caps out in a bowl in the afternoon when I came on.
+
+"Good afternoon, Sister," I said. "Ironing?"
+
+"I am obviously only washing as yet," she said.
+
+"It's because I think so quickly, Sister," I said; "I knew you would
+iron next."
+
+
+I dined with Irene last night after the hospital.
+
+I refused to believe what she told me about the last bus passing at
+half-past nine, and so at a quarter to ten I stood outside "The Green
+Lamp" and waited.
+
+Ten minutes passed and no bus.
+
+With me were two women waiting too--one holding a baby; the other,
+younger, smarter, dangling a purse.
+
+At last I communicated my growing fears: "I believe the last has
+gone...."
+
+We fixed our six eyes on the far corner of the road, waiting for the
+yellow lights to round it, but only the gas-lamps stood firm in their
+perspective.
+
+"Oh my, Elsie!" said the woman with the baby, "you can't never walk up
+to the cross-roads in the dark alone!"
+
+"I wouldn't make the attempt, not for anything!" replied the younger one
+firmly.
+
+Without waiting for more I stepped into the middle of the road and
+started on my walk home; the very next sentence would have suggested
+that Elsie and I should walk together.
+
+She wouldn't "make the attempt...." Her words trailed through my mind,
+conjuring up some adventure, some act of bravery and daring.
+
+The road was the high road, the channel of tarmac and pavements that she
+probably walked along every day; and now it was the selfsame high road,
+the same flagstones, hedges, railings, but with the cloak of night upon
+them.
+
+It wasn't man she feared; even in the dark I knew she wasn't that kind.
+She would be awfully capable--with man. No, it was the darkness, the
+spooky jungle of darkness: she feared the trees would move....
+
+"I wouldn't make the attempt, not for anything"; and the other woman had
+quite agreed with her.
+
+I knew where I was by the smells and the sounds on the road--the smell
+of the lines of picketed horses behind the railings, the sharp and
+sudden stamp of the sick ones in the wooden stables, and, later on, the
+glitter of water in the horse-troughs.
+
+I thought: "I am not afraid.... Is it because I am more educated, or
+have less imagination?"
+
+"Halt! Who goes there?"
+
+"Friend," I said, thrilling tremendously.
+
+He approached me and said something which I couldn't make anything of.
+Presently I disentangled, "You should never dread the baynit, miss."
+
+"But I'm not dreading," I said, annoyed, "I ... I love it."
+
+He said he was cold, and added: "I bin wounded. If you come to that lamp
+you can see me stripe."
+
+We went to the lamp. "It's them buses," he complained, "they won't stop
+when I halt 'em."
+
+"But why do you want to stop them? They can't poison the horse-troughs."
+
+"It's me duty," he said. "There's one comin'."
+
+A bus, coming the opposite way, bore down upon us with an unwieldy rush
+and roar--the last bus, in a hurry to get to bed.
+
+"You'll see," he said pessimistically.
+
+"'Alt! 'Alt, there!" The bus, with three soldiers hanging on the step,
+rushed past us, and seemed to slow a little. The sentry ran a few paces
+towards it, crying "'Alt!" But it gathered speed and boomed on again,
+buzzing away between the gas-lamps. He returned to me sadly.
+
+"I don't believe they can hear," I said, and gave him some chocolates
+and went on.
+
+As I passed the hospital gates it seemed there was a faint, a very
+faint, sweet smell of chloroform....
+
+
+I was down at the hospital to-night when the factory blew up over the
+river.
+
+The lights went out, and as they sank I reached the kitchen hatchway
+with my tray. At the bottom of the stairs I could see through the garden
+door the sky grown sulphur and the bushes glowing, while all the panes
+of glass turned incandescent.
+
+Then the explosion came; it sounded as though it was just behind the
+hospital. Two hundred panes of glass fell out, and they made a noise
+too.
+
+Standing in the dark with a tray in my hand I heard a man's voice saying
+gleefully, "I haven't been out of bed this two months!"
+
+Some one lit a candle, and by its light I saw all the charwomen from the
+kitchen bending about like broken weeds, and every officer was saying,
+"There, there now!"
+
+We watched the fires till midnight from the hill.
+
+
+I went over this morning early. We were thirty-two in a
+carriage--Lascars, Chinese, children, Jews, niggers from the docks.
+
+Lascars and children and Jews and I, we fought to get off the station
+platform; sometimes there wasn't room on the ground for both my feet at
+once.
+
+The fires were still burning and smouldering there at midday, but a
+shower of rime fell on it, so that it looked like an old ruin, something
+done long ago.
+
+At Pompeii, some one told me, one looked into the rooms and they were as
+they had been left--tables laid.... Here, too, I saw a table laid for
+the evening meal with a bedstead fallen from the upper floor astraddle
+across it. The insides of the houses were coughed into their windows,
+basket-chairs hanging to the sills, and fire-irons.
+
+Outside, the soil of the earth turned up; a workman's tin mug stuck and
+roasted and hardened into what looks like solid rock--a fossil, as
+though it had been there for ever.
+
+London is only skin-deep. Beneath lies the body of the world.
+
+
+The hump under the blankets rolls over and a man's solemn face appears
+upon the pillow.
+
+"Can you get me a book, nurse?"
+
+"Yes. What kind do you like?"
+
+"Nothing fanciful; something that might be true."
+
+"All right!"
+
+"Oh--and nurse...?"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Not sentimental and not funny, I like a practical story."
+
+I got him "Lord Jim."...
+
+Another voice: "Nurse, is there any modern French poetry in that
+bookcase?"
+
+"Good heavens, no! Who would have brought it here?"
+
+(Who are they all ... these men with their differing tastes?)
+
+Perhaps the angels feel like this as they trail about in heaven with
+their wings flapping on their thin white legs....
+
+"Who were you, angel?"
+
+"I was a beggar outside San Marco."
+
+"Were you? How odd! I was an Englishman."
+
+
+The concerts that we give in the ward touch me with some curious
+emotion. I think it is because I am for once at rest in the ward and
+have time to think and wonder.
+
+There is Captain Thomson finishing his song. He doesn't know what to do
+with his hands; they swing. He is tall and dark, with soft eyes--and
+staff badges.
+
+Could one guess what he is? Never in a dozen years.... But I _know_!
+
+He said to me last night, "Nurse, I'm going out to-morrow."
+
+I leant across the table to listen to him.
+
+"Nurse, if you ever want any _crêpe de Chine_ ... for nightgowns ...
+mind, at wholesale prices...."
+
+"I have bought some at a sale."
+
+"May I ask at what price?"
+
+"Four-and-eleven a yard."
+
+"Pity! You could have had it from me at three!"
+
+He gave me his business card. "That's it, nurse," he said, as he wrote
+on the back of it. "Drop me a line to that address and you'll get any
+material for underwear at trade prices."
+
+He booked one or two orders the night he went away--not laughingly, not
+as a joke, but with deep seriousness, and gravely pleased that he was
+able to do what he could for us. He was a traveller in ladies'
+underwear. I have seldom met any one so little a snob....
+
+
+Watch Mr. Gray singing....
+
+One hand on the piano, one on his hip:
+
+"I love every mouse in that old-fashioned house."
+
+"That fellow can sing!" whispers the man beside me.
+
+"Is he a professional?" I asked as, finishing, the singer made the
+faintest of bows and walked back to his chair.
+
+"I think he must be."
+
+"He is, he is!" whispered Mr. Matthews, "I've heard him before."
+
+They know so little about each other, and they don't ask. It is only I
+who wonder--I, a woman, and therefore of the old, burnt-out world. These
+men watch without curiosity, speak no personalities, form no sets,
+express no likings, analyse nothing. They are new-born; they have as yet
+no standards and do not look for any.
+
+Ah, to have had that experience too!... I am of the old world.
+
+Again and again I realize, "A nation in arms...."
+
+Watchmakers, jewellers, station-masters, dress-designers, actors,
+travellers in underwear, bank clerks ... they come here in uniforms and
+we put them into pyjamas and nurse them; and they lie in bed or hobble
+about the ward, watching us as we move, accepting each other with the
+unquestioning faith of children.
+
+
+The outside world has faded since I have been in the hospital. Their
+world is often near me--their mud and trenches, things they say when
+they come in wounded.
+
+The worst of it is it almost bores me to go to London, and London was
+always my Mecca. It is this garden at home, I think. It is so easy not
+to leave it.
+
+When you wake up the window is full of branches, and last thing at night
+the moon is on the snow on the lawn and you can see the pheasants'
+footmarks.
+
+Then one goes to the hospital....
+
+When Madeleine telephones to me, "I'm living in a whirl...." it disturbs
+me. Suddenly I want to too, but it dies down again.
+
+Not that it is their world, those trenches. When they come in wounded or
+sick they say at once, "What shows are on?"
+
+
+Mr. Wicks has ceased to read those magazines his sister sends him; he
+now stares all day at his white bedrail.
+
+I only pass him on my way to the towel-cupboard, twice an evening, and
+then as I glance at him I am set wondering all down the ward of what he
+thinks, or if he thinks....
+
+I may be quite wrong about him; it is possible he doesn't think at all,
+but stares himself into some happier dream.
+
+One day when he is dead, when he is as totally dead as he tells me he
+hopes to be, that bed with its haunted bedrail will bend under another
+man's weight. Surely it must be haunted? The weight of thought, dream or
+nightmare, that hangs about it now is almost visible to me.
+
+Mr. Wicks is an uneducated and ordinary man. In what manner does his
+dream run? Since he has ceased to read he has begun to drop away a
+little from my living understanding.
+
+He reflects deeply at times.
+
+To-night, as I went quickly past him with my load of bath-towels, his
+blind flapped a little, and I saw the moon, shaped like a horn, behind
+it.
+
+Dropping my towels, I pulled his blind back:
+
+"Mr. Wicks, look at the moon."
+
+Obedient as one who receives an order, he reached up to his supporting
+handle and pulled his shoulders half round in bed to look with me
+through the pane.
+
+The young moon, freed from the trees, was rising over the hill.
+
+I dropped the blind again and took up my towels and left him.
+
+After that he seemed to fall into one of his trances, and lay immovable
+an hour or more. When I took his dinner to him he lifted his large,
+sandy head and said:
+
+"Seems a queer thing that if you hadn't said 'Look at the moon' I might
+have bin dead without seeing her."
+
+"But don't you ever look out of the window?"
+
+The obstinate man shook his head.
+
+
+There was a long silence in the ward to-night. It was so cold that no
+one spoke. It is a gloomy ward, I think; the pink silk on the electric
+lights is so much too thick, and the fire smokes dreadfully. The
+patients sat round the fire with their "British warms" over their
+dressing-gowns and the collars turned up.
+
+Through the two glass doors and over the landing you can see the T.B.'s
+moving like little cinema figures backwards and forwards across the
+lighted entrance.
+
+Suddenly--a hesitating touch--an ancient polka struck up, a tune
+remembered at children's parties. Then a waltz, a very old one too. The
+T.B.'s were playing dance music.
+
+I crept to their door and looked. One man alone was taking any notice,
+and he was the player; the others sat round coughing or staring at
+nothing in particular, and those in bed had their heads turned away from
+the music.
+
+The man whose face is like a bird-cage has now more than ever a look of
+... an empty cage. He allows his mouth to hang open: that way the bird
+will fly.
+
+
+What is there so rapturous about the moon?
+
+The radiance of a floating moon is unbelievable. It is a figment of
+dream. The metal-silver ball that hung at the top of the Christmas tree,
+or, earlier still, the shining thing, necklace or spoon, the thing the
+baby leans to catch ... the magpie in us....
+
+
+Mr. Beecher is to be allowed to sleep till eight. He sleeps so badly, he
+says. He woke up crying this morning, for he has neurasthenia.
+
+That is what Sister says.
+
+He should have been in bed all yesterday, but instead he got up and
+through the door watched the dead T.B. ride away on his stretcher (for
+the bird flew in the night).
+
+"How morbid of him!" Sister says.
+
+He has seen many dead in France and snapped his fingers at them, but I
+agree with him that to die of tuberculosis in the backwaters of the war
+isn't the same thing.
+
+It's dreary; he thought how dreary it was as he lay awake in the night.
+
+But then he has neurasthenia....
+
+
+Pity is exhaustible. What a terrible discovery! If one ceases for one
+instant to pity Mr. Wicks he becomes an awful bore. Some days, when the
+sun is shining, I hear his grieving tenor voice all over the ward, his
+legendary tale of a wrong done him in his promotion. The men are kind to
+him and say "Old man," but Mr. Gray, who lies in the next bed to him, is
+drained of everything except resignation. I heard him say yesterday,
+"You told me that before...."
+
+
+We had a convoy last night.
+
+There was a rumour at tea-time, and suddenly I came round a corner on an
+orderly full of such definite information as:
+
+"There's thirty officers, nurse; an 'undred an' eighty men."
+
+I flew back to the bunk with the news, and we sat down to our tea
+wondering and discussing how many each ward would get.
+
+Presently the haughty Sister from downstairs came to the door: she held
+her thin, white face high, and her rimless glasses gleamed, as she
+remarked, overcasually, after asking for a hot-water bottle that had
+been loaned to us:
+
+"Have you many beds?"
+
+"Have they many beds?" The one question that starts up among the
+competing wards.
+
+And, "I don't want any; I've enough to do as it is!" is the false,
+cloaking answer that each Sister gives to the other.
+
+But my Sisters are frank women; they laughed at my
+excitement--themselves not unstirred. It's so long since we've had a
+convoy.
+
+
+The gallants of the ward showed annoyance. New men, new interests....
+They drew together and played bridge.
+
+
+A little flying boy with bright eyes said in his high, piping voice to
+me across the ward:
+
+"So there are soldiers coming into the ward to-night!"
+
+I paused, struck by his accusing eyes.
+
+"What do you mean? Soldiers...?"
+
+"I mean men who have been to the front, nurse."
+
+The gallants raised their eyebrows and grew uproarious.
+
+
+The gallants have been saying unprofessional things to me, and I haven't
+minded. The convoy will arm me against them. "Soldiers are coming into
+the ward."
+
+Eight o'clock, nine o'clock.... If only one could eat something! I took
+a sponge-finger out of a tin, resolving to pay it back out of my tea
+next day, and stole round to the dark corner near the German ward to eat
+it. The Germans were in bed; I could see two of them. At last, freed
+from their uniform, the dark blue with the scarlet soup-plates, they
+looked--how strange!--like other men.
+
+One was asleep. The other, I met his eyes so close; but I was in the
+dark, and he under the light of a lamp.
+
+I knew what was happening down at the station two miles away; I had been
+on station duty so often. The rickety country station lit by one large
+lamp; the thirteen waiting V.A.D.'s; the long wooden table loaded with
+mugs of every size; kettles boiling; the white clock ticking on; that
+frowsy booking clerk....
+
+Then the sharp bell, the tramp of the stretcher-bearers through the
+station, and at last the two engines drawing gravely across the lighted
+doorway, and carriage windows filled with eager faces, other carriage
+windows with beds slung across them, a vast Red Cross, a chemist's shop,
+a theatre, more windows, more faces....
+
+The stretcher-men are lined up; the M.O. meets the M.O. with the train;
+the train Sisters drift in to the coffee-table.
+
+"Here they come! Walkers first...."
+
+The station entrance is full of men crowding in and taking the steaming
+mugs of tea and coffee; men on pickaback with bandaged feet; men with
+only a nose and one eye showing, with stumbling legs, bound arms. The
+station, for five minutes, is full of jokes and witticisms; then they
+pass out and into the waiting chars-à-bancs.
+
+A long pause.
+
+"Stretchers!"
+
+The first stretchers are laid on the floor.
+
+There I have stood so often, pouring the tea behind the table, watching
+that littered floor, the single gas-lamp ever revolving on its chain,
+turning the shadows about the room like a wheel--my mind filled with
+pictures, emptied of thoughts, hypnotized.
+
+
+But last night, for the first time, I was in the ward. For the first
+time I should follow them beyond the glass door, see what became of
+them, how they changed from soldiers into patients....
+
+The gallants in the ward don't like a convoy; it unsexes us.
+
+Nine o'clock ... ten o'clock.... Another biscuit. Both Germans are
+asleep now.
+
+At last a noise in the corridor, a tramp on the stairs.... Only walkers?
+No, there's a stretcher--and another...!
+
+Now reflection ends, my feet begin to move, my hands to undo bootlaces,
+flick down thermometers, wash and fetch and carry.
+
+The gallants play bridge without looking up. I am tremendously fortified
+against them: for one moment I fiercely condemn and then forget them.
+For I am without convictions, antipathies, prejudices, reflections. I
+only work and watch, watch....
+
+Our ward is divided: half of it is neat and white and orderly; the
+other half has khaki tumbled all over it--"Sam Brownes," boots, caps,
+mud, the caked mud from the "other side."
+
+But the neat beds are empty; the occupants out talking to the
+new-comers, asking questions. Only the gallants play their bridge
+unmoved. They are on their mettle, showing off. Their turn will come
+some day.
+
+
+Now it only remains to walk home, hungry, under a heavy moon.
+
+The snow is running down the gutters. What a strange and penetrating
+smell of spring! February ... can it be yet?
+
+The running snow is uncovering something that has been delayed. In the
+garden a blackbird made a sudden cry in the hedge. I did smell spring,
+and I'm starving....
+
+
+I thought last night that a hospital ward is, above all, a serene place,
+in spite of pain and blood and dressings. Gravity rules it and order and
+a quiet procession of duties.
+
+Last night I made beds with the eldest Sister. The eldest Sister is good
+company to make beds with; she is quiet unless I rouse her, and when I
+talk she smiles with her eyes. I like to walk slowly round the ward,
+stooping and rising over the white beds, flicking the sheets
+mechanically from the mattress, and finally turning the mattress with an
+ease which gives me pleasure because I am strong.
+
+In life nothing is too small to please....
+
+Once during the evening the eldest Sister said to me:
+
+"I am worried about your throat. Is it no better?"
+
+And from the pang of pleasure and gratitude that went through me I have
+learnt the value of such remarks.
+
+In every bed there is some one whose throat is at least more sore than
+mine....
+
+Though I am not one of those fierce V.A.D.'s who scoff at sore throats
+and look for wounds, yet I didn't know it was so easy to give pleasure.
+
+
+The strange, disarming ways of men and women!
+
+I stood in the bunk to-night beside the youngest Sister, and she looked
+up suddenly with her absent stare and said, "You're not so nice as you
+used to be!"
+
+I was dumbfounded. Had I been "nice"? And now different....
+
+What a maddening sentence, for I felt she was going to refuse me any
+spoken explanation.
+
+But one should not listen to what people say, only to what they mean,
+and she was one of those persons whose minds one must read for oneself,
+since her words so often deformed her thoughts.
+
+The familiarity and equality of her tone seemed to come from some mood
+removed from the hospital, where her mistrustful mind was hovering about
+a trouble personal to herself.
+
+She did not mean "You are not so nice...." but "You don't like me so
+much...."
+
+She was so young, it was all so new to her, she wanted so to be "liked"!
+But there was this question of her authority....
+
+How was she to live among her fellows?
+
+Can one afford to disdain them? Can one steer happily with indifference?
+Must one, to be "liked," bend one's spirit to theirs? And, most
+disturbing question of all, is to be "liked" the final standard?
+
+Whether to wear, or not to wear, a mask towards one's world? For there
+is so much that is not ripe to show--change and uncertainty....
+
+As she sat there, unfolding to me the fogs of her situation, her fresh
+pink face clouded, her grand cap and red cape adding burdens of
+authority to the toil of growth, I could readily have looked into the
+glass to see if my hair was grey!
+
+
+"Then there is nothing you condemn?" said the youngest Sister finally,
+at the close of a conversation.
+
+I have to-day come up against the bedrock of her integrity; it is
+terrible. She has eternal youth, eternal fair hair, cold and ignorant
+judgments. On things relating to the world I can't further soften her; a
+man must do the rest.
+
+
+"A gentleman ... a gentleman...." I am so tired of this cry for a
+"gentleman."
+
+Why can't they do very well with what they've got!
+
+Here in the wards the Sisters have the stuff the world is made of laid
+out, bedded, before their eyes; the ups and downs of man from the four
+corners of the Empire and the hundred corners of social life, helpless
+and in pyjamas--and they're not satisfied, but must cry for a
+"gentleman"!
+
+"I couldn't make a friend of that man!" the youngest Sister loves to add
+to her criticism of a patient.
+
+It isn't my part as a V.A.D. to cry, "Who wants you to?"
+
+"I couldn't trust that man!" the youngest Sister will say equally often.
+
+This goes deeper....
+
+But whom need one trust? Brother, lover, friend ... no more. Why wish to
+trust all the world?...
+
+"They are not real men," she says, "not men through and through."
+
+That's where she goes wrong; they are men through and through--patchy,
+ordinary, human. She means they are not men after her pattern.
+
+Something will happen in the ward. Once I have touched this bedrock in
+her I shall be for ever touching it till it gets sore!
+
+One should seek for no response. They are not elastic, these nuns....
+
+
+In all honesty the hospital is a convent, and the men in it my brothers.
+
+This for months on end....
+
+For all that, now and then some one raises his eyes and looks at me; one
+day follows another and the glance deepens.
+
+"Charme de l'amour qui pourrait vous peindre!"
+
+Women are left behind when one goes into hospital. Such women as are in
+a hospital should be cool, gentle; anything else becomes a torment to
+the "prisoner."
+
+For me, too, it is bad; it brings the world back into my eyes; duties
+are neglected, discomforts unobserved.
+
+But there are things one doesn't fight.
+
+"Charme de l'amour...." The ward is changed! The eldest Sister and the
+youngest Sister are my enemies; the patients are my enemies--even Mr.
+Wicks, who lies on his back with his large head turned fixedly my way to
+see how often I stop at the bed whose number is 11.
+
+Last night he dared to say, "It's not like you, nurse, staying so much
+with that rowdy crew...." The gallants ... I know! But one among them
+has grown quieter, and his bed is No. 11.
+
+Even Mr. Wicks is my enemy.
+
+He watches and guards. Who knows what he might say to the eldest Sister?
+He has nothing to do all day but watch and guard.
+
+In the bunk at tea I sit among thoughts of my own. The Sisters are my
+enemies....
+
+
+I am alive, delirious, but not happy.
+
+I am at any one's mercy; I have lost thirty friends in a day. The
+thirty-first is in bed No. 11.
+
+
+This is bad: hospital cannot shelter this life we lead, No. 11 and I. He
+is a prisoner, and I have my honour, my responsibility towards him; he
+has come into this room to be cured, not tormented.
+
+Even my hand must not meet his--no, not even in a careless touch, not
+even in its "duty"; or, if it does, what risk!
+
+I am conspired against: it is not I who make his bed, hand him what he
+wishes; some accident defeats me every time.
+
+
+Now that I come to think of it, it seems strange that the Sisters should
+be my enemies. Don't we deserve sympathy and pity, No. 11 and I? From
+women, too....
+
+Isn't there a charm hanging about us? Aren't we leading magic days? Do
+they feel it and dislike it? Why?
+
+I feel that the little love we have created is a hare whose natural fate
+is to be run by every hound. But I don't see the reason.
+
+We can't speak, No. 11 and I, only a whispered word or two that seems to
+shout itself into every ear. We don't know each other.
+
+Last night it was stronger than I. I let him stand near me and talk. I
+saw the youngest Sister at the far end of the ward by the door, but I
+didn't move; she was watching. The moment I took my eyes from her I
+forgot her.... That is how one feels when one is desperate; that is how
+trouble comes.
+
+
+Later, I stood down by the hatch waiting for the tray of fish, and as I
+stood there, the youngest Sister beside me, he came down, for he was up
+and dressed yesterday, and offered to carry the tray. For he is
+reckless, too....
+
+She told him to go back, and said to me, looking from her young,
+condemning eyes, "I suppose he thinks he can make up for being the cause
+of all the lateness to-night."
+
+"Sister...." and then I stopped short. I hated her. Were we late? I
+looked at the other trays. We were not late; it was untrue. She had said
+that because she had had to wrap her barb in something and hadn't the
+courage to reprove me officially. I resented that and her air of
+equality. Since I am under her authority and agree to it, why dare she
+not use it?
+
+As for me, I dared not speak to her all the evening. She would have no
+weapons against me. If I am to remember she is my Sister I must hold my
+hand over my mouth.
+
+She would not speak to me, either. That was wrong of her: she is in
+authority, not I.
+
+It is difficult for her because she is so young; but I have no room for
+sympathy.
+
+At moments I forget her position and, burning with resentment, I
+reflect, " ... this schoolgirl...."
+
+
+To-day I walked down to the hospital thinking: "I must be stronger. It
+is I who, in the inverted position of things, should be the stronger. He
+is being tortured, and he has no release. He cannot even be alone a
+moment."
+
+But at the hospital gates I thought of nothing but that I should see
+him.
+
+
+In the bunk sat the eldest Sister, writing in a book. It passed through
+my head that the two Sisters had probably "sat" on my affairs together.
+I wondered without interest what the other had told her. Putting on my
+cap, I walked into the ward.
+
+Surely his bed had had a pink eiderdown!
+
+I walked up the ward and looked at it; but I knew without need of a
+second glance what had happened.
+
+His bed was made in the fashion in which we make an empty bed, a bed
+that waits for a new patient. His locker was empty and stood open,
+already scrubbed. I smiled as I noticed they hadn't even left me that to
+do.
+
+No one volunteered a word of explanation, no one took the trouble to say
+he had gone.
+
+These women.... I smiled again. Only the comic phrase rang in my head
+"They've properly done me in! Properly done me in...."
+
+I went downstairs and fetched the trays, and all the time the smile was
+on my lips. These women.... Somehow I had the better of the Sister. It
+is better to be in the wrong than in the right.
+
+His friends looked at me a little, but apparently he had left no message
+for me.
+
+Later I learnt that he had been taken to another hospital at two, while
+I came on at three.
+
+Once during the evening the eldest Sister mentioned vaguely, "So-and-so
+has gone."
+
+And I said aloud, after a little reflection, "Yes ... in the nick of
+time, Sister."
+
+During the evening I realized that I should never see him again. It was
+here in this ward the thing had grown. The hare we had started wouldn't
+bear the strain of any other life. He might write, but I shouldn't go
+and see him.
+
+"He must be wild," I thought with pity.
+
+The feeling between us would die anyhow; better throw in my strength
+with the Sister's and help her hurl it now towards its death. I looked
+at her bent head with a secret triumph.
+
+
+Then, slowly: "How ... permanently am I in disgrace?"
+
+And she: "Not at all ... now."
+
+
+Behind the stone pillar of the gateway is one dirty little patch of
+snow; I saw it even in the moonless darkness.
+
+The crown of the hill here holds the last snows, but for all that the
+spring smell is steaming among the trees and up and down the bracken
+slopes in the garden next door.
+
+There is no moon, there are no stars, no promise to the eye, but in the
+dense, vapouring darkness the bulbs are moving. I can smell what is not
+earth or rain or bark.
+
+
+The curtain has been drawn over No. 11; the Sister holds the corners
+tightly against the window-frame. He is outside, somewhere in the world,
+and I am here moving among my thirty friends; and since it isn't spring
+yet, the lights are lit to hide the twilight. The Sister's eyes talk to
+me again as we make beds--yes, even bed No. 11 with a little jaundice
+boy in it. They let me make it now!
+
+
+Last night we had another concert in the ward.
+
+A concert demoralizes me. By reason of sitting on the beds and talking
+to whom one wills, I regain my old manners, and forget that a patient
+may be washed, fed, dressed but not talked to. My old manners were more
+gracious, but less docile.
+
+Afterwards we wheeled the beds back into their positions. I bumped Mr.
+Lambert's as I wheeled it, and apologized.
+
+"I'm not grumbling," he smiled from his pillow.
+
+"You never do," I answered.
+
+"You don't know me, nurse!"
+
+And I thought as I looked down at him "I shall never know him better or
+so well again...."
+
+Indeed a Sister is a curious creature. She is like a fortress,
+unassailable, and whose sleeping guns may fire at any minute.
+
+I was struck with a bit of knowledge last night that will serve me
+through life, i.e. that to justify oneself is the inexcusable fault. It
+is better to be in the wrong than in the right.
+
+
+A Sister has an "intimate life."
+
+It occurs when she goes off duty; that is to say, it lies between 8.45,
+when she finishes her supper, and 10 o'clock, when she finishes
+undressing.
+
+That is why one Sister said to me, "If I hadn't taken up nursing I
+should have gone in for culture."
+
+I don't laugh at that.... To have an intimate life one must have a
+little time.
+
+Who am I that I can step in from outside to criticize? The hospital is
+not my life. I am expectant....
+
+But for them here and now is the business of life.
+
+
+As the weeks go by I recognize the difficulty of keeping the life of the
+Sisters and the V.A.D.'s out of the circle of my thoughts. Their
+vigorous and symmetrical vision of the ward attacks me; their attitude
+towards the patients, which began by offending me, ends by overtaking
+me.
+
+On the whole the Sisters loathe relations. They look into the ward and
+see the mothers and sisters and wives camped round the beds, and go back
+into the bunk feeling that the ward doesn't belong to them.
+
+The eldest Sister said to me yesterday: "Shut the door, nurse; there's
+Captain Fellows's father. I don't want him fussing round."
+
+On that we discussed relations, and it seemed to me that it was
+inevitable that a Sister should be the only buffer between them and
+their pressing anxieties.
+
+"No, a relation is the last straw.... You don't understand!" she said.
+
+I don't understand, but I am not specialized.
+
+
+Long ago in the Mess I said to _my_ Sister, laughing: "I would go
+through the four years' training just to wear that cap and cape!"
+
+And she: "You couldn't go through it and come out as you are...."
+
+
+Mr. Wicks has set his heart on crutches.
+
+"If you won't try me on them I'll buy me own and walk out of here!"
+
+Then I realize the vanity of his threat and the completeness of his
+imprisonment, and hurry to suggest a new idea before he sees it too....
+
+We set him on crutches....
+
+He is brave. He said with anger, "I can't stand on these, they're too
+long. You go and ask for some shorter ones...."
+
+And thus together we slurred over the fact of that pendulous, nerveless
+body which had hung from the crutches like an old stocking.
+
+But all the evening he was buried in his own silence, and I suppose he
+was looking at the vision on the bedrail.
+
+
+A boy of seventeen was brought in yesterday with pneumonia.
+
+He was so ill that he couldn't speak, and we put screens round his bed.
+All the other patients in the ward immediately became convalescents.
+
+I helped Sister to wash him, holding him on his side while he groaned
+with pain; and Sister, no longer cynical, said, "There you are Sonnie,
+it's almost finished...."
+
+When I rolled back the blanket it gave me a shock to see how young his
+feet were--clean and thin, with the big toe curling up and the little
+toes curling back.
+
+"Will you brush my hair?" he managed to say to me, and when I had
+finished: "This is a pretty ward...."
+
+It isn't, but I am glad it seems so to him.
+
+
+The boy is at his worst. Whenever we come near him he lifts his eyes and
+asks, "What are you going to do now?"
+
+But to whatever we do he submits with a terrible docility.
+
+Lying there propped on his pillow, with his small yellow face staring
+down the ward, he is all the centre of my thoughts; I am preoccupied
+with the mystery that is in his lungs.
+
+Five days ago he was walking on his legs: five days, and he is on the
+edge of the world--to-night looking over the edge.
+
+There is no shell, no mark, no tear.... The attack comes from within.
+
+The others in the ward are like phantoms.
+
+When I say to-morrow, "How is the boy?" what will they say?
+
+
+The sun on the cobwebs lights them as it lights the telephone-wires
+above. The cocks scream from every garden.
+
+To-day the sky is like a pale egg-shell, and aeroplanes from the two
+aerodromes are droning round the hill.
+
+I think from time to time, "Is he alive?"
+
+
+Can one grow used to death? It is unsafe to think of this....
+
+For if death becomes cheap it is the watcher, not the dying, who is
+poisoned.
+
+
+His mother buys a cake every day and brings it at tea-time, saying, "For
+the Sisters' tea...."
+
+It is a bribe, dumbly offered, more to be on the safe side of every bit
+of chance than because she really believes it can make the slightest
+difference.
+
+Now that I have time to think of it, her little action hurts me, but
+yesterday I helped to eat it with pleasure because one is hungry and the
+margarine not the best.
+
+
+Aches and pains....
+ Pains and aches....
+
+
+I don't know how to get home up the long hill....
+
+
+Measles....
+
+
+ (Unposted.)
+
+"DEAR SISTER,--Four more days before they will let me out of bed....
+Whatever I promise to a patient in future I shall do, if I have to wear
+a notebook hanging on my belt.
+
+"By which you will see that I am making discoveries!
+
+"The quality of _expectation_ in a person lying horizontally is wrought
+up to a high pitch. One is always expecting something. Generally it is
+food; three times a day it is the post; oftener it is the performance of
+some promise. The things that one asks from one's bed are so small: 'Can
+you get me a book?' 'Can you move that vase of flowers?' 'When you come
+up next time could you bring me an envelope?'
+
+"But if one cannot get them life might as well stop.
+
+
+"The wonder to me is how they stood me!
+
+"I was always cheerful--I thought it a merit; I find instead it is an
+exasperation.
+
+
+"I make a hundred reflections since my eyes are too bad to read. I stare
+at the ceiling, and if a moth comes on it--and just now that happened,
+or I would not have thought of mentioning it--I watch the pair of them,
+the moth and its leaping shadow, as they whirl from square to square of
+the smoke-ripened ceiling. This keeps my thoughts quiet.
+
+"Then in the daytime there is the garden, the dog that crosses the lawn,
+the gardener talking to himself, the girl who goes to feed the hens....
+
+"I don't say that in any of these things I find a substitute for
+reading, but since I can't and mayn't read....
+
+"I am thinking, you know, of the beds down the right-hand side of the
+ward.
+
+"There's Mr. Wicks, now: he has his back to the road with the trams on
+it.
+
+"Do you see anything in that?
+
+"I do. But then I have the advantage of you; my position is horizontal.
+
+"Mr. Wicks's position is also ... strictly ... horizontal. It seems to
+me that if he could see those trams, mark Saturdays and Sundays by the
+increase of passengers, make little games to himself involving the
+number of persons to get on and off (for the stopping-place is within
+view: I know, for I looked) it might be possible to draw him back from
+that apathy which I too, as well as you, was ceasing to notice.
+
+"Mr. Wicks, Sister, not only has his back to the road with trams on it,
+but for eleven months he has had his eyes on the yellow stone of the
+wall of the German ward; that is, when they are not on his own
+bedrail....
+
+"But if his bed were turned round to range alongside the window...? For
+he is a man with two eyes; not one who can write upon a stone wall with
+his thoughts.
+
+"And yet ... it would be impossible! There's not a ward in the hospital
+whose symmetry is so spoilt.
+
+"And that, you know, is a difficulty for you to weigh. How far are you a
+dictator?
+
+
+"I have been thinking of my rôle and yours.
+
+"In the long run, however 'capable' I become, my soul should be given to
+the smoothing of pillows.
+
+"You are barred from so many kinds of sympathy: you must not sympathize
+over the deficiencies of the hospital, over the food, over the M.O.'s
+lack of imagination, over the intolerable habits of the man in the next
+bed; you must not sigh 'I know ...' to any of these plaints.
+
+"Yours is the running of the ward. Yours the isolation of a crowned
+head.
+
+"One day you said a penetrating thing to me:
+
+"'He's not very ill, but he's feeling wretched. Run along and do the
+sympathetic V.A.D. touch!'
+
+"For a moment I, just able to do a poultice or a fomentation, resented
+it.
+
+"But you were right.... One has one's _métier_."
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+"THE BOYS ..."
+
+
+So now one steps down from chintz covers and lemonade to the Main Army
+and lemon-water.
+
+And to show how little one has one's eye upon the larger issues, the
+thing that upset me most on coming into a "Tommies'" ward was the fact
+that instead of twenty-six lemons twice a day for the making of lemonade
+I now squeeze two into an old jug and hope for the best about the sugar.
+
+Smiff said to-day, "Give us a drop of lemon, nurse...." And the Sister:
+"Go on with you! I won't have the new nurse making a pet of you...."
+
+I suppose I'm new to it, and one can't carry on the work that way, but,
+God knows, the water one can add to a lemon is cheap enough!
+
+Smiff had a flash of temper to-night. He said: "Keepin' me here starin'
+at green walls this way! Nothing but green, nine blessed months!"
+
+His foot is off, and to-night for the first time the doctor had promised
+that he should be wheeled into the corridor. But it was forgotten, and I
+am too new to jog the memory of the gods.
+
+It's a queer place, a "Tommies'" ward. It makes me nervous. I'm not
+simple enough; they make me shy. I can't think of them like the others
+do, as "the boys"; they seem to me full-grown men.
+
+
+I suffer awfully from my language in this ward. I seem to be the only
+V.A.D. of whom they continually ask, "What's say, nurse?" It isn't that
+I use long words, but my sentences seem to be inverted.
+
+An opportunity for learning to speak simple Saxon....
+
+
+"An antitetanic injection for Corrigan," said Sister. And I went to the
+dispensary to fetch the syringe and the needles.
+
+"But has he any symptoms?" I asked. (In a Tommies' ward one dare ask
+anything; there isn't that mystery which used to surround the officers'
+illnesses.)
+
+"Oh no," she said, "it's just that he hasn't had his full amount in
+France."
+
+So I hunted up the spirit-lamp and we prepared it, talking of it.
+
+But we forgot to talk of it to Corrigan. The needle was into his
+shoulder before he knew why his shirt was held up.
+
+His wrath came like an avalanche; the discipline of two years was
+forgotten, his Irish tongue was loosened. Sister shrugged her shoulders
+and laughed; I listened to him as I cleaned the syringe.
+
+I gathered that it was the indignity that had shocked his sense of
+individual pride. "Treating me like a cow...." I heard him say to
+Smiff--who laughed, since it wasn't his shoulder that carried the serum.
+Smiff laughed: he has been in hospital nine months, and his theory is
+that a Sister may do anything at any moment; his theory is that nothing
+does any good--that if you don't fuss you don't get worse.
+
+Corrigan was angry all day; the idea that "a bloomin' woman should come
+an' shove something into me systim" was too much for him. But he forgets
+himself: there are no individualists now; his "system" belongs to us.
+
+Sister said, laughing, to Smiff the other day, "Your leg is mine."
+
+"Wrong again; it's the Governmint's!" said Smiff. But Corrigan is Irish
+and doesn't like that joke.
+
+
+There are times when my heart fails me; when my eyes, my ears, my
+tongue, and my understanding fail me; when pain means nothing to me....
+
+In the bus yesterday I came down from London sitting beside a Sister
+from another ward, who held her hand to her ear and shifted in her seat.
+
+She told me she had earache, and I felt sorry for her.
+
+As she had earache we didn't talk, and I sat huddled in my corner and
+watched the names of the shops, thinking, as I was more or less forced
+to do by her movements, of her earache.
+
+What struck me was her own angry bewilderment before the fact of her
+pain. "But it hurts.... You've no idea how it hurts!" She was surprised.
+
+Many times a day she hears the words, "Sister, you're hurtin' me....
+Couldn't you shift my heel? It's like a toothache," and similar
+sentences. I hear them in our ward all the time. One can't pass down the
+ward without some such request falling on one's ears.
+
+She is astonished at her earache; she is astonished at what pain can
+be; it is unexpected. She is ready to be angry with herself, with her
+pain, with her ear. It is monstrous, she thinks....
+
+The pain of one creature cannot continue to have a meaning for another.
+It is almost impossible to nurse a man well whose pain you do not
+imagine. A deadlock!
+
+
+One has illuminations all the time!
+
+There is an old lady who visits in our ward, at whom, for one or two
+unimportant reasons, it is the custom to laugh. The men, who fall in
+with our moods with a docility which I am beginning to suspect is a
+mask, admit too that she is comic.
+
+This afternoon, when she was sitting by Corrigan's bed and talking to
+him I saw where her treatment of him differed from ours. She treats him
+as though he were an individual; but there is more in it than that....
+She treats him as though he had a wife and children, a house and a back
+garden and responsibilities: in some manner she treats him as though he
+had dignity.
+
+I thought of yesterday's injection. That is the difference: that is what
+the Sisters mean when they say "the boys."...
+
+The story of Rees is not yet ended in either of the two ways in which
+stories end in a hospital. His arm does not get worse, but his courage
+is ebbing. This morning I wheeled him out to the awful sleep again--for
+the third time.
+
+They will take nearly anything from each other. The only thing that
+cheered Rees up as he was wheeled away was the voice of Pinker crying,
+"Jer want white flowers on yer coffin? We'll see to the brass 'andles!"
+
+From Pinker, a little boy from the Mile End Road, they will stand
+anything. He is the servant of the ward (he says), partly through his
+good nature and a little because he has two good arms and legs. "I ain't
+no skivvy," he protests all the time, but every little odd job gets
+done.
+
+Rees, when he wakes, wakes sobbing and says, "Don' go away, nurse...."
+He holds my hand in a fierce clutch, then releases it to point in the
+air, crying "There's the pain!" as though the pain filled the air and
+rose to the rafters. As he wakes it centralizes, until at last comes the
+moment when he says, "Me arm aches cruel," and points to it. Then one
+can leave him.
+
+
+It was the first time I had heard a man sing at his dressing. I was
+standing at the sterilizer when Rees's song began to mount over the
+screen that hid him from me. ("Whatever is that?" "Rees's tubes going
+in.")
+
+It was like this: "Ah ... ee ... oo, Sister!" and again: "Sister ... oo
+... ee ... ah!" Then a little scream and his song again.
+
+I heard her voice: "Now then, Rees, I don't call that much of a song."
+She called me to make his bed, and I saw his left ear was full of tears.
+
+O visitors, who come into the ward in the calm of the long afternoon,
+when the beds are neat and clean and the flowers out on the tables and
+the V.A.D.'s sit sewing at splints and sandbags, when the men look like
+men again and smoke and talk and read ... if you could see what lies
+beneath the dressings!
+
+When one shoots at a wooden figure it makes a hole. When one shoots at a
+man it makes a hole, and the doctor must make seven others.
+
+
+I heard a blackbird sing in the middle of the night last night--two
+bars, and then another. I thought at first it might be a burglar
+whistling to his mate in the black and rustling garden.
+
+But it was a blackbird in a nightmare.
+
+
+Those distant guns again to-night....
+
+Now a lull and now a bombardment; again a lull, and then batter, batter,
+and the windows tremble. Is the lull when _they_ go over the top?
+
+I can only think of death to-night. I tried to think just now, "What is
+it, after all! Death comes anyway; this only hastens it." But that won't
+do; no philosophy helps the pain of death. It is pity, pity, pity, that
+I feel, and sometimes a sort of shame that I am here to write at all.
+
+Summer.... Can it be summer through whose hot air the guns shake and
+tremble? The honeysuckle, whose little stalks twinkled and shone that
+January night, has broken at each woody end into its crumbled flower.
+
+Where is the frost, the snow?... Where are the dead?
+
+Where is my trouble and my longing, and the other troubles, and the
+happiness in other summers?
+
+Alas, the long history of life! There is that in death that makes the
+throat contract and the heart catch: everything is written in water.
+
+We talk of tablets to the dead. There can be none but in the heart, and
+the heart fades.
+
+
+There are only ten men left in bed in the ward. Sometimes I think, "Will
+there never be another convoy?"
+
+And then: "Is not one man alone sufficient matter on which to reflect?"
+"One can find God in a herring's head...." says a Japanese proverb.
+
+
+When there is not much to do in the ward and no sound comes from behind
+the screens, when there has not been a convoy for weeks, when the little
+rubber tubes lie in the trolley-drawer and the syringe gives place to
+the dry dressing--then they set one of us aside from the work of the
+ward to sit at a table and pad splints.
+
+It isn't supposed to be a job we care for, and I am keeping up the
+delusion, but all the time I run my seams straight, pull the horsehair
+out to the last fine shred, turn in my corners as the corners of a
+leather book are turned, so that I may be kept at it, although out of
+cunning I appear to grumble and long to be released.
+
+One does not wash up when one makes splints, one does not change the
+pillow-cases--forcing the resentful pillow down, down till the corners
+of the case are filled--nor walk the ward in search of odd jobs.
+
+But these are not the reasons....
+
+Just as I liked the unending laying of the trays in the corridor, so
+making splints appears to me a gentle work in which one has time to look
+at and listen to the ward with more penetrating eyes, with wider ears--a
+work varied by long conversations with Pinker about his girl and the
+fountain-pen trade.
+
+But I ought not to have asked if she were pretty.
+
+At first he didn't answer and appeared to be thinking very seriously--of
+a way out, perhaps.
+
+"Does fer me all right," he presently said.
+
+The defence of his girl occupied his attention, for after a few minutes
+he returned to it: "Sensible sort of girl. She ain't soft. Can cook an'
+all that."
+
+I went on sewing my splint.
+
+Almost reluctantly he pursued: "Got 'er photograph 'ere." But he did not
+get up at once, and we turned to the fountain-pens. "Any nib," he said,
+"crossed ever so, _I_ could mend it. Kep' the books too; we was always
+stocktaking."
+
+Now I think of it, fountain-pen shops always _are_ stocktaking. They do
+it all down the Strand, with big red labels across the front.
+
+He rose suddenly and crossed to his locker to look for her photograph,
+returning after a few minutes with a bundle of little cardboards. The
+first I turned over was that of a pretty fair-haired girl. "Is that
+her?" I asked. "She's pretty!" "That's 'er young sister," he answered. I
+turned over the rest, and he pointed out his family one by one--last of
+all his girl.
+
+There are some men who are not taken in by a bit of fair hair.
+
+One knows what these cheap photographs are, how they distort and
+blacken. The girl who looked at me from this one appeared to be a
+monster.
+
+She had an enormous face, enormous spectacles, bands of galvanized iron
+drawn across her forehead for hair....
+
+"Ther's just them two, 'er an 'er sister. 'Er sister ain't got a feller
+yet."
+
+I praised his girl to Pinker, and praised Pinker to myself.
+
+"A girl friend," he said, "keeps yer straighter than a man. Makes yer
+punctual."
+
+"So she won't wait for you when you are late?"
+
+"Not a minute over time," he said with pride. "I used to be a terror
+when I first knew 'er; kep' 'er waitin' abaht. She soon cured me, did F.
+Steel."
+
+"You are a funny little bird, Pinker," said the Sister, passing.
+
+"Lil bird, am I?" He tucked his cardboards carefully into his locker and
+followed her up the ward firing repartee.
+
+I sewed my splint. In all walks of life men keep one waiting. I should
+like to ask the huge and terrible girl about her cure.
+
+
+Monk is the ugliest man I have ever seen. He has a squint and a leer,
+his mouth drops at both sides, he has no forehead, and his straight,
+combed hair meets his eyebrows--or rather, his left eyebrow, since that
+one is raised by a cut. He has the expression of a cut-throat, and yet
+he is quite young, good-tempered, and shy.
+
+When Monk was working at a woollen belt Pinker said: "Workin' that for
+yer girl?... You got a girl, Monk?"
+
+Monk squinted sidelong at Pinker and rubbed his hands together like a
+large ape.
+
+"'E ain't got no girl," shrilled Pinker. "Monk ain't got no girl. You
+don' know what a girl is, do yer, Monk?"
+
+Although they do much more to help each other than I ever saw done in
+the officers' ward, yet one is always saying things that I find myself
+praying the other hasn't heard.
+
+In the next bed to Monk lies Gayner, six foot two, of the Expeditionary
+Force. Wounded at Mons, he was brought home to England, and since then
+he has made the round of the hospitals. He is a good-looking, sullen man
+who will not read or write or sew, who will not play draughts or cards
+or speak to his neighbour. He sits up, attentive, while the ulcers on
+his leg are being dressed, but if one asks him something of the history
+of his wound his tone holds such a volume of bitterness and exasperation
+that one feels that at any moment the locks of his spirit might cease to
+hold.
+
+" ... ever since Mons, these ulcers, on and off?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Oh well, we must cure them now."
+
+Her light tone is what he cannot endure. He does not believe in cure and
+will not believe in cure. It has become an article of faith: his ulcers
+will never be cured. He has a silent scorn of hospitals. He can wind a
+perfect bandage and he knows the rules; beyond that he pays as little
+attention as possible to what goes on.
+
+When his dressing is over he tilts his thin, intelligent face at the
+ceiling. "Don't you ever read?" I asked him.
+
+"I haven't the patience," he replied. But he has the patience to lie
+like that with his thin lips compressed and a frown on his face for
+hours, for days ... since Mons....
+
+I have come to the conclusion that he has a violent soul, that he dare
+not talk. It is no life for a man.
+
+
+I said to Pinker this morning, "I wish you'd hurry up over your bath;
+I've got to get it scrubbed out by nine."
+
+"Don't you hurry me, nurse," said Pinker, "it's the on'y time I can
+think, in me bath."
+
+I should like to have parried with Pinker (only my language is so much
+more complicated than it ought to be) that thinking in one's bath is a
+self-deception. I lay in my own bath last night and thought very deep
+thoughts, but often when we think our thoughts are deep they are only
+vague. Bath thoughts are wonderful, but there's nothing "to" them.
+
+
+We had a heated discussion to-day as to whether the old lady who leaves
+a tract beneath a single rose by each bedside could longer be tolerated.
+
+"She is a nuisance," said the Sister; "the men make more noise
+afterwards because they set her hymns to ragtime."
+
+"What good does it do them?" said the V.A.D., " ... and I have to put
+the roses in water!"
+
+I rode the highest horse of all: "Her inquiries about their souls are an
+impertinence. Why should they be bothered?"
+
+These are the sort of things they say in debating societies. But Life
+talks differently....
+
+Pinker said, "Makes the po'r ole lady 'appy!"
+
+
+As one bends one's head low over the splint one sits unnoticed, a part
+of the furniture of the ward. The sounds of the ward rise and fill the
+ears; it is like listening to a kettle humming, bees round a bush of
+flowers, the ticking of a clock, the passing of life....
+
+Now and then there are incidents, as just now. Two orderlies came in
+with a stretcher to fetch Mr. Smith (an older man than Smiff and a more
+dignified) away to a convalescent home. Mr. Smith has never been to
+France, but walked into our ward one day with a sore on his foot which
+had to be cut. He was up and dressed in his bedraggled khaki uniform
+when the stretcher-bearers came for him.
+
+He looked down his nose at the stretcher. "I don't much like the look of
+that," he said. The stretcher-bearers waited for him.
+
+He stood irresolute. "I never bin in one of them, and I don't want to
+make a start."
+
+"Its bad luck to be our name," called out Smiff, waving his amputated
+ankle. "Better get your hand in!"
+
+Mr. Smith got in slowly and departed from the ward, sitting bolt
+upright, gripping the sides with his hands.
+
+
+Some of the wards and the Sisters' bunks are charming at this time of
+the year, now that larkspur and rambler-roses are cheap in the market.
+
+But the love of decoration is not woman's alone. Through the dispensary
+hatchway I saw three empty poison-bottles, each with a poppy stuck in
+its neck.
+
+Everything in the dispensary is beautiful--its glasses, its flames, its
+brass weights, its jars and globes; but much more beautiful because it
+is half a floor higher than the corridor in which we stand and look up
+into it, through a hatchway in the wall. There is something in that: one
+feels like Gulliver.
+
+No woman has ever been into this bachelors' temple.
+
+On tapping at a small square panel set in the wall of the corridor the
+panel flies up and a bachelor is seen from the waist to the knees. If he
+feels well and my smile is humble he will stoop, and I see looking down
+at me a small worn face and bushy eyebrows, or a long ascetic face and
+bleached hair, or a beard and a pair of bearded nostrils.
+
+Between them the three old things, priests in their way, measure and
+weigh and mix and scold and let up the panel and bang it down through
+the long day, filling the hospital with their coloured bottles, sealed
+packets of pills, jars and vaccines, and precious syringes in boxes
+marked "To be returned at once" (I never knew a Sister fail to toss her
+head when she saw this message).
+
+It is a very social spot outside the panel of the dispensary: each
+V.A.D. goes there each morning as one might do one's marketing, and,
+meeting there, puts down her straw basket, taps at the panel, and
+listens to the scolding of the old men with only half an ear.
+
+For the bachelors amuse themselves when they are not mixing and weighing
+by inventing odd rules and codes of their own, and, reaching a skinny
+arm through the hatchway, they pin them on, little scraps of paper which
+fall down and are swept to heaven in the charwomen's pails.
+
+And the V.A.D.'s, who are not at all afraid, because one cannot be
+afraid of a man of whom one has never seen more than half, turn a blind
+eye to the slips and a deaf ear to the voices, bringing their bottles
+and their jars just in the manner they were taught to do when first they
+entered the hospital. And they gossip! They have just seen the morning
+papers on all the beds; they have just heard about the half-days for the
+week; they have collected little rags and ends of news as they came
+along the corridor.
+
+They gossip. And once a bearded bachelor thumped the panel down almost
+on my finger, leaving three startled faces staring at a piece of painted
+wood. But a little dark girl worked the panel up an inch with her nails
+and cajoled through the crack.
+
+I have said before that the long corridor is wonderful. In the winter
+afternoons and evenings, when the mist rolled up and down over the tiles
+like the smoke in a tunnel, when one walked almost in darkness and
+peered into the then forbidden wards, when dwarfs coming from the G
+block grew larger and larger till the A block turned them into beings of
+one's own size, the corridor always made a special impression on me.
+
+But in the summer mornings it is remarkable too. Then regiments of
+charwomen occupy it, working in close mass formation. Seven will work
+abreast upon their knees, flanked by their pails, their hands moving
+backwards and forwards in so complicated a system that there appears to
+be no system at all.
+
+Patches of the corridor are thick with soapsuds; patches are dry. The
+art of walking the corridor in the morning can be learnt, and for a year
+and five months I have done it with no more than a slip and a slide.
+
+But yesterday I stepped on a charwoman's hand. It was worse than
+stepping on a puppy: one knows that sickening lift of the heart, as
+though the will could undo the weight of the foot....
+
+The stagger, the sense of one's unpardonable heaviness.... I slipped on
+her hand as on a piece of orange-peel, and, jumping like a chamois, sent
+the next pail all over the heels of the front rank.
+
+It was the sort of situation with which one can do nothing.
+
+
+I met a friend yesterday, one of the old Chelsea people. He has followed
+his natural development. Although he talks war, war, war, it is from his
+old angle, it wears the old hall-mark.
+
+He belongs to a movement which believes it "feels the war." Personal
+injury or personal loss does not enter the question; the heart of this
+movement of his bleeds perpetually, but impersonally. He claims for it
+that this heart is able to bleed more profusely than any other heart,
+individual or collective, in ... let us limit it to England!
+
+In fact it is the only blood he has noticed.
+
+When the taxes go up he says, "Well, now perhaps it will make people
+feel the war!" For he longs that every one should lose their money so
+that at last they may "feel the war," "stop the war" (interchangeable!)
+
+He forgets that even in England a great many quite stupid people would
+rather lose their money than their sons.
+
+How strange that these people should still picture the minds of soldiers
+as filled with the glitter of bright bayonets and the glory of war! They
+think we need a vision of blood and ravage and death to turn us from our
+bright thoughts, to still the noise of the drum in our ears. The drums
+don't beat, the flags don't fly....
+
+He should come down the left-hand side of the ward and hear what the
+dairyman says.
+
+"I 'ates it, nurse; I 'ates it. Them 'orses'll kill me; them drills....
+It's no life for a man, nurse."
+
+The dairyman hasn't been to the Front; you needn't go to the Front to
+hate the war. Sometimes I get a glimpse from him of what it means to the
+weaklings, the last-joined, feeble creatures.
+
+"Me 'ead's that queer, nurse; it seems to get queerer every day. I can't
+'elp worryin'. I keep thinkin' of them 'orses."
+
+Always the horses....
+
+I said to Sister, "Is No. 24 really ill?"
+
+"There's a chance of his being mental," she said. "He is being watched."
+
+Was he mental before the war took him, before the sergeant used to whip
+the horses as they got to the jumps, before the sergeant cried out
+"Cross your stirrups!"?
+
+It isn't his fault; there are strong and feeble men.
+
+A dairyman's is a gentle job; he could have scraped through life all
+right. He sleeps in the afternoon, and stirs and murmurs: "Drop your
+reins.... Them 'orses, sergeant! I'm comin', sergeant; don't touch 'im
+this time!" And then in a shriller voice, "Don't touch 'im...." Then he
+wakes.
+
+Poor mass of nerves.... He nods and smiles every time one looks at him,
+frantic to please.
+
+There are men and men. Scutts has eleven wounds, but he doesn't "mind"
+the war. God made many brands of men, that is all; one must accept them.
+
+But war finds few excuses; and there are strange minnows in the
+fishing-net. Sometimes, looking into the T.B. ward, I think: "It almost
+comes to this: one must spit blood or fight...."
+
+
+"Why don't you refuse?" my friend would say to the dairyman. "Why should
+you fight because another man tells you to?"
+
+It isn't so simple as that, is it, dairyman? It isn't even a question
+of the immense, vague machinery behind the sergeant, but just the
+sergeant himself; it isn't a question of generals or politicians of
+great wrongs or fierce beliefs ... but of the bugle which calls you in
+the morning and the bugle which puts you to bed at night.
+
+Well, well.... The dairyman is in hospital, and that is the best that he
+can hope for.
+
+
+I read a book once about a prison. They too, the prisoners, sought after
+the prison hospital, as one seeks after one's heaven.
+
+
+It is so puffed up of my friend to think that his and his "movement's"
+are the only eyes to see the vision of horror. Why, these others _are_
+the vision!
+
+
+This afternoon I was put at splints again.
+
+I only had an inch or two to finish and I spun it out, very happy.
+
+Presently the foot of a bed near me began to catch my attention: the toe
+beneath the sheets became more and more agitated, then the toes of the
+other foot joined the first foot, beating a frenzied tattoo beneath the
+coverings. I looked up.
+
+Facing me a pair of blue eyes were bulging above an open mouth, the
+nostrils were quivering, the fingers were wrung together. It was Gayner,
+surely seeing a ghost.
+
+I rose and went to his bed.
+
+"My jaws want to close," he muttered. "I can't keep them open."
+
+I jumped and went for Sister, who took the news in a leisurely fashion,
+which reproved me for my excitement. Feeling a fool, I went and sat down
+again, taking up my splint. But there was no forgetting Gayner.
+
+I tried to keep my eyes on my work, but first his toes and then his
+hands filled all my mind, till at last I had to look up and meet the
+eyes again.
+
+Still looking as though he had seen a ghost--a beast of a ghost...! In
+hospital since Mons.... "I wonder how many men he has seen die of
+tetanus?" I thought.
+
+"He's got the jumps," I thought.
+
+So had I. Suppose Sister was wrong! Suppose the precious minutes were
+passing! Suppose...! She was only the junior Sister.
+
+"Shall I get you some water?" I said at last. He nodded, and gulped in a
+horrible fashion. I got him the mug, and while he drank I longed, but
+did not dare, to say, "Are you afraid of ... that?" I thought if one
+could say the word it might break down that dumb fright, draw the flesh
+up again over those bulging eyes, give him a sort of anchor, a
+confessional, even if it was only me. But I didn't dare. Gayner is one
+of those men so pent up, so rigid with some inner indignation, one
+cannot tamper with the locks.
+
+Again I went and sat down.
+
+When next I looked up he was sweating. He beckoned to me: "Ask Sister to
+send for the doctor. I can't stand this."
+
+I went and asked her.
+
+She sucked her little finger thoughtfully.
+
+"Give him the thermometer," she said. He couldn't take it in his mouth,
+" ... for if I shut my lips they'll never open." I put it under his arm
+and waited while his feet kicked and his hands twisted. He was normal.
+Sister smiled.
+
+But by a coincidence the doctor came, gimlet-eyed.
+
+"Hysteria...." he said to Sister in the bunk.
+
+"Is no one going to reassure Gayner?" I wondered. And no one did.
+
+Isn't the fear of pain next brother to pain itself? Tetanus or the fear
+of tetanus--a choice between two nightmares. Don't they admit that?
+
+So, forbidden to speak to him, I finished my splint till tea-time. But I
+couldn't bring myself to sit down to it, for fear that the too placid
+resumption of my duties should outrage him. I stood up.
+
+Which helped me, not him.
+
+
+After the dressings are over we scrub the dishes and basins in the
+annexe.
+
+In the annexe, except that there is nothing to sit on, there is leisure
+and an invitation to reflection.
+
+Beneath the windows legions of white butterflies attack the
+cabbage-patch which divides us from the road; beyond the road there is a
+camp from which the dust flows all day.
+
+When the wind is from the north the dust is worse than ever and breaks
+like a surf over the cabbages, while the butterflies try to rise above
+it; but they never succeed, and dimly one can see the white wings
+beating in the whirlpool.
+
+I shall never look at white butterflies again without hearing the sounds
+from the camp, without seeing the ring of riders, without thinking,
+perhaps, of the dairyman and of the other "dairymen."
+
+The butterflies do not care for noise. When, standing beside the
+cabbage-patch, the bugler blows the dinner-bugle, they race in a cloud
+to the far corner and hover there until the last note is sounded.
+
+
+I think it is I who am wrong when I consider the men as citizens, as
+persons of responsibility, and the Sister right when she says "the
+boys."
+
+Taken from their women, from their establishments, as monks or boys or
+even sheep are housed, they do not want, perhaps, to be reminded of an
+existence to which they cannot return; until a limb is off, or the war
+ends.
+
+To what a point they leave their private lives behind them! To what a
+point their lives are suspended....
+
+On the whole, I find that in hospital they do not think of the future or
+of the past, nor think much at all. As far as life and growth goes it is
+a hold-up!
+
+There is really not much to hope for; the leave is so short, the
+home-life so disrupted that it cannot be taken up with content. Perhaps
+it isn't possible to let one's thoughts play round a life about which
+one can make no plans.
+
+They are adaptable, living for the minute--their present hope for the
+cup of tea, for the visiting day, for the concert; their future hope for
+the drying of the wound, for the day when the Sister's fingers may
+press, but no drop be wrung from the long scar.
+
+Isn't it curious to wish so passionately for the day which may place
+them near to death again?
+
+But the longing for health is a simple instinct, undarkened by logic.
+
+
+Yet some of them have plans. Scutts has plans.
+
+For a fortnight now he has watched for the post. "Parcel come for me,
+Sister? Small parcel?"
+
+Or he will meet the postman in the corridor. "Got my eye yet?" he asks.
+
+"What will it be like, Scutts?" we ask. "Can you move it? Can you sleep
+in it? Did he match your other carefully?"
+
+"You'll see," he says confidently. "It's grand."
+
+"When I get my eye...." he says, almost with the same longing with
+which he says "When I get into civies...."
+
+Scutts is not one of those whose life is stopped; he has made plans.
+"When I get into civies and walk out of here...." His plans for six
+months' holiday "are all writ down in me notebook."
+
+"But what shall you do, Scutts? Go to London?"
+
+"London!... No towns fer me!"
+
+He will not tell us what he is going to do. Secretly I believe it is
+something he wanted to do as a boy but thought himself a fool to carry
+out when he was a man: perhaps it is a sort of walking tour.
+
+Among his eleven wounds he has two crippled arms. "I'm safe enough from
+death," he says (meaning France), "till it fetches me in a proper way."
+
+Perhaps he means to live as though life were really a respite from
+death.
+
+
+I had a day on the river yesterday.
+
+"_I_ seed yer with yer bit of erdy-furdy roun' yer neck an' yer little
+attachy-case," said Pinker.
+
+"A nurse's life is one roun' of pleasure," said Pinker to the ward.
+
+We had two operations yesterday--one on a sergeant who has won the
+D.C.M. and has a certificate written in gold which hangs above his bed,
+telling of his courage and of one particular deed; the other on a Welsh
+private.
+
+I wonder what the sergeant was like before he won his D.C.M....
+
+There is something unreal about him; he is like a stage hero. He has a
+way of saying, "Now, my men, who is going to volunteer to fetch the
+dinners?" which is like an invitation to go over the top.
+
+The men gape when he says that, then go on with their cards. It is like
+a joke.
+
+Before his operation he was full of partially concealed boastings as to
+how he would bear it, how he would "come to" saying, "Let me get up! I
+can walk...."
+
+I felt a sneaking wish that he should be undone and show unusual
+weakness.
+
+When the moment came he did as he had said he would do--he laughed and
+waved good-bye as he was wheeled away; and in the afternoon when I came
+on duty I found him lying in his bed, conscious, looking brown and
+strong and unconcerned.
+
+But he can't let well alone....
+
+As I passed up the ward to the bedside of the Welsh private I was
+called by the sergeant, and when I stood by his bed he whispered, "Is
+that chap making a fuss over there?"
+
+"Evan?"
+
+"Chap as has had an operation the same as me...."
+
+"He's very bad."
+
+"You don't find me making a fuss and my leg isn't half giving me
+something."
+
+"We're not all alike, sergeant."
+
+"Why should one make a fuss and another say nothing?"
+
+"Is your leg hurting you a lot?"
+
+"Yes, it is," and he screwed up his face into a grimace.
+
+After all, he was a child. "Try to go to sleep," I said, knowing that it
+was his jealousy that was hurting him most.
+
+I went to Evan.
+
+He could do nothing with his pain, but in its tightest embraces, and
+crying, he lay with his large red handkerchief over his eyes.
+
+"Oh, Evan...!" I said. I couldn't do anything either.
+
+"Oh dear, dear, dear, dear, dear...." he wailed in his plaintive Welsh
+voice. "Oh, my dear leg, my poor leg...." He looked about nineteen.
+"Couldn't I lie on my side?"
+
+"No, it would make it bleed."
+
+"Would it?" He was so docile and so unhappy. The tears had run down and
+marked his pillow; I turned it, although the sergeant couldn't see.
+
+"Will they give me something to make me sleep to-night?"
+
+"Yes, Evan, at eight o'clock."
+
+I said that because I was so sure of it, I had always seen it done. But
+oh, I should have made more sure...!
+
+He built on it, he leant all his hopes upon it; his little clenched
+hands seemed to be holding my promise as firmly as though it had been my
+hand.
+
+And Sister said, "No, no ... it would be better not." "Oh, Sister, why
+not...?" (I, the least of mortals, had made a promise belonging only to
+the gods....)
+
+"Oh, Sister, why not?"
+
+Her reason was a good one: "He will want it more later in the night, and
+he can't have it twice."
+
+I ran back to tell him so quickly--but one can't run back into the past.
+
+
+It is wonderful to talk to men affectionately without exciting or
+implying love. The Utopian dreams of sixteen seem almost to be realized!
+
+When I sew splints they come and talk to me. Scutts will sometimes talk
+for an hour. At first I was so proud that I dared hardly stir a finger
+for fear that I should frighten him away; now I am more sure of him. He
+never says "What?" to me, nor any longer jumps when I speak to him as
+though my every word must carry some command. When I sew splints and
+listen to Scutts or the old Scotch grocer or Monk--that squinting child
+of whom Pinker said, "Monk got a girl! He don' know what a girl is!"--I
+think, "We cannot all be efficient, but ... this serves some end."
+
+For they are complaining that I am not efficient. At first it hurt my
+pride; but it depends upon the point of view. Does one go into a ward
+primarily to help the patients or to help the Sister? It is not always
+the same thing, but one must not question discipline....
+
+To-day nine of the patients "went convalescent." They departed, hobbling
+and on stretchers, at two o'clock, with bursts of song, plastered hair,
+bright buttons, and not a regret. "You'll be able to hear a pin fall
+to-night, nurse," said one of them.
+
+"I know we shall. And a tear too," I added.
+
+But they won't listen to any such nonsense. They are going off to the
+little convalescent hospitals, they are going away to be treated like
+men; and I must laugh and shake hands and not dream of adding, "Perhaps
+we shall see you back again."
+
+"No more route-marching...!" was the last cry I heard from the Nine.
+
+How they hate route-marching--especially the City men, most especially
+Pinker! "March down the silly road," he grumbles, "sit on the silly
+grass and get heat-bumps."
+
+
+Sometimes I think that sewing splints will be my undoing. If I listen
+much longer I shall see crooked.
+
+
+To-day they had some small bottles of stout to help us say good-bye to
+the Nine.
+
+Happiness is cheap. Last night at dinner a man said as he refilled his
+glass with champagne, "It makes me sad to think how much happiness there
+is in a bottle...."
+
+
+The attack has begun.
+
+"At 3.15 this morning ... on a front of two miles...."
+
+So that is why the ward is so empty and the ambulances have been
+hurrying out of the yard all day. We shall get that convoy for which I
+longed.
+
+When the ward is empty and there is, as now, so little work to do, how
+we, the women, watch each other over the heads of the men! And because
+we do not care to watch, nor are much satisfied with what we see, we
+want more work. At what a price we shall get it....
+
+Scutts and Monk talk to me while I sew, but what about the Monks,
+Scutts, Gayners, whose wounds will never need a dressing or a tube--who
+lie along a front of two miles, one on his face, another on his back?
+
+Since 3.15 this morning a lot of men have died. Thank God one cannot go
+on realizing death.
+
+But one need not think of it. This is a ward; here are lucky ones. Even
+when I look at Rees, even when I look at the grocer, even when I look at
+the T.B. ward, I know that anything, _anything_ is better than death.
+But I have known a man here and there who did not think so--and these
+men, close on death it is true, were like strangers in the ward.
+
+For one can be close on death and remain familiar, friendly,
+comprehensible.
+
+I used to think, "It is awful to die." But who knows what compliance the
+years will bring? What is awful is to die _young_.
+
+
+A new V.A.D. came into the ward yesterday--a girl straight from home,
+who has never been in a hospital before.
+
+Rees told me, "She turned her head away when she saw me arm."
+
+"I did once, Rees."
+
+He looked down at the almost unrecognizable twelve inches which we call
+"Rees's wound," and considered how this red inch had paled and the lips
+of that incision were drawing together. "'Tisn' no more me arm," he said
+at length, "than...." he paused for a simile. "'Tisn' me arm, it's me
+wound," he finally explained.
+
+His arm is stretched out at right angles from his bed in an iron cradle,
+and has been for six months.
+
+"Last night," he said, "I felt me arm layin' down by me side, an' I felt
+the fingers an' tried to scratch me knee. It's a feeling that's bin
+comin' on for some time, but last night it seemed real."
+
+The pain of the dressing forces Rees's reason to lay some claim to his
+arm, but when it ceases to hurt him he detaches himself from it to such
+a point that the ghost-arm familiar to all amputations has arrived, as
+it were, by mistake.
+
+The new V.A.D. doesn't talk much at present, being shy, but to-night I
+can believe she will write in her diary as I wrote in mine: "My feet
+ache, ache, ache...." Add to that that she is hungry because she hasn't
+yet learnt how to break the long stretches with hurried gnawings behind
+a door, that she is sick because the philosophy of Rees is not yet her
+philosophy, that her hands and feet grow cold and her body turns to warm
+milk, that she longs so to sit on a bed that she can almost visualize
+the depression her body would make on its counterpane, and I get a
+glimpse of the passage of time and of the effect of custom.
+
+With me the sickness and the hunger and the ache are barely remembered.
+It makes me wonder what else is left behind.... The old battle is again
+in my mind--the struggle to feel pain, to repel the invading
+familiarity.
+
+Here they come!
+
+One convoy last night and another this morning. There is one great burly
+man, a sort of bear, whose dried blood has squeezed through bandages
+applied in seven places, and who for all that mumbles "I'm well" if one
+asks him how he feels.
+
+Long before those wounds are healed he will diagnose himself better than
+that!
+
+"I'm well...." That's to say: "I'm alive, and I have reached this bed,
+and this bit of meat, and this pudding in a tin!" He answers by his
+standards.
+
+But in a few days he will think, "I am alive, but I might be better...";
+and in a few weeks, "Is this, after all, happiness?"
+
+How they sleep, the convoy men! Watching their wounds as we dress them,
+almost with a grave pleasure--the passports to this wonderful sleep.
+
+Then when the last safety-pin is in they lie back without making
+themselves in the least comfortable, without drawing up a sheet or
+turning once upon the pillow, and sleep just as the head falls.
+
+
+How little women can stand! Even the convoy cannot mend the pains of the
+new V.A.D. I dare not speak to her: she seems, poor camel, to be
+waiting for the last straw.
+
+
+But when we wash the bowls together we must talk. She and I together
+this morning washed and scrubbed, rinsed, dried, and piled basins into
+little heaps, and while we washed we examined each other.
+
+She is a born slave; in fact, I almost think she is born to be tortured.
+Her manner with the Sisters invites and entices them to "put upon" her.
+Her spiritual back is already covered with sores.
+
+I suppose she is hungry for sympathy, but it isn't really a case in
+which sympathy can do as much as custom. I showed her the white
+butterflies, without supposing them to be very solid food.
+
+She reminds me of the man of whom the Sister said, "He must stick it
+out." I might have pointed to the convoy and suggested comparisons; but
+one cannot rub a sore back.
+
+
+Some one has applied the last straw in the night.
+
+When I came on duty a brisk little war-hardened V.A.D. was brushing a
+pile of dust along the long boards to the door. The poor camel whose
+back is broken is as though she had never existed; either she is ill or
+she is banished.
+
+Such is the secret diplomacy of these establishments that nothing is
+known of her except her disappearance--at least among those whom one can
+ask. Matron knows, Sister knows.... But these are the inscrutable,
+smiling gods.
+
+
+There is only one man in the ward I don't much care for--a tall boy with
+a lock of fair hair and broken teeth. He was a sullen boy whose bad
+temper made his mouth repulsive. I say "was," for he is different now.
+
+Now he is feeble, gentle, grateful, and he smiles as often as one looks
+at him.
+
+Yesterday he went for his operation in the morning, and in the afternoon
+when I came on duty he was stirring and beginning to groan. Sister told
+me to sit beside him.
+
+I went up to the little room of screens in which he lay, and taking a
+wooden chair, I slipped it in between the screen and the bed and sat
+down.
+
+Is it the ether which rushes up from between his broken teeth?--is it
+the red glare of the turkey-twill screens?--but in ten minutes I am
+altered, mesmerized. Even the size of my surroundings is changed. The
+screens, high enough to blot out a man's head, are high enough to blot
+out the world. The narrow bed becomes a field of whiteness. The naked
+arm stretched towards me is more wonderful than any that could have
+belonged to a boy with dirty fair hair and broken teeth; it has
+sea-green veins rising along it, and the bright hairs are more silver
+than golden.
+
+The life of the ward goes on, the clatter of cups for supper, the
+shuffling of feet clad in loose carpet-slippers, but here within he and
+I are living together a concentrated life.
+
+"Oh, me back!"
+
+"I know, I know...."
+
+Do I know? I am getting to know. For while the men are drinking their
+cocoa I am drinking ether. I know how the waves of the pain come up and
+recede; how a little sleep just brushes the spirit, but never absorbs
+it; how the arms will struggle up to the air, only to be covered and
+enmeshed again in heat and blankets.
+
+"Was it in me lung?" (He pronounces the "g"--a Lancashire boy....)
+
+"The shrapnel?"
+
+He nods. I hold up the piece of metal which has lain buried in him these
+past three weeks. It has the number 20 engraved on it. That satisfies
+him. The blood which has come from between his lips is in a bowl placed
+too high for him to see.
+
+Through the crack in the screens the man in the bed opposite watches us
+unwinkingly.
+
+Eight o'clock.... Here is Sister with the syringe: he will sleep now and
+I can go home.
+
+If one did not forget the hospital when one leaves it, life wouldn't be
+very nice.
+
+
+From pillar to post....
+
+The dairyman, who has been gone to another hospital these five weeks,
+returned to-day, saying miserably as he walked into the ward, "Me 'ead's
+queerer than ever." His eyes, I think, are larger too, and he has still
+that manner of looking as though he thought some one could do something
+for him.
+
+I can't--beyond raising the smallest of tablets to him with the
+inscription, "Another farthing spent...."
+
+
+Waker had a birthday yesterday and got ten post cards and a telegram.
+But that is as nothing to another anniversary.
+
+"A year to-morrow I got my wound--two o'clock to-morrow morning."
+
+"Shall you be awake, Waker?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+How will he celebrate it? I would give a lot to know what will pass in
+his mind. For I don't yet understand this importance they attach to such
+an anniversary. One and all, they know the exact hour and minute on
+which their bit of metal turned them for home.
+
+Sometimes a man will whisper, "Nurse...." as I go by the bed; and when I
+stop I hear, "In ten minutes it will be a twelvemonth!" and he fixes his
+eyes on me.
+
+What does he want me to respond? I don't know whether I should be glad
+or sorry that he got it. I can't imagine what he thinks of as the minute
+ticks. For I can see by his words that the scene is blurred and no
+longer brings back any picture. "Did you crawl back or walk?"
+
+"I ... walked." He is hardly sure.
+
+I know that for some of them, for Waker, that moment at two o'clock in
+the morning changed his whole career. From that moment his arm was
+paralysed, the nerves severed; from that moment football was off, and
+with it his particular ambition. And football, governing a kingdom, or
+painting a picture--a man's ambition is his ambition, and when it is
+wiped out his life is changed.
+
+But he knows all that, he has had time to think of all that. What,
+then, does this particular minute bring him?
+
+They think I know; for when they tell me in that earnest voice that the
+minute is approaching they take for granted that I too will share some
+sacrament with them.
+
+
+Waker is not everything a man should be: he isn't clever. But he is so
+very brave.
+
+After his tenth operation two days ago there was a question as to
+whether he should have his pluggings changed under gas or not. The
+discussion went on between the doctors over his bed.
+
+But the anæsthetist couldn't be found.
+
+He didn't take any part in the discussion such as saying, "Yes, I will
+stand it...." but waited with interest showing on his bony face, and
+when they glanced down at him and said, "Let's get it through now!" he
+rolled over to undo his safety-pin that I might take off his sling.
+
+It was all very fine for the theatre people to fill his shoulder
+chockful of pluggings while he lay unconscious on the table; they had
+packed it as you might stuff linen into a bag: it was another matter to
+get it out.
+
+I did not dare touch his hand with that too-easy compassion which I
+have noticed here, or whisper to him "It's nearly over...." as the
+forceps pulled at the stiffened gauze. It wasn't nearly over.
+
+Six inches deep the gauze stuck, crackling under the pull of the
+forceps, blood and puss leaping forward from the cavities as the steady
+hand of the doctor pulled inch after inch of the gauze to the light. And
+when one hole was emptied there was another, five in all.
+
+Sometimes, when your mind has a grip like iron, your stomach will undo
+you; sometimes, when you could say "To-day is Tuesday, the fifth of
+August," you faint. There are so many parts of the body to look after,
+one of the flock may slip your control while you are holding the other
+by the neck. But Waker had his whole being in his hands, without so much
+as clenching them.
+
+When we had finished and Sister told me to wipe the sweat on his
+forehead, I did so reluctantly, as though one were being too exacting in
+drawing attention to so small a sign.
+
+
+I must say that the dairyman seems to me quite mad, and I only wonder
+how little it is noticed. He will sit in a chair beside Palmer for
+hours, raising and lowering his eyebrows and fitting imaginary gloves on
+to his fingers.
+
+An inspecting general, pausing at his bed this morning, said: "A
+dairyman, are you? Frightened of horses, are you? Then what do you do
+about the cows?"
+
+He was pleased with his own joke, and the dairyman smiled too,
+uncomprehendingly, his eyebrows shooting up and down like swallows'
+wings. Such jokes mean nothing to him; he is where no joke but his own
+will ever please him any more....
+
+Palmer doesn't like sitting near him, but since it is too much trouble
+to move he allows it--poor Palmer, who has a piece of metal somewhere in
+his brain and is never seen without one long hand to his aching head. He
+said to me yesterday when I asked him which convalescent home he was
+going to, "It doesn't matter. We both go to the same kind before
+long...." jerking his thumb at the dairyman. As for the latter, there
+surely can be no escape, but for Palmer....
+
+"They won't take it out; too risky. Seen my X-ray picture?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You look at it. Right in the middle of the brain. Seems funny that if
+I say I'm willing to risk it, why they shouldn't be."
+
+"You're willing to risk it?"
+
+"I'm only nineteen! What's the good of my head to me! I can't remember
+the name of the last hospital I was at...."
+
+Ah, these hurried conversations sandwiched between my duties, when in
+four sentences the distilled essence of bitterness is dropped into my
+ear!
+
+
+"Sister, what will they do with Palmer?"
+
+"They are going to discharge him. They won't operate."
+
+"But what will happen to him?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"But if he is willing to risk his life to save his brain, can they still
+refuse?"
+
+"They won't operate."
+
+
+Pinker is full of grains of knowledge. He has just discovered a
+wonderful justification for not getting up directly he is told off for a
+job.
+
+"I never refuse a nurse," he said, as he thoughtfully picked over the
+potatoes ("Li'l men, li'l spuds!" he says, to excuse himself for taking
+all the sought-after small ones).... "I never refuse a nurse. But I like
+to finish me game of draughts first--like Drake."
+
+Pinker notices everything. He took the grocer for a ride on the tram
+yesterday. "'E got so excited he got singing 'Tipperary,' an' the
+blood-vessels on his neck goin' fit to burst. Weren't he, Bill?"
+
+He appealed to Monk, whose name is George.
+
+(By the way, I wonder when people will stop calling them "Tommy" and
+call them "Bill." I never heard the word "Tommy" in a soldier's mouth:
+he was a red-coated man. "But every mate's called 'Bill,' ain't 'e,
+Bill?")
+
+
+From the camp across the road the words of command float in through the
+ward window.
+
+"Halt!" and "Left wheel!" and "Right wheel!..."
+
+They float into the ward bearing the sense of heat and dust, and of the
+bumping of the saddle. The dairyman has perhaps put me a bit against the
+camp across the road.
+
+When the dressings are finished and we scrub the enamel bowls in the
+annexe, one can see all the dairymen and all the plumbers, _chefs_ and
+shopwalkers bumping up and down in a ring amid a cloud of dust, while
+the voice of the sergeant cries out those things that my dairyman used
+to think of in his sleep.
+
+Then the jumps go up. "Left wheel!" "Right wheel!..." And now, "Cross
+your stirrups!" One out of every four of them is clinging, grabbing,
+swaying.
+
+The seventh is off! It was a long fight.... He went almost round the
+horse's neck before he fell.
+
+
+We must win the war, win the war, win the war!
+
+Every sort of price must be paid, every Mud of curious coinage--the
+pennies and farthings of fear and despair in odd places, as well as the
+golden coin of life which is spent across the water.
+
+
+All day long the words of command come over the ward window-sills. All
+day long they bump and shout and sweat and play that charade of theirs
+behind the guns.
+
+All day long little men training to fill just such another hospital as
+ours with other little men.
+
+But one does not say any longer, "What a strange thing is life!" for
+only in rare moments does the divine astonishment return.
+
+
+PRINTED AT THE COMPLETE PRESS
+WEST NORWOOD
+LONDON
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Diary Without Dates, by Enid Bagnold
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Diary Without Dates, by Enid Bagnold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Diary Without Dates
+
+Author: Enid Bagnold
+
+Release Date: January 30, 2010 [EBook #31124]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A DIARY WITHOUT DATES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Martin Pettit and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h1>A DIARY<br />WITHOUT DATES</h1>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="center"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width='415' height='700' alt="cover" /></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h3>SOLDIERS' TALES OF THE<br />GREAT WAR</h3>
+
+<div class="block"><p>MY '75. From the French of <span class="smcap">Paul Lintier</span>. 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>ON TWO FRONTS. By Major H. M. <span class="smcap">Alexander</span>, D.S.O. 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>NURSING ADVENTURES. (<span class="smcap">Anon.</span>) Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>FORCED TO FIGHT. By <span class="smcap">Erich Erichsen</span>. 2s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>IN GERMAN HANDS. By <span class="smcap">Charles Hennebois</span>. 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>"CONTEMPTIBLE." By "<span class="smcap">Casualty</span>." 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>ON THE ANZAC TRAIL. By "<span class="smcap">Anzac</span>." 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>UNCENSORED LETTERS FROM THE DARDANELLES. Notes of a French Army
+Doctor. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>PRISONER OF WAR. By <span class="smcap">Andr&eacute; Warnod</span>. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>IN THE FIELD (1914-15). The Impressions of an Officer of Light
+Cavalry. 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>DIXMUDE. A Chapter in the History of the Naval Brigade, Oct.-Nov.
+1914. By <span class="smcap">Charles le Goffic</span>. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p>WITH MY REGIMENT. By "<span class="smcap">Platoon Commander</span>." 3s. 6d. net.</p>
+
+<p class="center">LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN</p></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="block"><h3>UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME</h3>
+
+<h2>THE LOVERS</h2>
+
+<h3><span class="smcap">By</span> ELIZABETH ROBINS PENNELL</h3>
+
+<p>"It is one of the most charming little books among the many that owe
+their genesis to the war. The letters might be described as a lyric of
+married love; and their beauty and passion are enhanced by the exquisite
+setting which Mrs. Pennell has given them."&mdash;<i>Yorkshire Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN</p></div>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h1>A DIARY<br />WITHOUT DATES</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>ENID BAGNOLD</h2>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="center"><img src="images/logo.jpg" width='90' height='90' alt="Logo" /></div>
+
+<h3>LONDON<br />WILLIAM HEINEMANN</h3>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>First printed January 1918</i><br /><i>Second Impression February 1918</i></p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>London: William Heinemann, 1918</i></p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">TO<br />THAT FRIEND OF MINE<br />WHO, WHEN I WROTE HIM<br />
+ENDLESS LETTERS,<br />SAID COLDLY,<br />"WHY NOT KEEP SOMETHING<br />FOR YOURSELF!"</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="block"><p><i>I apologize to those whom I may hurt.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Can I soothe them by pleading that one may only write what is true for
+oneself?</i></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>E. B.</i></p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p></div>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="contents">
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#I">I</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>OUTSIDE THE GLASS DOORS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#II">II</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>INSIDE THE GLASS DOORS</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><a href="#III">III</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'>"THE BOYS ..."</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="I" id="I"></a>I</h2>
+
+<h3>OUTSIDE THE GLASS DOORS</h3>
+
+<p>I like discipline. I like to be part of an institution. It gives one
+more liberty than is possible among three or four observant friends.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It is always cool and wonderful after the monotone of the dim hospital,
+its half-lit corridors stretching as far as one can see, to come out
+into the dazzling starlight and climb the hill, up into the trees and
+shrubberies here.</p>
+
+<p>The wind was terrible to-night. I had to battle up, and the leaves were
+driven down the hill so fast that once I thought it was a motor-bicycle.</p>
+
+<p>Madeleine's garden next door is all deserted now: they have gone up to
+London. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> green asphalt tennis-court is shining with rain, the blue
+pond brown with slime; the little statues and bowls are lying on their
+sides to keep the wind from putting them forcibly there; and all over
+the house are white draperies and ghost chairs.</p>
+
+<p>When I walk in the garden I feel like a ghost left over from the summer too.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I became aware to-night of one face detaching itself from the rest. It
+is not a more pleasing face than the others, but it is becoming
+conspicuous to me.</p>
+
+<p>Twice a week, when there is a concert in the big hall, the officers and
+the V.A.D.'s are divided, by some unspoken rule&mdash;the officers sitting at
+one side of the room, the V.A.D.'s in a white row on the other.</p>
+
+<p>When my eyes rest for a moment on the motley of dressing-gowns,
+mackintoshes, uniforms, I inevitably see in the line one face set on a
+slant, one pair of eyes forsaking the stage and fixed on me in a steady,
+inoffensive beam.</p>
+
+<p>This irritates me. The very lack of offence irritates me. But one grows
+to look for everything.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards in the dining-room during Mess he will ask politely: "What
+did you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> think of the concert, Sister? Good show...."</p>
+
+<p>How wonderful to be called Sister! Every time the uncommon name is used
+towards me I feel the glow of an implied relationship, something which
+links me to the speaker.</p>
+
+<p>My Sister remarked: "If it's only a matter of that, we can provide
+thrills for you here very easily."</p>
+
+<p>The name of my ... admirer ... is, after all, Pettitt. The other nurse
+in the Mess, who is very grand and insists on pronouncing his name in
+the French way, says he is "of humble origin."</p>
+
+<p>He seems to have no relations and no visitors.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Out in the corridor I meditate on love.</p>
+
+<p>Laying trays soothes the activity of the body, and the mind works softly.</p>
+
+<p>I meditate on love. I say to myself that Mr. Pettitt is to be envied. I
+am still the wonder of the unknown to him: I exist, walk, talk, every
+day beneath the beam of his eye, impenetrable.</p>
+
+<p>He fell down again yesterday, and his foot won't heal. He has time before him.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>But in a hospital one has never time, one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> is never sure. He has perhaps
+been here long enough to learn that&mdash;to feel the insecurity, the impermanency.</p>
+
+<p>At any moment he may be forced to disappear into the secondary stage of
+convalescent homes.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, the impermanency of life in a hospital! An everlasting dislocation
+of combinations.</p>
+
+<p>Like nuns, one must learn to do with no nearer friend than God.</p>
+
+<p>Bolts, in the shape of sudden, whimsical orders, are flung by an
+Almighty whom one does not see.</p>
+
+<p>The Sister who is over me, the only Sister who can laugh at things other
+than jokes, is going in the first week of next month. Why? Where? She
+doesn't know, but only smiles at my impatience. She knows life&mdash;hospital life.</p>
+
+<p>It unsettles me as I lay my spoons and forks. Sixty-five trays. It takes
+an hour to do. Thirteen pieces on each tray. Thirteen times sixty-five
+... eight hundred and forty-five things to collect, lay, square up
+symmetrically. I make little absurd reflections and arrangements&mdash;taking
+a dislike to the knives because they will not lie still on the polished
+metal of the tray, but pivot<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> on their shafts, and swing out at angles
+after my fingers have left them.</p>
+
+<p>I love the long, the dim and lonely, corridor; the light centred in the
+gleam of the trays, salt-cellars, yellow butters, cylinders of glass....</p>
+
+<p>Impermanency.... I don't wonder the Sisters grow so secret, so uneager.
+How often stifled! How often torn apart!</p>
+
+<p>It's heaven to me to be one of such a number of faces.</p>
+
+<p>To see them pass into Mess like ghosts&mdash;gentleman, tinker, and tailor;
+each having shuffled home from death; each having known his life rock on
+its base ... not talking much&mdash;for what is there to say?&mdash;not laughing
+much for they have been here too long&mdash;is a nightly pleasure to me.</p>
+
+<p>Creatures of habit! All the coloured dressing-gowns range themselves
+round the two long tables&mdash;this man in this seat, that man by the
+gas-fire; this man with his wheel-chair drawn up at the end, that man at
+the corner where no one will jostle his arm.</p>
+
+<p>Curious how these officers leave the hospital, so silently.
+Disappearances.... One face after another slips out of the picture, the
+unknown heart behind the face fixed intently on some other centre of life.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p><p>I went into a soldiers' ward to-night to inquire about a man who has
+pneumonia.</p>
+
+<p>Round his bed there stood three red screens, and the busy, white-capped
+heads of two Sisters bobbed above the rampart.</p>
+
+<p>It suddenly shocked me. What were they doing there? Why the screens? Why
+the look of strain in the eyes of the man in the next bed who could see
+behind the screens?</p>
+
+<p>I went cold and stood rooted, waiting till one of them could come out
+and speak to me.</p>
+
+<p>Soon they took away the screen nearest to me; they had done with it.</p>
+
+<p>The man I was to inquire for has no nostrils; they were blown away, and
+he breathes through two pieces of red rubber tubing: it gave a more
+horrible look to his face than I have ever seen.</p>
+
+<p>The Sister came out and told me she thought he was "not up to much." I
+think she means he is dying.</p>
+
+<p>I wonder if he thinks it better to die.... But he was nearly well before
+he got pneumonia, had begun to take up the little habits of living. He
+had been out to tea.</p>
+
+<p>Inexplicable, what he thinks of, lying behind the screen.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>To-night I was laying my trays in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> corridor, the dim corridor that I
+am likely often to mention&mdash;the occasional blue gas-lamps hanging at
+intervals down the roof in a dwindling perspective.</p>
+
+<p>The only unshaded light in the corridor hangs above my head, making the
+cutlery gleam in my hands.</p>
+
+<p>The swish-swish of a lame foot approached down the stone tiling with the
+tapping, soft and dull, of a rubber-tipped walking-stick.</p>
+
+<p>He paused by the pillar, as I knew he would, and I busied myself with an
+added rush and hurry, an added irritating noise of spoons flung down.</p>
+
+<p>He waited patiently, shyly. I didn't look up, but I knew his face was
+half smiling and suppliant.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall miss you," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"But I shall be back in a week!"</p>
+
+<p>"We shall miss you ... laying the trays out here."</p>
+
+<p>"Everything passes," I said gaily.</p>
+
+<p>He whistled a little and balanced himself against his stick.</p>
+
+<p>"You are like me, Sister," he said earnestly; and I saw that he took me
+for a philosopher.</p>
+
+<p>He shuffled on almost beyond the circle of light, paused while my lips
+moved in a vague smile of response, then moved on into the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> shadow. The
+low, deep quiet of the corridor resumed its hold on me. The patter of
+reflection in my brain proceeded undisturbed.</p>
+
+<p>"You are like me!" The deepest flattery one creature pays its fellow ...
+the cry which is uttered when another enters "our country."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Far down the corridor a slim figure in white approaches, dwarfed by the
+smoky distance; her nun-like cap floating, her scarlet cape, the "cape
+of pride," slipped round her narrow shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>How intent and silent They are!</p>
+
+<p>I watched this one pass with a look half-reverence, half-envy. One
+should never aspire to know a Sister intimately. They are disappointing
+people; without candour, without imagination. Yet what a look of
+personality hangs about them....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>To-night ... Mr. Pettitt: "Sister!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Mr. Pettitt."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you ever go to theatres? Do you like them?"</p>
+
+<p>At the risk of appearing unnatural, I said, "Not much."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh ... I thought.... H'm, that's a pity. Don't you like revues?"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p><p>"Oh, yes...."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you'd take me to a <i>matin&eacute;e</i> one afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, charming! I can't get leave in the afternoons, though."</p>
+
+<p>"You often have a day off."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but it's too soon to ask for another."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, how about Wednesday, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Too soon. Think of the new Sister, and her opinion of me! That has yet to be won."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, let me know, anyway...."</p>
+
+<p>(Staved off!)</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The new Sister is coming quite soon: she has a medal.</p>
+
+<p>Now that I know <i>my</i> Sister must go I don't talk to her much; I almost
+avoid her. That's true hospital philosophy.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I must put down the beauty of the night and the woman's laugh in the shadowy hedge....</p>
+
+<p>I walked up from the hospital late to-night, half-past eight, and hungry
+... in the cold, brilliant moonlight; a fine moon, very low, throwing
+long, pointed shadows across the road from the trees and hedges.</p>
+
+<p>As one climbs up there is a wood on the right, the remains of the old
+wooded hill;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> sparse trees, very tall; and to-night a star between every
+branch, and a fierce moon beating down on the mud and grass.</p>
+
+<p>I had on my white cap and long blue coat, very visible. The moon swept
+the road from side to side: lovers, acting as though it were night, were
+lit as though it was day.</p>
+
+<p>I turned into the wood to take a message to a house set back from the
+road, and the moonlight and the night vapour rising from the marshy
+ground were all tangled together so that I could hardly see hedge from field or path.</p>
+
+<p>I saw a lit cigarette-end, and a woman's laugh came across the field as
+naturally as if a sheep had bleated in the swampy grass. It struck me
+that the dark countryside was built to surround and hide a laugh like
+hers&mdash;the laugh of a lover, animal and protesting.</p>
+
+<p>I saw the glowing end of the cigarette dance in a curve and fall to the
+ground, and she laughed again more faintly.</p>
+
+<p>Walking on in the middle of the moonlight, I reached the gate I was
+looking for, ran up the pebbly drive to the dining-room window, gave my
+message, and returned.</p>
+
+<p>I slipped my cap off my hair and pushed it into my pocket, keeping under
+the shadow of the hedge and into the quiet field.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p><p>They were whispering: "Do you?" "I do...." "Are you?" "I am...."
+crushed into the set branches of the hedge.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The Mess went vilely to-night. Sister adds up on her fingers, and that's
+fatal, so all the numbers were out, and the <i>chef</i> sent in forty-five
+meats instead of fifty-one. I blushed with horror and responsibility,
+standing there watching six hungry men pretending to be philosophers.</p>
+
+<p>The sergeant wolfed the cheese too. He got it out from under my very
+eyes while I was clearing the tables and ate it, standing up to it in
+the pantry with his back to me when I went in to fetch a tray.</p>
+
+<p>Whenever I see that broad khaki back, the knickered legs astride, the
+flexed elbow-tips, I know that his digestion is laying up more trouble for him.</p>
+
+<p>Benks, the Mess orderly, overeats himself too. He comes to the bunk and
+thrusts his little smile round the door: "Sister, I got another of them
+sick 'eadaches," very cheerfully, as though he had got something worth
+having. She actually retorted, "Benks, you eat too much!" one day, but
+he only swung on one leg and smiled more cheerfully than ever.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p><p>The new Sister has come. That should mean a lot. What about one's
+habits of life...?</p>
+
+<p>The new Sister has come, and at present she is absolutely without
+personality, beyond her medal. She appears to be deaf.</p>
+
+<p>I went along to-night to see and ask after the man who has his nose blown off.</p>
+
+<p>After the long walk down the corridor in almost total darkness, the
+vapour of the rain floating through every open door and window, the
+sudden brilliancy of the ward was like a haven.</p>
+
+<p>The man lay on my right on entering&mdash;the screen removed from him.</p>
+
+<p>Far up the ward the Sister was working by a bed. Ryan, the man with his
+nose gone, was lying high on five or six pillows, slung in his position
+by tapes and webbing passed under his arms and attached to the bedposts.
+He lay with his profile to me&mdash;only he has no profile, as we know a
+man's. Like an ape, he has only his bumpy forehead and his protruding
+lips&mdash;the nose, the left eye, gone.</p>
+
+<p>He was breathing heavily. They don't know yet whether he will live.</p>
+
+<p>When a man dies they fetch him with a stretcher, just as he came in;
+only he enters<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> with a blanket over him, and a flag covers him as he
+goes out. When he came in he was one of a convoy, but every man who can
+stand rises to his feet as he goes out. Then they play him to his
+funeral, to a grass mound at the back of the hospital.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It takes all sorts to make a hospital.</p>
+
+<p>For instance, the Visitors....</p>
+
+<p>There is the lady who comes in to tea and wants to be introduced to
+every one as though it was a school-treat.</p>
+
+<p>She jokes about the cake, its scarcity or its quantity, and makes a lot
+of "fun" about two lumps of sugar.</p>
+
+<p>When she is at her best the table assumes a perfect and listening
+silence&mdash;not the silence of the critic, but the silence of the absorbed
+child treasuring every item of talk for future use. After she goes the
+joy of her will last them all the evening.</p>
+
+<p>There is the lady who comes in to tea and, sitting down at the only
+unlaid table, cries, "Nurse! I have no knife or plate or cup; and I
+prefer a glass of boiling water to tea. And would you mind sewing this
+button on my glove?"</p>
+
+<p>There is the lady who comes in and asks the table at large: "I wonder if
+any<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> one knows General Biggens? I once met him...."</p>
+
+<p>Or: "You've been in Gallipoli? Did you run across my young cousin, a
+lieutenant in the...? Well, he was only there two days or so, I
+suppose...." exactly as though she was talking about Cairo in the season.</p>
+
+<p>To-day there was the Limit.</p>
+
+<p>She sat two paces away from where I sit to pour out tea. Her face was
+kind, but inquisitive, with that brown liver-look round the eyes and a
+large rakish hat. She comes often, having heard of him through the
+<i>padre</i>, to see a Canadian whom she doesn't know and who doesn't want to see her.</p>
+
+<p>From two places away I heard her voice piping up: "Nurse, excuse my
+asking, but is your cap a regulation one, like all the others?"</p>
+
+<p>I looked up, and all the tea I was pouring poured over the edge. Mr.
+Pettitt and Captain Matthew, between us, looked down at their plates.</p>
+
+<p>I put my hand to my cap. "Is anything wrong? It ought to be like the others."</p>
+
+<p>She leant towards me, nodding and smiling with bonhomie, and said
+flatteringly, "It's so prettily put on, I thought it was different."</p>
+
+<p>And then (horror): "Don't you think<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> nurse puts her cap on well?" she
+asked Captain Matthew, who, looking harder than ever at his plate and
+reddening to the ears, mumbled something which did not particularly
+commit him since it couldn't be heard.</p>
+
+<p>The usual delighted silence began to creep round the table, and I tried
+wildly to divert her attention before our end became a stage and the
+rest of the table an audience.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it's so nice to see you sitting down with them all," she cooed;
+"it's so cosy for them."</p>
+
+<p>"Is your cup empty?" I said furiously, and held out my hand for it. But
+it wasn't, of course; she couldn't even do that for me.</p>
+
+<p>She shook hands with me when she went away and said she hoped to come
+again. And she will.</p>
+
+<p>There was once a lady who asked me very loudly whether I "saw many
+horrible sights," and "did the V.A.D.'s have to go to the funerals?"</p>
+
+<p>And another who cried out with emotion when she saw the first officer
+limp in to Mess, "And can some of them <i>walk</i>, then!" Perhaps she
+thought they came in to tea on stretchers, with field-bandages on. She
+quivered all over, too, as she looked from one to the other, and I feel
+sure she went<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> home and broke down, crying, "What an experience ... the
+actual wounds!"</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Shuffle, shuffle, up the corridor to-night, as I was laying my trays.
+Captain Matthew appeared in the circle of light, his arm and hand bound
+up and his pipe in his mouth.</p>
+
+<p>He paused by me. "Well...." he said companionably, and lolled against a pillar.</p>
+
+<p>"You've done well at tea in the way of visitors," I remarked. "Six, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, "and now I've got rid of 'em all, except one."</p>
+
+<p>"Where's the one?"</p>
+
+<p>"In there." He pointed with his pipe to the empty Mess-Room. "He's the
+father of a subaltern of mine who was killed."</p>
+
+<p>"He's come to talk to you about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>But he seemed in no hurry to go in, waiting against the pillar and
+staring at the moving cutlery.</p>
+
+<p>He waited almost three minutes, then he sighed and went in.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Biscuits to put out, cheese to put out. How wet this new cheese is, and
+fresh and good the little bits that fall off the edge!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> I never eat
+cheese at home, but here the breakings are like manna.</p>
+
+<p>And pears, with the old shopman's trick, little, bitten ones at the
+bottom, fine ones at the top. Soft sugar, lump sugar, coffee. As one
+stirs the coffee round in the tin the whole room smells of it, that
+brown, burnt smell.</p>
+
+<p>And then to click the light on, let down the blind, stir the fire, close
+the door of the little bunk, and, looking round it, think what
+exhilaration of liberty I have here.</p>
+
+<p>Let them pile on the rules, invent and insist; yet behind them, beneath
+them, I have that strong, secret liberty of an institution that runs
+like a wind in me and lifts my mind like a leaf.</p>
+
+<p>So long as I conform absolutely, not a soul will glance at my
+thoughts&mdash;few at my face. I have only to be silent and conform, and I
+might be in so far a land that even the eye of God had lost me.</p>
+
+<p>I took the plate of biscuits, the two plates of cheese, one in each hand
+and one balanced with a new skill on my arm, and carried them into the
+dining-room, where the tables were already laid and only one light kept
+on as yet for economy's sake.</p>
+
+<p>Low voices.... There in the dimmest<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> corner sat Captain Matthew, his
+chin dug deep in his grey dressing-gown, and beside him a little elderly
+man, his hat on his knees, his anxious, ordinary face turned towards the light.</p>
+
+<p>A citizen ... a baker or a brewer, tinker, tailor, or candlestick-maker...?</p>
+
+<p>There had been the buying of the uniform, the visits to the camp in
+England, the parcels to send out&mdash;always the parcels&mdash;week by week. And
+now nothing; no more parcels, no more letters, silence.</p>
+
+<p>Only the last hungry pickings from Captain Matthew's tired memory and nervous speech.</p>
+
+<p>I turned away with a great shrinking.</p>
+
+<p>In a very few minutes the citizen went past my bunk door, his hat in his
+hand, his black coat buttoned; taking back to his home and his family
+the last facts that he might ever learn.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the passage he almost collided with that stretcher which bears a flag.</p>
+
+<p>Of the two, the stretcher moved me least.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><i>My</i> Sister is afraid of death. She told me so. And not the less afraid,
+she said, after all she has seen of it. That is terrible.</p>
+
+<p>But the new Sister is afraid of life. She is shorter-sighted.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p><p>The rain has been pouring all day.</p>
+
+<p>To-night it has stopped, and all the hill is steam and drizzle and black
+with the blackness that war has thrust upon the countryside.</p>
+
+<p><i>My</i> Sister has gone.</p>
+
+<p>Two nights ago I went up to a dinner at Madeleine's and to stay the
+night. My Sister said, "Go and enjoy yourself!" And I did. It is very
+amusing, the change into rooms full of talk and light; I feel a glow of
+pleasure as I climb to the room Madeleine calls mine and find the
+reflection of the fire on the blue wall-paper.</p>
+
+<p>The evening wasn't remarkable, but I came back full of descriptions to
+the bunk and Sister next day.</p>
+
+<p>I was running on, inventing this and that, making her laugh, when
+suddenly I looked up, and she had tears in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>I wavered and came to a stop. She got up suddenly and moved about the
+room, and then with a muttered "Wash my hands," disappeared into the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>I sat and thought: "Is it that she has her life settled, quietly
+continuous, and one breaks in...? Does the wind from outside hurt?"</p>
+
+<p>I regretted it all the evening.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p><p>Yesterday I arrived at the hospital and couldn't find the
+store-cupboard keys, then ran across to her room and tapped at the door.
+Her voice called "Come in!" and I found her huddled in an arm-chair,
+unnerved and white. I asked her for the keys, and when she gave them to
+me she held out her hand and said: "I'm going away to-morrow. They are
+sending me home; they say I'm ill."</p>
+
+<p>I muttered something with a feeling of shock, and going back to my bunk I brooded.</p>
+
+<p>The new Sister came in, and a new V.A.D. too, explaining that my former
+companion was now going into a ward.</p>
+
+<p>A sense of desolation was in the air, a ruthlessness on the part of some
+one unknown. "Shuffle, shuffle ... they shuffle us like cards!"</p>
+
+<p>I rose and began to teach the new V.A.D. the subtle art of laying trays.
+She seemed stupid.</p>
+
+<p>I didn't want to share my trays with her. I love them; they are my
+recreation. I hung over them idly, hardly laying down the spoons I held
+in my hand, but, standing with them, chivied the new V.A.D. until her
+movements became flustered and her eye distraught.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p><p>She was very ugly. I thought: "In a day or two I shall get to like her,
+and then I shan't be able to chivy her."</p>
+
+<p>Out in the corridor came a tremendous tramping, boots and jingling
+metal. Two armed men with fixed bayonets arrived, headed by a sergeant.
+The sergeant paused and looked uncertainly this way and that, and then at me.</p>
+
+<p>I guessed their destination. "In there," I nodded, pointing through a
+closed glass door, and the sergeant marched his men in and beyond the door.</p>
+
+<p>An officer had been brought back under arrest; I had seen him pass with
+his escort. The rumour at tea had been that he had extended his two
+days' leave into three weeks.</p>
+
+<p>The V.A.D. looked at me questioningly but she didn't dare, and I
+couldn't bear, to start any elucidations on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>I couldn't think; she worried me. Her odds and ends of conversation
+pecked at me like a small bird. She told me a riddle which filled me
+with nausea, and finally a limerick which I had heard three times in the Mess.</p>
+
+<p>I left her and went into the bunk.</p>
+
+<p>Here the new Sister had installed herself, gentle and pink and full of quiet murmurs.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p><p>The rain, half snow, half sleet, dabbled against the window-pane, and I
+lifted the blind to watch the flakes stick and melt on the glass.</p>
+
+<p>The V.A.D., her trays finished, appeared in the doorway. The little room
+seemed full of people.</p>
+
+<p>"There's a concert," I said, looking at the V.A.D. with distaste.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at me uncertainly: "Aren't you coming?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," I said, "I've a note to write," forgetting that the new Sister
+might not allow such infringements. She gave no sign.</p>
+
+<p>The V.A.D. gave in and disappeared concertwards.</p>
+
+<p>The Sister rose too and went out into the kitchen to consult with the <i>chef</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I slipped out behind her and down the steps into the garden&mdash;into the
+wet, dark garden, down the channels that were garden-paths, and felt my
+way over to the Sisters' quarters.</p>
+
+<p>My Sister hadn't moved. There by the gas-fire, her thin hand to her
+face, she sat as she had two hours before.</p>
+
+<p>"Come in," she offered, "and talk to me."</p>
+
+<p>Her collar, which was open, she tried to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> do up. It made a painful
+impression on me of weakness and the effort to be normal.</p>
+
+<p>I remembered that she had once told me she was so afraid of death, and I
+guessed that she was suffering now from that terror.</p>
+
+<p>But when the specialist is afraid, what can ignorance say...?</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Life in the bunk is wretched (except that the new V.A.D. tells fortunes by hands).</p>
+
+<p>The new Sister is at the same time timid and dogged. She looks at me
+with a sidelong look and gives me little flips with her hand, as though
+(<i>a</i>) she thought I might break something and (<i>b</i>) that she might stave
+it off by playfulness.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Pain....</p>
+
+<p>To stand up straight on one's feet, strong, easy, without the surging of
+any physical sensation, by a bedside whose coverings are flung here and
+there by the quivering nerves beneath it ... there is a sort of shame in such strength.</p>
+
+<p>"What can I do for you?" my eyes cry dumbly into his clouded brown pupils.</p>
+
+<p>I was told to carry trays from a ward where I had never been
+before&mdash;just to carry trays, orderly's work, no more.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p><p>No. 22 was lying flat on his back, his knees drawn up under him, the
+sheets up to his chin; his flat, chalk-white face tilted at the ceiling.
+As I bent over to get his untouched tray his tortured brown eyes fell on me.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm in pain, Sister," he said.</p>
+
+<p>No one has ever said that to me before in that tone.</p>
+
+<p>He gave me the look that a dog gives, and his words had the character of
+an unformed cry.</p>
+
+<p>He was quite alone at the end of the ward. The Sister was in her bunk.
+My white cap attracted his desperate senses.</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke his knees shot out from under him with his restless pain.
+His right arm was stretched from the bed in a narrow iron frame,
+reminding me of a hand laid along a harp to play the chords, the fingers
+with their swollen green flesh extended across the strings; but of this
+harp his fingers were the slave, not the master.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I call your Sister?" I whispered to him.</p>
+
+<p>He shook his head. "She can't do anything. I must just stick it out.
+They're going to operate on the elbow, but they must wait three days first."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p><p>His head turned from side to side, but his eyes never left my face. I
+stood by him, helpless, overwhelmed by his horrible loneliness.</p>
+
+<p>Then I carried his tray down the long ward and past the Sister's bunk.
+Within, by the fire, she was laughing with the M.O. and drinking a cup
+of tea&mdash;a harmless amusement.</p>
+
+<p>"The officer in No. 22 says he's in great pain," I said doubtfully. (It
+wasn't my ward, and Sisters are funny.)</p>
+
+<p>"I know," she said quite decently, "but I can't do anything. He must stick it out."</p>
+
+<p>I looked through the ward door once or twice during the evening, and
+still his knees, at the far end of the room, were moving up and down.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It must happen to the men in France that, living so near the edge of
+death, they are more aware of life than we are.</p>
+
+<p>When they come back, when the postwar days set in, will they keep that
+vision, letting it play on life ... or must it fade?</p>
+
+<p>And some become so careless of life, so careless of all the whims and
+personalities<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> and desires that go to make up existence, that one wrote
+to me:</p>
+
+<p>"The only real waste is the waste of metal. The earth will be covered
+again and again with Us. The corn will grow again; the bread and meat
+can be repeated. But this metal that has lain in the earth for
+centuries, the formation of the beginning, that men have sweated and
+grubbed for ... that is the waste."</p>
+
+<p>What carelessness of worldly success they should bring back with them!</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Orderlies come and go up and down the corridor. Often they carry
+stretchers&mdash;now and then a stretcher with the empty folds of a flag
+flung across it.</p>
+
+<p>Then I pause from laying my trays, and with a bunch of forks in my hand
+I stand still.</p>
+
+<p>They take the stretcher into a ward, and while I wait I know what they
+are doing behind the screens which stand around a bed against the wall.
+I hear the shuffle of feet as the men stand to attention, and the
+orderlies come out again, and the folds of the flag have ballooned up to
+receive and embrace a man's body.</p>
+
+<p>Where is he going?</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p><p>To the mortuary.</p>
+
+<p>Yes ... but where else...?</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps there is nothing better than the ecstasy and unappeasement of life?</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="II" id="II"></a>II</h2>
+
+<h3>INSIDE THE GLASS DOORS</h3>
+
+<p>My feet ache, ache, ache...!</p>
+
+<p>End of the first day.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Life in a ward is all scurry and rush. I don't reflect; I'm putting on
+my cap anyhow, and my hands are going to the dogs.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never get to understand Sisters; they are so strange, so tricky,
+uncertain as collies. Deep down they have an ineradicable axiom: that
+any visitor, any one in an old musquash coat, in a high-boned collar, in
+a spotted veil tied up at the sides, any one with whom one shakes hands
+or takes tea, is more important than the most charming patient (except,
+of course, a warded M.O.).</p>
+
+<p>For this reason the "mouths" of the pillow-cases are all turned to face
+up the ward, away from the door.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p><p>I think plants in a ward are a barbarism, for as they are always
+arranged on the table by the door, it is again obvious that they are
+intended only to minister to the eye of the visitor, that race of gods.</p>
+
+<p>In our ward there are eighteen fern-pots, some in copper, some in pink
+china, three in mauve paper, and one hanging basket of ferns. All of
+these have to be taken out on the landing at night and in again in the
+morning, and they have to be soaked under the tap.</p>
+
+<p>The Sisters' minds are as yet too difficult for me, but in the minds of
+the V.A.D.'s I see certain salient features. I see already manifested in
+them the ardent longing to be alike. I know and remember this longing;
+it was present through all my early years in a large boarding-school;
+but there it was naturally corrected by the changes of growth and the
+inexpertness of youth. Here I see for the first time grown women trying
+with all the concentration of their fuller years to be as like one
+another as it is possible to be.</p>
+
+<p>There is a certain dreadful innocence about them too, as though each
+would protest, "In spite of our tasks, our often immodest tasks, our
+minds are white as snow."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p><p>And, as far as I can see, their conception of a white female mind is
+the silliest, most mulish, incurious, unresponsive, condemning kind of
+an ideal that a human creature could set before it.</p>
+
+<p>At present I am so humble that I am content to do all the labour and
+take none of the temperatures, but I can see very well that it is when I
+reach a higher plane that all the trouble will begin.</p>
+
+<p>The ranklings, the heart-burnings, the gross injustices.... Who is to
+make the only poultice? Who is to paint the very septic throat of Mr.
+Mullins, Army Service Corps? Who is to&mdash;dizzy splendour&mdash;go round with
+the M.O. should the Sister be off for a half-day?</p>
+
+<p>These and other questions will form the pride and anguish of my inner life.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It is wonderful to go up to London and dine and stay the night with
+Madeleine after the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>The hospital&mdash;a sort of monotone, a place of whispers and wheels moving
+on rubber tyres, long corridors, and strangely unsexed women moving in
+them. Unsexed not in any real sense, but the white clothes, the hidden
+hair, the stern white collar just below<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> the chin, give them an air of
+school-girlishness, an air and a look women don't wear in the world.
+They seem unexpectant.</p>
+
+<p>Then at Madeleine's ... the light, the talk, the deep bath got ready for
+me by a maid, instead of my getting it ready for a patient....</p>
+
+<p>Not that I mind getting it ready; I like it. Only the change! It's like
+being turn and turn about maid and mistress.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>There is the first snow here, scanty and frozen on the doorstep.</p>
+
+<p>I came home last night in the dark to dinner and found its faint traces
+on the road and in the gutter as I climbed the hill. I couldn't see
+well; there were stars, but no moon. Higher up it was unmistakable; long
+white tracks frozen in the dried mud of the road, and a branch under a
+lamp thickened with frozen snow.</p>
+
+<p>Shall I ever grow out of that excitement over the first bit of snow...?</p>
+
+<p>I felt a glow of pride in the hill, thinking:</p>
+
+<p>"In London it's all slush and mud. They don't suspect what we've got
+here. A suburb is a wonderful place!"</p>
+
+<p>After a wet and muddy day in London I've seen the trains pull into
+Charing Cross<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> with snow piled on the roofs of the carriages, and felt a
+foot taller for joy that I was one of those fortunates who might step
+into a train and go down into a white countryside.</p>
+
+<p>It is the same excitement to wake up early to an overnight fall and see
+down the Dover Road for miles no foot of man printed, but only the
+birds' feet. Considering the Dover Road has been a highway since the
+Romans, it really is a fine moment when you realize its surface has
+suddenly become untrodden and unexplored as any jungle.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Alas, the amount of snow that has set me writing!... two bucketfuls in
+the whole garden!</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>When a Medical Officer goes sick, or, in other words, when an M.O. is
+warded, a very special and almost cynical expression settles on his
+face. Also the bedside manner of the Visiting Officer is discarded as he
+reaches the bed of the sick M.O.</p>
+
+<p>"My knees are very painful," says the sick M.O., but it is a despondent
+statement, not a plea for aid.</p>
+
+<p>The Visiting Officer nods, but he does not suggest that they will soon be better.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p><p>They look at each other as weak human beings look, and:</p>
+
+<p>"We might try...?" says the Visiting Officer questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>The M.O. agrees without conviction, and settles back on his pillows. Not
+for him the comfortable trust in the divine knowledge of specialists. He
+can endure like a dog, but without its faith in its master.</p>
+
+<p>The particular M.O. whose knees are painful is, as a matter of fact,
+better now. He got up yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>Mooning about the ward in a dressing-gown, he stared first out of one
+window into the fog and then out of another.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, just before he got back into bed, he made an epigram.</p>
+
+<p>"Nurse," he said, "the difference between being in bed and getting up is
+that in bed you do nothing, but when you get up there's nothing to do...."</p>
+
+<p>I tucked him up and put the cradle over his knees, and he added, "One
+gets accustomed to everything," and settled back happily with his
+reading-lamp, his French novel, and his dictionary.</p>
+
+<p>The fog developed all day yesterday, piling up white and motionless
+against the window-panes. As night fell a little air of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> excitement ran
+here and there amongst the V.A.D.'s.</p>
+
+<p>"How shall we get home...?" "Are the buses running?" "Oh no, the last
+one is stuck against the railings outside!" "My torch has run out...."</p>
+
+<p>By seven o'clock even the long corridor was as dim as the alley outside.
+No one thought of shutting the windows&mdash;I doubt whether they will shut
+... and the fog rolled over the sill in banks and round the open glass
+doors, till even the white cap of a Sister could hardly be seen as she passed.</p>
+
+<p>I am pleased with any atmospheric exaggeration; the adventure of going
+home was before me....</p>
+
+<p>At eight I felt my way down over the steps into the alley; the torch,
+held low on the ground, lighted but a small, pale circle round my shoes.
+Outside it was black and solid and strangely quiet.</p>
+
+<p>In the yard a man here and there raised his voice in a shout; feet
+strayed near mine and edged away.</p>
+
+<p>At the cross-roads I came on a lantern standing upon the ground, and by
+it drooped the nose of a benighted horse; the spurt of a match lit the
+face of its owner.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p><p>Up the hill, the torch held low against the kerbstone, the sudden
+looming of a black giant made me start back as I nearly ran my head into
+a telegraph-post....</p>
+
+<p>I was at the bottom of the sea; fathoms and fathoms of fog must stand
+above my head.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly a dozen lights showed about me, then the whole sky alight with
+stars, and naked trees with the rime on them, bristling; the long road
+ran up the hill its accustomed steel colour, the post office was there
+with its red window, the lean old lamp-post with its broken arm....</p>
+
+<p>I had walked out of the fog as one walks out of the sea on to a beach!</p>
+
+<p>Looking back, I could see the pit behind me; the fog standing on the
+road like a solid wall, straight up and down. Again I felt a pride in
+the hill. "Down there," I thought, "those groping feet and shouting
+voices; that man and that horse ... they don't guess!"</p>
+
+<p>I walked briskly up the hill, and presently stepped on to the pavement;
+but at the edge of the asphalt, where tufted grass should grow,
+something crackled and hissed under my feet. Under the torchlight the
+unnatural grass was white and brittle with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> rime, fanciful as a stage
+fairy scene, and the railings beyond it glittered too.</p>
+
+<p>I slid in the road as I turned down the drive; a sheet of ice was spread
+where the leaky pipe is, and the steps up to the house door were slippery.</p>
+
+<p>But oh, the honeysuckle and the rose-trees...! Bush, plant, leaf, stem,
+rimed from end to end. The garden was a Bond Street jeweller's!</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the final chapter on Mr. Pettitt....</p>
+
+<p>In the excitement of the ward I had almost forgotten him; he is buried
+in the Mess, in the days when I lived on the floor below.</p>
+
+<p>To-night, as I was waiting by the open hatch of the kitchen for my tray
+to be filled with little castles of lemon jelly, the hot blast from the
+kitchen drawing stray wisps of hair from beneath my cap, I saw the
+familiar limping figure&mdash;a figure bound up with my first days at the
+hospital, evoking a hundred evenings at the concerts, in the
+dining-room. I felt he had been away, but I didn't dare risk a "So you're back!"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, blushed, and limped past me.</p>
+
+<p>Upstairs in the ward, as I was serving out my jellies, he arrived in the
+doorway, but, avoiding me, hobbled round the ward,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> visiting every bed
+but the one I was at at the moment. Then he went downstairs again.</p>
+
+<p>I passed him on the stairs. He can't say he didn't have his opportunity,
+for I even stopped with my heavy tray and spoke to him.</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour later he was back in the ward again (not his ward), and
+this time he found the courage of hysteria. There in the middle of the
+ward, under the glaring Christmas lights, with the eyes of every
+interested man in every bed glued upon us, he presented me with a fan
+wrapped in white paper: "A little present I bought you, nurse." I took
+it, eyes sizzling and burning holes in my shoulders, and stammered my frantic thanks.</p>
+
+<p>"You do like it, nurse?" he said rapidly, three times in succession.</p>
+
+<p>And I: "I do, I do, I do...."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you would. You do like it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, just what I wanted!"</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, then. Just a little Christmas present."</p>
+
+<p>We couldn't stop. It was like taking too much butter for the marmalade
+and too much marmalade for the butter.</p>
+
+<p>He leaves the hospital in a day or two.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p><p>The fog is still thick. To-night at the station after a day off I found
+it white and silent. Touching the arm of a man, I asked him the
+all-important question: "Are the buses running?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no...."</p>
+
+<p>And the cabs all gone home to bed, and I was hungry!</p>
+
+<p>What ghosts pass ... and voices, bodyless, talking intimately while
+their feet fall without a stir on the grass of the open Heath.</p>
+
+<p>I was excited by the strange silent fog.</p>
+
+<p>But my left shoe began to hurt me, and stopping at the house of a girl I
+knew, I borrowed a country pair of hers: no taller than I, she takes two
+sizes larger; they were like boats.</p>
+
+<p>I started to trudge the three miles home in the boats: the slightest
+flick of the foot would have sent one of them flying beyond the eye of
+God or man. After a couple of miles the shoes began to tell, and I stood
+still and lifted up one foot behind me, craning over my shoulder to see
+if I could catch sight of the glimmer of skin through the heel of the
+stocking. The fog was too thick for that.</p>
+
+<p>Another half-mile and I put my finger down to my heel and felt the wet
+blood<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> through a large hole in my stocking, so I took off the shoes and
+tied them together ... and, more silent than ever in the tomb of fog,
+padded along as God had first supposed that woman would walk, on the wet
+surface of the road.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>A warded M.O. is pathetic. He knows he can't get well quicker than time
+will let him. He has no faith.</p>
+
+<p>To-morrow I have to take down all the decorations that I put up for
+Christmas. When I put them up I never thought I should be the one to
+take them down. When I was born no one thought I should be old.</p>
+
+<p>While I was untying a piece of holly from the electric-light cords on
+the ceiling and a patient was holding the ladder for me, a young <i>padre</i>
+came and pretended to help us, but while he stood with us he whispered
+to the patient, "Are you a communicant?" I felt a wave of heat and
+anger; I could have dropped the holly on him.</p>
+
+<p>They hung up their stockings on Christmas night on walking-sticks
+hitched over the ends of the beds and under the mattresses. Such big
+stockings! Many of them must have played Father Christmas in their own
+homes, to their own children, on other Christmases.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p><p>On Christmas Eve I didn't leave the hospital till long after the
+Day-Sisters had gone and the Night-Sisters came on. The wards were all
+quiet as I walked down the corridor, and to left and right through the
+glass doors hung the rows of expectant stockings.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Final and despairing postscript on Mr. Pettitt.</p>
+
+<p>When a woman says she cannot come to lunch it is because she doesn't
+want to.</p>
+
+<p>Let this serve as an axiom to every lover: A woman who refuses lunch
+refuses everything.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The hospital is alive; I feel it like a living being.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The hospital is like a dream. I am afraid of waking up and finding it commonplace.</p>
+
+<p>The white Sisters, the ceaselessly-changing patients, the long passages,
+the sudden plunges into the brilliant wards ... their scenery hypnotizes me.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes in the late evening one walks busily up and down the ward
+doing this and that, forgetting that there is anything beyond<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> the drawn
+blinds, engrossed in the patients, one's tasks&mdash;bed-making, washing, one
+errand and another&mdash;and then suddenly a blind will blow out and almost
+up to the ceiling, and through it you will catch a glimpse that makes
+you gasp, of a black night crossed with bladed searchlights, of a moon
+behind a crooked tree.</p>
+
+<p>The lifting of the blind is a miracle; I do not believe in the wind.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>A new Sister on to-night ... very severe. We had to make the beds like
+white cardboard. I wonder what she thinks of me.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pettitt (who really is going to-morrow) wandered up into the ward
+and limped near me. "Sister...." he began. He <i>will</i> call me "Sister." I
+frowned at him. The new Sister glanced at him and blinked.</p>
+
+<p>He was very persistent. "Sister," he said again, "do you think I can
+have a word with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not now," I whispered as I hurried past him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, is that so?" he said, as though I had made an interesting
+statement, and limped away, looking backwards at me. I suppose he wants
+to say good-bye.</p>
+
+<p>He sat beside Mr. Wicks's bed (Mr. Wicks<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> who is paralysed) and looked
+at me from time to time with that stare of his which contains so little offence.</p>
+
+<p>It is curious to think that I once saw Mr. Wicks on a tennis-lawn,
+walking across the grass.... Mr. Wicks, who will never put his foot on
+grass again, but, lying in his bed, continues to say, as all Tommies
+say, "I feel well in meself."</p>
+
+<p>So he does; he feels well in himself. But he isn't going to live, all the same.</p>
+
+<p>Still his routine goes on: he plays his game of cards, he has his joke:
+"Lemonade, please, nurse; but it's not from choice!"</p>
+
+<p>When I go to clear his ash-tray at night I always say, "Well, now I've
+got something worth clearing at last!"</p>
+
+<p>And he chuckles and answers, "Thought you'd be pleased. It's the others
+gets round my bed and leaves their bits."</p>
+
+<p>He was once a sergeant: he got his commission a year ago.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>My ruined charms cry aloud for help.</p>
+
+<p>The cap wears away my front hair; my feet are widening from the
+everlasting boards; my hands won't take my rings.</p>
+
+<p>I was advised last night on the telephone to marry immediately before it was too late.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p><p>A desperate remedy. I will try cold cream and hair tonics first.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>There is a tuberculosis ward across the landing. They call it the T.B. ward.</p>
+
+<p>It is a den of coughs and harrowing noises.</p>
+
+<p>One night I saw a negro standing in the doorway with his long hair done
+up in hairpins. He is the pet of the T.B. ward; they call him Henry.</p>
+
+<p>Henry came in to help us with our Christmas decorations on Christmas
+Eve, and as he cleverly made wreaths my Sister whispered to me, "He's
+never spitting ... in the ward!"</p>
+
+<p>But he wasn't, it was part of his language&mdash;little clicks and ticks. He
+comes from somewhere in Central Africa, and one of the T.B.'s told me,
+"He's only got one wife, nurse."</p>
+
+<p>He is very proud of his austerity, for he has somehow discovered that he
+has hit on a country where it is the nutty thing only to have one wife.</p>
+
+<p>No one can speak a word of his language, no one knows exactly where he
+comes from; but he can say in English, "Good morning, Sister!" and
+"Christmas Box!" and "One!"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p><p>Directly one takes any notice of him he laughs and clicks, holding up
+one finger, crying, "One!"</p>
+
+<p>Then a proud T.B. (they regard him as the Creator might regard a
+humming-bird) explains: "He means he's only got one wife, nurse."</p>
+
+<p>Then he did his second trick. He came to me with outstretched black hand
+and took my apron, fingering it. Its whiteness slipped between his
+fingers. He dropped it and, holding up the hand with its fellow, ducked
+his head to watch me with his glinting eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"He means," explained the versatile T.B., "that he has ten piccaninnies
+in his village and they're all dressed in white."</p>
+
+<p>It took my breath away; I looked at Henry for corroboration. He nodded
+earnestly, coughed and whispered, "Ten!"</p>
+
+<p>"How do you know he means that?" I asked. "How can you possibly have found out?"</p>
+
+<p>"We got pictures, nurse. We showed 'im kids, and 'e said 'e got ten&mdash;six
+girls and four boys. We showed 'im pictures of kids."</p>
+
+<p>I had never seen Henry before, never knew he existed. But in the ward
+opposite the poor T.B.'s had been holding conversations with him in
+window-seats, showing him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> pictures, painfully establishing a communion
+with him ... Henry, with his hair done up in hairpins!</p>
+
+<p>Although they showed him off with conscious pride, I don't think he
+really appeared strange to them, beyond his colour. I believe they
+imagine his wife as appearing much as their own wives, his children as
+the little children who run about their own doorsteps. They do not
+stretch their imaginations to conceive any strangeness about his home
+surroundings to correspond with his own strangeness.</p>
+
+<p>To them Henry has the dignity of a man and a householder, possibly a rate-payer.</p>
+
+<p>He seems quite happy and amused. I see him carrying a bucket sometimes,
+sharing its handle with a flushed T.B. They carry on animated
+conversations as they go downstairs, the T.B. talking the most. It
+reminds me of a child and a dog.</p>
+
+<p>What strange machinery is there for getting him back? Part of the cargo
+of a ship ... one day ... "a nigger for Central Africa...."</p>
+
+<p>"Where's his unit?"</p>
+
+<p>"Who knows! One nigger and his bundle ... for Central Africa!"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p><p>The ward has put Mr. Wicks to Coventry because he has been abusive and
+violent-tempered for three days.</p>
+
+<p>He lies flat in his bed and frowns; no more jokes over the lemonade, no
+wilfulness over the thermometer.</p>
+
+<p>It is in these days that Mr. Wicks faces the truth.</p>
+
+<p>I lingered by his bed last night, after I had put his tea-tray on his
+table, and looked down at him; he pretended to be inanimate, his open
+eyes fixed upon the white rail of the bed. His bedclothes were stretched
+about him as though he had not moved since his bed was made, hours before.</p>
+
+<p>His worldly pleasures were beside him&mdash;his reading-lamp, his Christmas
+box of cigars, his <i>Star</i>&mdash;but his eyes, disregarding them, were upon
+that sober vision that hung around the bedrail.</p>
+
+<p>He began a bitter conversation:</p>
+
+<p>"Nurse, I'm only a ranker, but I had a bit saved. I went to a private
+doctor and paid for myself. And I went to a specialist, and he told me I
+should never get this. I paid for it myself out of what I had saved."</p>
+
+<p>We might have been alone in the world, he and I. Far down at the other
+end of the room the men sat crouched about the fire,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> their trays before
+them on chairs. The sheet of window behind Mr. Wicks's head was flecked
+with the morsels of snow which, hunted by the gale, obtained a second's
+refuge before oblivion.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd sooner be dead than lying here; I would, reely." You hear that
+often in the world. "I'd sooner be dead than&mdash;&mdash;" But Mr. Wicks meant
+it; he would sooner be dead than lying there. And death is a horror, an
+end. Yet he says lying there is worse.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, I paid for a specialist myself, and he told me I should never
+be like this."</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing to be said.... One must have one's tea. I went down
+the ward to the bunk, and we cut the pink iced cake left over from Christmas....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I did not mean to forget him, but I forgot him. From birth to death we
+are alone....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>But one of the Sisters remembered him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Wicks is still in the dumps," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"What is really the matter with him, Sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Locomotor ataxy." And she added as she drank her tea, "It's his own fault."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p><p>"Oh, hush, hush!" my heart cried soundlessly to her, "You can't judge
+the bitterness of this, nun, from your convent...!"</p>
+
+<p>Alas, Mr. Wicks!... No wonder you saved your money to spend upon
+specialists! How many years have you walked in fear of this? He took
+your money, the gentleman in Harley Street, and told you that you might
+go in peace. He blessed you and gave you salvation.</p>
+
+<p>And the bitterest thing of all is that you paid for him like an officer
+and he was wrong.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>How the blinds blew and the windows shook to-night...! I walked out of
+the hospital into a gale, clouds driving to the sea, trees bending back
+and fore across the moon.</p>
+
+<p>I walked till I was warm, and then I walked for happiness.</p>
+
+<p>The maddening shine of the moon held my eyes, and I walked in the road
+like a fool, watching her&mdash;till at last, bringing my eyes down, the
+telegraph-posts were small as blades of grass on the hill-side and the
+shining ribbon tracks in the mud on the road ran up the hill for ever.
+They go to Dover, and Dover is France&mdash;and France leads anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>To what a lost enchantment am I recalled<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> by the sight of a branch
+across the moon? Something in childhood, something which escapes yet
+does not wither....</p>
+
+<p>As I passed the public-house on the crest of the hill, all black and
+white in the cold moonlight, a heavy door swung open and, with a cough
+and a deep, satisfied snuffle, a man coming out let a stream of gaslight
+across the road. If I were a man I should certainly go to public-houses.
+All that polished brass and glass boxed up away from the moon and the
+shadows would call to me. And to drink must be a happy thing when you
+have climbed the hill.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The T.B. ward is a melancholy place. There is a man in a bed near the
+door who lies with his mouth open; his head is like a bird-cage beneath
+a muslin cloth. I saw him behind his screens when I took them over a
+little lukewarm chicken left from our dinner.</p>
+
+<p>There was a dark red moon to-night, and frost. Our orderly said, "You
+can tell it's freezing, nurse, by the breath," as he watched mine curl
+up in smoke in the icy corridor. I like people who notice things....</p>
+
+<p>Out in the road in front of the hospital I couldn't get the
+motor-bicycle to work, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> sat crouched in the dark fiddling with
+spanners.</p>
+
+<p>The charwomen came out of the big gate in the dark talking and laughing,
+all in a bunch. One of them stepped off the pavement near me and stopped
+to put her toe through the ice in the gutter.</p>
+
+<p>"Nah, come on, Mrs. Toms!"</p>
+
+<p>"I always 'ave to break it, it's ser nice an' stiff," she said as she
+ran after them.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>To be a Sister is to have a nationality.</p>
+
+<p>As there are Icelanders urbane, witty, lazy ... and yet they are all
+Icelanders ... so there are cold, uproarious, observant, subservient,
+slangy, sympathetic, indifferent, and Scotch Sisters, and yet....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Sister said of a patient to-day, "He was a funny man."</p>
+
+<p>A funny man is a man who is a dark horse: who is neither friendly nor
+antagonistic; who is witty; who is preoccupied; who is whimsical or
+erratic&mdash;funny qualities, unsafe qualities.</p>
+
+<p>No Sister could like a funny man.</p>
+
+<p>In our ward there are three sorts of men: "Nothing much," "nice boys," and Mr. Wicks.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p><p>The last looms even to the mind of the Sister as a Biblical figure, a
+pillar of salt, a witness to God's wrath.</p>
+
+<p>The Sister is a past-mistress of such phrases as "Indeed!" "That is a
+matter of opinion," "We shall see..." "It is possible."</p>
+
+<p>I have discovered a new and (for me) charming game which I play with my
+Sister. It is the game of telling the truth about the contents of my
+mind when asked.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday Sister was trying to get some coal out of the coal-bin with a
+shovel that turned round and round on its handle; she was unsuccessful.</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Let me, Sister!"</p>
+
+<p>She said, "Why?"</p>
+
+<p>And I: "Because I think I can do it better."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should you think that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because all human beings do," I said, and, luckily, she smiled.</p>
+
+<p>She was washing her caps out in a bowl in the afternoon when I came on.</p>
+
+<p>"Good afternoon, Sister," I said. "Ironing?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am obviously only washing as yet," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"It's because I think so quickly,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> Sister," I said; "I knew you would
+iron next."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I dined with Irene last night after the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>I refused to believe what she told me about the last bus passing at
+half-past nine, and so at a quarter to ten I stood outside "The Green
+Lamp" and waited.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes passed and no bus.</p>
+
+<p>With me were two women waiting too&mdash;one holding a baby; the other,
+younger, smarter, dangling a purse.</p>
+
+<p>At last I communicated my growing fears: "I believe the last has gone...."</p>
+
+<p>We fixed our six eyes on the far corner of the road, waiting for the
+yellow lights to round it, but only the gas-lamps stood firm in their
+perspective.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh my, Elsie!" said the woman with the baby, "you can't never walk up
+to the cross-roads in the dark alone!"</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't make the attempt, not for anything!" replied the younger one firmly.</p>
+
+<p>Without waiting for more I stepped into the middle of the road and
+started on my walk home; the very next sentence would have suggested
+that Elsie and I should walk together.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p><p>She wouldn't "make the attempt...." Her words trailed through my mind,
+conjuring up some adventure, some act of bravery and daring.</p>
+
+<p>The road was the high road, the channel of tarmac and pavements that she
+probably walked along every day; and now it was the selfsame high road,
+the same flagstones, hedges, railings, but with the cloak of night upon them.</p>
+
+<p>It wasn't man she feared; even in the dark I knew she wasn't that kind.
+She would be awfully capable&mdash;with man. No, it was the darkness, the
+spooky jungle of darkness: she feared the trees would move....</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't make the attempt, not for anything"; and the other woman had
+quite agreed with her.</p>
+
+<p>I knew where I was by the smells and the sounds on the road&mdash;the smell
+of the lines of picketed horses behind the railings, the sharp and
+sudden stamp of the sick ones in the wooden stables, and, later on, the
+glitter of water in the horse-troughs.</p>
+
+<p>I thought: "I am not afraid.... Is it because I am more educated, or
+have less imagination?"</p>
+
+<p>"Halt! Who goes there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Friend," I said, thrilling tremendously.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p><p>He approached me and said something which I couldn't make anything of.
+Presently I disentangled, "You should never dread the baynit, miss."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm not dreading," I said, annoyed, "I ... I love it."</p>
+
+<p>He said he was cold, and added: "I bin wounded. If you come to that lamp
+you can see me stripe."</p>
+
+<p>We went to the lamp. "It's them buses," he complained, "they won't stop
+when I halt 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"But why do you want to stop them? They can't poison the horse-troughs."</p>
+
+<p>"It's me duty," he said. "There's one comin'."</p>
+
+<p>A bus, coming the opposite way, bore down upon us with an unwieldy rush
+and roar&mdash;the last bus, in a hurry to get to bed.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll see," he said pessimistically.</p>
+
+<p>"'Alt! 'Alt, there!" The bus, with three soldiers hanging on the step,
+rushed past us, and seemed to slow a little. The sentry ran a few paces
+towards it, crying "'Alt!" But it gathered speed and boomed on again,
+buzzing away between the gas-lamps. He returned to me sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe they can hear," I said, and gave him some chocolates and went on.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span></p><p>As I passed the hospital gates it seemed there was a faint, a very
+faint, sweet smell of chloroform....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I was down at the hospital to-night when the factory blew up over the
+river.</p>
+
+<p>The lights went out, and as they sank I reached the kitchen hatchway
+with my tray. At the bottom of the stairs I could see through the garden
+door the sky grown sulphur and the bushes glowing, while all the panes
+of glass turned incandescent.</p>
+
+<p>Then the explosion came; it sounded as though it was just behind the
+hospital. Two hundred panes of glass fell out, and they made a noise too.</p>
+
+<p>Standing in the dark with a tray in my hand I heard a man's voice saying
+gleefully, "I haven't been out of bed this two months!"</p>
+
+<p>Some one lit a candle, and by its light I saw all the charwomen from the
+kitchen bending about like broken weeds, and every officer was saying,
+"There, there now!"</p>
+
+<p>We watched the fires till midnight from the hill.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I went over this morning early. We were thirty-two in a
+carriage&mdash;Lascars, Chinese, children, Jews, niggers from the docks.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p><p>Lascars and children and Jews and I, we fought to get off the station
+platform; sometimes there wasn't room on the ground for both my feet at once.</p>
+
+<p>The fires were still burning and smouldering there at midday, but a
+shower of rime fell on it, so that it looked like an old ruin, something
+done long ago.</p>
+
+<p>At Pompeii, some one told me, one looked into the rooms and they were as
+they had been left&mdash;tables laid.... Here, too, I saw a table laid for
+the evening meal with a bedstead fallen from the upper floor astraddle
+across it. The insides of the houses were coughed into their windows,
+basket-chairs hanging to the sills, and fire-irons.</p>
+
+<p>Outside, the soil of the earth turned up; a workman's tin mug stuck and
+roasted and hardened into what looks like solid rock&mdash;a fossil, as
+though it had been there for ever.</p>
+
+<p>London is only skin-deep. Beneath lies the body of the world.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The hump under the blankets rolls over and a man's solemn face appears
+upon the pillow.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you get me a book, nurse?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. What kind do you like?"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p><p>"Nothing fanciful; something that might be true."</p>
+
+<p>"All right!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh&mdash;and nurse...?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not sentimental and not funny, I like a practical story."</p>
+
+<p>I got him "Lord Jim."...</p>
+
+<p>Another voice: "Nurse, is there any modern French poetry in that bookcase?"</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens, no! Who would have brought it here?"</p>
+
+<p>(Who are they all ... these men with their differing tastes?)</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the angels feel like this as they trail about in heaven with
+their wings flapping on their thin white legs....</p>
+
+<p>"Who were you, angel?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was a beggar outside San Marco."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you? How odd! I was an Englishman."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The concerts that we give in the ward touch me with some curious
+emotion. I think it is because I am for once at rest in the ward and
+have time to think and wonder.</p>
+
+<p>There is Captain Thomson finishing his song. He doesn't know what to do
+with his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> hands; they swing. He is tall and dark, with soft eyes&mdash;and
+staff badges.</p>
+
+<p>Could one guess what he is? Never in a dozen years.... But I <i>know</i>!</p>
+
+<p>He said to me last night, "Nurse, I'm going out to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>I leant across the table to listen to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Nurse, if you ever want any <i>cr&ecirc;pe de Chine</i> ... for nightgowns ...
+mind, at wholesale prices...."</p>
+
+<p>"I have bought some at a sale."</p>
+
+<p>"May I ask at what price?"</p>
+
+<p>"Four-and-eleven a yard."</p>
+
+<p>"Pity! You could have had it from me at three!"</p>
+
+<p>He gave me his business card. "That's it, nurse," he said, as he wrote
+on the back of it. "Drop me a line to that address and you'll get any
+material for underwear at trade prices."</p>
+
+<p>He booked one or two orders the night he went away&mdash;not laughingly, not
+as a joke, but with deep seriousness, and gravely pleased that he was
+able to do what he could for us. He was a traveller in ladies'
+underwear. I have seldom met any one so little a snob....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Watch Mr. Gray singing....</p>
+
+<p>One hand on the piano, one on his hip:</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p><p>"I love every mouse in that old-fashioned house."</p>
+
+<p>"That fellow can sing!" whispers the man beside me.</p>
+
+<p>"Is he a professional?" I asked as, finishing, the singer made the
+faintest of bows and walked back to his chair.</p>
+
+<p>"I think he must be."</p>
+
+<p>"He is, he is!" whispered Mr. Matthews, "I've heard him before."</p>
+
+<p>They know so little about each other, and they don't ask. It is only I
+who wonder&mdash;I, a woman, and therefore of the old, burnt-out world. These
+men watch without curiosity, speak no personalities, form no sets,
+express no likings, analyse nothing. They are new-born; they have as yet
+no standards and do not look for any.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, to have had that experience too!... I am of the old world.</p>
+
+<p>Again and again I realize, "A nation in arms...."</p>
+
+<p>Watchmakers, jewellers, station-masters, dress-designers, actors,
+travellers in underwear, bank clerks ... they come here in uniforms and
+we put them into pyjamas and nurse them; and they lie in bed or hobble
+about the ward, watching us as we move,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> accepting each other with the
+unquestioning faith of children.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The outside world has faded since I have been in the hospital. Their
+world is often near me&mdash;their mud and trenches, things they say when
+they come in wounded.</p>
+
+<p>The worst of it is it almost bores me to go to London, and London was
+always my Mecca. It is this garden at home, I think. It is so easy not to leave it.</p>
+
+<p>When you wake up the window is full of branches, and last thing at night
+the moon is on the snow on the lawn and you can see the pheasants' footmarks.</p>
+
+<p>Then one goes to the hospital....</p>
+
+<p>When Madeleine telephones to me, "I'm living in a whirl...." it disturbs
+me. Suddenly I want to too, but it dies down again.</p>
+
+<p>Not that it is their world, those trenches. When they come in wounded or
+sick they say at once, "What shows are on?"</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wicks has ceased to read those magazines his sister sends him; he
+now stares all day at his white bedrail.</p>
+
+<p>I only pass him on my way to the towel-cupboard, twice an evening, and
+then as I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> glance at him I am set wondering all down the ward of what he
+thinks, or if he thinks....</p>
+
+<p>I may be quite wrong about him; it is possible he doesn't think at all,
+but stares himself into some happier dream.</p>
+
+<p>One day when he is dead, when he is as totally dead as he tells me he
+hopes to be, that bed with its haunted bedrail will bend under another
+man's weight. Surely it must be haunted? The weight of thought, dream or
+nightmare, that hangs about it now is almost visible to me.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wicks is an uneducated and ordinary man. In what manner does his
+dream run? Since he has ceased to read he has begun to drop away a
+little from my living understanding.</p>
+
+<p>He reflects deeply at times.</p>
+
+<p>To-night, as I went quickly past him with my load of bath-towels, his
+blind flapped a little, and I saw the moon, shaped like a horn, behind it.</p>
+
+<p>Dropping my towels, I pulled his blind back:</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Wicks, look at the moon."</p>
+
+<p>Obedient as one who receives an order, he reached up to his supporting
+handle and pulled his shoulders half round in bed to look with me through the pane.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p><p>The young moon, freed from the trees, was rising over the hill.</p>
+
+<p>I dropped the blind again and took up my towels and left him.</p>
+
+<p>After that he seemed to fall into one of his trances, and lay immovable
+an hour or more. When I took his dinner to him he lifted his large,
+sandy head and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Seems a queer thing that if you hadn't said 'Look at the moon' I might
+have bin dead without seeing her."</p>
+
+<p>"But don't you ever look out of the window?"</p>
+
+<p>The obstinate man shook his head.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>There was a long silence in the ward to-night. It was so cold that no
+one spoke. It is a gloomy ward, I think; the pink silk on the electric
+lights is so much too thick, and the fire smokes dreadfully. The
+patients sat round the fire with their "British warms" over their
+dressing-gowns and the collars turned up.</p>
+
+<p>Through the two glass doors and over the landing you can see the T.B.'s
+moving like little cinema figures backwards and forwards across the lighted entrance.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly&mdash;a hesitating touch&mdash;an ancient polka struck up, a tune
+remembered at <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>children's parties. Then a waltz, a very old one too. The
+T.B.'s were playing dance music.</p>
+
+<p>I crept to their door and looked. One man alone was taking any notice,
+and he was the player; the others sat round coughing or staring at
+nothing in particular, and those in bed had their heads turned away from the music.</p>
+
+<p>The man whose face is like a bird-cage has now more than ever a look of
+... an empty cage. He allows his mouth to hang open: that way the bird will fly.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>What is there so rapturous about the moon?</p>
+
+<p>The radiance of a floating moon is unbelievable. It is a figment of
+dream. The metal-silver ball that hung at the top of the Christmas tree,
+or, earlier still, the shining thing, necklace or spoon, the thing the
+baby leans to catch ... the magpie in us....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Beecher is to be allowed to sleep till eight. He sleeps so badly, he
+says. He woke up crying this morning, for he has neurasthenia.</p>
+
+<p>That is what Sister says.</p>
+
+<p>He should have been in bed all yesterday, but instead he got up and
+through the door<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> watched the dead T.B. ride away on his stretcher (for
+the bird flew in the night).</p>
+
+<p>"How morbid of him!" Sister says.</p>
+
+<p>He has seen many dead in France and snapped his fingers at them, but I
+agree with him that to die of tuberculosis in the backwaters of the war
+isn't the same thing.</p>
+
+<p>It's dreary; he thought how dreary it was as he lay awake in the night.</p>
+
+<p>But then he has neurasthenia....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Pity is exhaustible. What a terrible discovery! If one ceases for one
+instant to pity Mr. Wicks he becomes an awful bore. Some days, when the
+sun is shining, I hear his grieving tenor voice all over the ward, his
+legendary tale of a wrong done him in his promotion. The men are kind to
+him and say "Old man," but Mr. Gray, who lies in the next bed to him, is
+drained of everything except resignation. I heard him say yesterday,
+"You told me that before...."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>We had a convoy last night.</p>
+
+<p>There was a rumour at tea-time, and suddenly I came round a corner on an
+orderly full of such definite information as:</p>
+
+<p>"There's thirty officers, nurse; an 'undred an' eighty men."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p><p>I flew back to the bunk with the news, and we sat down to our tea
+wondering and discussing how many each ward would get.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the haughty Sister from downstairs came to the door: she held
+her thin, white face high, and her rimless glasses gleamed, as she
+remarked, overcasually, after asking for a hot-water bottle that had
+been loaned to us:</p>
+
+<p>"Have you many beds?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have they many beds?" The one question that starts up among the
+competing wards.</p>
+
+<p>And, "I don't want any; I've enough to do as it is!" is the false,
+cloaking answer that each Sister gives to the other.</p>
+
+<p>But my Sisters are frank women; they laughed at my
+excitement&mdash;themselves not unstirred. It's so long since we've had a convoy.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The gallants of the ward showed annoyance. New men, new interests....
+They drew together and played bridge.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>A little flying boy with bright eyes said in his high, piping voice to
+me across the ward:</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p><p>"So there are soldiers coming into the ward to-night!"</p>
+
+<p>I paused, struck by his accusing eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean? Soldiers...?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean men who have been to the front, nurse."</p>
+
+<p>The gallants raised their eyebrows and grew uproarious.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The gallants have been saying unprofessional things to me, and I haven't
+minded. The convoy will arm me against them. "Soldiers are coming into the ward."</p>
+
+<p>Eight o'clock, nine o'clock.... If only one could eat something! I took
+a sponge-finger out of a tin, resolving to pay it back out of my tea
+next day, and stole round to the dark corner near the German ward to eat
+it. The Germans were in bed; I could see two of them. At last, freed
+from their uniform, the dark blue with the scarlet soup-plates, they
+looked&mdash;how strange!&mdash;like other men.</p>
+
+<p>One was asleep. The other, I met his eyes so close; but I was in the
+dark, and he under the light of a lamp.</p>
+
+<p>I knew what was happening down at the station two miles away; I had been
+on station duty so often. The rickety country<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> station lit by one large
+lamp; the thirteen waiting V.A.D.'s; the long wooden table loaded with
+mugs of every size; kettles boiling; the white clock ticking on; that
+frowsy booking clerk....</p>
+
+<p>Then the sharp bell, the tramp of the stretcher-bearers through the
+station, and at last the two engines drawing gravely across the lighted
+doorway, and carriage windows filled with eager faces, other carriage
+windows with beds slung across them, a vast Red Cross, a chemist's shop,
+a theatre, more windows, more faces....</p>
+
+<p>The stretcher-men are lined up; the M.O. meets the M.O. with the train;
+the train Sisters drift in to the coffee-table.</p>
+
+<p>"Here they come! Walkers first...."</p>
+
+<p>The station entrance is full of men crowding in and taking the steaming
+mugs of tea and coffee; men on pickaback with bandaged feet; men with
+only a nose and one eye showing, with stumbling legs, bound arms. The
+station, for five minutes, is full of jokes and witticisms; then they
+pass out and into the waiting chars-&agrave;-bancs.</p>
+
+<p>A long pause.</p>
+
+<p>"Stretchers!"</p>
+
+<p>The first stretchers are laid on the floor.</p>
+
+<p>There I have stood so often, pouring the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> tea behind the table, watching
+that littered floor, the single gas-lamp ever revolving on its chain,
+turning the shadows about the room like a wheel&mdash;my mind filled with
+pictures, emptied of thoughts, hypnotized.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>But last night, for the first time, I was in the ward. For the first
+time I should follow them beyond the glass door, see what became of
+them, how they changed from soldiers into patients....</p>
+
+<p>The gallants in the ward don't like a convoy; it unsexes us.</p>
+
+<p>Nine o'clock ... ten o'clock.... Another biscuit. Both Germans are asleep now.</p>
+
+<p>At last a noise in the corridor, a tramp on the stairs.... Only walkers?
+No, there's a stretcher&mdash;and another...!</p>
+
+<p>Now reflection ends, my feet begin to move, my hands to undo bootlaces,
+flick down thermometers, wash and fetch and carry.</p>
+
+<p>The gallants play bridge without looking up. I am tremendously fortified
+against them: for one moment I fiercely condemn and then forget them.
+For I am without convictions, antipathies, prejudices, reflections. I
+only work and watch, watch....</p>
+
+<p>Our ward is divided: half of it is neat and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> white and orderly; the
+other half has khaki tumbled all over it&mdash;"Sam Brownes," boots, caps,
+mud, the caked mud from the "other side."</p>
+
+<p>But the neat beds are empty; the occupants out talking to the
+new-comers, asking questions. Only the gallants play their bridge
+unmoved. They are on their mettle, showing off. Their turn will come some day.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Now it only remains to walk home, hungry, under a heavy moon.</p>
+
+<p>The snow is running down the gutters. What a strange and penetrating
+smell of spring! February ... can it be yet?</p>
+
+<p>The running snow is uncovering something that has been delayed. In the
+garden a blackbird made a sudden cry in the hedge. I did smell spring,
+and I'm starving....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I thought last night that a hospital ward is, above all, a serene place,
+in spite of pain and blood and dressings. Gravity rules it and order and
+a quiet procession of duties.</p>
+
+<p>Last night I made beds with the eldest Sister. The eldest Sister is good
+company to make beds with; she is quiet unless I rouse her, and when I
+talk she smiles with her eyes. I like to walk slowly round the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> ward,
+stooping and rising over the white beds, flicking the sheets
+mechanically from the mattress, and finally turning the mattress with an
+ease which gives me pleasure because I am strong.</p>
+
+<p>In life nothing is too small to please....</p>
+
+<p>Once during the evening the eldest Sister said to me:</p>
+
+<p>"I am worried about your throat. Is it no better?"</p>
+
+<p>And from the pang of pleasure and gratitude that went through me I have
+learnt the value of such remarks.</p>
+
+<p>In every bed there is some one whose throat is at least more sore than mine....</p>
+
+<p>Though I am not one of those fierce V.A.D.'s who scoff at sore throats
+and look for wounds, yet I didn't know it was so easy to give pleasure.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The strange, disarming ways of men and women!</p>
+
+<p>I stood in the bunk to-night beside the youngest Sister, and she looked
+up suddenly with her absent stare and said, "You're not so nice as you used to be!"</p>
+
+<p>I was dumbfounded. Had I been "nice"? And now different....</p>
+
+<p>What a maddening sentence, for I felt she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> was going to refuse me any
+spoken explanation.</p>
+
+<p>But one should not listen to what people say, only to what they mean,
+and she was one of those persons whose minds one must read for oneself,
+since her words so often deformed her thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>The familiarity and equality of her tone seemed to come from some mood
+removed from the hospital, where her mistrustful mind was hovering about
+a trouble personal to herself.</p>
+
+<p>She did not mean "You are not so nice...." but "You don't like me so much...."</p>
+
+<p>She was so young, it was all so new to her, she wanted so to be "liked"!
+But there was this question of her authority....</p>
+
+<p>How was she to live among her fellows?</p>
+
+<p>Can one afford to disdain them? Can one steer happily with indifference?
+Must one, to be "liked," bend one's spirit to theirs? And, most
+disturbing question of all, is to be "liked" the final standard?</p>
+
+<p>Whether to wear, or not to wear, a mask towards one's world? For there
+is so much that is not ripe to show&mdash;change and uncertainty....</p>
+
+<p>As she sat there, unfolding to me the fogs of her situation, her fresh
+pink face clouded,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> her grand cap and red cape adding burdens of
+authority to the toil of growth, I could readily have looked into the
+glass to see if my hair was grey!</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"Then there is nothing you condemn?" said the youngest Sister finally,
+at the close of a conversation.</p>
+
+<p>I have to-day come up against the bedrock of her integrity; it is
+terrible. She has eternal youth, eternal fair hair, cold and ignorant
+judgments. On things relating to the world I can't further soften her; a
+man must do the rest.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"A gentleman ... a gentleman...." I am so tired of this cry for a "gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>Why can't they do very well with what they've got!</p>
+
+<p>Here in the wards the Sisters have the stuff the world is made of laid
+out, bedded, before their eyes; the ups and downs of man from the four
+corners of the Empire and the hundred corners of social life, helpless
+and in pyjamas&mdash;and they're not satisfied, but must cry for a "gentleman"!</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't make a friend of that man!" the youngest Sister loves to add
+to her criticism of a patient.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span></p><p>It isn't my part as a V.A.D. to cry, "Who wants you to?"</p>
+
+<p>"I couldn't trust that man!" the youngest Sister will say equally often.</p>
+
+<p>This goes deeper....</p>
+
+<p>But whom need one trust? Brother, lover, friend ... no more. Why wish to
+trust all the world?...</p>
+
+<p>"They are not real men," she says, "not men through and through."</p>
+
+<p>That's where she goes wrong; they are men through and through&mdash;patchy,
+ordinary, human. She means they are not men after her pattern.</p>
+
+<p>Something will happen in the ward. Once I have touched this bedrock in
+her I shall be for ever touching it till it gets sore!</p>
+
+<p>One should seek for no response. They are not elastic, these nuns....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>In all honesty the hospital is a convent, and the men in it my brothers.</p>
+
+<p>This for months on end....</p>
+
+<p>For all that, now and then some one raises his eyes and looks at me; one
+day follows another and the glance deepens.</p>
+
+<p>"Charme de l'amour qui pourrait vous peindre!"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p><p>Women are left behind when one goes into hospital. Such women as are in
+a hospital should be cool, gentle; anything else becomes a torment to the "prisoner."</p>
+
+<p>For me, too, it is bad; it brings the world back into my eyes; duties
+are neglected, discomforts unobserved.</p>
+
+<p>But there are things one doesn't fight.</p>
+
+<p>"Charme de l'amour...." The ward is changed! The eldest Sister and the
+youngest Sister are my enemies; the patients are my enemies&mdash;even Mr.
+Wicks, who lies on his back with his large head turned fixedly my way to
+see how often I stop at the bed whose number is 11.</p>
+
+<p>Last night he dared to say, "It's not like you, nurse, staying so much
+with that rowdy crew...." The gallants ... I know! But one among them
+has grown quieter, and his bed is No. 11.</p>
+
+<p>Even Mr. Wicks is my enemy.</p>
+
+<p>He watches and guards. Who knows what he might say to the eldest Sister?
+He has nothing to do all day but watch and guard.</p>
+
+<p>In the bunk at tea I sit among thoughts of my own. The Sisters are my enemies....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I am alive, delirious, but not happy.</p>
+
+<p>I am at any one's mercy; I have lost<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> thirty friends in a day. The
+thirty-first is in bed No. 11.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>This is bad: hospital cannot shelter this life we lead, No. 11 and I. He
+is a prisoner, and I have my honour, my responsibility towards him; he
+has come into this room to be cured, not tormented.</p>
+
+<p>Even my hand must not meet his&mdash;no, not even in a careless touch, not
+even in its "duty"; or, if it does, what risk!</p>
+
+<p>I am conspired against: it is not I who make his bed, hand him what he
+wishes; some accident defeats me every time.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Now that I come to think of it, it seems strange that the Sisters should
+be my enemies. Don't we deserve sympathy and pity, No. 11 and I? From women, too....</p>
+
+<p>Isn't there a charm hanging about us? Aren't we leading magic days? Do
+they feel it and dislike it? Why?</p>
+
+<p>I feel that the little love we have created is a hare whose natural fate
+is to be run by every hound. But I don't see the reason.</p>
+
+<p>We can't speak, No. 11 and I, only a whispered word or two that seems to
+shout itself into every ear. We don't know each other.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p><p>Last night it was stronger than I. I let him stand near me and talk. I
+saw the youngest Sister at the far end of the ward by the door, but I
+didn't move; she was watching. The moment I took my eyes from her I
+forgot her.... That is how one feels when one is desperate; that is how trouble comes.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Later, I stood down by the hatch waiting for the tray of fish, and as I
+stood there, the youngest Sister beside me, he came down, for he was up
+and dressed yesterday, and offered to carry the tray. For he is reckless, too....</p>
+
+<p>She told him to go back, and said to me, looking from her young,
+condemning eyes, "I suppose he thinks he can make up for being the cause
+of all the lateness to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"Sister...." and then I stopped short. I hated her. Were we late? I
+looked at the other trays. We were not late; it was untrue. She had said
+that because she had had to wrap her barb in something and hadn't the
+courage to reprove me officially. I resented that and her air of
+equality. Since I am under her authority and agree to it, why dare she not use it?</p>
+
+<p>As for me, I dared not speak to her all the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> evening. She would have no
+weapons against me. If I am to remember she is my Sister I must hold my
+hand over my mouth.</p>
+
+<p>She would not speak to me, either. That was wrong of her: she is in authority, not I.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult for her because she is so young; but I have no room for sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>At moments I forget her position and, burning with resentment, I
+reflect, " ... this schoolgirl...."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>To-day I walked down to the hospital thinking: "I must be stronger. It
+is I who, in the inverted position of things, should be the stronger. He
+is being tortured, and he has no release. He cannot even be alone a moment."</p>
+
+<p>But at the hospital gates I thought of nothing but that I should see him.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>In the bunk sat the eldest Sister, writing in a book. It passed through
+my head that the two Sisters had probably "sat" on my affairs together.
+I wondered without interest what the other had told her. Putting on my
+cap, I walked into the ward.</p>
+
+<p>Surely his bed had had a pink eiderdown!</p>
+
+<p>I walked up the ward and looked at it;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> but I knew without need of a
+second glance what had happened.</p>
+
+<p>His bed was made in the fashion in which we make an empty bed, a bed
+that waits for a new patient. His locker was empty and stood open,
+already scrubbed. I smiled as I noticed they hadn't even left me that to do.</p>
+
+<p>No one volunteered a word of explanation, no one took the trouble to say
+he had gone.</p>
+
+<p>These women.... I smiled again. Only the comic phrase rang in my head
+"They've properly done me in! Properly done me in...."</p>
+
+<p>I went downstairs and fetched the trays, and all the time the smile was
+on my lips. These women.... Somehow I had the better of the Sister. It
+is better to be in the wrong than in the right.</p>
+
+<p>His friends looked at me a little, but apparently he had left no message for me.</p>
+
+<p>Later I learnt that he had been taken to another hospital at two, while
+I came on at three.</p>
+
+<p>Once during the evening the eldest Sister mentioned vaguely, "So-and-so has gone."</p>
+
+<p>And I said aloud, after a little reflection, "Yes ... in the nick of time, Sister."</p>
+
+<p>During the evening I realized that I should<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> never see him again. It was
+here in this ward the thing had grown. The hare we had started wouldn't
+bear the strain of any other life. He might write, but I shouldn't go and see him.</p>
+
+<p>"He must be wild," I thought with pity.</p>
+
+<p>The feeling between us would die anyhow; better throw in my strength
+with the Sister's and help her hurl it now towards its death. I looked
+at her bent head with a secret triumph.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Then, slowly: "How ... permanently am I in disgrace?"</p>
+
+<p>And she: "Not at all ... now."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Behind the stone pillar of the gateway is one dirty little patch of
+snow; I saw it even in the moonless darkness.</p>
+
+<p>The crown of the hill here holds the last snows, but for all that the
+spring smell is steaming among the trees and up and down the bracken
+slopes in the garden next door.</p>
+
+<p>There is no moon, there are no stars, no promise to the eye, but in the
+dense, vapouring darkness the bulbs are moving. I can smell what is not
+earth or rain or bark.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The curtain has been drawn over No. 11;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> the Sister holds the corners
+tightly against the window-frame. He is outside, somewhere in the world,
+and I am here moving among my thirty friends; and since it isn't spring
+yet, the lights are lit to hide the twilight. The Sister's eyes talk to
+me again as we make beds&mdash;yes, even bed No. 11 with a little jaundice
+boy in it. They let me make it now!</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Last night we had another concert in the ward.</p>
+
+<p>A concert demoralizes me. By reason of sitting on the beds and talking
+to whom one wills, I regain my old manners, and forget that a patient
+may be washed, fed, dressed but not talked to. My old manners were more
+gracious, but less docile.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards we wheeled the beds back into their positions. I bumped Mr.
+Lambert's as I wheeled it, and apologized.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not grumbling," he smiled from his pillow.</p>
+
+<p>"You never do," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't know me, nurse!"</p>
+
+<p>And I thought as I looked down at him "I shall never know him better or
+so well again...."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p><p>Indeed a Sister is a curious creature. She is like a fortress,
+unassailable, and whose sleeping guns may fire at any minute.</p>
+
+<p>I was struck with a bit of knowledge last night that will serve me
+through life, i.e. that to justify oneself is the inexcusable fault. It
+is better to be in the wrong than in the right.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>A Sister has an "intimate life."</p>
+
+<p>It occurs when she goes off duty; that is to say, it lies between 8.45,
+when she finishes her supper, and 10 o'clock, when she finishes undressing.</p>
+
+<p>That is why one Sister said to me, "If I hadn't taken up nursing I
+should have gone in for culture."</p>
+
+<p>I don't laugh at that.... To have an intimate life one must have a little time.</p>
+
+<p>Who am I that I can step in from outside to criticize? The hospital is
+not my life. I am expectant....</p>
+
+<p>But for them here and now is the business of life.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>As the weeks go by I recognize the difficulty of keeping the life of the
+Sisters and the V.A.D.'s out of the circle of my thoughts. Their
+vigorous and symmetrical vision of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> ward attacks me; their attitude
+towards the patients, which began by offending me, ends by overtaking me.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole the Sisters loathe relations. They look into the ward and
+see the mothers and sisters and wives camped round the beds, and go back
+into the bunk feeling that the ward doesn't belong to them.</p>
+
+<p>The eldest Sister said to me yesterday: "Shut the door, nurse; there's
+Captain Fellows's father. I don't want him fussing round."</p>
+
+<p>On that we discussed relations, and it seemed to me that it was
+inevitable that a Sister should be the only buffer between them and
+their pressing anxieties.</p>
+
+<p>"No, a relation is the last straw.... You don't understand!" she said.</p>
+
+<p>I don't understand, but I am not specialized.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Long ago in the Mess I said to <i>my</i> Sister, laughing: "I would go
+through the four years' training just to wear that cap and cape!"</p>
+
+<p>And she: "You couldn't go through it and come out as you are...."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wicks has set his heart on crutches.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p><p>"If you won't try me on them I'll buy me own and walk out of here!"</p>
+
+<p>Then I realize the vanity of his threat and the completeness of his
+imprisonment, and hurry to suggest a new idea before he sees it too....</p>
+
+<p>We set him on crutches....</p>
+
+<p>He is brave. He said with anger, "I can't stand on these, they're too
+long. You go and ask for some shorter ones...."</p>
+
+<p>And thus together we slurred over the fact of that pendulous, nerveless
+body which had hung from the crutches like an old stocking.</p>
+
+<p>But all the evening he was buried in his own silence, and I suppose he
+was looking at the vision on the bedrail.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>A boy of seventeen was brought in yesterday with pneumonia.</p>
+
+<p>He was so ill that he couldn't speak, and we put screens round his bed.
+All the other patients in the ward immediately became convalescents.</p>
+
+<p>I helped Sister to wash him, holding him on his side while he groaned
+with pain; and Sister, no longer cynical, said, "There you are Sonnie,
+it's almost finished...."</p>
+
+<p>When I rolled back the blanket it gave me a shock to see how young his
+feet were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>&mdash;clean and thin, with the big toe curling up and the little
+toes curling back.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you brush my hair?" he managed to say to me, and when I had
+finished: "This is a pretty ward...."</p>
+
+<p>It isn't, but I am glad it seems so to him.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The boy is at his worst. Whenever we come near him he lifts his eyes and
+asks, "What are you going to do now?"</p>
+
+<p>But to whatever we do he submits with a terrible docility.</p>
+
+<p>Lying there propped on his pillow, with his small yellow face staring
+down the ward, he is all the centre of my thoughts; I am preoccupied
+with the mystery that is in his lungs.</p>
+
+<p>Five days ago he was walking on his legs: five days, and he is on the
+edge of the world&mdash;to-night looking over the edge.</p>
+
+<p>There is no shell, no mark, no tear.... The attack comes from within.</p>
+
+<p>The others in the ward are like phantoms.</p>
+
+<p>When I say to-morrow, "How is the boy?" what will they say?</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The sun on the cobwebs lights them as it lights the telephone-wires
+above. The cocks scream from every garden.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p><p>To-day the sky is like a pale egg-shell, and aeroplanes from the two
+aerodromes are droning round the hill.</p>
+
+<p>I think from time to time, "Is he alive?"</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Can one grow used to death? It is unsafe to think of this....</p>
+
+<p>For if death becomes cheap it is the watcher, not the dying, who is poisoned.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>His mother buys a cake every day and brings it at tea-time, saying, "For
+the Sisters' tea...."</p>
+
+<p>It is a bribe, dumbly offered, more to be on the safe side of every bit
+of chance than because she really believes it can make the slightest difference.</p>
+
+<p>Now that I have time to think of it, her little action hurts me, but
+yesterday I helped to eat it with pleasure because one is hungry and the
+margarine not the best.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Aches and pains....<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pains and aches....</span></p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I don't know how to get home up the long hill....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Measles....</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">(Unposted.)</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Sister</span>,&mdash;Four more days before they will let me out of bed....
+Whatever I promise to a patient in future I shall do, if I have to wear
+a notebook hanging on my belt.</p>
+
+<p>"By which you will see that I am making discoveries!</p>
+
+<p>"The quality of <i>expectation</i> in a person lying horizontally is wrought
+up to a high pitch. One is always expecting something. Generally it is
+food; three times a day it is the post; oftener it is the performance of
+some promise. The things that one asks from one's bed are so small: 'Can
+you get me a book?' 'Can you move that vase of flowers?' 'When you come
+up next time could you bring me an envelope?'</p>
+
+<p>"But if one cannot get them life might as well stop.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"The wonder to me is how they stood me!</p>
+
+<p>"I was always cheerful&mdash;I thought it a merit; I find instead it is an exasperation.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"I make a hundred reflections since my eyes are too bad to read. I stare
+at the ceiling, and if a moth comes on it&mdash;and just now that happened,
+or I would not have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> thought of mentioning it&mdash;I watch the pair of them,
+the moth and its leaping shadow, as they whirl from square to square of
+the smoke-ripened ceiling. This keeps my thoughts quiet.</p>
+
+<p>"Then in the daytime there is the garden, the dog that crosses the lawn,
+the gardener talking to himself, the girl who goes to feed the hens....</p>
+
+<p>"I don't say that in any of these things I find a substitute for
+reading, but since I can't and mayn't read....</p>
+
+<p>"I am thinking, you know, of the beds down the right-hand side of the ward.</p>
+
+<p>"There's Mr. Wicks, now: he has his back to the road with the trams on it.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you see anything in that?</p>
+
+<p>"I do. But then I have the advantage of you; my position is horizontal.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Wicks's position is also ... strictly ... horizontal. It seems to
+me that if he could see those trams, mark Saturdays and Sundays by the
+increase of passengers, make little games to himself involving the
+number of persons to get on and off (for the stopping-place is within
+view: I know, for I looked) it might be possible to draw him back from
+that apathy which I too, as well as you, was ceasing to notice.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p><p>"Mr. Wicks, Sister, not only has his back to the road with trams on it,
+but for eleven months he has had his eyes on the yellow stone of the
+wall of the German ward; that is, when they are not on his own bedrail....</p>
+
+<p>"But if his bed were turned round to range alongside the window...? For
+he is a man with two eyes; not one who can write upon a stone wall with his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet ... it would be impossible! There's not a ward in the hospital
+whose symmetry is so spoilt.</p>
+
+<p>"And that, you know, is a difficulty for you to weigh. How far are you a dictator?</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"I have been thinking of my r&ocirc;le and yours.</p>
+
+<p>"In the long run, however 'capable' I become, my soul should be given to
+the smoothing of pillows.</p>
+
+<p>"You are barred from so many kinds of sympathy: you must not sympathize
+over the deficiencies of the hospital, over the food, over the M.O.'s
+lack of imagination, over the intolerable habits of the man in the next
+bed; you must not sigh 'I know ...' to any of these plaints.</p>
+
+<p>"Yours is the running of the ward. Yours the isolation of a crowned head.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p><p>"One day you said a penetrating thing to me:</p>
+
+<p>"'He's not very ill, but he's feeling wretched. Run along and do the
+sympathetic V.A.D. touch!'</p>
+
+<p>"For a moment I, just able to do a poultice or a fomentation, resented it.</p>
+
+<p>"But you were right.... One has one's <i>m&eacute;tier</i>."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2><a name="III" id="III"></a>III</h2>
+
+<h3>"THE BOYS ..."</h3>
+
+<p>So now one steps down from chintz covers and lemonade to the Main Army
+and lemon-water.</p>
+
+<p>And to show how little one has one's eye upon the larger issues, the
+thing that upset me most on coming into a "Tommies'" ward was the fact
+that instead of twenty-six lemons twice a day for the making of lemonade
+I now squeeze two into an old jug and hope for the best about the sugar.</p>
+
+<p>Smiff said to-day, "Give us a drop of lemon, nurse...." And the Sister:
+"Go on with you! I won't have the new nurse making a pet of you...."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I'm new to it, and one can't carry on the work that way, but,
+God knows, the water one can add to a lemon is cheap enough!</p>
+
+<p>Smiff had a flash of temper to-night. He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> said: "Keepin' me here starin'
+at green walls this way! Nothing but green, nine blessed months!"</p>
+
+<p>His foot is off, and to-night for the first time the doctor had promised
+that he should be wheeled into the corridor. But it was forgotten, and I
+am too new to jog the memory of the gods.</p>
+
+<p>It's a queer place, a "Tommies'" ward. It makes me nervous. I'm not
+simple enough; they make me shy. I can't think of them like the others
+do, as "the boys"; they seem to me full-grown men.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I suffer awfully from my language in this ward. I seem to be the only
+V.A.D. of whom they continually ask, "What's say, nurse?" It isn't that
+I use long words, but my sentences seem to be inverted.</p>
+
+<p>An opportunity for learning to speak simple Saxon....</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"An antitetanic injection for Corrigan," said Sister. And I went to the
+dispensary to fetch the syringe and the needles.</p>
+
+<p>"But has he any symptoms?" I asked. (In a Tommies' ward one dare ask
+anything; there isn't that mystery which used to surround the officers' illnesses.)</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p><p>"Oh no," she said, "it's just that he hasn't had his full amount in
+France."</p>
+
+<p>So I hunted up the spirit-lamp and we prepared it, talking of it.</p>
+
+<p>But we forgot to talk of it to Corrigan. The needle was into his
+shoulder before he knew why his shirt was held up.</p>
+
+<p>His wrath came like an avalanche; the discipline of two years was
+forgotten, his Irish tongue was loosened. Sister shrugged her shoulders
+and laughed; I listened to him as I cleaned the syringe.</p>
+
+<p>I gathered that it was the indignity that had shocked his sense of
+individual pride. "Treating me like a cow...." I heard him say to
+Smiff&mdash;who laughed, since it wasn't his shoulder that carried the serum.
+Smiff laughed: he has been in hospital nine months, and his theory is
+that a Sister may do anything at any moment; his theory is that nothing
+does any good&mdash;that if you don't fuss you don't get worse.</p>
+
+<p>Corrigan was angry all day; the idea that "a bloomin' woman should come
+an' shove something into me systim" was too much for him. But he forgets
+himself: there are no individualists now; his "system" belongs to us.</p>
+
+<p>Sister said, laughing, to Smiff the other day, "Your leg is mine."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p><p>"Wrong again; it's the Governmint's!" said Smiff. But Corrigan is Irish
+and doesn't like that joke.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>There are times when my heart fails me; when my eyes, my ears, my
+tongue, and my understanding fail me; when pain means nothing to me....</p>
+
+<p>In the bus yesterday I came down from London sitting beside a Sister
+from another ward, who held her hand to her ear and shifted in her seat.</p>
+
+<p>She told me she had earache, and I felt sorry for her.</p>
+
+<p>As she had earache we didn't talk, and I sat huddled in my corner and
+watched the names of the shops, thinking, as I was more or less forced
+to do by her movements, of her earache.</p>
+
+<p>What struck me was her own angry bewilderment before the fact of her
+pain. "But it hurts.... You've no idea how it hurts!" She was surprised.</p>
+
+<p>Many times a day she hears the words, "Sister, you're hurtin' me....
+Couldn't you shift my heel? It's like a toothache," and similar
+sentences. I hear them in our ward all the time. One can't pass down the
+ward without some such request falling on one's ears.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p><p>She is astonished at her earache; she is astonished at what pain can
+be; it is unexpected. She is ready to be angry with herself, with her
+pain, with her ear. It is monstrous, she thinks....</p>
+
+<p>The pain of one creature cannot continue to have a meaning for another.
+It is almost impossible to nurse a man well whose pain you do not imagine. A deadlock!</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>One has illuminations all the time!</p>
+
+<p>There is an old lady who visits in our ward, at whom, for one or two
+unimportant reasons, it is the custom to laugh. The men, who fall in
+with our moods with a docility which I am beginning to suspect is a
+mask, admit too that she is comic.</p>
+
+<p>This afternoon, when she was sitting by Corrigan's bed and talking to
+him I saw where her treatment of him differed from ours. She treats him
+as though he were an individual; but there is more in it than that....
+She treats him as though he had a wife and children, a house and a back
+garden and responsibilities: in some manner she treats him as though he had dignity.</p>
+
+<p>I thought of yesterday's injection. That is the difference: that is what
+the Sisters mean when they say "the boys."...</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p><p>The story of Rees is not yet ended in either of the two ways in which
+stories end in a hospital. His arm does not get worse, but his courage
+is ebbing. This morning I wheeled him out to the awful sleep again&mdash;for the third time.</p>
+
+<p>They will take nearly anything from each other. The only thing that
+cheered Rees up as he was wheeled away was the voice of Pinker crying,
+"Jer want white flowers on yer coffin? We'll see to the brass 'andles!"</p>
+
+<p>From Pinker, a little boy from the Mile End Road, they will stand
+anything. He is the servant of the ward (he says), partly through his
+good nature and a little because he has two good arms and legs. "I ain't
+no skivvy," he protests all the time, but every little odd job gets done.</p>
+
+<p>Rees, when he wakes, wakes sobbing and says, "Don' go away, nurse...."
+He holds my hand in a fierce clutch, then releases it to point in the
+air, crying "There's the pain!" as though the pain filled the air and
+rose to the rafters. As he wakes it centralizes, until at last comes the
+moment when he says, "Me arm aches cruel," and points to it. Then one can leave him.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It was the first time I had heard a man<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> sing at his dressing. I was
+standing at the sterilizer when Rees's song began to mount over the
+screen that hid him from me. ("Whatever is that?" "Rees's tubes going in.")</p>
+
+<p>It was like this: "Ah ... ee ... oo, Sister!" and again: "Sister ... oo
+... ee ... ah!" Then a little scream and his song again.</p>
+
+<p>I heard her voice: "Now then, Rees, I don't call that much of a song."
+She called me to make his bed, and I saw his left ear was full of tears.</p>
+
+<p>O visitors, who come into the ward in the calm of the long afternoon,
+when the beds are neat and clean and the flowers out on the tables and
+the V.A.D.'s sit sewing at splints and sandbags, when the men look like
+men again and smoke and talk and read ... if you could see what lies
+beneath the dressings!</p>
+
+<p>When one shoots at a wooden figure it makes a hole. When one shoots at a
+man it makes a hole, and the doctor must make seven others.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I heard a blackbird sing in the middle of the night last night&mdash;two
+bars, and then another. I thought at first it might be a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> burglar
+whistling to his mate in the black and rustling garden.</p>
+
+<p>But it was a blackbird in a nightmare.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Those distant guns again to-night....</p>
+
+<p>Now a lull and now a bombardment; again a lull, and then batter, batter,
+and the windows tremble. Is the lull when <i>they</i> go over the top?</p>
+
+<p>I can only think of death to-night. I tried to think just now, "What is
+it, after all! Death comes anyway; this only hastens it." But that won't
+do; no philosophy helps the pain of death. It is pity, pity, pity, that
+I feel, and sometimes a sort of shame that I am here to write at all.</p>
+
+<p>Summer.... Can it be summer through whose hot air the guns shake and
+tremble? The honeysuckle, whose little stalks twinkled and shone that
+January night, has broken at each woody end into its crumbled flower.</p>
+
+<p>Where is the frost, the snow?... Where are the dead?</p>
+
+<p>Where is my trouble and my longing, and the other troubles, and the
+happiness in other summers?</p>
+
+<p>Alas, the long history of life! There is that in death that makes the
+throat contract<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> and the heart catch: everything is written in water.</p>
+
+<p>We talk of tablets to the dead. There can be none but in the heart, and
+the heart fades.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>There are only ten men left in bed in the ward. Sometimes I think, "Will
+there never be another convoy?"</p>
+
+<p>And then: "Is not one man alone sufficient matter on which to reflect?"
+"One can find God in a herring's head...." says a Japanese proverb.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>When there is not much to do in the ward and no sound comes from behind
+the screens, when there has not been a convoy for weeks, when the little
+rubber tubes lie in the trolley-drawer and the syringe gives place to
+the dry dressing&mdash;then they set one of us aside from the work of the
+ward to sit at a table and pad splints.</p>
+
+<p>It isn't supposed to be a job we care for, and I am keeping up the
+delusion, but all the time I run my seams straight, pull the horsehair
+out to the last fine shred, turn in my corners as the corners of a
+leather book are turned, so that I may be kept at it, although out of
+cunning I appear to grumble and long to be released.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p><p>One does not wash up when one makes splints, one does not change the
+pillow-cases&mdash;forcing the resentful pillow down, down till the corners
+of the case are filled&mdash;nor walk the ward in search of odd jobs.</p>
+
+<p>But these are not the reasons....</p>
+
+<p>Just as I liked the unending laying of the trays in the corridor, so
+making splints appears to me a gentle work in which one has time to look
+at and listen to the ward with more penetrating eyes, with wider ears&mdash;a
+work varied by long conversations with Pinker about his girl and the
+fountain-pen trade.</p>
+
+<p>But I ought not to have asked if she were pretty.</p>
+
+<p>At first he didn't answer and appeared to be thinking very seriously&mdash;of
+a way out, perhaps.</p>
+
+<p>"Does fer me all right," he presently said.</p>
+
+<p>The defence of his girl occupied his attention, for after a few minutes
+he returned to it: "Sensible sort of girl. She ain't soft. Can cook an' all that."</p>
+
+<p>I went on sewing my splint.</p>
+
+<p>Almost reluctantly he pursued: "Got 'er photograph 'ere." But he did not
+get up at once, and we turned to the fountain-pens. "Any nib," he said,
+"crossed ever so, <i>I</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> could mend it. Kep' the books too; we was always
+stocktaking."</p>
+
+<p>Now I think of it, fountain-pen shops always <i>are</i> stocktaking. They do
+it all down the Strand, with big red labels across the front.</p>
+
+<p>He rose suddenly and crossed to his locker to look for her photograph,
+returning after a few minutes with a bundle of little cardboards. The
+first I turned over was that of a pretty fair-haired girl. "Is that
+her?" I asked. "She's pretty!" "That's 'er young sister," he answered. I
+turned over the rest, and he pointed out his family one by one&mdash;last of
+all his girl.</p>
+
+<p>There are some men who are not taken in by a bit of fair hair.</p>
+
+<p>One knows what these cheap photographs are, how they distort and
+blacken. The girl who looked at me from this one appeared to be a monster.</p>
+
+<p>She had an enormous face, enormous spectacles, bands of galvanized iron
+drawn across her forehead for hair....</p>
+
+<p>"Ther's just them two, 'er an 'er sister. 'Er sister ain't got a feller yet."</p>
+
+<p>I praised his girl to Pinker, and praised Pinker to myself.</p>
+
+<p>"A girl friend," he said, "keeps yer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> straighter than a man. Makes yer
+punctual."</p>
+
+<p>"So she won't wait for you when you are late?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a minute over time," he said with pride. "I used to be a terror
+when I first knew 'er; kep' 'er waitin' abaht. She soon cured me, did F. Steel."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a funny little bird, Pinker," said the Sister, passing.</p>
+
+<p>"Lil bird, am I?" He tucked his cardboards carefully into his locker and
+followed her up the ward firing repartee.</p>
+
+<p>I sewed my splint. In all walks of life men keep one waiting. I should
+like to ask the huge and terrible girl about her cure.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Monk is the ugliest man I have ever seen. He has a squint and a leer,
+his mouth drops at both sides, he has no forehead, and his straight,
+combed hair meets his eyebrows&mdash;or rather, his left eyebrow, since that
+one is raised by a cut. He has the expression of a cut-throat, and yet
+he is quite young, good-tempered, and shy.</p>
+
+<p>When Monk was working at a woollen belt Pinker said: "Workin' that for
+yer girl?... You got a girl, Monk?"</p>
+
+<p>Monk squinted sidelong at Pinker and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> rubbed his hands together like a
+large ape.</p>
+
+<p>"'E ain't got no girl," shrilled Pinker. "Monk ain't got no girl. You
+don' know what a girl is, do yer, Monk?"</p>
+
+<p>Although they do much more to help each other than I ever saw done in
+the officers' ward, yet one is always saying things that I find myself
+praying the other hasn't heard.</p>
+
+<p>In the next bed to Monk lies Gayner, six foot two, of the Expeditionary
+Force. Wounded at Mons, he was brought home to England, and since then
+he has made the round of the hospitals. He is a good-looking, sullen man
+who will not read or write or sew, who will not play draughts or cards
+or speak to his neighbour. He sits up, attentive, while the ulcers on
+his leg are being dressed, but if one asks him something of the history
+of his wound his tone holds such a volume of bitterness and exasperation
+that one feels that at any moment the locks of his spirit might cease to hold.</p>
+
+<p>" ... ever since Mons, these ulcers, on and off?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh well, we must cure them now."</p>
+
+<p>Her light tone is what he cannot endure. He does not believe in cure and
+will not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> believe in cure. It has become an article of faith: his ulcers
+will never be cured. He has a silent scorn of hospitals. He can wind a
+perfect bandage and he knows the rules; beyond that he pays as little
+attention as possible to what goes on.</p>
+
+<p>When his dressing is over he tilts his thin, intelligent face at the
+ceiling. "Don't you ever read?" I asked him.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't the patience," he replied. But he has the patience to lie
+like that with his thin lips compressed and a frown on his face for
+hours, for days ... since Mons....</p>
+
+<p>I have come to the conclusion that he has a violent soul, that he dare
+not talk. It is no life for a man.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I said to Pinker this morning, "I wish you'd hurry up over your bath;
+I've got to get it scrubbed out by nine."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you hurry me, nurse," said Pinker, "it's the on'y time I can
+think, in me bath."</p>
+
+<p>I should like to have parried with Pinker (only my language is so much
+more complicated than it ought to be) that thinking in one's bath is a
+self-deception. I lay in my own bath last night and thought very deep
+thoughts, but often when we think our thoughts are deep they are only
+vague.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> Bath thoughts are wonderful, but there's nothing "to" them.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>We had a heated discussion to-day as to whether the old lady who leaves
+a tract beneath a single rose by each bedside could longer be tolerated.</p>
+
+<p>"She is a nuisance," said the Sister; "the men make more noise
+afterwards because they set her hymns to ragtime."</p>
+
+<p>"What good does it do them?" said the V.A.D., " ... and I have to put
+the roses in water!"</p>
+
+<p>I rode the highest horse of all: "Her inquiries about their souls are an
+impertinence. Why should they be bothered?"</p>
+
+<p>These are the sort of things they say in debating societies. But Life
+talks differently....</p>
+
+<p>Pinker said, "Makes the po'r ole lady 'appy!"</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>As one bends one's head low over the splint one sits unnoticed, a part
+of the furniture of the ward. The sounds of the ward rise and fill the
+ears; it is like listening to a kettle humming, bees round a bush of
+flowers, the ticking of a clock, the passing of life....</p>
+
+<p>Now and then there are incidents, as just<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> now. Two orderlies came in
+with a stretcher to fetch Mr. Smith (an older man than Smiff and a more
+dignified) away to a convalescent home. Mr. Smith has never been to
+France, but walked into our ward one day with a sore on his foot which
+had to be cut. He was up and dressed in his bedraggled khaki uniform
+when the stretcher-bearers came for him.</p>
+
+<p>He looked down his nose at the stretcher. "I don't much like the look of
+that," he said. The stretcher-bearers waited for him.</p>
+
+<p>He stood irresolute. "I never bin in one of them, and I don't want to
+make a start."</p>
+
+<p>"Its bad luck to be our name," called out Smiff, waving his amputated
+ankle. "Better get your hand in!"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Smith got in slowly and departed from the ward, sitting bolt
+upright, gripping the sides with his hands.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Some of the wards and the Sisters' bunks are charming at this time of
+the year, now that larkspur and rambler-roses are cheap in the market.</p>
+
+<p>But the love of decoration is not woman's alone. Through the dispensary
+hatchway I saw three empty poison-bottles, each with a poppy stuck in its neck.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p><p>Everything in the dispensary is beautiful&mdash;its glasses, its flames, its
+brass weights, its jars and globes; but much more beautiful because it
+is half a floor higher than the corridor in which we stand and look up
+into it, through a hatchway in the wall. There is something in that: one
+feels like Gulliver.</p>
+
+<p>No woman has ever been into this bachelors' temple.</p>
+
+<p>On tapping at a small square panel set in the wall of the corridor the
+panel flies up and a bachelor is seen from the waist to the knees. If he
+feels well and my smile is humble he will stoop, and I see looking down
+at me a small worn face and bushy eyebrows, or a long ascetic face and
+bleached hair, or a beard and a pair of bearded nostrils.</p>
+
+<p>Between them the three old things, priests in their way, measure and
+weigh and mix and scold and let up the panel and bang it down through
+the long day, filling the hospital with their coloured bottles, sealed
+packets of pills, jars and vaccines, and precious syringes in boxes
+marked "To be returned at once" (I never knew a Sister fail to toss her
+head when she saw this message).</p>
+
+<p>It is a very social spot outside the panel of the dispensary: each
+V.A.D. goes there each morning as one might do one's <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>marketing, and,
+meeting there, puts down her straw basket, taps at the panel, and
+listens to the scolding of the old men with only half an ear.</p>
+
+<p>For the bachelors amuse themselves when they are not mixing and weighing
+by inventing odd rules and codes of their own, and, reaching a skinny
+arm through the hatchway, they pin them on, little scraps of paper which
+fall down and are swept to heaven in the charwomen's pails.</p>
+
+<p>And the V.A.D.'s, who are not at all afraid, because one cannot be
+afraid of a man of whom one has never seen more than half, turn a blind
+eye to the slips and a deaf ear to the voices, bringing their bottles
+and their jars just in the manner they were taught to do when first they
+entered the hospital. And they gossip! They have just seen the morning
+papers on all the beds; they have just heard about the half-days for the
+week; they have collected little rags and ends of news as they came
+along the corridor.</p>
+
+<p>They gossip. And once a bearded bachelor thumped the panel down almost
+on my finger, leaving three startled faces staring at a piece of painted
+wood. But a little dark girl worked the panel up an inch with her nails
+and cajoled through the crack.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span></p><p>I have said before that the long corridor is wonderful. In the winter
+afternoons and evenings, when the mist rolled up and down over the tiles
+like the smoke in a tunnel, when one walked almost in darkness and
+peered into the then forbidden wards, when dwarfs coming from the G
+block grew larger and larger till the A block turned them into beings of
+one's own size, the corridor always made a special impression on me.</p>
+
+<p>But in the summer mornings it is remarkable too. Then regiments of
+charwomen occupy it, working in close mass formation. Seven will work
+abreast upon their knees, flanked by their pails, their hands moving
+backwards and forwards in so complicated a system that there appears to
+be no system at all.</p>
+
+<p>Patches of the corridor are thick with soapsuds; patches are dry. The
+art of walking the corridor in the morning can be learnt, and for a year
+and five months I have done it with no more than a slip and a slide.</p>
+
+<p>But yesterday I stepped on a charwoman's hand. It was worse than
+stepping on a puppy: one knows that sickening lift of the heart, as
+though the will could undo the weight of the foot....</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span></p><p>The stagger, the sense of one's unpardonable heaviness.... I slipped on
+her hand as on a piece of orange-peel, and, jumping like a chamois, sent
+the next pail all over the heels of the front rank.</p>
+
+<p>It was the sort of situation with which one can do nothing.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I met a friend yesterday, one of the old Chelsea people. He has followed
+his natural development. Although he talks war, war, war, it is from his
+old angle, it wears the old hall-mark.</p>
+
+<p>He belongs to a movement which believes it "feels the war." Personal
+injury or personal loss does not enter the question; the heart of this
+movement of his bleeds perpetually, but impersonally. He claims for it
+that this heart is able to bleed more profusely than any other heart,
+individual or collective, in ... let us limit it to England!</p>
+
+<p>In fact it is the only blood he has noticed.</p>
+
+<p>When the taxes go up he says, "Well, now perhaps it will make people
+feel the war!" For he longs that every one should lose their money so
+that at last they may "feel the war," "stop the war" (interchangeable!)</p>
+
+<p>He forgets that even in England a great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> many quite stupid people would
+rather lose their money than their sons.</p>
+
+<p>How strange that these people should still picture the minds of soldiers
+as filled with the glitter of bright bayonets and the glory of war! They
+think we need a vision of blood and ravage and death to turn us from our
+bright thoughts, to still the noise of the drum in our ears. The drums
+don't beat, the flags don't fly....</p>
+
+<p>He should come down the left-hand side of the ward and hear what the
+dairyman says.</p>
+
+<p>"I 'ates it, nurse; I 'ates it. Them 'orses'll kill me; them drills....
+It's no life for a man, nurse."</p>
+
+<p>The dairyman hasn't been to the Front; you needn't go to the Front to
+hate the war. Sometimes I get a glimpse from him of what it means to the
+weaklings, the last-joined, feeble creatures.</p>
+
+<p>"Me 'ead's that queer, nurse; it seems to get queerer every day. I can't
+'elp worryin'. I keep thinkin' of them 'orses."</p>
+
+<p>Always the horses....</p>
+
+<p>I said to Sister, "Is No. 24 really ill?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's a chance of his being mental," she said. "He is being watched."</p>
+
+<p>Was he mental before the war took him,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> before the sergeant used to whip
+the horses as they got to the jumps, before the sergeant cried out
+"Cross your stirrups!"?</p>
+
+<p>It isn't his fault; there are strong and feeble men.</p>
+
+<p>A dairyman's is a gentle job; he could have scraped through life all
+right. He sleeps in the afternoon, and stirs and murmurs: "Drop your
+reins.... Them 'orses, sergeant! I'm comin', sergeant; don't touch 'im
+this time!" And then in a shriller voice, "Don't touch 'im...." Then he wakes.</p>
+
+<p>Poor mass of nerves.... He nods and smiles every time one looks at him,
+frantic to please.</p>
+
+<p>There are men and men. Scutts has eleven wounds, but he doesn't "mind"
+the war. God made many brands of men, that is all; one must accept them.</p>
+
+<p>But war finds few excuses; and there are strange minnows in the
+fishing-net. Sometimes, looking into the T.B. ward, I think: "It almost
+comes to this: one must spit blood or fight...."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you refuse?" my friend would say to the dairyman. "Why should
+you fight because another man tells you to?"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p><p>It isn't so simple as that, is it, dairyman? It isn't even a question
+of the immense, vague machinery behind the sergeant, but just the
+sergeant himself; it isn't a question of generals or politicians of
+great wrongs or fierce beliefs ... but of the bugle which calls you in
+the morning and the bugle which puts you to bed at night.</p>
+
+<p>Well, well.... The dairyman is in hospital, and that is the best that he
+can hope for.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I read a book once about a prison. They too, the prisoners, sought after
+the prison hospital, as one seeks after one's heaven.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It is so puffed up of my friend to think that his and his "movement's"
+are the only eyes to see the vision of horror. Why, these others <i>are</i> the vision!</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>This afternoon I was put at splints again.</p>
+
+<p>I only had an inch or two to finish and I spun it out, very happy.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the foot of a bed near me began to catch my attention: the toe
+beneath the sheets became more and more agitated, then the toes of the
+other foot joined the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> first foot, beating a frenzied tattoo beneath the
+coverings. I looked up.</p>
+
+<p>Facing me a pair of blue eyes were bulging above an open mouth, the
+nostrils were quivering, the fingers were wrung together. It was Gayner,
+surely seeing a ghost.</p>
+
+<p>I rose and went to his bed.</p>
+
+<p>"My jaws want to close," he muttered. "I can't keep them open."</p>
+
+<p>I jumped and went for Sister, who took the news in a leisurely fashion,
+which reproved me for my excitement. Feeling a fool, I went and sat down
+again, taking up my splint. But there was no forgetting Gayner.</p>
+
+<p>I tried to keep my eyes on my work, but first his toes and then his
+hands filled all my mind, till at last I had to look up and meet the eyes again.</p>
+
+<p>Still looking as though he had seen a ghost&mdash;a beast of a ghost...! In
+hospital since Mons.... "I wonder how many men he has seen die of
+tetanus?" I thought.</p>
+
+<p>"He's got the jumps," I thought.</p>
+
+<p>So had I. Suppose Sister was wrong! Suppose the precious minutes were
+passing! Suppose...! She was only the junior Sister.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I get you some water?" I said at last. He nodded, and gulped in a
+horrible<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> fashion. I got him the mug, and while he drank I longed, but
+did not dare, to say, "Are you afraid of ... that?" I thought if one
+could say the word it might break down that dumb fright, draw the flesh
+up again over those bulging eyes, give him a sort of anchor, a
+confessional, even if it was only me. But I didn't dare. Gayner is one
+of those men so pent up, so rigid with some inner indignation, one
+cannot tamper with the locks.</p>
+
+<p>Again I went and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>When next I looked up he was sweating. He beckoned to me: "Ask Sister to
+send for the doctor. I can't stand this."</p>
+
+<p>I went and asked her.</p>
+
+<p>She sucked her little finger thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Give him the thermometer," she said. He couldn't take it in his mouth,
+" ... for if I shut my lips they'll never open." I put it under his arm
+and waited while his feet kicked and his hands twisted. He was normal. Sister smiled.</p>
+
+<p>But by a coincidence the doctor came, gimlet-eyed.</p>
+
+<p>"Hysteria...." he said to Sister in the bunk.</p>
+
+<p>"Is no one going to reassure Gayner?" I wondered. And no one did.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p><p>Isn't the fear of pain next brother to pain itself? Tetanus or the fear
+of tetanus&mdash;a choice between two nightmares. Don't they admit that?</p>
+
+<p>So, forbidden to speak to him, I finished my splint till tea-time. But I
+couldn't bring myself to sit down to it, for fear that the too placid
+resumption of my duties should outrage him. I stood up.</p>
+
+<p>Which helped me, not him.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>After the dressings are over we scrub the dishes and basins in the annexe.</p>
+
+<p>In the annexe, except that there is nothing to sit on, there is leisure
+and an invitation to reflection.</p>
+
+<p>Beneath the windows legions of white butterflies attack the
+cabbage-patch which divides us from the road; beyond the road there is a
+camp from which the dust flows all day.</p>
+
+<p>When the wind is from the north the dust is worse than ever and breaks
+like a surf over the cabbages, while the butterflies try to rise above
+it; but they never succeed, and dimly one can see the white wings
+beating in the whirlpool.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never look at white butterflies again without hearing the sounds
+from the camp,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> without seeing the ring of riders, without thinking,
+perhaps, of the dairyman and of the other "dairymen."</p>
+
+<p>The butterflies do not care for noise. When, standing beside the
+cabbage-patch, the bugler blows the dinner-bugle, they race in a cloud
+to the far corner and hover there until the last note is sounded.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I think it is I who am wrong when I consider the men as citizens, as
+persons of responsibility, and the Sister right when she says "the boys."</p>
+
+<p>Taken from their women, from their establishments, as monks or boys or
+even sheep are housed, they do not want, perhaps, to be reminded of an
+existence to which they cannot return; until a limb is off, or the war ends.</p>
+
+<p>To what a point they leave their private lives behind them! To what a
+point their lives are suspended....</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, I find that in hospital they do not think of the future or
+of the past, nor think much at all. As far as life and growth goes it is
+a hold-up!</p>
+
+<p>There is really not much to hope for; the leave is so short, the
+home-life so disrupted that it cannot be taken up with content.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> Perhaps
+it isn't possible to let one's thoughts play round a life about which
+one can make no plans.</p>
+
+<p>They are adaptable, living for the minute&mdash;their present hope for the
+cup of tea, for the visiting day, for the concert; their future hope for
+the drying of the wound, for the day when the Sister's fingers may
+press, but no drop be wrung from the long scar.</p>
+
+<p>Isn't it curious to wish so passionately for the day which may place
+them near to death again?</p>
+
+<p>But the longing for health is a simple instinct, undarkened by logic.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Yet some of them have plans. Scutts has plans.</p>
+
+<p>For a fortnight now he has watched for the post. "Parcel come for me,
+Sister? Small parcel?"</p>
+
+<p>Or he will meet the postman in the corridor. "Got my eye yet?" he asks.</p>
+
+<p>"What will it be like, Scutts?" we ask. "Can you move it? Can you sleep
+in it? Did he match your other carefully?"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll see," he says confidently. "It's grand."</p>
+
+<p>"When I get my eye...." he says,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> almost with the same longing with
+which he says "When I get into civies...."</p>
+
+<p>Scutts is not one of those whose life is stopped; he has made plans.
+"When I get into civies and walk out of here...." His plans for six
+months' holiday "are all writ down in me notebook."</p>
+
+<p>"But what shall you do, Scutts? Go to London?"</p>
+
+<p>"London!... No towns fer me!"</p>
+
+<p>He will not tell us what he is going to do. Secretly I believe it is
+something he wanted to do as a boy but thought himself a fool to carry
+out when he was a man: perhaps it is a sort of walking tour.</p>
+
+<p>Among his eleven wounds he has two crippled arms. "I'm safe enough from
+death," he says (meaning France), "till it fetches me in a proper way."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps he means to live as though life were really a respite from death.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I had a day on the river yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> seed yer with yer bit of erdy-furdy roun' yer neck an' yer little
+attachy-case," said Pinker.</p>
+
+<p>"A nurse's life is one roun' of pleasure," said Pinker to the ward.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p><p>We had two operations yesterday&mdash;one on a sergeant who has won the
+D.C.M. and has a certificate written in gold which hangs above his bed,
+telling of his courage and of one particular deed; the other on a Welsh private.</p>
+
+<p>I wonder what the sergeant was like before he won his D.C.M....</p>
+
+<p>There is something unreal about him; he is like a stage hero. He has a
+way of saying, "Now, my men, who is going to volunteer to fetch the
+dinners?" which is like an invitation to go over the top.</p>
+
+<p>The men gape when he says that, then go on with their cards. It is like a joke.</p>
+
+<p>Before his operation he was full of partially concealed boastings as to
+how he would bear it, how he would "come to" saying, "Let me get up! I can walk...."</p>
+
+<p>I felt a sneaking wish that he should be undone and show unusual weakness.</p>
+
+<p>When the moment came he did as he had said he would do&mdash;he laughed and
+waved good-bye as he was wheeled away; and in the afternoon when I came
+on duty I found him lying in his bed, conscious, looking brown and
+strong and unconcerned.</p>
+
+<p>But he can't let well alone....</p>
+
+<p>As I passed up the ward to the bedside<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span> of the Welsh private I was
+called by the sergeant, and when I stood by his bed he whispered, "Is
+that chap making a fuss over there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Evan?"</p>
+
+<p>"Chap as has had an operation the same as me...."</p>
+
+<p>"He's very bad."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't find me making a fuss and my leg isn't half giving me something."</p>
+
+<p>"We're not all alike, sergeant."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should one make a fuss and another say nothing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is your leg hurting you a lot?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, it is," and he screwed up his face into a grimace.</p>
+
+<p>After all, he was a child. "Try to go to sleep," I said, knowing that it
+was his jealousy that was hurting him most.</p>
+
+<p>I went to Evan.</p>
+
+<p>He could do nothing with his pain, but in its tightest embraces, and
+crying, he lay with his large red handkerchief over his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Evan...!" I said. I couldn't do anything either.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh dear, dear, dear, dear, dear...." he wailed in his plaintive Welsh
+voice. "Oh, my dear leg, my poor leg...." He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> looked about nineteen.
+"Couldn't I lie on my side?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, it would make it bleed."</p>
+
+<p>"Would it?" He was so docile and so unhappy. The tears had run down and
+marked his pillow; I turned it, although the sergeant couldn't see.</p>
+
+<p>"Will they give me something to make me sleep to-night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Evan, at eight o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>I said that because I was so sure of it, I had always seen it done. But
+oh, I should have made more sure...!</p>
+
+<p>He built on it, he leant all his hopes upon it; his little clenched
+hands seemed to be holding my promise as firmly as though it had been my hand.</p>
+
+<p>And Sister said, "No, no ... it would be better not." "Oh, Sister, why
+not...?" (I, the least of mortals, had made a promise belonging only to the gods....)</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Sister, why not?"</p>
+
+<p>Her reason was a good one: "He will want it more later in the night, and
+he can't have it twice."</p>
+
+<p>I ran back to tell him so quickly&mdash;but one can't run back into the past.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>It is wonderful to talk to men affectionately<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> without exciting or
+implying love. The Utopian dreams of sixteen seem almost to be realized!</p>
+
+<p>When I sew splints they come and talk to me. Scutts will sometimes talk
+for an hour. At first I was so proud that I dared hardly stir a finger
+for fear that I should frighten him away; now I am more sure of him. He
+never says "What?" to me, nor any longer jumps when I speak to him as
+though my every word must carry some command. When I sew splints and
+listen to Scutts or the old Scotch grocer or Monk&mdash;that squinting child
+of whom Pinker said, "Monk got a girl! He don' know what a girl is!"&mdash;I
+think, "We cannot all be efficient, but ... this serves some end."</p>
+
+<p>For they are complaining that I am not efficient. At first it hurt my
+pride; but it depends upon the point of view. Does one go into a ward
+primarily to help the patients or to help the Sister? It is not always
+the same thing, but one must not question discipline....</p>
+
+<p>To-day nine of the patients "went convalescent." They departed, hobbling
+and on stretchers, at two o'clock, with bursts of song, plastered hair,
+bright buttons, and not a regret. "You'll be able to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> hear a pin fall
+to-night, nurse," said one of them.</p>
+
+<p>"I know we shall. And a tear too," I added.</p>
+
+<p>But they won't listen to any such nonsense. They are going off to the
+little convalescent hospitals, they are going away to be treated like
+men; and I must laugh and shake hands and not dream of adding, "Perhaps
+we shall see you back again."</p>
+
+<p>"No more route-marching...!" was the last cry I heard from the Nine.</p>
+
+<p>How they hate route-marching&mdash;especially the City men, most especially
+Pinker! "March down the silly road," he grumbles, "sit on the silly
+grass and get heat-bumps."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes I think that sewing splints will be my undoing. If I listen
+much longer I shall see crooked.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>To-day they had some small bottles of stout to help us say good-bye to the Nine.</p>
+
+<p>Happiness is cheap. Last night at dinner a man said as he refilled his
+glass with champagne, "It makes me sad to think how much happiness there
+is in a bottle...."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The attack has begun.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p><p>"At 3.15 this morning ... on a front of two miles...."</p>
+
+<p>So that is why the ward is so empty and the ambulances have been
+hurrying out of the yard all day. We shall get that convoy for which I longed.</p>
+
+<p>When the ward is empty and there is, as now, so little work to do, how
+we, the women, watch each other over the heads of the men! And because
+we do not care to watch, nor are much satisfied with what we see, we
+want more work. At what a price we shall get it....</p>
+
+<p>Scutts and Monk talk to me while I sew, but what about the Monks,
+Scutts, Gayners, whose wounds will never need a dressing or a tube&mdash;who
+lie along a front of two miles, one on his face, another on his back?</p>
+
+<p>Since 3.15 this morning a lot of men have died. Thank God one cannot go
+on realizing death.</p>
+
+<p>But one need not think of it. This is a ward; here are lucky ones. Even
+when I look at Rees, even when I look at the grocer, even when I look at
+the T.B. ward, I know that anything, <i>anything</i> is better than death.
+But I have known a man here and there who did not think so&mdash;and these
+men, close<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> on death it is true, were like strangers in the ward.</p>
+
+<p>For one can be close on death and remain familiar, friendly,
+comprehensible.</p>
+
+<p>I used to think, "It is awful to die." But who knows what compliance the
+years will bring? What is awful is to die <i>young</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>A new V.A.D. came into the ward yesterday&mdash;a girl straight from home,
+who has never been in a hospital before.</p>
+
+<p>Rees told me, "She turned her head away when she saw me arm."</p>
+
+<p>"I did once, Rees."</p>
+
+<p>He looked down at the almost unrecognizable twelve inches which we call
+"Rees's wound," and considered how this red inch had paled and the lips
+of that incision were drawing together. "'Tisn' no more me arm," he said
+at length, "than...." he paused for a simile. "'Tisn' me arm, it's me
+wound," he finally explained.</p>
+
+<p>His arm is stretched out at right angles from his bed in an iron cradle,
+and has been for six months.</p>
+
+<p>"Last night," he said, "I felt me arm layin' down by me side, an' I felt
+the fingers an' tried to scratch me knee. It's a feeling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> that's bin
+comin' on for some time, but last night it seemed real."</p>
+
+<p>The pain of the dressing forces Rees's reason to lay some claim to his
+arm, but when it ceases to hurt him he detaches himself from it to such
+a point that the ghost-arm familiar to all amputations has arrived, as
+it were, by mistake.</p>
+
+<p>The new V.A.D. doesn't talk much at present, being shy, but to-night I
+can believe she will write in her diary as I wrote in mine: "My feet
+ache, ache, ache...." Add to that that she is hungry because she hasn't
+yet learnt how to break the long stretches with hurried gnawings behind
+a door, that she is sick because the philosophy of Rees is not yet her
+philosophy, that her hands and feet grow cold and her body turns to warm
+milk, that she longs so to sit on a bed that she can almost visualize
+the depression her body would make on its counterpane, and I get a
+glimpse of the passage of time and of the effect of custom.</p>
+
+<p>With me the sickness and the hunger and the ache are barely remembered.
+It makes me wonder what else is left behind.... The old battle is again
+in my mind&mdash;the struggle to feel pain, to repel the invading familiarity.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p><p>Here they come!</p>
+
+<p>One convoy last night and another this morning. There is one great burly
+man, a sort of bear, whose dried blood has squeezed through bandages
+applied in seven places, and who for all that mumbles "I'm well" if one
+asks him how he feels.</p>
+
+<p>Long before those wounds are healed he will diagnose himself better than that!</p>
+
+<p>"I'm well...." That's to say: "I'm alive, and I have reached this bed,
+and this bit of meat, and this pudding in a tin!" He answers by his standards.</p>
+
+<p>But in a few days he will think, "I am alive, but I might be better...";
+and in a few weeks, "Is this, after all, happiness?"</p>
+
+<p>How they sleep, the convoy men! Watching their wounds as we dress them,
+almost with a grave pleasure&mdash;the passports to this wonderful sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Then when the last safety-pin is in they lie back without making
+themselves in the least comfortable, without drawing up a sheet or
+turning once upon the pillow, and sleep just as the head falls.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>How little women can stand! Even the convoy cannot mend the pains of the
+new V.A.D. I dare not speak to her: she seems,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span> poor camel, to be
+waiting for the last straw.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>But when we wash the bowls together we must talk. She and I together
+this morning washed and scrubbed, rinsed, dried, and piled basins into
+little heaps, and while we washed we examined each other.</p>
+
+<p>She is a born slave; in fact, I almost think she is born to be tortured.
+Her manner with the Sisters invites and entices them to "put upon" her.
+Her spiritual back is already covered with sores.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose she is hungry for sympathy, but it isn't really a case in
+which sympathy can do as much as custom. I showed her the white
+butterflies, without supposing them to be very solid food.</p>
+
+<p>She reminds me of the man of whom the Sister said, "He must stick it
+out." I might have pointed to the convoy and suggested comparisons; but
+one cannot rub a sore back.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Some one has applied the last straw in the night.</p>
+
+<p>When I came on duty a brisk little war-hardened V.A.D. was brushing a
+pile of dust along the long boards to the door. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span> poor camel whose
+back is broken is as though she had never existed; either she is ill or
+she is banished.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the secret diplomacy of these establishments that nothing is
+known of her except her disappearance&mdash;at least among those whom one can
+ask. Matron knows, Sister knows.... But these are the inscrutable, smiling gods.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>There is only one man in the ward I don't much care for&mdash;a tall boy with
+a lock of fair hair and broken teeth. He was a sullen boy whose bad
+temper made his mouth repulsive. I say "was," for he is different now.</p>
+
+<p>Now he is feeble, gentle, grateful, and he smiles as often as one looks at him.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday he went for his operation in the morning, and in the afternoon
+when I came on duty he was stirring and beginning to groan. Sister told
+me to sit beside him.</p>
+
+<p>I went up to the little room of screens in which he lay, and taking a
+wooden chair, I slipped it in between the screen and the bed and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>Is it the ether which rushes up from between his broken teeth?&mdash;is it
+the red glare of the turkey-twill screens?&mdash;but in ten minutes I am
+altered, mesmerized. Even the size of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> my surroundings is changed. The
+screens, high enough to blot out a man's head, are high enough to blot
+out the world. The narrow bed becomes a field of whiteness. The naked
+arm stretched towards me is more wonderful than any that could have
+belonged to a boy with dirty fair hair and broken teeth; it has
+sea-green veins rising along it, and the bright hairs are more silver than golden.</p>
+
+<p>The life of the ward goes on, the clatter of cups for supper, the
+shuffling of feet clad in loose carpet-slippers, but here within he and
+I are living together a concentrated life.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, me back!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know, I know...."</p>
+
+<p>Do I know? I am getting to know. For while the men are drinking their
+cocoa I am drinking ether. I know how the waves of the pain come up and
+recede; how a little sleep just brushes the spirit, but never absorbs
+it; how the arms will struggle up to the air, only to be covered and
+enmeshed again in heat and blankets.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it in me lung?" (He pronounces the "g"&mdash;a Lancashire boy....)</p>
+
+<p>"The shrapnel?"</p>
+
+<p>He nods. I hold up the piece of metal which has lain buried in him these
+past three weeks. It has the number 20 engraved on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span> it. That satisfies
+him. The blood which has come from between his lips is in a bowl placed
+too high for him to see.</p>
+
+<p>Through the crack in the screens the man in the bed opposite watches us unwinkingly.</p>
+
+<p>Eight o'clock.... Here is Sister with the syringe: he will sleep now and
+I can go home.</p>
+
+<p>If one did not forget the hospital when one leaves it, life wouldn't be very nice.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>From pillar to post....</p>
+
+<p>The dairyman, who has been gone to another hospital these five weeks,
+returned to-day, saying miserably as he walked into the ward, "Me 'ead's
+queerer than ever." His eyes, I think, are larger too, and he has still
+that manner of looking as though he thought some one could do something for him.</p>
+
+<p>I can't&mdash;beyond raising the smallest of tablets to him with the
+inscription, "Another farthing spent...."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Waker had a birthday yesterday and got ten post cards and a telegram.
+But that is as nothing to another anniversary.</p>
+
+<p>"A year to-morrow I got my wound&mdash;two o'clock to-morrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall you be awake, Waker?"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span></p><p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>How will he celebrate it? I would give a lot to know what will pass in
+his mind. For I don't yet understand this importance they attach to such
+an anniversary. One and all, they know the exact hour and minute on
+which their bit of metal turned them for home.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes a man will whisper, "Nurse...." as I go by the bed; and when I
+stop I hear, "In ten minutes it will be a twelvemonth!" and he fixes his eyes on me.</p>
+
+<p>What does he want me to respond? I don't know whether I should be glad
+or sorry that he got it. I can't imagine what he thinks of as the minute
+ticks. For I can see by his words that the scene is blurred and no
+longer brings back any picture. "Did you crawl back or walk?"</p>
+
+<p>"I ... walked." He is hardly sure.</p>
+
+<p>I know that for some of them, for Waker, that moment at two o'clock in
+the morning changed his whole career. From that moment his arm was
+paralysed, the nerves severed; from that moment football was off, and
+with it his particular ambition. And football, governing a kingdom, or
+painting a picture&mdash;a man's ambition is his ambition, and when it is
+wiped out his life is changed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p><p>But he knows all that, he has had time to think of all that. What,
+then, does this particular minute bring him?</p>
+
+<p>They think I know; for when they tell me in that earnest voice that the
+minute is approaching they take for granted that I too will share some
+sacrament with them.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Waker is not everything a man should be: he isn't clever. But he is so very brave.</p>
+
+<p>After his tenth operation two days ago there was a question as to
+whether he should have his pluggings changed under gas or not. The
+discussion went on between the doctors over his bed.</p>
+
+<p>But the an&aelig;sthetist couldn't be found.</p>
+
+<p>He didn't take any part in the discussion such as saying, "Yes, I will
+stand it...." but waited with interest showing on his bony face, and
+when they glanced down at him and said, "Let's get it through now!" he
+rolled over to undo his safety-pin that I might take off his sling.</p>
+
+<p>It was all very fine for the theatre people to fill his shoulder
+chockful of pluggings while he lay unconscious on the table; they had
+packed it as you might stuff linen into a bag: it was another matter to get it out.</p>
+
+<p>I did not dare touch his hand with that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> too-easy compassion which I
+have noticed here, or whisper to him "It's nearly over...." as the
+forceps pulled at the stiffened gauze. It wasn't nearly over.</p>
+
+<p>Six inches deep the gauze stuck, crackling under the pull of the
+forceps, blood and puss leaping forward from the cavities as the steady
+hand of the doctor pulled inch after inch of the gauze to the light. And
+when one hole was emptied there was another, five in all.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, when your mind has a grip like iron, your stomach will undo
+you; sometimes, when you could say "To-day is Tuesday, the fifth of
+August," you faint. There are so many parts of the body to look after,
+one of the flock may slip your control while you are holding the other
+by the neck. But Waker had his whole being in his hands, without so much
+as clenching them.</p>
+
+<p>When we had finished and Sister told me to wipe the sweat on his
+forehead, I did so reluctantly, as though one were being too exacting in
+drawing attention to so small a sign.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>I must say that the dairyman seems to me quite mad, and I only wonder
+how little<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> it is noticed. He will sit in a chair beside Palmer for
+hours, raising and lowering his eyebrows and fitting imaginary gloves on to his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>An inspecting general, pausing at his bed this morning, said: "A
+dairyman, are you? Frightened of horses, are you? Then what do you do about the cows?"</p>
+
+<p>He was pleased with his own joke, and the dairyman smiled too,
+uncomprehendingly, his eyebrows shooting up and down like swallows'
+wings. Such jokes mean nothing to him; he is where no joke but his own
+will ever please him any more....</p>
+
+<p>Palmer doesn't like sitting near him, but since it is too much trouble
+to move he allows it&mdash;poor Palmer, who has a piece of metal somewhere in
+his brain and is never seen without one long hand to his aching head. He
+said to me yesterday when I asked him which convalescent home he was
+going to, "It doesn't matter. We both go to the same kind before
+long...." jerking his thumb at the dairyman. As for the latter, there
+surely can be no escape, but for Palmer....</p>
+
+<p>"They won't take it out; too risky. Seen my X-ray picture?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span></p><p>"You look at it. Right in the middle of the brain. Seems funny that if
+I say I'm willing to risk it, why they shouldn't be."</p>
+
+<p>"You're willing to risk it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm only nineteen! What's the good of my head to me! I can't remember
+the name of the last hospital I was at...."</p>
+
+<p>Ah, these hurried conversations sandwiched between my duties, when in
+four sentences the distilled essence of bitterness is dropped into my ear!</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>"Sister, what will they do with Palmer?"</p>
+
+<p>"They are going to discharge him. They won't operate."</p>
+
+<p>"But what will happen to him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know."</p>
+
+<p>"But if he is willing to risk his life to save his brain, can they still refuse?"</p>
+
+<p>"They won't operate."</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Pinker is full of grains of knowledge. He has just discovered a
+wonderful justification for not getting up directly he is told off for a job.</p>
+
+<p>"I never refuse a nurse," he said, as he thoughtfully picked over the
+potatoes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span> ("Li'l men, li'l spuds!" he says, to excuse himself for taking
+all the sought-after small ones).... "I never refuse a nurse. But I like
+to finish me game of draughts first&mdash;like Drake."</p>
+
+<p>Pinker notices everything. He took the grocer for a ride on the tram
+yesterday. "'E got so excited he got singing 'Tipperary,' an' the
+blood-vessels on his neck goin' fit to burst. Weren't he, Bill?"</p>
+
+<p>He appealed to Monk, whose name is George.</p>
+
+<p>(By the way, I wonder when people will stop calling them "Tommy" and
+call them "Bill." I never heard the word "Tommy" in a soldier's mouth:
+he was a red-coated man. "But every mate's called 'Bill,' ain't 'e, Bill?")</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>From the camp across the road the words of command float in through the ward window.</p>
+
+<p>"Halt!" and "Left wheel!" and "Right wheel!..."</p>
+
+<p>They float into the ward bearing the sense of heat and dust, and of the
+bumping of the saddle. The dairyman has perhaps put me a bit against the
+camp across the road.</p>
+
+<p>When the dressings are finished and we<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span> scrub the enamel bowls in the
+annexe, one can see all the dairymen and all the plumbers, <i>chefs</i> and
+shopwalkers bumping up and down in a ring amid a cloud of dust, while
+the voice of the sergeant cries out those things that my dairyman used
+to think of in his sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Then the jumps go up. "Left wheel!" "Right wheel!..." And now, "Cross
+your stirrups!" One out of every four of them is clinging, grabbing, swaying.</p>
+
+<p>The seventh is off! It was a long fight.... He went almost round the
+horse's neck before he fell.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>We must win the war, win the war, win the war!</p>
+
+<p>Every sort of price must be paid, every Mud of curious coinage&mdash;the
+pennies and farthings of fear and despair in odd places, as well as the
+golden coin of life which is spent across the water.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>All day long the words of command come over the ward window-sills. All
+day long they bump and shout and sweat and play that charade of theirs
+behind the guns.</p>
+
+<p>All day long little men training to fill just<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> such another hospital as
+ours with other little men.</p>
+
+<p>But one does not say any longer, "What a strange thing is life!" for
+only in rare moments does the divine astonishment return.</p>
+
+<p class="tbrk">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">PRINTED AT THE COMPLETE PRESS<br />WEST NORWOOD<br />LONDON</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Diary Without Dates, by Enid Bagnold
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Diary Without Dates, by Enid Bagnold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Diary Without Dates
+
+Author: Enid Bagnold
+
+Release Date: January 30, 2010 [EBook #31124]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A DIARY WITHOUT DATES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Martin Pettit and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A DIARY WITHOUT DATES
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOLDIERS' TALES OF THE GREAT WAR
+
+ MY '75. From the French of PAUL LINTIER. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ ON TWO FRONTS. By Major H. M. ALEXANDER, D.S.O. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ NURSING ADVENTURES. (ANON.) Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ FORCED TO FIGHT. By ERICH ERICHSEN. 2s. 6d. net.
+
+ IN GERMAN HANDS. By CHARLES HENNEBOIS. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ "CONTEMPTIBLE." By "CASUALTY." 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ ON THE ANZAC TRAIL. By "ANZAC." 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ UNCENSORED LETTERS FROM THE DARDANELLES. Notes of a French Army
+ Doctor. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ PRISONER OF WAR. By ANDRE WARNOD. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ IN THE FIELD (1914-15). The Impressions of an Officer of Light
+ Cavalry. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ DIXMUDE. A Chapter in the History of the Naval Brigade, Oct.-Nov.
+ 1914. By CHARLES LE GOFFIC. Illustrated. 3s. 6d. net.
+
+ WITH MY REGIMENT. By "PLATOON COMMANDER." 3s. 6d. net.
+
+
+LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME
+
+THE LOVERS
+
+BY ELIZABETH ROBINS PENNELL
+
+"It is one of the most charming little books among the many that owe
+their genesis to the war. The letters might be described as a lyric of
+married love; and their beauty and passion are enhanced by the exquisite
+setting which Mrs. Pennell has given them."--_Yorkshire Post._
+
+
+LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN
+
+
+
+
+A DIARY WITHOUT DATES
+
+BY
+
+ENID BAGNOLD
+
+[Illustration: Logo]
+
+LONDON
+
+WILLIAM HEINEMANN
+
+
+_First printed January 1918_
+
+_Second Impression February 1918_
+
+
+_London: William Heinemann, 1918_
+
+
+ TO
+ THAT FRIEND OF MINE
+ WHO, WHEN I WROTE HIM
+ ENDLESS LETTERS,
+ SAID COLDLY,
+ "WHY NOT KEEP SOMETHING
+ FOR YOURSELF!"
+
+
+_I apologize to those whom I may hurt._
+
+_Can I soothe them by pleading that one may only write what is true for
+oneself?_
+
+_E. B._
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ I
+
+OUTSIDE THE GLASS DOORS
+
+ II
+
+INSIDE THE GLASS DOORS
+
+ III
+
+"THE BOYS ..."
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+OUTSIDE THE GLASS DOORS
+
+
+I like discipline. I like to be part of an institution. It gives one
+more liberty than is possible among three or four observant friends.
+
+
+It is always cool and wonderful after the monotone of the dim hospital,
+its half-lit corridors stretching as far as one can see, to come out
+into the dazzling starlight and climb the hill, up into the trees and
+shrubberies here.
+
+The wind was terrible to-night. I had to battle up, and the leaves were
+driven down the hill so fast that once I thought it was a motor-bicycle.
+
+Madeleine's garden next door is all deserted now: they have gone up to
+London. The green asphalt tennis-court is shining with rain, the blue
+pond brown with slime; the little statues and bowls are lying on their
+sides to keep the wind from putting them forcibly there; and all over
+the house are white draperies and ghost chairs.
+
+When I walk in the garden I feel like a ghost left over from the summer
+too.
+
+
+I became aware to-night of one face detaching itself from the rest. It
+is not a more pleasing face than the others, but it is becoming
+conspicuous to me.
+
+Twice a week, when there is a concert in the big hall, the officers and
+the V.A.D.'s are divided, by some unspoken rule--the officers sitting at
+one side of the room, the V.A.D.'s in a white row on the other.
+
+When my eyes rest for a moment on the motley of dressing-gowns,
+mackintoshes, uniforms, I inevitably see in the line one face set on a
+slant, one pair of eyes forsaking the stage and fixed on me in a steady,
+inoffensive beam.
+
+This irritates me. The very lack of offence irritates me. But one grows
+to look for everything.
+
+Afterwards in the dining-room during Mess he will ask politely: "What
+did you think of the concert, Sister? Good show...."
+
+How wonderful to be called Sister! Every time the uncommon name is used
+towards me I feel the glow of an implied relationship, something which
+links me to the speaker.
+
+My Sister remarked: "If it's only a matter of that, we can provide
+thrills for you here very easily."
+
+The name of my ... admirer ... is, after all, Pettitt. The other nurse
+in the Mess, who is very grand and insists on pronouncing his name in
+the French way, says he is "of humble origin."
+
+He seems to have no relations and no visitors.
+
+
+Out in the corridor I meditate on love.
+
+Laying trays soothes the activity of the body, and the mind works
+softly.
+
+I meditate on love. I say to myself that Mr. Pettitt is to be envied. I
+am still the wonder of the unknown to him: I exist, walk, talk, every
+day beneath the beam of his eye, impenetrable.
+
+He fell down again yesterday, and his foot won't heal. He has time
+before him.
+
+
+But in a hospital one has never time, one is never sure. He has perhaps
+been here long enough to learn that--to feel the insecurity, the
+impermanency.
+
+At any moment he may be forced to disappear into the secondary stage of
+convalescent homes.
+
+Yes, the impermanency of life in a hospital! An everlasting dislocation
+of combinations.
+
+Like nuns, one must learn to do with no nearer friend than God.
+
+Bolts, in the shape of sudden, whimsical orders, are flung by an
+Almighty whom one does not see.
+
+The Sister who is over me, the only Sister who can laugh at things other
+than jokes, is going in the first week of next month. Why? Where? She
+doesn't know, but only smiles at my impatience. She knows life--hospital
+life.
+
+It unsettles me as I lay my spoons and forks. Sixty-five trays. It takes
+an hour to do. Thirteen pieces on each tray. Thirteen times sixty-five
+... eight hundred and forty-five things to collect, lay, square up
+symmetrically. I make little absurd reflections and arrangements--taking
+a dislike to the knives because they will not lie still on the polished
+metal of the tray, but pivot on their shafts, and swing out at angles
+after my fingers have left them.
+
+I love the long, the dim and lonely, corridor; the light centred in the
+gleam of the trays, salt-cellars, yellow butters, cylinders of glass....
+
+Impermanency.... I don't wonder the Sisters grow so secret, so uneager.
+How often stifled! How often torn apart!
+
+It's heaven to me to be one of such a number of faces.
+
+To see them pass into Mess like ghosts--gentleman, tinker, and tailor;
+each having shuffled home from death; each having known his life rock on
+its base ... not talking much--for what is there to say?--not laughing
+much for they have been here too long--is a nightly pleasure to me.
+
+Creatures of habit! All the coloured dressing-gowns range themselves
+round the two long tables--this man in this seat, that man by the
+gas-fire; this man with his wheel-chair drawn up at the end, that man at
+the corner where no one will jostle his arm.
+
+Curious how these officers leave the hospital, so silently.
+Disappearances.... One face after another slips out of the picture, the
+unknown heart behind the face fixed intently on some other centre of
+life.
+
+I went into a soldiers' ward to-night to inquire about a man who has
+pneumonia.
+
+Round his bed there stood three red screens, and the busy, white-capped
+heads of two Sisters bobbed above the rampart.
+
+It suddenly shocked me. What were they doing there? Why the screens? Why
+the look of strain in the eyes of the man in the next bed who could see
+behind the screens?
+
+I went cold and stood rooted, waiting till one of them could come out
+and speak to me.
+
+Soon they took away the screen nearest to me; they had done with it.
+
+The man I was to inquire for has no nostrils; they were blown away, and
+he breathes through two pieces of red rubber tubing: it gave a more
+horrible look to his face than I have ever seen.
+
+The Sister came out and told me she thought he was "not up to much." I
+think she means he is dying.
+
+I wonder if he thinks it better to die.... But he was nearly well before
+he got pneumonia, had begun to take up the little habits of living. He
+had been out to tea.
+
+Inexplicable, what he thinks of, lying behind the screen.
+
+
+To-night I was laying my trays in the corridor, the dim corridor that I
+am likely often to mention--the occasional blue gas-lamps hanging at
+intervals down the roof in a dwindling perspective.
+
+The only unshaded light in the corridor hangs above my head, making the
+cutlery gleam in my hands.
+
+The swish-swish of a lame foot approached down the stone tiling with the
+tapping, soft and dull, of a rubber-tipped walking-stick.
+
+He paused by the pillar, as I knew he would, and I busied myself with an
+added rush and hurry, an added irritating noise of spoons flung down.
+
+He waited patiently, shyly. I didn't look up, but I knew his face was
+half smiling and suppliant.
+
+"We shall miss you," he said.
+
+"But I shall be back in a week!"
+
+"We shall miss you ... laying the trays out here."
+
+"Everything passes," I said gaily.
+
+He whistled a little and balanced himself against his stick.
+
+"You are like me, Sister," he said earnestly; and I saw that he took me
+for a philosopher.
+
+He shuffled on almost beyond the circle of light, paused while my lips
+moved in a vague smile of response, then moved on into the shadow. The
+low, deep quiet of the corridor resumed its hold on me. The patter of
+reflection in my brain proceeded undisturbed.
+
+"You are like me!" The deepest flattery one creature pays its fellow ...
+the cry which is uttered when another enters "our country."
+
+
+Far down the corridor a slim figure in white approaches, dwarfed by the
+smoky distance; her nun-like cap floating, her scarlet cape, the "cape
+of pride," slipped round her narrow shoulders.
+
+How intent and silent They are!
+
+I watched this one pass with a look half-reverence, half-envy. One
+should never aspire to know a Sister intimately. They are disappointing
+people; without candour, without imagination. Yet what a look of
+personality hangs about them....
+
+
+To-night ... Mr. Pettitt: "Sister!"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Pettitt."
+
+"Do you ever go to theatres? Do you like them?"
+
+At the risk of appearing unnatural, I said, "Not much."
+
+"Oh ... I thought.... H'm, that's a pity. Don't you like revues?"
+
+"Oh, yes...."
+
+"I thought you'd take me to a _matinee_ one afternoon."
+
+"Oh, charming! I can't get leave in the afternoons, though."
+
+"You often have a day off."
+
+"Yes, but it's too soon to ask for another."
+
+"Well, how about Wednesday, then?"
+
+"Too soon. Think of the new Sister, and her opinion of me! That has yet
+to be won."
+
+"Well, let me know, anyway...."
+
+(Staved off!)
+
+
+The new Sister is coming quite soon: she has a medal.
+
+Now that I know _my_ Sister must go I don't talk to her much; I almost
+avoid her. That's true hospital philosophy.
+
+
+I must put down the beauty of the night and the woman's laugh in the
+shadowy hedge....
+
+I walked up from the hospital late to-night, half-past eight, and hungry
+... in the cold, brilliant moonlight; a fine moon, very low, throwing
+long, pointed shadows across the road from the trees and hedges.
+
+As one climbs up there is a wood on the right, the remains of the old
+wooded hill; sparse trees, very tall; and to-night a star between every
+branch, and a fierce moon beating down on the mud and grass.
+
+I had on my white cap and long blue coat, very visible. The moon swept
+the road from side to side: lovers, acting as though it were night, were
+lit as though it was day.
+
+I turned into the wood to take a message to a house set back from the
+road, and the moonlight and the night vapour rising from the marshy
+ground were all tangled together so that I could hardly see hedge from
+field or path.
+
+I saw a lit cigarette-end, and a woman's laugh came across the field as
+naturally as if a sheep had bleated in the swampy grass. It struck me
+that the dark countryside was built to surround and hide a laugh like
+hers--the laugh of a lover, animal and protesting.
+
+I saw the glowing end of the cigarette dance in a curve and fall to the
+ground, and she laughed again more faintly.
+
+Walking on in the middle of the moonlight, I reached the gate I was
+looking for, ran up the pebbly drive to the dining-room window, gave my
+message, and returned.
+
+I slipped my cap off my hair and pushed it into my pocket, keeping under
+the shadow of the hedge and into the quiet field.
+
+They were whispering: "Do you?" "I do...." "Are you?" "I am...."
+crushed into the set branches of the hedge.
+
+
+The Mess went vilely to-night. Sister adds up on her fingers, and that's
+fatal, so all the numbers were out, and the _chef_ sent in forty-five
+meats instead of fifty-one. I blushed with horror and responsibility,
+standing there watching six hungry men pretending to be philosophers.
+
+The sergeant wolfed the cheese too. He got it out from under my very
+eyes while I was clearing the tables and ate it, standing up to it in
+the pantry with his back to me when I went in to fetch a tray.
+
+Whenever I see that broad khaki back, the knickered legs astride, the
+flexed elbow-tips, I know that his digestion is laying up more trouble
+for him.
+
+Benks, the Mess orderly, overeats himself too. He comes to the bunk and
+thrusts his little smile round the door: "Sister, I got another of them
+sick 'eadaches," very cheerfully, as though he had got something worth
+having. She actually retorted, "Benks, you eat too much!" one day, but
+he only swung on one leg and smiled more cheerfully than ever.
+
+The new Sister has come. That should mean a lot. What about one's
+habits of life...?
+
+The new Sister has come, and at present she is absolutely without
+personality, beyond her medal. She appears to be deaf.
+
+I went along to-night to see and ask after the man who has his nose
+blown off.
+
+After the long walk down the corridor in almost total darkness, the
+vapour of the rain floating through every open door and window, the
+sudden brilliancy of the ward was like a haven.
+
+The man lay on my right on entering--the screen removed from him.
+
+Far up the ward the Sister was working by a bed. Ryan, the man with his
+nose gone, was lying high on five or six pillows, slung in his position
+by tapes and webbing passed under his arms and attached to the bedposts.
+He lay with his profile to me--only he has no profile, as we know a
+man's. Like an ape, he has only his bumpy forehead and his protruding
+lips--the nose, the left eye, gone.
+
+He was breathing heavily. They don't know yet whether he will live.
+
+When a man dies they fetch him with a stretcher, just as he came in;
+only he enters with a blanket over him, and a flag covers him as he
+goes out. When he came in he was one of a convoy, but every man who can
+stand rises to his feet as he goes out. Then they play him to his
+funeral, to a grass mound at the back of the hospital.
+
+
+It takes all sorts to make a hospital.
+
+For instance, the Visitors....
+
+There is the lady who comes in to tea and wants to be introduced to
+every one as though it was a school-treat.
+
+She jokes about the cake, its scarcity or its quantity, and makes a lot
+of "fun" about two lumps of sugar.
+
+When she is at her best the table assumes a perfect and listening
+silence--not the silence of the critic, but the silence of the absorbed
+child treasuring every item of talk for future use. After she goes the
+joy of her will last them all the evening.
+
+There is the lady who comes in to tea and, sitting down at the only
+unlaid table, cries, "Nurse! I have no knife or plate or cup; and I
+prefer a glass of boiling water to tea. And would you mind sewing this
+button on my glove?"
+
+There is the lady who comes in and asks the table at large: "I wonder if
+any one knows General Biggens? I once met him...."
+
+Or: "You've been in Gallipoli? Did you run across my young cousin, a
+lieutenant in the...? Well, he was only there two days or so, I
+suppose...." exactly as though she was talking about Cairo in the
+season.
+
+To-day there was the Limit.
+
+She sat two paces away from where I sit to pour out tea. Her face was
+kind, but inquisitive, with that brown liver-look round the eyes and a
+large rakish hat. She comes often, having heard of him through the
+_padre_, to see a Canadian whom she doesn't know and who doesn't want to
+see her.
+
+From two places away I heard her voice piping up: "Nurse, excuse my
+asking, but is your cap a regulation one, like all the others?"
+
+I looked up, and all the tea I was pouring poured over the edge. Mr.
+Pettitt and Captain Matthew, between us, looked down at their plates.
+
+I put my hand to my cap. "Is anything wrong? It ought to be like the
+others."
+
+She leant towards me, nodding and smiling with bonhomie, and said
+flatteringly, "It's so prettily put on, I thought it was different."
+
+And then (horror): "Don't you think nurse puts her cap on well?" she
+asked Captain Matthew, who, looking harder than ever at his plate and
+reddening to the ears, mumbled something which did not particularly
+commit him since it couldn't be heard.
+
+The usual delighted silence began to creep round the table, and I tried
+wildly to divert her attention before our end became a stage and the
+rest of the table an audience.
+
+"I think it's so nice to see you sitting down with them all," she cooed;
+"it's so cosy for them."
+
+"Is your cup empty?" I said furiously, and held out my hand for it. But
+it wasn't, of course; she couldn't even do that for me.
+
+She shook hands with me when she went away and said she hoped to come
+again. And she will.
+
+There was once a lady who asked me very loudly whether I "saw many
+horrible sights," and "did the V.A.D.'s have to go to the funerals?"
+
+And another who cried out with emotion when she saw the first officer
+limp in to Mess, "And can some of them _walk_, then!" Perhaps she
+thought they came in to tea on stretchers, with field-bandages on. She
+quivered all over, too, as she looked from one to the other, and I feel
+sure she went home and broke down, crying, "What an experience ... the
+actual wounds!"
+
+
+Shuffle, shuffle, up the corridor to-night, as I was laying my trays.
+Captain Matthew appeared in the circle of light, his arm and hand bound
+up and his pipe in his mouth.
+
+He paused by me. "Well...." he said companionably, and lolled against a
+pillar.
+
+"You've done well at tea in the way of visitors," I remarked. "Six,
+wasn't it?"
+
+"Yes," he said, "and now I've got rid of 'em all, except one."
+
+"Where's the one?"
+
+"In there." He pointed with his pipe to the empty Mess-Room. "He's the
+father of a subaltern of mine who was killed."
+
+"He's come to talk to you about it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+But he seemed in no hurry to go in, waiting against the pillar and
+staring at the moving cutlery.
+
+He waited almost three minutes, then he sighed and went in.
+
+
+Biscuits to put out, cheese to put out. How wet this new cheese is, and
+fresh and good the little bits that fall off the edge! I never eat
+cheese at home, but here the breakings are like manna.
+
+And pears, with the old shopman's trick, little, bitten ones at the
+bottom, fine ones at the top. Soft sugar, lump sugar, coffee. As one
+stirs the coffee round in the tin the whole room smells of it, that
+brown, burnt smell.
+
+And then to click the light on, let down the blind, stir the fire, close
+the door of the little bunk, and, looking round it, think what
+exhilaration of liberty I have here.
+
+Let them pile on the rules, invent and insist; yet behind them, beneath
+them, I have that strong, secret liberty of an institution that runs
+like a wind in me and lifts my mind like a leaf.
+
+So long as I conform absolutely, not a soul will glance at my
+thoughts--few at my face. I have only to be silent and conform, and I
+might be in so far a land that even the eye of God had lost me.
+
+I took the plate of biscuits, the two plates of cheese, one in each hand
+and one balanced with a new skill on my arm, and carried them into the
+dining-room, where the tables were already laid and only one light kept
+on as yet for economy's sake.
+
+Low voices.... There in the dimmest corner sat Captain Matthew, his
+chin dug deep in his grey dressing-gown, and beside him a little elderly
+man, his hat on his knees, his anxious, ordinary face turned towards the
+light.
+
+A citizen ... a baker or a brewer, tinker, tailor, or
+candlestick-maker...?
+
+There had been the buying of the uniform, the visits to the camp in
+England, the parcels to send out--always the parcels--week by week. And
+now nothing; no more parcels, no more letters, silence.
+
+Only the last hungry pickings from Captain Matthew's tired memory and
+nervous speech.
+
+I turned away with a great shrinking.
+
+In a very few minutes the citizen went past my bunk door, his hat in his
+hand, his black coat buttoned; taking back to his home and his family
+the last facts that he might ever learn.
+
+At the end of the passage he almost collided with that stretcher which
+bears a flag.
+
+Of the two, the stretcher moved me least.
+
+
+_My_ Sister is afraid of death. She told me so. And not the less afraid,
+she said, after all she has seen of it. That is terrible.
+
+But the new Sister is afraid of life. She is shorter-sighted.
+
+The rain has been pouring all day.
+
+To-night it has stopped, and all the hill is steam and drizzle and black
+with the blackness that war has thrust upon the countryside.
+
+_My_ Sister has gone.
+
+Two nights ago I went up to a dinner at Madeleine's and to stay the
+night. My Sister said, "Go and enjoy yourself!" And I did. It is very
+amusing, the change into rooms full of talk and light; I feel a glow of
+pleasure as I climb to the room Madeleine calls mine and find the
+reflection of the fire on the blue wall-paper.
+
+The evening wasn't remarkable, but I came back full of descriptions to
+the bunk and Sister next day.
+
+I was running on, inventing this and that, making her laugh, when
+suddenly I looked up, and she had tears in her eyes.
+
+I wavered and came to a stop. She got up suddenly and moved about the
+room, and then with a muttered "Wash my hands," disappeared into the
+corridor.
+
+I sat and thought: "Is it that she has her life settled, quietly
+continuous, and one breaks in...? Does the wind from outside hurt?"
+
+I regretted it all the evening.
+
+Yesterday I arrived at the hospital and couldn't find the
+store-cupboard keys, then ran across to her room and tapped at the door.
+Her voice called "Come in!" and I found her huddled in an arm-chair,
+unnerved and white. I asked her for the keys, and when she gave them to
+me she held out her hand and said: "I'm going away to-morrow. They are
+sending me home; they say I'm ill."
+
+I muttered something with a feeling of shock, and going back to my bunk
+I brooded.
+
+The new Sister came in, and a new V.A.D. too, explaining that my former
+companion was now going into a ward.
+
+A sense of desolation was in the air, a ruthlessness on the part of some
+one unknown. "Shuffle, shuffle ... they shuffle us like cards!"
+
+I rose and began to teach the new V.A.D. the subtle art of laying trays.
+She seemed stupid.
+
+I didn't want to share my trays with her. I love them; they are my
+recreation. I hung over them idly, hardly laying down the spoons I held
+in my hand, but, standing with them, chivied the new V.A.D. until her
+movements became flustered and her eye distraught.
+
+She was very ugly. I thought: "In a day or two I shall get to like her,
+and then I shan't be able to chivy her."
+
+Out in the corridor came a tremendous tramping, boots and jingling
+metal. Two armed men with fixed bayonets arrived, headed by a sergeant.
+The sergeant paused and looked uncertainly this way and that, and then
+at me.
+
+I guessed their destination. "In there," I nodded, pointing through a
+closed glass door, and the sergeant marched his men in and beyond the
+door.
+
+An officer had been brought back under arrest; I had seen him pass with
+his escort. The rumour at tea had been that he had extended his two
+days' leave into three weeks.
+
+The V.A.D. looked at me questioningly but she didn't dare, and I
+couldn't bear, to start any elucidations on the subject.
+
+I couldn't think; she worried me. Her odds and ends of conversation
+pecked at me like a small bird. She told me a riddle which filled me
+with nausea, and finally a limerick which I had heard three times in the
+Mess.
+
+I left her and went into the bunk.
+
+Here the new Sister had installed herself, gentle and pink and full of
+quiet murmurs.
+
+The rain, half snow, half sleet, dabbled against the window-pane, and I
+lifted the blind to watch the flakes stick and melt on the glass.
+
+The V.A.D., her trays finished, appeared in the doorway. The little room
+seemed full of people.
+
+"There's a concert," I said, looking at the V.A.D. with distaste.
+
+She looked at me uncertainly: "Aren't you coming?"
+
+"No," I said, "I've a note to write," forgetting that the new Sister
+might not allow such infringements. She gave no sign.
+
+The V.A.D. gave in and disappeared concertwards.
+
+The Sister rose too and went out into the kitchen to consult with the
+_chef_.
+
+I slipped out behind her and down the steps into the garden--into the
+wet, dark garden, down the channels that were garden-paths, and felt my
+way over to the Sisters' quarters.
+
+My Sister hadn't moved. There by the gas-fire, her thin hand to her
+face, she sat as she had two hours before.
+
+"Come in," she offered, "and talk to me."
+
+Her collar, which was open, she tried to do up. It made a painful
+impression on me of weakness and the effort to be normal.
+
+I remembered that she had once told me she was so afraid of death, and I
+guessed that she was suffering now from that terror.
+
+But when the specialist is afraid, what can ignorance say...?
+
+
+Life in the bunk is wretched (except that the new V.A.D. tells fortunes
+by hands).
+
+The new Sister is at the same time timid and dogged. She looks at me
+with a sidelong look and gives me little flips with her hand, as though
+(_a_) she thought I might break something and (_b_) that she might stave
+it off by playfulness.
+
+
+Pain....
+
+To stand up straight on one's feet, strong, easy, without the surging of
+any physical sensation, by a bedside whose coverings are flung here and
+there by the quivering nerves beneath it ... there is a sort of shame in
+such strength.
+
+"What can I do for you?" my eyes cry dumbly into his clouded brown
+pupils.
+
+I was told to carry trays from a ward where I had never been
+before--just to carry trays, orderly's work, no more.
+
+No. 22 was lying flat on his back, his knees drawn up under him, the
+sheets up to his chin; his flat, chalk-white face tilted at the ceiling.
+As I bent over to get his untouched tray his tortured brown eyes fell on
+me.
+
+"I'm in pain, Sister," he said.
+
+No one has ever said that to me before in that tone.
+
+He gave me the look that a dog gives, and his words had the character of
+an unformed cry.
+
+He was quite alone at the end of the ward. The Sister was in her bunk.
+My white cap attracted his desperate senses.
+
+As he spoke his knees shot out from under him with his restless pain.
+His right arm was stretched from the bed in a narrow iron frame,
+reminding me of a hand laid along a harp to play the chords, the fingers
+with their swollen green flesh extended across the strings; but of this
+harp his fingers were the slave, not the master.
+
+"Shall I call your Sister?" I whispered to him.
+
+He shook his head. "She can't do anything. I must just stick it out.
+They're going to operate on the elbow, but they must wait three days
+first."
+
+His head turned from side to side, but his eyes never left my face. I
+stood by him, helpless, overwhelmed by his horrible loneliness.
+
+Then I carried his tray down the long ward and past the Sister's bunk.
+Within, by the fire, she was laughing with the M.O. and drinking a cup
+of tea--a harmless amusement.
+
+"The officer in No. 22 says he's in great pain," I said doubtfully. (It
+wasn't my ward, and Sisters are funny.)
+
+"I know," she said quite decently, "but I can't do anything. He must
+stick it out."
+
+I looked through the ward door once or twice during the evening, and
+still his knees, at the far end of the room, were moving up and down.
+
+
+It must happen to the men in France that, living so near the edge of
+death, they are more aware of life than we are.
+
+When they come back, when the postwar days set in, will they keep that
+vision, letting it play on life ... or must it fade?
+
+And some become so careless of life, so careless of all the whims and
+personalities and desires that go to make up existence, that one wrote
+to me:
+
+"The only real waste is the waste of metal. The earth will be covered
+again and again with Us. The corn will grow again; the bread and meat
+can be repeated. But this metal that has lain in the earth for
+centuries, the formation of the beginning, that men have sweated and
+grubbed for ... that is the waste."
+
+What carelessness of worldly success they should bring back with them!
+
+
+Orderlies come and go up and down the corridor. Often they carry
+stretchers--now and then a stretcher with the empty folds of a flag
+flung across it.
+
+Then I pause from laying my trays, and with a bunch of forks in my hand
+I stand still.
+
+They take the stretcher into a ward, and while I wait I know what they
+are doing behind the screens which stand around a bed against the wall.
+I hear the shuffle of feet as the men stand to attention, and the
+orderlies come out again, and the folds of the flag have ballooned up to
+receive and embrace a man's body.
+
+Where is he going?
+
+To the mortuary.
+
+Yes ... but where else...?
+
+
+Perhaps there is nothing better than the ecstasy and unappeasement of
+life?
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+INSIDE THE GLASS DOORS
+
+
+My feet ache, ache, ache...!
+
+End of the first day.
+
+
+Life in a ward is all scurry and rush. I don't reflect; I'm putting on
+my cap anyhow, and my hands are going to the dogs.
+
+I shall never get to understand Sisters; they are so strange, so tricky,
+uncertain as collies. Deep down they have an ineradicable axiom: that
+any visitor, any one in an old musquash coat, in a high-boned collar, in
+a spotted veil tied up at the sides, any one with whom one shakes hands
+or takes tea, is more important than the most charming patient (except,
+of course, a warded M.O.).
+
+For this reason the "mouths" of the pillow-cases are all turned to face
+up the ward, away from the door.
+
+I think plants in a ward are a barbarism, for as they are always
+arranged on the table by the door, it is again obvious that they are
+intended only to minister to the eye of the visitor, that race of gods.
+
+In our ward there are eighteen fern-pots, some in copper, some in pink
+china, three in mauve paper, and one hanging basket of ferns. All of
+these have to be taken out on the landing at night and in again in the
+morning, and they have to be soaked under the tap.
+
+The Sisters' minds are as yet too difficult for me, but in the minds of
+the V.A.D.'s I see certain salient features. I see already manifested in
+them the ardent longing to be alike. I know and remember this longing;
+it was present through all my early years in a large boarding-school;
+but there it was naturally corrected by the changes of growth and the
+inexpertness of youth. Here I see for the first time grown women trying
+with all the concentration of their fuller years to be as like one
+another as it is possible to be.
+
+There is a certain dreadful innocence about them too, as though each
+would protest, "In spite of our tasks, our often immodest tasks, our
+minds are white as snow."
+
+And, as far as I can see, their conception of a white female mind is
+the silliest, most mulish, incurious, unresponsive, condemning kind of
+an ideal that a human creature could set before it.
+
+At present I am so humble that I am content to do all the labour and
+take none of the temperatures, but I can see very well that it is when I
+reach a higher plane that all the trouble will begin.
+
+The ranklings, the heart-burnings, the gross injustices.... Who is to
+make the only poultice? Who is to paint the very septic throat of Mr.
+Mullins, Army Service Corps? Who is to--dizzy splendour--go round with
+the M.O. should the Sister be off for a half-day?
+
+These and other questions will form the pride and anguish of my inner
+life.
+
+
+It is wonderful to go up to London and dine and stay the night with
+Madeleine after the hospital.
+
+The hospital--a sort of monotone, a place of whispers and wheels moving
+on rubber tyres, long corridors, and strangely unsexed women moving in
+them. Unsexed not in any real sense, but the white clothes, the hidden
+hair, the stern white collar just below the chin, give them an air of
+school-girlishness, an air and a look women don't wear in the world.
+They seem unexpectant.
+
+Then at Madeleine's ... the light, the talk, the deep bath got ready for
+me by a maid, instead of my getting it ready for a patient....
+
+Not that I mind getting it ready; I like it. Only the change! It's like
+being turn and turn about maid and mistress.
+
+
+There is the first snow here, scanty and frozen on the doorstep.
+
+I came home last night in the dark to dinner and found its faint traces
+on the road and in the gutter as I climbed the hill. I couldn't see
+well; there were stars, but no moon. Higher up it was unmistakable; long
+white tracks frozen in the dried mud of the road, and a branch under a
+lamp thickened with frozen snow.
+
+Shall I ever grow out of that excitement over the first bit of snow...?
+
+I felt a glow of pride in the hill, thinking:
+
+"In London it's all slush and mud. They don't suspect what we've got
+here. A suburb is a wonderful place!"
+
+After a wet and muddy day in London I've seen the trains pull into
+Charing Cross with snow piled on the roofs of the carriages, and felt a
+foot taller for joy that I was one of those fortunates who might step
+into a train and go down into a white countryside.
+
+It is the same excitement to wake up early to an overnight fall and see
+down the Dover Road for miles no foot of man printed, but only the
+birds' feet. Considering the Dover Road has been a highway since the
+Romans, it really is a fine moment when you realize its surface has
+suddenly become untrodden and unexplored as any jungle.
+
+
+Alas, the amount of snow that has set me writing!... two bucketfuls in
+the whole garden!
+
+
+When a Medical Officer goes sick, or, in other words, when an M.O. is
+warded, a very special and almost cynical expression settles on his
+face. Also the bedside manner of the Visiting Officer is discarded as he
+reaches the bed of the sick M.O.
+
+"My knees are very painful," says the sick M.O., but it is a despondent
+statement, not a plea for aid.
+
+The Visiting Officer nods, but he does not suggest that they will soon
+be better.
+
+They look at each other as weak human beings look, and:
+
+"We might try...?" says the Visiting Officer questioningly.
+
+The M.O. agrees without conviction, and settles back on his pillows. Not
+for him the comfortable trust in the divine knowledge of specialists. He
+can endure like a dog, but without its faith in its master.
+
+The particular M.O. whose knees are painful is, as a matter of fact,
+better now. He got up yesterday.
+
+Mooning about the ward in a dressing-gown, he stared first out of one
+window into the fog and then out of another.
+
+Finally, just before he got back into bed, he made an epigram.
+
+"Nurse," he said, "the difference between being in bed and getting up is
+that in bed you do nothing, but when you get up there's nothing to
+do...."
+
+I tucked him up and put the cradle over his knees, and he added, "One
+gets accustomed to everything," and settled back happily with his
+reading-lamp, his French novel, and his dictionary.
+
+The fog developed all day yesterday, piling up white and motionless
+against the window-panes. As night fell a little air of excitement ran
+here and there amongst the V.A.D.'s.
+
+"How shall we get home...?" "Are the buses running?" "Oh no, the last
+one is stuck against the railings outside!" "My torch has run out...."
+
+By seven o'clock even the long corridor was as dim as the alley outside.
+No one thought of shutting the windows--I doubt whether they will shut
+... and the fog rolled over the sill in banks and round the open glass
+doors, till even the white cap of a Sister could hardly be seen as she
+passed.
+
+I am pleased with any atmospheric exaggeration; the adventure of going
+home was before me....
+
+At eight I felt my way down over the steps into the alley; the torch,
+held low on the ground, lighted but a small, pale circle round my shoes.
+Outside it was black and solid and strangely quiet.
+
+In the yard a man here and there raised his voice in a shout; feet
+strayed near mine and edged away.
+
+At the cross-roads I came on a lantern standing upon the ground, and by
+it drooped the nose of a benighted horse; the spurt of a match lit the
+face of its owner.
+
+Up the hill, the torch held low against the kerbstone, the sudden
+looming of a black giant made me start back as I nearly ran my head into
+a telegraph-post....
+
+I was at the bottom of the sea; fathoms and fathoms of fog must stand
+above my head.
+
+Suddenly a dozen lights showed about me, then the whole sky alight with
+stars, and naked trees with the rime on them, bristling; the long road
+ran up the hill its accustomed steel colour, the post office was there
+with its red window, the lean old lamp-post with its broken arm....
+
+I had walked out of the fog as one walks out of the sea on to a beach!
+
+Looking back, I could see the pit behind me; the fog standing on the
+road like a solid wall, straight up and down. Again I felt a pride in
+the hill. "Down there," I thought, "those groping feet and shouting
+voices; that man and that horse ... they don't guess!"
+
+I walked briskly up the hill, and presently stepped on to the pavement;
+but at the edge of the asphalt, where tufted grass should grow,
+something crackled and hissed under my feet. Under the torchlight the
+unnatural grass was white and brittle with rime, fanciful as a stage
+fairy scene, and the railings beyond it glittered too.
+
+I slid in the road as I turned down the drive; a sheet of ice was spread
+where the leaky pipe is, and the steps up to the house door were
+slippery.
+
+But oh, the honeysuckle and the rose-trees...! Bush, plant, leaf, stem,
+rimed from end to end. The garden was a Bond Street jeweller's!
+
+
+Perhaps the final chapter on Mr. Pettitt....
+
+In the excitement of the ward I had almost forgotten him; he is buried
+in the Mess, in the days when I lived on the floor below.
+
+To-night, as I was waiting by the open hatch of the kitchen for my tray
+to be filled with little castles of lemon jelly, the hot blast from the
+kitchen drawing stray wisps of hair from beneath my cap, I saw the
+familiar limping figure--a figure bound up with my first days at the
+hospital, evoking a hundred evenings at the concerts, in the
+dining-room. I felt he had been away, but I didn't dare risk a "So
+you're back!"
+
+He smiled, blushed, and limped past me.
+
+Upstairs in the ward, as I was serving out my jellies, he arrived in the
+doorway, but, avoiding me, hobbled round the ward, visiting every bed
+but the one I was at at the moment. Then he went downstairs again.
+
+I passed him on the stairs. He can't say he didn't have his opportunity,
+for I even stopped with my heavy tray and spoke to him.
+
+Half an hour later he was back in the ward again (not his ward), and
+this time he found the courage of hysteria. There in the middle of the
+ward, under the glaring Christmas lights, with the eyes of every
+interested man in every bed glued upon us, he presented me with a fan
+wrapped in white paper: "A little present I bought you, nurse." I took
+it, eyes sizzling and burning holes in my shoulders, and stammered my
+frantic thanks.
+
+"You do like it, nurse?" he said rapidly, three times in succession.
+
+And I: "I do, I do, I do...."
+
+"I thought you would. You do like it?"
+
+"Oh, just what I wanted!"
+
+"That's all right, then. Just a little Christmas present."
+
+We couldn't stop. It was like taking too much butter for the marmalade
+and too much marmalade for the butter.
+
+He leaves the hospital in a day or two.
+
+The fog is still thick. To-night at the station after a day off I found
+it white and silent. Touching the arm of a man, I asked him the
+all-important question: "Are the buses running?"
+
+"Oh no...."
+
+And the cabs all gone home to bed, and I was hungry!
+
+What ghosts pass ... and voices, bodyless, talking intimately while
+their feet fall without a stir on the grass of the open Heath.
+
+I was excited by the strange silent fog.
+
+But my left shoe began to hurt me, and stopping at the house of a girl I
+knew, I borrowed a country pair of hers: no taller than I, she takes two
+sizes larger; they were like boats.
+
+I started to trudge the three miles home in the boats: the slightest
+flick of the foot would have sent one of them flying beyond the eye of
+God or man. After a couple of miles the shoes began to tell, and I stood
+still and lifted up one foot behind me, craning over my shoulder to see
+if I could catch sight of the glimmer of skin through the heel of the
+stocking. The fog was too thick for that.
+
+Another half-mile and I put my finger down to my heel and felt the wet
+blood through a large hole in my stocking, so I took off the shoes and
+tied them together ... and, more silent than ever in the tomb of fog,
+padded along as God had first supposed that woman would walk, on the wet
+surface of the road.
+
+
+A warded M.O. is pathetic. He knows he can't get well quicker than time
+will let him. He has no faith.
+
+To-morrow I have to take down all the decorations that I put up for
+Christmas. When I put them up I never thought I should be the one to
+take them down. When I was born no one thought I should be old.
+
+While I was untying a piece of holly from the electric-light cords on
+the ceiling and a patient was holding the ladder for me, a young _padre_
+came and pretended to help us, but while he stood with us he whispered
+to the patient, "Are you a communicant?" I felt a wave of heat and
+anger; I could have dropped the holly on him.
+
+They hung up their stockings on Christmas night on walking-sticks
+hitched over the ends of the beds and under the mattresses. Such big
+stockings! Many of them must have played Father Christmas in their own
+homes, to their own children, on other Christmases.
+
+On Christmas Eve I didn't leave the hospital till long after the
+Day-Sisters had gone and the Night-Sisters came on. The wards were all
+quiet as I walked down the corridor, and to left and right through the
+glass doors hung the rows of expectant stockings.
+
+
+Final and despairing postscript on Mr. Pettitt.
+
+When a woman says she cannot come to lunch it is because she doesn't
+want to.
+
+Let this serve as an axiom to every lover: A woman who refuses lunch
+refuses everything.
+
+
+The hospital is alive; I feel it like a living being.
+
+
+The hospital is like a dream. I am afraid of waking up and finding it
+commonplace.
+
+The white Sisters, the ceaselessly-changing patients, the long passages,
+the sudden plunges into the brilliant wards ... their scenery hypnotizes
+me.
+
+Sometimes in the late evening one walks busily up and down the ward
+doing this and that, forgetting that there is anything beyond the drawn
+blinds, engrossed in the patients, one's tasks--bed-making, washing, one
+errand and another--and then suddenly a blind will blow out and almost
+up to the ceiling, and through it you will catch a glimpse that makes
+you gasp, of a black night crossed with bladed searchlights, of a moon
+behind a crooked tree.
+
+The lifting of the blind is a miracle; I do not believe in the wind.
+
+
+A new Sister on to-night ... very severe. We had to make the beds like
+white cardboard. I wonder what she thinks of me.
+
+Mr. Pettitt (who really is going to-morrow) wandered up into the ward
+and limped near me. "Sister...." he began. He _will_ call me "Sister." I
+frowned at him. The new Sister glanced at him and blinked.
+
+He was very persistent. "Sister," he said again, "do you think I can
+have a word with you?"
+
+"Not now," I whispered as I hurried past him.
+
+"Oh, is that so?" he said, as though I had made an interesting
+statement, and limped away, looking backwards at me. I suppose he wants
+to say good-bye.
+
+He sat beside Mr. Wicks's bed (Mr. Wicks who is paralysed) and looked
+at me from time to time with that stare of his which contains so little
+offence.
+
+It is curious to think that I once saw Mr. Wicks on a tennis-lawn,
+walking across the grass.... Mr. Wicks, who will never put his foot on
+grass again, but, lying in his bed, continues to say, as all Tommies
+say, "I feel well in meself."
+
+So he does; he feels well in himself. But he isn't going to live, all
+the same.
+
+Still his routine goes on: he plays his game of cards, he has his joke:
+"Lemonade, please, nurse; but it's not from choice!"
+
+When I go to clear his ash-tray at night I always say, "Well, now I've
+got something worth clearing at last!"
+
+And he chuckles and answers, "Thought you'd be pleased. It's the others
+gets round my bed and leaves their bits."
+
+He was once a sergeant: he got his commission a year ago.
+
+
+My ruined charms cry aloud for help.
+
+The cap wears away my front hair; my feet are widening from the
+everlasting boards; my hands won't take my rings.
+
+I was advised last night on the telephone to marry immediately before it
+was too late.
+
+A desperate remedy. I will try cold cream and hair tonics first.
+
+
+There is a tuberculosis ward across the landing. They call it the T.B.
+ward.
+
+It is a den of coughs and harrowing noises.
+
+One night I saw a negro standing in the doorway with his long hair done
+up in hairpins. He is the pet of the T.B. ward; they call him Henry.
+
+Henry came in to help us with our Christmas decorations on Christmas
+Eve, and as he cleverly made wreaths my Sister whispered to me, "He's
+never spitting ... in the ward!"
+
+But he wasn't, it was part of his language--little clicks and ticks. He
+comes from somewhere in Central Africa, and one of the T.B.'s told me,
+"He's only got one wife, nurse."
+
+He is very proud of his austerity, for he has somehow discovered that he
+has hit on a country where it is the nutty thing only to have one wife.
+
+No one can speak a word of his language, no one knows exactly where he
+comes from; but he can say in English, "Good morning, Sister!" and
+"Christmas Box!" and "One!"
+
+Directly one takes any notice of him he laughs and clicks, holding up
+one finger, crying, "One!"
+
+Then a proud T.B. (they regard him as the Creator might regard a
+humming-bird) explains: "He means he's only got one wife, nurse."
+
+Then he did his second trick. He came to me with outstretched black hand
+and took my apron, fingering it. Its whiteness slipped between his
+fingers. He dropped it and, holding up the hand with its fellow, ducked
+his head to watch me with his glinting eyes.
+
+"He means," explained the versatile T.B., "that he has ten piccaninnies
+in his village and they're all dressed in white."
+
+It took my breath away; I looked at Henry for corroboration. He nodded
+earnestly, coughed and whispered, "Ten!"
+
+"How do you know he means that?" I asked. "How can you possibly have
+found out?"
+
+"We got pictures, nurse. We showed 'im kids, and 'e said 'e got ten--six
+girls and four boys. We showed 'im pictures of kids."
+
+I had never seen Henry before, never knew he existed. But in the ward
+opposite the poor T.B.'s had been holding conversations with him in
+window-seats, showing him pictures, painfully establishing a communion
+with him ... Henry, with his hair done up in hairpins!
+
+Although they showed him off with conscious pride, I don't think he
+really appeared strange to them, beyond his colour. I believe they
+imagine his wife as appearing much as their own wives, his children as
+the little children who run about their own doorsteps. They do not
+stretch their imaginations to conceive any strangeness about his home
+surroundings to correspond with his own strangeness.
+
+To them Henry has the dignity of a man and a householder, possibly a
+rate-payer.
+
+He seems quite happy and amused. I see him carrying a bucket sometimes,
+sharing its handle with a flushed T.B. They carry on animated
+conversations as they go downstairs, the T.B. talking the most. It
+reminds me of a child and a dog.
+
+What strange machinery is there for getting him back? Part of the cargo
+of a ship ... one day ... "a nigger for Central Africa...."
+
+"Where's his unit?"
+
+"Who knows! One nigger and his bundle ... for Central Africa!"
+
+The ward has put Mr. Wicks to Coventry because he has been abusive and
+violent-tempered for three days.
+
+He lies flat in his bed and frowns; no more jokes over the lemonade, no
+wilfulness over the thermometer.
+
+It is in these days that Mr. Wicks faces the truth.
+
+I lingered by his bed last night, after I had put his tea-tray on his
+table, and looked down at him; he pretended to be inanimate, his open
+eyes fixed upon the white rail of the bed. His bedclothes were stretched
+about him as though he had not moved since his bed was made, hours
+before.
+
+His worldly pleasures were beside him--his reading-lamp, his Christmas
+box of cigars, his _Star_--but his eyes, disregarding them, were upon
+that sober vision that hung around the bedrail.
+
+He began a bitter conversation:
+
+"Nurse, I'm only a ranker, but I had a bit saved. I went to a private
+doctor and paid for myself. And I went to a specialist, and he told me I
+should never get this. I paid for it myself out of what I had saved."
+
+We might have been alone in the world, he and I. Far down at the other
+end of the room the men sat crouched about the fire, their trays before
+them on chairs. The sheet of window behind Mr. Wicks's head was flecked
+with the morsels of snow which, hunted by the gale, obtained a second's
+refuge before oblivion.
+
+"I'd sooner be dead than lying here; I would, reely." You hear that
+often in the world. "I'd sooner be dead than----" But Mr. Wicks meant
+it; he would sooner be dead than lying there. And death is a horror, an
+end. Yet he says lying there is worse.
+
+"You see, I paid for a specialist myself, and he told me I should never
+be like this."
+
+There was nothing to be said.... One must have one's tea. I went down
+the ward to the bunk, and we cut the pink iced cake left over from
+Christmas....
+
+
+I did not mean to forget him, but I forgot him. From birth to death we
+are alone....
+
+
+But one of the Sisters remembered him.
+
+"Mr. Wicks is still in the dumps," she remarked.
+
+"What is really the matter with him, Sister?"
+
+"Locomotor ataxy." And she added as she drank her tea, "It's his own
+fault."
+
+"Oh, hush, hush!" my heart cried soundlessly to her, "You can't judge
+the bitterness of this, nun, from your convent...!"
+
+Alas, Mr. Wicks!... No wonder you saved your money to spend upon
+specialists! How many years have you walked in fear of this? He took
+your money, the gentleman in Harley Street, and told you that you might
+go in peace. He blessed you and gave you salvation.
+
+And the bitterest thing of all is that you paid for him like an officer
+and he was wrong.
+
+
+How the blinds blew and the windows shook to-night...! I walked out of
+the hospital into a gale, clouds driving to the sea, trees bending back
+and fore across the moon.
+
+I walked till I was warm, and then I walked for happiness.
+
+The maddening shine of the moon held my eyes, and I walked in the road
+like a fool, watching her--till at last, bringing my eyes down, the
+telegraph-posts were small as blades of grass on the hill-side and the
+shining ribbon tracks in the mud on the road ran up the hill for ever.
+They go to Dover, and Dover is France--and France leads anywhere.
+
+To what a lost enchantment am I recalled by the sight of a branch
+across the moon? Something in childhood, something which escapes yet
+does not wither....
+
+As I passed the public-house on the crest of the hill, all black and
+white in the cold moonlight, a heavy door swung open and, with a cough
+and a deep, satisfied snuffle, a man coming out let a stream of gaslight
+across the road. If I were a man I should certainly go to public-houses.
+All that polished brass and glass boxed up away from the moon and the
+shadows would call to me. And to drink must be a happy thing when you
+have climbed the hill.
+
+
+The T.B. ward is a melancholy place. There is a man in a bed near the
+door who lies with his mouth open; his head is like a bird-cage beneath
+a muslin cloth. I saw him behind his screens when I took them over a
+little lukewarm chicken left from our dinner.
+
+There was a dark red moon to-night, and frost. Our orderly said, "You
+can tell it's freezing, nurse, by the breath," as he watched mine curl
+up in smoke in the icy corridor. I like people who notice things....
+
+Out in the road in front of the hospital I couldn't get the
+motor-bicycle to work, and sat crouched in the dark fiddling with
+spanners.
+
+The charwomen came out of the big gate in the dark talking and laughing,
+all in a bunch. One of them stepped off the pavement near me and stopped
+to put her toe through the ice in the gutter.
+
+"Nah, come on, Mrs. Toms!"
+
+"I always 'ave to break it, it's ser nice an' stiff," she said as she
+ran after them.
+
+
+To be a Sister is to have a nationality.
+
+As there are Icelanders urbane, witty, lazy ... and yet they are all
+Icelanders ... so there are cold, uproarious, observant, subservient,
+slangy, sympathetic, indifferent, and Scotch Sisters, and yet....
+
+
+Sister said of a patient to-day, "He was a funny man."
+
+A funny man is a man who is a dark horse: who is neither friendly nor
+antagonistic; who is witty; who is preoccupied; who is whimsical or
+erratic--funny qualities, unsafe qualities.
+
+No Sister could like a funny man.
+
+In our ward there are three sorts of men: "Nothing much," "nice boys,"
+and Mr. Wicks.
+
+The last looms even to the mind of the Sister as a Biblical figure, a
+pillar of salt, a witness to God's wrath.
+
+The Sister is a past-mistress of such phrases as "Indeed!" "That is a
+matter of opinion," "We shall see..." "It is possible."
+
+I have discovered a new and (for me) charming game which I play with my
+Sister. It is the game of telling the truth about the contents of my
+mind when asked.
+
+Yesterday Sister was trying to get some coal out of the coal-bin with a
+shovel that turned round and round on its handle; she was unsuccessful.
+
+I said, "Let me, Sister!"
+
+She said, "Why?"
+
+And I: "Because I think I can do it better."
+
+"Why should you think that?"
+
+"Because all human beings do," I said, and, luckily, she smiled.
+
+She was washing her caps out in a bowl in the afternoon when I came on.
+
+"Good afternoon, Sister," I said. "Ironing?"
+
+"I am obviously only washing as yet," she said.
+
+"It's because I think so quickly, Sister," I said; "I knew you would
+iron next."
+
+
+I dined with Irene last night after the hospital.
+
+I refused to believe what she told me about the last bus passing at
+half-past nine, and so at a quarter to ten I stood outside "The Green
+Lamp" and waited.
+
+Ten minutes passed and no bus.
+
+With me were two women waiting too--one holding a baby; the other,
+younger, smarter, dangling a purse.
+
+At last I communicated my growing fears: "I believe the last has
+gone...."
+
+We fixed our six eyes on the far corner of the road, waiting for the
+yellow lights to round it, but only the gas-lamps stood firm in their
+perspective.
+
+"Oh my, Elsie!" said the woman with the baby, "you can't never walk up
+to the cross-roads in the dark alone!"
+
+"I wouldn't make the attempt, not for anything!" replied the younger one
+firmly.
+
+Without waiting for more I stepped into the middle of the road and
+started on my walk home; the very next sentence would have suggested
+that Elsie and I should walk together.
+
+She wouldn't "make the attempt...." Her words trailed through my mind,
+conjuring up some adventure, some act of bravery and daring.
+
+The road was the high road, the channel of tarmac and pavements that she
+probably walked along every day; and now it was the selfsame high road,
+the same flagstones, hedges, railings, but with the cloak of night upon
+them.
+
+It wasn't man she feared; even in the dark I knew she wasn't that kind.
+She would be awfully capable--with man. No, it was the darkness, the
+spooky jungle of darkness: she feared the trees would move....
+
+"I wouldn't make the attempt, not for anything"; and the other woman had
+quite agreed with her.
+
+I knew where I was by the smells and the sounds on the road--the smell
+of the lines of picketed horses behind the railings, the sharp and
+sudden stamp of the sick ones in the wooden stables, and, later on, the
+glitter of water in the horse-troughs.
+
+I thought: "I am not afraid.... Is it because I am more educated, or
+have less imagination?"
+
+"Halt! Who goes there?"
+
+"Friend," I said, thrilling tremendously.
+
+He approached me and said something which I couldn't make anything of.
+Presently I disentangled, "You should never dread the baynit, miss."
+
+"But I'm not dreading," I said, annoyed, "I ... I love it."
+
+He said he was cold, and added: "I bin wounded. If you come to that lamp
+you can see me stripe."
+
+We went to the lamp. "It's them buses," he complained, "they won't stop
+when I halt 'em."
+
+"But why do you want to stop them? They can't poison the horse-troughs."
+
+"It's me duty," he said. "There's one comin'."
+
+A bus, coming the opposite way, bore down upon us with an unwieldy rush
+and roar--the last bus, in a hurry to get to bed.
+
+"You'll see," he said pessimistically.
+
+"'Alt! 'Alt, there!" The bus, with three soldiers hanging on the step,
+rushed past us, and seemed to slow a little. The sentry ran a few paces
+towards it, crying "'Alt!" But it gathered speed and boomed on again,
+buzzing away between the gas-lamps. He returned to me sadly.
+
+"I don't believe they can hear," I said, and gave him some chocolates
+and went on.
+
+As I passed the hospital gates it seemed there was a faint, a very
+faint, sweet smell of chloroform....
+
+
+I was down at the hospital to-night when the factory blew up over the
+river.
+
+The lights went out, and as they sank I reached the kitchen hatchway
+with my tray. At the bottom of the stairs I could see through the garden
+door the sky grown sulphur and the bushes glowing, while all the panes
+of glass turned incandescent.
+
+Then the explosion came; it sounded as though it was just behind the
+hospital. Two hundred panes of glass fell out, and they made a noise
+too.
+
+Standing in the dark with a tray in my hand I heard a man's voice saying
+gleefully, "I haven't been out of bed this two months!"
+
+Some one lit a candle, and by its light I saw all the charwomen from the
+kitchen bending about like broken weeds, and every officer was saying,
+"There, there now!"
+
+We watched the fires till midnight from the hill.
+
+
+I went over this morning early. We were thirty-two in a
+carriage--Lascars, Chinese, children, Jews, niggers from the docks.
+
+Lascars and children and Jews and I, we fought to get off the station
+platform; sometimes there wasn't room on the ground for both my feet at
+once.
+
+The fires were still burning and smouldering there at midday, but a
+shower of rime fell on it, so that it looked like an old ruin, something
+done long ago.
+
+At Pompeii, some one told me, one looked into the rooms and they were as
+they had been left--tables laid.... Here, too, I saw a table laid for
+the evening meal with a bedstead fallen from the upper floor astraddle
+across it. The insides of the houses were coughed into their windows,
+basket-chairs hanging to the sills, and fire-irons.
+
+Outside, the soil of the earth turned up; a workman's tin mug stuck and
+roasted and hardened into what looks like solid rock--a fossil, as
+though it had been there for ever.
+
+London is only skin-deep. Beneath lies the body of the world.
+
+
+The hump under the blankets rolls over and a man's solemn face appears
+upon the pillow.
+
+"Can you get me a book, nurse?"
+
+"Yes. What kind do you like?"
+
+"Nothing fanciful; something that might be true."
+
+"All right!"
+
+"Oh--and nurse...?"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Not sentimental and not funny, I like a practical story."
+
+I got him "Lord Jim."...
+
+Another voice: "Nurse, is there any modern French poetry in that
+bookcase?"
+
+"Good heavens, no! Who would have brought it here?"
+
+(Who are they all ... these men with their differing tastes?)
+
+Perhaps the angels feel like this as they trail about in heaven with
+their wings flapping on their thin white legs....
+
+"Who were you, angel?"
+
+"I was a beggar outside San Marco."
+
+"Were you? How odd! I was an Englishman."
+
+
+The concerts that we give in the ward touch me with some curious
+emotion. I think it is because I am for once at rest in the ward and
+have time to think and wonder.
+
+There is Captain Thomson finishing his song. He doesn't know what to do
+with his hands; they swing. He is tall and dark, with soft eyes--and
+staff badges.
+
+Could one guess what he is? Never in a dozen years.... But I _know_!
+
+He said to me last night, "Nurse, I'm going out to-morrow."
+
+I leant across the table to listen to him.
+
+"Nurse, if you ever want any _crepe de Chine_ ... for nightgowns ...
+mind, at wholesale prices...."
+
+"I have bought some at a sale."
+
+"May I ask at what price?"
+
+"Four-and-eleven a yard."
+
+"Pity! You could have had it from me at three!"
+
+He gave me his business card. "That's it, nurse," he said, as he wrote
+on the back of it. "Drop me a line to that address and you'll get any
+material for underwear at trade prices."
+
+He booked one or two orders the night he went away--not laughingly, not
+as a joke, but with deep seriousness, and gravely pleased that he was
+able to do what he could for us. He was a traveller in ladies'
+underwear. I have seldom met any one so little a snob....
+
+
+Watch Mr. Gray singing....
+
+One hand on the piano, one on his hip:
+
+"I love every mouse in that old-fashioned house."
+
+"That fellow can sing!" whispers the man beside me.
+
+"Is he a professional?" I asked as, finishing, the singer made the
+faintest of bows and walked back to his chair.
+
+"I think he must be."
+
+"He is, he is!" whispered Mr. Matthews, "I've heard him before."
+
+They know so little about each other, and they don't ask. It is only I
+who wonder--I, a woman, and therefore of the old, burnt-out world. These
+men watch without curiosity, speak no personalities, form no sets,
+express no likings, analyse nothing. They are new-born; they have as yet
+no standards and do not look for any.
+
+Ah, to have had that experience too!... I am of the old world.
+
+Again and again I realize, "A nation in arms...."
+
+Watchmakers, jewellers, station-masters, dress-designers, actors,
+travellers in underwear, bank clerks ... they come here in uniforms and
+we put them into pyjamas and nurse them; and they lie in bed or hobble
+about the ward, watching us as we move, accepting each other with the
+unquestioning faith of children.
+
+
+The outside world has faded since I have been in the hospital. Their
+world is often near me--their mud and trenches, things they say when
+they come in wounded.
+
+The worst of it is it almost bores me to go to London, and London was
+always my Mecca. It is this garden at home, I think. It is so easy not
+to leave it.
+
+When you wake up the window is full of branches, and last thing at night
+the moon is on the snow on the lawn and you can see the pheasants'
+footmarks.
+
+Then one goes to the hospital....
+
+When Madeleine telephones to me, "I'm living in a whirl...." it disturbs
+me. Suddenly I want to too, but it dies down again.
+
+Not that it is their world, those trenches. When they come in wounded or
+sick they say at once, "What shows are on?"
+
+
+Mr. Wicks has ceased to read those magazines his sister sends him; he
+now stares all day at his white bedrail.
+
+I only pass him on my way to the towel-cupboard, twice an evening, and
+then as I glance at him I am set wondering all down the ward of what he
+thinks, or if he thinks....
+
+I may be quite wrong about him; it is possible he doesn't think at all,
+but stares himself into some happier dream.
+
+One day when he is dead, when he is as totally dead as he tells me he
+hopes to be, that bed with its haunted bedrail will bend under another
+man's weight. Surely it must be haunted? The weight of thought, dream or
+nightmare, that hangs about it now is almost visible to me.
+
+Mr. Wicks is an uneducated and ordinary man. In what manner does his
+dream run? Since he has ceased to read he has begun to drop away a
+little from my living understanding.
+
+He reflects deeply at times.
+
+To-night, as I went quickly past him with my load of bath-towels, his
+blind flapped a little, and I saw the moon, shaped like a horn, behind
+it.
+
+Dropping my towels, I pulled his blind back:
+
+"Mr. Wicks, look at the moon."
+
+Obedient as one who receives an order, he reached up to his supporting
+handle and pulled his shoulders half round in bed to look with me
+through the pane.
+
+The young moon, freed from the trees, was rising over the hill.
+
+I dropped the blind again and took up my towels and left him.
+
+After that he seemed to fall into one of his trances, and lay immovable
+an hour or more. When I took his dinner to him he lifted his large,
+sandy head and said:
+
+"Seems a queer thing that if you hadn't said 'Look at the moon' I might
+have bin dead without seeing her."
+
+"But don't you ever look out of the window?"
+
+The obstinate man shook his head.
+
+
+There was a long silence in the ward to-night. It was so cold that no
+one spoke. It is a gloomy ward, I think; the pink silk on the electric
+lights is so much too thick, and the fire smokes dreadfully. The
+patients sat round the fire with their "British warms" over their
+dressing-gowns and the collars turned up.
+
+Through the two glass doors and over the landing you can see the T.B.'s
+moving like little cinema figures backwards and forwards across the
+lighted entrance.
+
+Suddenly--a hesitating touch--an ancient polka struck up, a tune
+remembered at children's parties. Then a waltz, a very old one too. The
+T.B.'s were playing dance music.
+
+I crept to their door and looked. One man alone was taking any notice,
+and he was the player; the others sat round coughing or staring at
+nothing in particular, and those in bed had their heads turned away from
+the music.
+
+The man whose face is like a bird-cage has now more than ever a look of
+... an empty cage. He allows his mouth to hang open: that way the bird
+will fly.
+
+
+What is there so rapturous about the moon?
+
+The radiance of a floating moon is unbelievable. It is a figment of
+dream. The metal-silver ball that hung at the top of the Christmas tree,
+or, earlier still, the shining thing, necklace or spoon, the thing the
+baby leans to catch ... the magpie in us....
+
+
+Mr. Beecher is to be allowed to sleep till eight. He sleeps so badly, he
+says. He woke up crying this morning, for he has neurasthenia.
+
+That is what Sister says.
+
+He should have been in bed all yesterday, but instead he got up and
+through the door watched the dead T.B. ride away on his stretcher (for
+the bird flew in the night).
+
+"How morbid of him!" Sister says.
+
+He has seen many dead in France and snapped his fingers at them, but I
+agree with him that to die of tuberculosis in the backwaters of the war
+isn't the same thing.
+
+It's dreary; he thought how dreary it was as he lay awake in the night.
+
+But then he has neurasthenia....
+
+
+Pity is exhaustible. What a terrible discovery! If one ceases for one
+instant to pity Mr. Wicks he becomes an awful bore. Some days, when the
+sun is shining, I hear his grieving tenor voice all over the ward, his
+legendary tale of a wrong done him in his promotion. The men are kind to
+him and say "Old man," but Mr. Gray, who lies in the next bed to him, is
+drained of everything except resignation. I heard him say yesterday,
+"You told me that before...."
+
+
+We had a convoy last night.
+
+There was a rumour at tea-time, and suddenly I came round a corner on an
+orderly full of such definite information as:
+
+"There's thirty officers, nurse; an 'undred an' eighty men."
+
+I flew back to the bunk with the news, and we sat down to our tea
+wondering and discussing how many each ward would get.
+
+Presently the haughty Sister from downstairs came to the door: she held
+her thin, white face high, and her rimless glasses gleamed, as she
+remarked, overcasually, after asking for a hot-water bottle that had
+been loaned to us:
+
+"Have you many beds?"
+
+"Have they many beds?" The one question that starts up among the
+competing wards.
+
+And, "I don't want any; I've enough to do as it is!" is the false,
+cloaking answer that each Sister gives to the other.
+
+But my Sisters are frank women; they laughed at my
+excitement--themselves not unstirred. It's so long since we've had a
+convoy.
+
+
+The gallants of the ward showed annoyance. New men, new interests....
+They drew together and played bridge.
+
+
+A little flying boy with bright eyes said in his high, piping voice to
+me across the ward:
+
+"So there are soldiers coming into the ward to-night!"
+
+I paused, struck by his accusing eyes.
+
+"What do you mean? Soldiers...?"
+
+"I mean men who have been to the front, nurse."
+
+The gallants raised their eyebrows and grew uproarious.
+
+
+The gallants have been saying unprofessional things to me, and I haven't
+minded. The convoy will arm me against them. "Soldiers are coming into
+the ward."
+
+Eight o'clock, nine o'clock.... If only one could eat something! I took
+a sponge-finger out of a tin, resolving to pay it back out of my tea
+next day, and stole round to the dark corner near the German ward to eat
+it. The Germans were in bed; I could see two of them. At last, freed
+from their uniform, the dark blue with the scarlet soup-plates, they
+looked--how strange!--like other men.
+
+One was asleep. The other, I met his eyes so close; but I was in the
+dark, and he under the light of a lamp.
+
+I knew what was happening down at the station two miles away; I had been
+on station duty so often. The rickety country station lit by one large
+lamp; the thirteen waiting V.A.D.'s; the long wooden table loaded with
+mugs of every size; kettles boiling; the white clock ticking on; that
+frowsy booking clerk....
+
+Then the sharp bell, the tramp of the stretcher-bearers through the
+station, and at last the two engines drawing gravely across the lighted
+doorway, and carriage windows filled with eager faces, other carriage
+windows with beds slung across them, a vast Red Cross, a chemist's shop,
+a theatre, more windows, more faces....
+
+The stretcher-men are lined up; the M.O. meets the M.O. with the train;
+the train Sisters drift in to the coffee-table.
+
+"Here they come! Walkers first...."
+
+The station entrance is full of men crowding in and taking the steaming
+mugs of tea and coffee; men on pickaback with bandaged feet; men with
+only a nose and one eye showing, with stumbling legs, bound arms. The
+station, for five minutes, is full of jokes and witticisms; then they
+pass out and into the waiting chars-a-bancs.
+
+A long pause.
+
+"Stretchers!"
+
+The first stretchers are laid on the floor.
+
+There I have stood so often, pouring the tea behind the table, watching
+that littered floor, the single gas-lamp ever revolving on its chain,
+turning the shadows about the room like a wheel--my mind filled with
+pictures, emptied of thoughts, hypnotized.
+
+
+But last night, for the first time, I was in the ward. For the first
+time I should follow them beyond the glass door, see what became of
+them, how they changed from soldiers into patients....
+
+The gallants in the ward don't like a convoy; it unsexes us.
+
+Nine o'clock ... ten o'clock.... Another biscuit. Both Germans are
+asleep now.
+
+At last a noise in the corridor, a tramp on the stairs.... Only walkers?
+No, there's a stretcher--and another...!
+
+Now reflection ends, my feet begin to move, my hands to undo bootlaces,
+flick down thermometers, wash and fetch and carry.
+
+The gallants play bridge without looking up. I am tremendously fortified
+against them: for one moment I fiercely condemn and then forget them.
+For I am without convictions, antipathies, prejudices, reflections. I
+only work and watch, watch....
+
+Our ward is divided: half of it is neat and white and orderly; the
+other half has khaki tumbled all over it--"Sam Brownes," boots, caps,
+mud, the caked mud from the "other side."
+
+But the neat beds are empty; the occupants out talking to the
+new-comers, asking questions. Only the gallants play their bridge
+unmoved. They are on their mettle, showing off. Their turn will come
+some day.
+
+
+Now it only remains to walk home, hungry, under a heavy moon.
+
+The snow is running down the gutters. What a strange and penetrating
+smell of spring! February ... can it be yet?
+
+The running snow is uncovering something that has been delayed. In the
+garden a blackbird made a sudden cry in the hedge. I did smell spring,
+and I'm starving....
+
+
+I thought last night that a hospital ward is, above all, a serene place,
+in spite of pain and blood and dressings. Gravity rules it and order and
+a quiet procession of duties.
+
+Last night I made beds with the eldest Sister. The eldest Sister is good
+company to make beds with; she is quiet unless I rouse her, and when I
+talk she smiles with her eyes. I like to walk slowly round the ward,
+stooping and rising over the white beds, flicking the sheets
+mechanically from the mattress, and finally turning the mattress with an
+ease which gives me pleasure because I am strong.
+
+In life nothing is too small to please....
+
+Once during the evening the eldest Sister said to me:
+
+"I am worried about your throat. Is it no better?"
+
+And from the pang of pleasure and gratitude that went through me I have
+learnt the value of such remarks.
+
+In every bed there is some one whose throat is at least more sore than
+mine....
+
+Though I am not one of those fierce V.A.D.'s who scoff at sore throats
+and look for wounds, yet I didn't know it was so easy to give pleasure.
+
+
+The strange, disarming ways of men and women!
+
+I stood in the bunk to-night beside the youngest Sister, and she looked
+up suddenly with her absent stare and said, "You're not so nice as you
+used to be!"
+
+I was dumbfounded. Had I been "nice"? And now different....
+
+What a maddening sentence, for I felt she was going to refuse me any
+spoken explanation.
+
+But one should not listen to what people say, only to what they mean,
+and she was one of those persons whose minds one must read for oneself,
+since her words so often deformed her thoughts.
+
+The familiarity and equality of her tone seemed to come from some mood
+removed from the hospital, where her mistrustful mind was hovering about
+a trouble personal to herself.
+
+She did not mean "You are not so nice...." but "You don't like me so
+much...."
+
+She was so young, it was all so new to her, she wanted so to be "liked"!
+But there was this question of her authority....
+
+How was she to live among her fellows?
+
+Can one afford to disdain them? Can one steer happily with indifference?
+Must one, to be "liked," bend one's spirit to theirs? And, most
+disturbing question of all, is to be "liked" the final standard?
+
+Whether to wear, or not to wear, a mask towards one's world? For there
+is so much that is not ripe to show--change and uncertainty....
+
+As she sat there, unfolding to me the fogs of her situation, her fresh
+pink face clouded, her grand cap and red cape adding burdens of
+authority to the toil of growth, I could readily have looked into the
+glass to see if my hair was grey!
+
+
+"Then there is nothing you condemn?" said the youngest Sister finally,
+at the close of a conversation.
+
+I have to-day come up against the bedrock of her integrity; it is
+terrible. She has eternal youth, eternal fair hair, cold and ignorant
+judgments. On things relating to the world I can't further soften her; a
+man must do the rest.
+
+
+"A gentleman ... a gentleman...." I am so tired of this cry for a
+"gentleman."
+
+Why can't they do very well with what they've got!
+
+Here in the wards the Sisters have the stuff the world is made of laid
+out, bedded, before their eyes; the ups and downs of man from the four
+corners of the Empire and the hundred corners of social life, helpless
+and in pyjamas--and they're not satisfied, but must cry for a
+"gentleman"!
+
+"I couldn't make a friend of that man!" the youngest Sister loves to add
+to her criticism of a patient.
+
+It isn't my part as a V.A.D. to cry, "Who wants you to?"
+
+"I couldn't trust that man!" the youngest Sister will say equally often.
+
+This goes deeper....
+
+But whom need one trust? Brother, lover, friend ... no more. Why wish to
+trust all the world?...
+
+"They are not real men," she says, "not men through and through."
+
+That's where she goes wrong; they are men through and through--patchy,
+ordinary, human. She means they are not men after her pattern.
+
+Something will happen in the ward. Once I have touched this bedrock in
+her I shall be for ever touching it till it gets sore!
+
+One should seek for no response. They are not elastic, these nuns....
+
+
+In all honesty the hospital is a convent, and the men in it my brothers.
+
+This for months on end....
+
+For all that, now and then some one raises his eyes and looks at me; one
+day follows another and the glance deepens.
+
+"Charme de l'amour qui pourrait vous peindre!"
+
+Women are left behind when one goes into hospital. Such women as are in
+a hospital should be cool, gentle; anything else becomes a torment to
+the "prisoner."
+
+For me, too, it is bad; it brings the world back into my eyes; duties
+are neglected, discomforts unobserved.
+
+But there are things one doesn't fight.
+
+"Charme de l'amour...." The ward is changed! The eldest Sister and the
+youngest Sister are my enemies; the patients are my enemies--even Mr.
+Wicks, who lies on his back with his large head turned fixedly my way to
+see how often I stop at the bed whose number is 11.
+
+Last night he dared to say, "It's not like you, nurse, staying so much
+with that rowdy crew...." The gallants ... I know! But one among them
+has grown quieter, and his bed is No. 11.
+
+Even Mr. Wicks is my enemy.
+
+He watches and guards. Who knows what he might say to the eldest Sister?
+He has nothing to do all day but watch and guard.
+
+In the bunk at tea I sit among thoughts of my own. The Sisters are my
+enemies....
+
+
+I am alive, delirious, but not happy.
+
+I am at any one's mercy; I have lost thirty friends in a day. The
+thirty-first is in bed No. 11.
+
+
+This is bad: hospital cannot shelter this life we lead, No. 11 and I. He
+is a prisoner, and I have my honour, my responsibility towards him; he
+has come into this room to be cured, not tormented.
+
+Even my hand must not meet his--no, not even in a careless touch, not
+even in its "duty"; or, if it does, what risk!
+
+I am conspired against: it is not I who make his bed, hand him what he
+wishes; some accident defeats me every time.
+
+
+Now that I come to think of it, it seems strange that the Sisters should
+be my enemies. Don't we deserve sympathy and pity, No. 11 and I? From
+women, too....
+
+Isn't there a charm hanging about us? Aren't we leading magic days? Do
+they feel it and dislike it? Why?
+
+I feel that the little love we have created is a hare whose natural fate
+is to be run by every hound. But I don't see the reason.
+
+We can't speak, No. 11 and I, only a whispered word or two that seems to
+shout itself into every ear. We don't know each other.
+
+Last night it was stronger than I. I let him stand near me and talk. I
+saw the youngest Sister at the far end of the ward by the door, but I
+didn't move; she was watching. The moment I took my eyes from her I
+forgot her.... That is how one feels when one is desperate; that is how
+trouble comes.
+
+
+Later, I stood down by the hatch waiting for the tray of fish, and as I
+stood there, the youngest Sister beside me, he came down, for he was up
+and dressed yesterday, and offered to carry the tray. For he is
+reckless, too....
+
+She told him to go back, and said to me, looking from her young,
+condemning eyes, "I suppose he thinks he can make up for being the cause
+of all the lateness to-night."
+
+"Sister...." and then I stopped short. I hated her. Were we late? I
+looked at the other trays. We were not late; it was untrue. She had said
+that because she had had to wrap her barb in something and hadn't the
+courage to reprove me officially. I resented that and her air of
+equality. Since I am under her authority and agree to it, why dare she
+not use it?
+
+As for me, I dared not speak to her all the evening. She would have no
+weapons against me. If I am to remember she is my Sister I must hold my
+hand over my mouth.
+
+She would not speak to me, either. That was wrong of her: she is in
+authority, not I.
+
+It is difficult for her because she is so young; but I have no room for
+sympathy.
+
+At moments I forget her position and, burning with resentment, I
+reflect, " ... this schoolgirl...."
+
+
+To-day I walked down to the hospital thinking: "I must be stronger. It
+is I who, in the inverted position of things, should be the stronger. He
+is being tortured, and he has no release. He cannot even be alone a
+moment."
+
+But at the hospital gates I thought of nothing but that I should see
+him.
+
+
+In the bunk sat the eldest Sister, writing in a book. It passed through
+my head that the two Sisters had probably "sat" on my affairs together.
+I wondered without interest what the other had told her. Putting on my
+cap, I walked into the ward.
+
+Surely his bed had had a pink eiderdown!
+
+I walked up the ward and looked at it; but I knew without need of a
+second glance what had happened.
+
+His bed was made in the fashion in which we make an empty bed, a bed
+that waits for a new patient. His locker was empty and stood open,
+already scrubbed. I smiled as I noticed they hadn't even left me that to
+do.
+
+No one volunteered a word of explanation, no one took the trouble to say
+he had gone.
+
+These women.... I smiled again. Only the comic phrase rang in my head
+"They've properly done me in! Properly done me in...."
+
+I went downstairs and fetched the trays, and all the time the smile was
+on my lips. These women.... Somehow I had the better of the Sister. It
+is better to be in the wrong than in the right.
+
+His friends looked at me a little, but apparently he had left no message
+for me.
+
+Later I learnt that he had been taken to another hospital at two, while
+I came on at three.
+
+Once during the evening the eldest Sister mentioned vaguely, "So-and-so
+has gone."
+
+And I said aloud, after a little reflection, "Yes ... in the nick of
+time, Sister."
+
+During the evening I realized that I should never see him again. It was
+here in this ward the thing had grown. The hare we had started wouldn't
+bear the strain of any other life. He might write, but I shouldn't go
+and see him.
+
+"He must be wild," I thought with pity.
+
+The feeling between us would die anyhow; better throw in my strength
+with the Sister's and help her hurl it now towards its death. I looked
+at her bent head with a secret triumph.
+
+
+Then, slowly: "How ... permanently am I in disgrace?"
+
+And she: "Not at all ... now."
+
+
+Behind the stone pillar of the gateway is one dirty little patch of
+snow; I saw it even in the moonless darkness.
+
+The crown of the hill here holds the last snows, but for all that the
+spring smell is steaming among the trees and up and down the bracken
+slopes in the garden next door.
+
+There is no moon, there are no stars, no promise to the eye, but in the
+dense, vapouring darkness the bulbs are moving. I can smell what is not
+earth or rain or bark.
+
+
+The curtain has been drawn over No. 11; the Sister holds the corners
+tightly against the window-frame. He is outside, somewhere in the world,
+and I am here moving among my thirty friends; and since it isn't spring
+yet, the lights are lit to hide the twilight. The Sister's eyes talk to
+me again as we make beds--yes, even bed No. 11 with a little jaundice
+boy in it. They let me make it now!
+
+
+Last night we had another concert in the ward.
+
+A concert demoralizes me. By reason of sitting on the beds and talking
+to whom one wills, I regain my old manners, and forget that a patient
+may be washed, fed, dressed but not talked to. My old manners were more
+gracious, but less docile.
+
+Afterwards we wheeled the beds back into their positions. I bumped Mr.
+Lambert's as I wheeled it, and apologized.
+
+"I'm not grumbling," he smiled from his pillow.
+
+"You never do," I answered.
+
+"You don't know me, nurse!"
+
+And I thought as I looked down at him "I shall never know him better or
+so well again...."
+
+Indeed a Sister is a curious creature. She is like a fortress,
+unassailable, and whose sleeping guns may fire at any minute.
+
+I was struck with a bit of knowledge last night that will serve me
+through life, i.e. that to justify oneself is the inexcusable fault. It
+is better to be in the wrong than in the right.
+
+
+A Sister has an "intimate life."
+
+It occurs when she goes off duty; that is to say, it lies between 8.45,
+when she finishes her supper, and 10 o'clock, when she finishes
+undressing.
+
+That is why one Sister said to me, "If I hadn't taken up nursing I
+should have gone in for culture."
+
+I don't laugh at that.... To have an intimate life one must have a
+little time.
+
+Who am I that I can step in from outside to criticize? The hospital is
+not my life. I am expectant....
+
+But for them here and now is the business of life.
+
+
+As the weeks go by I recognize the difficulty of keeping the life of the
+Sisters and the V.A.D.'s out of the circle of my thoughts. Their
+vigorous and symmetrical vision of the ward attacks me; their attitude
+towards the patients, which began by offending me, ends by overtaking
+me.
+
+On the whole the Sisters loathe relations. They look into the ward and
+see the mothers and sisters and wives camped round the beds, and go back
+into the bunk feeling that the ward doesn't belong to them.
+
+The eldest Sister said to me yesterday: "Shut the door, nurse; there's
+Captain Fellows's father. I don't want him fussing round."
+
+On that we discussed relations, and it seemed to me that it was
+inevitable that a Sister should be the only buffer between them and
+their pressing anxieties.
+
+"No, a relation is the last straw.... You don't understand!" she said.
+
+I don't understand, but I am not specialized.
+
+
+Long ago in the Mess I said to _my_ Sister, laughing: "I would go
+through the four years' training just to wear that cap and cape!"
+
+And she: "You couldn't go through it and come out as you are...."
+
+
+Mr. Wicks has set his heart on crutches.
+
+"If you won't try me on them I'll buy me own and walk out of here!"
+
+Then I realize the vanity of his threat and the completeness of his
+imprisonment, and hurry to suggest a new idea before he sees it too....
+
+We set him on crutches....
+
+He is brave. He said with anger, "I can't stand on these, they're too
+long. You go and ask for some shorter ones...."
+
+And thus together we slurred over the fact of that pendulous, nerveless
+body which had hung from the crutches like an old stocking.
+
+But all the evening he was buried in his own silence, and I suppose he
+was looking at the vision on the bedrail.
+
+
+A boy of seventeen was brought in yesterday with pneumonia.
+
+He was so ill that he couldn't speak, and we put screens round his bed.
+All the other patients in the ward immediately became convalescents.
+
+I helped Sister to wash him, holding him on his side while he groaned
+with pain; and Sister, no longer cynical, said, "There you are Sonnie,
+it's almost finished...."
+
+When I rolled back the blanket it gave me a shock to see how young his
+feet were--clean and thin, with the big toe curling up and the little
+toes curling back.
+
+"Will you brush my hair?" he managed to say to me, and when I had
+finished: "This is a pretty ward...."
+
+It isn't, but I am glad it seems so to him.
+
+
+The boy is at his worst. Whenever we come near him he lifts his eyes and
+asks, "What are you going to do now?"
+
+But to whatever we do he submits with a terrible docility.
+
+Lying there propped on his pillow, with his small yellow face staring
+down the ward, he is all the centre of my thoughts; I am preoccupied
+with the mystery that is in his lungs.
+
+Five days ago he was walking on his legs: five days, and he is on the
+edge of the world--to-night looking over the edge.
+
+There is no shell, no mark, no tear.... The attack comes from within.
+
+The others in the ward are like phantoms.
+
+When I say to-morrow, "How is the boy?" what will they say?
+
+
+The sun on the cobwebs lights them as it lights the telephone-wires
+above. The cocks scream from every garden.
+
+To-day the sky is like a pale egg-shell, and aeroplanes from the two
+aerodromes are droning round the hill.
+
+I think from time to time, "Is he alive?"
+
+
+Can one grow used to death? It is unsafe to think of this....
+
+For if death becomes cheap it is the watcher, not the dying, who is
+poisoned.
+
+
+His mother buys a cake every day and brings it at tea-time, saying, "For
+the Sisters' tea...."
+
+It is a bribe, dumbly offered, more to be on the safe side of every bit
+of chance than because she really believes it can make the slightest
+difference.
+
+Now that I have time to think of it, her little action hurts me, but
+yesterday I helped to eat it with pleasure because one is hungry and the
+margarine not the best.
+
+
+Aches and pains....
+ Pains and aches....
+
+
+I don't know how to get home up the long hill....
+
+
+Measles....
+
+
+ (Unposted.)
+
+"DEAR SISTER,--Four more days before they will let me out of bed....
+Whatever I promise to a patient in future I shall do, if I have to wear
+a notebook hanging on my belt.
+
+"By which you will see that I am making discoveries!
+
+"The quality of _expectation_ in a person lying horizontally is wrought
+up to a high pitch. One is always expecting something. Generally it is
+food; three times a day it is the post; oftener it is the performance of
+some promise. The things that one asks from one's bed are so small: 'Can
+you get me a book?' 'Can you move that vase of flowers?' 'When you come
+up next time could you bring me an envelope?'
+
+"But if one cannot get them life might as well stop.
+
+
+"The wonder to me is how they stood me!
+
+"I was always cheerful--I thought it a merit; I find instead it is an
+exasperation.
+
+
+"I make a hundred reflections since my eyes are too bad to read. I stare
+at the ceiling, and if a moth comes on it--and just now that happened,
+or I would not have thought of mentioning it--I watch the pair of them,
+the moth and its leaping shadow, as they whirl from square to square of
+the smoke-ripened ceiling. This keeps my thoughts quiet.
+
+"Then in the daytime there is the garden, the dog that crosses the lawn,
+the gardener talking to himself, the girl who goes to feed the hens....
+
+"I don't say that in any of these things I find a substitute for
+reading, but since I can't and mayn't read....
+
+"I am thinking, you know, of the beds down the right-hand side of the
+ward.
+
+"There's Mr. Wicks, now: he has his back to the road with the trams on
+it.
+
+"Do you see anything in that?
+
+"I do. But then I have the advantage of you; my position is horizontal.
+
+"Mr. Wicks's position is also ... strictly ... horizontal. It seems to
+me that if he could see those trams, mark Saturdays and Sundays by the
+increase of passengers, make little games to himself involving the
+number of persons to get on and off (for the stopping-place is within
+view: I know, for I looked) it might be possible to draw him back from
+that apathy which I too, as well as you, was ceasing to notice.
+
+"Mr. Wicks, Sister, not only has his back to the road with trams on it,
+but for eleven months he has had his eyes on the yellow stone of the
+wall of the German ward; that is, when they are not on his own
+bedrail....
+
+"But if his bed were turned round to range alongside the window...? For
+he is a man with two eyes; not one who can write upon a stone wall with
+his thoughts.
+
+"And yet ... it would be impossible! There's not a ward in the hospital
+whose symmetry is so spoilt.
+
+"And that, you know, is a difficulty for you to weigh. How far are you a
+dictator?
+
+
+"I have been thinking of my role and yours.
+
+"In the long run, however 'capable' I become, my soul should be given to
+the smoothing of pillows.
+
+"You are barred from so many kinds of sympathy: you must not sympathize
+over the deficiencies of the hospital, over the food, over the M.O.'s
+lack of imagination, over the intolerable habits of the man in the next
+bed; you must not sigh 'I know ...' to any of these plaints.
+
+"Yours is the running of the ward. Yours the isolation of a crowned
+head.
+
+"One day you said a penetrating thing to me:
+
+"'He's not very ill, but he's feeling wretched. Run along and do the
+sympathetic V.A.D. touch!'
+
+"For a moment I, just able to do a poultice or a fomentation, resented
+it.
+
+"But you were right.... One has one's _metier_."
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+"THE BOYS ..."
+
+
+So now one steps down from chintz covers and lemonade to the Main Army
+and lemon-water.
+
+And to show how little one has one's eye upon the larger issues, the
+thing that upset me most on coming into a "Tommies'" ward was the fact
+that instead of twenty-six lemons twice a day for the making of lemonade
+I now squeeze two into an old jug and hope for the best about the sugar.
+
+Smiff said to-day, "Give us a drop of lemon, nurse...." And the Sister:
+"Go on with you! I won't have the new nurse making a pet of you...."
+
+I suppose I'm new to it, and one can't carry on the work that way, but,
+God knows, the water one can add to a lemon is cheap enough!
+
+Smiff had a flash of temper to-night. He said: "Keepin' me here starin'
+at green walls this way! Nothing but green, nine blessed months!"
+
+His foot is off, and to-night for the first time the doctor had promised
+that he should be wheeled into the corridor. But it was forgotten, and I
+am too new to jog the memory of the gods.
+
+It's a queer place, a "Tommies'" ward. It makes me nervous. I'm not
+simple enough; they make me shy. I can't think of them like the others
+do, as "the boys"; they seem to me full-grown men.
+
+
+I suffer awfully from my language in this ward. I seem to be the only
+V.A.D. of whom they continually ask, "What's say, nurse?" It isn't that
+I use long words, but my sentences seem to be inverted.
+
+An opportunity for learning to speak simple Saxon....
+
+
+"An antitetanic injection for Corrigan," said Sister. And I went to the
+dispensary to fetch the syringe and the needles.
+
+"But has he any symptoms?" I asked. (In a Tommies' ward one dare ask
+anything; there isn't that mystery which used to surround the officers'
+illnesses.)
+
+"Oh no," she said, "it's just that he hasn't had his full amount in
+France."
+
+So I hunted up the spirit-lamp and we prepared it, talking of it.
+
+But we forgot to talk of it to Corrigan. The needle was into his
+shoulder before he knew why his shirt was held up.
+
+His wrath came like an avalanche; the discipline of two years was
+forgotten, his Irish tongue was loosened. Sister shrugged her shoulders
+and laughed; I listened to him as I cleaned the syringe.
+
+I gathered that it was the indignity that had shocked his sense of
+individual pride. "Treating me like a cow...." I heard him say to
+Smiff--who laughed, since it wasn't his shoulder that carried the serum.
+Smiff laughed: he has been in hospital nine months, and his theory is
+that a Sister may do anything at any moment; his theory is that nothing
+does any good--that if you don't fuss you don't get worse.
+
+Corrigan was angry all day; the idea that "a bloomin' woman should come
+an' shove something into me systim" was too much for him. But he forgets
+himself: there are no individualists now; his "system" belongs to us.
+
+Sister said, laughing, to Smiff the other day, "Your leg is mine."
+
+"Wrong again; it's the Governmint's!" said Smiff. But Corrigan is Irish
+and doesn't like that joke.
+
+
+There are times when my heart fails me; when my eyes, my ears, my
+tongue, and my understanding fail me; when pain means nothing to me....
+
+In the bus yesterday I came down from London sitting beside a Sister
+from another ward, who held her hand to her ear and shifted in her seat.
+
+She told me she had earache, and I felt sorry for her.
+
+As she had earache we didn't talk, and I sat huddled in my corner and
+watched the names of the shops, thinking, as I was more or less forced
+to do by her movements, of her earache.
+
+What struck me was her own angry bewilderment before the fact of her
+pain. "But it hurts.... You've no idea how it hurts!" She was surprised.
+
+Many times a day she hears the words, "Sister, you're hurtin' me....
+Couldn't you shift my heel? It's like a toothache," and similar
+sentences. I hear them in our ward all the time. One can't pass down the
+ward without some such request falling on one's ears.
+
+She is astonished at her earache; she is astonished at what pain can
+be; it is unexpected. She is ready to be angry with herself, with her
+pain, with her ear. It is monstrous, she thinks....
+
+The pain of one creature cannot continue to have a meaning for another.
+It is almost impossible to nurse a man well whose pain you do not
+imagine. A deadlock!
+
+
+One has illuminations all the time!
+
+There is an old lady who visits in our ward, at whom, for one or two
+unimportant reasons, it is the custom to laugh. The men, who fall in
+with our moods with a docility which I am beginning to suspect is a
+mask, admit too that she is comic.
+
+This afternoon, when she was sitting by Corrigan's bed and talking to
+him I saw where her treatment of him differed from ours. She treats him
+as though he were an individual; but there is more in it than that....
+She treats him as though he had a wife and children, a house and a back
+garden and responsibilities: in some manner she treats him as though he
+had dignity.
+
+I thought of yesterday's injection. That is the difference: that is what
+the Sisters mean when they say "the boys."...
+
+The story of Rees is not yet ended in either of the two ways in which
+stories end in a hospital. His arm does not get worse, but his courage
+is ebbing. This morning I wheeled him out to the awful sleep again--for
+the third time.
+
+They will take nearly anything from each other. The only thing that
+cheered Rees up as he was wheeled away was the voice of Pinker crying,
+"Jer want white flowers on yer coffin? We'll see to the brass 'andles!"
+
+From Pinker, a little boy from the Mile End Road, they will stand
+anything. He is the servant of the ward (he says), partly through his
+good nature and a little because he has two good arms and legs. "I ain't
+no skivvy," he protests all the time, but every little odd job gets
+done.
+
+Rees, when he wakes, wakes sobbing and says, "Don' go away, nurse...."
+He holds my hand in a fierce clutch, then releases it to point in the
+air, crying "There's the pain!" as though the pain filled the air and
+rose to the rafters. As he wakes it centralizes, until at last comes the
+moment when he says, "Me arm aches cruel," and points to it. Then one
+can leave him.
+
+
+It was the first time I had heard a man sing at his dressing. I was
+standing at the sterilizer when Rees's song began to mount over the
+screen that hid him from me. ("Whatever is that?" "Rees's tubes going
+in.")
+
+It was like this: "Ah ... ee ... oo, Sister!" and again: "Sister ... oo
+... ee ... ah!" Then a little scream and his song again.
+
+I heard her voice: "Now then, Rees, I don't call that much of a song."
+She called me to make his bed, and I saw his left ear was full of tears.
+
+O visitors, who come into the ward in the calm of the long afternoon,
+when the beds are neat and clean and the flowers out on the tables and
+the V.A.D.'s sit sewing at splints and sandbags, when the men look like
+men again and smoke and talk and read ... if you could see what lies
+beneath the dressings!
+
+When one shoots at a wooden figure it makes a hole. When one shoots at a
+man it makes a hole, and the doctor must make seven others.
+
+
+I heard a blackbird sing in the middle of the night last night--two
+bars, and then another. I thought at first it might be a burglar
+whistling to his mate in the black and rustling garden.
+
+But it was a blackbird in a nightmare.
+
+
+Those distant guns again to-night....
+
+Now a lull and now a bombardment; again a lull, and then batter, batter,
+and the windows tremble. Is the lull when _they_ go over the top?
+
+I can only think of death to-night. I tried to think just now, "What is
+it, after all! Death comes anyway; this only hastens it." But that won't
+do; no philosophy helps the pain of death. It is pity, pity, pity, that
+I feel, and sometimes a sort of shame that I am here to write at all.
+
+Summer.... Can it be summer through whose hot air the guns shake and
+tremble? The honeysuckle, whose little stalks twinkled and shone that
+January night, has broken at each woody end into its crumbled flower.
+
+Where is the frost, the snow?... Where are the dead?
+
+Where is my trouble and my longing, and the other troubles, and the
+happiness in other summers?
+
+Alas, the long history of life! There is that in death that makes the
+throat contract and the heart catch: everything is written in water.
+
+We talk of tablets to the dead. There can be none but in the heart, and
+the heart fades.
+
+
+There are only ten men left in bed in the ward. Sometimes I think, "Will
+there never be another convoy?"
+
+And then: "Is not one man alone sufficient matter on which to reflect?"
+"One can find God in a herring's head...." says a Japanese proverb.
+
+
+When there is not much to do in the ward and no sound comes from behind
+the screens, when there has not been a convoy for weeks, when the little
+rubber tubes lie in the trolley-drawer and the syringe gives place to
+the dry dressing--then they set one of us aside from the work of the
+ward to sit at a table and pad splints.
+
+It isn't supposed to be a job we care for, and I am keeping up the
+delusion, but all the time I run my seams straight, pull the horsehair
+out to the last fine shred, turn in my corners as the corners of a
+leather book are turned, so that I may be kept at it, although out of
+cunning I appear to grumble and long to be released.
+
+One does not wash up when one makes splints, one does not change the
+pillow-cases--forcing the resentful pillow down, down till the corners
+of the case are filled--nor walk the ward in search of odd jobs.
+
+But these are not the reasons....
+
+Just as I liked the unending laying of the trays in the corridor, so
+making splints appears to me a gentle work in which one has time to look
+at and listen to the ward with more penetrating eyes, with wider ears--a
+work varied by long conversations with Pinker about his girl and the
+fountain-pen trade.
+
+But I ought not to have asked if she were pretty.
+
+At first he didn't answer and appeared to be thinking very seriously--of
+a way out, perhaps.
+
+"Does fer me all right," he presently said.
+
+The defence of his girl occupied his attention, for after a few minutes
+he returned to it: "Sensible sort of girl. She ain't soft. Can cook an'
+all that."
+
+I went on sewing my splint.
+
+Almost reluctantly he pursued: "Got 'er photograph 'ere." But he did not
+get up at once, and we turned to the fountain-pens. "Any nib," he said,
+"crossed ever so, _I_ could mend it. Kep' the books too; we was always
+stocktaking."
+
+Now I think of it, fountain-pen shops always _are_ stocktaking. They do
+it all down the Strand, with big red labels across the front.
+
+He rose suddenly and crossed to his locker to look for her photograph,
+returning after a few minutes with a bundle of little cardboards. The
+first I turned over was that of a pretty fair-haired girl. "Is that
+her?" I asked. "She's pretty!" "That's 'er young sister," he answered. I
+turned over the rest, and he pointed out his family one by one--last of
+all his girl.
+
+There are some men who are not taken in by a bit of fair hair.
+
+One knows what these cheap photographs are, how they distort and
+blacken. The girl who looked at me from this one appeared to be a
+monster.
+
+She had an enormous face, enormous spectacles, bands of galvanized iron
+drawn across her forehead for hair....
+
+"Ther's just them two, 'er an 'er sister. 'Er sister ain't got a feller
+yet."
+
+I praised his girl to Pinker, and praised Pinker to myself.
+
+"A girl friend," he said, "keeps yer straighter than a man. Makes yer
+punctual."
+
+"So she won't wait for you when you are late?"
+
+"Not a minute over time," he said with pride. "I used to be a terror
+when I first knew 'er; kep' 'er waitin' abaht. She soon cured me, did F.
+Steel."
+
+"You are a funny little bird, Pinker," said the Sister, passing.
+
+"Lil bird, am I?" He tucked his cardboards carefully into his locker and
+followed her up the ward firing repartee.
+
+I sewed my splint. In all walks of life men keep one waiting. I should
+like to ask the huge and terrible girl about her cure.
+
+
+Monk is the ugliest man I have ever seen. He has a squint and a leer,
+his mouth drops at both sides, he has no forehead, and his straight,
+combed hair meets his eyebrows--or rather, his left eyebrow, since that
+one is raised by a cut. He has the expression of a cut-throat, and yet
+he is quite young, good-tempered, and shy.
+
+When Monk was working at a woollen belt Pinker said: "Workin' that for
+yer girl?... You got a girl, Monk?"
+
+Monk squinted sidelong at Pinker and rubbed his hands together like a
+large ape.
+
+"'E ain't got no girl," shrilled Pinker. "Monk ain't got no girl. You
+don' know what a girl is, do yer, Monk?"
+
+Although they do much more to help each other than I ever saw done in
+the officers' ward, yet one is always saying things that I find myself
+praying the other hasn't heard.
+
+In the next bed to Monk lies Gayner, six foot two, of the Expeditionary
+Force. Wounded at Mons, he was brought home to England, and since then
+he has made the round of the hospitals. He is a good-looking, sullen man
+who will not read or write or sew, who will not play draughts or cards
+or speak to his neighbour. He sits up, attentive, while the ulcers on
+his leg are being dressed, but if one asks him something of the history
+of his wound his tone holds such a volume of bitterness and exasperation
+that one feels that at any moment the locks of his spirit might cease to
+hold.
+
+" ... ever since Mons, these ulcers, on and off?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Oh well, we must cure them now."
+
+Her light tone is what he cannot endure. He does not believe in cure and
+will not believe in cure. It has become an article of faith: his ulcers
+will never be cured. He has a silent scorn of hospitals. He can wind a
+perfect bandage and he knows the rules; beyond that he pays as little
+attention as possible to what goes on.
+
+When his dressing is over he tilts his thin, intelligent face at the
+ceiling. "Don't you ever read?" I asked him.
+
+"I haven't the patience," he replied. But he has the patience to lie
+like that with his thin lips compressed and a frown on his face for
+hours, for days ... since Mons....
+
+I have come to the conclusion that he has a violent soul, that he dare
+not talk. It is no life for a man.
+
+
+I said to Pinker this morning, "I wish you'd hurry up over your bath;
+I've got to get it scrubbed out by nine."
+
+"Don't you hurry me, nurse," said Pinker, "it's the on'y time I can
+think, in me bath."
+
+I should like to have parried with Pinker (only my language is so much
+more complicated than it ought to be) that thinking in one's bath is a
+self-deception. I lay in my own bath last night and thought very deep
+thoughts, but often when we think our thoughts are deep they are only
+vague. Bath thoughts are wonderful, but there's nothing "to" them.
+
+
+We had a heated discussion to-day as to whether the old lady who leaves
+a tract beneath a single rose by each bedside could longer be tolerated.
+
+"She is a nuisance," said the Sister; "the men make more noise
+afterwards because they set her hymns to ragtime."
+
+"What good does it do them?" said the V.A.D., " ... and I have to put
+the roses in water!"
+
+I rode the highest horse of all: "Her inquiries about their souls are an
+impertinence. Why should they be bothered?"
+
+These are the sort of things they say in debating societies. But Life
+talks differently....
+
+Pinker said, "Makes the po'r ole lady 'appy!"
+
+
+As one bends one's head low over the splint one sits unnoticed, a part
+of the furniture of the ward. The sounds of the ward rise and fill the
+ears; it is like listening to a kettle humming, bees round a bush of
+flowers, the ticking of a clock, the passing of life....
+
+Now and then there are incidents, as just now. Two orderlies came in
+with a stretcher to fetch Mr. Smith (an older man than Smiff and a more
+dignified) away to a convalescent home. Mr. Smith has never been to
+France, but walked into our ward one day with a sore on his foot which
+had to be cut. He was up and dressed in his bedraggled khaki uniform
+when the stretcher-bearers came for him.
+
+He looked down his nose at the stretcher. "I don't much like the look of
+that," he said. The stretcher-bearers waited for him.
+
+He stood irresolute. "I never bin in one of them, and I don't want to
+make a start."
+
+"Its bad luck to be our name," called out Smiff, waving his amputated
+ankle. "Better get your hand in!"
+
+Mr. Smith got in slowly and departed from the ward, sitting bolt
+upright, gripping the sides with his hands.
+
+
+Some of the wards and the Sisters' bunks are charming at this time of
+the year, now that larkspur and rambler-roses are cheap in the market.
+
+But the love of decoration is not woman's alone. Through the dispensary
+hatchway I saw three empty poison-bottles, each with a poppy stuck in
+its neck.
+
+Everything in the dispensary is beautiful--its glasses, its flames, its
+brass weights, its jars and globes; but much more beautiful because it
+is half a floor higher than the corridor in which we stand and look up
+into it, through a hatchway in the wall. There is something in that: one
+feels like Gulliver.
+
+No woman has ever been into this bachelors' temple.
+
+On tapping at a small square panel set in the wall of the corridor the
+panel flies up and a bachelor is seen from the waist to the knees. If he
+feels well and my smile is humble he will stoop, and I see looking down
+at me a small worn face and bushy eyebrows, or a long ascetic face and
+bleached hair, or a beard and a pair of bearded nostrils.
+
+Between them the three old things, priests in their way, measure and
+weigh and mix and scold and let up the panel and bang it down through
+the long day, filling the hospital with their coloured bottles, sealed
+packets of pills, jars and vaccines, and precious syringes in boxes
+marked "To be returned at once" (I never knew a Sister fail to toss her
+head when she saw this message).
+
+It is a very social spot outside the panel of the dispensary: each
+V.A.D. goes there each morning as one might do one's marketing, and,
+meeting there, puts down her straw basket, taps at the panel, and
+listens to the scolding of the old men with only half an ear.
+
+For the bachelors amuse themselves when they are not mixing and weighing
+by inventing odd rules and codes of their own, and, reaching a skinny
+arm through the hatchway, they pin them on, little scraps of paper which
+fall down and are swept to heaven in the charwomen's pails.
+
+And the V.A.D.'s, who are not at all afraid, because one cannot be
+afraid of a man of whom one has never seen more than half, turn a blind
+eye to the slips and a deaf ear to the voices, bringing their bottles
+and their jars just in the manner they were taught to do when first they
+entered the hospital. And they gossip! They have just seen the morning
+papers on all the beds; they have just heard about the half-days for the
+week; they have collected little rags and ends of news as they came
+along the corridor.
+
+They gossip. And once a bearded bachelor thumped the panel down almost
+on my finger, leaving three startled faces staring at a piece of painted
+wood. But a little dark girl worked the panel up an inch with her nails
+and cajoled through the crack.
+
+I have said before that the long corridor is wonderful. In the winter
+afternoons and evenings, when the mist rolled up and down over the tiles
+like the smoke in a tunnel, when one walked almost in darkness and
+peered into the then forbidden wards, when dwarfs coming from the G
+block grew larger and larger till the A block turned them into beings of
+one's own size, the corridor always made a special impression on me.
+
+But in the summer mornings it is remarkable too. Then regiments of
+charwomen occupy it, working in close mass formation. Seven will work
+abreast upon their knees, flanked by their pails, their hands moving
+backwards and forwards in so complicated a system that there appears to
+be no system at all.
+
+Patches of the corridor are thick with soapsuds; patches are dry. The
+art of walking the corridor in the morning can be learnt, and for a year
+and five months I have done it with no more than a slip and a slide.
+
+But yesterday I stepped on a charwoman's hand. It was worse than
+stepping on a puppy: one knows that sickening lift of the heart, as
+though the will could undo the weight of the foot....
+
+The stagger, the sense of one's unpardonable heaviness.... I slipped on
+her hand as on a piece of orange-peel, and, jumping like a chamois, sent
+the next pail all over the heels of the front rank.
+
+It was the sort of situation with which one can do nothing.
+
+
+I met a friend yesterday, one of the old Chelsea people. He has followed
+his natural development. Although he talks war, war, war, it is from his
+old angle, it wears the old hall-mark.
+
+He belongs to a movement which believes it "feels the war." Personal
+injury or personal loss does not enter the question; the heart of this
+movement of his bleeds perpetually, but impersonally. He claims for it
+that this heart is able to bleed more profusely than any other heart,
+individual or collective, in ... let us limit it to England!
+
+In fact it is the only blood he has noticed.
+
+When the taxes go up he says, "Well, now perhaps it will make people
+feel the war!" For he longs that every one should lose their money so
+that at last they may "feel the war," "stop the war" (interchangeable!)
+
+He forgets that even in England a great many quite stupid people would
+rather lose their money than their sons.
+
+How strange that these people should still picture the minds of soldiers
+as filled with the glitter of bright bayonets and the glory of war! They
+think we need a vision of blood and ravage and death to turn us from our
+bright thoughts, to still the noise of the drum in our ears. The drums
+don't beat, the flags don't fly....
+
+He should come down the left-hand side of the ward and hear what the
+dairyman says.
+
+"I 'ates it, nurse; I 'ates it. Them 'orses'll kill me; them drills....
+It's no life for a man, nurse."
+
+The dairyman hasn't been to the Front; you needn't go to the Front to
+hate the war. Sometimes I get a glimpse from him of what it means to the
+weaklings, the last-joined, feeble creatures.
+
+"Me 'ead's that queer, nurse; it seems to get queerer every day. I can't
+'elp worryin'. I keep thinkin' of them 'orses."
+
+Always the horses....
+
+I said to Sister, "Is No. 24 really ill?"
+
+"There's a chance of his being mental," she said. "He is being watched."
+
+Was he mental before the war took him, before the sergeant used to whip
+the horses as they got to the jumps, before the sergeant cried out
+"Cross your stirrups!"?
+
+It isn't his fault; there are strong and feeble men.
+
+A dairyman's is a gentle job; he could have scraped through life all
+right. He sleeps in the afternoon, and stirs and murmurs: "Drop your
+reins.... Them 'orses, sergeant! I'm comin', sergeant; don't touch 'im
+this time!" And then in a shriller voice, "Don't touch 'im...." Then he
+wakes.
+
+Poor mass of nerves.... He nods and smiles every time one looks at him,
+frantic to please.
+
+There are men and men. Scutts has eleven wounds, but he doesn't "mind"
+the war. God made many brands of men, that is all; one must accept them.
+
+But war finds few excuses; and there are strange minnows in the
+fishing-net. Sometimes, looking into the T.B. ward, I think: "It almost
+comes to this: one must spit blood or fight...."
+
+
+"Why don't you refuse?" my friend would say to the dairyman. "Why should
+you fight because another man tells you to?"
+
+It isn't so simple as that, is it, dairyman? It isn't even a question
+of the immense, vague machinery behind the sergeant, but just the
+sergeant himself; it isn't a question of generals or politicians of
+great wrongs or fierce beliefs ... but of the bugle which calls you in
+the morning and the bugle which puts you to bed at night.
+
+Well, well.... The dairyman is in hospital, and that is the best that he
+can hope for.
+
+
+I read a book once about a prison. They too, the prisoners, sought after
+the prison hospital, as one seeks after one's heaven.
+
+
+It is so puffed up of my friend to think that his and his "movement's"
+are the only eyes to see the vision of horror. Why, these others _are_
+the vision!
+
+
+This afternoon I was put at splints again.
+
+I only had an inch or two to finish and I spun it out, very happy.
+
+Presently the foot of a bed near me began to catch my attention: the toe
+beneath the sheets became more and more agitated, then the toes of the
+other foot joined the first foot, beating a frenzied tattoo beneath the
+coverings. I looked up.
+
+Facing me a pair of blue eyes were bulging above an open mouth, the
+nostrils were quivering, the fingers were wrung together. It was Gayner,
+surely seeing a ghost.
+
+I rose and went to his bed.
+
+"My jaws want to close," he muttered. "I can't keep them open."
+
+I jumped and went for Sister, who took the news in a leisurely fashion,
+which reproved me for my excitement. Feeling a fool, I went and sat down
+again, taking up my splint. But there was no forgetting Gayner.
+
+I tried to keep my eyes on my work, but first his toes and then his
+hands filled all my mind, till at last I had to look up and meet the
+eyes again.
+
+Still looking as though he had seen a ghost--a beast of a ghost...! In
+hospital since Mons.... "I wonder how many men he has seen die of
+tetanus?" I thought.
+
+"He's got the jumps," I thought.
+
+So had I. Suppose Sister was wrong! Suppose the precious minutes were
+passing! Suppose...! She was only the junior Sister.
+
+"Shall I get you some water?" I said at last. He nodded, and gulped in a
+horrible fashion. I got him the mug, and while he drank I longed, but
+did not dare, to say, "Are you afraid of ... that?" I thought if one
+could say the word it might break down that dumb fright, draw the flesh
+up again over those bulging eyes, give him a sort of anchor, a
+confessional, even if it was only me. But I didn't dare. Gayner is one
+of those men so pent up, so rigid with some inner indignation, one
+cannot tamper with the locks.
+
+Again I went and sat down.
+
+When next I looked up he was sweating. He beckoned to me: "Ask Sister to
+send for the doctor. I can't stand this."
+
+I went and asked her.
+
+She sucked her little finger thoughtfully.
+
+"Give him the thermometer," she said. He couldn't take it in his mouth,
+" ... for if I shut my lips they'll never open." I put it under his arm
+and waited while his feet kicked and his hands twisted. He was normal.
+Sister smiled.
+
+But by a coincidence the doctor came, gimlet-eyed.
+
+"Hysteria...." he said to Sister in the bunk.
+
+"Is no one going to reassure Gayner?" I wondered. And no one did.
+
+Isn't the fear of pain next brother to pain itself? Tetanus or the fear
+of tetanus--a choice between two nightmares. Don't they admit that?
+
+So, forbidden to speak to him, I finished my splint till tea-time. But I
+couldn't bring myself to sit down to it, for fear that the too placid
+resumption of my duties should outrage him. I stood up.
+
+Which helped me, not him.
+
+
+After the dressings are over we scrub the dishes and basins in the
+annexe.
+
+In the annexe, except that there is nothing to sit on, there is leisure
+and an invitation to reflection.
+
+Beneath the windows legions of white butterflies attack the
+cabbage-patch which divides us from the road; beyond the road there is a
+camp from which the dust flows all day.
+
+When the wind is from the north the dust is worse than ever and breaks
+like a surf over the cabbages, while the butterflies try to rise above
+it; but they never succeed, and dimly one can see the white wings
+beating in the whirlpool.
+
+I shall never look at white butterflies again without hearing the sounds
+from the camp, without seeing the ring of riders, without thinking,
+perhaps, of the dairyman and of the other "dairymen."
+
+The butterflies do not care for noise. When, standing beside the
+cabbage-patch, the bugler blows the dinner-bugle, they race in a cloud
+to the far corner and hover there until the last note is sounded.
+
+
+I think it is I who am wrong when I consider the men as citizens, as
+persons of responsibility, and the Sister right when she says "the
+boys."
+
+Taken from their women, from their establishments, as monks or boys or
+even sheep are housed, they do not want, perhaps, to be reminded of an
+existence to which they cannot return; until a limb is off, or the war
+ends.
+
+To what a point they leave their private lives behind them! To what a
+point their lives are suspended....
+
+On the whole, I find that in hospital they do not think of the future or
+of the past, nor think much at all. As far as life and growth goes it is
+a hold-up!
+
+There is really not much to hope for; the leave is so short, the
+home-life so disrupted that it cannot be taken up with content. Perhaps
+it isn't possible to let one's thoughts play round a life about which
+one can make no plans.
+
+They are adaptable, living for the minute--their present hope for the
+cup of tea, for the visiting day, for the concert; their future hope for
+the drying of the wound, for the day when the Sister's fingers may
+press, but no drop be wrung from the long scar.
+
+Isn't it curious to wish so passionately for the day which may place
+them near to death again?
+
+But the longing for health is a simple instinct, undarkened by logic.
+
+
+Yet some of them have plans. Scutts has plans.
+
+For a fortnight now he has watched for the post. "Parcel come for me,
+Sister? Small parcel?"
+
+Or he will meet the postman in the corridor. "Got my eye yet?" he asks.
+
+"What will it be like, Scutts?" we ask. "Can you move it? Can you sleep
+in it? Did he match your other carefully?"
+
+"You'll see," he says confidently. "It's grand."
+
+"When I get my eye...." he says, almost with the same longing with
+which he says "When I get into civies...."
+
+Scutts is not one of those whose life is stopped; he has made plans.
+"When I get into civies and walk out of here...." His plans for six
+months' holiday "are all writ down in me notebook."
+
+"But what shall you do, Scutts? Go to London?"
+
+"London!... No towns fer me!"
+
+He will not tell us what he is going to do. Secretly I believe it is
+something he wanted to do as a boy but thought himself a fool to carry
+out when he was a man: perhaps it is a sort of walking tour.
+
+Among his eleven wounds he has two crippled arms. "I'm safe enough from
+death," he says (meaning France), "till it fetches me in a proper way."
+
+Perhaps he means to live as though life were really a respite from
+death.
+
+
+I had a day on the river yesterday.
+
+"_I_ seed yer with yer bit of erdy-furdy roun' yer neck an' yer little
+attachy-case," said Pinker.
+
+"A nurse's life is one roun' of pleasure," said Pinker to the ward.
+
+We had two operations yesterday--one on a sergeant who has won the
+D.C.M. and has a certificate written in gold which hangs above his bed,
+telling of his courage and of one particular deed; the other on a Welsh
+private.
+
+I wonder what the sergeant was like before he won his D.C.M....
+
+There is something unreal about him; he is like a stage hero. He has a
+way of saying, "Now, my men, who is going to volunteer to fetch the
+dinners?" which is like an invitation to go over the top.
+
+The men gape when he says that, then go on with their cards. It is like
+a joke.
+
+Before his operation he was full of partially concealed boastings as to
+how he would bear it, how he would "come to" saying, "Let me get up! I
+can walk...."
+
+I felt a sneaking wish that he should be undone and show unusual
+weakness.
+
+When the moment came he did as he had said he would do--he laughed and
+waved good-bye as he was wheeled away; and in the afternoon when I came
+on duty I found him lying in his bed, conscious, looking brown and
+strong and unconcerned.
+
+But he can't let well alone....
+
+As I passed up the ward to the bedside of the Welsh private I was
+called by the sergeant, and when I stood by his bed he whispered, "Is
+that chap making a fuss over there?"
+
+"Evan?"
+
+"Chap as has had an operation the same as me...."
+
+"He's very bad."
+
+"You don't find me making a fuss and my leg isn't half giving me
+something."
+
+"We're not all alike, sergeant."
+
+"Why should one make a fuss and another say nothing?"
+
+"Is your leg hurting you a lot?"
+
+"Yes, it is," and he screwed up his face into a grimace.
+
+After all, he was a child. "Try to go to sleep," I said, knowing that it
+was his jealousy that was hurting him most.
+
+I went to Evan.
+
+He could do nothing with his pain, but in its tightest embraces, and
+crying, he lay with his large red handkerchief over his eyes.
+
+"Oh, Evan...!" I said. I couldn't do anything either.
+
+"Oh dear, dear, dear, dear, dear...." he wailed in his plaintive Welsh
+voice. "Oh, my dear leg, my poor leg...." He looked about nineteen.
+"Couldn't I lie on my side?"
+
+"No, it would make it bleed."
+
+"Would it?" He was so docile and so unhappy. The tears had run down and
+marked his pillow; I turned it, although the sergeant couldn't see.
+
+"Will they give me something to make me sleep to-night?"
+
+"Yes, Evan, at eight o'clock."
+
+I said that because I was so sure of it, I had always seen it done. But
+oh, I should have made more sure...!
+
+He built on it, he leant all his hopes upon it; his little clenched
+hands seemed to be holding my promise as firmly as though it had been my
+hand.
+
+And Sister said, "No, no ... it would be better not." "Oh, Sister, why
+not...?" (I, the least of mortals, had made a promise belonging only to
+the gods....)
+
+"Oh, Sister, why not?"
+
+Her reason was a good one: "He will want it more later in the night, and
+he can't have it twice."
+
+I ran back to tell him so quickly--but one can't run back into the past.
+
+
+It is wonderful to talk to men affectionately without exciting or
+implying love. The Utopian dreams of sixteen seem almost to be realized!
+
+When I sew splints they come and talk to me. Scutts will sometimes talk
+for an hour. At first I was so proud that I dared hardly stir a finger
+for fear that I should frighten him away; now I am more sure of him. He
+never says "What?" to me, nor any longer jumps when I speak to him as
+though my every word must carry some command. When I sew splints and
+listen to Scutts or the old Scotch grocer or Monk--that squinting child
+of whom Pinker said, "Monk got a girl! He don' know what a girl is!"--I
+think, "We cannot all be efficient, but ... this serves some end."
+
+For they are complaining that I am not efficient. At first it hurt my
+pride; but it depends upon the point of view. Does one go into a ward
+primarily to help the patients or to help the Sister? It is not always
+the same thing, but one must not question discipline....
+
+To-day nine of the patients "went convalescent." They departed, hobbling
+and on stretchers, at two o'clock, with bursts of song, plastered hair,
+bright buttons, and not a regret. "You'll be able to hear a pin fall
+to-night, nurse," said one of them.
+
+"I know we shall. And a tear too," I added.
+
+But they won't listen to any such nonsense. They are going off to the
+little convalescent hospitals, they are going away to be treated like
+men; and I must laugh and shake hands and not dream of adding, "Perhaps
+we shall see you back again."
+
+"No more route-marching...!" was the last cry I heard from the Nine.
+
+How they hate route-marching--especially the City men, most especially
+Pinker! "March down the silly road," he grumbles, "sit on the silly
+grass and get heat-bumps."
+
+
+Sometimes I think that sewing splints will be my undoing. If I listen
+much longer I shall see crooked.
+
+
+To-day they had some small bottles of stout to help us say good-bye to
+the Nine.
+
+Happiness is cheap. Last night at dinner a man said as he refilled his
+glass with champagne, "It makes me sad to think how much happiness there
+is in a bottle...."
+
+
+The attack has begun.
+
+"At 3.15 this morning ... on a front of two miles...."
+
+So that is why the ward is so empty and the ambulances have been
+hurrying out of the yard all day. We shall get that convoy for which I
+longed.
+
+When the ward is empty and there is, as now, so little work to do, how
+we, the women, watch each other over the heads of the men! And because
+we do not care to watch, nor are much satisfied with what we see, we
+want more work. At what a price we shall get it....
+
+Scutts and Monk talk to me while I sew, but what about the Monks,
+Scutts, Gayners, whose wounds will never need a dressing or a tube--who
+lie along a front of two miles, one on his face, another on his back?
+
+Since 3.15 this morning a lot of men have died. Thank God one cannot go
+on realizing death.
+
+But one need not think of it. This is a ward; here are lucky ones. Even
+when I look at Rees, even when I look at the grocer, even when I look at
+the T.B. ward, I know that anything, _anything_ is better than death.
+But I have known a man here and there who did not think so--and these
+men, close on death it is true, were like strangers in the ward.
+
+For one can be close on death and remain familiar, friendly,
+comprehensible.
+
+I used to think, "It is awful to die." But who knows what compliance the
+years will bring? What is awful is to die _young_.
+
+
+A new V.A.D. came into the ward yesterday--a girl straight from home,
+who has never been in a hospital before.
+
+Rees told me, "She turned her head away when she saw me arm."
+
+"I did once, Rees."
+
+He looked down at the almost unrecognizable twelve inches which we call
+"Rees's wound," and considered how this red inch had paled and the lips
+of that incision were drawing together. "'Tisn' no more me arm," he said
+at length, "than...." he paused for a simile. "'Tisn' me arm, it's me
+wound," he finally explained.
+
+His arm is stretched out at right angles from his bed in an iron cradle,
+and has been for six months.
+
+"Last night," he said, "I felt me arm layin' down by me side, an' I felt
+the fingers an' tried to scratch me knee. It's a feeling that's bin
+comin' on for some time, but last night it seemed real."
+
+The pain of the dressing forces Rees's reason to lay some claim to his
+arm, but when it ceases to hurt him he detaches himself from it to such
+a point that the ghost-arm familiar to all amputations has arrived, as
+it were, by mistake.
+
+The new V.A.D. doesn't talk much at present, being shy, but to-night I
+can believe she will write in her diary as I wrote in mine: "My feet
+ache, ache, ache...." Add to that that she is hungry because she hasn't
+yet learnt how to break the long stretches with hurried gnawings behind
+a door, that she is sick because the philosophy of Rees is not yet her
+philosophy, that her hands and feet grow cold and her body turns to warm
+milk, that she longs so to sit on a bed that she can almost visualize
+the depression her body would make on its counterpane, and I get a
+glimpse of the passage of time and of the effect of custom.
+
+With me the sickness and the hunger and the ache are barely remembered.
+It makes me wonder what else is left behind.... The old battle is again
+in my mind--the struggle to feel pain, to repel the invading
+familiarity.
+
+Here they come!
+
+One convoy last night and another this morning. There is one great burly
+man, a sort of bear, whose dried blood has squeezed through bandages
+applied in seven places, and who for all that mumbles "I'm well" if one
+asks him how he feels.
+
+Long before those wounds are healed he will diagnose himself better than
+that!
+
+"I'm well...." That's to say: "I'm alive, and I have reached this bed,
+and this bit of meat, and this pudding in a tin!" He answers by his
+standards.
+
+But in a few days he will think, "I am alive, but I might be better...";
+and in a few weeks, "Is this, after all, happiness?"
+
+How they sleep, the convoy men! Watching their wounds as we dress them,
+almost with a grave pleasure--the passports to this wonderful sleep.
+
+Then when the last safety-pin is in they lie back without making
+themselves in the least comfortable, without drawing up a sheet or
+turning once upon the pillow, and sleep just as the head falls.
+
+
+How little women can stand! Even the convoy cannot mend the pains of the
+new V.A.D. I dare not speak to her: she seems, poor camel, to be
+waiting for the last straw.
+
+
+But when we wash the bowls together we must talk. She and I together
+this morning washed and scrubbed, rinsed, dried, and piled basins into
+little heaps, and while we washed we examined each other.
+
+She is a born slave; in fact, I almost think she is born to be tortured.
+Her manner with the Sisters invites and entices them to "put upon" her.
+Her spiritual back is already covered with sores.
+
+I suppose she is hungry for sympathy, but it isn't really a case in
+which sympathy can do as much as custom. I showed her the white
+butterflies, without supposing them to be very solid food.
+
+She reminds me of the man of whom the Sister said, "He must stick it
+out." I might have pointed to the convoy and suggested comparisons; but
+one cannot rub a sore back.
+
+
+Some one has applied the last straw in the night.
+
+When I came on duty a brisk little war-hardened V.A.D. was brushing a
+pile of dust along the long boards to the door. The poor camel whose
+back is broken is as though she had never existed; either she is ill or
+she is banished.
+
+Such is the secret diplomacy of these establishments that nothing is
+known of her except her disappearance--at least among those whom one can
+ask. Matron knows, Sister knows.... But these are the inscrutable,
+smiling gods.
+
+
+There is only one man in the ward I don't much care for--a tall boy with
+a lock of fair hair and broken teeth. He was a sullen boy whose bad
+temper made his mouth repulsive. I say "was," for he is different now.
+
+Now he is feeble, gentle, grateful, and he smiles as often as one looks
+at him.
+
+Yesterday he went for his operation in the morning, and in the afternoon
+when I came on duty he was stirring and beginning to groan. Sister told
+me to sit beside him.
+
+I went up to the little room of screens in which he lay, and taking a
+wooden chair, I slipped it in between the screen and the bed and sat
+down.
+
+Is it the ether which rushes up from between his broken teeth?--is it
+the red glare of the turkey-twill screens?--but in ten minutes I am
+altered, mesmerized. Even the size of my surroundings is changed. The
+screens, high enough to blot out a man's head, are high enough to blot
+out the world. The narrow bed becomes a field of whiteness. The naked
+arm stretched towards me is more wonderful than any that could have
+belonged to a boy with dirty fair hair and broken teeth; it has
+sea-green veins rising along it, and the bright hairs are more silver
+than golden.
+
+The life of the ward goes on, the clatter of cups for supper, the
+shuffling of feet clad in loose carpet-slippers, but here within he and
+I are living together a concentrated life.
+
+"Oh, me back!"
+
+"I know, I know...."
+
+Do I know? I am getting to know. For while the men are drinking their
+cocoa I am drinking ether. I know how the waves of the pain come up and
+recede; how a little sleep just brushes the spirit, but never absorbs
+it; how the arms will struggle up to the air, only to be covered and
+enmeshed again in heat and blankets.
+
+"Was it in me lung?" (He pronounces the "g"--a Lancashire boy....)
+
+"The shrapnel?"
+
+He nods. I hold up the piece of metal which has lain buried in him these
+past three weeks. It has the number 20 engraved on it. That satisfies
+him. The blood which has come from between his lips is in a bowl placed
+too high for him to see.
+
+Through the crack in the screens the man in the bed opposite watches us
+unwinkingly.
+
+Eight o'clock.... Here is Sister with the syringe: he will sleep now and
+I can go home.
+
+If one did not forget the hospital when one leaves it, life wouldn't be
+very nice.
+
+
+From pillar to post....
+
+The dairyman, who has been gone to another hospital these five weeks,
+returned to-day, saying miserably as he walked into the ward, "Me 'ead's
+queerer than ever." His eyes, I think, are larger too, and he has still
+that manner of looking as though he thought some one could do something
+for him.
+
+I can't--beyond raising the smallest of tablets to him with the
+inscription, "Another farthing spent...."
+
+
+Waker had a birthday yesterday and got ten post cards and a telegram.
+But that is as nothing to another anniversary.
+
+"A year to-morrow I got my wound--two o'clock to-morrow morning."
+
+"Shall you be awake, Waker?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+How will he celebrate it? I would give a lot to know what will pass in
+his mind. For I don't yet understand this importance they attach to such
+an anniversary. One and all, they know the exact hour and minute on
+which their bit of metal turned them for home.
+
+Sometimes a man will whisper, "Nurse...." as I go by the bed; and when I
+stop I hear, "In ten minutes it will be a twelvemonth!" and he fixes his
+eyes on me.
+
+What does he want me to respond? I don't know whether I should be glad
+or sorry that he got it. I can't imagine what he thinks of as the minute
+ticks. For I can see by his words that the scene is blurred and no
+longer brings back any picture. "Did you crawl back or walk?"
+
+"I ... walked." He is hardly sure.
+
+I know that for some of them, for Waker, that moment at two o'clock in
+the morning changed his whole career. From that moment his arm was
+paralysed, the nerves severed; from that moment football was off, and
+with it his particular ambition. And football, governing a kingdom, or
+painting a picture--a man's ambition is his ambition, and when it is
+wiped out his life is changed.
+
+But he knows all that, he has had time to think of all that. What,
+then, does this particular minute bring him?
+
+They think I know; for when they tell me in that earnest voice that the
+minute is approaching they take for granted that I too will share some
+sacrament with them.
+
+
+Waker is not everything a man should be: he isn't clever. But he is so
+very brave.
+
+After his tenth operation two days ago there was a question as to
+whether he should have his pluggings changed under gas or not. The
+discussion went on between the doctors over his bed.
+
+But the anaesthetist couldn't be found.
+
+He didn't take any part in the discussion such as saying, "Yes, I will
+stand it...." but waited with interest showing on his bony face, and
+when they glanced down at him and said, "Let's get it through now!" he
+rolled over to undo his safety-pin that I might take off his sling.
+
+It was all very fine for the theatre people to fill his shoulder
+chockful of pluggings while he lay unconscious on the table; they had
+packed it as you might stuff linen into a bag: it was another matter to
+get it out.
+
+I did not dare touch his hand with that too-easy compassion which I
+have noticed here, or whisper to him "It's nearly over...." as the
+forceps pulled at the stiffened gauze. It wasn't nearly over.
+
+Six inches deep the gauze stuck, crackling under the pull of the
+forceps, blood and puss leaping forward from the cavities as the steady
+hand of the doctor pulled inch after inch of the gauze to the light. And
+when one hole was emptied there was another, five in all.
+
+Sometimes, when your mind has a grip like iron, your stomach will undo
+you; sometimes, when you could say "To-day is Tuesday, the fifth of
+August," you faint. There are so many parts of the body to look after,
+one of the flock may slip your control while you are holding the other
+by the neck. But Waker had his whole being in his hands, without so much
+as clenching them.
+
+When we had finished and Sister told me to wipe the sweat on his
+forehead, I did so reluctantly, as though one were being too exacting in
+drawing attention to so small a sign.
+
+
+I must say that the dairyman seems to me quite mad, and I only wonder
+how little it is noticed. He will sit in a chair beside Palmer for
+hours, raising and lowering his eyebrows and fitting imaginary gloves on
+to his fingers.
+
+An inspecting general, pausing at his bed this morning, said: "A
+dairyman, are you? Frightened of horses, are you? Then what do you do
+about the cows?"
+
+He was pleased with his own joke, and the dairyman smiled too,
+uncomprehendingly, his eyebrows shooting up and down like swallows'
+wings. Such jokes mean nothing to him; he is where no joke but his own
+will ever please him any more....
+
+Palmer doesn't like sitting near him, but since it is too much trouble
+to move he allows it--poor Palmer, who has a piece of metal somewhere in
+his brain and is never seen without one long hand to his aching head. He
+said to me yesterday when I asked him which convalescent home he was
+going to, "It doesn't matter. We both go to the same kind before
+long...." jerking his thumb at the dairyman. As for the latter, there
+surely can be no escape, but for Palmer....
+
+"They won't take it out; too risky. Seen my X-ray picture?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You look at it. Right in the middle of the brain. Seems funny that if
+I say I'm willing to risk it, why they shouldn't be."
+
+"You're willing to risk it?"
+
+"I'm only nineteen! What's the good of my head to me! I can't remember
+the name of the last hospital I was at...."
+
+Ah, these hurried conversations sandwiched between my duties, when in
+four sentences the distilled essence of bitterness is dropped into my
+ear!
+
+
+"Sister, what will they do with Palmer?"
+
+"They are going to discharge him. They won't operate."
+
+"But what will happen to him?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"But if he is willing to risk his life to save his brain, can they still
+refuse?"
+
+"They won't operate."
+
+
+Pinker is full of grains of knowledge. He has just discovered a
+wonderful justification for not getting up directly he is told off for a
+job.
+
+"I never refuse a nurse," he said, as he thoughtfully picked over the
+potatoes ("Li'l men, li'l spuds!" he says, to excuse himself for taking
+all the sought-after small ones).... "I never refuse a nurse. But I like
+to finish me game of draughts first--like Drake."
+
+Pinker notices everything. He took the grocer for a ride on the tram
+yesterday. "'E got so excited he got singing 'Tipperary,' an' the
+blood-vessels on his neck goin' fit to burst. Weren't he, Bill?"
+
+He appealed to Monk, whose name is George.
+
+(By the way, I wonder when people will stop calling them "Tommy" and
+call them "Bill." I never heard the word "Tommy" in a soldier's mouth:
+he was a red-coated man. "But every mate's called 'Bill,' ain't 'e,
+Bill?")
+
+
+From the camp across the road the words of command float in through the
+ward window.
+
+"Halt!" and "Left wheel!" and "Right wheel!..."
+
+They float into the ward bearing the sense of heat and dust, and of the
+bumping of the saddle. The dairyman has perhaps put me a bit against the
+camp across the road.
+
+When the dressings are finished and we scrub the enamel bowls in the
+annexe, one can see all the dairymen and all the plumbers, _chefs_ and
+shopwalkers bumping up and down in a ring amid a cloud of dust, while
+the voice of the sergeant cries out those things that my dairyman used
+to think of in his sleep.
+
+Then the jumps go up. "Left wheel!" "Right wheel!..." And now, "Cross
+your stirrups!" One out of every four of them is clinging, grabbing,
+swaying.
+
+The seventh is off! It was a long fight.... He went almost round the
+horse's neck before he fell.
+
+
+We must win the war, win the war, win the war!
+
+Every sort of price must be paid, every Mud of curious coinage--the
+pennies and farthings of fear and despair in odd places, as well as the
+golden coin of life which is spent across the water.
+
+
+All day long the words of command come over the ward window-sills. All
+day long they bump and shout and sweat and play that charade of theirs
+behind the guns.
+
+All day long little men training to fill just such another hospital as
+ours with other little men.
+
+But one does not say any longer, "What a strange thing is life!" for
+only in rare moments does the divine astonishment return.
+
+
+PRINTED AT THE COMPLETE PRESS
+WEST NORWOOD
+LONDON
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Diary Without Dates, by Enid Bagnold
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