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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65762 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65762)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Florence Nightingale, by Annie Matheson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Florence Nightingale
- A Biography
-
-Author: Annie Matheson
-
-Release Date: July 4, 2021 [eBook #65762]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Brian Coe and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Florence Nightingale.
-
-(_From a model of the statue by A. G. Walker. By kind permission of the
-Sculptor._)]
-
-
-
-
- FLORENCE
- NIGHTINGALE
-
- A BIOGRAPHY
-
- BY
- ANNIE MATHESON
- AUTHOR OF
- “THE STORY OF A BRAVE CHILD (JOAN OF ARC)”
-
- THOMAS NELSON AND SONS
- LONDON, EDINBURGH, DUBLIN, AND NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “The Lady with the Lamp.”
-
-(_From the statuette in the Nightingale Home._)]
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-It is hardly necessary to say that this little biography is based
-mainly upon the work of others, though I hope and believe it is honest
-enough to have an individuality of its own and it has certainly cost
-endless individual labour and anxiety. Few tasks in literature are in
-practice more worrying than the responsibility of “piecing together”
-other people’s fragments, and “the great unknown” who in reviewing my
-“Leaves of Prose” thought I had found an easy way of turning myself into
-respectable cement for a tessellated pavement made of other people’s
-chipped marble, was evidently a stranger to my particular temperament.
-Where I have been free to express myself without regard to others, to use
-only my own language, and utter only my own views, I have had something
-of the feeling of a child out for a holiday, and of course the greater
-part of the book is in my own words. But I have often, for obvious
-reasons, chosen the humbler task, because, wherever it is possible, it
-is good that my readers should have their impressions at first hand, and
-in regard to Kinglake especially, from whose non-copyright volumes I
-have given many a page, his masculine tribute to Miss Nightingale is of
-infinitely more value than any words which could come from me.
-
-My publisher has kindly allowed me to leave many questions of copyright
-to him, but I wish, not the less—rather the more—to thank all those
-authors and publishers who have permitted use of their material and whose
-names will, in many instances, be found incorporated in the text or in
-the accompanying footnotes. I have not thought it necessary in every
-instance to give a reference to volume and page, though occasionally, for
-some special reason of my own, I have done so.
-
-Of those in closest touch with Miss Nightingale during her lifetime,
-whose help with original material has been invaluable, not more than
-one can be thanked by name. But to Mrs. Tooley for her large-hearted
-generosity with regard to her own admirable biography—to which I owe far
-more than the mere quotations so kindly permitted, and in most cases so
-clearly acknowledged in the text—it is a great pleasure to express my
-thanksgiving publicly.
-
-There are many others who have helped me, and not once with regard to
-the little sketch have I met with any unkindness or rebuff. Indeed, so
-various are the acknowledgments due, and so sincere the gratitude I feel,
-that I scarcely know where to begin.
-
-To Miss Rickards, for the pages from her beautiful life of Felicia
-Skene, I wish to record heartfelt thanks; and also to Messrs. Burns
-and Oates with regard to lengthy quotations from the letters of Sister
-Aloysius—a deeply interesting little volume published by them in 1904,
-under the title of “A Sister of Mercy’s Memories of the Crimea;” to Dr.
-Hagberg Wright of the London Library for the prolonged loan of a whole
-library of books of reference and the help always accessible to his
-subscribers; and to the librarian of the Derby Free Library for aid in
-verifying pedigree. Also to Lord Stanmore for his generous permission to
-use long extracts from his father’s “Life of Lord Herbert,” from which
-more than one valuable letter has been taken; and to Mr. John Murray for
-sanctioning this and for like privileges in relation to the lives of
-Sir John MacNeill and Sir Bartle Frere. To Messrs. William Blackwood,
-Messrs. Cassell, Messrs. G. P. Putnam and Sons, as well as to the editors
-and publishers of the _Times_, _Daily Telegraph_, _Morning Post_, and
-_Evening News_, I wish to add my thanks to those of my publisher.
-
-To any reader of this book it will be clear how great a debt I owe to
-General Evatt, and he knows, I think, how sincerely I recognize it. Mr.
-Stephen Paget, the writer of the article on Miss Nightingale in the
-Dictionary of National Biography, has not only permitted me to quote from
-that—a privilege for which I must also thank Messrs. Smith Elder, and Sir
-Sidney Lee—but has, in addition, put me in the way of other priceless
-material wherewith to do honour to the subject of this biography. I
-have long been grateful to him for the inspiration and charm of his own
-“Confessio Medici”—there is now this other obligation to add to that.
-
-Nor can I forgo cordial acknowledgments to the writer and also the
-publisher of the charming sketch of Miss Nightingale’s Life published
-some years ago by the Pilgrim Press and entitled “The Story of Florence
-Nightingale.”
-
-To my friend Dr. Lewis N. Chase I owe the rare privilege of an
-introduction to Mr. Walker, the sculptor, who has so graciously permitted
-for my frontispiece a reproduction of the statue he has just completed as
-a part of our national memorial to Miss Nightingale.
-
-I desire to thank Miss Rosalind Paget for directing me to sources of
-information and bestowing on me treasures of time and of memory, as well
-as Miss Eleanor F. Rathbone and the writer of Sir John MacNeill’s Life
-for help given by their books, and Miss Marion Holmes for permission to
-quote from her inspiring monograph; and last, but by no means least, to
-express my sense of the self-sacrificing magnanimity with which Miss
-E. Brierly, the present editor of _Nursing Notes_, at once offered me
-and placed in my hands—what I should never have dreamed of asking,
-even had I been a friend of old standing, instead of a comparative
-stranger—everything she herself had gathered together and preserved as
-bearing on the life of Florence Nightingale.
-
-When, under the influence of certain articles in the _Times_, I
-undertook to write this volume for Messrs. Nelson, I knew nothing of the
-other biographies in the field. Nor had I any idea that an officially
-authorized life was about to be written by Sir Edward Cook, a biographer
-with an intellectual equipment far beyond my own, but who will not
-perhaps grudge me the name of friend, since his courteous considerateness
-for all leads many others to make a like claim, and the knowledge that
-he would put no obstacle in my path has spared me what might have been
-a serious difficulty. Had I known all this, a decent modesty might have
-prevented my undertaking. But in every direction unforeseen help has been
-showered upon me, and nothing but my own inexorable limitations have
-stood in my way.
-
-If there be any who, by their books, or in any other way, have helped me,
-but whom by some unhappy oversight I have omitted to name in these brief
-documentary thanks, I must earnestly beg them to believe that such an
-error is contrary to my intention and goodwill.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- Introductory Chapter 15
-
- I. Florence Nightingale: her home, her birthplace, and her
- family 25
-
- II. Life at Lea Hurst and Embley 41
-
- III. The weaving of many threads, both of evil and of good 55
-
- IV. The activities of girlhood—Elizabeth Fry—Felicia Skene
- again 62
-
- V. Home duties and pleasures—The brewing of war 71
-
- VI. Pastor Fliedner 90
-
- VII. Years of preparation 101
-
- VIII. The beginning of the war—A sketch of Sidney Herbert 117
-
- IX. The Crimean muddle—Explanations and excuses 134
-
- X. “Five were wise, and five foolish” 142
-
- XI. The expedition 162
-
- XII. The tribute of Kinglake and Macdonald and the Chelsea
- Pensioners 172
-
- XIII. The horrors of Scutari—The victory of the Lady-in-Chief—The
- Queen’s letter—Her gift of butter and treacle 200
-
- XIV. Letters from Scutari—Kinglake on Miss Nightingale and her
- dynasty—The refusal of a new contingent 216
-
- XV. The busy nursing hive—M. Soyer and his memories—Miss
- Nightingale’s complete triumph over prejudice—The
- memories of Sister Aloysius 235
-
- XVI. Inexactitudes—Labels—Cholera—“The Lady with the Lamp”—Her
- humour—Letters of Sister Aloysius 247
-
- XVII. Miss Nightingale visits Balaclava—Her illness—Lord
- Raglan’s visit—The Fall of Sebastopol 261
-
- XVIII. The Nightingale Fund—Miss Nightingale remains at her
- post, organizing healthy occupations for the men off
- duty—Sisters of Mercy—The Queen’s jewel—Its meaning 274
-
- XIX. Her citizenship—Her initiative—Public recognition and
- gratitude—Her return incognito—Village excitement—The
- country’s welcome—Miss Nightingale’s broken health—The
- Nightingale Fund—St. Thomas’s Hospital—Reform of
- nursing as a profession 292
-
- XX. William Rathbone—Agnes Jones—Infirmaries—Nursing in
- the homes of the poor—Municipal work—Homely power
- of Miss Nightingale’s writings—Lord Herbert’s death 312
-
- XXI. Multifarious work and many honours—Jubilee Nurses—Nursing
- Association—Death of father and mother—Lady Verney and
- her husband—No respecter of persons—From within four
- walls—South Africa and America 331
-
- XXII. India—Correspondence with Sir Bartle Frere—Interest
- in village girls—The Lamp 346
-
- XXIII. A brief summing up 360
-
- APPENDIX 367
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Statue of Florence Nightingale by A. G. Walker _Frontispiece_
-
- “The Lady with the Lamp.” Statuette _Facing p._ 8
-
- Embley Park, Romsey, Hants ” 16
-
- Florence Nightingale’s Father ” 32
-
- Florence Nightingale (after Augustus Egg, R.A.) ” 88
-
- Florence Nightingale in 1854 ” 112
-
- At the Therapia Hospital ” 176
-
- At Scutari ” 192
-
- Miss Nightingale’s Medals and Decorations ” 280
-
- The Nightingale Nursing Carriage ” 296
-
- At the Herbert Hospital, Woolwich ” 304
-
- A Letter from Miss Nightingale ” 320
-
- Miss Nightingale’s London House ” 344
-
- Florence Nightingale in her Last Days ” 352
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER FOR THE ELDERS IN MY AUDIENCE.
-
-
-It is my hope that my younger readers may find this volume all the
-more to their liking if it is not without interest to people of my own
-generation. Girls and boys of fourteen to sixteen are already on the
-threshold of manhood and womanhood, but even of children I am sure it
-is true that they hate to be “written down to,” since they are eagerly
-drinking in hopes and ideas which they cannot always put into words, and
-to such hopes and ideas they give eager sympathy of heart and curiosity
-of mind.
-
-[Illustration: Florence Nightingale’s Home, Embley Park, Romsey, Hants.]
-
-For one of her St. Thomas’s nurses, among the first nine women to be
-decorated with the Red Cross, the heroine of this story wrote what might
-well be the marching orders of many a good soldier in the divine army,
-and not least, perhaps, of those boy scouts and girl guides who would
-like better a life of adventure than the discipline of a big school or
-the “duties enough and little cares” of a luxurious home; and as the
-words have not, so far as I am aware, appeared in print before, it may be
-worth while to give them here:—
-
- “Soldiers,” she wrote, “must obey orders. And to you the
- ‘roughing’ it has been the resigning yourself to ‘comforts’
- which you detested and to work which you did not want, while
- the work which wanted you was within reach. A severe kind
- of ‘roughing’ indeed—perhaps the severest, as I know by sad
- experience.
-
- “But it will not last. This short war is not life. But all will
- depend—your possible future in the work, we pray for you, O my
- Cape of Good Hope—upon the name you gain here. That name I know
- will be of one who obeys authority, however unreasonable, in
- the name of Him who is above all, and who is Reason itself—of
- one who submits to disagreeables, however unjust, for the
- work’s sake and for His who tells us to love those we don’t
- like—a precept I follow oh so badly—of one who never criticizes
- so that it can even be guessed at that she has criticism in her
- heart—and who helps her companions to submit by her own noble
- example....
-
- “I have sometimes found in my life that the very hindrances
- I had been deploring were there expressly to fit me for
- the next step in my life. (This was the case—hindrances of
- _years_—before the Crimean War.)” And elsewhere she writes: “To
- have secured for you all the _circumstances_ we wished for your
- work, I would gladly have given my life. But you are made to
- rise above circumstances; perhaps this is God’s way—His ways
- are not as our ways—of preparing you for the great work which I
- am persuaded He has in store for you some day.”
-
-It is touching to find her adding in parenthesis that before her own work
-was given to her by the Great Unseen Commander, she had ten years of
-contradictions and disappointments, and adding, as if with a sigh from
-the heart, “And oh, how badly I did it!”
-
-There we have the humility of true greatness. All her work was amazing
-in its fruitfulness, but those who knew her best feel sometimes that the
-part of her work which was greatest of all and will endure longest is
-just the part of which most people know least. I mean her great labour
-of love for India, which I cannot doubt has already saved the lives of
-millions, and will in the future save the health and working power of
-millions more.
-
-Florence Nightingale would have enriched our calendar of uncanonized
-saints even if her disciplined high-hearted goodness had exercised an
-unseen spell by simply _being_, and had, by some limitation of body or
-of circumstance, been cut off from much active _doing_: for so loving
-and obedient a human will, looking ever to the Highest, as a handmaiden
-watches the eyes of her mistress, is always and everywhere a humane
-influence and a divine offering. But in her life—a light set on a
-hill—being and doing went hand in hand in twofold beauty and strength,
-for even through those years when she lay on her bed, a secluded
-prisoner, her activities were world-wide.
-
-In addition to the work for which she is most widely revered and loved,
-Miss Nightingale did three things—each leaving a golden imprint upon the
-history of our time:—
-
-She broke down a “Chinese wall” of prejudice with regard to the
-occupations of women, and opened up a new and delightful sphere of hard,
-but congenial, work for girls.
-
-She helped to reconstruct, on the lines of feminine common sense,
-the hygiene and the transport service of our army—yes, of the entire
-imperial army, for what is a success in one branch of our dominions
-cannot permanently remain unaccepted by the rest. And in all her work for
-our army she had, up to the time of his death, unbounded help from her
-friend, Lord Herbert.
-
-Last, and perhaps greatest of all, she initiated, with the help of Sir
-Bartle Frere, Sir John Lawrence, and other enlightened men of her time,
-the reform of insanitary and death-dealing neglect throughout the length
-and breadth of India, thus saving countless lives, not only from death,
-but from what is far worse—a maimed or invalid existence of lowered
-vitality and lessened mental powers.
-
-One of her friends, himself a great army doctor holding a high official
-position, has repeatedly spoken of her to me as the supreme embodiment
-of citizenship. She did indeed exemplify what Ruskin so nobly expressed
-in his essay on “Queens’ Gardens”—the fact that, while men and women
-differ profoundly and essentially, and life would lose in beauty if they
-did not, the state has need of them both; for what the woman should be
-at her own hearth, the guardian of order, of health, of beauty, and of
-love, that also should she be at that wider imperial hearth where there
-are children to be educated, soldiers to be equipped, wounded lives to be
-tended, and the health of this and future generations to be diligently
-guarded.
-
-“Think,” she said once to one of her nurses, “less of what you may
-gain than of what you may give.” Herself, she gave royally—gave her
-fortune, her life, her soul’s treasure. I read in a recent contemporary
-of high standing a review which ended with what seemed to me a very
-heathen sentence, which stamped itself on my memory by its arrogant
-narrowness. “Woman,” wrote the reviewer, “is always either frustrate
-or absorbed;” and there leaped to my heart the exclamation, “Here in
-Florence Nightingale is the answer; for in her we have one, known and
-read of all men, who was neither the one nor the other.” That there was
-supreme renunciation in her life, none who is born to womanhood can
-doubt; for where could there be any who would have been more superbly
-fitted for what she herself regarded as the natural lot of woman as wife
-and mother? But she, brilliant, beautiful, and worshipped, was called
-to a more difficult and lonely path, and if there was hidden suffering,
-it did but make her service of mankind the more untiring, her practical
-and keen-edged intellect the more active in good work, her tenderness to
-pain and humility of self-effacement the more beautiful and just.
-
-It has been said, and said truly, that she did not suffer fools gladly,
-and she knew well how very human she was in this and in other ways, as
-far removed from a cold and statuesque faultlessness as are all ardent,
-swift, loving natures here on earth. But her words were words of wisdom
-when she wrote to one dear to her whom she playfully named “her Cape of
-Good Hope”: “Let us be persecuted for righteousness’ sake, _but not for
-unrighteousness_.”
-
-The italics are mine, because in their warning they seem so singularly
-timely. And the entire sentence is completely in tune with that fine note
-with which she ends one of her delightful volumes on nursing—
-
-“I would earnestly ask my sisters to keep clear of both the jargons
-now current everywhere (for they are equally jargons): of the jargon,
-namely, about the ‘rights’ of women which urges women to do all that men
-do, including the medical and other professions, merely because men do
-it, and without regard to whether this _is_ the best that women can do;
-and of the jargon which urges women to do nothing that men do, merely
-because they are women, and should be ‘recalled to a sense of their duty
-as women,’ and because ‘this is women’s work,’ and ‘that is men’s,’ and
-‘these are things which women should not do,’ which is all assertion and
-nothing more. Surely woman should bring the best she has, _whatever_ that
-is, to the work of God’s world, without attending to either of these
-cries. For what are they, both of them, the one _just_ as much as the
-other, but listening to the ‘what people will say,’ to opinion, to the
-‘voices from without’? And as a wise man has said, no one has ever done
-anything great or useful by listening to the voices from without.
-
-“You do not want the effect of your good things to be, ‘How wonderful
-for a _woman_!’ nor would you be deterred from good things by hearing
-it said, ‘Yes, but she ought not to have done this, because it is not
-suitable for a woman.’ But you want to do the thing that is good,
-whether it is ‘suitable for a woman,’ or not.
-
-“It does not make a thing good, that it is remarkable that a woman should
-have been able to do it. Neither does it make a thing bad, which would
-have been good had a man done it, that it has been done by a woman.
-
-“Oh, leave these jargons, and go your way straight to God’s work, in
-simplicity and singleness of heart.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
- _Florence Nightingale: her home, her birthplace, and her
- family._
-
-
-In the heart of Derbyshire there is a quaint old church, once a private
-chapel, and possessing, instead of a churchyard, a bit of quiet
-greenness, of which the chief ornament, besides the old yew tree at the
-church door, is a kind of lovers’ bower made by two ancient elder trees
-which have so intertwined their branches as to form an arbour, where in
-summer-time sweethearts can gossip and the children play. It belonged to
-a world far away from the world of to-day, when, in the high-backed pews
-reserved for the “quality,” little Florence Nightingale, in her Sunday
-attire that was completed by Leghorn hat and sandal shoes, made, Sunday
-after Sunday, a pretty vision for the villagers, in whose cottages she
-was early a welcome visitor. It was just such a church as we read of in
-George Eliot’s stories, clerk and parson dividing the service between
-them, and the rustic bareness of the stone walls matched by the visible
-bell-ropes and the benches for the labouring people. But the special
-story that has come down from those days suggests that the parson was
-more satirical than Mr. Gilfil or Mr. Tryan, and it is to be feared that
-when he remarked that “a lie is a very useful thing in trade,” the people
-who quoted him in Derby market-place merely used his “Devil’s text” as
-a convenience and saw no satire in it at all. Have we really travelled
-a little way towards honesty since those days, or have we grown more
-hypocritical?
-
-The little girl in the squire’s pew grew up in a home where religious
-shams were not likely to be taken at their face value.
-
-Her father, who was one of the chief supporters of the cheap schools
-of the neighbourhood, had his own ways of helping the poor folk on his
-estate, but used to reply to some of the beseeching people who wanted
-money from him for local charities that he was “not born generous.”
-Generous or not, he had very decided views about the education of his
-two children, Florence and Parthe. They enjoyed nearly a hundred years
-ago (Florence was born in 1820) as liberal a course of study as any High
-School girl of to-day, and no doubt it is true that the orderliness of
-mind and character, at which his methods aimed, proved of countless value
-to Florence in those later days, when her marvellous power in providing
-for minutest details without unnecessary fuss or friction banished the
-filth and chaos of the first Crimean hospitals, and transformed them
-into abodes of healing and of order. She grew up to be a beautiful and
-charming woman, for whom men would gladly have laid down their lives; yet
-her beauty and her charm alone could not have secured for our wounded
-soldiers in the Crimea, tortured by dirt and neglect, the swift change to
-cleanness and comfort and good nursing which her masterly and unbending
-methods aided her commanding personal influence to win.
-
-But this is leaping too far ahead. As yet she is only Parthenope’s
-little playfellow and schoolfellow in the room devoted to “lessons” at
-Lea Hall, the small maiden who climbs the hill on Sundays to the church
-where the yew tree guards the door, and on week-days is busy or at play
-in the house that has been the home of her father’s family through many
-generations, and in the grounds of the manor that surround it.
-
-Lea Hall is in that part of the country which Father Benson has described
-in his novel, “Come Rack, come Rope,” and the Nightingale children
-were within easy reach of Dethick Hall, where young Anthony Babington
-had lived. It must have added zest to their history lessons and their
-girlish romancings to hear of the secret passage, which was supposed to
-lead right into Wingfield Manor, from the underground cellar close to
-the old wall that showed still where Dethick had once reared its stately
-buildings. The fact that the farm bailiff now kept his potatoes there
-and could not find the opening, would only make it a constant new ground
-for adventure and imagination. For they would be told of course—these
-children—how Mary Stuart had once been a prisoner at Dethick, and Anthony
-had vowed to be her servant in life or death and never cease from the
-struggle to set her free so long as life was in him. Nor did he; for he
-died before her, and it was not at Wingfield, but at Fotheringay, as
-these little students very well knew, no doubt, that her lovely head soon
-afterwards was laid upon the block.
-
-Enviable children to have such a playground of imagination at their
-doors! But, indeed, all children have that, and a bare room in a slum,
-or a little patch of desert ground, may for them be danced over by Queen
-Mab and all her fairies, or guarded by the very angel who led St. Peter
-out of prison. Still, it is very exciting to have history written beside
-the doorstep where you live, and if you grow up in a home where lesson
-books are an important part of the day’s duties, it is pleasant to find
-them making adventures for you on your father’s own estate. It mattered
-nothing that the story would all be told by those contending against
-Anthony’s particular form of religion, who would be ready to paint him
-with as black an ink as their regard for justice would allow. To a child,
-that would rather enhance the vividness of it all. And there was the
-actual kitchen still standing, with its little harmless-looking trapdoor
-in the roof that leads into the secret chamber, where the persecuted
-priests used to hide when they came to celebrate a secret Mass. No
-wonder the two children delighted in Dethick, and wove many a tale
-about it. For had they not seen with their very own eyes the great open
-fireplace in that kitchen, where venison used to be roasted, and the very
-roasting-jack hanging from its central beam where all the roof-beams were
-black with age and dark with many tragic memories?
-
-Dethick is but one of the three villages included in the ancient manor,
-the other two are Lea and Holloway; and in the days of King John, long
-before it came to the Nightingales, the De Alveleys had built a chapel
-there. Those who have read Mr. Skipton’s life of Nicholas Ferrar and know
-their John Inglesant, will be interested to hear that half this manor had
-passed through the hands of the Ferrars among others, and another portion
-had belonged to families whose names suggest a French origin. But the
-two inheritances had now met in the hands of the Nightingales.
-
-It is a very enchanting part of the Midlands. The silvery Derwent
-winds through the valleys, keeping fresh the fields of buttercups and
-meadowsweet and clover, and in the tall hedges wild roses mingle their
-sweetness with the more powerful fragrance of the honeysuckle, until both
-yield to the strange and overwhelming perfume of the elder tree. The
-limestone hills, with their bold and mountainlike outline, their tiny
-rills, and exquisite ferns, had been less spoiled in those days by the
-tramp of tourists; and the purity of the air, the peacefulness of the
-upland solitudes, would have a wholesome share in the “grace that can
-mould the maiden’s form by silent sympathy.”
-
-[Illustration: Florence Nightingale’s Father.]
-
-It was a very youthful little maiden as yet who had been transplanted
-into these English wilds from the glory and the sunshine of the Italy
-where she was born. After the valley of the Arno and the splendours of
-Florence, it may have seemed somewhat cold and bracing at times. Rightly
-or wrongly, the father of the little girls—for our heroine’s sister,
-named after another Italian city, shared all her life at this time—seems
-to a mere outsider a little cold and bracing too. He came of a very old
-family, and we hear of his “pride of birth.” His wife, on the other
-hand, whom Florence Nightingale resembled, lives before us in more warm
-and glowing colours, as one who did much to break down the barriers of
-caste and, with a heart of overflowing love, “went about doing good.”
-Both were people of real cultivation—good breeding being theirs by a
-happy inheritance—and each seems to have had a strong and distinctive
-personality. It might not be easy to say to which of the two the little
-daughter, who grew to such world-wide fame, owed most; but probably
-the equipment for her life-work was fairly divided between the two.
-There is no magnet so powerful as force of character, and it is clear
-that her father possessed moral and intellectual force of a notable
-sort. Love, in the sense of enthusiasm for humanity, will always be the
-heaven-born gift of one in whom religion is such a reality as it was with
-Florence Nightingale, but religious ardour may be sadly ineffective
-if defeated by the slack habits of a lifetime, or even by a moral and
-mental vagueness that befogs holy intentions. Mr. Edward Nightingale’s
-daughters were disciplined in a schoolroom where slackness and disorder
-were not permitted, and a somewhat severe training in the classics was
-supplemented by the example of Mrs. Nightingale’s excellent housewifery,
-and by that fine self-control in manners and behaviour which in the
-old-fashioned days used to be named “deportment.” Sports and outdoor
-exercises were a part—and a delightful part—of the day’s routine.
-
-But let us go back a few years and give a few pages to the place of
-Florence Nightingale’s birth and the history of her family. Her name,
-like that of another social reformer among Englishwomen, was linked
-with Italy, and she took it from the famous old Italian town in
-whose neighbourhood she was born. I have tried in vain to trace the
-authorship[1]—was it Ruskin or some less known writer?—who said of
-that town, “if you wish to see it to perfection, fix upon such a day as
-Florence owes the sun, and, climbing the hill of Bellosguardo, or past
-the stages of the Via Crucis to the church of San Miniato, look forth
-upon the scene before you. You trace the course of the Arno from the
-distant mountains on the right, through the heart of the city, winding
-along the fruitful valley toward Pisa. The city is beneath you, like a
-pearl set in emerald. All colours are in the landscape, and all sounds
-are in the air. The hills look almost heathery. The sombre olive and
-funereal cypress blend with the graceful acacia and the clasping vine.
-The hum of the insect and the carol of bird chime with the blithe voices
-of men; while dome, tower, mountains, the yellow river, the quaint
-bridges, spires, palaces, gardens, and the cloudless heavens overhanging,
-make up a panorama on which to gaze in trance of rapture until the spirit
-wearies from the exceeding beauty of the vision.”
-
-When on May 12, 1820, Florence Nightingale was born, her parents were
-staying at the Villa Colombaia, near to this beautiful City of Flowers;
-and when the question of a name for her arose, they were of one mind
-about it—she must be called after the city itself. They had no sons, and
-this child’s elder sister, their only other daughter, having been born at
-Naples, had taken its ancient and classical name of Parthenope.[2]
-
-Their own family name had changed. Mr. Nightingale, who was first known
-as William Edward Shore, was the only son of Mr. William Shore of Tapton,
-in Derbyshire, and the child who was to reform England’s benighted views
-of nursing, and do so much for the health, not only of our British
-troops, but also of our Indian Army, was related through that family
-to John Shore, a famous physician in Derby in the reign of Charles the
-Second, as well as to the Governor-General of India who, twenty-three
-years before her birth, took the title of Baron Teignmouth. It was
-through her father’s mother, the only daughter of Mr. Evans of Cromford,
-that she was linked with the family of the Nightingales, whose name her
-father afterwards took. Mary Evans, her paternal grandmother, was the
-niece of “Old Peter,” a rich and roystering squire, who was well liked
-in his own neighbourhood, in spite of his nickname of “Madman Peter”
-and the rages that now and then overtook him. Florence Nightingale
-was, however, no descendant of his, for he never married, and all his
-possessions, except those which he sold to Sir Richard Arkwright, the
-famous cotton-spinner, came to his niece, who was the mother of Miss
-Nightingale’s father. When all this landed property came into the
-hands of Mr. Edward Shore, three years before his marriage and five
-years before Florence was born, his name was changed under the Prince
-Regent’s sign manual from Shore to Nightingale, in accordance with Peter
-Nightingale’s will. But he continued to live in Italy for a great part of
-every year until Florence was nearly five years old, though the change of
-ownership on the English estate was at once felt under the new squire,
-who was in most ways the very opposite of that “Old Peter,” of whom we
-read that when he had been drinking, as was then the fashion, he would
-frighten away the servant-maids by rushing into the kitchen and throwing
-the puddings on the dust-heap.
-
-Mr. Edward Nightingale, our heroine’s father, bore a character without
-fear or reproach. Educated at Edinburgh and at Trinity, Cambridge, he had
-afterwards travelled a good deal, at a time when travel was by no means
-the commonplace that it is now.
-
-He is described as “tall and slim,” and from the descriptions we have of
-him it is clear that no one, even at a glance, could have missed the note
-of distinction in his bearing, or mistaken him for other than that which
-he was proud to be, the cultivated and enlightened son of a fine old
-family.
-
-When we read that the lady he married was daughter of a strong
-Abolitionist, Mr. William Smith of Parndon, in Essex, we feel that the
-very name of Abolitionist belongs to a bygone past.
-
-In those days the American Civil War was still to come, but the horizon
-was already beginning to blacken for it, just as in Europe, while two
-happy little girls were playing hide-and-seek in the gardens of Lea Hall
-and racing with their dogs across the meadows to Dethick, the hush
-before the tempest did not blind wise statesmen to those dangers in the
-Near East which were to overwhelm us in so terrible a war.
-
-Mr. Smith, in desiring ardently the abolition of slavery, was ahead of
-many Englishmen of his day. He was an eager philanthropist, who for half
-a century represented Norwich in Parliament, and had therefore real power
-in urging any good cause he had at heart. His daughter Frances, when she
-became Mrs. Nightingale, did not cease to labour among the poor in the
-spirit of her father and of her own benevolent heart. She was a beautiful
-and impressive woman, and in her untiring service of others seems to have
-been just the wife for Mr. Nightingale, who was ready to further every
-good work in his own neighbourhood. He, in his artistic and scholarly
-tastes, was as humane and enlightened as was the woman of his choice in
-her own skill of hand and charm of household guidance.
-
-For Mrs. Nightingale was not only a notable housekeeper and her
-husband’s companion in the world of books, she was also a woman whose
-individuality of thought and action had been deepened by her practical
-faith, so that even at a time when England was still tied and bound by
-conventions of rank, from which the last fifty years have released many
-devotees, she felt the call of the Master to a deeper and wider sense of
-brotherhood, and had a great wish to break through artificial barriers.
-
-As a matter of fact, she found many innocent ways of doing so. But she
-did not know in these early days that in giving to the world a little
-daughter who was akin to her in this, she had found the best way of all;
-for that daughter was to serve others in the very spirit of those great
-ones of old—S. Teresa and S. Catharine and the Blessed Joan of Arc—to
-whom the real things were so real and so continually present that the
-world’s voices were as nothing in comparison. This was true also of Mrs.
-Browning, whose memory has already come to mind, as linked, like that
-of Florence Nightingale, though for quite other reasons, with the City
-of Flowers; and although a life of action in the ordinary sense was
-impossible for the author of “Aurora Leigh,” yet it is remarkable how
-much she also did to arouse and set free her sisters, for she too, like
-the others, was a woman of great practical discernment.
-
-The little peasant maid of France, who was born to be a warrior and the
-deliverer of her people, had this in common with the little English girl
-born to a great inheritance and aiming at a higher and humbler estate
-wherein she was the queen of nurses, that both cared so much for the
-commands from above as to be very little influenced by the gossip round
-about.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
- _Life at Lea Hurst and Embley._
-
-
-Florence was between five and six years old when the Nightingales moved
-from Lea Hall into their new home at Lea Hurst, a house commanding a
-specially beautiful outlook, and built under Mr. Nightingale’s own
-supervision with much care and taste, about a mile from the old home. It
-is only fourteen miles out of Derby, though there would seem to be many
-sleepy inhabitants of that aristocratic old town—like the old lady of
-Hendon who lived on into the twentieth century without having been into
-the roaring city of London hard by—who know nothing of the attractions
-within a few miles of them; for Mrs. Tooley tells an amusing story of a
-photographer there who supposed Lea Hurst to be a distinguished man and a
-local celebrity.
-
-To some it seemed that there was a certain bleakness in the country
-surrounding Lea Hall, but, though the two dwellings are so short a
-distance apart, Lea Hurst is set in a far more perfect landscape. Hills
-and woodlands, stretching far away to Dovedale, are commanded by the
-broad terrace of upland on which the house stands, and it looks across to
-the bold escarpment known as Crich Stand, while deep below, the Derwent
-makes music on its rocky course. Among the foxglove and the bracken, the
-gritstone rocks jutting forth are a hovering place for butterflies and a
-haunt of the wild bee.
-
-The house itself—shaped like a cross, gabled and mullioned, and
-heightened by substantial chimney-stacks—is solid, unpretending,
-satisfying to the eye. Above the fine oriel window in the drawing-room
-wing is the balcony pointed out to visitors where, they are told, after
-the Crimea “Miss Florence used to come out and speak to the people.”
-
-The building of the house was completed in 1825, and above the door that
-date is inscribed, together with the letter N. The drawing-room and
-library look south, and open on to the garden, and “from the library
-a flight of stone steps leads down to the lawn.” In the centre of the
-garden front an old chapel has been built into the mansion, and it may
-be that the prayers of the unknown dead have been answered in the life
-of the child who grew up under its shadow, and to whom the busy toiling
-world has owed so much.
-
-The terraced garden at the back of the house, with its sweet
-old-fashioned flowers and blossoming apple trees, has doubtless grown
-more delightful with every year of its advancing age, but what an
-interest the two little girls must have had when it was first being
-planted out and each could find a home for her favourite flowers!
-Fuchsias were among those loved by little Florence, who, as has already
-been noted, was only six years old when she and her sister and father and
-mother moved into Lea Hurst, and there was a large bed of these outside
-the chapel. The old schoolroom and nursery at the back of the house
-look out upon the hills, and in a quiet corner of the garden there is a
-summer-house where Florence and her only sister, who had no brothers to
-share their games, must often have played and worked.
-
-Lea Hurst is a quiet, beautiful home, characteristically English and
-unpretending, with a modest park-gate, and beyond the park those Lea
-Woods where the hyacinths bloom and where it is still told how “Miss
-Florence” loved to walk through the long winding avenue with its grand
-views of the distant hills and woods.
-
-But the Nightingales did not spend the whole year at Lea Hurst. In the
-autumn it was their custom to move to Embley, in Hampshire, where they
-spent the winter and early spring. They usually sent the servants on
-ahead with the luggage, and drove by easy stages in their own carriage,
-taking the journey at leisure, and putting up at inns by the way.
-Sometimes, of course, they travelled by coach. Those of us who only know
-the Derby road in the neighbourhood of towns like Nottingham and Derby
-now that its coaching glories are past, find it difficult to picture
-its gaiety in those old coaching days, when the very horses enjoyed
-the liveliness of the running, and the many carriages with their gay
-postilions and varied occupants were on the alert for neighbour or friend
-who might be posting in the same direction.
-
-Whether in autumn or in spring, the drive must have been a joy. The
-varied beauty of the Midlands recalls the lines in “Aurora Leigh” which
-speak of
-
- “Such nooks of valleys lined with orchises,
- Fed full of noises by invisible streams;
- And open pastures where you scarcely tell
- White daisies from white dew, ...
- ... the clouds, the fields,
- The happy violets hiding from the roads
- The primroses run down to, carrying gold;
- The tangled hedgerows, where the cows push out
- Impatient horns and tolerant churning mouths
- ’Twixt dripping ash-boughs,—hedgerows all alive
- With birds and gnats and large white butterflies
- Which look as if the May-flower had caught life
- And palpitated forth upon the wind;
- Hills, vales, woods, netted in a silver mist,
- Farms, granges, doubled up among the hills;
- And cattle grazing in the watered vales,
- And cottage-chimneys smoking from the woods,
- And cottage-gardens smelling everywhere,
- Confused with smell of orchards.”
-
-Derbyshire itself, with its wild lilies of the valley, its ferns and
-daffodils and laughing streams, is hardly more “taking” than the country
-through which winds the silver Trent, past Nottingham Castle, perched
-on its rock and promontory above the fields where the wild crocus in
-those days made sheets of vivid purple, and the steep banks of Clifton
-Grove, with its shoals of blue forget-me-not, making a dim, tree-crowned
-outline, with here and there a gleam of silver, as seen by the chariots
-“on the road.” Wollaton Park, with its great beeches and limes and
-glimpses of shy deer, would give gold and crimson and a thousand shades
-of russet to the picture.
-
-And farther south, at the other end of the journey, what miles of
-orchards and pine woods and sweet-scented heather—what rolling Downs and
-Surrey homesteads along the turnpike roads!
-
-Though Parthenope and Florence had no brothers to play with them, they
-seem to have had a great variety of active occupations, both at Lea
-Hurst and at Embley. Of course they had their dolls, like other little
-girls; but those which belonged to Florence had a way of falling into the
-doctor’s hands—an imaginary doctor, of course—and needing a good deal of
-tender care and attention. Florence seemed never tired of looking after
-their various ailments. In fact, she had at times a whole dolls’ hospital
-to tend. She probably picked up a little amateur knowledge of medicine
-quite early in life; for the poor people in the neighbourhood used to
-come to her mother for help in any little emergency, and Mrs. Nightingale
-was, like many another Lady Bountiful of her generation, equipped with a
-certain amount of traditional wisdom and kindly common sense, aided in
-her case by wider reading and a better educated mind than the ordinary.
-
-Florence, having somehow escaped measles and whooping-cough, was not
-allowed to run into infection in the cottages, but that did not prevent
-the sending of beef-teas and jellies and other helpful and neighbourly
-gifts, which could be tied to her pony’s saddle-bow and left by her at
-the door. She learned to know the cottagers with a frank and very human
-intimacy, and their homely wit touched her own, their shrewdness and
-sympathy met their like in her, and as she grew older, all this added
-to her power and her charm. She learned to know both the north and
-the south in “her ain countree,” and when, later in life, she was the
-wise angel of hope to the brave “Tommies,” recruited from such homes,
-meeting them as she did amid unrecorded agonies that were far worse
-than the horrors of the battlefield, she understood them all the better
-as men, because she had known just such boys as they had been and was
-familiar with just such homes as those in which they grew up. According
-to Mrs. Tooley’s biography, the farmhouse where Adam Bede fell in love
-with Hetty was just the other side of the meadows at Lea Hurst, and the
-old mill-wheel, where Maggie Tulliver’s father ground the corn of the
-neighbourhood, was only two or three miles away. Marian Evans, of whom
-the world still thinks and speaks by her pen-name of George Eliot, came
-sometimes to visit her kinsfolk in the thatched cottage by Wirksworth
-Tape Mills, and has left us in her earlier novels a vivid picture of the
-cottage life that surrounded our heroine during that part of the year
-which she spent in the Derbyshire home. The children, of course, had
-their own garden, which they dug and watered, and Florence was so fond
-of flowers and animals that that again was an added bond with her rustic
-neighbours. Flower-missions had not in those days been heard of, but she
-often tied up a nosegay of wild flowers for invalid villagers, or took
-some of her favourites out of her own garden to the sick people whom she
-visited.
-
-The story of her first patient has already been told several times in
-print, but no biography would be complete without it.
-
-She had nursed many dolls back to convalescence—to say nothing of
-“setting” their broken limbs—tempted their delicate appetites with
-dainties offered on toy plates, and dressed the burns when her sister let
-them tumble too near the nursery fire; but as yet she had had no real
-human patient, when one day, out riding with her friend the vicar over
-the Hampshire Downs near Embley, they noticed that Roger, an old shepherd
-whom they knew very well, was having endless trouble in getting his sheep
-together.
-
-“Where’s Cap?” asked the vicar, drawing up his horse, for Cap was a very
-capable and trusted sheep-dog.
-
-“T’ boys have been throwing stones at ‘n and they’ve broken t’ poor
-chap’s leg. Won’t ever be any good no more, a’m thinkin’. Best put him
-out of ‘s misery.”
-
-“O Roger!” exclaimed a clear young voice, “poor Cap’s leg broken? Can’t
-we do anything for him?”
-
-“Where is he?” added Florence eagerly, for the voice was that of the
-future “Queen of Nurses.” “Oh, we can’t leave him all alone in his pain.
-Just think how cruel!”
-
-“Us can’t do no good, miss, nor you nayther. I’se just take a cord to him
-to-night; ’tis the only way to ease his pain.”
-
-But Florence turned to plead with the vicar, and to beg that some further
-effort should be made.
-
-The vicar, urged by the compassion in the young face looking up to his,
-turned his horse’s head in the right direction for a visit to Cap. In a
-moment Florence’s pony was put to the gallop, and she was the first to
-arrive at the shed where the poor dog was lying.
-
-Cap’s faithful brown eyes were soon lifted to hers, as she tenderly tried
-to make him understand her loving sympathy, caressing him with her little
-hand and speaking soothingly with her own lips and eyes; till, like the
-suffering men whose wounds would in the far-off years be eased through
-her skill, the dog looked up at her in dumb and worshipping gratitude.
-
-The vicar was equal to the occasion, and soon discovered that the leg was
-not broken at all, but badly bruised and swollen, and perhaps an even
-greater source of danger and pain than if there had merely been a broken
-bone.
-
-When he suggested a “compress,” his child-companion was puzzled for a
-moment. She thought she knew all about poultices and bandages, and I
-daresay she had often given her dolls a mustard plaster; but a “compress”
-sounded like something new and mysterious. It was, of course, a great
-relief when she learned that she only needed to keep soaking cloths in
-hot water, wringing them out, and folding them over Cap’s injured leg,
-renewing them as quickly as they cooled. She was a nimble little person,
-and, with the help of the shepherd boy, soon got a fire of sticks kindled
-in a neighbouring cottage and the kettle singing on it with the necessary
-boiling water. But now what to do for cloths? Time is of importance in
-sick-nursing when every moment of delay means added pain to the sufferer.
-To ride home would have meant the loss of an hour or two, and thrifty
-cottagers are not always ready to tear up scant and cherished house-linen
-for the nursing of dogs. But Florence was not to be baffled. To her great
-delight she espied the shepherd’s smock hanging up behind the door. She
-was a fearless soul, and felt no doubt whatever that her mother would
-pay for a new smock. “This will just do,” she said, and, since that
-delightful vicar gave a nod of entire approval, she promptly tore it into
-strips.
-
-Then back to Cap’s hut she hastened, with her small henchman beside
-her carrying the kettle and the basin; for by this time he, the boy
-shepherd, began to be interested too, and the vicar’s superintendence was
-no longer needed. A message of explanation was sent to Embley that Mr.
-and Mrs. Nightingale might not be anxious, and for several hours Florence
-gave herself up to nursing her patient. Cap was passive in her hands, and
-the hot fomentations gradually lessened the pain and the swelling.
-
-Imagine the wonder and gratitude of old Roger when he turned up with
-the rope in his hand and a leaden weight on his poor old heart! Cap,
-of course, knew his step and greeted him with a little whine of
-satisfaction, as if to be the first to tell him the good news.
-
-“Why, missy, you have been doing wonders,” he said. “I never thought to
-see t’ poor dog look up at me like that again.”
-
-“Yes,” exclaimed the happy young nurse; “doesn’t he look better? Well,
-Roger, you can throw away the rope. I shall want you to help me make
-these hot compresses.”
-
-“Miss Florence is quite right, Roger,” interposed the vicar; “you’ll
-soon have Cap running about again.”
-
-“I’m sure I cannot thank you and the young lady enough, yer riv’rence.
-And I’ll mind all the instrooctions for he.”
-
-As the faithful dog looked up at him, eased and content, it was a very
-happy man that was old Roger. But the doctor-nurse was not prepared to
-lose her occupation too quickly.
-
-“I shall come and see him again to-morrow, Roger,” she said; “I know
-mamma will let me, when I just explain to her about it all.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
- _The weaving of many threads, both of evil and of good._
-
-
-While Florence Nightingale and her sister were working hard at history
-and languages and all useful feminine arts, romping in the sunny
-Hampshire gardens, or riding amongst the Derbyshire hills, the big world
-outside their quiet paradise was heaping fuel for the fires of war,
-which at last, when after a quarter of a century it flared up out of its
-long-prepared combustibles, was “to bring to death a million workmen and
-soldiers, consume vast wealth, shatter the framework of the European
-system, and make it hard henceforth for any nation to be safe except by
-sheer strength.” And above all its devastation, remembered as a part of
-its undying record, the name of one of these happy children was to be
-blazoned on the page of history.
-
-Already at the beginning of the century the first Napoleon had said that
-the Czar of Russia was always threatening Constantinople and never taking
-it, and by the time Florence Nightingale was twelve years old, it might
-be said of that Czar that while “holding the boundless authority of an
-Oriental potentate,” his power was supplemented by the far-reaching
-transmission of his orders across the telegraph wires, and if Kinglake
-does not exaggerate, “he would touch the bell and kindle a war, without
-hearing counsel from any living man.”
-
-The project against Constantinople was a scheme of conquest continually
-to be delayed, but never discarded, and, happen what might, it was
-never to be endured that the prospect of Russia’s attaining some day to
-the Bosphorus should be shut out by the ambition of any other Power.
-Nicholas was quite aware that multitudes of the pious throughout his
-vast dominions dwelt upon the thought of their co-religionists under
-the Turkish rule, and looked to the shining cross of St. Sophia, symbol
-of their faith above the church founded by Constantine, as the goal of
-political unity for a “suppliant nation.”
-
-And Kinglake tells us with an almost acid irony of Louis Napoleon, that
-he who was by the Senatus-Consulte of 1804 the statutory heir of the
-great Bonaparte, and after his exile and imprisonment had returned to
-France, laboured to show all men “how beautifully Nature in her infinite
-wisdom had adapted that same France to the service of the Bonapartes;
-and how, without the fostering care of these same Bonapartes, the
-creature was doomed to degenerate, and to perish out of the world, and
-was considering how it was possible at the beginning of the nineteenth
-century to make the coarse Bonaparte yoke of 1804 sit kindly upon her
-neck.”
-
-The day was drawing near when a great war would seem to him to offer just
-the opportunity he wanted.
-
-Far away as yet was that awful massacre of peaceful citizens in Paris in
-1851, with which the name of Louis Napoleon was associated as responsible
-for the _coup d’état_—a massacre probably the result of brutal panic on
-the part of the soldiers, the civilians, and that craven president,
-Louis Napoleon himself, whose conscience made a coward of him, and whose
-terror usually took the form of brutality—but long before that date, by
-his callous plotting and underhand self-seeking, he was preparing forces
-which then made for death and terror, and by that time had more or less
-broken the manhood of his beautiful Paris.
-
-Yet all over the world at all times, while the enemy is sowing tares in
-the field, the good seed is ripening also in the ground for the harvest;
-and through these same years far-off threads were being woven, ready to
-make part of the warp and woof of a life, as yet busied with the duties
-and joys of childhood, but one day to thrill the hearts of Europe and be
-remembered while time shall last.
-
-Elizabeth Fry, who was to be one of its decisive influences, was bringing
-new light and hope into the noisome prisons of a bygone century, and we
-shall see how her life-work was not without its influence later on the
-life of the child growing up at Embley and Lea Hurst.
-
-And a child nearly of Florence Nightingale’s own age, who was one day to
-cross her path with friendly help at an important crisis, was playing
-with her sister Curlinda—Sir Walter Scott’s nickname for her real name
-of Caroline—and being drilled in manners in French schools in Paris and
-Versailles, before her family moved to Edinburgh and her more serious
-lessons began. This was Felicia Skene, who was afterwards able to give
-momentary, but highly important help, at a critical moment in Florence
-Nightingale’s career. Like Florence herself, she was born amid romantic
-surroundings, though not in Italy but in Provence, and was named after
-her French godmother, a certain Comtesse de Felicité. Her two earliest
-recollections were of the alarming and enraged gesticulations of Liszt
-when giving a music lesson to her frightened sisters, and the very
-different vision of a lumbering coach and six accompanied by mounted
-soldiers—the coach and six wherein sat Charles the Tenth, who was soon
-afterwards to take refuge in Holyrood. That was in Paris, where her
-family went to live when she was six years old, but at the time of Cap’s
-accident they had already moved to Edinburgh, where her chief friends and
-playmates were the little Lockharts and the children of the murdered Duc
-de Berri. It was there that Sir Walter Scott, on the day when he heard of
-his bankruptcy, came and sat quietly by the little Felicia, and bade her
-tell him fairy stories, as he didn’t want to talk much himself. He was an
-old and dear friend of her father, one link between them being the fact
-that Mr. Skene was related by marriage to the beautiful Williamina Stuart
-with whom Scott in his early days had fallen deeply and ardently in love.
-
-The little Felicia was at this time a very lively child and full of
-innocent mischief. Her later devotion to the sick and poor did not
-begin so early as was the case with Florence Nightingale, though there
-came a time when she and Florence met in after life as equals and
-fellow-soldiers in the great campaign against human suffering. Her
-travels and adventures in Greece and her popularity at the Athenian
-court were still hidden in the future, and while Florence at Embley
-and Lea Hurst was gradually unfolding a sweetness of nature that was by
-no means blind to the humorous side of things, and a highly practical
-thoroughness in all she undertook, Felicia was enjoying a merry home-life
-under the governorship of Miss Palmer, whom she nicknamed Pompey, and
-being prepared for confirmation by her father’s friend, Dean Ramsay. We
-are told of her that she might have said with Coppée, “J’ai eu toujours
-besoin de Dieu.” Full of fun and of interest in life’s great adventure,
-for others quite as much as for herself, religion was the moving force
-that moulded the soul of her to much unforeseen self-sacrifice as yet
-undreamed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
- _The activities of girlhood—Elizabeth Fry—Felicia Skene again._
-
-
-But we are wandering away from Embley and from the two daughters of the
-squire, who were already the delight of the village.
-
-Cap was by no means the only animal who owed much to Florence, and Peggy,
-a favourite old pony, now holiday-making in the paddock, looked for
-frequent visits and much sport between lesson hours.
-
-“Poor old Peggy, then; would she like a carrot?”
-
-“Well, where is it, then? See if you can find it, Peggy.”
-
-And then a little game followed, to which the beloved pony was quite
-accustomed—snuffing round her young mistress and being teased and
-tantalized for a minute or two, just to heighten the coming pleasure,
-until at last the pocket was found where the precious delicacy was
-hidden, and the daily feast began, a feast not of carrots only, for
-caresses were of course a part of the ritual.
-
-Florence had much good fellowship also with the wild squirrels of the
-neighbourhood, especially in one long avenue that was their favourite
-abode. They were not in the least afraid of her, and would come leaping
-down after the nuts that she dropped for them as she walked along.
-Sometimes she would turn sharp round and startle them back into their
-homes, but it was easy to tempt them down again. She was quick at finding
-and guarding the nests of brooding birds, and suffered very keenly as a
-child when the young ones were taken away from their mothers.
-
-Lambs and calves soon learned that she was fond of them, and the
-affection was not on her side only. But among the pets that the two girls
-were allowed to have, the ailing ones were always the most interesting to
-the future nurse.
-
-It cannot, however, be too strongly stated that there was nothing
-sentimental or lackadaisical in the very vigorous and hard-working life
-that she led. It was not by any means all songs and roses, though it
-was full of the happiness of a well-ordered and loving existence. Her
-father was a rigid disciplinarian, and nothing casual or easygoing was
-allowed in the Embley schoolroom. For any work carelessly done there was
-punishment as well as reproof, and no shamming of any sort was allowed.
-Hours must be punctually kept, and, whether the lesson for the moment was
-Latin, Greek, or mathematics, or the sewing of a fine and exquisite seam,
-it must come up to the necessary standard and be satisfactorily done. The
-master-mind that so swiftly transformed the filthy horrors of Scutari
-into a well-ordered hospital, and could dare to walk through minor
-difficulties and objections as though they did not exist, was educated
-in a severe and early school; and the striking modesty and gentleness of
-Florence Nightingale’s girlhood was the deeper for having grappled with
-enough real knowledge to know its own ignorances and limitations, and
-treat the personality of others with a deference which was a part of her
-charm.
-
-And if study was made a serious business, the sisters enjoyed to the
-full the healthy advantages of country life. They scampered about the
-park with their dogs, rode their ponies over hill and dale, spent long
-days in the woods among the bluebells and primroses, and in summer
-tumbled about in the sweet-scented hay. “During the summer at Lea Hurst,
-lessons were a little relaxed in favour of outdoor life; but on the
-return to Embley for the winter, schoolroom routine was again enforced on
-very strict lines.”[3]
-
-In Florence Nightingale’s Derbyshire home the experiments in methods of
-healing which dispensed with drugs could not fail to arouse attention
-and discussion, for Mr. John Smedley’s newly-built cure-house stood at
-the foot of the hill below Lea Hurst, and before Florence Nightingale
-was twenty she had already begun to turn her attention definitely in the
-direction of nursing. Everything tended to deepen this idea. She was
-already able to do much for the villagers, and in any case of illness
-they were always eager to let her know. The consumptive girl whose room
-she gladdened with flowers was but one of the many ailing folk who found
-comfort and joy in her presence. “Miss Florence had a way with her that
-made them feel better,” they said.
-
-In those days nursing as a profession did not exist. When it was not done
-wholly for love by the unselfish maiden aunt or sister, who was supposed,
-as a matter of course, to be always at the disposal of the sick people
-among her kinsfolk, it had come to be too often a mere callous trade,
-carried on by ignorant and grasping women, who were not even clean or
-of good character. The turning of a Scutari hell into a hospital that
-seemed heaven by comparison, was a smaller miracle than that which Miss
-Nightingale’s influence was destined later to achieve in changing a
-despised and brutalized occupation throughout a whole empire into a noble
-and distinguished art.
-
-Of course it must never be forgotten that through all the centuries since
-the Christian Church was founded, there had been Catholic sisterhoods
-with whom the real and the ideal were one—Sisters of Mercy, who were
-not only refined and cultivated gentlewomen, but the most devoted and
-self-sacrificing of human souls.
-
-And now in England, in that Society of Friends, which among Christian
-communities might seem outwardly farthest away from a communion valuing
-as its very language the ancient symbols and ritual of the Catholic
-Church, yet was perhaps by its obedience to the inward voice more in
-sympathy with the sisterhoods of that Church than were many other
-religious groups, there had been lifted up by Elizabeth Fry a new
-standard of duty in this matter, which in her hands became a new standard
-of nursing, to be passed on in old age by her saintly hands into the
-young and powerful grasp of the brilliant girl who is the heroine of
-our story. The name of Elizabeth Fry is associated with the reform of
-our prisons, but it is less commonly known that she was also a pioneer
-of decent nursing. She understood with entire simplicity the words, “I
-was sick and in prison, and ye visited me.” Perhaps it was not mere
-coincidence that the words occur in the “lesson” appointed for the 15th
-of February—the day noted in Elizabeth Fry’s journal as the date of that
-visit to Newgate, when the poor felons she was yearning to help fell on
-their knees and prayed to a divine unseen Presence. In a recent number of
-the _Times_ which celebrates her centenary a quotation from her diary is
-given which tells in her own words:—
-
- “I heard weeping, and I thought they appeared much tendered;
- a very solemn quiet was observed; it was a striking scene,
- the poor people on their knees around us, in their deplorable
- condition.”
-
-And the _Times_ goes on to say, “nothing appears but those qualities of
-helpfulness, sympathy, and love which could tame the most savage natures,
-silence the voice of profanity and blasphemy, and subdue all around her
-by a sense of her common sisterhood even with the vilest of them in the
-love of God and the service of man.... But the deepest note of her nature
-was an intense enthusiasm of humanity. It was this which inspired and
-sustained all her efforts from first to last—even in her earlier and more
-frivolous days—for the welfare and uplifting of her fellow-creatures;
-and it is only right to add that it was itself sustained by her deep and
-abiding conviction that it is only by the love of God that the service
-of man can be sanctified and made to prosper.” A letter followed next
-day from Mr. Julian Hill, who actually remembers her, and tells how the
-Institution of Nursing Sisters which she organized grew out of her deep
-pity for the victims of Sairey Gamp and her kind.
-
-All this was preparing the way for the wider and more successful nursing
-crusade in which her memory and influence were to inspire the brave young
-soul of Florence Nightingale. Speaking of all the difficulties that a
-blindly conventional world is always ready to throw in the way of any
-such new path, her old friend writes: “Such difficulties Mrs. Fry and
-Miss Nightingale brushed contemptuously aside.”
-
-But in our story Miss Nightingale is as yet only lately out of the
-schoolroom. And Elizabeth Fry’s life was by no means alone, as we have
-seen, in its preparation of her appointed path, for about the time that
-Florence Nightingale was taking her place in the brilliant society that
-met about her father’s board, and Felicia Skene was “coming out,” a new
-experiment was being made by a devout member of the Lutheran Church, an
-experiment which was to play an important part in the world’s history,
-though so quietly and unobtrusively carried out.
-
-We must not anticipate—we shall read of that in a later chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
- _Home duties and pleasures—The brewing of war._
-
-
-Florence was very happy as her mother’s almoner, and in her modest and
-unobtrusive way was the life and soul of the village festivities that
-centred in the church and school and were planned in many instances by
-her father and mother. It is one of the happy characteristics of our time
-that much innocent grace and merriment have been revived in the teaching
-of beautiful old morris dances and other peasant festivities that had
-been banished by the rigour of a perverted Puritanism, and the squire of
-Lea Hurst and his wife were before their time in such matters. There was
-a yearly function of prize-giving and speech-making and dancing, known
-as the children’s “Feast Day,” to which the scholars came in procession
-to the Hall, with their wreaths and garlands, to the music of a good
-marching band provided by the squire, and afterwards they had tea in
-the fields below the Hall garden, served by Mrs. Nightingale and her
-daughters and the Hall servants, and then ended their day with merry
-outdoor dancing. For the little ones Florence planned all kinds of games;
-the children, indeed, were her special care, and by the time the evening
-sun was making pomp of gold and purple in the sky above the valley of
-the Derwent, there came the crowning event of the day when on the garden
-terrace the two daughters of the house distributed their gifts to the
-happy scholars.
-
-Mrs. Tooley in her biography calls up for us in a line or two a vision
-of Florence as she was remembered by one old lady, who had often been
-present and recalled her slender charm, herself as sweet as the rose
-which she often wore in her neatly braided hair, brown hair with a glint
-of gold in it, glossy and smooth and characteristic of youth and health.
-We have from one and another a glimpse of the harmonious simplicity also
-of her dress—the soft muslin gown, the little silk fichu crossed upon
-her breast, the modest Leghorn bonnet with its rose. Or in winter, riding
-about in the neighbourhood of Embley and distributing her little personal
-gifts at Christmas among the old women—tea and warm petticoats—her
-“ermine tippet and muff and beaver hat.”
-
-She helped in the training of young voices in the village, and was
-among the entertainers when the carol-singers enjoyed their mince-pies
-and annual coins in the hall. The workhouse knew her well, and any
-wise enterprise in the neighbourhood for help or healing among the
-poor and the sad was sure of her presence and of all the co-operation
-in the power of her neighbours, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Herbert, with whom
-for some years before the Crimea she shared much companionship in such
-work. This friendship was an important influence in our heroine’s life,
-for Mr. Herbert was of those who reveal to the dullest a little of the
-divine beauty and love, and his wife was through all their married life
-his faithful and devoted friend, so that they made a strong trio of
-sympathetic workers; for “Liz,” as her husband usually called her in his
-letters to their common friend Florence Nightingale, seemed to have fully
-shared his unbounded faith in the noble powers and high aims of the said
-Florence, whom she too loved and admired. She was a daughter of General
-Charles Ashe à Court, and she and Sidney Herbert had known one another as
-children. Indeed, it was in those early days, when she was quite a little
-child, that Elizabeth, who grew up to be one of the most beautiful women
-of her day, said of Sidney, then, of course, a mere boy, that that was
-the boy she was going to marry, and that she would never marry any one
-else. Many a long year, however, had rolled between before he rode over
-to Amington from Drayton, where he often met her, though no longer such
-near neighbours as in the early Wiltshire days, and asked the beautiful
-Elizabeth to be his wife. The intimacy between the two families had never
-ceased, and General à Court, himself member for Wilton, had worked hard
-for Sidney’s first election for the county. We shall hear more of these
-dear and early friends of Florence Nightingale as her story unfolds, but
-let us turn now for a moment to herself.
-
-Her life was many-sided, and her devotion to good works did not arise
-from any lack of knowledge of the world. She was presented, of course,
-like other girls of her order, and had her “seasons” in London as well
-as her share in country society. A young and lovely girl, whose father
-had been wise enough to give her all the education and advantages of
-a promising boy, and who excelled also in every distinctive feminine
-accomplishment and “pure womanliness,” had her earthly kingdom at her
-feet. But her soul was more and more deeply bent on a life spent in
-service and consecrated to the good of others. Her Sunday class, in the
-old building known as the “Chapel” at Lea Hurst, was but one of her many
-efforts in her father’s special domain in Derbyshire, and girls of every
-faith came to her there without distinction of creed. They were mostly
-workers in the hosiery mills owned by John Smedley, and many of them,
-like their master, were Methodists. She sang to them, and they still
-remember the sweetness of her voice and “how beautifully Miss Florence
-used to talk,” as they sat together through many a sunny afternoon in the
-tiny stone building overlooking Lea Hurst gardens. Cromford Church, built
-by Sir Richard Arkwright, was then comparatively new, and time had not
-made of it the pretty picture that it is now, in its bosoming trees above
-the river; but it played a considerable part in Florence Nightingale’s
-youth, when the vicar and the Arkwright of her day—old Sir Richard’s
-tomb in the chancel bears the earlier date of 1792—organized many a kind
-scheme for the good of the parish, in which the squire’s two daughters
-gave their help.
-
-But Miss Nightingale was not of a type to consider these amateur
-pleasures a sufficient training for her life-work, and that life-work was
-already taking a more or less definite shape in her mind.
-
-She herself has written:—
-
- “I would say to all young ladies who are called to any
- particular vocation, qualify yourselves for it as a man does
- for his work. Don’t think you can undertake it otherwise.
- Submit yourselves to the rules of business as men do, by which
- alone you can make God’s business succeed, for He has never
- said that He will give His success and His blessing to sketchy
- and unfinished work.” And on another occasion she wrote that
- “three-fourths of the whole mischief in women’s lives arises
- from their excepting themselves from the rules of training
- considered needful for men.”
-
-It has already been said that her thought was more and more directed
-towards nursing, and in various ways she was quietly preparing herself to
-that end.
-
-Her interview with the Quaker-saint, Elizabeth Fry, though deliberately
-sought and of abiding effect, was but a brief episode. It was about
-this time that they met in London. The serene old Quakeress, through
-whose countenance looked forth such a heavenly soul, was no doubt keenly
-interested in the ardent, witty, beautiful girl who came to her for
-inspiration and counsel. They had much in common, and who knows but the
-older woman, with all her weight of experience, her saintly character,
-and ripened harvest, may yet in some ways have felt herself the younger
-of the two; for she had come to that quiet threshold of the life beyond,
-where a soul like hers has part in the simple joys of the Divine Child,
-and looks tenderly on those who are still in the fires of battle through
-which they have passed.
-
-Her own girlhood had defied in innocent ways the strictness of the Quaker
-rule. Imagine a young Quakeress of those days wearing, as she had done on
-occasion, a red riding habit!
-
-She had been fond of dancing, and would have, I suspect, a very healthy
-human interest in the activities of a girl in Society, though she would
-enter into Florence Nightingale’s resolve that her life should not be
-frittered away in a self-centred round, while men and women, for whom her
-Master died, were themselves suffering a slow death in workhouses and
-prisons and hospitals, with none to tend their wounds of soul and body.
-
-Be this as it may—and without a record of their conversation it is easy
-to go astray in imagining—we do know that like all the greatest saints
-they were both very practical in their Christianity, and did not care
-too much what was thought of their actions, so long as they were right
-in the sight of God. In their common sense, their humility, their warm,
-quick-beating heart of humanity, they were kindred spirits.
-
-The interview bore fruit even outwardly afterwards in a very important
-way. For it was from Elizabeth Fry that Florence Nightingale first heard
-of Pastor Fliedner and his institute for training nurses at Kaiserswerth,
-as well as of Elizabeth Fry’s own institute for a like purpose in London,
-which first suggested the Kaiserswerth training home, thus returning in
-ever-widening blessing the harvest of its seed.
-
-Her desire was for definite preparatory knowledge and discipline, and
-we of this generation can hardly realize how much searching must have
-been necessary before the adequate training could be found. Certificated
-nursing is now a commonplace, and we forget that it dates from Miss
-Nightingale’s efforts after her return from the Crimea. We have only
-to turn to the life of Felicia Skene and her lonely labour of love at
-the time when the cholera visited Oxford—some twelve years later than
-Florence Nightingale’s seventeenth birthday, that is to say, in 1849-51,
-and again in 1854—to gain some idea of the bareness of the field. Sir
-Henry Acland, whose intimate friendship with Felicia dates from their
-common labours among the cholera patients, has described one among the
-terrible cases for which there would, it seems, have been no human aid,
-but for their discovery of the patient’s neglected helplessness.
-
- “She had no blanket,” he says, “or any covering but the ragged
- cotton clothes she had on. She rolled screaming. One woman,
- scarcely sober, sat by; she sat with a pipe in her mouth,
- looking on. To treat her in this state was hopeless. She was
- to be removed. There was a press of work at the hospital, and
- a delay. When the carriers came, her saturated garments were
- stripped off, and in the finer linen and in the blankets of a
- wealthier woman she was borne away, and in the hospital she
- died.”
-
-This is given, it would seem, as but one case among hundreds.
-
-Three old cattle-sheds were turned into a sort of impromptu hospital, to
-which some of the smallpox and cholera patients were carried, and the
-clergy, especially Mr. Charles Marriott and Mr. Venables, did all they
-could for old and young alike, seconding the doctors, with Sir Henry
-at their head, in cheering and helping every one in the stricken town;
-and Miss Skene’s friend, Miss Hughes, Sister Marion, directed the women
-called in to help, who there received a kind of rough-and-ready training.
-But more overwhelming still was Miss Skene’s own work of home nursing
-in the cottages, at first single-handed, and afterwards at the head of
-a band of women engaged by the deputy chairman as her servants in the
-work, of whom many were ignorant and needed training. “By day and by
-night she visited,” writes Sir Henry. “She plied this task, and when she
-rested—or where as long at least as she knew of a house where disease had
-entered—is known to herself alone.”
-
-Meanwhile a critical moment had arisen in the affairs of Europe. Our
-own Premier, Lord Aberdeen, had long been regarded as the very head and
-front of the Peace Movement in England, and when he succeeded the wary
-Lord Palmerston, it is said that Nicholas, the Czar of Russia, made no
-secret of his pleasure in the event, for he saw tokens in England of
-what might at least leave him a chance of pulling Turkey to pieces.
-He seems also to have had a great personal liking for our ambassador,
-Sir Hamilton Seymour, who was fortunately a man of honour as well as a
-man of discretion and ready wit. The account given by Kinglake of the
-conversations in which the Emperor Nicholas disclosed his views, and
-was not permitted to hint them merely, makes very dramatic reading. The
-Czar persisted in speaking of Turkey as a very sick man, whose affairs
-had better be taken out of his hands by his friends before his final
-dissolution. Sir Hamilton courteously intimated that England did not
-treat her allies in that manner; but Nicholas was not to be put off, and
-at a party given by the Grand Duchess Hereditary on February 20, 1853, he
-again took Sir Hamilton apart, and in a very gracious and confidential
-manner closed his conversation with the words, “I repeat to you that the
-sick man is dying, and we can never allow such an event to take us by
-surprise. We must come to some understanding.”
-
-The next day he explained how the partition should in his opinion
-be made. Servia and Bulgaria should be independent states under his
-protection. England should have Egypt and Candia. He had already made
-it clear that he should expect us to pledge ourselves not to occupy
-Constantinople, though he could not himself give us a like undertaking.
-
-“As I did not wish,” writes Sir Hamilton Seymour, “that the Emperor
-should imagine that an English public servant was caught by this sort
-of overture, I simply answered that I had always understood that the
-English views upon Egypt did not go beyond the point of securing a safe
-and ready communication between British India and the mother country.
-‘Well,’ said the Emperor, ‘induce your Government to write again upon
-these subjects, to write more fully, and to do so without hesitation. I
-have confidence in the English Government. It is not an engagement, a
-convention, which I ask of them; it is a free interchange of ideas, and
-in case of need the word of a “gentleman”—that is enough between us.’”
-
-In reply, our Government disclaimed all idea of aiming at any of the
-Sultan’s possessions, or considering the Ottoman Empire ready to fall to
-bits; and while accepting the Emperor’s word that he would not himself
-grab any part of it, refused most decisively to enter on any secret
-understanding.
-
-All through 1853 these parleyings were kept secret, and in the meantime
-the Czar had failed in his rôle of tempter. In the interval the Sultan,
-who perhaps had gained some inkling of what was going on, suddenly
-yielded to Austria’s demand that he should withdraw certain troops that
-had been harassing Montenegro, and thereby rousing the Czar’s religious
-zeal on behalf of his co-religionists in that province. Everything for
-the moment lulled his previous intention of a war against Turkey.
-
-But the Emperor Louis Napoleon had in cold blood been driving a wedge
-into the peace of the world by reviving a treaty of 1740, which had given
-to Latin monks a key to the chief door of the Church of Bethlehem, as
-well as the keys to the two doors of the Sacred Manger, and also the
-right to place a silver star adorned with the arms of France in the
-Sanctuary of the Nativity. That the Churches should fight for the key to
-the supposed birthplace of the Prince of Peace is indeed grotesque. But
-the old temple had in His day become a den of thieves; and even the new
-temple, built through His own loving sacrifice, is ever being put to uses
-that are childish and greedy.
-
-It is not difficult to understand that, by means of this treaty,
-awakening the vanity and greed that cloak themselves under more decent
-feelings in such rivalries, Louis Napoleon made his profit for the
-moment out of the powers of evil.
-
-The Czar’s jealousy for his own empire’s Greek version of the faith made
-the triumph of this treaty wormwood to him and to his people. “To the
-indignation,” Count Nesselrode writes, “of the whole people following the
-Greek ritual, the key of the Church of Bethlehem has been made over to
-the Latins, so as publicly to demonstrate their religious supremacy in
-the East.” ...
-
- “A crowd of monks with bare foreheads,” says Kinglake, “stood
- quarrelling for a key at the sunny gates of a church in
- Palestine, but beyond and above, towering high in the misty
- North, men saw the ambition of the Czars.”
-
-The Czars did not stand alone: “some fifty millions of men in Russia held
-one creed, and they held it too with the earnestness of which Western
-Europe used to have experience in earlier times.... They knew that in the
-Turkish dominions there were ten or fourteen millions of men holding
-exactly the same faith as themselves ... they had heard tales of the
-sufferings of these their brethren which seemed,” they blindly thought,
-“to call for vengeance.”
-
-Nicholas himself was a fanatic on such questions, and the end of it
-was that his rage hoodwinked his conscience, and he stole a march upon
-England and France, which destroyed their trust in his honour. He had
-already gathered troops in the south, to say nothing of a fleet in the
-Euxine; and having determined on an embassy to Constantinople, he chose
-Mentschikoff as his messenger, a man who was said to hate the Turks and
-dislike the English, and who, according to Kinglake, was a wit rather
-than a diplomat or a soldier. Advancing with much of the pomp of war, and
-disregarding much of the etiquette of peace, his arrival and behaviour
-caused such a panic in the Turkish capital that Colonel Rose was besought
-to take an English fleet to the protection of the Ottoman Empire.
-Colonel Rose’s friendly willingness, though afterwards cancelled by our
-Home Government, at once quieted the terror in Constantinople; but the
-Emperor of the French cast oil upon the smouldering flame by sending a
-fleet to Salamis. This greatly angered Nicholas, and, although he was
-pleased to find England disapproved of what France had done, Mentschikoff
-offered a secret treaty to Turkey, with ships and men, if she ever needed
-help, and asked in return for complete control of the Greek Church. This
-broke all his promises to the Western Powers, and England at once was
-made aware of it by the Turkish minister.
-
-Prince Mentschikoff meanwhile drew to himself an army, and the English
-Vice-consul at Galatz reported that in Bessarabia preparations were
-already made for the passage of 120,000 men, while battalions from all
-directions were making southward—the fleet was even then at Sebastopol.
-
-[Illustration: Florence Nightingale.
-
-(_From the painting in the National Portrait Gallery by Augustus Egg,
-R.A._)]
-
-The double-dealing of Russia was met by a gradual and tacit alliance
-between England and the Sultan; and Lord Aberdeen, whose love of peace
-has been described by one historian as “passionate” and “fanatical,” was
-unknowingly tying his own hands by the advice he gave in his despatches
-when consulted by Turkey. Moreover, in Turkey, our ambassador, Lord
-Stratford de Redcliffe, stiffened the back of Ottoman resistance against
-the Czar’s wily handling of “the sick man.” Lord Stratford’s tact and
-force of character had moulded all to his will, and our admiral at Malta
-was told to obey any directions he received from him. Our fleets were
-ordered into the neighbourhood of the Dardanelles, and Lord Stratford
-held his watch at Therapia against the gathering wrath of the Czar. Only
-a very little kindling touch was needed to light the fires of a terrible
-conflict in Europe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
- _Pastor Fliedner._
-
-
-A pebble thrown into a lake sends the tiny circling ripples very far,
-and one good piece of work leads to others of a quite different kind.
-Pastor Fliedner, inspired by love to his Master and deeply interested
-in Elizabeth Fry’s efforts, began to help prisoners. Finding no nurses
-for those of them who were ill, he was led to found the institution at
-Kaiserswerth, where Miss Nightingale afterwards received a part of her
-training.
-
-His story is a beautiful one. His father and grandfather had both been
-pastors in the Lutheran Church, and, like so many sons of the Manse, he
-was exceedingly poor, but he lived to justify his name of Theodor. He was
-born twenty years before Miss Nightingale, in the village of Eppstein,
-and perhaps he was the more determined to prove to himself and others
-that he had a soul, because he was one of those plump children who
-get teased for looking like dumplings, and when his father laughingly
-called him the “little beer-brewer” he didn’t like it, for he was a bit
-thin-skinned. He worked his way bravely through school and college,
-Giessen and Göttingen, and not only earned his fees by teaching, but also
-his bread and roof; and when teaching was not enough, he had the good
-sense to turn shoeblack and carpenter and odd man. He valued all that
-opens the eyes of the mind and educates what is highest and best. Many
-a time, heedless of hardship and privation, he would, in his holidays,
-tramp long distances that he might see more of God’s world and learn
-more of men and things. He taught himself in this way to speak several
-languages, learned the useful healing properties of many herbs, and
-other homely knowledge that afterwards helped him in his work among the
-sick. Then, too, the games and songs that he picked up on his travels
-afterwards enriched his own kindergarten. While tutoring at Cologne,
-he did quite informally some of the work of a curate, and, through
-preaching sometimes in the prison, became interested in the lot of
-discharged prisoners. It was at Cologne too that he received from the
-mother of his pupils kindly suggestions as to his own manners, which
-led him to write what is as true as it is quaint, that “gentle ways and
-polite manners help greatly to further the Kingdom of God.”
-
-He was only twenty-two when he became pastor of the little Protestant
-flock at Kaiserswerth, having walked there on foot and purposely taken
-his parishioners by surprise that they might not be put to the expense
-of a formal welcome. His yearly salary was only twenty pounds, and he
-helped his widowed mother by sharing the parsonage with a sister and two
-younger brothers, though in any case he had to house the mother of the
-man who had been there before him. Then came a failure in the business
-of the little town—the making of velvet—and though there were other rich
-communities that would have liked to claim him, he was true to his own
-impoverished flock, and set forth like a pilgrim in search of aid for
-them. In this apostolic journey he visited Holland and England as well
-as Germany, and it was in London that, in Elizabeth Fry, he found a noble
-kindred spirit, much older, of course, than himself, as we count the time
-of earth, but still full of all the tender enthusiasm of love’s immortal
-youth. Her wonderful work among the prisoners of Newgate sent him back to
-his own parish all on fire to help the prisoners of his own country, and
-he began at once with Düsseldorf, the prison nearest home. Through him
-was founded the first German organization for improving the discipline of
-prisons.
-
-Most of all he wanted to help the women who on leaving the prison doors
-were left without roof or protector.
-
-With his own hands he made clean his old summer-house, and in this
-shelter—twelve feet square—which he had furnished with a bed, a chair,
-and a table, he asked the All-father to lead some poor outcast to the
-little home he had made for her.
-
-It was at night that for the first time a poor forlorn creature came
-in answer to that prayer, and he and his wife led her in to the place
-prepared for her. Nine others followed, and, by the time the number had
-risen to twenty, a new building was ready for them with its own field and
-garden, and Fliedner’s wife, helped by Mademoiselle Gobel, who gave her
-services “all for love and nothing for reward,” had charge of the home,
-where many a one who, like the woman in the Gospel, “had been a great
-sinner” began to lead a new life and to follow Christ.
-
-For the children of some of these women a kindergarten arose; but the
-work of all others on which the pastor’s heart was set was the training
-of women to nurse and tend the poor; for in his own parish, where there
-was much illness and ignorance, there was no one to do this. Three years
-after his earlier venture, in 1836 when Miss Nightingale in her far-away
-home was a girl of sixteen still more or less in the schoolroom, this new
-undertaking was begun, this quiet haven, from which her own great venture
-long afterwards took help and teaching, was built up by this German saint.
-
-The failure of the velvet industry at Kaiserswerth, in the pastor’s
-first year, had left an empty factory which he turned into a hospital.
-
-But when it was opened, the faith needed was much like the faith of
-Abraham when great blessing was promised to a son whom the world thought
-he would never possess; for the Deaconess Hospital, when the wards were
-fitted up by its pastor with “mended furniture and cracked earthenware,”
-had as yet no patients and no deaconesses.
-
-There is, however, one essential of a good hospital which can be bought
-by labour as well as by money; and by hard work the hospital was kept
-admirably clean.
-
-The first patient who knocked at its doors was a servant girl, and
-other patients followed so quickly that within the first year sixty
-patients were nursed there and seven nurses had entered as deaconess and
-probationers. All the deaconesses were to be over twenty-five, and though
-they entered for five years, they could leave at any moment. The code
-of rules drawn up by the pastor was very simple, and there were not any
-vows; but the form of admission was a solemn one and included the laying
-on of hands, while the pastor invoked the Threefold Name, saying: “May
-God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, three Persons in one God,
-bless you; may He stablish you in the Truth until death, and give you
-hereafter the Crown of Life. Amen.”
-
-It all had a kind of homely grace, even in outward things. The
-deaconesses wore a large white turned-down collar over a blue cotton
-gown, a white muslin cap tied on under the chin with a large bow, and a
-white apron—a dress so well suited to the work that young and old both
-looked more than usually sweet and womanly in it.
-
-The story of how the deaconesses found a head, and Fliedner a second
-helper after the death of his first wife, reads rather like a Hans
-Andersen fairy tale.
-
-He travelled to Hamburg to ask Amalie Sievekin to take charge of the
-Home, and as she could not do so, she advised him to go to her friend and
-pupil Caroline Berthean, who had had experience of nursing in the Hamburg
-Hospital.
-
-The pastor was so pleased with Miss Caroline that he then and there
-offered her the choice of becoming either his wife or the Superintendent
-of the Deaconesses’ Home.
-
-She said she would fill _both_ the vacant places, and their honeymoon was
-spent in Berlin that they might “settle” the first five deaconesses in
-the Charité Hospital.
-
-Caroline, young though she was, made a good Deaconess Mother,[4] and she
-seems also to have been an excellent wife, full of devotion to the work
-her husband loved, through all the rest of her life. The deaconesses give
-their work, and in a sense give themselves. They do not pay for their
-board, but neither are they paid for their work, though they are allowed
-a very simple yearly outfit of two cotton gowns and aprons, and every
-five years a new _best_ dress of blue woollen material and an apron of
-black alpaca. Also their outdoor garb of a long black cloak and bonnet
-is supplied to them, and each is allowed a little pocket money. Their
-private property remains their own to control as they please, whether
-they live or die.
-
-The little account of Kaiserswerth which Miss Nightingale wrote is most
-rare and precious, having long been out of print, but from the copy in
-the British Museum I transfer a few sentences to these pages, because of
-their quaintness and their interest for all who are feeling their way in
-the education of young children:—
-
- “In the Orphan Asylum,” wrote Miss Nightingale, “each family
- lives with its deaconess exactly as her children. Some of
- them have already become deaconesses or teachers, some have
- returned home. When a new child is admitted, a little feast
- celebrates its arrival, at which the pastor himself presides,
- who understands children so well that his presence, instead of
- being a constraint, serves to make the little new-comer feel
- herself at home. She chooses what is to be sung, she has a
- little present from the pastor, and, after tea, at the end of
- the evening, she is prayed for....
-
- “One morning, in the boys’ ward, as they were about to have
- prayers, just before breakfast, two of the boys quarrelled
- about a hymn book. The ‘sister’ was uncertain, for a moment,
- what to do. They could not pray in that state of mind, yet
- excluding them from the prayer was not likely to improve them.
- She told a story of her own childhood, how one night she had
- been cross with her parents, and, putting off her prayers till
- she felt good again, had fallen asleep. The children were quite
- silent for a moment and shocked at the idea that anybody should
- go to bed without praying. The two boys were reconciled, and
- prayers took place....”
-
-In the British Museum also is a copy of the following letter:—
-
- “MESSRS. DUBAW,—A gentleman called here yesterday from you,
- asking for a copy of my ‘Kaiserswerth’ for, I believe, the
- British Museum.
-
- “Since yesterday a search has been instituted—but only two
- copies have been found, and one of those is torn and dirty. I
- send you the least bad-looking. You will see the date is 1851,
- and after the copies then printed were given away I don’t think
- I have ever thought of it.
-
- “I was twice in training there myself. Of course, since then
- hospital and district nursing have made great strides. Indeed,
- district nursing has been invented.
-
- “But never have I met with a higher love, a purer devotion than
- there. There was no neglect.
-
- “It was the more remarkable because many of the deaconesses had
- been only peasants (none were gentlewomen when I was there).
-
- “The food was poor—no coffee but bean coffee—no luxury but
- cleanliness.
-
- “FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.”
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
- _Years of preparation._
-
-
-Florence Nightingale, like Felicia Skene, had that saving gift of humour
-which at times may make bearable an otherwise unbearable keenness of
-vision.
-
-Here, for instance, is her account of the customary dusting of a room
-in those days (is it always nowadays so entirely different as might be
-wished?):—
-
- “Having witnessed the morning process called ‘tidying the
- room’ for many years, and with ever-increasing astonishment,
- I can describe what it is. From the chairs, tables, or sofa,
- upon which ‘things’ have lain during the night, and which are
- therefore comparatively clean from dust or blacks, the poor
- ‘things’ having ‘caught it,’ they are removed to other chairs,
- tables, sofas, upon which you could write your name with your
- finger in the dust or blacks. The other side of the things is
- therefore now evenly dirtied or dusted. The housemaid then
- flaps everything or some things not out of her reach with a
- thing called a duster—the dust flies up, then resettles more
- equally than it lay before the operation. The room has now been
- ‘put to rights.’”
-
-You see the shrewd humour of that observation touches the smallest
-detail. Miss Nightingale never wasted time in unpractical theorizing. In
-discussing the far-off attainment of ideal nursing she says:—
-
- “Will the top of Mont Blanc ever be made habitable? Our answer
- would be, it will be many thousands of years before we have
- reached the bottom of Mont Blanc in making the earth healthy.
- Wait till we have reached the bottom before we discuss the top.”
-
-Did she with her large outlook and big heart see our absurdity as
-well as our shame when, pointing a finger of scorn at what we named
-the superstition of other countries, we were yet content to see Spain
-and France and Italy sending out daily, in religious service to the
-poor, whole regiments of gentle and refined women trained in the arts
-of healing and the methods of discipline, while even in our public
-institutions—our hospitals and workhouses and prisons—it would hardly
-have been an exaggeration to say that most of the so-called “nurses” of
-those days were but drunken sluts?
-
-She herself has said:—
-
- “Shall the Roman Catholic Church do all the work? Has not the
- Protestant the same Lord, who accepted the services not only of
- men, but also of women?”
-
-One saving clause there is for England concerning this matter in the
-history of that time, in the work of a distinguished member of the
-Society of Friends, even before Florence Nightingale or Felicia Skene
-had been much heard of. We read that “the heavenly personality of
-Elizabeth Fry (whom Miss Nightingale sought out and visited) was an
-ever-present inspiration in her life.” From Elizabeth Fry our heroine
-heard of Pastor Fliedner’s training institute for nurses at Kaiserswerth,
-already described in the foregoing chapter; but, before going there,
-she took in the meantime a self-imposed course of training in Britain,
-visiting the hospitals in London, Edinburgh, and Dublin, though, so far
-as the nursing was concerned, the criticisms in her own _Nursing Notes_
-of later years would certainly suggest that what she learned was chiefly
-what _not_ to do. Her gracious and winning dignity was far indeed from
-the blindness of a weak amiability, and it can hardly be doubted that
-what she saw of the so-called “nurses” in our hospitals of those days,
-went far to deepen her resolve to devote herself to a calling then in
-dire neglect and disrepute. Dirt, disorder, drunkenness—these are the
-words used by a trustworthy biographer in describing the ways of English
-nurses in those days—of whom, indeed, we are told that they were of a
-very coarse order—ill-trained, hard-hearted, immoral. There must surely
-have been exceptions, but they seem to have been so rare as to have
-escaped notice. Indeed, it was even said that in those days—so strong
-and stupefying is the force of custom—decent girls avoided this noble
-calling, fearing to lose their character if found in its ranks.
-
-But whatever were Florence Nightingale’s faults—and she was by no means
-so inhuman as to be without faults—conventionality of thought and action
-certainly cannot be counted among them; and what she saw of the poor
-degraded souls who waited on the sick in our hospitals did but strengthen
-her resolve to become a nurse herself.
-
-Since she found no good school of nursing in England, she went abroad,
-and visited, among other places, the peaceful old hospital of St. John
-at Bruges, where the nuns are cultivated and devoted women who are well
-skilled in the gentle art of nursing.
-
-To city after city she went, taking with her not only her gift of
-discernment, but also that open mind and earnest heart which made of her
-life-offering so world-wide a boon.
-
-I do not think I have used too strong a word of the gift she was
-preparing. For the writer of an article which appeared in _Nursing
-Notes_[5] was right when, at the end of Miss Nightingale’s life, she
-wrote of her:—
-
- “Miss Nightingale belongs to that band of the great ones of
- the earth who may be acclaimed as citizens of the world; her
- influence has extended far beyond the limits of the nation to
- which she owed her birth, and in a very special sense she will
- be the great prototype for all time to those who follow more
- especially in her footsteps, in the profession she practically
- created. We must ever be grateful for the shining example she
- has given to nurses, who in her find united that broad-minded
- comprehension of the ultimate aim of all their work, with a
- patient and untiring devotion to its practical detail, which
- alone combine to make the perfect nurse.”
-
-But as yet she was only humbly and diligently preparing herself for the
-vocation to which she had determined, in face of countless obstacles, to
-devote herself, little knowing how vast would be the opportunities given
-to her when once she was ready for the work.
-
-During the winter and spring of 1849-50 she made a long tour through
-Egypt with Mr. and Mrs. Bracebridge. On her way there she met in Paris
-two Sisters of the Order of St. Vincent de Paul, from whom she took
-introductions to the schools and “miséricorde” in Alexandria. There she
-saw the fruits of long and self-denying discipline among the Nursing
-Sisters, and in the following year she visited Pastor Fliedner’s
-Institute at Kaiserswerth, where, among Protestant deaconesses, the life
-of ordered simplicity and service showed some of the same virtues.
-
-Miss Nightingale’s first visit to Kaiserswerth was comparatively short,
-but in the following year, 1852, she went there again and took four
-months of definite training, from June to October.
-
-A deep and warm regard seems to have arisen between the Fliedners and
-their English pupil, and the pastor’s friendship for Miss Nightingale’s
-revered counsellor, Elizabeth Fry, must have been one pleasant link in
-the happy bond.
-
-Fliedner was certainly a wonderful man, and Miss Nightingale’s comment on
-the spirit of his work was as true as it was witty. “Pastor Fliedner,”
-she said, “began his work with two beds under a roof, not with a castle
-in the air, and Kaiserswerth is now diffusing its blessings and its
-deaconesses over almost every Protestant land.” This was literally true.
-Within ten years of founding Kaiserswerth he had established sixty
-nurses in twenty-five different centres. Later he founded a Mother-house
-on Mount Zion at Jerusalem, having already settled some of his nurses
-at Pittsburg in the United States. The building for the Jerusalem
-Mother-house was given by the King of Prussia, and, nursing all sick
-people, without any question of creed, is a school of training for nurses
-in the East.
-
-Alexandria, Beyrout, Smyrna, Bucharest—he visited them all, and it is due
-to his efforts nearer home that to-day in almost all German towns of any
-importance there is a Deaconess Home, sending out trained women to nurse
-in middle-class families at very moderate fees, and ready to nurse the
-poor without any charge at all.
-
-When, in 1864, “he passed to his glorious rest”—the words are Miss
-Nightingale’s—there were already one hundred such houses, and during part
-of Miss Nightingale’s visit to Kaiserswerth, Pastor Fliedner was away a
-good deal on the missionary journeys which spread the Deaconess Homes
-through Germany, but they met quite often enough for each to appreciate
-the noble character of the other. In all his different kinds of work for
-helping the poor she was eagerly interested, and it may be that some of
-her wise criticisms of district visiting in later years may have been
-suggested by the courtesy and good manners that ruled the visiting of
-poor homes at Kaiserswerth in which she shared. It was there also that
-she made warm friendship with Henrietta Frickenhaus, in whose training
-college at Kaiserswerth 400 pupils had already passed muster. It should
-be added that Henrietta Frickenhaus was the first schoolmistress of
-Kaiserswerth.
-
-Mr. Sidney Herbert visited Kaiserswerth while Miss Nightingale was there,
-and when, in the great moment that came afterwards, he asked her to go
-out to the Crimea, he knew well how detailed and definite her training
-had been.
-
-Pastor Fliedner’s eldest daughter told Mrs. Tooley how vividly she
-recalled her father’s solemn farewell blessing when Miss Nightingale was
-leaving Kaiserswerth; laying his hands on her bent head and, with eyes
-that seemed to look beyond the scene that lay before him, praying that
-she might be stablished in the Truth till death, and receive the Crown of
-Life.
-
-And even mortal eyes may read a little of how those prayers for her
-future were fulfilled.
-
-She left vivid memories. “No one has ever passed so brilliant an
-examination,” said Fliedner, “or shown herself so thoroughly mistress of
-all she had to learn, as the young, wealthy, and graceful Englishwoman.”
-Agnes Jones, who was trained there before her work in Liverpool left a
-memorable record of life spent in self-denying service, tells how the
-workers at Kaiserswerth longed to see Miss Nightingale again, how her
-womanliness and lovableness were remembered, and how among the sick
-people were those who even in dying blessed her for having led them to
-the Redeemer; for throughout her whole life her religion was the very
-life of her life, as deep as it was quiet, the underlying secret of
-that compassionate self-detachment and subdued fire, without which her
-wit and shrewdness would have lost their absolving glow and underlying
-tenderness. Hers was ever the gentleness of strength, not the easy
-bending of the weak. She was a pioneer among women, and did much to break
-down the cruel limitations which, in the name of affection and tradition,
-hemmed in the lives of English girls in those days. Perhaps she was among
-the first of that day in England to realize that the Christ, her Master,
-who sent Mary as His first messenger of the Resurrection, was in a fine
-sense of the word “unconventional,” even though He came that every jot
-and tittle of religious law might be _spiritually_ fulfilled.
-
-It was after her return to England from Germany that she published her
-little pamphlet on Kaiserswerth, from which quotations have already been
-given.
-
-Her next visit was to the Convent of St. Vincent de Paul in Paris,
-where the nursing was a part of the long-established routine, and while
-there she was able to visit the hospitals in Paris, and learned much
-from the Sisters in their organized work among the houses of the poor.
-In the midst of all this she was herself taken ill, and was nursed
-by the Sisters. Her direct and personal experience of their tender
-skill no doubt left its mark upon her own fitness. On her return home
-to complete her recovery, her new capacity and knowledge made a good
-deal of delighted talk in the cottages, and Mrs. Tooley tells us how
-it was rumoured that “Miss Florence could set a broken leg better than
-a doctor,” and made the old rheumatic folk feel young again with her
-remedies, to say nothing of her “eye lotions,” which “was enough to ruin
-the spectacle folk.” She was always ahead of her time in her belief in
-simple rules of health and diet and hatred of all that continual use
-of drugs which was then so much in fashion, and she no doubt saw many
-interesting experiments at Matlock Bank in helping Nature to do her own
-work.
-
-[Illustration: Florence Nightingale in 1854.
-
-(_From a drawing by H. M. B. C._)]
-
-As soon as her convalescence was over she visited London hospitals, and
-in the autumn of 1852 those of Edinburgh and Dublin, having spent a part
-of the interval in her home at Embley, where she had again the pleasure
-of being near her friends the Herberts, with whose neighbourly work among
-the poor she was in fullest sympathy.
-
-Her first post was at the Harley Street Home for Sick Governesses. She
-had been interested in many kinds of efforts on behalf of those who
-suffer; Lord Shaftesbury’s Ragged School labours, for instance, had
-appealed to her, and to that and other like enterprises she had given
-the money earned by her little book on Kaiserswerth. But she always had
-in view the one clear and definite aim—to fit herself in every possible
-way for competent nursing. It was on August 12, 1853, that she became
-Superintendent of the Harley Street institution, which is now known
-as the Florence Nightingale Hospital. It was founded in 1850 by Lady
-Canning, as a Home for Invalid Gentlewomen, and when an appeal was made
-to Miss Nightingale for money and good counsel, she gave in addition
-_herself_ and became for a time the Lady Superintendent.
-
-The hospital was intended mainly for sick governesses, for whom the need
-of such a home of rest and care and surgical help had sometimes arisen,
-but it had been mismanaged and was in danger of becoming a failure. There
-Miss Nightingale, we read, was to be found “in the midst of various
-duties of a hospital—for the Home was largely a sanatorium—organizing the
-nurses, attending to the correspondence, prescriptions, and accounts; in
-short, performing all the duties of a hard-working matron, as well as
-largely financing the institution.”
-
- “The task of dealing with sick and querulous women,” says
- Mrs. Tooley, “embittered and rendered sensitive and exacting
- by the unfortunate circumstances of their lives, was not an
- easy one, but Miss Nightingale had a calm and cheerful spirit
- which could bear with the infirmities of the weak. And so she
- laboured on in the dull house in Harley Street, summer and
- winter, bringing order and comfort out of a wretched chaos, and
- proving a real friend and helper to the sick and sorrow-laden
- women.
-
- “At length the strain proved too much for her delicate body,
- and she was compelled most reluctantly to resign her task.”
-
-She had worked very hard, and was seldom seen outside the walls of the
-house in Harley Street. Though she was not there very long, the effect
-of her presence was great and lasting, and the Home, which has now moved
-to Lisson Grove, has increased steadily in usefulness, though it has
-of necessity changed its lines a little, because the High Schools and
-the higher education of women have opened new careers and lessened the
-number of governesses, especially helpless governesses. It gives aid far
-and wide to the daughters and other kindred of hard-worked professional
-men, men who are serving the world with their brains, and nobly seeking
-to give work and service of as good a kind as lies within their power,
-rather than to snatch at its exact value in coin, even if that were
-possible—and in such toil as theirs, whether they be teachers, artists,
-parsons, or themselves doctors, it is _not_ possible; for such work
-cannot be weighed in money.
-
-Queen Alexandra is President, and last year 301 patients were treated,
-besides the 16 who were already within its walls when the new year began.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
- _The beginning of the war—A sketch of Sidney Herbert._
-
-
-It was on April 11, 1854, that war was declared by Russia, and four days
-later the invasion of the Ottoman Empire began. England and France were
-the sworn allies of Turkey, and though the war had begun with a quarrel
-about “a key and a trinket,” the key and the trinket were, after all,
-symbols, just as truly as the flags for which men lay down their lives.
-
-England had entrusted the cause of peace to those faithful lovers of
-peace, Lord Aberdeen, Mr. Gladstone, Mr. Cobden, and Mr. Bright; but no
-single man in our “constitutional” Government is in reality a free agent,
-and the peace-loving members of the Cabinet had been skilfully handled
-by the potent Lord Palmerston, and did not perceive soon enough that the
-understanding with Turkey and with France, into which they had drifted,
-must endanger the peace of Europe because the other Powers were ignored.
-If the English people had been secretly longing for war—and it is said
-that they had—then the terrible cup they had desired was to be drunk to
-the lees: the war on which they were entering was a war of agony and
-shame, a war in which men died by hundreds of neglect and mismanagement,
-before a woman’s hand could reach the helm and reform the hospital
-ordinances in the ship of State.
-
-Meanwhile, before we plunge into the horrors of the Crimean War we may
-rest our minds with a few pages about Miss Nightingale’s friend, Mr.
-Sidney Herbert, who became an active and self-sacrificing power in the
-War Office.
-
-When Florence Nightingale was born, Sidney Herbert—afterwards Lord
-Herbert of Lea—was already a boy of ten.
-
-Those who know the outlook over the Thames, from the windows of Pembroke
-Lodge at Richmond, will realize that he too, like Florence Nightingale,
-was born in a very beautiful spot. His father, the eleventh Earl of
-Pembroke, had married the daughter of Count Woronzow, the Russian
-Ambassador, and, in Sidney’s knowledgeable help afterwards at the War
-Office during the Crimean War, it is not without interest to remember
-this.
-
-His birth had not been expected so soon, and there were no baby clothes
-handy at Pembroke Lodge, where his mother was staying. It would seem
-that shops were not so well able to supply every need with a ready-made
-garment as they are in these days; so the first clothes that the baby boy
-wore were lent by the workhouse until his own were ready.
-
-In later days, when he cared for the needs of all who crossed his path,
-until his people feared—or pretended to fear—that he would give away all
-he had, his mother used to say that workhouse clothes were the first he
-had worn after his birth, and were also clearly those in which he would
-die.
-
-He had good reason to rejoice in his lineage, for he was descended from
-the sister of Sir Philip Sidney, after whom he was named. He too, like
-his great namesake, was all his life full of that high courtesy which
-comes of loving consideration for others rather than for self, and is
-never more charming than in those who, being in every sense “well-born,”
-have seen it in their fathers, and in their fathers before them,
-notwithstanding that in those others who, less fortunate, whether they be
-rich or poor, having come of an ill brood, are yet themselves well-bred,
-such courtesy is of the courts of heaven.
-
-The boy’s father had much individuality. Being the owner of some thirty
-villages, and lord-lieutenant of the county, he was naturally a great
-magnate in Wiltshire. He was very fond of dogs, and his favourites among
-them sat at his own table, each with its own chair and plate.
-
-Sidney was almost like an only son at home, for his elder brother,
-who was, of course, the heir to Lord Herbert’s patrimony, had married
-unhappily and lived abroad.
-
-The little boy seems to have been really rather like the little angels
-in Italian pictures, a child with golden curls and big brown eyes, with
-the look of love and sunshine gleaming out of them that he kept all his
-life, and there is a letter of his mother’s, describing a children’s
-fancy dress ball, at which she dressed him up as a little cupid, with
-wings and a wreath of roses, and was very proud of the result. He was
-either too little to mind, or if he hated it, as so many boys would,
-he bore with it to please his mother, who, we are told, made as much
-of an idol of him as did the rest of his family. And indeed it is most
-wonderful, from all accounts, that he was not completely spoiled. Here is
-his mother’s letter about it:—
-
- “I never did see anything half so like an angel. I must say
- so, although it was my own performance. He had on a garland of
- roses and green leaves mixed; a pair of wild duck’s wings, put
- on wire to make them set well; a bow and arrow, and a quiver
- with arrows in it, tied on with a broad blue ribbon that went
- across his sweet neck.”
-
-In another of her letters we are told of a visit paid, about this time,
-to Queen Charlotte, and how the child “Boysey” climbed into the Queen’s
-lap, drew up and pulled down window-blinds, romped at hide-and-seek with
-the Duke of Cambridge, and showed himself to be not in the slightest
-degree abashed by the presence of royalty.
-
-Lord Fitzwilliam, a friend and distant relation, used often to stay at
-Pembroke Lodge and at Wilton, and seems to have been pleased by the boy’s
-courteous ways and winning looks; for, having no children of his own,
-when he left most of his property to Lord Pembroke, the “remainder,”
-which meant big estates in Ireland and Shropshire, was to go to his
-second son, Sidney.
-
-The boy loved his father with a very special intimacy and tenderness, as
-we see by a letter written soon after he left Harrow and a little while
-before he went up to Oxford, where at Oriel he at once made friends with
-men of fine character and sterling worth. His father had died in 1827,
-and he writes from Chilmark, where the rector, Mr. Lear, was his tutor,
-and the Rectory was near his own old home at Wilton:—
-
- “You cannot think how comfortable it is to be in a nice little
- country church after that great noisy chapel. Everything is
- so quiet and the people all so attentive that you might hear
- a pin fall while Mr. Lear is preaching. I like, too, being so
- near Wilton, so many things here ever bringing to mind all _he_
- said and did, all places where I have ridden with _him_, and
- the home where we used to be so happy. In short, there is not
- a spot about Wilton now which I do not love as if it were a
- person. I hope you will be coming there soon and get it over,
- for seeing that place again will be a dreadful trial to you.”
-
-Among his friends at Oxford were Cardinal Manning, Lord Lincoln, who
-as Duke of Newcastle was afterwards closely associated with him at the
-War Office; Lord Elgin, Lord Dalhousie, and Lord Canning, all three
-Viceroys of India. It was there, too, that his friendship with Mr.
-Gladstone began. Lord Stanmore says that Mr. Gladstone told him a year
-or two before his death how one day at a University Convocation dealing
-with a petition against the Roman Catholic Relief Bill, to which he
-had himself gone as an undergraduate outsider, he had noticed among the
-crowd of undergraduates in the vestibule of the Convocation House “a tall
-and graceful figure, surmounted by a face of such singular sweetness
-and refinement that his attention was at once riveted by it, and with
-such force that the picture he then saw rose again as vividly before him
-while talking as when first seen sixty-eight years before.” Mr. Gladstone
-inquired the name of this attractive freshman. “Herbert of Oriel,” was
-the answer. They became friends; but in those days friendships between
-men of different colleges and different ages were not always easily kept
-up. The more intimate relations between himself and Herbert date only
-from a later time.
-
-Herbert’s noble and beautiful life was to be closely intertwined with
-that of his little friend and neighbour, in one of those friendships—holy
-in their unselfish ardour of comradeship and service of others—which put
-to shame many of the foolish sayings of the world, and prove that, while
-an ideal marriage is the divinest happiness God gives to earthly life, an
-ideal friendship also has the power to lift both joy and pain into the
-region of heaven itself.
-
-This was a friendship which, as we shall see, arose in the first
-instance partly out of the fact that the two children grew up on
-neighbouring estates, and were both what Mrs. Tollemache has called
-“Sunday people”—people with leisure to give to others, as well as wealth;
-and at the end of Sidney Herbert’s life it was said that the following
-description of Sir Philip Sidney, after whom he was named, was in every
-particular a description of him:—
-
- “He was gentle, loving, compassionate, forgiving as a woman,
- and yet had the dignity and valour of a man. His liberality was
- so great that with him not to give was not to enjoy what he had.
-
- “In his familiarity with men he never descended, but raised
- everybody to his own level. So modest, so humble was he, and so
- inaccessible to flattery, that he esteemed not praise except as
- an encouragement to further exertion in well-doing. His tongue
- knew no deceit, and his mind no policy but frankness, courage,
- and sincerity, and ... England has had greater statesmen, but
- never so choice a union of the qualities which make a Sidney.
- His fame is founded on those personal qualities of which his
- contemporaries were the best judges, although they may not
- leave a trace in books or in history.”
-
-And of both might it most emphatically have been said, as was said by Mr.
-Gladstone of one of them: “Rare indeed—God only knows how rare—are men
-with his qualities; but even a man with his qualities might not have been
-so happy as to possess his opportunities. He had them, and he used them.”
-
-The story of his betraying a State secret to that other friend, who was
-the original of “Diana of the Crossways,” is a myth which has been more
-than once disproved, and of which his biographer says that any one who
-knew him, or knew the real “Diana,” would have treated it with derision.
-
-But he was always ready to bear lightly undeserved blame, just as he took
-it as of no account when credit that should have been his was rendered
-elsewhere. Take, for instance, the warrant which relieved soldiers of
-good conduct from the liability of punishment by flogging. He had worked
-hard at this warrant, and it originated with him, although the Duke of
-Cambridge supported him in it. But when one of his friends expressed
-annoyance that the praise had come to the better-known man, he replied
-impatiently: “What _does_ it matter who gets the credit so long as the
-thing itself is done?”
-
-Nor did he ever seem to care about mere material reward, and he simply
-could not understand the outcry of one useful servant of the State who,
-when likely to be left out of office in prospective Cabinet arrangements,
-exclaimed, “And pray what is to become of _me_?”
-
-With him, as with Miss Nightingale, giving was an untold and constant
-joy, and he was able to be lavish because of his great personal economy
-and self-denial. In all his beautiful home at Wilton, Lord Stanmore tells
-us, his own were the only rooms that could have been called bare or
-shabby, and when he was urged to buy a good hunter for himself, he had
-spent too much on others to allow himself such a luxury. He delighted in
-educating the sons of widows left by men of his own order without means.
-“He maintained,” we read, “at one and the same time boys at Harrow,
-Marlborough, and Woolwich, another in training for an Australian career,
-and a fifth who was being educated for missionary work. And he expended
-much in sending poor clergymen and their families to the seaside for a
-month’s holiday.” And to gentlepeople who were poor we read that the help
-of money “was given so delicately as to remove the burden of obligation.
-A thousand little attentions in time of sickness or sorrow helped and
-cheered them. In all these works his wife was his active coadjutor,
-but” we read that “it was not till after his death that she was at all
-aware of their extent, and even then not fully, so unostentatiously and
-secretly were they performed. His sunny presence,” says his biographer,
-“warmed and cheered all around him, and the charm of his conversation
-made him the light and centre of any company of which he formed a
-part.[6] There are, however, many men who are brilliant and joyous in
-society, over whom a strange change comes when they cross their own
-threshold. Sidney Herbert was never more brilliant, never more charming,
-never more witty than when alone with his mother, his wife, his sisters,
-or his children.
-
-“Nowhere was he seen to greater advantage than in his own home. He
-delighted in country life, and took a keen and almost boyish interest in
-its sports and pursuits, into the enjoyment of which he threw himself
-with a zest and fulness not common among busy men ... a good shot, a bold
-rider, and an expert fisherman, he was welcomed by the country gentlemen
-as one of themselves, and to this he owed much of his great popularity in
-his own country. But it was also due to the unfailing consideration shown
-by him to those of every class around him, and the sure trust in his
-responsive sympathy which was felt by all, high and low alike, dwelling
-within many miles of Wilton. By all dependent on him, or in any way under
-his orders, he was adored, and well deserved to be so. The older servants
-were virtually members of his family, and he took much pains in seeing
-to their interests, and helping their children to start well in the
-world.”
-
-“Never,” says Lady Herbert, “did he come down to Wilton, if only for a
-few days, without going to see Sally Parham, an old housemaid, who had
-been sixty years in the family, and Larkum, an old carpenter of whom he
-was very fond, and who on his death-bed gave him the most beautiful and
-emphatic blessing I ever heard.”
-
-Of his splendid work in the War Office, and for our soldiers long after
-he had laid aside War Office cares, we shall read in its due place.
-Meanwhile we think of him for the present as Florence Nightingale’s
-friend, and her neighbour when in the south, for his beautiful Wilton
-home was quite near to her own home at Embley.
-
-Before the Crimean War began he was already giving his mind to army
-reform, and while that war was in progress the horrors of insanitary
-carelessness, as he saw them through Florence Nightingale’s letters, made
-of him England’s greatest sanitary reformer in army matters, with the
-single exception of Florence Nightingale herself.
-
-The two had from the first many tastes in common, and among those of
-minor importance was their great affection for animals. He was as devoted
-to his horse Andover as she had been to the little owl Athene, of which
-her sister, Lady Verney, in an old MS. quoted by Sir Stuart Grant Duff,
-gives the following pretty history:—
-
- “Bought for 6 lepta from some children into whose hands it had
- dropped out of its nest in the Parthenon, it was brought by
- Miss Nightingale to Trieste, with a slip of a plane from the
- Ilissus and a cicala. At Vienna the owl ate the cicala and was
- mesmerized, much to the improvement of his temper. At Prague
- a waiter was heard to say that ‘this is the bird which all
- English ladies carry with them, because it tells them when they
- are to die.’ It came to England by Berlin, lived at Embley,
- Lea Hurst, and in London, travelled in Germany, and stayed at
- Carlsbad while its mistress was at Kaiserswerth. It died the
- very day she was to have started for Scutari (her departure was
- delayed two days), and the only tear that she had shed during
- that tremendous week was when ⸺ put the little body into her
- hand. ‘Poor little beastie,’ she said, ‘it was odd how much I
- loved you.’”
-
-And we read that before his death, Lord Herbert with a like tenderness
-bade a special farewell to his horse Andover, kissing him on the neck,
-feeding him with sugar, and telling him he should never ride again.
-
-That was when he was already extremely ill, though not too ill to take
-care that a young priest who was dying also, but too poor to buy all the
-doctor had ordered, should be cared for out of his own purse.
-
-With him, as with Florence Nightingale, giving and helping seem to have
-been unceasing.
-
-The friendship between them was very dear to both of them, and was warmly
-shared by Lord Herbert’s wife. When they all knew that death was waiting
-with a summons, and that Lord Herbert’s last journey abroad could have
-but one ending, even though, as things turned out, he was to have just
-a momentary glimpse of home again, Florence Nightingale was the last
-friend to whom he bade farewell. But that was not till 1861, and in the
-intervening years they worked incessantly together, for the good of the
-army and the improvement of sanitary conditions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
- _The Crimean muddle—Explanations and excuses._
-
-
-In our last chapter we ended with a word about those sanitary reforms
-which were yet to come. How appalling was the ignorance and confusion in
-1854, when the war in the Crimea began, has now become matter of common
-knowledge everywhere.
-
-I note later, as a result of my talk with General Evatt, some of the
-reasons and excuses for the dire neglect and muddle that reigned. John
-Bull was, as usual, so arrogantly sure of himself that he had—also as
-usual—taken no sort of care to keep himself fit in time of peace, and
-there was no central organizing authority for the equipment of the
-army—every one was responsible, and therefore no one. The provisions
-bought by contract were many of them rotten and mouldy, so cleverly had
-the purchasers been deceived and defrauded. The clothing provided for
-the men before Sebastopol, where, in at least one instance, man was
-literally frozen to man, were such as would have been better suited to
-India or South Africa. Many of the boots sent out were fitter for women
-and children playing on green lawns than for the men who must tramp over
-rough and icy roads. The very horses were left to starve for want of
-proper hay. Proper medical provision there was none. There were doctors,
-some of them nobly unselfish, but few of them trained for that particular
-work. An army surgeon gets little practice in time of peace, and one
-lady, a Red Cross nurse, told me that even in our South African campaign
-the doctor with whom she did her first bit of bandaging out there told
-her he had not bandaged an arm for fifteen years! But indeed many of the
-doctors in the Crimea were not only badly prepared, they were also so
-tied up with red-tape details that, though they gave their lives freely,
-they quickly fell in with the helpless chaos of a hospital without a head.
-
-England shuddered to the heart when at last she woke up under the lash
-of the following letter from William Howard Russell, the _Times_ war
-correspondent:—
-
- “The commonest accessories of a hospital are wanting, there is
- not the least attention paid to decency or cleanliness, the
- stench is appalling ... and, for all I can observe, the men die
- without the least effort to save them. There they lie just as
- they were let gently down on the ground by the poor fellows,
- the comrades, who brought them on their backs from the camp
- with the greatest tenderness, but who are not allowed to remain
- with them.”
-
- “Are there,” he wrote at a later date, “no devoted women among
- us, able and willing to go forth and minister to the sick and
- suffering soldiers of the East in the hospitals at Scutari?
- Are none of the daughters of England, at this extreme hour of
- need, ready for such a work of mercy?... France has sent forth
- her Sisters of Mercy unsparingly, and they are even now by the
- bedsides of the wounded and the dying, giving what woman’s hand
- alone can give of comfort and relief.... Must we fall so far
- below the French in self-sacrifice and devotedness, in a work
- which Christ so signally blesses as done unto Himself? ‘I was
- sick and ye visited me.’”
-
-What the art of nursing had fallen to in England may be guessed from the
-fact lately mentioned to me by a great friend of Miss Nightingale’s, that
-when Florence Nightingale told her family she would like to devote her
-life to nursing, they said with a smile, “Are you sure you would not like
-to be a kitchen-maid?”
-
-Yet the Nightingales were, on other questions, such as that of the
-education of girls, far in advance of their time.
-
-Possibly nothing short of those letters to the _Times_, touching, as they
-did, the very quick of the national pride, could have broken down the
-“Chinese wall” of that particular prejudice.
-
-Something may be said at this point as to what had been at the
-root of the dreadful condition of things in the hospitals before
-Miss Nightingale’s arrival. I have had some instructive talk with
-Surgeon-General Evatt, who knows the medical administration of our army
-through and through, and whose friendship with Miss Nightingale arose in
-a very interesting way, but will be mentioned later on in its due place.
-
-General Evatt has pointed out to me in conversation that what is still
-a weakness of our great London hospitals, though lessened there by the
-fierce light of public opinion that is ever beating upon them, was the
-very source of the evil at Scutari.
-
-Such hospitals as the London, doing such magnificent work that it
-deserves a thousand times the support it receives, are, explained General
-Evatt, without any central authority. The doctors pay their daily visits
-and their code is a high one, but they are as varied in ability and in
-character as any other group of doctors, and are responsible to no one
-but God and their own conscience. The nursing staff have _their_ duties
-and _their_ code, but are under separate management. The committee
-secures the funds and manages the finance, but it is again quite distinct
-in its powers, and does not control either doctors or nurses.
-
-The Barrack Hospital at Scutari was, said the General, in this respect
-just like a London hospital of sixty years ago, set down in the midst of
-the Crimea. There was, he said—to adapt a well-known quotation—“knowledge
-without authority, and authority without knowledge,” but no power to
-unite them in responsible effort. Therefore we must feel deep pity,
-not indignation, with regard to any one member of the staff; for each
-alone was helpless against the chaos, until Miss Nightingale, who stood
-outside the official muddle, yet with the friendship of a great War
-Minister behind her, and in her hand all the powers of wealth, hereditary
-influence, and personal charm, quietly cut some of the knots of red tape
-which were, as she saw clearly, strangling the very lives of our wounded
-soldiers. When I spoke of the miracle by which a woman who had been
-all her life fitting herself for this work, had suddenly received her
-world-wide opportunity, he replied: “Yes, I have often said it was as if
-a very perfect machine had through long years been fitted together and
-polished to the highest efficiency, and when, at last, it was ready for
-service, a hand was put forth to accept and use it.”
-
-Just as he sought to explain the awful condition of the army hospitals
-at the beginning of the war; so also he, as a military doctor, pointed
-out to me that there were even many excuses for the condition of the
-transport service, and the idiotic blunders of a government that sent
-soldiers to the freezing winters of the Crimea in clothes that would have
-been better suited to the hot climate of India.
-
-The army after the Peninsular War had been split up into battalions, and
-had, like the hospitals, lost all _centre_ of authority. England had
-been seething with the social troubles of our transition from the feudal
-order to the new competitions and miseries of a commercial and mechanical
-age. Machinery was causing uproar among the hand-workers. Chartist
-riots, bread riots, were upsetting the customary peace. Troops were sent
-hither and thither, scattered over the country, and allowed a certain
-degree of licence and slackness. The army had no administrative head.
-There was no one to consider the question of stores or transit, and,
-even when the war broke out, it was treated with John Bull’s too casual
-self-satisfaction as a moment of excitement and self-glorification, from
-which our troops were to return as victors in October, after displaying
-themselves for a few weeks and satisfactorily alarming the enemy. The
-moral of it all is ever present and needs no pressing home. Not until
-every man has had the training of a man in defence of his own home, and
-is himself responsible for the defence of his own hearth, shall we as a
-nation learn the humility and caution of the true courage, and realize
-how much, at the best, is outside human control, and how great is our
-responsibility in every detail for all that lies within it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
- “_Five were wise, and five foolish._”
-
-
-When the great moment came, there was one wise virgin whose lamp had long
-been trimmed and daily refilled with ever finer quality of flame. She was
-not alone. There were others, and she was always among the first to do
-them honour. But she stood easily first, and first, too, in the modesty
-of all true greatness. All her life had been a training for the work
-which was now given to her hand.
-
-Among the many women who longed to nurse and tend our soldiers, many were
-fast bound by duties to those dependent on them, many were tied hand
-and foot by the pettifogging prejudices of the school in which they had
-been brought up. Many, whose ardour would have burned up all prejudice
-and all secondary claim, were yet ignorant, weak, incapable. Florence
-Nightingale, on the contrary, was highly trained, not only in intellect,
-but in the details of what she rightly regarded as an art, “a craft,”
-the careful art of nursing—highly disciplined in body and in soul, every
-muscle and nerve obedient to her will, an international linguist, a woman
-in whom organizing power had been developed to its utmost capacity by a
-severely masculine education, and whose experience had been deepened by
-practical service both at home and abroad.
-
-Her decision was a foregone conclusion, and a very striking seal was set
-upon it. For the letter, in which she offered to go out to the Crimea
-as the servant of her country, was crossed by a letter from Mr. Sidney
-Herbert, that country’s representative at the War Office, asking her to
-go. Promptitude on both sides had its own reward; for each would have
-missed the honour of spontaneous initiative had there been a day’s delay.
-
-Here is a part of Mr. Herbert’s letter:—
-
- “_October 15, 1854._
-
- “DEAR MISS NIGHTINGALE,—You will have seen in the papers
- that there is a great deficiency of nurses at the hospital of
- Scutari. The other alleged deficiencies, namely, of medical
- men, lint, sheets, etc., must, if they ever existed, have
- been remedied ere this, as the number of medical officers
- with the army amounted to one to every ninety-five men in the
- whole force, being nearly double what we have ever had before;
- and thirty more surgeons went out there three weeks ago, and
- must at this time, therefore, be at Constantinople. A further
- supply went on Monday, and a fresh batch sail next week. As to
- medical stores, they have been sent out in profusion, by the
- ton weight—15,000 pair of sheets, medicine, wine, arrowroot in
- the same proportion; and the only way of accounting for the
- deficiency at Scutari, if it exists, is that the mass of the
- stores went to Varna, and had not been sent back when the army
- left for the Crimea, but four days would have remedied that.
-
- “In the meantime, stores are arriving, but the deficiency of
- female nurses is undoubted; none but male nurses have ever been
- admitted to military hospitals. It would be impossible to
- carry about a large staff of female nurses with an army in the
- field. But at Scutari, having now a fixed hospital, no military
- reason exists against the introduction; and I am confident they
- might be introduced with great benefit, for hospital orderlies
- must be very rough hands, and most of them, on such an occasion
- as this, very inexperienced ones.
-
- “I receive numbers of offers from ladies to go out, but they
- are ladies who have no conception of what a hospital is, nor
- of the nature of its duties; and they would, when the time
- came, either recoil from the work or be entirely useless, and
- consequently, what is worse, entirely in the way; nor would
- these ladies probably even understand the necessity, especially
- in a military hospital, of strict obedience to rule, etc....
-
- “There is but one person in England that I know of who would
- be capable of organizing and superintending such a scheme,
- and I have been several times on the point of asking you
- hypothetically if, supposing the attempt were made, you would
- undertake to direct it. The selection of the rank and file
- of nurses would be difficult—no one knows that better than
- yourself. The difficulty of finding women equal to the task,
- after all, full of horror, and requiring, besides knowledge and
- goodwill, great knowledge and great courage, will be great; the
- task of ruling them and introducing system among them great;
- and not the least will be the difficulty of making the whole
- work smoothly with the medical and military authorities out
- there.
-
- “This is what makes it so important that the experiment
- should be carried out by one with administrative capacity and
- experience. A number of sentimental, enthusiastic ladies turned
- loose in the hospital at Scutari would probably after a few
- days be _mises à la porte_ by those whose business they would
- interrupt, and whose authority they would dispute.
-
- “My question simply is—would you listen to the request to go
- out and supervise the whole thing? You would, of course, have
- plenary authority over all the nurses, and I think I could
- secure you the fullest assistance and co-operation from the
- medical staff, and you would also have an unlimited power of
- drawing on the Government for whatever you think requisite
- for the success of your mission. On this part of the subject
- the details are too many for a letter, and I reserve it for
- our meeting; for, whatever decision you take, I know you will
- give me every assistance and advice. I do not say one word to
- press you. You are the only person who can judge for yourself
- which of conflicting or incompatible duties is the first or the
- highest; but I think I must not conceal from you that upon your
- decision will depend the ultimate success or failure of the
- plan.... Will you let me have a line at the War Office, to let
- me know?
-
- “There is one point which I have hardly a right to touch
- upon, but I trust you will pardon me. If you were inclined
- to undertake the great work, would Mr. and Mrs. Nightingale
- consent? This work would be so national, and the request made
- to you, proceeding from the Government which represents the
- nation, comes at such a moment that I do not despair of their
- consent.
-
- “Deriving your authority from the Government, your position
- would ensure the respect and consideration of every one,
- especially in a service where official rank carries so much
- respect. This would secure you any attention or comfort on your
- way out there, together with a complete submission to your
- orders. I know these things are a matter of indifference to
- you, except so far as they may further the great object you may
- have in view; but they are of importance in themselves, and of
- every importance to those who have a right to take an interest
- in your personal position and comfort.
-
- “I know you will come to a right and wise decision. God grant
- it may be one in accordance with my hopes.—Believe me, dear
- Miss Nightingale, ever yours,
-
- “SIDNEY HERBERT.”
-
-
-Miss Nightingale’s decision was announced in the _Times_, and on October
-23 the following paragraph appeared in that paper:—
-
- “It is known that Miss Nightingale has been appointed by
- Government to the office of Superintendent of Nurses at
- Scutari. She has been pressed to accept of sums of money for
- the general objects of the hospitals for the sick and wounded.
- Miss Nightingale neither invites nor can refuse these generous
- offers. Her bankers’ account is opened at Messrs. Glyn’s, but
- it must be understood that any funds forwarded to her can only
- be used so as not to interfere with the official duties of the
- Superintendent.”
-
-This was written by Miss Nightingale herself, and the response in money
-was at once very large, but money was by no means the first or most
-difficult question.
-
-No time must be lost in choosing the nurses who were to accompany the
-Lady-in-Chief. It was not until later that she became known by that name,
-but it already well described her office, for every vital arrangement and
-decision seems to have centred in her. She knew well that her task could
-be undertaken in no spirit of lightness, and she never wasted power in
-mere fuss or flurry.
-
-She once wrote to Sir Bartle Frere of “that careless and ignorant
-person called the Devil,” and she did not want any of his careless and
-ignorant disciples to go out with her among her chosen band. Nor did she
-want any incompetent sentimentalists of the kind brought before us in
-that delightful story of our own South African War, of the soldier who
-gave thanks for the offer to wash his face, but confessed that fourteen
-other ladies had already offered the same service. Indeed, the rather
-garish merriment of that little tale seems almost out of place when we
-recall the rotting filth and unspeakable stench of blood and misery in
-which the men wounded in the Crimea were lying wrapped from head to
-foot. No antiseptic surgery, no decent sanitation, no means of ordinary
-cleanliness, were as yet found for our poor Tommies, and Kinglake assures
-us that all the efforts of masculine organization, seeking to serve the
-crowded hospitals with something called a laundry, had only succeeded in
-washing _seven_ shirts for the entire army!
-
-Miss Nightingale knew a little of the vastness of her undertaking,
-but she is described by Lady Canning at this critical time as “gentle
-and wise and quiet”—“in no bustle or hurry.” Yet within a single week
-from the date of Mr. Herbert’s letter asking her to go out, all her
-arrangements were made and her nurses chosen—nay more, the expedition had
-actually started.
-
-The War Office issued its official intimation that “Miss Nightingale, a
-lady with greater practical experience of hospital administration and
-treatment than any other lady in this country,” had undertaken the noble
-and arduous work of organizing and taking out nurses for the soldiers;
-and it was also notified that she had been appointed by Government to the
-office of Superintendent of Nurses at Scutari.
-
-The _Examiner_ published a little biographical sketch in reply to the
-question which was being asked everywhere. Society, of course, knew Miss
-Nightingale very well, but Society includes only a small knot of people
-out of the crowd of London’s millions, to say nothing of the provinces.
-Many out of those millions were asking, “Who is Miss Nightingale?” and,
-in looking back, it is amazing to see how many disapproved of the step
-she was taking.
-
-In those days, as in these, and much more tyrannically than in these,
-Mrs. Grundy had her silly daughters, ready to talk slander and folly
-about any good woman who disregarded her. To Miss Nightingale she simply
-did not exist. Miss Martineau was right when she wrote of her that “to
-her it was a small thing to be judged by man’s judgment.”
-
-And the spirit in which she chose the women who were to go out under her
-to the Crimea may be judged by later words of her own, called forth by a
-discussion of fees for nurses—words in which the italics are mine, though
-the sentence is quoted here to show the scorn she poured on fashion’s
-canting view of class distinction.
-
- “I have seen,” she said, “somewhere in print that nursing is a
- profession to be followed by the ‘lower middle-class.’ Shall we
- say that painting or sculpture is a profession to be followed
- by the ‘lower middle-class’? _Why limit the class at all?_ Or
- shall we say that God is only to be served in His sick by the
- ‘lower middle-class’?
-
- “_It appears to be the most futile of all distinctions to
- classify as between ‘paid’ and unpaid art, so between ‘paid’
- and unpaid nursing, to make into a test a circumstance as
- adventitious as whether the hair is black or brown—viz.,
- whether people have private means or not, whether they are
- obliged or not to work at their art or their nursing for a
- livelihood._ Probably no person ever did that well which he did
- only for money. Certainly no person ever did that well which
- he did not work at as hard as if he did it solely for money.
- If by amateur in art or in nursing are meant those who take it
- up for play, it is not art at all, it is not nursing at all.
- _You never yet made an artist by paying him well; but an artist
- ought to be well paid._”
-
-The woman who in later life wrote this, and all her life acted on it,
-could not only well afford to let _Punch_ have his joke about the
-nightingales who would shortly turn into ringdoves—although, indeed,
-_Punch’s_ verses and illustration were delightful in their innocent
-fun—but could even without flinching let vulgar slander insinuate its
-usual common-minded nonsense. She herself has written in _Nursing Notes_:—
-
- “The everyday management of a large ward, let alone of a
- hospital, the knowing what are the laws of life and death
- for men, and what the laws of health for wards (and wards are
- healthy or unhealthy mainly according to the knowledge or
- ignorance of the nurse)—are not these matters of sufficient
- importance and difficulty to require learning by experience
- and careful inquiry, just as much as any other art? They do
- not come by inspiration to the lady disappointed in love, nor
- to the poor workhouse drudge hard up for a livelihood. And
- terrible is the injury which has followed to the sick from such
- wild notions.”
-
-Happily, too, she was not blinded by the narrow sectarian view of
-religion which was, in her day and generation, so often a part of the
-parrot belief of those who learned their English version of the faith by
-rote, rather than with the soul’s experience, for she goes on to say:—
-
- “In this respect (and why is it so?) in Roman Catholic
- countries, both writers and workers are, in theory at least,
- far before ours. They would never think of such a beginning
- for a good-working Superior or Sister of Charity. And many a
- Superior has refused to admit a postulant who appeared to have
- no better ‘vocation’ or reasons for offering herself than these.
-
- “It is true we make no ‘vows.’ But is a ‘vow’ necessary to
- convince us that the true spirit for learning any art, most
- especially an art of charity, aright, is not a disgust to
- everything or something else? Do we really place the love of
- our kind (and of nursing as one branch of it) so low as this?
- What would the Mère Angélique of Port Royal, what would our own
- Mrs. Fry, have said to this?”
-
-How silly, in the light of these words, was the gossip of the idle
-person, proud of her shopping and her visiting list and her elaborate
-choice of dinner, who greeted the news of this nursing embassy to the
-Crimea with such cheap remarks as that the women would be all invalided
-home in a month; that it was most improper for “young ladies”—for it
-was not only shop assistants who were called “young ladies” in early
-Victorian days—to nurse in a military hospital; it was only nonsense to
-try and “nurse soldiers when they did not even yet know what it was to
-nurse a baby!”
-
-Such folly would only shake its hardened old noddle on reading, in the
-_Times_ reprint of the article in the _Examiner_, that Miss Nightingale
-was “a young lady of singular endowments both natural and acquired.
-In a knowledge of the ancient languages and of the higher branches of
-mathematics, in general art, science, and literature, her attainments are
-extraordinary. There is scarcely a modern language which she does not
-understand, and she speaks French, German, and Italian as fluently as
-her native English. She has visited and studied all the various nations
-of Europe, and has ascended the Nile to its remotest cataract. Young
-(about the age of our Queen), graceful, feminine, rich, popular, she
-holds a singularly gentle and persuasive influence over all with whom she
-comes in contact. Her friends and acquaintances are of all classes and
-persuasions, but her happiest place is at home, in the centre of a very
-large band of accomplished relatives.”
-
-Girton and Newnham, Somerville and Lady Margaret did not then exist.
-If any one had dreamed of them, the dream had not yet been recorded.
-Perhaps its first recognized expression, in Tennyson’s “Princess” in
-1847, mingling as it does with the story of a war and of the nursing of
-wounded men, may have imperceptibly smoothed away a few coarse prejudices
-from the path Florence Nightingale was to tread, but far more effectually
-was the way cleared by her own inspiring personality. Mrs. Tooley
-quotes from an intimate letter the following words: “Miss Nightingale
-is one of those whom God forms for great ends. You cannot hear her say
-a few sentences—no, not even look at her—without feeling that she is
-an extraordinary being. Simple, intellectual, sweet, full of love and
-benevolence, she is a fascinating and perfect woman. She is tall and
-pale. Her face is exceedingly lovely, but better than all is the soul’s
-glory that shines through every feature so exultingly. Nothing can be
-sweeter than her smile. It is like a sunny day in summer.”
-
-She who advised other women to make ready for the business of their lives
-as men make ready had been for long years preparing herself, and there
-was therefore none of the nervous waste and excitement of those who in a
-moment of impulse take a path which to their ignorance is like leaping in
-the dark.
-
-But she knew well how much must depend on those she took with her, and it
-was clear that many who desired to go were quite unfitted for the work.
-
-With her usual clearsightedness she knew where to turn for help. Felicia
-Skene was among those whom she consulted and whose advice she found
-of good service. It has already been noted in these pages that Miss
-Skene had, without knowing it, been preparing one of the threads to be
-interwoven in that living tapestry in which Miss Nightingale’s labours
-were to endure in such glowing colours. Like Miss Nightingale she had
-real intimacy with those outside her own order, and by her practical
-human sympathy understood life, not only in one rank, but in all ranks.
-By night as well as by day her door was open to the outcast, and in
-several life-stories she had played a part which saved some poor girl
-from suicide. Full of humour and romance, and a welcome guest in
-every society, she will be remembered longest for her work in rescuing
-others both in body and in soul, and you will remember that, on the
-two occasions when the cholera visited Oxford, she nursed the sick and
-the dying by day and by night, and did much to direct and organize the
-helpful work of others. Miss Wordsworth speaks of her “innate purity of
-heart and mind,” and says of her, “one always felt of her that she had
-been brought up in the best of company, as indeed she had.” It was just
-such women that Miss Nightingale needed—women who, in constant touch with
-what was coarse and hard, could never become coarse or hard themselves;
-women versed in practical service and trained by actual experience as
-well as by hard-won knowledge.
-
-Moreover, it chanced that after Miss Skene’s labour of love in the
-cholera visitation, her niece, “Miss Janie Skene, then a girl of fifteen,
-who was staying in Constantinople with her parents, had gone with her
-mother to visit the wounded soldiers at Scutari. Shocked by their
-terrible sufferings and the lack of all that might have eased their
-pain, she wrote strongly to her grandfather, who sent her letter to the
-_Times_, where it did much to stir up public opinion.”
-
- “It struck Felicia,” says Miss Rickards, “that having with
- great pains trained her corps of nurses for the cholera, they
- might now be utilized at Scutari, her great desire being to go
- out herself at the head of them. Had these events occurred at
- the present day, when ideas have changed as to what ladies,
- still young, may and may not do in the way of bold enterprise,
- perhaps she might have obtained her parents’ permission to go.
- As it was the notion was too new and startling to be taken into
- consideration; and she had to content herself with doing all
- she could at home to send out others.
-
- “Her zeal was quickened by a letter she received from Lord
- Stratford de Redcliffe, who had been much struck by her energy
- and ability, urging her to do all she could in England to send
- to the rescue.
-
- “At once she set out as a pioneer in the undertaking,
- delighted to encourage her nurses to take their part in the
- heroic task.
-
- “Meantime Miss Nightingale was hard at work enlisting recruits,
- thankful to secure Felicia’s services as agent at Oxford. She
- sent her friends Mr. and Mrs. Bracebridge down there, that they
- might inspect the volunteers and select the women they thought
- would be suitable.
-
- “The interviews took place in Mr. Skene’s dining-room, along
- the walls of which the candidates were ranged.
-
- “Kind-hearted as Mrs. Bracebridge was, her proceedings were
- somewhat in the ‘Off with their heads!’ style of the famous
- duchess in ‘Alice in Wonderland.’ If the sudden questions fired
- at each in succession were not answered in a way that she
- thought quite satisfactory, ‘She won’t do; send her out,’ was
- the decided command.
-
- “And Felicia had to administer balm to the wounded feelings of
- the rejected.”[7]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
- _The Expedition._
-
-
-Of the thirty-eight nurses who went out with Miss Nightingale,
-twenty-four had been trained in sisterhoods, Roman and Anglican, and of
-the remaining fourteen, some had been chosen in the first instance by
-Lady Maria Forrester, others by Miss Skene and Mrs. Bracebridge, but it
-must be supposed that the final decision lay always with Miss Nightingale.
-
-The correspondence that had poured in upon her and upon Mr. Herbert was
-overwhelming, and there was a personal interview with all who seemed in
-the least degree likely to be admitted to her staff; so that she worked
-very hard, with little pause for rest, to get through her ever-increasing
-task in time. Each member of the staff undertook to obey her absolutely.
-
-Among the many who were rejected, though most were unsuitable for
-quite other reasons, there were some who objected to this rule. Many
-who were full of sympathy and generosity had to be turned away, because
-they had not had enough training. Advertisements had appeared in the
-_Record_ and the _Guardian_, but the crowd of fair ladies who flocked
-to the War Office in response were not always received with such open
-arms as they expected. Mr. Herbert was well on his guard against the
-charms of impulsive, but ignorant, goodwill, and he issued a sort of
-little manifesto in which he said that “many ladies whose generous
-enthusiasm prompts them to offer services as nurses are little aware of
-the hardships they would have to encounter, and the horrors they would
-have to witness. Were all accepted who offer,” he added, with a touch of
-humour, “I fear we should have not only many indifferent nurses, but many
-hysterical patients.”
-
-He and his wife were untiring in their efficiency and their help.
-
-The English Sisterhoods had made a difficulty about surrendering control
-over the Sisters they sent out, but Miss Nightingale overcame that, and
-the Roman bishop entirely freed the ten Sisters of his communion from any
-rule which could clash with Miss Nightingale’s orders.
-
-It was on the evening of October 21, 1854, that the “Angel Band,” as
-Kinglake rightly names them, quietly set out under cover of darkness,
-escorted by a parson and a courier and by Miss Nightingale’s friends, Mr.
-and Mrs. Bracebridge of Atherstone Hall.
-
-In this way all flourish of trumpets was avoided. Miss Nightingale always
-hated public fuss—or, indeed, fuss of any kind. She was anxious also to
-lighten the parting for those who loved her best, and who had given a
-somewhat doubting consent to her resolve.
-
-The Quakerish plainness of her black dress did but make the more striking
-the beauty of her lovely countenance, the firm, calm sweetness of the
-smiling lips and steadfast eyes, the grace of the tall, slender figure;
-and as the train whirled her out of sight with her carefully-chosen
-regiment, she left with her friends a vision of good cheer and high
-courage.
-
-But however quiet the setting forth, the arrival at Boulogne could not
-be kept a secret, and the enthusiasm of our French allies for those who
-were going to nurse the wounded made the little procession a heart-moving
-triumph. A merry band of white-capped fishwives met the boat and,
-seizing all the luggage, insisted on doing everything for nothing.
-Boxes on their backs and bags in their hands, they ran along in their
-bright petticoats, pouring out their hearts about their own boys at the
-front, and asking only the blessing of a handshake as the sole payment
-they would take. Then, as Miss Nightingale’s train whistled its noisy
-way out of the station, waving their adieus while the tears streamed
-down the weather-beaten cheeks of more than one old wife, they stood
-and watched with longing hearts. At Paris there was a passing visit to
-the Mother-house of Miss Nightingale’s old friends, the Sisters of St.
-Vincent de Paul, and a little call on Lady Canning, also an old friend,
-who writes of her as “happy and stout-hearted.”
-
-The poor “Angels” had a terrible voyage to Malta, for the wind, as
-with St. Paul, was “contrary” and blew a hurricane dead against them,
-so that their ship, the _Vectis_, had something of a struggle to escape
-with its many lives. They touched at Malta on October 31, 1854, and soon
-afterwards set sail again for Constantinople.
-
-What an old-world story it seems now to talk of “setting sail”!
-
-On the 4th of November, the day before the battle of Inkermann, they had
-reached their goal, and had their work before them at Scutari.
-
-A friend of mine who knows Scutari well has described it in summer as a
-place of roses, the very graves wreathed all over with the blossoming
-briars of them; and among those graves she found a nameless one, on
-which, without revealing identity, the epitaph stated, in the briefest
-possible way, that this was the grave of a hospital matron, adding in
-comment the words spoken of Mary when she broke the alabaster box—and
-in this instance full of pathos—the six words, “She hath done what she
-could.” And I find from one of Miss Nightingale’s letters that it was she
-herself who inscribed those words.
-
-Unspeakable indeed must have been the difficulties with which any
-previous hospital matron had to contend, rigid and unbreakable for
-ordinary fingers the red tape by which she must have been bound. On this
-subject Kinglake has written words which are strong indeed in their
-haunting sincerity.
-
-He writes of an “England officially typified that swathes her limbs round
-with red tape,” and of those who, though dogged in routine duty, were so
-afraid of any new methods that they were found “surrendering, as it were,
-at discretion, to want and misery” for those in their care.
-
- “But,” he adds, “happily, after a while, and in gentle, almost
- humble, disguise which put foes of change off their guard,
- there acceded to the State a new power.
-
- “Almost at one time—it was when they learnt how our troops had
- fought on the banks of the Alma—the hearts of many women in
- England, in Scotland, in Ireland, were stirred with a heavenly
- thought impelling them to offer and say that, if only the
- State were consenting, they would go out to tend our poor
- soldiers laid low on their hospital pallets by sickness or
- wounds; and the honour of welcoming into our public service
- this new and gracious aid belonged to Mr. Sidney Herbert.”
-
-He goes on to explain and define Mr. Herbert’s exact position at the War
-Office; how he was not only official chief there, but, “having perhaps
-also learnt from life’s happy experience that, along with what he might
-owe to fortune and birth, his capacity for business of State, his frank,
-pleasant speech, his bright, winning manners, and even his glad, sunshine
-looks, had a tendency to disarm opposition, he quietly, yet boldly,
-stepped out beyond his set bounds, and not only became in this hospital
-business the volunteer delegate of the Duke of Newcastle, but even
-ventured to act without always asking the overworked Department of War
-to go through the form of supporting him by orders from the Secretary of
-State; so that thus, and to the great advantage of the public service, he
-usurped, as it were, an authority which all who knew what he was doing
-rejoiced to see him wield. If he could not in strictness command by an
-official despatch, he at least could impart what he wished in a ‘private
-letter;’ and a letter, though ostensibly ‘private,’ which came from the
-War Office, under the hand of its chief, was scarce likely to encounter
-resistance from any official personages to whom the writer might send it.
-
-“Most happily this gifted minister had formed a strong belief in the
-advantages our military hospitals would gain by accepting womanly aid;
-and, proceeding to act on this faith, he not only despatched to the East
-some chosen bands of ladies, and of salaried attendants accustomed to
-hospital duties, but also requested that they might have quarters and
-rations assigned to them; and, moreover, whilst requesting the principal
-medical officer at Scutari to point out to these new auxiliaries how best
-they could make themselves useful, Mr. Sidney Herbert enjoined him to
-receive with attention and deference the counsels of the Lady-in-Chief,
-who was, of course, no other than Miss Nightingale herself.
-
-“That direction was one of great moment, and well calculated to govern
-the fate of a newly ventured experiment.
-
-“Thus it was that, under the sanction of a government acceding to the
-counsels of one of its most alert and sagacious members, there went out
-angel women from England, resolved to confront that whole world of horror
-and misery that can be gathered into a military hospital from camp or
-battlefield; and their plea, when they asked to be trusted with this
-painful, this heart-rending mission, was simply the natural aptitude
-of their sex for ministering to those who lie prostrate from sickness
-and wounds. Using that tender word which likened the helplessness of
-the down-stricken soldier to the helplessness of infancy, they only
-said they would ‘nurse’ him; and accordingly, if regarded with literal
-strictness, their duty would simply be that of attendants in hospital
-wards—attendants obeying with strictness the orders of the medical
-officers.
-
-“It was seen that the humble soldiers were likely to be the men most in
-want of care, and the ladies were instructed to abstain from attending
-upon any of the officers.”[8]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
- _The tribute of Kinglake and Macdonald and the Chelsea
- Pensioners._
-
-
-But before continuing the story of Miss Nightingale’s expedition, we must
-turn aside for a moment in Kinglake’s company to realize something of the
-devotion of another brave and unselfish Englishwoman who, without her
-“commanding genius,” yet trod the same path of sacrifice and compassion.
-The words “commanding genius” were spoken by Dean Stanley of Miss
-Nightingale, and it is of Dean Stanley’s sister Mary that a word must
-now be spoken. She had been the right hand of her father, the Bishop of
-Norwich, and, in serving the poor, had disclosed special gifts, made
-the more winning by her gentle, loving nature. Having had experience of
-travel, which was much less a thing of course than it is in these days,
-she was willing to escort a company of nurses chosen for work in the
-Levant, and at first this was all she expected to do. But there proved
-to be a difficulty about receiving them at Scutari, and she could not
-bring herself to leave them without guidance; so she quietly gave up all
-thought of returning to England while the war continued.
-
- “Could she,” asks Kinglake, “see them in that strait disband,
- when she knew but too well that their services were bitterly
- needed for the shiploads and shiploads of stricken soldiery
- brought down day by day from the seat of war? Under stress
- of the question thus put by her own exacting conscience, or
- perhaps by the simpler commandment of her generous heart, she
- formed the heroic resolve which was destined to govern her life
- throughout the long, dismal period of which she then knew not
- the end. Instead of returning to England, and leaving on the
- shores of the Bosphorus her band of sisters and nurses, she
- steadfastly remained at their head, and along with them entered
- at once upon what may be soberly called an appalling task—the
- task of ‘nursing’ in hospitals not only overcrowded with
- sufferers, but painfully, grievously wanting in most of the
- conditions essential to all good hospital management.
-
- “The sisters and salaried nurses,” says Kinglake, “who placed
- themselves under this guidance were in all forty-six; and Miss
- Stanley, with great spirit and energy, brought the aid of
- her whole reinforcement—at first to the naval hospital newly
- founded at Therapia under the auspices of our Embassy, and
- afterwards to another establishment—to that fated hospital at
- Kullali, in which, as we saw, at one time a fearful mortality
- raged.
-
- “Not regarding her mission as one that needs should aim loftily
- at the reformation of the hospital management, Miss Stanley
- submitted herself for guidance to the medical officers, saying,
- ‘What do you wish us to do?’ The officers wisely determined
- that they would not allow the gentle women to exhaust their
- power of doing good by undertaking those kinds of work that
- might be as well or better performed by men, and their answer
- was to this effect: ‘The work that in surgical cases has been
- commonly done by our dressers will be performed by them, as
- before, under our orders. What we ask of you is that you will
- see the men take the medicines and the nourishment ordered for
- them, and we know we can trust that you will give them all that
- watchful care which alleviates suffering, and tends to restore
- health and strength.’
-
- “With ceaseless devotion and energy the instructions were
- obeyed. What number of lives were saved—saved even in
- that pest-stricken hospital of Kullali—by a long, gentle
- watchfulness, when science almost despaired, no statistics,
- of course, can show; and still less can they gauge or record
- the alleviation of misery effected by care such as this; but
- apparent to all was the softened demeanour of the soldier
- when he saw approaching his pallet some tender, gracious lady
- intent to assuage his suffering, to give him the blessing of
- hope, to bring him the food he liked, and withal—when she
- came with the medicine—to rule him like a sick child. Coarse
- expressions and oaths deriving from barracks and camps died
- out in the wards as though exorcised by the sacred spell of her
- presence, and gave way to murmurs of gratitude. When conversing
- in this softened mood with the lady appointed to nurse him,
- the soldier used often to speak as though the worship he owed
- her and the worship he owed to Heaven were blending into one
- sentiment; and sometimes, indeed, he disclosed a wild faith in
- the ministering angel that strained beyond the grave. ‘Oh!’
- said one to the lady he saw bending over his pallet, ‘you
- are taking me on the way to heaven; don’t forsake me now!’
- When a man was under delirium, its magic force almost always
- transported him to the home of his childhood, and made him
- indeed a child—a child crying, ‘Mother! mother!’ Amongst the
- men generally, notwithstanding their moments of fitful piety,
- there still glowed a savage desire for the fall of Sebastopol.
- More than once—wafted up from Constantinople—the sound of great
- guns was believed to announce a victory, and sometimes there
- came into the wards fresh tidings of combat brought down from
- our army in front of the long-besieged stronghold. When this
- happened, almost all of the sufferers who had not yet lost
- their consciousness used to show that, however disabled, they
- were still soldiers—true soldiers. At such times, on many a
- pallet, the dying man used to raise himself by unwonted effort,
- and seem to yearn after the strife, as though he would answer
- once more the appeal of the bugles and drums.”
-
-[Illustration: Florence Nightingale at the Therapia Hospital.
-
-“I was sick, and ye visited me.”]
-
-Kinglake’s touching description of what womanly tenderness could do for
-our soldiers, and of the worship it called forth, is followed by these
-words:—
-
- “But great would be the mistake of any chronicler fancying
- that the advantage our country derived from womanly aid was
- only an accession of nurses; for, if gifted with the power
- to comfort and soothe, woman also—a still higher gift—can
- impel, can disturb, can destroy pernicious content; and when
- she came to the rescue in an hour of gloom and adversity,
- she brought to her self-imposed task that forethought, that
- agile brain power, that organizing and governing faculty of
- which our country had need. The males at that time in England
- were already giving proofs of the lameness in the use of
- brain power, which afterwards became more distinct. Owing,
- possibly, to their habits of industry, applied in fixed, stated
- directions, they had lost that command of brain force which
- kindles ‘initiative,’ and with it, of course, the faculty of
- opportunely resorting to any very new ways of action. They
- proved slow to see and to meet the fresh exigencies occasioned
- by war, when approaching, or even by war when present; and,
- apparently, in the hospital problem, they must have gone on
- failing and failing indefinitely, if they had not undergone the
- propulsion of the quicker—the woman’s—brain to ‘set them going’
- in time.”
-
-He then goes on to tell of the arrival at “the immense Barrack Hospital”
-at Scutari of Miss Nightingale and her chosen band. “If,” he says, “the
-generous women thus sacrificing themselves were all alike in devotion
-to their sacred cause, there was one of them—the Lady-in-Chief—who not
-only came armed with the special experience needed, but also was clearly
-transcendent in that subtle quality which gives to one human being a
-power of command over others. Of slender, delicate form, engaging,
-highly-bred, and in council a rapt, careful listener, so long as others
-were speaking; and strongly, though gently, persuasive whenever speaking
-herself, the Lady-in-Chief, the Lady Florence, Miss Nightingale, gave her
-heart to this enterprise in a spirit of absolute devotion; but her sway
-was not quite of the kind that many in England imagined.”
-
-No, indeed! Sentimentalists who talk as though she had been cast in the
-conventional mould of mere yielding amiability, do not realize what she
-had to do, nor with what fearless, unflinching force she went straight
-to her mark, not heeding what was thought of herself, overlooking the
-necessary wounds she must give to fools, caring only that the difficult
-duty should be done, the wholesale agony be lessened, the filth and
-disorder be swept away.
-
-Her sweetness was the sweetness of strength, not weakness, and was
-reserved not for the careless, the stupid, the self-satisfied, but for
-the men whose festering wounds and corrupting gangrene were suffered in
-their country’s pay, and had been increased by the heedless muddle of a
-careless peace-time and a criminally mismanaged transport service.
-
-The picture of their condition before her arrival is revolting in its
-horror. There is no finer thing in the history of this war, perhaps, than
-the heroism of the wounded and dying soldiers. We are told how, in the
-midst of their appalling privation, if they fancied a shadow on their
-General’s face—as well, indeed, there might be, when he saw them without
-the common necessaries and decencies of life, let alone a sick-room—they
-would seize the first possible opening for assuring him they had all they
-needed, and if they were questioned by him, though they were dying of
-cold and hunger—
-
- “No man ever used to say: ‘My Lord, you see how I am lying wet
- and cold, with only this one blanket to serve me for bed and
- covering. The doctors are wonderfully kind, but they have not
- the medicines, nor the wine, nor any of the comforting things
- they would like to be given me. If only I had another blanket,
- I think perhaps I might live.’ Such words would have been true
- to the letter.”
-
-But as for Lord Raglan, the chief whom they thus adored, “with the
-absolute hideous truth thus day by day spread out before him, he did not
-for a moment deceive himself by observing that no man complained.”
-
-Yet even cold and hunger were as nothing to the loathsome condition in
-which Miss Nightingale found the hospital at Scutari. There are certain
-kinds of filth which make life far more horrible than the brief moment
-of a brave death, and of filth of every sort that crowded hospital was
-full—filth in the air, for the stench was horrible, filth and gore as the
-very garment of the poor, patient, dying men.
-
-There was no washing, no clean linen. Even for bandages the shirts had to
-be stripped from the dead and torn up to stanch the wounds of the living.
-
-And there were other foul conditions which only the long labour of
-sanitary engineering could cure.
-
-The arrival day by day of more and more of the wounded has been described
-as an avalanche. We all know Tennyson’s “Charge of the Light Brigade”:
-that charge occurred at Balaclava the day before Miss Nightingale left
-England. And the terrible battle of Inkermann was fought the day after
-she arrived at Scutari.
-
-Here is a word-for-word description from Nolan’s history of the campaign,
-given also in Mrs. Tooley’s admirable “Life”:—
-
- “There were no vessels for water or utensils of any kind; no
- soap, towels, or cloths, no hospital clothes; the men lying in
- their uniforms, stiff with gore and covered with filth to a
- degree and of a kind no one could write about; their persons
- covered with vermin, which crawled about the floors and walls
- of the dreadful den of dirt, pestilence, and death to which
- they were consigned.
-
- “Medical assistance would naturally be expected by the invalid
- as soon as he found himself in a place of shelter, but many lay
- waiting for their turn until death anticipated the doctor. The
- medical men toiled with unwearied assiduity, but their numbers
- were inadequate to the work.”
-
-The great hospital at Scutari is a quadrangle, each wing nearly a quarter
-of a mile long, and built in tiers of corridors and galleries, one above
-the other. The wounded men had been brought in and laid on the floor,
-side by side, as closely as they could lie, so that Kinglake was writing
-quite literally when he spoke of “miles of the wounded.”
-
-Rotting beneath an Eastern sky and filling the air with poison, Miss
-Nightingale counted the carcasses of six dead dogs lying under the
-hospital windows. And in all the vast building there was no cooking
-apparatus, though it did boast of what was supposed to be a kitchen. As
-for our modern bathrooms, the mere notion would have given rise to bitter
-laughter; for even the homely jugs and basins were wanting in that
-palace of a building, and water of any kind was a rare treasure.
-
-How were sick men to be “nursed,” when they could not even be washed,
-and their very food had to be carried long distances and was usually the
-worst possible!
-
-Miss Nightingale—the Lady-in-Chief—had the capacity, the will, the
-driving power, to change all that.
-
-A week or two ago I had some talk with several of the old pensioners who
-remember her. The first to be introduced to me has lost now his power of
-speech through a paralytic stroke, but it was almost surprising, after
-all these long years that have passed between the Crimean day and our
-own day, to see how well-nigh overwhelming was the dumb emotion which
-moved the strong man at the naming of her name. The second, who was full
-of lively, chuckling talk, having been in active service for a month
-before her arrival in the Crimea, and himself seen the wondrous changes
-she wrought, was not only one of her adorers—all soldiers seem to be
-that—but also overflowing with admiration for her capability, her pluck.
-To him she was not only the ideal nurse, but also emphatically a woman of
-unsurpassed courage and efficiency.
-
-“You know, miss,” he said, “there was a many young doctors out there that
-should never have been there—they didn’t know their duty and they didn’t
-do as they should for us—and she chased ’em, ay, she did that! She got
-rid of ’em, and there was better ones come in their place, and it was
-all quite different. Oh yes,” and he laughed delightedly, as a schoolboy
-might. “Oh yes, she hunted ’em out.” I, who have a great reverence for
-the medical profession, felt rather shy and frightened and inclined
-to blush, but the gusto with which the veteran recalled a righteous
-vengeance on the heads of the unworthy was really very funny. And his
-gargoyle mirth set in high relief the tenderness with which he told of
-Miss Nightingale’s motherly ways with his poor wounded comrades, and how
-she begged them not to mind having their wounds washed, any more than if
-she were really their mother or sister, and thus overcame any false shame
-that might have prevented their recovery. “Ah, she was a good woman,” he
-kept repeating, “there’s no two ways about it, a _good_ woman!”
-
-From Pensioner John Garrett of the 3rd Battalion Grenadier Guards, I had
-one very interesting bit of history at first hand; for he volunteered the
-fact that on his first arrival in the Crimea—which was evidently about
-the same time as Miss Nightingale’s own, his first engagement having
-been the battle of Inkermann—Miss Nightingale being still unknown to
-the soldiers—a mere name to them—she had much unpopularity to overcome.
-Clearly jealous rumour had been at work against this mere woman who was
-coming, as the other pensioner had phrased it, “to chase the doctors.”
-This, of course, made the completeness of her rapid victory over the
-hearts of the entire army the more noteworthy.
-
-“And afterwards?” I asked.
-
-“Oh, _afterwards we knew what she was_, and she was very popular indeed!”
-Though he treasured and carried about with him everywhere a Prayer Book
-containing Florence Nightingale’s autograph—which I told him ought to be
-a precious heirloom to his sons and their children, and therefore refused
-to accept, when in the generosity of his kind old heart he thrice tried
-to press it upon me—he had only seen her once; for he was camping out at
-the front, and it was on one of her passing visits that he had his vision
-of her. He is a very young-looking old man of eighty-two, Suffolk-born,
-and had been in the army from boyhood up to the time of taking his
-pension. He had fought in the battle of Inkermann and done valiant
-trench-duty before Sebastopol, and confirmed quite of his own accord
-the terrible accounts that have come to us of the privations suffered.
-“Water,” he said, “why, we could scarce get water to drink—much less to
-wash—why, I hadn’t a change of linen all the winter through.”
-
-“And you hadn’t much food, I hear, for your daily rations?” I said.
-
-“Oh, we didn’t have food every _day_!” said he, with a touch of gently
-scornful laughter. “Every _three_ days or so, we may have had some
-biscuits served out. But there was a lot of the food as wasn’t fit to
-eat.”
-
-He was, however, a man of few words, and when I asked him what Miss
-Nightingale was like, he answered rather unexpectedly and with great
-promptitude, “Well, she had a very nice figger.” All the same, though he
-did not dilate on the beauty of her countenance, and exercised a certain
-reserve of speech when I tried to draw him out about the Lady-in-Chief,
-it was clear that hers was a sacred name to him, and that the bit of her
-handwriting which he possessed in the little book, so carefully unwrapped
-for me from the tin box holding his dearest possessions, which he
-uncorded under my eyes with his own capable but rather tired old hands,
-between two bouts of his wearying cough, had for long been the great joy
-and pride of his present quiet existence.
-
-I had a talk with others of these veterans in their stately and
-well-earned home of rest in the Royal Hospital at Chelsea, and it was
-clear that to them all she was enshrined in memory’s highest place. This
-may be a fitting moment for recording the tribute of Mr. Macdonald, the
-administrator of the _Times_ Fund, who wrote of her before his return to
-England:—
-
- “Wherever there is disease in its most dangerous form, and
- the hand of the spoiler distressingly nigh, there is that
- incomparable woman sure to be seen; her benignant presence
- is an influence for good comfort, even among the struggles
- of expiring nature. She is a ‘ministering angel,’ without
- any exaggeration, in these hospitals, and, as her slender
- form glides quietly along each corridor, every poor fellow’s
- face softens with gratitude at the sight of her. When all
- the medical officers have retired for the night, and silence
- and darkness have settled down upon those miles of prostrate
- sick, she may be observed alone, with a little lamp in her
- hand, making her solitary rounds. The popular instinct was
- not mistaken, which, when she had set out from England on her
- mission of mercy, hailed her as a heroine; I trust she may not
- earn her title to a higher though sadder appellation. No one
- who has observed her fragile figure and delicate health can
- avoid misgivings lest these should fail. With the heart of a
- true woman, and the manners of a lady, accomplished and refined
- beyond most of her sex, she combines a surprising calmness of
- judgment and promptitude and decision of character.”
-
-The soldier who watched for her coming, night by night, on her quiet
-rounds, after dark, when other nurses were by her orders resting, and
-who only knew her as “the Lady with the Lamp,” has been quoted all over
-the world; but it has been well said that she was also “the lady with
-the brain.” Hercules had not so big a task before him when he cleansed
-the Augean stables, and the swiftness with which order and comfort were
-created in this “hell” of suffering—for so it has been named by those who
-saw and knew—might well be called one of the wonders of the world.
-
-[Illustration: “A Mission of Mercy.” Florence Nightingale at Scutari.
-
-(_After the painting by J. Barratt._)]
-
-The secret lay partly in the fact that Florence Nightingale’s whole
-life had been an offering and a preparation. She knew all it had been
-possible for her to learn of hospital management and training. She never
-wasted words, nor frittered away her power. Her authority grew daily. Mr.
-Herbert’s support, even at so great a distance, was, of course, beyond
-price. Lord Raglan soon found the value of her letters. She inspired
-her orderlies with utmost devotion, and it is needless to speak of what
-her patients themselves felt to her. Kinglake is not, like the present
-writer, a woman, and therefore he can write with a good grace and from
-his own knowledge what might come with an ill grace from a woman’s pen.
-He shall again therefore be quoted, word for word, through a few pages.
-
- “The growth of her dominion was rapid, was natural, and
- not unlike the development of what men call ‘responsible
- government.’ One of others accepting a task ostensibly
- subordinate and humble, she yet could not, if she would,
- divest herself of the authority that belonged to her as a
- gentlewoman—as a gentlewoman abounding in all the natural
- gifts, and all the peculiar knowledge required for hospital
- management. Charged to be in the wards, to smooth the
- sufferer’s pillow, to give him his food and his medicine as
- ordered by the medical officers, she could not but speak
- with cogency of the state of the air which she herself had
- to breathe; she could not be bidden to acquiesce if the beds
- she approached were impure; she could scarcely be held to
- silence if the diet she had been told to administer were not
- forthcoming; and, whatever her orders, she could hardly be
- expected to give a sufferer food which she perceived to be bad
- or unfit. If the males[9] did not quite understand the peculiar
- contrivances fitted for the preparation of hospital diet,
- might she not, perhaps, disclose her own knowledge, and show
- them what to do? Or, if they could not be taught, or imagined
- that they had not the power to do what was needed, might not
- she herself compass her object by using the resources which
- she had at command? Might not she herself found and organize
- the requisite kitchens, when she knew that the difference
- between fit and unfit food was one of life and death to the
- soldier? And again, if she chose, might she not expend her own
- resources in striving against the foul poisons that surrounded
- our prostrate soldiery? Rather, far, than that even one man
- should suffer from those cruel wants which she generously chose
- to supply, it was well that the State should be humbled, and
- submit to the taunt which accused it of taking alms from her
- hand.
-
- “If we learnt that the cause of the evils afflicting our
- Levantine hospitals was a want of impelling and of governing
- power, we now see how the want was supplied. In the absence of
- all constituted authority proving equal to the emergency, there
- was need—dire need—of a firm, well-intentioned usurper; but
- amongst the males acting at Scutari there was no one with that
- resolute will, overstriding law, habit, and custom, which the
- cruel occasion required; for even Dr. M’Gregor, whose zeal and
- abilities were admirable, omitted to lay hold, dictatorially,
- of that commanding authority which—because his chief could
- not wield it—had fallen into abeyance. The will of the males
- was always to go on performing their accustomed duties
- industriously, steadily, faithfully, each labouring to the
- utmost, and, if need be, even to death (as too often, indeed,
- was the case), in that groove-going ‘state of life to which it
- had pleased God to call him.’ The will of the woman, whilst
- stronger, flew also more straight to the end;[10] for what she
- almost fiercely sought was—not to make good mere equations
- between official codes of duty and official acts of obedience,
- but—overcoming all obstacles, to succour, to save our prostrate
- soldiery, and turn into a well-ordered hospital the hell—the
- appalling hell—of the vast barrack wards and corridors. Nature
- seemed, as it were, to ordain that in such a conjuncture the
- all-essential power which our cramped, over-disciplined males
- had chosen to leave unexerted should pass to one who would
- seize it, should pass to one who could wield it—should pass to
- the Lady-in-Chief.
-
- “To have power was an essential condition of success in her
- sacred cause; and of power accordingly she knew and felt the
- worth, rightly judging that, in all sorts of matters within
- what she deemed its true range, her word must be law. Like
- other dictators, she had cast upon her one duty which no one
- can hope to perform without exciting cavil. For the sake of
- the cause, she had to maintain her dictatorship, and (on pain
- of seeing her efforts defeated by anarchical action) to check
- the growth of authority—of authority in even small matters—if
- not derived from herself. She was apparently careful in this
- direction; and, though outwardly calm when provoked, could give
- strong effect to her anger. On the other hand, when seeing
- merit in the labours of others, she was ready with generous
- praise. It was hardly in the nature of things that her sway
- should excite no jealousies, or that always, hand in hand with
- the energy which made her great enterprise possible, there
- should be the cold, accurate justice at which the slower sex
- aims; but she reigned—painful, heart-rending empire—in a spirit
- of thorough devotion to the objects of her care, and, upon the
- whole, with excellent wisdom.
-
- “To all the other sources of power which we have seen her
- commanding, she added one of a kind less dependent upon
- her personal qualities. Knowing thoroughly the wants of a
- hospital, and foreseeing, apparently, that the State might
- fail to meet them, she had taken care to provide herself with
- vast quantities of hospital stores, and by drawing upon these
- to make good the shortcoming of any hampered or lazy official,
- she not only furnished our soldiery with the things they were
- needing, but administered to the defaulting administrator a
- telling, though silent, rebuke; and it would seem that under
- this discipline the groove-going men winced in agony, for they
- uttered touching complaints, declaring that the Lady-in-Chief
- did not choose to give them time (it was always time that the
- males wanted), and that the moment a want declared itself she
- made haste to supply it herself.”
-
-Another able writer—a woman—has said that for Miss Nightingale the
-testing moment of her life met her with the coming of the wagon-loads
-of wounded men from the battlefield of Inkermann, who were poured into
-the hospital at Scutari within twenty-four hours of her arrival. Had the
-sight of all that agony and of the senseless confusion that received
-it, led the Lady-in-Chief and her nurses to waste their power in rushing
-hither and thither in disorganized fear of defeat, their very sympathy
-and emotion dimming their foresight and clouding their brain, the whole
-story might have been different. But Miss Nightingale was of those who,
-by a steadfast obedience hour by hour to the voice within, have attained
-through the long years to a fine mastery of every nerve and muscle of
-that frail house wherein they dwell. The more critical the occasion, the
-more her will rose to meet it. She knew she must think of the welfare,
-not of one, but of thousands; and for tens of thousands she wrought the
-change from this welter of misery and death to that clean orderliness
-which for the moment seemed as far away as the unseen heaven. There
-were many other faithful and devoted nurses in the Crimea, though few,
-perhaps, so highly skilled; but her name stands alone as that of the
-high-hearted and daring spirit who made bold to change the evil system
-of the past when no man else had done anything but either consent to it
-or bemoan it. She, at least, had never been bound by red tape, and her
-whole soul rose up in arms at sight of the awful suffering which had been
-allowed under the shelter of dogged routine.
-
-Before ten days had passed, she had her kitchen ready and was feeding 800
-men every day with well-cooked food, and this in spite of the unforeseen
-and overwhelming numbers in which the new patients had been poured into
-the hospitals after Balaclava and Inkermann. She had brought out with
-her, in the _Vectis_, stores of invalid food, and all sorts of little
-delicacies surprised the eyes and lips of the hitherto half-starved men.
-Their gentle nurses brought them beef tea, chicken broth, jelly. They
-were weak and in great pain, and may be forgiven if their gratitude was,
-as we are told, often choked with sobs.
-
-Mrs. Tooley tells us of one Crimean veteran, that when he received a
-basin of arrowroot on his first arrival at the hospital early in the
-morning, he said to himself, “‘Tommy, me boy, that’s all you’ll get into
-your inside this blessed day, and think yourself lucky you’ve got that.’
-But two hours later, if another of them blessed angels didn’t come
-entreating of me to have just a little chicken broth! Well, I took that,
-thinking maybe it was early dinner, and before I had well done wondering
-what would happen next, round the nurse came again with a bit o’ jelly;
-and all day long at intervals they kept on bringing me what they called
-‘a little nourishment.’ In the evening, Miss Nightingale she came and had
-a look at me, and says she, ‘I hope you’re feeling better?’ I could have
-said, ‘Ma’am, I feels as fit as a fightin’ cock,’ but I managed to git
-out somethin’ a bit more polite.”[11]
-
-The barracks had thirteen “coppers,” and in the old days meat and
-vegetables had just been tossed into these and boiled together anyhow.
-It is easy to imagine the greasy mess to which the fevered invalids must
-have been treated by the time the stuff had been carried round to the
-hospital.
-
-But now, sometimes in a single day, thirteen gallons of chicken broth,
-and forty gallons of arrowroot found their way from the new kitchen to
-the hospital wards.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
- _The horrors of Scutari—The victory of the Lady-in-Chief—The
- Queen’s letter—Her gift of butter and treacle._
-
-
-Miss Nightingale’s discipline was strict; she did not mind the name
-of autocrat when men were dying by twenties for lack of what only an
-autocrat could do; and when there was continual loss of life for want
-of fitting nourishment, though there had been supplies sent out, as had
-been said “by the ton-weight,” she herself on at least one occasion,
-broke open the stores and fed her famishing patients. It is true that
-the ordinary matron would have been dismissed for doing so; she was not
-an ordinary matron—she was the Lady-in-Chief. To her that hath shall be
-given. She had grudged nothing to the service to which from childhood
-she had given herself—not strength, nor time, nor any other good gift
-of her womanhood, and having done her part nobly, fortune aided her.
-Her friends were among the “powers that be,” and even her wealth was, in
-this particular battle, a very important means of victory. Her beauty
-would have done little for her if she had been incompetent, but being to
-the last degree efficient, her loveliness gave the final touch to her
-power—her loveliness and that personal magnetism which gave her sway
-over the hearts and minds of men, and also, let it be added, of women.
-Not only did those in authority give to her of their best—their best
-knowledge, their closest attention, their most untiring service—but she
-knew how to discern the true from the false, and to put to the best use
-the valuable information often confided to her. She had many helpers.
-Besides her thirty-eight nurses and the chaplain, Mr. Sidney Osborne,
-there were her friends, Mr. and Mrs. Bracebridge, and that splendid
-“fag,” as he called himself, the young “Mr. Stafford,”[12] who had left
-the gaieties of London to fetch and carry for the Lady-in-Chief, and—to
-quote Mrs. Tooley, “did anything and everything which a handy and
-gallant gentleman could do to make himself useful to the lady whom he
-felt honoured to serve.” Among those who were most thoughtful in their
-little gifts for the wounded officers was the wife of our ambassador,
-Lady Stratford de Redcliffe, and her “beauteous guest,” as Kinglake calls
-her, Lady George Paget. But Miss Nightingale’s chief anxiety was not for
-the officers—they, like herself, had many influences in their favour—her
-thought was for the nameless rank and file, who had neither money nor
-rank, and were too often, as she knew, the forgotten pawns on the big
-chessboard. It was said “she thought only of the men;” she understood
-well that for their commanders her thought was less needed.
-
-“In the hearts of thousands and thousands of our people,” says Kinglake,
-“there was a yearning to be able to share the toil, the distress, the
-danger of battling for our sick and wounded troops against the sea
-of miseries that encompassed them on their hospital pallets; and men
-still remember how graciously, how simply, how naturally, if so one may
-speak, the ambassadress Lady Stratford de Redcliffe and her beauteous
-guest gave their energies and their time to the work; still remember
-the generous exertions of Mr. Sidney Osborne and Mr. Joscelyne Percy;
-still remember, too, how Mr. Stafford—I would rather call him ‘Stafford
-O’Brien’—the cherished yet unspoilt favourite of English society,
-devoted himself heart and soul to the task of helping and comforting our
-prostrate soldiery in the most frightful depths of their misery.
-
-“Many found themselves embarrassed when trying to choose the best
-direction they could for their generous impulses; and not, I think,
-the least praiseworthy of all the self-sacrificing enterprises which
-imagination devised was that of the enthusiastic young fellow who,
-abandoning his life of ease, pleasure, and luxury, went out, as he
-probably phrased it, to ‘fag’ for the Lady-in-Chief. Whether fetching
-and carrying for her, or writing for her letters or orders, or orally
-conveying her wishes to public servants or others, he, for months and
-months, faithfully toiled, obeying in all things her word.
-
-“There was grace—grace almost mediæval—in his simple yet romantic idea;
-and, if humbly, still not the less usefully he aided the sacred cause,
-for it was one largely, mainly dependent on the power of the lady he
-served; so that, when by obeying her orders he augmented her means of
-action, and saved her precious time, there were unnumbered sufferers
-deriving sure benefit from his opportune, well-applied help. By no other
-kind of toil, however ambitiously aimed, could he well have achieved so
-much good.”
-
-But there was many a disappointment, much that did not seem “good luck”
-by any means, and that called for great courage and endurance. The
-stores, which Mr. Herbert had sent out in such abundance, had gone to
-Varna by mistake, and the loss of the _Prince_, a ship laden with ample
-supplies, a fortnight after Miss Nightingale’s arrival, was a very
-serious matter.
-
-Warm clothing for the frost-bitten men brought in from Sebastopol was so
-badly needed that one nurse, writing home, told her people: “Whenever
-a man opens his mouth with ‘Please, ma’am, I want to speak to you,’ my
-heart sinks within me, for I feel sure it will end in flannel shirts.”
-
-Every one had for too long been saying “all right,” when, as a matter of
-fact, it was all wrong. Here once again it is best to quote Kinglake.
-“By shunning the irksome light,” he says, “by choosing a low standard of
-excellence, and by vaguely thinking ‘War’ an excuse for defects which
-war did not cause, men, it seems, had contrived to be satisfied with
-the condition of our hospitals; but the Lady-in-Chief was one who would
-harbour no such content, seek no such refuge from pain. Not for her was
-the bliss—fragile bliss—of dwelling in any false paradise. She confronted
-the hideous truth. Her first care was—Eve-like—to dare to know, and—still
-Eve-like—to force dreaded knowledge on the faltering lord of creation.
-Then declaring against acquiescence in horror and misery which firmness
-and toil might remove, she waged her ceaseless war against custom and
-sloth, gaining every day on the enemy, and achieving, as we saw, in
-December, that which to eyes less intent than her own upon actual saving
-of life, and actual restoration of health, seemed already the highest
-excellence.”
-
-But, of course, what most made the men adore her was her loving
-individual care for each of those for whom she felt herself responsible.
-There was one occasion on which she begged to be allowed to try whether
-she could nurse back to possible life five wounded men who were being
-given up as “hopeless cases,” and did actually succeed in doing so.
-
-In all that terrible confusion of suffering that surrounded her soon
-after her first arrival, the first duty of the doctors was to sort out
-from the wounded as they arrived those cases which they could help and
-save from those which it seemed no human surgery could help.
-
-While this was being done she stood by: she never spared herself the
-sight of suffering, and her eyes—the trained eyes that had all the
-intuition of a born nurse—saw a glimmer of hope for five badly wounded
-men who were being set aside among those for whom nothing could be done.
-
-“Will you give me those five men?” she asked. She knew how much might
-be done by gentle and gradual feeding, and by all the intently watchful
-care of a good nurse, to give them just enough strength to risk the
-surgery that might save them. With her own hand, spoonful by spoonful,
-as they were able to bear it, she gave the nourishment, and by her own
-night-long watching and tending in the care of all those details which
-to a poor helpless patient may make the difference between life and
-death—the purifying of the air, the avoidance of draughts, the mending of
-the fire—she nursed her five patients back into a condition in which the
-risks of an operation were, to say the least of it, greatly lessened. The
-operation was in each case successfully performed; by all human standards
-it may be said that she saved the lives of all the five.
-
-She never spared herself, though she sometimes spared others. She has
-been known to stand for twenty hours out of the twenty-four, and at
-night, when she had sent her day-nurses to rest, it was she herself
-who watched in all the wards and silently cared for the needs of one
-and another. Is it any wonder that “there was worship almost in the
-gratitude of the prostrate sufferer, who saw her glide into his ward,
-and at last approach his bedside? The magic of her power over men used
-often to be felt in the room—the dreaded, the blood-stained room—where
-‘operations’ took place. There, perhaps, the maimed soldier, if not yet
-resigned to his fate, might at first be craving death rather than meet
-the knife of the surgeon; but, when such a one looked and saw that the
-honoured Lady-in-Chief was patiently standing beside him, and—with lips
-closely set and hands folded—decreeing herself to go through the pain of
-witnessing pain, he used to fall into the mood for obeying her silent
-command, and—finding strange support in her presence—bring himself to
-submit and endure.”[13]
-
-M. Soyer, who placed his culinary art at her service, has written a book
-about his experiences in which he tells us that, after a merry evening in
-the doctors’ quarters, when on his way back to his own, he saw by a faint
-light a little group—shadowy in the half-darkness—in a corner of one
-of the corridors. A Sister stood beside Miss Nightingale with a lighted
-candle that she might see clearly enough to scribble down the last wishes
-of the dying soldier who was supported on the bed beside her. With its
-deep colouring, described as like a grave study by Rembrandt, the little
-picture drew the passer-by, and for a few minutes he watched unseen while
-the Lady-in-Chief took into those “tender womanly hands” the watch and
-trinkets of the soldier, who with his last gasping breath was trying to
-make clear to her his farewell message to his wife and children. And this
-seems to have been but one among many kindred scenes.
-
-We have all heard of the man who watched till her shadow fell across the
-wall by his bed that he might at least kiss that shadow as it passed; but
-few of us, perhaps, know the whole story. The man was a Highland soldier
-who had been doomed to lose his arm by amputation. Miss Nightingale
-believed that she might possibly be able to save the arm by careful
-nursing, and she begged that she might at least be allowed to try.
-Nursing was to her an art as well as a labour of love. The ceaseless care
-in matters of detail, which she considered the very alphabet of that art,
-stand out clearly in her own _Notes on Nursing_. And in this instance her
-skill and watchfulness and untiring effort saved the man’s arm. No wonder
-that he wanted to kiss her shadow!
-
-To the wives of the soldiers she was indeed a saving angel. When she
-arrived at Scutari, they were living, we are told, literally in holes and
-corners of the hospital. Their clothes were worn out. They had neither
-bonnets, nor shoes, nor any claim on rations. Poor faithful creatures,
-many of them described in the biographies as respectable and decent, they
-had followed their husbands through all the horrors of the campaign, and
-now, divided from them and thrust aside for want of space, they were
-indeed in sorry case.
-
-Well might Miss Nightingale write later, and well may we all lay it to
-heart—“When the improvements in our system are discussed, let not the
-wife and child of the soldier be forgotten.”
-
-After being moved about from one den to another, the poor women—some
-wives and some, alas, widows—had been quartered in a few damp rooms in
-the hospital basement, where those who wanted solitude or privacy could
-do nothing to secure it beyond hanging a few rags on a line as a sort of
-screen between home and home. And in these desolate quarters many babies
-had been born.
-
-It was but the last drop of misery in their cup when, early in 1855,
-a month or two after Miss Nightingale’s arrival, a drain broke in the
-basement, and fever followed.
-
-Miss Nightingale had already sought them out, and from her own stores
-given them food and clothing; but now she did not rest until through her
-influence a house had been requisitioned and cleaned and furnished for
-them out of her own funds. Next, after fitting out the widows to return
-to their homes, employment was found for the wives who remained. Work was
-found for some of them in Constantinople, but for most of them occupation
-was at hand in the laundry she had set going, and there those who were
-willing to do their part could earn from 10s. to 14s. a week. In this
-way, through our heroine’s wise energy, helped by the wife and daughter
-of Dr. Blackwood, one of the army chaplains, we are told that about 500
-women were cared for.
-
-There had already arrived through the hands of Mr. Sidney Herbert, who
-forwarded it to Miss Nightingale, a message from Queen Victoria—in effect
-a letter—which greatly cheered the army and also strengthened Miss
-Nightingale’s position.
-
- “WINDSOR CASTLE, _December 6, ’54_.
-
- “Would you tell Mrs. Herbert,” wrote the Queen to Mr.
- Sidney Herbert, “that I beg she would let me see frequently
- the accounts she receives from Miss Nightingale or Mrs.
- Bracebridge, as I hear no details of the wounded, though I
- see so many from officers, etc., about the battlefield, and
- naturally the former must interest me more than any one.
-
- “Let Mrs. Herbert also know that I wish Miss Nightingale and
- the ladies would tell these poor, noble wounded and sick men
- that no one takes a warmer interest or feels more for their
- sufferings or admires their courage and heroism more than their
- Queen. Day and night she thinks of her beloved troops. So does
- the Prince.
-
- “Beg Mrs. Herbert to communicate these my words to those
- ladies, as I know that our sympathy is much valued by these
- noble fellows.
-
- “VICTORIA.”
-
-
-Miss Nightingale agreed with the Queen in her use of the word “noble”
-here, for she herself has written of the men:—
-
- “Never came from any of them one word nor one look which a
- gentleman would not have used; and while paying this humble
- tribute to humble courtesy, the tears come into my eyes as I
- think how, amidst scenes of ... loathsome disease and death,
- there rose above it all the innate dignity, gentleness, and
- chivalry of the men (for never, surely, was chivalry so
- strikingly exemplified), shining in the midst of what must be
- considered as the lowest sinks of human misery, and preventing
- instinctively the use of one expression which could distress a
- gentlewoman.”
-
-Having transcribed the Queen’s letter, this may be a good place for
-adding from the letters of Sister Aloysius a little instance of Her
-Majesty’s homely kindness to her troops whenever she heard of any need
-which she could supply:—
-
- “When Miss Stanley reached England, Her Majesty the Queen
- (anxious, of course, to hear all about her soldiers) sent for
- her; and when the interview was nearly over Her Majesty asked
- her what she thought the poor soldiers would like—she was
- anxious to send them a present. Miss Stanley said: ‘Oh, I do
- know what they would like—plenty of flannel shirts, mufflers,
- butter, and treacle.’ Her Majesty said they must have all these
- things; and they did come out in abundance: Kullali got its
- share of the gifts. But the very name of butter or treacle was
- enough for the doctors: they said they would not allow it into
- the wards, because it would be going about in bits of paper
- and daubing everything. So Rev. Mother at once interposed, and
- said if the doctors allowed it, she would have it distributed
- in a way that could give no trouble. They apologized, and said
- they should have known that, and at once left everything to
- her. Each Sister got her portion of butter and treacle (which
- were given only to the convalescent patients), and when the
- bell rang every evening for tea she stood at the table in the
- centre of the ward, and each soldier walked over and got his
- bread buttered, and some treacle if he wished spread on like
- jam. We told them it was a gift from the Queen; and if Her
- Majesty could only have seen how gratified they were it would
- have given her pleasure. One evening Lady Stratford, and some
- distinguished guests who were staying at the Embassy, came,
- and were much pleased to see how happy and comfortable the men
- were, and how much they enjoyed Her Majesty’s gifts.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
- _Letters from Scutari—Kinglake on Miss Nightingale and her
- dynasty—The refusal of a new contingent._
-
-
-Miss Nightingale’s saving sense of humour gleams forth in her letters
-in the most delightful way, even in the darkest days. In the following,
-something of the hugeness of her task is dimly seen through the comic
-background of the unbecoming cap that “If I’d known, ma’am, I wouldn’t
-have come, ma’am.” Here is the letter just as it is given in Lord
-Herbert’s life. It begins abruptly, evidently quoting from a conversation
-just held with one of the staff nurses:—
-
- “‘I came out, ma’am, prepared to submit to everything, to be
- put upon in every way. But there are some things, ma’am, one
- can’t submit to. There is the caps, ma’am, that suits one face
- and some that suits another; and if I’d known, ma’am, about the
- caps, great as was my desire to come out to nurse at Scutari,
- I wouldn’t have come, ma’am.’—_Speech of Mrs. L., Barrack
- Hospital, Scutari, Asiatic Side, November 14, 1854._
-
- “Time must be at a discount with the man who can adjust the
- balance of such an important question as the above, and I for
- one have none, as you will easily suppose when I tell you that
- on Thursday last we had 1,175 sick and wounded in this hospital
- (among whom 120 cholera patients), and 650 severely wounded in
- the other building, called the General Hospital, of which we
- also have charge, when a message came to me to prepare for 510
- wounded on our side of the hospital, who were arriving from the
- dreadful affair of November 5, from Balaclava, in which battle
- were 1,763 wounded and 442 killed, besides 96 officers wounded
- and 38 killed. I always expected to end my days as a hospital
- matron, but I never expected to be barrack mistress. We had but
- half an hour’s notice before they began landing the wounded.
- Between one and nine o’clock we had the mattresses stuffed,
- sewn up, laid down (alas! only upon matting on the floor), the
- men washed and put to bed, and all their wounds dressed.
-
- “We are very lucky in our medical heads. Two of them are
- brutes and four are angels—for this is a work which makes
- either angels or devils of men, and of women too. As for
- the assistants, they are all cubs, and will, while a man
- is breathing his last breath under the knife, lament the
- ‘annoyance of being called up from their dinners by such a
- fresh influx of wounded.’ But unlicked cubs grow up into good
- old bears, though I don’t know how; for certain it is, the old
- bears are good. We have now four miles of beds and not eighteen
- inches apart.
-
- “We have our quarters in one tower of the barracks, and all
- this fresh influx has been laid down between us and the main
- guard, in two corridors, with a line of beds down each side,
- just room for one person to pass between, and four wards. Yet
- in the midst of this appalling horror (we are steeped up to our
- necks in blood) there is good—and I can truly say, like St.
- Peter, ‘It is good for us to be here’—though I doubt whether,
- if St. Peter had been there, he would have said so.”
-
-Meanwhile England, stirred to its depths by the accounts given by Mr.
-William Howard Russell, of the sufferings of our soldiers, had begged the
-_Times_, in whose pages his letters appeared, to receive funds and send
-them out by the hand of Mr. Macdonald, a man of vigour, firmness, and
-good sense, and “loyally devoted to his duty.” Before leaving England,
-he saw the Inspector-General of the army, Dr. Andrew Smith, and also the
-Duke of Newcastle, but was assured that Government had already provided
-so amply for the sick and wounded that his fund was not likely to be
-needed. When he reached the Bosphorus all the official people there
-talked to him in the same strain. But there leaked out through an officer
-on duty one little fact that showed how much such assurances were worth.
-
-It seemed that the 39th Regiment was actually on its way to the
-severities of a Crimean winter with only the light summer clothing that
-would be worn in hot countries. Happily, the surgeon of the regiment
-appealed to Mr. Macdonald, and, more happily still, Mr. Macdonald dared
-to go beyond his exact instructions and give help out of his fund which
-might prevent illness, instead of waiting for the moment when death was
-already at the door. He went into the markets of Constantinople and
-bought then and there a suit of flannels or other woollens for every man
-in that regiment.
-
-Mr. Macdonald saw that he must be ready to offer help, or red tape and
-loyalty together would seal the lips of men in the service, lest they
-should seem to be casting a slur on the army administration.
-
-There is humour of the grimmest kind in what resulted. The chief of the
-Scutari hospitals told him “nothing was wanted,” and on pushing his
-inquiry with a yet more distinguished personage, he was actually advised
-to spend the money on building a church at Pera!
-
- “Yet at that very time,” says Kinglake, “wants so dire as
- to include want of hospital furniture and of shirts for the
- patients, and of the commonest means for obtaining cleanliness,
- were afflicting our stricken soldiery in the hospitals.”
-
-The Pera proposal—rightly described as “astounding”—led to an interview
-with the Lady-in-Chief. Tears and laughter must have met in her heart
-as she heard this absurdity, and away she took him—money as well—to the
-very centre of her commissariat, to see for himself the daily demands and
-the gaping need—furniture, pillows, sheets, shirts—endless appliances
-and drugs—that need seemed truly endless, and many hours daily he spent
-with her in the Nurses’ Tower, taking down lists of orders for the
-storekeepers in Constantinople. Here was the right help at last—not
-pretty mufflers for men in need of shirts, nor fine cambric for stout
-bed-linen.
-
-However, from the Lady-in-Chief Mr. Macdonald soon learned the truth,
-and the course he then took was one of the simplest kind, but it worked
-a mighty change. He bought the things needed, and the authorities,
-succumbing at last to this excruciating form of demonstration, had to
-witness the supply of wants which before they had refused to confess.
-So now, besides using the stores which she had at her own command, the
-Lady-in-Chief could impart wants felt in our hospitals to Mr. Macdonald
-with the certainty that he would hasten to meet them by applying what was
-called the “_Times_ Fund” in purchasing the articles needed.
-
- “It was thus,” adds Kinglake, “that under the sway of motives
- superbly exalted, a great lady came to the rescue of our
- prostrate soldiery, made good the default of the State, won the
- gratitude, the rapt admiration of an enthusiastic people, and
- earned for the name she bears a pure, a lasting renown.
-
- “She even did more. By the very power of her fame, but also,
- I believe, by the wisdom and the authority of her counsels,
- she founded, if so one may speak, a gracious dynasty that
- still reigns supreme in the wards where sufferers lie, and
- even brings solace, brings guidance, brings hope, into those
- dens of misery that, until the blessing has reached them, seem
- only to harbour despair. When into the midst of such scenes
- the young high-bred lady now glides, she wears that same
- sacred armour—the gentle attire of the servitress—which seemed
- ‘heavenly’ in the eyes of our soldiers at the time of the war,
- and finds strength to meet her dire task, because she knows by
- tradition what the first of the dynasty proved able to confront
- and to vanquish in the wards of the great Barrack Hospital.”
-
-In everything a woman’s hand and brain had been needed. It was, for
-instance, of little use to receive in the evening, after barrack fires
-were out, food which had been asked for from the supplies for some meal
-several hours earlier; yet that, it appears, was the sort of thing that
-happened. And too much of the food officially provided, even when it did
-reach the patients at last, had been unfit for use.
-
-As for the question of laundry, a washing contract that had only
-succeeded in washing seven shirts for two or three thousand men could
-not have been permitted to exist under any feminine management. Nor could
-any trained or knowledgeable nurse have allowed for a single day the
-washing of infectious bed-linen in one common tub with the rest. Yet this
-had been the condition of affairs before the Lady-in-Chief came on the
-scenes. In speaking of her work among the soldiers’ wives it has already
-been noted how she quickly hired and fitted up a house close to the
-hospital as a laundry, where under sanitary regulations 500 shirts and
-150 other articles were washed every week.
-
-Then there arose the practical question of what could be done for the
-poor fellows who had no clothes at all except the grimy and blood-stained
-garments in which they arrived, and we are told that in the first three
-months, out of her own private funds, she provided the men with ten
-thousand shirts.
-
-The drugs had all been in such confusion that once when Mrs. Bracebridge
-had asked three times for chloride of lime and been assured that there
-was none, Miss Nightingale insisted on a thorough search, and not less
-than ninety pounds of it were discovered.
-
-The semi-starvation of many hospital patients before Miss Nightingale’s
-arrival, noted on an earlier page, was chiefly the result of
-mismanagement—mismanagement on the part of those who meant well—often,
-indeed, meant the very best within their power, but among whom there
-was, until her coming, no central directing power, with brain and heart
-alike capable and energizing and alive to all the vital needs of deathly
-illness—alert with large foreseeing outlook, yet shrewd and swift in
-detail.
-
-It is at first puzzling to compare Kinglake’s picture of the confusion
-and suffering, even while he is defending Lord Raglan, with some of
-the letters in Lord Stanmore’s “Life of Lord Herbert,” especially one
-from General Estcourt, in which he says “never was an army better fed.”
-But even in this letter—dated, be it noted, a fortnight after Miss
-Nightingale’s arrival—the next sentence, which refers, of course, to the
-army in general and not to the hospitals under her management, shows the
-same muddling that had pursued the hospitals until she came to their
-aid with Mr. Herbert and the War Office at her back; for after saying
-that the ration is ample and most liberal, it adds—and the italics are
-mine—“_but the men cannot cook for want of camp-kettles and for want of
-fuel_.”
-
-Yet even with regard to the hospitals, it is startling to find Mr.
-Bracebridge, in his first letter to Mr. Herbert, speaking of the Barrack
-Hospital as clean and airy. But people have such odd ideas of what is
-“clean and airy,” and it would seem that he thought it “clean and airy”
-for the patients to have no proper arrangements for washing, for the
-drains to be in such a noisome state as to need engineering, and for six
-dead dogs to be rotting under the windows! I suppose he liked the look
-of the walls and the height of the ceilings, and wanted, moreover, to
-comfort Mr. Herbert’s sad heart at a time when all England was up in arms
-at the mistakes made in transport and other arrangements.
-
-The letters of the chaplain to Mr. Herbert are full of interest, and
-in reading the following we have to put ourselves back into the mind
-of a time that looked anxiously to see whether Miss Nightingale was
-really equal to her task—an idea which to us of to-day seems foolish and
-timorous, but which was, after all, quite natural, seeing that she was
-new and untried in this particular venture of army nursing, and that half
-the onlookers had no idea of the long and varied training she had had.
-
- “MY DEAR HERBERT,—I have now had near a week’s opportunity of
- closely observing the details of the hospitals at Scutari.
- First, as to Miss Nightingale and her company, nothing can be
- said too strong in their praise; she works them wonderfully,
- and they are so useful that I have no hesitation in saying some
- twenty more of the same sort would be a very great blessing
- to the establishment. Her nerve is equal to her good sense;
- she, with one of her nurses and myself, gave efficient aid at
- an amputation of the thigh yesterday. She was just as cool
- as if she had had to do it herself. We are close allies, and
- through Macdonald and the funds at my own command, I get her
- everything for which she asks, and this is saying a great deal.
-
- “My honest view of the matter is this: I found but too great
- evidence of the staff and means being unequal to the emergency;
- the requirements have almost doubled through the last two
- unhappy actions at Balaclava. Still, day by day I see manifest
- improvement; no government, no nation could have provided, on
- a sudden, staff and appliances for accident wards miles in
- length, and for such sickness as that horrid Varna dysentery.
- To manage more than three thousand casualties of the worst
- nature is indeed a task to be met in an entirely satisfactory
- way by nothing short of a miraculous energy with the means
- it would require. The men are landed necessarily in a most
- pitiable state, and have to be carried up steep ground for
- considerable distance, either by those beasts of Turks, who are
- as stupid as callous, or by our invalids, who are not equal to
- the task. Still, it is done, and as this is war, not peace, and
- Scutari is really a battlefield, I am more disposed to lament
- than to blame.
-
- “There seems now, so far as I can see, no lack of lint and
- plaister; there is a lack of linen,—we have sent home for it.
- The surgeons are working their utmost, and serious cases seem
- treated with great humanity and skill. There was and is an
- awful want of shirts for the men, and socks, and such matters;
- we have already let Miss Nightingale have all she applies for,
- and this morning I, with Macdonald’s sanction, or, rather, in
- concert with him, have sent to the Crimea a large stock of
- shirts of warm serge, socks, flannel, tea, etc., etc. I spend
- the best part of every day there acting, at one time as priest
- to the dying, at another helping the surgeons or the men to
- dress their wounds; again, I go to the landing-place and try
- to work them into method for an hour or two, etc., etc. One
- and all are now most kind and civil to me, meet my wishes in
- every way they can. Alas! I fear, with every possible effort
- of the existing establishment, the crisis is still too great;
- there are wanting hundreds of beds—that is, many hundreds have
- only matting between the beds and the stone floor. I slept
- here Sunday night, and walked the wards late and early in
- the morning; I fear the cold weather in these passages will
- produce on men so crippled and so maimed much supplementary
- evil in the way of coughs and chest diseases. The wounded do
- better than the sick. I scarce pray with one of the latter one
- day but I hear he is dead on the morrow.... I am glad to say
- the authorities have left off swearing they had everything
- and wanted nothing; they are now grateful for the help which,
- with the fund at command, we liberally meet. The wounds are,
- many of them, of the most fearful character, and yet I have
- not heard a murmur, even from those who, from the pressing
- urgency of the case, are often left with most obvious grounds
- of complaint. Stafford O’Brien is here; he, at my suggestion,
- aids my son and self in letter writing for the poor creatures.
- My room is a post office; I pay the post of every letter from
- every hospital patient, and we write masses every day. They
- show one what the British soldier really is; I only wish to God
- the people of England, who regard the red coat as a mere guise
- of a roystering rake in the private and a dandified exclusive
- in the officer, could see the patience, true modesty, and
- courageous endurance of all ranks.
-
- “Understand me clearly. I could pick many a hole; I could
- show where head has been wanting, truth perverted, duty
- neglected, etc.; but I feel that the pressure was such and of
- so frightful, so severe (in one way) a character, there is such
- an effort at what we desire, that I for one cry out of the past
- ‘_non mi ricordo_;’ of the present, ‘If the cart is in the
- rut, there is every shoulder at the wheel.’ The things wanted
- we cannot wait for you to supply, in England; if the slaughter
- is to go on as it has done the last fortnight, the need must
- be met at once. Macdonald is doing his work most sensibly,
- steadily, and I believe not only with no offence to any, but is
- earning the goodwill of all.”
-
-Truth is a two-edged sword, and for purposes of rebuke or reform Miss
-Nightingale used it at times with keenness and daring. In that sense this
-glowing, loving-hearted woman knew how on occasions to be stern. Her
-salt never lost its savour. She was swift, efficient, capable to the
-last degree, and she was also high-spirited and sometimes sharp-tongued.
-Perhaps we love her all the more for being so human. A person outwardly
-all perfection, if not altogether divine, is apt to give the idea
-that there are faults hidden up somewhere. It was not so with Miss
-Nightingale. Her determination to carry at all costs the purpose she had
-in hand laid her often open to criticism, for, just as she was ready on
-occasion to override her own feelings, so also she was ready sometimes to
-override the feelings of others. Mr. Herbert judged from her letters that
-an addition to her staff of nurses would be welcome, but we saw that when
-the new band of forty-six arrived, under the escort of Miss Nightingale’s
-old friend Miss Stanley, they were not admitted to the hospital at
-Scutari, and to tell the truth, Miss Nightingale was very angry at their
-being thrust upon her, just when she was finding her own staff rather a
-“handful.” In point of fact, she not only wrote a very warm letter to her
-old friend Mr. Herbert, but she also formally gave in her resignation.
-
-This was not accepted. Mr. Herbert’s generous sweetness of nature, his
-love for the writer, and his belief that she was the one person needed
-in the hospitals, and was doing wonders there, led him to write a very
-noble and humble reply, saying that _he_ had made a mistake—which,
-indeed, was true enough—in taking his well-meant step without consulting
-her. She yielded her point in so far as to remain at her post, now that
-Miss Stanley and her staff had moved on to Therapia and Smyrna, and were
-doing real good there, Miss Stanley having given up all her own plans, to
-remain and look after the nurses who had come under her escort.
-
-But, apart from the fact that it would have been a great hindrance to
-discipline to have forty-six women on her hands who had _not_ promised
-obedience to her, as had her own nurses, a little sidelight is thrown
-upon it all by these words in one of Miss Stanley’s own letters, speaking
-of the nurses under her guardianship:—
-
- “The first night there was great dissatisfaction among them,
- and a strong inclination to strike work. ‘We are not come out
- to be cooks, housemaids, and washerwomen,’ and they dwelt
- considerably on Mr. Herbert’s words about equality. _They are
- like troublesome children._”
-
-Though our sympathy goes out to Miss Stanley, it is not impossible that
-Miss Nightingale’s decision may have saved Scutari from unavoidable
-confusions of authority which would have been very unseemly, and from
-more than a possibility of defeat in the experiment she was making, in
-the eyes of all Europe, as to how far women could be wisely admitted
-into military hospitals. Such confusion might have arisen, not from any
-fault in Miss Nightingale or Miss Stanley, but from the special work of
-reorganization which had to be done at Scutari, and the special code of
-obedience by which Miss Nightingale’s staff had been prepared for it. She
-did not want for such work any “troublesome children.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
- _The busy nursing hive—M. Soyer and his memories—Miss
- Nightingale’s complete triumph over prejudice—The memories of
- Sister Aloysius._
-
-
-Meanwhile Miss Stanley’s letters give us a very interesting informal
-glimpse of the work that was going on and of Miss Nightingale herself.
-Here is one in which she describes her visit to her in the hospital at
-Scutari:—
-
- “We passed down two or three of these immense corridors, asking
- our way as we went. At last we came to the guard-room, another
- corridor, then through a door into a large, busy kitchen, where
- stood Mrs. Margaret Williams, who seemed much pleased to see
- me: then a heavy curtain was raised; I went through a door, and
- there sat dear Flo writing on a small unpainted deal table. I
- never saw her looking better. She had on her black merino,
- trimmed with black velvet, clean linen collar and cuffs, apron,
- white cap with a black handkerchief tied over it; and there was
- Mrs. Bracebridge, looking so nice, too. I was quite satisfied
- with my welcome. It was settled at once that I was to sleep
- here, especially as, being post day, Flo could not attend to me
- till the afternoon.
-
- “The sofa is covered with newspapers just come in by the post.
- I have been sitting for an hour here, having some coffee, and
- writing, Mrs. Clarke coming in to see what I have wanted, in
- spite of what I could say.
-
- “The work this morning was the sending off General Adams’s
- remains, and the arrangements consequent upon it.
-
- “A stream of people every minute.
-
- “‘Please, ma’am, have you any black-edged paper?’
-
- “‘Please, what can I give which would keep on his stomach; is
- there any arrowroot to-day for him?’
-
- “‘No; the tubs of arrowroot must be for the worst cases; we
- cannot spare him any, nor is there any jelly to-day; try him
- with some eggs, etc.’
-
- “‘Please, Mr. Gordon wishes to see Miss Nightingale about the
- orders she gave him.’
-
- “Mr. Sabine comes in for something else.
-
- “Mr. Bracebridge in and out about General Adams, and orders of
- various kinds.”
-
-Such was the busy life of which Miss Nightingale was the queen, though,
-unlike the queen-bee of the ordinary honey-hive, this queen of nurses was
-the hardest-worked and most severely strained worker in the whole toiling
-community.
-
-It was early in the spring of 1855 that in the feeding department, which
-she rightly considered of great importance to her invalids, she received
-unexpected help.
-
-This came from M. Soyer, who may be remembered by more than one old
-Londoner as at one time _chef_ of the New Reform Club, where his
-biography, which contains some interesting illustrations, still adorns
-the library. M. Soyer begged to be allowed the command of the hospital
-kitchen at Scutari. He was an expert and an enthusiast, and very amusing.
-
-Also what he offered was of no slight importance and unselfishness. In
-February, 1855, he wrote as follows to the _Times_:—
-
- “Sir,—After carefully perusing the letter of your
- correspondent, dated Scutari, in your impression of Wednesday
- last, I perceive that, although the kitchen under the
- superintendence of Miss Nightingale affords so much relief,
- the system of management at the large one at the Barrack
- Hospital is far from being perfect. I propose offering my
- services gratuitously, and proceeding direct to Scutari at my
- own personal expense, to regulate that important department,
- if the Government will honour me with their confidence, and
- grant me the full power of acting according to my knowledge and
- experience in such matters.—I have the honour to remain, sir,
- your obedient servant,
-
- “A. SOYER.”
-
-
-His proposal was accepted, and on his arrival at Scutari he was welcomed
-by Miss Nightingale in what he names, after his rather florid manner, “a
-sanctuary of benevolence.” There he presented his letters and parcels
-from the Duchess of Sutherland and Mr. Stafford and others, the Duchess
-especially commending him to the Lady-in-Chief as likely to be of service
-in the cooking department. He was found to be a most valuable ally, and
-his letters and writings, since published, are full of interest. He
-wrote home at once, saying: “I must especially express my gratitude to
-Miss Nightingale, who from her extraordinary intelligence and the good
-organization of her kitchen procured me every material for making a
-commencement, and thus saved me at least one week’s sheer loss of time,
-as my model kitchen did not arrive till Saturday last.”
-
-This is interesting, because it shows yet once more Miss Nightingale’s
-thoroughness and foresight and attention to detail—the more valuable in
-one whose outlook at the same time touched so wide a skyline, and was so
-large in its noble care for a far-off future and a world of many nations,
-never bounded by her own small island or her own church pew.
-
-Soyer’s description of her is worth giving in full, and later we shall,
-through his eyes, have a vision of her as she rode to Balaclava.
-
- “Her visage as regards expression is very remarkable, and one
- can almost anticipate by her countenance what she is about to
- say: alternately, with matters of the most grave importance,
- a gentle smile passes radiantly over her countenance, thus
- proving her evenness of temper; at other times, when wit or
- a pleasantry prevails, the heroine is lost in the happy,
- good-natured smile which pervades her face, and you recognize
- only the charming woman. Her dress is generally of a greyish
- or black tint; she wears a simple white cap, and often a rough
- apron. In a word, her whole appearance is religiously simple
- and unsophisticated. In conversation no member of the fair sex
- can be more amiable and gentle than Miss Nightingale. Removed
- from her arduous and cavalier-like duties, which require the
- nerve of a Hercules—and she possesses it when required—she is
- Rachel on the stage in both tragedy and comedy.”
-
-Soyer’s help and loyalty proved invaluable all through the campaign. His
-volume of memories adds a vivid bit of colour here and there to these
-pages. His own life had been romantic, and he saw everything from the
-romantic point of view.
-
-We read and know that although Sidney Herbert’s letter to Dr. Menzies,
-the principal medical officer at Scutari, asked that all regard should be
-paid to every wish of the Lady-in-Chief, and that was in itself a great
-means of power, the greatest power of all lay in her own personality and
-its compelling magnetism, which drew others to obedience. The attractive
-force of a strong, clear, comprehensive mind, and still more of a soul on
-fire with high purpose and deep compassion, which never wasted themselves
-in words, became tenfold the more powerful for the restraint and
-self-discipline which held all boisterous expression of them in check—her
-word, her very glance,
-
- “Winning its way with extreme gentleness
- Through all the outworks of suspicious pride.”
-
-Her strength was to be tried to the uttermost; for scarcely had her work
-in the hospital begun when cholera came stalking over the threshold. Day
-and night among the dying and the dead she and her nurses toiled with
-fearless devotion, each one carrying her life in her hand, but seldom,
-indeed, even thinking of that in the heroic struggle to save as many
-other lives as possible.
-
-Miss Nightingale long afterwards, when talking of services of a far
-easier kind, once said to a professional friend that no one was fit to be
-a nurse who did not really enjoy precisely those duties of a sick-room
-which the ordinary uneducated woman counts revolting; and if she was, at
-this time, now and then impatient with stupidity and incompetence and
-carelessness, that is not wonderful in one whose effort was always at
-high level, and for whom every detail was of vivid interest, because she
-realized that often on exactitude in details hung the balance between
-life and death.
-
-On their first arrival she and her nurses may, no doubt, have had to bear
-cold-shouldering and jealousy; but in the long agony of the cholera
-visitation they were welcomed as veritable angels of light. It would
-be easy to be sensational in describing the scenes amid which they
-moved, for before long the hospital was filled, day and night, with two
-long processions: on one side came in those who carried the sick men
-in on their stretchers, and on the other side those who carried out
-the dead. The orderlies could not have been trusted to do the nursing
-that was required; the “stuping”—a professional method of wholesale hot
-fomentations and rubbings to release the iron rigidity of the cholera
-patient’s body—was best done by skilled and gentle hands, and even in
-_such_ hands, so bad were the surrounding conditions—the crowding, the
-bad drainage, the impure water—that, despite the utmost devotion, only a
-small proportion of lives could be saved.
-
-It was especially at this time that the feeling towards the Lady-in-Chief
-deepened into a trust that was almost worship. Watchful, resourceful,
-unconquered, with a mind that, missing no detail, yet took account of
-the widest issues and the farthest ends, she was yet full of divine
-tenderness for each sufferer whom with her own hands she tended; and,
-although she did not nurse the officers—she left that to others—in her
-devotion to Tommy Atkins she had been known to be on her feet, as already
-has been said, for twenty hours on end; and, whether she was kneeling or
-standing, stooping or lifting, always an ideal nurse.
-
-The graves round the hospitals were not dug deep enough, and the air
-became even fouler than before. To the inroads of cholera the suffering
-of Sebastopol patients added a new form of death. Sister Aloysius writes
-of these men who came in by scores and hundreds from the trenches, and
-whom this Sister, greatly valued by the Lady-in-Chief, helped to nurse
-both at Scutari and at Balaclava:—
-
- “I must say something of my poor frost-bitten patients. The men
- who came from the ‘front,’ as they called it, had only thin
- linen suits, no other clothing to keep out the Crimean frost
- of 1854-5. When they were carried in on the stretchers which
- conveyed so many to their last resting-place, their clothes
- had to be cut off. In most cases the flesh and clothes were
- frozen together; and, as for the feet, the boots had to be cut
- off bit by bit, the flesh coming off with them; many pieces of
- the flesh I have seen remain in the boot.
-
- “We have just received some hundreds of poor creatures, worn
- out with sufferings beyond any you could imagine, in the
- Crimea, where the cold is so intense that a soldier described
- to me the Russians and the Allies in a sudden skirmish, and
- neither party able to draw a trigger! So fancy what the poor
- soldiers must endure in the ‘trenches.’
-
- “It was a comfort to think that these brave men had some care,
- all that we could procure for them. For at this time the food
- was very bad—goat’s flesh, and sometimes what they called
- mutton, but black, blue, and green. Yet who could complain of
- anything after the sufferings I have faintly described—borne,
- too, with such patience: not a murmur!... One day, after a
- batch had arrived from the Crimea, and I had gone my rounds
- through them, one of my orderlies told me that a man wanted to
- speak one word to me.
-
- “When I had a moment I went to him. ‘Tell me at once what you
- want; I have worse cases to see after’—he did not happen to be
- very bad. ‘All I want to know, ma’am, is, are you one of our
- own Sisters of Mercy from Ireland?’ ‘Yes,’ I said, ‘your very
- own.’ ‘God be praised for that!’
-
- “Another poor fellow said to me one day, ‘Do they give you
- anything good out here?’ ‘Oh yes,’ I said; ‘why do you ask me?’
- ‘Because, ma’am, you gave me a piece of chicken for my dinner,
- and I kept some of it for you.’ He pulled it out from under his
- head and offered it to me. I declined the favour with thanks. I
- never could say enough of those kind-hearted soldiers and their
- consideration for us in the midst of their sufferings.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
- _Inexactitudes—Labels—Cholera—“The Lady with the Lamp”—Her
- humour—Letters of Sister Aloysius._
-
-
-About the middle of December Miss Nightingale had to rebuke very severely
-one of her own nurses, who had written a letter to the _Times_ which made
-a great sensation by its lurid picture of the evils in the hospital—a
-misrepresentation so great that the nurse herself confessed in the end
-that it was “a tissue of exaggerations”—perhaps “inexactitudes” would be
-our modern word.
-
-Meanwhile, the small-minded parochial gossips at home were wasting
-their time in discussing Miss Nightingale’s religious opinions. One who
-worked so happily with all who served the same Master was first accused
-under the old cry of “Popery,” and then under the equally silly label
-of “Unitarianism.” Her friend Mrs. Herbert, in rebuking parish gossip,
-felt it necessary to unpin these two labels and loyally pin on a new one,
-by explaining that in reality she was rather “Low Church.” The really
-sensible person, with whom, doubtless, Lady Herbert would have fully
-agreed, was the Irish parson, and his like, when he replied to some
-foolish questions about her that Miss Nightingale belonged to a very rare
-sect indeed—the sect of the Good Samaritans.
-
-Miss Stanley tells a most amusing story of how one of the military
-chaplains complained to Miss Jebbut that very improper books had been
-circulated in the wards; she pressed in vain to know what they were. “As
-I was coming away he begged for five minutes’ conversation, said he was
-answerable for the men and what they read, and he must protest against
-sentiments he neither approved nor understood, and that he would fetch me
-the book. It was Keble’s ‘Christian Year,’ which Miss Jebbut had lent to
-a sick midshipman!”
-
-It was a brave heart indeed that the Good Samaritan needed now, with
-cholera added to the other horrors of hospital suffering, and the
-frost-bitten cases from Sebastopol were almost equally heart-rending.
-
-It was early in January 1855 that Miss Stanley escorted fifty more
-nurses. Most of them worked under Miss Anderson at the General Hospital
-at Scutari, but eight were sent into the midst of the fighting at
-Balaclava, and of the life there “at the front” the letters of Sister
-Aloysius give a terrible picture. We have, for instance, the story of a
-man ill and frost-bitten, who found he could not turn on his side because
-his feet were frozen to those of the soldier opposite. And it came to
-pass that for two months the death-rate in the hospitals was sixty per
-cent.
-
-Night after night, the restless, lonely sufferers watched for the coming
-of the slender, white-capped figure with the little light that she shaded
-so carefully lest it should waken any sleeper, as she passed through the
-long corridors watching over the welfare of her patients, and to them she
-was “the Lady with the Lamp.”
-
-We still see with the American poet:—
-
- “The wounded from the battle-plain,
- In dreary hospitals of pain,
- The cheerless corridors,
- The cold and stony floors.
-
- “Lo! in that house of misery
- A lady with a lamp I see
- Pass through the glimmering gloom,
- And flit from room to room.
-
- “And slow, as in a dream of bliss,
- The speechless sufferer turns to kiss
- Her shadow, as it falls
- Upon the darkening walls.”
-
-“Ah,” said to me old John Ball, the veteran of the Crimea, who had been
-wounded at Alma and been at Scutari a month before her arrival, so that
-in his later days there he saw the changes that she wrought, “ah, she was
-a _good_ soul—she was a _good_ woman!” And through his words, and those
-of the other old men who remembered her, it was possible to discern a
-little of the glow, the humour, the homely maternal tenderness with which
-the _Wohlgebohrene Dame_ had comforted young and old in their hours of
-patriotic wounding and pain.
-
-For herself, in the long days of sacrificial service, was there any
-human solace, any dear companionship, any dawning light of love?
-
-For us at least, the mere outsiders, to whom she is just a very practical
-saint and a very great woman, “there lives no record of reply.” But we
-know that, though hers was the solitary path, which yet was no solitude
-because of the outpoured love and sympathy to others, when in her
-presence once some one was chattering about the advantages of “single
-blessedness,” she, with her quick sense of humour, replied that a fish
-out of water might be blessed, but a good deal of effort was needed to
-become accustomed to the air!
-
-None of the letters describing the Scutari life are more interesting than
-those of Sister Aloysius, the Irish Sister of Mercy, from whose graphic
-descriptions quotations have already been made.
-
- “She and her companions had had only a few hours in which to
- prepare for a long and dangerous journey, with the details of
- which they were quite unacquainted, only knowing that they were
- to start for Turkey at half-past seven in the morning, and
- that they went for the love of God.
-
- “‘And who is to take care of you from this to Turkey?’ asked
- one of their amazed well-wishers. To which the Sisters only
- replied that ‘they hoped their guardian angels would kindly do
- so.’”
-
-Needless to say, the little party _did_ reach its destination safely,
-and “at last,” writes Sister Aloysius, “a despatch came[14] to say that
-five Sisters were to proceed to Scutari, to the General Hospital; while
-arrangements were made for the other ten Sisters to proceed to a house on
-the Bosphorus, to await further orders. At once the five Sisters started
-for Scutari: Reverend Mother, Sister M. Agnes, Sister M. Elizabeth,
-Sister M. Winifred, and myself. When we reached Scutari we were shown
-to our quarters consisting of one little room, not in a very agreeable
-locality. However, we were quite satisfied none better could be found,
-and for this little nook we were thankful.
-
-“Of course, we expected to be sent to the wards at once. Sister M. Agnes
-and the writer were sent to a store to sort clothes that had been eaten
-by the rats; Rev. Mother and Sister M. Elizabeth either to the kitchen or
-to another store. In a dark, damp, gloomy shed we set to work and did the
-best we could; but, indeed, the destruction accomplished by the rats was
-something wonderful. On the woollen goods they had feasted sumptuously.
-They were running about us in all directions; we begged of the sergeant
-to leave the door open that we might make our escape if they attacked us.
-Our home rats would run if you ‘hushed’ them; but you might ‘hush’ away,
-and the Scutari rats would not take the least notice.
-
-“During my stay in the stores I saw numberless funerals pass by the
-window. Cholera was raging, and how I did wish to be in the wards amongst
-the poor dying soldiers! Before I leave the stores I must mention that
-Sister M. Agnes and myself thought the English nobility must have emptied
-their wardrobes and linen stores to send out bandages for the wounded—the
-most beautiful underclothing, the finest cambric sheets, with merely a
-scissors run here and there through them to ensure their being used
-for no other purpose. And such large bales, too; some from the Queen’s
-Palace, with the Royal monogram beautifully worked. Whoever sent out
-these immense bales thought nothing too good for the poor soldiers. And
-they were right—nothing was too good for them. And now good-bye stores
-and good-bye rats; for I was to be in the cholera wards in the morning.
-
-“Where shall I begin, or how can I ever describe my first day in the
-hospital at Scutari? Vessels were arriving, and the orderlies carrying
-the poor fellows, who, with their wounds and frost-bites, had been
-tossing about on the Black Sea for two or three days, and sometimes more.
-Where were they to go? Not an available bed. They were laid on the floor
-one after another, till the beds were emptied of those dying of cholera
-and every other disease. Many died immediately after being brought
-in—their moans would pierce the heart—the taking of them in and out of
-the vessels must have increased their pain.
-
-“The look of agony in those poor dying faces will never leave my heart.
-
-“Week in, week out, the cholera went on. The same remedies were
-continued, though almost always to fail. However, while there was life
-there was hope, and we kept on the warm applications to the last. When it
-came near the end the patients got into a sort of collapse, out of which
-they did not rally.
-
-“We begged the orderlies, waiting to take them to the dead-house, to
-wait a little lest they might not be dead; and with great difficulty we
-prevailed on them to make the least delay. As a rule the orderlies drank
-freely—‘to drown their grief,’ they said. I must say that their position
-was a very hard one—their work always increasing—and such work; death
-around them on every side; their own lives in continual danger—it was
-almost for them a continuation of the field of battle.
-
-“The poor wounded men brought in out of the vessels were in a dreadful
-state of dirt, and so weak that whatever cleaning they got had to
-be done cautiously. Oh, the state of those fine fellows, so worn
-out with fatigue, so full of vermin! Most, or all, of them required
-spoon-feeding. We had wine, sago, arrowroot. Indeed, I think there was
-everything in the stores, but it was so hard to get them.... An orderly
-officer took the rounds of the wards every night to see that all was
-right. He was expected by the orderlies, and the moment he raised the
-latch one cried out, ‘All right, your honour.’ Many a time I said, ‘All
-wrong.’ The poor officer, of course, went his way; and one could scarcely
-blame him for not entering those wards, so filled with pestilence, the
-air so dreadful that to breathe it might cost him his life. And then,
-what could he do even if he did come? I remember one day an officer’s
-orderly being brought in—a dreadful case of cholera; and so devoted was
-his master that he came in every half-hour to see him, and stood over him
-in the bed as if it was only a cold he had; the poor fellow died after a
-few hours’ illness. I hope his devoted master escaped. I never heard.
-
-“Each Sister had charge of two wards, and there was just at this time
-a fresh outbreak of cholera. The Sisters were up every night; and the
-cases, as in Scutari and Kullali, were nearly all fatal. Reverend Mother
-did not allow the Sisters to remain up all night, except in cases of
-cholera, without a written order from the doctor.
-
-“In passing to the wards at night we used to meet the rats in droves.
-They would not even move out of our way. They were there before us, and
-were determined to keep possession. As for our hut, they evidently wanted
-to make it theirs, scraping under the boards, jumping up on the shelf
-where our little tin utensils were kept, rattling everything. One night
-dear Sister M. Paula found one licking her forehead—she had a real horror
-of them. Sleep was out of the question. Our third day in Balaclava was a
-very sad one for us. One of our dear band, Sister Winifred, got very ill
-during the night with cholera. She was a most angelic Sister, and we were
-all deeply grieved.
-
-“She, the first to go of all our little band, had been full of life and
-energy the day before. We were all very sad, and we wondered who would be
-the next.
-
-“Miss Nightingale was at the funeral, and even joined in the prayers.
-The soldiers, doctors, officers, and officials followed. When all was
-over we returned to our hut, very sad; but we had no further time to
-think. Patients were pouring in, and we should be out again to the
-cholera wards. Besides cholera there were cases of fever—in fact, of
-every disease. Others had been nearly killed by the blasting of rocks,
-and they came in fearfully disfigured.
-
-“Father Woolett brought us one day a present of a Russian cat; he bought
-it, he told us, from an old Russian woman for the small sum of seven
-shillings. It made a particularly handsome captive in the land of its
-fathers, for we were obliged to keep it tied to a chair to prevent its
-escape. But the very sight of this powerful champion soon relieved us of
-some of our unwelcome and voracious visitors.
-
-“Early in 1856 rumours of peace reached us from all sides. But our
-Heavenly Father demanded another sacrifice from our devoted little band.
-Dear Sister Mary Elizabeth was called to a martyrs’ crown.
-
-“She was specially beloved for her extraordinary sweetness of
-disposition. The doctor, when called, pronounced her illness to be fever;
-she had caught typhus in her ward. Every loving care was bestowed on her
-by our dearest Mother, who scarcely ever left her bedside. Death seemed
-to have no sting.... She had no wish to live or die, feeling she was in
-the arms of her Heavenly Father. ‘He will do for me what is best,’ she
-whispered, ‘and His will is all I desire.’”
-
-At Scutari Miss Nightingale’s work of reorganization was bearing swift
-fruit. The wives of the soldiers were daily employed in the laundry she
-had established, so that they had a decent livelihood, and the soldiers
-themselves had clean linen. But, of course, a great many of the soldiers
-had left their wives and children at home.
-
-A money office also had been formed by the Lady-in-Chief, which helped
-them in sending home their pay. It was she too who arranged for the safe
-return of the widows to England, and it was she who provided stamps
-and stationery for the men, that they might be able to write to those
-dear to them. No one had had a moment, it seemed, to give thought to
-anything but the actual warfare with all its horrors, until her womanly
-sympathy and splendid capacity came on the scene. With her there was
-always little time lost between planning and achieving, and happily she
-had power of every kind in her hand. Besides her own means, which she
-poured forth like water, the people of England had, as we saw, subscribed
-magnificently through the _Times_ Fund, and with one so practical as the
-Lady-in-Chief in daily consultation with Mr. Macdonald, there was no
-longer any fear of giving to church walls what was intended to save the
-lives of ill-clad and dying soldiers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
- _Miss Nightingale visits Balaclava—Her illness—Lord Raglan’s
- visit—The Fall of Sebastopol._
-
-
-At last, in the May of 1855, the Lady-in-Chief was able to see such
-fruits of the six months’ steady work at Scutari that the scene of her
-labours could be changed, and she set out for Balaclava to inspect the
-other hospitals, for which, as superintendent of the ladies in the
-military hospitals in the East, she was responsible. She wished to see
-for herself what was being done for the soldiers on the field. Besides
-Mr. Bracebridge and her nursing staff, M. Soyer accompanied her with a
-view to improving the cooking arrangements for the army in the field, and
-he writes with his usual vividness:—
-
- “Thomas, Miss Nightingale’s boy, the twelve-year-old drummer
- who had left what he called his ‘instrument sticks’ to make
- himself her most devoted slave and messenger, was also allowed
- to go.
-
- “At nine,” says M. Soyer, “we were all on shore and mounted.
- There were about eight of us ready to escort our heroine to the
- seat of war. Miss Nightingale was attired simply in a genteel
- amazone, or riding habit, and had quite a martial air. She was
- mounted upon a very pretty mare of a golden colour which, by
- its gambols and caracoling, seemed proud to carry its noble
- charge. The weather was very fine. Our cavalcade produced an
- extraordinary effect upon the motley crowd of all nations
- assembled at Balaclava, who were astonished at seeing a lady so
- well escorted. It was not so, however, with those who knew who
- the lady was.”
-
-Later he gives us a most characteristic glimpse of the light-hearted
-courage and high spirit of his Lady-in-Chief:—
-
- “Mr. Anderson proposed to have a peep at Sebastopol. It was
- four o’clock, and they were firing sharply on both sides.
- Miss Nightingale, to whom the offer was made, immediately
- accepted it; so we formed a column and, for the first time,
- fearlessly faced the enemy, and prepared to go under fire.
- P. M. turned round to me, saying quietly, but with great
- trepidation, ‘I say, Monsieur Soyer, of course you would not
- take Miss Nightingale where there will be any danger?’ ... The
- sentry then repeated his caution, saying, ‘Madam, even where
- you stand you are in great danger; some of the shot reach
- more than half a mile beyond this!’ ... ‘My good young man,’
- replied Miss Nightingale in French, ‘more dead and wounded have
- passed through my hands than I hope you will ever see in the
- battlefield during the whole of your military career; believe
- me, I have no fear of death!’”
-
-By a little guile the eager Frenchman led the unsuspecting idol of the
-troops into a position where she could be well seen by the soldiers; and
-while she was seated on the Morta, in view of them all, it hardly needed
-his own dramatic outcry for a salutation to “the Daughter of England” to
-call forth the ringing cheers which greeted her from the men of the 39th
-Regiment, and the shouts were taken up so loudly by all the rest that the
-Russians were actually startled by them at Sebastopol.
-
-The darkness fell quickly, and half-way back to Balaclava Miss
-Nightingale and her party found themselves in the midst of a merry
-Zouave camp, where the men were singing and drinking coffee, but warned
-our friends that brigands were in the neighbourhood. However, there
-was nothing for it but to push on, and, as a matter of fact, the only
-wound received was from the head of Miss Nightingale’s horse, which hit
-violently against the face of her escort at the bridle rein, who kept
-silence that he might not alarm her, but was found with a face black and
-bleeding at the end of the journey.
-
-After her night’s rest in her state-cabin in the _Robert Lowe_, though
-still feeling used up with the adventurous visit to the camp hospitals,
-Miss Nightingale visited the General Hospital at Balaclava and the
-collection of huts on the heights, which formed the sanatoria, and
-also went to see an officer ill with typhus in the doctors’ huts. She
-renewed her visit next day, when, after a night at Balaclava, she settled
-three nurses into the sanatorium, and then for some days continued her
-inspection of hospitals and moved into the ship _London_, the _Robert
-Lowe_ having been ordered home.
-
-Worn out by her ceaseless labours at Scutari, she had probably been
-specially open to infection in the sick officer’s hut, and while on board
-the _London_ it became clear that she had contracted Crimean fever in a
-very bad form.
-
-She was ordered up to the huts amid such dreadful lamentations of the
-surrounding folk that, thanks to their well-meant delays, it took an
-hour to carry her up to the heights, her faithful nurse, Mrs. Roberts,
-keeping off the sun-glare by walking beside her with an umbrella, and
-her page-boy Thomas weeping his heart out at the tail of the little
-procession.
-
-A spot was found after her own heart near a running stream where the wild
-flowers were in bloom, and she tells in her _Nursing Notes_ how her first
-recovery began when a nosegay of her beloved flowers was brought to her
-bedside. But for some days she was desperately ill, and the camp was
-unspeakably moved and alarmed.
-
-Britain also shared deeply in the suspense, though happily the worst
-crisis was passed in about twelve days, leaving, however, a long time of
-great weakness and slow convalescence to be won through afterwards.
-
-During those twelve days some very sharp skirmishing took place, and
-there was talk of an attack on Balaclava from the Kamara side, in which
-case Miss Nightingale’s hut would, it was said, be the first outpost
-to be attacked. Any such notion was, of course, an injustice to the
-Russians, who would not knowingly have hurt a hair of her head—indeed, it
-may almost be said that she was sacred to all the troops, whether friends
-or foes. But at all events it gave her boy Thomas his opportunity, and he
-was prepared, we are told, “to die valiantly in defence of his mistress.”
-
-Soyer gives a picturesque account of Lord Raglan’s visit to Miss
-Nightingale when her recovery was first beginning. He begins by
-describing his own visit, and tells the story through the lips of Mrs.
-Roberts, Miss Nightingale’s faithful nurse.
-
- “ ... I was,” he writes, “very anxious to know the actual state
- of Miss Nightingale’s health, and went to her hut to inquire.
- I found Mrs. Roberts, who was quite astonished and very much
- delighted to see me.
-
- “‘Thank God, Monsieur Soyer,’ she exclaimed, ‘you are here
- again. We have all been in such a way about you. Why, it was
- reported that you had been taken prisoner by the Russians. I
- must go and tell Miss Nightingale you are found again.’
-
- “‘Don’t disturb her now. I understand Lord Raglan has been to
- see her.’
-
- “‘Yes, he has, and I made a serious mistake. It was about five
- o’clock in the afternoon when he came. Miss Nightingale was
- dozing, after a very restless night. We had a storm that day
- and it was very wet. I was in my room sewing when two men on
- horseback, wrapped in large gutta-percha cloaks and dripping
- wet, knocked at the door. I went out, and one inquired in which
- hut Miss Nightingale resided.
-
- “‘He spoke so loud that I said, “Hist! hist! don’t make such
- a horrible noise as that, my man,” at the same time making a
- sign with both hands for him to be quiet. He then repeated his
- question, but not in so loud a tone. I told him this was the
- hut.
-
- “‘“All right,” said he, jumping from his horse, and he was
- walking straight in when I pushed him back, asking what he
- meant and whom he wanted.
-
- “‘“Miss Nightingale,” said he.
-
- “‘“And pray who are you?”
-
- “‘“Oh, only a soldier,” was the reply; “but I must see her—I
- have come a long way—my name is Raglan: she knows me very well.”
-
- “‘Miss Nightingale, overhearing him, called me in, saying, “Oh!
- Mrs. Roberts, it is Lord Raglan. Pray tell him I have a very
- bad fever, and it will be dangerous for him to come near me.”
-
- “‘“I have no fear of fever, or anything else,” said Lord Raglan.
-
- “‘And before I had time to turn round, in came his lordship. He
- took up a stool, sat down at the foot of the bed, and kindly
- asked Miss Nightingale how she was, expressing his sorrow at
- her illness, and thanking her and praising her for the good she
- had done for the troops. He wished her a speedy recovery, and
- hoped that she might be able to continue her charitable and
- invaluable exertions, so highly appreciated by every one, as
- well as by himself.
-
- “‘He then bade Miss Nightingale good-bye, and went away. As he
- was going I said I wished to apologize.
-
- “‘“No, no! not at all, my dear lady,” said Lord Raglan; “you
- did very right; for I perceive that Miss Nightingale has not
- yet received my letter, in which I announced my intention of
- paying her a visit to-day—having previously inquired of the
- doctor if she could be seen.”’”[15]
-
-The doctors, after her twelve days of dangerous illness, were urgent for
-Miss Nightingale’s instant return to England; but this she would not do:
-she was sure that, with time and patience, she would be able once more to
-take up her work at Scutari. Lord Ward placed his yacht at her disposal,
-and by slow degrees she made recovery, though Lord Raglan’s death, June
-18, 1855, was a great grief and shock to her.
-
-Wellington said of Lord Raglan that he was a man who would not tell a lie
-to save his life, and he was also a man of great charm and benevolence,
-adored by his troops. He felt to the quick the terrible repulse of our
-troops before Sebastopol that June, having yielded his own counsels to
-those of France rather than break the alliance, and he died two days
-after the despatch was written in which he told the story of this event.
-
-Writing to the Duke of Newcastle in October, he had entreated for his
-army a little repose—that brave army, worn out, not only by the ordinary
-fatigues of a military campaign, and by the actual collecting of wood and
-water to keep life from extinction, but by cholera, sickness, and the
-bitter purgatorial cold of a black hillside in a Russian winter.
-
-“Repose!” echoes Kinglake with sardonic bitterness, and we too echo it,
-remembering how, two days afterwards, it was riding through the devil’s
-jaws at Balaclava, to hurl itself but a little later against its myriad
-assailants at Inkermann!
-
-Repose! uncomplaining and loyal, in the bitter grasp of winter on the
-heights of the Chersonese, holding day and night a siege that seemed
-endless, the allied armies had proved their heroism through the slow
-tragedy. And when at last, on the day of victory, amid the fury of the
-elements and the avenging fury of their own surging hearts, they grasped
-the result of their patient agony, though
-
- “Stormed at with shot and shell,
- Boldly they rode and well,”
-
-that final moment of onset did but crown the fortitude of those long,
-slow days of dying by inches in the slow clutch of starvation, that had
-been so much harder to bear, while they saw their comrades in the anguish
-of cholera and felt their own limbs freezing beneath them.
-
-But it was doubtless a brave assault, and it was sad that their loved
-commander was not there to see; for, while the Malakoff fell before
-the French, it was the British troops that took the Redan—that Redan
-of which it has been written that “three months before it had repulsed
-the attacking force with fearful carnage, and brought Lord Raglan to a
-despairing death.”
-
-There is tragedy, therefore, in the fact that when, so soon afterwards,
-Sebastopol fell, the triumph was not his.
-
-It was on September 8, amid a furious storm which suddenly broke up a
-summer-like day, that the cannonade joined with the thunder and the final
-assault was made. Though the first shouts of victory came at the end of
-an hour, it was nightfall before the fighting ceased and the Russians
-retreated. Sebastopol was in flames. And before the next day dawned the
-last act in this terrible war-drama was over.
-
-Within a month of leaving Scutari Miss Nightingale was already there
-again, and during these days of slowly returning strength, when she
-wandered sometimes through the beautiful cemetery where the strange,
-black-plumaged birds fly above the cypresses and, against the background
-of the blue Bosphorus, the roses garland the tombs, she planned, for the
-soldiers who had fallen, the monument which now stands there to their
-undying memory, where under the drooping wings of the angels that support
-it are inserted the words, “This monument was erected by Queen Victoria
-and her people.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- _The Nightingale Fund—Miss Nightingale remains at her post,
- organizing healthy occupations for the men off duty—Sisters of
- Mercy—The Queen’s jewel—Its meaning._
-
-
-Far and wide spread the news of the fall of Sebastopol, and London took
-the lead in rejoicings. The Tower guns shouted the victory, the arsenals
-fired their salutes, cathedrals and village churches rang out their
-welcome to peace. There were sons, husbands, brothers, fathers, for whom
-there would be no more home-coming on earth; and some who would come back
-broken and maimed: but all had served their country, and heroism lasts
-beyond time and death.
-
-All through the empire arose an outcry of thanksgiving to the woman who
-still remained at her post among the sick and the dying—the woman who had
-saved England’s honour in the day of disgrace and neglect, and had saved
-also countless lives among her brave sons.
-
-The Queen and all her people were eager to know what there was that they
-might lay at her feet. In one form only would Miss Nightingale accept the
-testimony offered—namely, the means of yet further work. The Herberts
-knew she had longed to organize a hospital on the lines of unpaid
-nursing, but there was a difficulty for the moment, because she could not
-bring herself to leave the East until her work there was fully completed,
-and such a hospital must, they thought, have her presence from the first.
-Just now she was with Sister Aloysius at Balaclava, nursing one of her
-staff, and while there an accident on the rough roads, which injured not
-only herself, but also the Sister who was walking beside her, led to a
-thoughtful kindness from Colonel Macmurdo, who had a little carriage
-especially made for her. In this little carriage, through the cutting
-cold and snow of a Crimean winter, she would drive about among the camp
-hospitals with no escort but her driver, as she returned through the dark
-night at the end of her long day of self-imposed duties. Sometimes she
-has stood for hours on a cold, shelterless rock, giving her directions,
-and when one and another of her friends entreated against such risk and
-exposure, she would just smile with a quiet certainty that, for all that
-in her eyes was her clear duty, strength and protection would certainly
-be given.
-
-She was much occupied in helping and uplifting the convalescent, and not
-only these, but also all the soldiers in camp in the army of occupation,
-which was for a while to be left in the East until the treaty was signed,
-and would necessarily be surrounded by special temptations in time of
-peace. Her way of fighting drunkenness—and after Sebastopol you may be
-sure there was a good deal of “drinking of healths”—was to provide all
-possible means of interest and amusement. Huts were built, clubs were
-formed. Stationery was provided for letters home. So effectually was
-every one in England interested that, while Queen Victoria herself led
-the way in sending newspapers and magazines, all through the country her
-example was followed.
-
-And while this was going on, the great testimonial fund in London was
-mounting and mounting.
-
-The Duke of Cambridge, Lord Houghton, and the Marquis of Ripon were
-members of the committee. The great bankers opened their books. The
-churches collected funds, _the rank and file of our impoverished army
-sent £4,000_, and taking Mrs. Tooley’s figures, which are doubtless
-correct, and including all ranks and all troops throughout the world, the
-military contributions alone appear to have risen to about £10,000.
-
-Jenny Lind, then Madame Goldschmidt, gave a concert, of which she
-herself bore all the expense, amounting to about £500, and then gave
-the entire proceeds, about £2,000, to the fund. This was so warmly
-appreciated by some of those interested in the success of the fund that,
-by private subscription, they gave a marble bust of Queen Victoria to the
-Goldschmidts as a thank-offering.
-
-From the overseas dominions came over £4,000; from provincial cities,
-towns, and villages in Britain, between £6,000 and £7,000, and from
-British residents abroad also a very handsome sum. Indeed, it may be
-truly said that in every quarter of the globe men and women united
-to pour forth their gratitude to Miss Nightingale, and to enable her
-to complete the work so bravely begun, by transforming the old and
-evil methods of nursing under British rule to that ideal art in which
-fortitude, tenderness, and skill receive their crowning grace. It has
-been said—I know not with what exactitude—that no British subject has
-ever received such world-wide honour as was at this time laid at her feet.
-
-At one of the great meetings Mr. Sidney Herbert read the following letter
-from one of his friends:—
-
- “I have just heard a pretty account from a soldier describing
- the comfort it was even to see Florence pass. ‘She would speak
- to one and another,’ he said, ‘and nod and smile to many more,
- but she could not do it to all, you know, for we lay there by
- hundreds; but we could kiss her shadow[16] as it fell, and lay
- our heads on the pillow again content.’”
-
-That letter alone, we are told, brought another £10,000.
-
-The gross amount had reached £44,000, but in 1857 Miss Nightingale
-desired that the list should be closed and help be given instead to our
-French Allies, who were then suffering from the terrible floods that laid
-waste their country in that year.
-
-And whatever she commanded, of course, was done. Alike in England and in
-the Crimea, her influence was potent for all good.
-
-She herself was still busy nursing some of the Roman Catholic members
-of her staff in the huts on the snowclad heights of Balaclava, and how
-heartily she valued them may be judged from these closing sentences of a
-letter to their Reverend Mother:—
-
- “You know that I shall do everything I can for the Sisters
- whom you have left me. I will care for them as if they were my
- own children. But it will not be like you.”
-
-Not very far from the sanatorium on the heights above Balaclava, two new
-camp hospitals had been put up, and while superintending the nursing
-there, our Lady-in-Chief lived in a three-roomed hut with a medical store
-attached to it, where she was quite near to sanatorium and hospitals.
-She and the three Sisters who were with her had not very weather-proof
-quarters. One of them, whose letters are full of interest, tells of their
-waking one morning to find themselves covered with snow, and leading a
-life of such adventurous simplicity that when the Protestant chaplain
-brought some eggs tied up in a handkerchief the gift was regarded as
-princely! Happily, they were able to reward the gentleman by washing his
-neckties, and ironing them with an ingenious makeshift for the missing
-flat-iron, in the shape of a teapot filled with hot water. Every night
-everything in the huts froze, even to the ink. But Miss Nightingale tells
-how brave and entirely self-forgetful the Sisters were under every
-hardship and privation.
-
-[Illustration: Miss Nightingale’s Medals and Decorations.]
-
-By those who have never had the privilege of knowing such women
-intimately, her affection for them may be the better understood from the
-following graphic letter written by Lord Napier:—
-
- “At an early period of my life I held a diplomatic position
- under Lord Stratford de Redcliffe in Constantinople. During
- the distress of the Crimean War the Ambassador called me one
- morning and said: ‘Go down to the port; you will find a ship
- there loaded with Jewish exiles—Russian subjects from the
- Crimea. It is your duty to disembark them. The Turks will give
- you a house in which they may be placed. I turn them over
- entirely to you.’ I went down to the shore and received about
- two hundred persons, the most miserable objects that could be
- witnessed, most of them old men, women, and children. I placed
- them in the cold, ruinous lodging allocated to them by the
- Ottoman authorities. I went back to the Ambassador and said:
- ‘Your Excellency, these people are cold, and I have no fuel
- or blankets. They are hungry, and I have no food. They are
- dirty, and I have no soap. Their hair is in an indescribable
- condition, and I have no combs. What am I to do with these
- people?’ ‘Do?’ said the Ambassador. ‘Get a couple of Sisters
- of Mercy; they will put all to right in a moment.’ I went, saw
- the Mother Superior, and explained the case. I asked for two
- Sisters. She ordered two from her presence to follow me. They
- were ladies of refinement and intellect. I was a stranger and
- a Protestant, and I invoked their assistance for the benefit
- of the Jews. Yet these two women made up their bundles and
- followed me through the rain, without a look, a whisper, a
- sign of hesitation. From that moment my fugitives were saved.
- I witnessed the labours of those Sisters for months, and they
- never endeavoured to make a single convert.”
-
-The military men were not less enthusiastic. When Colonel Connolly,
-brother-in-law to Mr. Bruin, of Carlow, was travelling, after his
-return from the war, near the Bruin estate, a fellow-traveller spoke
-disrespectfully of nuns. The colonel, a Protestant, not only made a warm
-defence of the ladies who had nursed him in Russia and Ottoman regions,
-and for their sakes of all other nuns, but handed the assailant his card,
-saying: “If you say another word against these saintly gentlewomen I
-shall call you out.” The slanderer subsided very quickly.
-
-Sister Aloysius, one of those very Sisters who were with Miss Nightingale
-in the huts, has written in her “Memories of the Crimea”:—
-
- “It was said at one time that the War Office was on the point
- of issuing a mandate forbidding us to speak even to the
- Catholic soldiers on religion, or to say a prayer for them.
- However, that mandate never came; we often thought the guardian
- angels of the soldiers prevented it.”
-
-It made no difference to the loyalty of their work together that Miss
-Nightingale was not a Roman Catholic; they all obeyed the Master who has
-taught that it is not the way in which He is addressed that matters, but
-whether we help those whom He gave His life to help, and in loving and
-serving whom, we love and serve Him.
-
-So in London and in Balaclava the good of her influence was felt. In
-London the funds mounted, and at Balaclava the excellent work among the
-soldiers still went on.
-
-Her very presence among the men helped to keep them sober and diligent,
-and in every way at their best, in those first months of victory when
-heads are only too easily turned. And she had the reward she most
-desired, for she was able to speak of these brave fellows—the nameless
-heroes of the long campaign—as having been “uniformly quiet and
-well-bred.” Those words, it is true, were spoken of the men attending the
-reading-huts; but they are quite in line with her more general verdict
-with regard to Tommy; though, alas, we cannot stretch them to cover
-his behaviour at the canteens, where we are told that much drunkenness
-prevailed.
-
-She had advanced money for the building of a coffee-house at Inkermann,
-and had helped the chaplain to get maps and slates for his school work,
-and the bundles of magazines and illustrated papers, sent out from
-England in answer to her appeal, as well as books sent out by the Duchess
-of Kent, cheered and brightened many a long hour for the men. She was
-always on the alert to help them about sending home their pay, and quick
-to care for the interests of their wives and children.
-
-Before she left the Crimea, her hut was beset by fifty or sixty poor
-women who had been left behind when their husbands sailed for home with
-their regiments. They had followed their husbands to the war without
-leave and, having proved themselves useful, had been allowed to remain.
-And now they were left alone in a strange land and, but for Florence
-Nightingale, the end of the story might have been bitter sorrow. But she
-managed to get them sent home in a British ship.
-
-Many a mother at home must already have blessed her; for reckless boys
-who had enlisted, without the sanction of their families, had again and
-again been by her persuaded to write home, and in the first months of
-the war she had actually undertaken to stamp for the men any letters
-home which were sent to her camp. And at Scutari she had arranged a
-provisional money-order office where, four afternoons in each week, she
-received from the men the pay which she encouraged them to send home.
-When we are told that, in small sums, about £1,000 passed through this
-office month by month, we realize dimly something of the labour involved,
-and thinking of all her other cares and labours, which were nevertheless
-not allowed to stand in the way of such practical thoughtfulness as
-this, we do not wonder that “the services” loved her with a love that
-was akin to worship. The money, as she herself says, “was literally so
-much rescued from the canteens and from drunkenness;” and the Government,
-following her lead, had themselves established money-order offices later
-at Scutari, Balaclava, Constantinople, and the Headquarters, Crimea.
-
-It is not surprising that, in the “Old Country,” songs were dedicated to
-her as “the good angel of Derbyshire,” and that her very portrait became
-a popular advertisement.
-
-And we have it on good authority that her name was revered alike by
-English, French, Turks, and Russians.
-
-The Treaty of Peace was signed at Paris on March 30, 1856, and on July
-12 General Codrington formally gave up Sebastopol and Balaclava to the
-Russians. When the last remnant of our army was ordered home and the
-hospitals were finally closed, Florence Nightingale was for the first
-time willing to leave a post which she had held so bravely and so long.
-But before she left she wished to leave a memorial to the brave men who
-had fallen, and the brave women, her comrades, who had died upon that
-other battlefield where disease, and Death himself, must be wrestled with
-on behalf of those who are nursed and tended.
-
-And so it comes to pass that among the visible tokens which the war
-has left behind, is a gigantic white marble cross erected by Florence
-Nightingale upon the sombre heights of Balaclava, where it still opens
-wide its arms for every gleam of golden sunlight, every reflected
-shimmer, through the dark night, of silvery moon and star, to hearten
-the sailors voyaging northward and mark a prayer for the brave men and
-women who toiled and suffered there. It is inscribed with the words in
-Italian, “Lord, have mercy upon us.” But while she herself asked only
-mercy for herself and others, that human shortcomings might be forgiven,
-her compatriots were uniting to do her honour.
-
-On December 20, 1855, the _Morning Post_ printed the following
-announcement:—
-
- “The country will experience much satisfaction, though no
- surprise, on learning, as we believe we are correct in stating,
- that Her Majesty the Queen has, in a manner as honourable to
- herself as it must be gratifying to her people, been pleased to
- mark her warm appreciation of the unparalleled self-devotion
- of the good Miss Nightingale. The Queen has transmitted to
- that lady a jewelled ornament of great beauty, which may be
- worn as a decoration, and has accompanied it with an autograph
- letter—such a letter as Queen Victoria has ere now proved she
- can write—a letter not merely of graceful acknowledgment, but
- full of that deep feeling which speaks from heart to heart, and
- at once ennobles the sovereign and the subject.”
-
-Of the symbolic meaning of this jewel the following exposition appeared
-in the issue of January 15, 1856, of the same paper:—
-
- “The design of the jewel is admirable, and the effect
- no less brilliant than chaste. It is characteristic and
- emblematical—being formed of a St. George’s cross in ruby-red
- enamel, on a white field—representing England. This is
- encircled by a black band, typifying the office of Charity, on
- which is inscribed a golden legend, ‘Blessed are the merciful.’
- The Royal donor is expressed by the letters ‘V. R.’ surmounted
- by a crown in diamonds, impressed upon the centre of the St.
- George’s cross, from which also rays of gold emanating upon
- the field of white enamel are supposed to represent the glory
- of England. While spreading branches of palm, in bright green
- enamel, tipped with gold, form a framework for the shield,
- their stems at the bottom being banded with a ribbon of blue
- enamel (the colour of the ribbon for the Crimean medal), on
- which, in golden letters, is inscribed ‘Crimea.’ At the top
- of the shield, between the palm branches, and connecting the
- whole, three brilliant stars of diamonds illustrate the idea
- of the light of heaven shed upon the labours of Mercy, Peace,
- and Charity, in connection with the glory of a nation. On the
- back of this Royal jewel is an inscription on a golden tablet,
- written by Her Majesty ... recording it to be a gift and
- testimonial in memory of services rendered to her brave army by
- Miss Nightingale. The jewel is about three inches in depth by
- two and a half in width. It is to be worn, not as a brooch or
- ornament, but rather as the badge of an order. We believe the
- credit of the design is due to the illustrious consort of Her
- Majesty.”
-
-_Punch_, of course, had always taken the liveliest interest in Miss
-Nightingale’s work, and having begun with friendly jesting, he ended
-with a tribute so tender in its grave beauty that it would hardly have
-been out of place in a church window; for below a sketch of Florence
-Nightingale herself, holding a wounded soldier by the hand, and with the
-badge of Scutari across her breast, was a vision of the Good Samaritan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
- _Her citizenship—Her initiative—Public recognition and
- gratitude—Her return incognito—Village excitement—The country’s
- welcome—Miss Nightingale’s broken health—The Nightingale
- Fund—St. Thomas’s Hospital—Reform of nursing as a profession._
-
-
-It may be fairly supposed that even those benighted Philistines whose
-mockery had at the outset been of a less innocent quality than _Punch’s_
-gentle fun, now found it expedient to alter their tone, and if their
-objections had been mere honest stupidity, they were probably both
-convinced of their past folly and a good deal ashamed.
-
-For Britain was very proud of the daughter who had become so mighty a
-power for good in the State. The Sister of Mercy whom Miss Nightingale
-used laughingly to call “her Cardinal” had responded on one occasion by
-addressing her with equal affection as “Your Holiness,” and the nickname
-was not altogether inappropriate, for her advice in civic and hygienic
-matters had an authority which might well be compared with that which the
-Pope himself wielded on theological questions.
-
-Among the doctors at Scutari was a friend of General Evatt, from whom he
-had many facts at first-hand, and it was therefore not without knowledge
-that, in his conversation with me on the subject, the latter confirmed
-and strengthened all that has already been written of Miss Nightingale’s
-mental grasp and supreme capacity. To him, knowing her well, and knowing
-well also the facts, she was the highest embodiment of womanhood and of
-citizenship. Yet, while he talked, my heart ached for her, thinking of
-the womanly joys of home and motherhood which were not for her, and all
-the pure and tender romance which woman bears in her inmost soul, even
-when, as in this noble instance, it is transmuted by the will of God and
-the woman’s own obedient will into service of other homes and other lives.
-
-Perhaps I may here be allowed to quote a sentence from Mrs. Tooley’s
-admirable life of our heroine; for it could not have been better
-expressed: “No one would wish to exempt from due praise even the humblest
-of that ‘Angel Band’ who worked with Florence Nightingale, and still less
-would she, but in every great cause there is the initiating genius who
-stands in solitary grandeur above the rank and file of followers.”
-
-Nor was official recognition of the country’s debt to Miss Nightingale in
-any wise lacking. When the Treaty of Peace was under discussion in the
-House of Lords, Lord Ellesmere made it an opportunity for the following
-tribute:—
-
- “My Lords, the agony of that time has become a matter of
- history. The vegetation of two successive springs has obscured
- the vestiges of Balaclava and of Inkermann. Strong voices now
- answer to the roll-call, and sturdy forms now cluster round
- the colours. The ranks are full, the hospitals are empty. The
- Angel of Mercy still lingers to the last on the scene of
- her labours; but her mission is all but accomplished. Those
- long arcades of Scutari, in which dying men sat up to catch
- the sound of her footstep or the flutter of her dress, and
- fell back on the pillow content to have seen her shadow as it
- passed, are now comparatively deserted. She may probably be
- thinking how to escape, as best she may, on her return, the
- demonstrations of a nation’s appreciation of the deeds and
- motives of Florence Nightingale.”
-
-And in the House of Commons Mr. Sidney Herbert said: “I have received,
-not only from medical men, but from many others who have had an
-opportunity of making observations, letters couched in the highest
-possible terms of praise. I will not repeat the words, but no higher
-expressions of praise could be applied to woman, for the wonderful
-energy, the wonderful tact, the wonderful tenderness, combined with
-the extraordinary self-devotion, which have been displayed by Miss
-Nightingale.”
-
-Lord Ellesmere was right when he hinted that Miss Nightingale would
-be likely to do her best to escape all public fuss on her return. The
-Government had offered her a British man-of-war to take her home; but
-it was not her way to accept any such outward pomp, and, almost before
-people knew what had happened, it was found that she had travelled
-quietly home as Miss Smith in a French vessel, visiting in Paris her old
-friends the Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul, and finding that by having
-embarked at night, at a moment when Scutari was not looking for her
-departure, her little _ruse_ had been very successful. An eager people
-had not recognized under the passing incognito of Miss Smith, travelling
-with her aunt, Mrs. Smith, the great Florence Nightingale whose return
-they had wished to celebrate. The village gossips at Lea Hurst have it
-that “the closely veiled lady in black, who slipped into her father’s
-house by the back door, was first recognized by the family butler,” and
-it seems a pity to spoil such a picturesque tradition by inquiring into
-it too closely.
-
-[Illustration: The Nightingale Nursing Carriage.]
-
-There was great joy among the villagers that “Miss Florence had come
-home from the wars,” but it was understood that she wished to be quiet,
-and that bonfires and such-like rejoicings were out of the question.
-
-Along the roads near Lea Hurst came troops of people from Derby and
-Nottingham, and even from Manchester, hoping to catch a glimpse of her;
-and there is in one of the biographies a vivid account, given by the old
-lady who kept the lodge gates, of how the park round Lea Hurst was beset
-by these lingering crowds, how men came without arms or without legs,
-hoping to see the Queen of Nurses. “But,” added the old lady, “the squire
-wasn’t a-going to let Miss Florence be made a staring-stock of.” And,
-indeed, “Miss Florence” must have been in great need of repose, though
-never to the end of her life would it seem that she was allowed to have
-much of it; for the very fruitfulness of her work made work multiply upon
-her hands, and her friend Mrs. Sidney Herbert knew her well when she said
-that to Florence Nightingale the dearest guerdon of work already done was
-the gift of more work still to do.
-
-Perhaps we shall never any of us fully know what it must have been to one
-so abounding in spiritual energy and world-wide compassion to have to
-learn slowly and painfully, through the years that followed, what must
-henceforth be the physical limitations of her life. When we think of
-the long, careful training that had been given to her fine gifts of eye
-and hand in the art that she loved—for she rightly regarded nursing as
-an art—an art in which every movement must be a skilled and disciplined
-movement—we may divine something of what it cost to bear, without one
-murmur of complaint, what she might so easily have been tempted to regard
-as a lifelong waste of faculty. Instead of allowing herself to dwell on
-any such idea, gradually, as the knowledge dawned on her of what she must
-forego, she gave herself, with tenfold power in other directions, to work
-which _could_ be achieved from an invalid’s couch, and thus helped and
-guided others in that art all over the world.
-
-Among the greetings which pleased her most on her first return to England
-was an address from the workmen of Newcastle-on-Tyne, to whom she
-replied in the following letter:—
-
- _August 23, 1856._
-
- “MY DEAR FRIENDS,—I wish it were in my power to tell you what
- was in my heart when I received your letter.
-
- “Your welcome home, your sympathy with what has been passing
- while I have been absent, have touched me more than I can tell
- in words. My dear friends, the things that are the deepest
- in our hearts are perhaps what it is most difficult for us
- to express. ‘She hath done what she could.’ These words I
- inscribed on the tomb of one of my best helpers when I left
- Scutari. It has been my endeavour, in the sight of God, to do
- as she has done.
-
- “I will not speak of reward when permitted to do our country’s
- work—it is what we live for—but I may say to receive sympathy
- from affectionate hearts like yours is the greatest support,
- the greatest gratification, that it is possible for me to
- receive from man.
-
- “I thank you all, the eighteen hundred, with grateful, tender
- affection. And I should have written before to do so, were not
- the business, which my return home has not ended, been almost
- more than I can manage.—Pray believe me, my dear friends, yours
- faithfully and gratefully,
-
- “FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.”
-
-
-Among the tokens of regard which the late Duke of Devonshire brought to
-his old friend on her return, when he drove over from Chatsworth to Lea
-Hurst to see her after her long, eventful absence, was a little silver
-owl, a sort of souvenir, I suppose, of her beloved little “Athena,”
-whose death she had felt so keenly when leaving for the Crimea. Queen
-Victoria and the young princesses were eager to welcome Miss Nightingale
-to Balmoral; and in looking back on her little visit there, which seems
-to have been a happiness on both sides, it is interesting to see how her
-influence told upon the Crown Princess and Princess Alice in their later
-organization of hospital work, and to be reminded by Mrs. Tooley, whose
-words we here venture to quote, that the “tiny Princess Helena was to
-become in after years an accomplished nurse, and an active leader in the
-nursing movement of this country; and, alas, to yield her soldier son on
-the fatal field of South Africa.”
-
-Meanwhile, before and after this visit, Miss Nightingale was quietly
-receiving her own friends and neighbours at Lea Hurst, and entertaining
-little parties of villagers from among the rustics she had so long known
-and loved. Rich and poor alike were all so eager to do her honour that
-it is impossible to speak separately of all the many forms which their
-expressions of gratitude took. They included a gift from the workmen of
-Sheffield as well as from her own more immediate neighbours, and found
-their climax in the fund pressed upon her by a grateful nation, and for
-convenience called the Nightingale Fund, which was still awaiting its
-final disposal.
-
-Meanwhile, imagine the importance of the ex-drummer-boy Thomas, her
-devoted servant and would-be defender at Balaclava, promoted now to
-be “Miss Nightingale’s own man” in her home at Lea Hurst—an even more
-exciting presence to the villagers than the Russian hound which was
-known through the country-side as “Miss Florence’s Crimean dog.”
-
-There were still living, we are told, when Mrs. Tooley wrote her
-delightful record, a few old people round about Lea Hurst who remembered
-those great days of “Miss Florence’s return,” and the cannon balls and
-bullets they had seen as trophies, the dried flowers gathered at Scutari,
-and Thomas’s thrilling stories, for if he had not himself been present
-in the famous charge at Balaclava, he did at least know all about it at
-first-hand.
-
-So little did any one dream that Miss Nightingale’s health had been
-permanently shattered that when the Indian Mutiny broke out in 1857, she
-offered to go out to her friend Lady Canning, and organize a nursing
-staff for the troops. And while, with her customary business-like
-clearness, she proceeded to draw up a detailed account of all the
-private gifts entrusted to her for the Crimea, and took the opportunity
-of putting on record her tribute to Lord Raglan, the final arrangements
-with regard to the Nightingale Fund were still for a time held in
-suspense, in the hope that she would so far recover strength as to be
-able to take into her own hands the government of that institution for
-the training of hospital nurses, to which it was to be devoted. When her
-friend Mr. Herbert talked gaily in public of chaining her to the oar
-for the rest of her life, that she might “raise the system of nursing
-to a pitch of efficiency never before known,” he did not foresee that
-the invisible chain, which was to bruise her eager spirit, was to be of
-a kind so much harder to bear. But when, in 1860, her health showed no
-signs of recovery, she definitely handed over to others the management
-of the fund, only reserving to herself the right to advise. Her friend
-Mr. Herbert was, up to the time of his death, the guiding spirit of the
-council, and it gave Miss Nightingale pleasure that St. Thomas’s Hospital
-should from the outset be associated with the scheme, because that
-hospital had originated in one of the oldest foundations in the country
-for the relief of the sick poor, and in choosing it for the training of
-lay sisters as nurses, its earliest tradition was being continued. The
-work of the fund began at St. Thomas’s in 1860, in the old building near
-London Bridge, before it moved into its present palace at Westminster,
-of which the Nightingale Training Home is a part. In those first early
-days an upper floor was arranged for the nurses in a new part of the
-old hospital, with a bedroom for each probationer, two rooms for the
-Sister-in-charge, and a sitting-room in which all shared. As the result
-of the advertisement for candidates in 1860, fifteen probationers were
-admitted in June, the first superintendent being Mrs. Wardroper. The
-probationers were, of course, under the authority of the matron, and
-subject to the rules of the hospital. They were to give help in the wards
-and receive teaching from the Sisters and medical staff, and if at the
-end of the year they passed their examination, they were to be registered
-as certified nurses.
-
-[Illustration: Miss Nightingale visiting the Herbert Hospital, Woolwich.
-
-(_Bas-relief on the pedestal—Herbert Memorial._)]
-
-Thanks to Miss Nightingale and other pioneers, the fifty years that have
-passed since then have made Mrs. Grundy a little less Grundyish, but in
-those days she considered the whole business a terrible venture, and was
-too much occupied with the idea of possible love affairs between the
-doctors and nurses to realize what good work was being done. The first
-year was a very anxious one for Miss Nightingale, but all the world
-knows now how her experiment has justified itself and how her prayers
-have been answered; for it was in prayer that she found her “quietness
-and confidence” through those first months of tension when the enemy was
-watching and four probationers had to be dismissed, though their ranks
-were speedily filled up by others.
-
-At the end of the year, from among those who were placed on the
-register, six received appointments at St. Thomas’s and two took work
-in infirmaries. There was special need of good nurses in workhouse
-infirmaries, and there was also throughout the whole country a crying
-need for nurses carefully trained in midwifery: lack of knowledge, for
-instance, had greatly increased the danger of puerperal fever, a scourge
-against which Miss Nightingale was one of the first to contend; and it
-had been wisely decided that while two-thirds of the fund should go to
-the work at St. Thomas’s, one-third should be used for special training
-of nurses in these branches at King’s College.
-
- “How has the tone and state of hospital nurses been raised?”
- Miss Nightingale asks in her little book on “Trained Nursing
- for the Sick Poor,” published in 1876.
-
- “By, more than anything else, making the hospital such a home
- as good young women—educated young women—can live and nurse
- in; and, secondly, by raising hospital nursing into such a
- profession as these can earn an honourable livelihood in.”
-
-In her “Notes on Hospitals,” published in 1859, she pointed out what she
-considered the four radical defects in hospital construction—namely:—
-
- 1. The agglomeration of a large number of sick under the same
- roof.
-
- 2. Deficiency of space.
-
- 3. Deficiency of ventilation.
-
- 4. Deficiency of light.
-
-How magnificently builders have since learned to remedy such defects may
-be seen in the Nightingale Wing of St. Thomas’s Hospital.
-
-The block system on which St. Thomas’s Hospital is built is what Miss
-Nightingale has always recommended, each block being divided from the
-next by a space of 125 feet, across which runs a double corridor by means
-of which they communicate with one another. Each has three tiers of wards
-above the ground floor.
-
-The six blocks in the centre are those used for patients, that at the
-south for the lecture-rooms and a school of medicine, the one at the
-north, adjoining Westminster Bridge, for the official staff. From Lambeth
-Palace to Westminster Bridge, with a frontage of 1,700 feet, the hospital
-extends; and there would be room in the operating theatre for 600
-students. In the special wing in one of the northern blocks, reserved for
-the Nightingale Home and Training School for Nurses, everything has been
-ordered in accordance with Miss Nightingale’s wishes.
-
-To-day the whole _status_ of nursing in Britain and British dominions
-is recognized as that of an honoured and certified profession, and
-year by year, at St. Thomas’s alone, thirty probationers are trained,
-of whom fifteen pay £1, 1_s._ a week for the privilege, whereas to the
-other fifteen it is given gratuitously. At St. Thomas’s were trained
-nurses who were among the earliest to be decorated with the Red Cross,
-that international badge of good army nursing throughout the world
-which, indirectly as well as directly, owed much to Miss Nightingale.
-How warmly, even arduously, Miss Nightingale shared in the trials and
-joys and adventures of her nurses, comes out very clearly in some of
-her letters to one of them, whom, as a personal friend and one of the
-first nine to receive the Red Cross, she playfully named “her Cape of
-Good Hope.” Those tender and intimate letters, which I will not name
-emotional, because she who wrote them had justified emotion by ever
-translating it into useful work, made me feel to an almost startling
-degree her warm, eager, dominating personality with its extraordinary
-mingling of utmost modesty and pleading authority. To me that personality
-seems to win the heart of the coldest and dullest by its ardent
-enthusiasm and humility, and those unpublished letters, which I was
-privileged to read, brought home to me how Miss Nightingale—then an
-invalid of sixty-two—literally _lived_ in the life of those pioneer
-nurses whom she had inspired and sent forth.
-
-It is easy to see in them how much she feared for her nurses any innocent
-little trip of the tongue, with regard to the rest of the staff, which
-might set rolling the dangerous ball of hospital gossip. She puts the
-duty of obedience and forbearance on the highest grounds, and she draws
-a useful distinction between the sham dignity which we all know in the
-hatefulness of “the superior person,” and the true dignity which tries to
-uplift those less fortunate, rather than self-indulgently to lean on them
-or make to them foolish confidences.
-
-And while she is all aglow with sympathy for every detail of a nurse’s
-work, she entreats her friend to “let no want of concord or discretion
-appear to mar that blessed work. And let no one,” she adds, “be able
-justly to say what was said to me last month, ‘It is only Roman Catholic
-vows that can keep Sisters together.’”
-
-What she wrote when asking for recruits for St. Thomas’s at the outset
-still remains the basis of the ideal held there. “We require,” she wrote,
-“that a woman be sober, honest, truthful, without which there is no
-foundation on which to build.
-
-“We train her in habits of punctuality, quietness, trustworthiness,
-personal neatness. We teach her how to manage the concerns of a large
-ward or establishment. We train her in dressing wounds and other
-injuries, and in performing all those minor operations which nurses are
-called upon day and night to undertake.
-
-“We teach her how to manage helpless patients in regard to moving,
-changing, feeding, temperature, and the prevention of bedsores.
-
-“She has to make and apply bandages, line splints, and the like. She must
-know how to make beds with as little disturbance as possible to their
-inmates. She is instructed how to wait at operations, and as to the kind
-of aid the surgeon requires at her hands. She is taught cooking for the
-sick; the principle on which sick wards ought to be cleansed, aired, and
-warmed; the management of convalescents; and how to observe sick and
-maimed patients, so as to give an intelligent and truthful account to the
-physician or surgeon in regard to the progress of cases in the intervals
-between visits—a much more difficult thing than is generally supposed.
-
-“We do not seek to make ‘medical women,’ but simply nurses acquainted
-with the principle which they are required constantly to apply at the
-bedside.
-
-“For the future superintendent is added a course of instruction in
-the administration of a hospital, including, of course, the linen
-arrangements, and what else is necessary for a matron to be conversant
-with.
-
-“There are those who think that all this is intuitive in women, that they
-are born so, or, at least, that it comes to them without training. To
-such we say, by all means send us as many such geniuses as you can, for
-we are sorely in want of them.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
- _William Rathbone—Agnes Jones—Infirmaries—Nursing in the homes
- of the poor—Municipal work—Homely power of Miss Nightingale’s
- writings—Lord Herbert’s death._
-
-
-A word must here be said of Mr. William Rathbone’s work in Liverpool.
-After the death of his first wife, realizing the comfort and help that
-had been given during her last illness by a trained nurse, he determined
-to do what he could to bring aid of the same kind into the homes of the
-poor, where the need was often so much more terrible. This brought him
-into touch with Miss Nightingale, who advised him to start a school of
-nursing in connection with the Liverpool Hospital. These two friends—for
-they soon became trusted and valued friends, each to each—were both
-people of prompt and efficient action, and one step led to another,
-until Liverpool had not only an important school of nurses for the sick
-poor, but also led the way throughout the country in the reform of the
-hitherto scandalous nursing in workhouse infirmaries. Mr. Rathbone set
-his mind on securing the services of Miss Agnes Elizabeth Jones to help
-him in his work, a woman of character as saintly as his own, and the
-difference in their religious outlook only made more beautiful their
-mutual relations in this great work.
-
-Miss Agnes Jones, who has already been mentioned more than once in these
-pages, left an undying record on England’s roll of honour. It was of her
-that in 1868 Miss Nightingale wrote[17]:—
-
- “A woman attractive and rich, and young and witty; yet a veiled
- and silent woman, distinguished by no other genius but the
- divine genius—working hard to train herself in order to train
- others to walk in the footsteps of Him who went about doing
- good.... She died, as she had lived, at her post in one of
- the largest workhouse infirmaries in this kingdom—the first
- in which trained nursing has been introduced.... When her
- whole life and image rise before me, so far from thinking the
- story of Una and her lion a myth, I say here is Una in real
- flesh and blood—Una and her paupers far more untamable than
- lions. In less than three years she had reduced one of the
- most disorderly hospital populations in the world to something
- like Christian discipline, and had converted a vestry to the
- conviction of the economy as well as humanity of nursing pauper
- sick by trained nurses.”
-
-And it was in introducing a book about the Liverpool Home and School for
-Nurses that she wrote:—
-
- “Nursing, especially that most important of all its
- branches—nursing of the sick poor at home—is no amateur work.
- To do it as it ought to be done requires knowledge, practice,
- self-abnegation, and, as is so well said here, direct obedience
- to and activity under the highest of all masters and from the
- highest of all motives. It is an essential part of the daily
- service of the Christian Church. It has never been otherwise.
- It has proved itself superior to all religious divisions,
- and is destined, by God’s blessing, to supply an opening the
- great value of which, in our densely populated towns, has been
- unaccountably overlooked until within these few years.”
-
-As early as 1858 Miss Nightingale published “Notes on Matters affecting
-the Health, Efficiency, and Hospital Administration of the British Army,”
-and the commission on this subject appointed in 1857 set a high value on
-her evidence.
-
-Something of the development that followed along both these lines—that of
-army reform and of nursing among the submerged—may be gleaned from the
-following clear statement of fact which appeared during the South African
-War, on May 21, 1900, in a great London daily:—
-
- “In the forty and more years that have elapsed since her
- return, Miss Nightingale has seen the whole system of army
- nursing and hospitals transformed. Netley, which has been
- visited by the Queen again this week, was designed by her, and
- for the next largest, namely, the Herbert Hospital, Woolwich,
- she assisted and advised Sir Douglas Galton in his plans.
-
- “There is not a naval or military hospital on any of the
- foreign stations or depôts on which she has not been consulted,
- and matters concerning the health and well-being of both
- services have been constantly brought before her. District
- nursing owes much to her, and in this connection may be cited
- a few lines from a letter which she wrote when Princess
- Louise, Duchess of Argyll, was initiating a movement to
- establish a home for the Queen’s Jubilee Nurses in Chiswick and
- Hammersmith. ‘I look upon district nursing,’ she wrote, ‘as
- one of the most hopeful of the agencies for raising the poor,
- physically as well as morally, its province being not only
- nursing the patient, but nursing the room, showing the family
- and neighbours how to second the nurse, and eminently how to
- nurse health as well as disease.’”
-
- “Everywhere,” we read in Mr. Stephen Paget’s contribution to
- the “Dictionary of National Biography,” “her expert reputation
- was paramount,” and “during the American Civil War of 1862-4,
- and the Franco-German War of 1870-1, her advice was eagerly
- sought by the governments concerned.” The “Dictionary of
- National Biography” also assures us that “in regard to civil
- hospitals, home nursing, care of poor women in childbirth, and
- sanitation, Miss Nightingale’s authority stood equally high.”
-
-In what she wrote there was a homely directness, a complete absence of
-anything like pose or affectation, which more than doubled her power, and
-was the more charming in a woman of such brilliant acquirements and—to
-quote once more Dean Stanley’s words—such “commanding genius”; but, then,
-genius is of its nature opposed to all that is sentimental or artificial.
-
-I believe it is in her “Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes” that
-she writes to those who are “minding baby”: “One-half of all the nurses
-in service are girls of from five to twenty years old. You see you are
-very important little people. Then there are all the girls who are
-nursing mother’s baby at home; and in all these cases it seems pretty
-nearly to come to this, that baby’s health for its whole life depends
-upon you, girls, more than upon anything else.” Simple rules, such as
-a girl of six could understand, are given for the feeding, washing,
-dressing, nursing, and even amusement of that important person, “baby.”
-
-And it is in her best known book of all that she says: “The healthiest,
-happiest, liveliest, most beautiful baby I ever saw was the only child of
-a busy laundress. She washed all day in a room with the door open upon a
-larger room, where she put the child. It sat or crawled upon the floor
-all day with no other playfellow than a kitten, which it used to hug. Its
-mother kept it beautifully clean, and fed it with perfect regularity. The
-child was never frightened at anything. The room where it sat was the
-house-place; and it always gave notice to its mother when anybody came
-in, not by a cry, but by a crow. I lived for many months within hearing
-of that child, and never heard it cry day or night. I think there is a
-great deal too much of amusing children now, and not enough of letting
-them amuse themselves.”
-
-What, again, could be more useful in its simplicity than the following,
-addressed to working mothers:—
-
- “DEAR HARD-WORKING FRIENDS,—I am a hard-working woman too. May
- I speak to you? And will you excuse me, though not a mother?
-
- “You feel with me that every mother who brings a child into the
- world has the duty laid upon her of bringing up the child in
- such health as will enable him to do the work of his life.
-
- “But though you toil all day for your children, and are so
- devoted to them, this is not at all an easy task.
-
- “We should not attempt to practise dressmaking, or any other
- trade, without any training for it; but it is generally
- impossible for a woman to get any teaching about the management
- of health; yet health is to be learnt....
-
- “The cottage homes of England are, after all, the most
- important of the homes of any class; they should be pure in
- every sense, pure in body and mind.
-
- “Boys and girls must grow up healthy, with clean minds and
- clean bodies and clean skins.
-
- “And for this to be possible, the air, the earth, and the water
- that they grow up in and have around them must be clean. Fresh
- air, not bad air; clean earth, not foul earth; pure water,
- not dirty water; and the first teachings and impressions that
- they have at home must all be pure, and gentle, and firm. It
- is home that teaches the child, after all, more than any other
- schooling. A child learns before it is three whether it shall
- obey its mother or not; and before it is seven, wise men tell
- us that its character is formed.
-
- “There is, too, another thing—orderliness. We know your daily
- toil and love. May not the busiest and hardest life be somewhat
- lightened, the day mapped out, so that each duty has the same
- hours?...
-
- “Think what enormous extra trouble it entails on mothers when
- there is sickness. It is worth while to try to keep the family
- in health, to prevent the sorrow, the anxiety, the trouble of
- illness in the house, of which so much can be prevented.
-
- “When a child has lost its health, how often the mother says,
- ‘Oh, if I had only known! but there was no one to tell me. And
- after all, it is health and not sickness that is our natural
- state—the state that God intends for us. There are more people
- to pick us up when we fall than to enable us to stand upon
- our feet. God did not intend all mothers to be accompanied by
- doctors, but He meant all children to be cared for by mothers.
- God bless your work and labour of love.”
-
-[Illustration: Letter from Miss FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.
-
-Dec 16/96 10 South Street Park Lane W
-
-Dear Duke of Westminster
-
-Good speed to your noble effort in favour of District Nurses for town “&
-Country”; and in Commemoration of our Queen who cares for all.
-
-We look upon the District Nurse, if she is what she should be, & if we
-give her the training she should have, as the great civilizer of the
-poor, training as well as nursing them out of ill health into good health
-(Health Missioness), out of drink into self control but all without
-preaching, without patronizing—as friends in sympathy.
-
-But let them hold the standard high as Nurses.
-
-Pray be sure I will try to help all I can, tho’ that be small, here I
-will with your leave let you know.
-
-Pray believe me your Grace’s faithful servant
-
-Florence Nightingale]
-
-Or in a widely different field, in that fight against one of the most
-important causes of consumption, in which she was so far ahead of her
-time, what could be more clear and convincing, both in knowledge and in
-reasoning, than the following analysis with regard to army barracks:—
-
- “The cavalry barracks, as a whole, are the least overcrowded,
- and have the freest external movement of air. Next come
- the infantry; and the most crowded and the least ventilated
- externally are the Guards’ barracks; _so that the mortality
- from consumption, which follows the same order of increase in
- the different arms, augments with increase of crowding and
- difficulty of ventilation_.”[18]
-
-Her own well-trained mind was in extreme contrast with the type of mind
-which she describes in the following story:—
-
- “I remember, when a child, hearing the story of an accident,
- related by some one who sent two girls to fetch a ‘bottle of
- sal volatile from her room.’ ‘Mary could not stir,’ she said;
- ‘Fanny ran and fetched a bottle that was not sal volatile, and
- that was not in my room.’”
-
-All her teaching, so far as I know it, is clearly at first-hand and
-carefully sifted. It is as far as possible from that useless kind of
-doctrine which is a mere echo of unthinking hearsay. For instance, how
-many sufferers she must have saved from unnecessary irritation by the
-following reminder to nurses:—
-
- “Of all parts of the body, the face is perhaps the one which
- tells the least to the common observer or the casual visitor.
-
- “I have known patients dying of sheer pain, exhaustion, and
- want of sleep, from one of the most lingering and painful
- diseases known, preserve, till within a few days of death,
- not only the healthy colour of the cheek, but the mottled
- appearance of a robust child. And scores of times have I heard
- these unfortunate creatures assailed with, ‘I am glad to see
- you looking so well.’ ‘I see no reason why you should not live
- till ninety years of age.’ ‘Why don’t you take a little more
- exercise and amusement?’—with all the other commonplaces with
- which we are so familiar.”
-
-And then, again, how like her it is to remind those who are nursing that
-“a patient is not merely a piece of furniture, to be kept clean and
-arranged against the wall, and saved from injury or breakage.”
-
-She was one of the rare people who realized that truth of word is partly
-a question of education, and that many people are quite unconscious of
-their lack of that difficult virtue. “I know I fibbs dreadful,” said a
-poor little servant girl to her once. “But believe me, miss, I never
-finds out I have fibbed until they tell me so!” And her comment suggests
-that in this matter that poor little servant girl by no means stood alone.
-
-She worked very hard. Her books and pamphlets[19] were important, and her
-correspondence, ever dealing with the reforms she had at heart all over
-the world, was of itself an immense output.
-
-Those who have had to write much from bed or sofa know only too well the
-abnormal fatigue it involves, and her labours of this kind seem to have
-been unlimited.
-
-How strongly she sympathized with all municipal efforts, we see in many
-such letters as the one to General Evatt, given him for electioneering
-purposes, but not hitherto included in any biography, which we are
-allowed to reproduce here:—
-
- “Strenuously desiring, as we all of us must, that
- _Administration_ as well as Politics should be well represented
- in Parliament, and that vital matters of social, sanitary,
- and general interest should find their voice, we could desire
- no better representative and advocate of these essential
- matters—matters of life and death—than a man who, like
- yourself, unites with almost exhaustless energy and public
- spirit, sympathy with the wronged and enthusiasm with the
- right, a persevering acuteness in unravelling the causes of the
- evil and the good, large and varied experience and practical
- power, limited only by the nature of the object for which it is
- exerted.
-
- “It is important beyond measure that such a man’s thoughtful
- and well-considered opinions and energetic voice should be
- heard in the House of Commons.
-
- “You have my warmest sympathy in your candidature for Woolwich,
- my best wishes that you should succeed, even less for your
- own sake than for that of Administration and of England.—Pray
- believe me, ever your faithful servant,
-
- “FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.”
-
-
-And also the following letter written to the Buckinghamshire County
-Council in 1892, begging them to appoint a sanitary committee:—
-
- “We must create a public opinion which will drive the
- Government, instead of the Government having to drive us—an
- enlightened public opinion, wise in principles, wise in
- details. We hail the County Council as being or becoming one
- of the strongest engines in our favour, at once fathering and
- obeying the great impulse for national health against national
- and local disease. For we have learned that we have national
- health in our own hands—local sanitation, national health.
- But we have to contend against centuries of superstition and
- generations of indifference. Let the County Council take the
- lead.”
-
-And how justly, how clearly, she was able to weigh the work of those who
-had borne the brunt of sanitary inquiry in the Crimea, with but little
-except kicks for their pains, may be judged by the following sentences
-from a letter to Lady Tulloch in 1878:—
-
- “MY DEAR LADY TULLOCH,—I give you joy, I give you both joy, for
- this crowning recognition of one of the noblest labours ever
- done on earth. You yourself cannot cling to it more than I do;
- hardly so much, in one sense, for I saw how Sir John MacNeill’s
- and Sir A. Tulloch’s reporting was the salvation of the army in
- the Crimea. Without them everything that happened would have
- been considered ‘all right.’
-
- “Mr. Martin’s note is perfect, for it does not look like an
- afterthought, nor as prompted by others, but as the flow of a
- generous and able man’s own reflection, and careful search into
- authentic documents. Thank you again and again for sending it
- to me. It is the greatest consolation I could have had. Will
- you remember me gratefully to Mr. Paget, also to Dr. Balfour?
- _I look back upon these twenty years as if they were yesterday,
- but also as if they were a thousand years._ Success be with us
- and the noble dead—and it has been success.—Yours ever,
-
- “FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.”
-
-
-We see from this letter how warmly the old memories dwelt with her, even
-while her hands were full of good work for the future.
-
-The death of Lord Herbert in 1868 had been a blow that struck very deeply
-at her health and spirits.
-
-In all her work of army reform she had looked up to him as her “Chief,”
-hardly realizing, perhaps, how much of the initiating had been her own.
-Their friendship, too, had been almost lifelong, and in every way ideal.
-The whole nation mourned his loss, but only the little intimate group
-which centred in his wife and children and those dearest friends, of whom
-Miss Nightingale was one, knew fully all that the country had lost in him.
-
-It may be worth while for a double reason to quote here from Mr.
-Gladstone’s tribute at a meeting held to decide on a memorial.
-
- “To him,” said Gladstone, “we owe the commission for inquiry
- into barracks and hospitals; to him we are indebted for the
- reorganization of the medical department of the army. To him
- we owe the commission of inquiry into, and remodelling the
- medical education of, the army. And, lastly, we owe him the
- commission for presenting to the public the vital statistics of
- the army in such a form, from time to time, that the great and
- living facts of the subject are brought to view.”
-
-Lord Herbert had toiled with ever-deepening zeal to reform the unhealthy
-conditions to which, even in times of peace, our soldiers had been
-exposed—so unhealthy that, while the mortality lists showed a death
-of eight in every thousand for civilians, for soldiers the number of
-deaths was seventeen per thousand. And of every two deaths in the army
-it was asserted that one was preventable. Lord Herbert was the heart
-and soul of the Royal Commission to inquire into these preventable
-causes, and through his working ardour the work branched forth into four
-supplementary commissions concerning hospitals and barracks. When he
-died, Miss Nightingale not only felt the pang of parting from one of her
-oldest and most valued friends, but she also felt that in this cause,
-so specially dear to her heart, she had lost a helper who could never be
-replaced, though she dauntlessly stood to her task and helped to carry on
-his work.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
- _Multifarious work and many honours—Jubilee Nurses—Nursing
- Association—Death of father and mother—Lady Verney and her
- husband—No respecter of persons—From within four walls—South
- Africa and America._
-
-
-Her activities were so multitudinous that it is difficult even to name
-them all in such a brief sketch as this. Besides those at which we have
-already glanced, prison reform, help to Bosnian fugitives, Manchester
-Police Court Mission for Lads, Indian Famine Fund—merely glancing
-down two pages of her biography, I find all these mentioned. She was
-herself, of course, decorated with the Red Cross, but M. Henri Dunant’s
-magnificent Red Cross scheme for helping the wounded on the battlefield
-may be said to have been really the outcome of her own work and example.
-For it was the extension of her own activities, by means of the Red
-Cross Societies, which throughout the European continent act in concert
-with their respective armies and governments.
-
-She was the first woman to be decorated with the Order of Merit, which
-was bestowed on her in 1907, and in the following year she received,
-as the Baroness Burdett Coutts had done, the “Freedom of the City of
-London,” having already been awarded, among many like honours, the French
-Gold Medal of Secours aux blessés Militaires, and the German Order of
-the Cross of Merit. On May 10, 1910, she received the badge of honour of
-the Norwegian Red Cross Society. But there was another distinction, even
-more unique, which was already hers. For when £70,000 came into Queen
-Victoria’s hands as a gift from the women of her empire at the time of
-her Jubilee, so much had the Queen been impressed by the work of the
-Nursing Association and all that had been done for the sick poor, that
-the interest of this Women’s Jubilee Fund, £2,000 a year, was devoted to
-an Institution for Training and Maintaining Nurses for the Sick Poor; and
-the National Association for Providing Trained Nurses, which owed so
-much to Miss Nightingale, was affiliated with it, though it still keeps
-its old headquarters at 23 Bloomsbury Square, where for so many years
-would arrive at Christmas from her old home a consignment of beautiful
-holly and other evergreens for Christmas festivities. H.R.H. the Princess
-Christian is President of the Nursing Association, and Miss Nightingale’s
-old friend and fellow-worker, Mr. Henry Bonham Carter, is the Secretary.
-The influence of Miss Florence Lees, described by Kinglake as “the gifted
-and radiant pupil of Florence Nightingale,” who afterwards became Mrs.
-Dacre Craven, and was the first Superintendent-General, has been a very
-vitalizing influence there, and the home owes much also to her husband,
-the Rev. Dacre Craven, of St. Andrew’s, Holborn. Miss Nightingale’s warm
-friendship for Miss Florence Lees brought her into peculiarly intimate
-relations with the home, and both the Association and the Queen’s Jubilee
-Institute are the fruit of Miss Nightingale’s teaching, and a noble
-double memorial of the national—nay, imperial—recognition of its value.
-
-The Royal Pension Fund for Nurses also, in which Queen Alexandra
-was so specially interested, helped to crown the fulfilment of Miss
-Nightingale’s early dream and long, steadfast life-work.
-
-But equally important, though less striking, has been the growing harvest
-of her quiet, courteous efforts to help village mothers to understand
-the laws of health, her pioneer-work in regard to all the dangers of
-careless milk-farms, her insistence on the importance of pure air as
-well as pure water, though she had always been careful to treat the poor
-man’s rooftree as his castle and never to cross his doorstep except by
-permission or invitation.
-
-After the death of her father at Embley in 1874—a very peaceful death,
-commemorated in the inscription on his tomb, “In Thy light we shall see
-light,” which suggests in him a nature at once devout and sincere—she was
-much with her mother, in the old homes at Embley and Lea Hurst, though
-Lea Hurst was the one she loved best, and the beech-wood walk in Lea
-Woods, with its radiant shower of golden leaves in the autumn, for which
-she would sometimes delay her leaving, is still specially associated with
-her memory: and her thoughtfulness for the poor still expressed itself in
-many different ways—in careful gifts, for instance, through one whom she
-trusted for knowledge and tact; in her arrangement that pure milk should
-be sent daily from the home dairy at Lea Hurst to those in need of it.
-
-With faithful love she tended her mother to the time of her death in
-1880, and there seems to be a joyous thanksgiving for that mother’s
-beauty of character in the words the two sisters inscribed to her memory:
-“God is love—Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits.”
-
-After her mother’s death, when the property had passed into the hands of
-Mr. William Shore Nightingale, she still visited her kinsman there and
-kept up her interest in the people of the district.
-
-Among the outward events of her life, after her return from the Crimea,
-one of the earliest had been the marriage of her sister Parthenope, who
-in 1858 became the second wife of Sir Harry Verney,[20] and her home
-at Claydon in Buckinghamshire was thenceforth a second home to Miss
-Nightingale. It need hardly be said that in Sir Harry Verney’s various
-generous schemes for the good of the neighbourhood, schemes in which his
-wife cordially co-operated, Miss Nightingale took a warm and sympathetic
-pleasure. His keen interest in army reform was, of course, a special
-ground of comradeship. Miss Nightingale divided her time chiefly between
-her own home in South Street, Park Lane, and visits to the rooms that
-were reserved for her at Claydon. One of her great interests while at
-Claydon, soon after her sister’s marriage, had been the building of the
-new Buckinghamshire Infirmary in 1861, of which her sister laid the
-foundation; and her bust still adorns the entrance hall.
-
-Mrs. Tooley reminds us that not only was Lady Verney well known in
-literary and political circles, but also her books on social questions
-had the distinction of being quoted in the House of Commons. She gives
-many interesting details with regard to the philanthropic and political
-work of Sir Harry Verney and his family, but it is hardly necessary to
-duplicate them here, since her book is still available. Lady Verney’s
-death in 1890, after a long and painful illness, following on that of her
-father and mother, bereaved Miss Nightingale of a lifelong companionship,
-and might have left her very lonely but for her absorbing work and her
-troops of friends.
-
-How fruitful that work was we may dimly see when we remember that—to
-instance one branch of it only—in ten years the death-rate in the army
-in India, which her efforts so determinately strove to lessen, fell from
-sixty-nine per thousand to eighteen per thousand.[21] She strove—and not
-in vain—to improve the sanitary conditions of immense areas of undrained
-country, but she also endeavoured to bring home to the rank and file of
-the army individual teaching.
-
-She gives in one of her pamphlets a delightful story of men who came to
-a district in India supposed to be fatal to any new-comer, but, strong
-in their new hygienic knowledge, determined _not_ to have cholera. They
-lived carefully, they grew their own garden produce, they did not give
-way to fear, and _all_, without exception, escaped.
-
-To return for a moment to Britain, since a separate chapter is reserved
-for India. She was before her day in contending that foul air was one
-of the great causes of consumption and other diseases. And her teaching
-was ever given with courtesy and consideration. How strongly she felt
-on this and kindred subjects, and how practical her help was, we see
-clearly in her letters and pamphlets. She delighted in making festivities
-for companies of nurses and of her other hard-working friends. And in
-St. Paul’s fine sense of the phrase, she was no “respecter of persons”:
-she reverenced personality, not accidental rank. She had no patience
-with those visiting ladies who think they may intrude at all hours
-of the day into the homes of the poor, and her quick sense of humour
-delighted in many of the odd speeches which would have shocked the prim
-and conventional. She thought the highest compliment ever paid to her
-staff of nurses who visited in the homes of the poor was the speech of
-the grubby ragamuffin, who seemed to think they could wash off even the
-blackness of the Arch-fiend and, when being scrubbed, cried out, “You may
-bathe the divil.”
-
-But with all her fun and relish of life, how sane, how practical, she was!
-
-Do you remember how she laughed at the silly idea that nothing was needed
-to make a good nurse except what the “Early Victorian” used to call “a
-disappointment in love”?
-
-Here are other of her shrewd sayings from her _Nursing Notes_:—
-
- “Another extraordinary fallacy is the dread of night air.
- What air can we breathe at night but night air? The choice
- is between pure night air from without and foul air from
- within. Most people prefer the latter.... Without cleanliness
- within and without your house, ventilation is comparatively
- useless.... And now, you think these things trifles, or at
- least exaggerated. But what you ‘think’ or what I ‘think’
- matters little. Let us see what God thinks of them. God
- always justifies His ways. While we are thinking, He has been
- teaching. I have known cases of hospital pyæmia quite as severe
- in handsome private houses as in any of the worst hospitals,
- and from the same cause—viz., foul air. Yet nobody learnt the
- lesson. Nobody learnt _anything_ at all from it. They went on
- _thinking_—thinking that the sufferer had scratched his thumb,
- or that it was singular that ‘all the servants’ had ‘whitlows,’
- or that something was ‘much about this year.’”
-
-If there had been any hope at first that Miss Nightingale might grow
-strong enough to stand visibly among those who were being trained as
-nurses by the fund raised in her honour, that hope was now past, and when
-the great new wing of St. Thomas’s was built—the finest building for its
-purpose in Europe—the outward reins of government had to be delivered
-over into the hands of another, though hers was throughout the directing
-hand. And the results of her work are written in big type upon the page
-of history.
-
-In India and America she is acclaimed as an adored benefactress, but
-what has she not done for our own country alone? To sum up even a few of
-the points on which I have touched: she initiated sick nursing among the
-poor, through her special appeal was built the Central Home for Nurses,
-she was the pioneer in the hygienic work of county councils, and, besides
-the great nursing school at St. Thomas’s, to her was largely due the
-reform of nursing in workhouses and infirmaries. And in 1890, with the
-£70,000 of the Women’s Jubilee Fund, the establishment of the Queen’s
-Nurses received its charter.
-
-In affairs of military nursing it is no exaggeration to say that she
-was consulted throughout the world. America came to her in the Civil
-War; South Africa owed much to her; India infinitely more; and so vital
-have been the reforms introduced by Lord Herbert and herself that even
-as early as 1880, when General Gordon was waging war in China during
-the Taiping Rebellion, the death-rate as compared with the Crimea was
-reduced from sixty per cent. to little more than three in every hundred
-yearly.[22]
-
-We have seen that, though she was so much more seriously broken in health
-than any one at first realized, that did not prevent her incessant work,
-though it did in the end make her life more or less a hidden life, spent
-within four walls, and chiefly on her bed.
-
-Yet from those four walls what electric messages of help and common sense
-were continuously flashing across the length and breadth of the world!
-She was regarded as an expert in her own subjects, and long before her
-Jubilee Fund enabled her to send forth the Queen’s Nurses, she was, as we
-have already seen, busy writing and working to improve not only nursing
-in general, but especially the nursing of the sick poor; and unceasingly
-she still laboured for the army.
-
-Repeated mention has been made of General Evatt, to whose memory of Miss
-Nightingale I am much indebted.
-
-General Evatt served in the last Afghan campaign, and what he there
-experienced determined him to seek an interview, as soon as he returned
-to England, with her whom he regarded as the great reformer of military
-hygiene—Florence Nightingale. In this way and on this subject there arose
-between them a delightful and enduring friendship. Many and many a time
-in that quiet room in South Street where she lay upon her bed—its dainty
-coverlet all strewn with the letters and papers that might have befitted
-the desk or office of a busy statesman, and surrounded by books and by
-the flowers that she loved so well—he had talked with her for four hours
-on end, admiring with a sort of wonder her great staying power and her
-big, untiring brain.
-
-He did not, like another acquaintance of mine, say that he came away
-feeling like a sucked orange, with all hoarded knowledge on matters great
-and small gently, resistlessly drawn from him by his charming companion;
-but so voracious was the eager, sympathetic interest of Miss Nightingale
-in the men and women of that active world whose streets, at the time he
-learned to know her, she no longer walked, that no conversation on human
-affairs ever seemed, he said, to tire her.
-
-And her mind was ever working towards new measures for the health and
-uplifting of her fellow-creatures.
-
-We have seen how eager she was to use for good every municipal
-opportunity, but she did not stop at the municipality, for she knew that
-there are many womanly duties also at the imperial hearth; and without
-entering on any controversy, it is necessary to state clearly that she
-very early declared herself in favour of household suffrage for women,
-and that “the North of England Society for Women’s Suffrage is the proud
-possessor of her signature to an address to Mr. Disraeli, thanking him
-for his favourable vote in the House of Commons, and begging him to
-do his utmost to remove the injustice under which women householders
-suffered by being deprived of the parliamentary vote.”[23]
-
-[Illustration: Florence Nightingale’s London House, 10 South Street, Park
-Lane (house with balcony), where she died, August 14, 1910.]
-
-Whatever could aid womanly service—as a voice in choosing our great
-domestic executive nowadays undoubtedly can—had her sympathy and
-interest; but what she emphasized most, I take it, at all times, was that
-when any door opened for service, woman should be not only willing, but
-also nobly _efficient_. She herself opened many such doors, and her lamp
-was always trimmed and filled and ready to give light and comfort in the
-darkest room.
-
-It has been well said that in describing a friend in the following words,
-she unconsciously drew a picture of herself:—
-
- “She had the gracefulness, the wit, the unfailing
- cheerfulness—qualities so remarkable, but so much overlooked,
- in our Saviour’s life. She had the absence of all
- ‘mortification’ for mortification’s sake, which characterized
- His work, and any real work in the present day as in His day.
- And how did she do all this?... She was always filled with the
- thought that she must be about her Father’s business.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
- _India—Correspondence with Sir Bartle Frere—Interest in village
- girls—The Lamp._
-
-
-We come now to Miss Nightingale’s most monumental achievement of all,
-the reform of sanitary conditions in India—a reform ever widening and
-developing, branching forth and striking its roots deeper. Her interest
-in that vast population, that world-old treasury of subtle religious
-thought and ever-present mystical faith, may perhaps have been in part an
-inheritance from the Anglo-Indian Governor who was counted in her near
-ancestry. But there can be little doubt that her ardent and practical
-desire to improve the conditions of camp life in India began in her
-intimate care for the soldiers, and her close knowledge of many things
-unknown to the ordinary English subject. The world-wide freemasonry of
-the rank and file in our army enabled her to hear while at Scutari much
-of the life of the army in the vast and distant dominions of Burma and
-Bengal, and she had that gift for seeing through things to their farthest
-roots which enabled her to perceive clearly that no mere mending of camp
-conditions could stay the continual ravages of disease among our men.
-The evil was deeper and wider, and only as conditions were improved in
-sanitary matters could the mortality of the army be lessened. She saw,
-and saw clearly, that the reason children died like flies in India, so
-that those who loved them best chose the agony of years of parting rather
-than take the risks, lay not so much in the climate as in the human
-poisons and putrefactions so carelessly treated and so quickly raised to
-murder-power by the extreme heat.
-
-Much of this comes out clearly in her letter to Sir Bartle Frere, with
-whom her first ground of friendship had arisen out of their common
-interest in sanitary matters.
-
-What manner of man Sir Bartle was may be divined from a letter to him
-written by Colonel W. F. Marriott, one of the secretaries of the Bombay
-Government, at the time of his leaving Bombay:—
-
- “The scene of your departure stirred me much. That bright
- evening, the crowd on the pier and shore as the boat put
- off, the music from the _Octavia_, as the band played ‘Auld
- Lang Syne’ as we passed, were all typical and impressive by
- association of ideas. But it was not a shallow sympathy with
- which I took in all the circumstances. I could divine some of
- your thoughts. If I felt like Sir Bedivere, left behind ‘among
- new men, strange faces, other minds,’ you must have felt in
- some degree like King Arthur in the barge, ‘I have lived my
- life, and that which I have done may He Himself make pure.’
- I do not doubt that you felt that all this ‘mouth honour’ is
- only worth so far as it is the seal of one’s own approving
- conscience, and though you could accept it freely as deserved
- from their lips, yet at that hour you judged your own work
- hardly. You measured the palpable results with your conceptions
- and hopes, and were inclined to say, ‘I am no better than my
- fathers.’ But I, judging now calmly and critically, feel—I may
- say, see—that though the things that seem to have failed be
- amongst those for which you have taken most pains, yet they
- are small things compared with the work which has not failed.
- You have made an impression of earnest human sympathy with the
- people of this country, which will deepen and expand, so that
- it will be felt as a perpetual witness against any narrower
- and less noble conception of our relation to them, permanently
- raising the moral standard of highest policy towards them;
- and your name will become a traditional embodiment of a good
- governor.”[24]
-
-Frere had seen that the filthy condition of many of the roads, after
-the passing of animals and the failure to cleanse from manure, was of
-itself a source of poison, though the relation between garbage and
-disease-bearing flies was then less commonly understood, and he was never
-tired of urging the making of decent roads; but this, he knew, was only
-a very small part of the improvements needed.
-
-His correspondence with Miss Nightingale began in 1867, and in that
-and the five following years they exchanged about one hundred letters,
-chiefly on sanitary questions.
-
-It was part of her genius always to see and seize her opportunity, and
-she rightly thought that, as she says in one of her letters, “We might
-never have such a favourable conjunction of the larger planets again:
-
-“You, who are willing and most able to organize the machinery here; Sir
-John Lawrence, who is able and willing, provided only he knew what to do;
-and a Secretary of State who is willing and in earnest. And I believe
-nothing would bring them to their senses in India more than an annual
-report of what they have done, with your comments upon it, laid before
-Parliament.”
-
-In order to set in motion the machinery of a sanitary department for all
-India, a despatch had to be written, pointing out clearly and concisely
-what was to be done.
-
-Frere consulted Miss Nightingale at every point about this despatch,
-but spoke of the necessity for some sort of peg to hang it on—“not,” he
-said, “that the Secretary of State is at all lukewarm, nor, I think, that
-he has any doubt as to what should be said, or how—that, I think, your
-memoranda have fixed; the only difficulty is as to the when....
-
-“No governor-general, I believe, since the time of Clive has had such
-powers and such opportunities, but he fancies the want of progress is
-owing to some opposing power which does not exist anywhere but in his own
-imagination.
-
-“He cannot see that perpetual inspection by the admiral of the drill and
-kit of every sailor is not the way to make the fleet efficient, and he
-gets disheartened and depressed because he finds that months and years of
-this squirrel-like activity lead to no real progress.”
-
-The despatch with its accompanying documents went to Miss Nightingale for
-her remarks before it was sent out. Her commentary was as follows:—
-
- “I find nothing to add or to take away in the memorandum
- (sanitary). It appears to me quite perfect in itself—that is,
- it is quite as much as the enemy will bear, meaning by the
- enemy—not at all the Government of India in India, still less
- the Government of India at home, but—that careless and ignorant
- person called the Devil, who is always walking about taking
- knowledge out of people’s heads, who said that he was coming to
- give us the knowledge of good and evil, and who has done just
- the contrary.
-
- “It is a noble paper, an admirable paper—and what a present to
- make to a government! You have included in it all the great
- principles—sanitary and administrative—which the country
- requires. And now you must work, work these points until they
- are embodied in local works in India. This will not be in our
- time, for it takes more than a few years to fill a continent
- with civilization. But I never despair that in God’s good time
- every man of us will reap the common benefit of obeying all the
- laws which He has given us for our well-being.
-
- “I shall give myself the pleasure of writing to you again about
- these papers. But I write this note merely to say that I don’t
- think this memorandum requires any addition.
-
- “God bless you for it! I think it is a great work.”[25]
-
-It _was_ a great work, and it might have been delayed for scores of
-years, with a yearly unnecessary waste of thousands of lives, if she had
-not initiated it.
-
-[Illustration: Florence Nightingale in her Last Days.
-
-(_From a drawing from memory. Copyright A. Rischgitz._)]
-
-Her words to Sir Bartle Frere at the outset had been: “It does seem that
-there is no element in the scheme of government (of India) by which the
-public health can be taken care of. And the thing is now to create such
-an element.”
-
-As early as 1863, in her “Observations on the Sanitary State of the Army
-in India,” she had written:—
-
- “Native ‘caste’ prejudices appear to have been made the excuse
- for European laziness, as far as regards our sanitary and
- hospital neglects of the natives. Recent railroad experience is
- a striking proof that ‘caste,’ in their minds, is no bar to
- intercommunication in arrangements tending to their benefit.”
-
-Sir C. Trevelyan justly says that “a good sanitary state of the military
-force cannot be secured without making similar arrangements for the
-populations settled in and around the military cantonments; that sanitary
-reform must be generally introduced into India for the civil as well as
-the military portion of the community.”
-
-And now that the opportunity arrived, all was done with wise and swift
-diplomacy. The way was smoothed by a call from Frere on his old friend
-Sir Richard Temple, at that time Finance Minister at Calcutta, asking him
-to help.
-
-Those who know India best, and know Miss Nightingale best, are those who
-are most aware of the mighty tree of ever-widening health improvement
-that grew from this little seed, and of the care with which Miss
-Nightingale helped to guard and foster it.
-
-“She was a great Indian,” her friend General Evatt repeated to me more
-than once, “and what a head she had! She was the only human being I
-have ever met, for instance, man or woman, who had thoroughly mastered
-the intricate details of the Bengal land-purchase system. She loved
-India, and she knew it through and through. It was no wonder that every
-distinguished Indian who came to England went to see Miss Nightingale.”
-
-She bore her ninety years very lightly, and made a vision serene and
-noble, as will be seen from our picture, though that does not give the
-lovely youthful colouring in contrast with the silvery hair, and we read
-of the great expressiveness of her hands, which, a little more, perhaps,
-than is usual with Englishwomen, she used in conversation.
-
-It was a very secluded life that she lived at No. 10 South Street; but
-she was by no means without devotees, and the bouquet that the German
-Emperor sent her was but one of many offerings from many high-hearted
-warriors at her shrine.
-
-And when she visited her old haunts at Lea Hurst and Embley she delighted
-in sending invitations to the girls growing up in those village families
-that she had long counted among her friends, so that to her tea-table
-were lovingly welcomed guests very lowly, as well as those better known
-to the world.
-
-Her intense and sympathetic interest in all the preparations for nursing
-in the South African campaign has already been touched upon, as well as
-her joy that some of her own nurses from among the first probationers at
-St. Thomas’s were accepted in that enterprise with praise and gratitude.
-
-It would be a serious omission not to refer my readers to a very moving
-letter which she wrote to Cavaliere Sebastiano Fenzi, during the Italian
-War of Independence in 1866, of which a part is given in Mrs. Tooley’s
-book, and from which I am permitted to quote the following:—
-
- “I have given dry advice as dryly as I could. But you must
- permit me to say that if there is anything I could do for you
- at any time, and you would command me, I should esteem it
- the greatest honour and pleasure. I am a hopeless invalid,
- entirely a prisoner to my room, and overwhelmed with business.
- Otherwise how gladly would I answer to your call and come and
- do my little best for you in the dear city where I was born. If
- the giving my miserable life could hasten your success but by
- half an hour, how gladly would I give it!”
-
-How far she was ahead of her time becomes every day more obvious; for
-every day the results of her teaching are gradually making themselves
-felt. For example, it can no longer, without qualification, be said,
-as she so truly said in her own day, that while “the coxcombries of
-education are taught to every schoolgirl” there is gross ignorance, not
-only among schoolgirls, but also even among mothers and nurses, with
-regard to “those laws which God has assigned to the relations of our
-bodies with the world in which He has put them. In other words, the laws
-which make these bodies, into which He has put our minds, healthy or
-unhealthy organs of those minds, are all but unlearnt. Not but that these
-laws—the laws of life—are in a certain measure understood, but not even
-mothers think it worth their while to study them—to study how to give
-their children healthy existences. They call it medical or physiological
-knowledge, fit only for doctors.”
-
-In her old age, loved and honoured far and wide, she toiled on with all
-the warm enthusiasm of a girl, and the ripe wisdom of fourscore years and
-ten spent in the service of her one Master, for she was not of those who
-ever tried to serve two. And when she died at No. 10 South Street, on
-August 10, 1910—so peacefully that the tranquil glow of sunset descended
-upon her day of harvest—the following beautiful incident was recorded in
-_Nursing Notes_, to whose editor I am specially indebted for bringing to
-my notice the verses in which the story is told[26]:—
-
- “At Chelsea, under the lime tree’s stir,
- I read the news to a pensioner
- That a noble lord and a judge were dead—
- ‘They were younger men than me,’ he said.
-
- “I read again of another death;
- The old man turned, and caught his breath—
- ‘She’s gone?’ he said; ‘she too? In camp
- We called her the Lady of the Lamp.’
-
- “He would not listen to what I read,
- But wanted it certain—‘The Lady’s dead?’
- I showed it him to remove his doubt,
- And added, unthinking, ‘The Lamp is out.’
-
- “He rose—and I had to help him stand—
- Then, as he saluted with trembling hand,
- I was abashed to hear him say,
- ‘The Lamp she lit is alight to-day.’”
-
- F. S.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
- _A brief summing up._
-
-
-Those who write of Florence Nightingale sentimentally, as though she
-spent herself in a blind, caressing tenderness, would have earned her
-secret scorn, not unflavoured by a jest; for she stood always at the
-opposite pole from the sentimentalists, and perhaps had a little of her
-father in her—that father who, when he was _giving_ right and left, would
-say to some plausible beggar of society who came to him for wholesale
-subscriptions, “You see, I was not born generous,” well knowing that his
-ideas of generosity and theirs differed by a whole heaven, and that his
-were the wider and the more generous of the two.
-
-She had a will of iron. That is what one of her greatest admirers has
-more than once said to me—and he knew her well. No doubt it was true.
-Only a will of iron could have enabled a delicate woman to serve, for
-twenty hours at a time, with unwearying tenderness and courage among
-the wounded and the dying. Even her iron resolution and absolute
-fearlessness could not prevent her from taking Crimean fever when she
-insisted on visiting a second time the lonely typhus patient outside
-Balaclava, at a moment when she was worn out with six months of nursing
-and administration combined. But it did enable her to go back to her post
-when barely recovered, and, later in life, even when a prisoner within
-four walls, who seldom left her bed, that will of iron did enable her to
-go on labouring till the age of ninety, and to fulfil for the good of
-mankind the dearest purpose of her heart. Nothing is harder than iron,
-and that which is made of it after it has been through the furnace has
-long been the very symbol of loyalty and uprightness when we say of a man
-that he is “true as steel.”
-
-Yes, iron is hard and makes a pillar of strength in time of need. But
-he who forges out of it weapons and tools that are at once delicate
-and resistless, knows that it will humbly shoe the feet of horses, and
-cut the household bread, and will make for others besides Lombardy a
-kingly crown. And when iron is truly on fire, nothing commoner or softer
-nor anything more yielding—not even gold itself—can glow with a more
-steadfast and fervent heat to warm the hands and hearts of men.
-
-The picture of Miss Nightingale that dwells in the popular mind no
-doubt owes its outline to the memories of the men she nursed with such
-tenderness and skill. And it is a true picture. Like all good workmen,
-she loved her work, and nursing was her chosen work so long as her
-strength remained. None can read her writing, and especially her _Nursing
-Notes_ and her pamphlet on nursing among the sick poor, without feeling
-how much she cared for every minutest detail, and how sensitively she
-felt with, and for, her patients.
-
-But such a picture, as will have been made clear by this time, shows only
-one aspect of her life-work. One of her nearest intimates writes to me of
-her difficulties in reforming military hospitals, and her determination
-therefore to give herself later in life to the reform of civilian
-nursing; but in reality she did both, for through the one she indirectly
-influenced the other, and began what has been widening and unfolding in
-every direction ever since.
-
-Those who knew her best speak almost with awe of her constructive and
-organizing power. She was indeed a pioneer and a leader, and girt about
-with the modesty of all true greatness.
-
-Like Joan of Arc, she heeded not the outward voices, but, through all
-faults and sorrows, sought to follow always and only the voice of the
-Divine One. This gave her life unity and power. And when she passed on
-into the life beyond, the door opened and closed again very quietly,
-leaving the whole world the better for her ninety years in our midst.
-“When I have done with this old suit,” says George Meredith, “so much in
-need of mending;” but hers, like his, was a very charming suit to the
-last, and even to the end of her ninety years the colouring was clear and
-fresh as a girl’s.
-
-Like all strong, true, disinterested people, she made enemies—where is
-there any sanitary reformer who does not?—yet seldom indeed has any one,
-man or woman, won deeper and more world-wide love. But that was not her
-aim; her aim was to do the will of her Commander and leave the world
-better than she found it.
-
-Seldom has there been a moment when women have more needed the counsel
-given in one of the letters here published for the first time, when
-she begs of a dear friend that her name may be that “of one who obeys
-authority, however unreasonable, in the name of Him who is above all, and
-who is Reason itself.”
-
-And as we think of the debt the world owes to Florence Nightingale and of
-all she did for England, for India, and not only for the British Empire,
-but for the world, we may well pause for a moment on the words that
-closed our opening chapter, in which she begs her fellow-workers to give
-up considering their actions in any light of rivalry as between men and
-women, and ends with an entreaty:—
-
- “It does not make a thing good, that it is remarkable that a
- woman should have been able to do it. Neither does it make a
- thing bad, which would have been good had a man done it, that
- it has been done by a woman.
-
- “Oh, leave these jargons, and go your way straight to God’s
- work, in simplicity and singleness of heart.”
-
-The well-remembered words of Ruskin’s appeal to girls in “Sesame and
-Lilies,” published but a few years earlier, were evidently in Miss
-Nightingale’s mind when she wrote the closing sentences of her tribute
-to Agnes Jones—sentences which set their seal upon this volume, and will
-echo long after it is forgotten.
-
- “Let us,” she writes, “add living flowers to her grave, ‘lilies
- with full hands,’ not fleeting primroses, nor dying flowers.
- Let us bring the work of our hands and our heads and our
- hearts to finish her work which God has so blessed. Let us not
- merely rest in peace, but let hers be the life which stirs up
- to fight the good fight against vice and sin and misery and
- wretchedness, as she did—the call to arms which she was ever
- obeying:—
-
- ‘The Son of God goes forth to war—
- Who follows in His train?’
-
- “O daughters of God, are there so few to answer?”
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-LIST OF PUBLICATIONS BY FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.
-
-Letter (on the Madras Famine): The Great Lesson of the Indian Famine,
-etc. 1877.
-
-Life or Death in India. A Paper read at the Meeting of the National
-Association for the Promotion of Social Science, Norwich, 1873, with an
-Appendix on Life or Death by Irrigation. 1874.
-
-Notes on Hospitals: being two Papers read before the National Association
-for the Promotion of Science ... 1858, with the evidence given to the
-Royal Commissioners on the state of the Army in 1857 (Appendix, Sites and
-Construction of Hospitals, etc.).
-
-Do., 3rd Edition, enlarged, and for the most part rewritten. 1863.
-
-Notes on Matters affecting the Health, Efficiency, and Hospital
-Administration of the British Army, founded chiefly on the experience of
-the late war. 1858.
-
-Notes on Nursing: What it is, and what it is not. 1860.
-
-New Edition, revised and enlarged, 1860; another Edition, 1876.
-
-Miss Florence Nightingale ovy knitra o oŝctr̂ování nemocnŷch. z
-anglického pr̂eloẑila. Králova, 1872.
-
-Des Soins à donner aux malades ce qu’il faut faire, ce qu’il faut eviter.
-Ouvrage traduit de l’Anglais. 1862.
-
-Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes, with a Chapter on Children.
-1861.
-
-Do., New Edition, 1868 and 1876.
-
-Observations on the ... Sanitary State of the Army in India. Reprinted
-from the Report of the Royal Commission. 1863.
-
-On Trained Nursing for the Sick Poor.... A Letter ... to _The Times_ ...
-April 14, 1876.
-
-Sanitary Statistics of Native Nursing Schools and Hospitals. 1863.
-
-Reproduction of a printed Report originally submitted to the Bucks
-County Council in the year 1892, containing Letters from Miss Florence
-Nightingale on Health Visiting in Rural Districts. 1911.
-
-Statements exhibiting the Voluntary Contributions received by Miss
-Nightingale for the Use of the British War Hospitals in the East, with
-the mode of their Distribution in 1854, 1855, 1856. Published, London,
-1857.
-
-
-A LIST OF SOME OF THE BOOKS CONSULTED
-
-In case any of my readers wish to read further for themselves:—
-
-Kinglake’s _Invasion of the Crimea_. (William Blackwood.)
-
-_Memoir of Sidney Herbert_, by Lord Stanmore. (John Murray.)
-
-_Life of Sir Bartle Frere_, by John Martineau. (John Murray.)
-
-_Letters of John Stuart Mill_, edited by John Elliot. (Longmans.)
-
-_William Rathbone_, a Memoir by Eleanor F. Rathbone. (Macmillan.)
-
-_The Life of Florence Nightingale_, by Sarah Tooley. (Cassell.)
-
-_Felicia Skene of Oxford_, by E. C. Rickards. (John Murray.)
-
-_Memoir of Sir John MacNeill, G.C.B._, by his Granddaughter. (John
-Murray.)
-
-_Agnes Elizabeth Jones_, by her Sister. (Alexander Strahan.)
-
-_A History of Nursing_, by M. Adelaide Nutting, R.N., and Lavinia L.
-Dock, R.N. (G. P. Putnam and Sons.)
-
-_A Sister of Mercy’s Memories of the Crimea_, by Sister Aloysius. (Burns
-and Oates.)
-
-_The Story of Florence Nightingale_, by W. I. W. (Pilgrim Press.)
-
-_Soyer’s Culinary Campaign_, by Alexis Soyer. (Routledge.)
-
-_Kaiserswerth_, by Florence Nightingale.
-
-_Florence Nightingale_, a Cameo Life-Sketch by Marion Holmes. (Women’s
-Freedom League.)
-
-_Paterson’s Roads_, edited by Edward Mogg. (Longmans, Green, Orme.)
-
-_The London Library_, No. 3, vol. of _The Times_ for 1910.
-
-_Nursing Notes_, by Florence Nightingale, and other writings of Miss
-Nightingale included in the foregoing list.
-
-
-A BRIEF SKETCH OF GENERAL EVATT’S CAREER.
-
-[As given in _Who’s Who_.]
-
-EVATT, SURGEON-GENERAL GEORGE JOSEPH HAMILTON, C.B., 1903; M.D.,
-R.A.M.C.; retired; Member, Council British Medical Association, 1904;
-born, 11th Nov. 1843; son of Captain George Evatt, 70th Foot; married,
-1877, Sophie Mary Frances, daughter of William Walter Raleigh Kerr,
-Treasurer of Mauritius, and granddaughter of Lord Robert Kerr; one son,
-one daughter. Educated, Royal College of Surgeons, and Trinity College,
-Dublin. Entered Army Medical Service, 1865; joined 25th (K.O.S.B.)
-Regiment, 1866; Surgeon-Major, 1877; Lieutenant-Colonel, R.A.M.C., 1885;
-Colonel, 1896; Surgeon-General, 1899; served Perak Expedition with Sir
-H. Ross’s Bengal Column, 1876 (medal and clasp); Afghan War, 1878-80;
-capture of Ali Musjid (despatches); action in Bazaar Valley, with General
-Tytler’s Column (despatches); advance on Gundamak, and return in “Death
-March,” 1879 (specially thanked in General Orders by Viceroy of India in
-Council and Commander-in-Chief in India for services); commanded Field
-Hospital in second campaign, including advance to relief of Cabul under
-General Sir Charles Gough, 1879; action on the Ghuzni Road; return to
-India, 1880 (medal and two clasps); Suakin Expedition, 1885, including
-actions at Handoub, Tamai, and removal of wounded from MacNeill’s zareba
-(despatches, medal and clasp, Khedive’s Star); Zhob Valley Expedition,
-1890; commanded a Field Hospital (despatches); Medical Officer, Royal
-Military Academy, Woolwich, 1880-96; Senior Medical Officer, Quetta
-Garrison, Baluchistan, 1887-91; Sanitary Officer, Woolwich Garrison,
-1892-94; Secretary, Royal Victoria Hospital, Netley, 1894-96; P.M.O.,
-China, 1896-99; P.M.O., Western District, 1899-1902; Surgeon-General,
-2nd Army Corps, Salisbury, 1902-3; raised with Mr. Cantlie R.A.M.C.
-Volunteers, 1883; founded, 1884, Medical Officers of Schools Association,
-London; and, 1886, drew up scheme for Army Nursing Service Reserve;
-Member, Committee International Health Exhibition, 1884; Member of
-Council, Royal Army Temperance Association, 1903; President, Poor Law
-Medical Officers’ Association; contested (L.) Woolwich, 1886, Fareham
-Division, Hampshire, 1906, and Brighton, 1910; Honorary Colonel,
-Home Counties Division, R.A.M.C., Territorial Force, 1908; received
-Distinguished Service Reward, 1910. _Publications_: Travels in the
-Euphrates Valley and Mesopotamia, 1873; and many publications on military
-and medical subjects.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] I wrote to the author of the charming sketch of Florence Nightingale
-in which I found it quoted, but he has quite forgotten who was the writer.
-
-[2] Her full name was Frances Parthenope Nightingale.
-
-[3] Mrs. Tooley, p. 37.
-
-[4] For a charming sketch of Fliedner’s first wife, a woman of rare
-excellence, my readers are referred to “A History of Nursing,” by M.
-Adelaide Nutting, R.N., and Lavinia P. Dock, R.N. (G. P. Putnam and Sons.)
-
-[5] The reference here is not to Miss Nightingale’s book, but to the
-periodical which at present bears that name.
-
-[6] “Memoir of Sidney Herbert,” by Lord Stanmore. (John Murray.)
-
-[7] “Felicia Skene of Oxford,” by E. C. Rickards.
-
-[8] Kinglake’s “Invasion of the Crimea,” vol. vi. (William Blackwood and
-Sons.)
-
-[9] Kinglake’s “Invasion of the Crimea,” vol. vi. p. 426.
-
-[10] Kinglake’s “Invasion of the Crimea,” vol. vi.
-
-[11] “The Life of Florence Nightingale,” by Sarah Tooley.
-
-[12] Stafford O’Brien.
-
-[13] Kinglake’s “Invasion of Crimea.”
-
-[14] “Memories of the Crimea,” by Sister Mary Aloysius. (Burns and Oates.)
-
-[15] “Soyer’s Culinary Campaign,” Alexis Soyer. (Routledge, 1857.)
-
-[16] I know not whether this was the man whose arm she had saved;
-probably many others echoed his feeling, and he was not by any means the
-only soldier who thus reverently greeted her passing presence.
-
-[17] “Introduction to Memorials of Agnes Elizabeth Jones.” Reprinted from
-_Good Words_ for June 1868. Florence Nightingale.
-
-[18] The italics are added.
-
-[19] A complete list is subjoined in the Appendix.
-
-[20] Sir Harry Verney died four years later, and Claydon then passed to
-Sir Edmund Hope Verney, the son of his first marriage.
-
-[21] “Life of Florence Nightingale,” by Sarah Tooley, p. 295.
-
-[22] See “Life of Florence Nightingale,” by Sarah Tooley, p. 268.
-
-[23] “Florence Nightingale,” a Cameo Life-Sketch by Marion Holmes.
-
-[24] “Life of Sir Bartle Frere,” by John Martineau. (John Murray.)
-
-[25] “Life of Sir Bartle Frere,” by John Martineau. (John Murray.)
-
-[26] “The Lady of the Lamp,” by F. S., reprinted from the _Evening News_
-of August 16, 1910, in _Nursing Notes_ of September 1, 1910.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE ***
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Florence Nightingale, by Annie Matheson</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-</div>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Florence Nightingale</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0;'>A Biography</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Annie Matheson</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 4, 2021 [eBook #65762]</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Brian Coe and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE ***</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>[i]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;" id="illus1">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Florence Nightingale.</p>
-<p class="caption">(<i>From a model of the statue by A. G. Walker. By kind permission
-of the Sculptor.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>FLORENCE<br />
-NIGHTINGALE</h1>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">A BIOGRAPHY</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-ANNIE MATHESON<br />
-<span class="smaller">AUTHOR OF<br />
-“THE STORY OF A BRAVE CHILD (JOAN OF ARC)”</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THOMAS NELSON AND SONS<br />
-<span class="smaller">LONDON, EDINBURGH, DUBLIN, AND NEW YORK</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a>[ii]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;" id="illus2">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“The Lady with the Lamp.”</p>
-<p class="caption">(<i>From the statuette in the Nightingale Home.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>[iii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PREFACE.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is hardly necessary to say that this little biography
-is based mainly upon the work of others,
-though I hope and believe it is honest enough to
-have an individuality of its own and it has certainly
-cost endless individual labour and anxiety.
-Few tasks in literature are in practice more
-worrying than the responsibility of “piecing
-together” other people’s fragments, and “the
-great unknown” who in reviewing my “Leaves
-of Prose” thought I had found an easy way
-of turning myself into respectable cement for
-a tessellated pavement made of other people’s
-chipped marble, was evidently a stranger to my
-particular temperament. Where I have been
-free to express myself without regard to others,
-to use only my own language, and utter only my
-own views, I have had something of the feeling
-of a child out for a holiday, and of course the
-greater part of the book is in my own words.
-But I have often, for obvious reasons, chosen the
-humbler task, because, wherever it is possible, it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv"></a>[iv]</span>
-is good that my readers should have their impressions
-at first hand, and in regard to Kinglake
-especially, from whose non-copyright volumes
-I have given many a page, his masculine tribute
-to Miss Nightingale is of infinitely more value
-than any words which could come from me.</p>
-
-<p>My publisher has kindly allowed me to leave
-many questions of copyright to him, but I wish,
-not the less—rather the more—to thank all those
-authors and publishers who have permitted use
-of their material and whose names will, in many
-instances, be found incorporated in the text or in
-the accompanying footnotes. I have not thought
-it necessary in every instance to give a reference
-to volume and page, though occasionally, for
-some special reason of my own, I have done so.</p>
-
-<p>Of those in closest touch with Miss Nightingale
-during her lifetime, whose help with original
-material has been invaluable, not more than one
-can be thanked by name. But to Mrs. Tooley
-for her large-hearted generosity with regard to
-her own admirable biography—to which I owe
-far more than the mere quotations so kindly permitted,
-and in most cases so clearly acknowledged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[v]</span>
-in the text—it is a great pleasure to express my
-thanksgiving publicly.</p>
-
-<p>There are many others who have helped me, and
-not once with regard to the little sketch have I met
-with any unkindness or rebuff. Indeed, so various
-are the acknowledgments due, and so sincere the
-gratitude I feel, that I scarcely know where to begin.</p>
-
-<p>To Miss Rickards, for the pages from her
-beautiful life of Felicia Skene, I wish to record
-heartfelt thanks; and also to Messrs. Burns and
-Oates with regard to lengthy quotations from
-the letters of Sister Aloysius—a deeply interesting
-little volume published by them in 1904,
-under the title of “A Sister of Mercy’s Memories
-of the Crimea;” to Dr. Hagberg Wright of the
-London Library for the prolonged loan of a
-whole library of books of reference and the help
-always accessible to his subscribers; and to the
-librarian of the Derby Free Library for aid in
-verifying pedigree. Also to Lord Stanmore for
-his generous permission to use long extracts from
-his father’s “Life of Lord Herbert,” from which
-more than one valuable letter has been taken;
-and to Mr. John Murray for sanctioning this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[vi]</span>
-and for like privileges in relation to the lives of
-Sir John MacNeill and Sir Bartle Frere. To
-Messrs. William Blackwood, Messrs. Cassell,
-Messrs. G. P. Putnam and Sons, as well as to
-the editors and publishers of the <cite>Times</cite>, <cite>Daily
-Telegraph</cite>, <cite>Morning Post</cite>, and <cite>Evening News</cite>, I
-wish to add my thanks to those of my publisher.</p>
-
-<p>To any reader of this book it will be clear
-how great a debt I owe to General Evatt, and
-he knows, I think, how sincerely I recognize it.
-Mr. Stephen Paget, the writer of the article on
-Miss Nightingale in the Dictionary of National
-Biography, has not only permitted me to quote
-from that—a privilege for which I must also
-thank Messrs. Smith Elder, and Sir Sidney Lee—but
-has, in addition, put me in the way of other
-priceless material wherewith to do honour to the
-subject of this biography. I have long been
-grateful to him for the inspiration and charm of
-his own “Confessio Medici”—there is now this
-other obligation to add to that.</p>
-
-<p>Nor can I forgo cordial acknowledgments to
-the writer and also the publisher of the charming
-sketch of Miss Nightingale’s Life published some<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[vii]</span>
-years ago by the Pilgrim Press and entitled “The
-Story of Florence Nightingale.”</p>
-
-<p>To my friend Dr. Lewis N. Chase I owe the
-rare privilege of an introduction to Mr. Walker,
-the sculptor, who has so graciously permitted for
-my frontispiece a reproduction of the statue he
-has just completed as a part of our national
-memorial to Miss Nightingale.</p>
-
-<p>I desire to thank Miss Rosalind Paget for
-directing me to sources of information and bestowing
-on me treasures of time and of memory,
-as well as Miss Eleanor F. Rathbone and the
-writer of Sir John MacNeill’s Life for help
-given by their books, and Miss Marion Holmes
-for permission to quote from her inspiring monograph;
-and last, but by no means least, to express
-my sense of the self-sacrificing magnanimity with
-which Miss E. Brierly, the present editor of
-<cite>Nursing Notes</cite>, at once offered me and placed in
-my hands—what I should never have dreamed of
-asking, even had I been a friend of old standing,
-instead of a comparative stranger—everything she
-herself had gathered together and preserved as
-bearing on the life of Florence Nightingale.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>[viii]</span></p>
-
-<p>When, under the influence of certain articles
-in the <cite>Times</cite>, I undertook to write this volume
-for Messrs. Nelson, I knew nothing of the other
-biographies in the field. Nor had I any idea
-that an officially authorized life was about to be
-written by Sir Edward Cook, a biographer with
-an intellectual equipment far beyond my own,
-but who will not perhaps grudge me the name
-of friend, since his courteous considerateness for
-all leads many others to make a like claim, and
-the knowledge that he would put no obstacle in
-my path has spared me what might have been a
-serious difficulty. Had I known all this, a decent
-modesty might have prevented my undertaking.
-But in every direction unforeseen help has been
-showered upon me, and nothing but my own inexorable
-limitations have stood in my way.</p>
-
-<p>If there be any who, by their books, or in any
-other way, have helped me, but whom by some
-unhappy oversight I have omitted to name in
-these brief documentary thanks, I must earnestly
-beg them to believe that such an error is contrary
-to my intention and goodwill.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix"></a>[ix]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td>Introductory Chapter</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#INTRODUCTORY_CHAPTER">15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">I.</td>
- <td>Florence Nightingale: her home, her birthplace, and
- her family</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">25</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">II.</td>
- <td>Life at Lea Hurst and Embley</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">41</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">III.</td>
- <td>The weaving of many threads, both of evil and of good</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">55</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">IV.</td>
- <td>The activities of girlhood—Elizabeth Fry—Felicia
- Skene again</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">62</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">V.</td>
- <td>Home duties and pleasures—The brewing of war</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">71</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VI.</td>
- <td>Pastor Fliedner</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VII.</td>
- <td>Years of preparation</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">101</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">VIII.</td>
- <td>The beginning of the war—A sketch of Sidney Herbert</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">117</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">IX.</td>
- <td>The Crimean muddle—Explanations and excuses</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">134</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x"></a>[x]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">X.</td>
- <td>“Five were wise, and five foolish”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XI.</td>
- <td>The expedition</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XII.</td>
- <td>The tribute of Kinglake and Macdonald and the Chelsea
- Pensioners</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">172</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XIII.</td>
- <td>The horrors of Scutari—The victory of the Lady-in-Chief—The
- Queen’s letter—Her gift of butter and treacle</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">200</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XIV.</td>
- <td>Letters from Scutari—Kinglake on Miss Nightingale and
- her dynasty—The refusal of a new contingent</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">216</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XV.</td>
- <td>The busy nursing hive—M. Soyer and his memories—Miss
- Nightingale’s complete triumph over prejudice—The
- memories of Sister Aloysius</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">235</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XVI.</td>
- <td>Inexactitudes—Labels—Cholera—“The Lady with the Lamp”—Her
- humour—Letters of Sister Aloysius</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">247</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XVII.</td>
- <td>Miss Nightingale visits Balaclava—Her illness—Lord Raglan’s
- visit—The Fall of Sebastopol</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">261</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XVIII.</td>
- <td>The Nightingale Fund—Miss Nightingale remains at her post,
- organizing healthy occupations for the men off duty—Sisters
- of Mercy—The Queen’s jewel—Its meaning</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">274</a><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi"></a>[xi]</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XIX.</td>
- <td>Her citizenship—Her initiative—Public recognition and
- gratitude—Her return incognito—Village excitement—The
- country’s welcome—Miss Nightingale’s broken health—The
- Nightingale Fund—St. Thomas’s Hospital—Reform of nursing
- as a profession</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">292</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XX.</td>
- <td>William Rathbone—Agnes Jones—Infirmaries—Nursing in the homes
- of the poor—Municipal work—Homely power of Miss Nightingale’s
- writings—Lord Herbert’s death</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">312</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XXI.</td>
- <td>Multifarious work and many honours—Jubilee Nurses—Nursing
- Association—Death of father and mother—Lady Verney and her
- husband—No respecter of persons—From within four walls—South
- Africa and America</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">331</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XXII.</td>
- <td>India—Correspondence with Sir Bartle Frere—Interest in village
- girls—The Lamp</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">346</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">XXIII.</td>
- <td>A brief summing up</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">360</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- <td>APPENDIX</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX">367</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii"></a>[xii]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiii"></a>[xiii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="List of illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td>Statue of Florence Nightingale by A. G. Walker</td>
- <td class="tdpg" colspan="2"><a href="#illus1"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>“The Lady with the Lamp.” Statuette</td>
- <td><i>Facing p.</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus2">8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Embley Park, Romsey, Hants</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus3">16</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Florence Nightingale’s Father</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus4">32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Florence Nightingale (after Augustus Egg, R.A.)</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus5">88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Florence Nightingale in 1854</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus6">112</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At the Therapia Hospital</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus7">176</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At Scutari</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus8">192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Miss Nightingale’s Medals and Decorations</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus9">280</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Nightingale Nursing Carriage</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus10">296</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>At the Herbert Hospital, Woolwich</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus11">304</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>A Letter from Miss Nightingale</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus12">320</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Miss Nightingale’s London House</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus13">344</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Florence Nightingale in her Last Days</td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus14">352</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiv"></a>[xiv]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INTRODUCTORY_CHAPTER">INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER FOR
-THE ELDERS IN MY AUDIENCE.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is my hope that my younger readers may
-find this volume all the more to their liking
-if it is not without interest to people of my
-own generation. Girls and boys of fourteen to
-sixteen are already on the threshold of manhood
-and womanhood, but even of children
-I am sure it is true that they hate to be
-“written down to,” since they are eagerly
-drinking in hopes and ideas which they cannot
-always put into words, and to such hopes and
-ideas they give eager sympathy of heart and
-curiosity of mind.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus3">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Florence Nightingale’s Home, Embley Park, Romsey, Hants.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>For one of her St. Thomas’s nurses, among
-the first nine women to be decorated with the
-Red Cross, the heroine of this story wrote
-what might well be the marching orders of
-many a good soldier in the divine army, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-not least, perhaps, of those boy scouts and girl
-guides who would like better a life of adventure
-than the discipline of a big school or the
-“duties enough and little cares” of a luxurious
-home; and as the words have not, so far as
-I am aware, appeared in print before, it may
-be worth while to give them here:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Soldiers,” she wrote, “must obey orders.
-And to you the ‘roughing’ it has been the
-resigning yourself to ‘comforts’ which you
-detested and to work which you did not want,
-while the work which wanted you was within
-reach. A severe kind of ‘roughing’ indeed—perhaps
-the severest, as I know by sad experience.</p>
-
-<p>“But it will not last. This short war is not
-life. But all will depend—your possible future
-in the work, we pray for you, O my Cape of
-Good Hope—upon the name you gain here.
-That name I know will be of one who obeys
-authority, however unreasonable, in the name
-of Him who is above all, and who is Reason
-itself—of one who submits to disagreeables, however<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-unjust, for the work’s sake and for His
-who tells us to love those we don’t like—a
-precept I follow oh so badly—of one who
-never criticizes so that it can even be guessed
-at that she has criticism in her heart—and
-who helps her companions to submit by her
-own noble example....</p>
-
-<p>“I have sometimes found in my life that
-the very hindrances I had been deploring were
-there expressly to fit me for the next step in
-my life. (This was the case—hindrances of
-<em>years</em>—before the Crimean War.)” And elsewhere
-she writes: “To have secured for you
-all the <em>circumstances</em> we wished for your work,
-I would gladly have given my life. But you
-are made to rise above circumstances; perhaps
-this is God’s way—His ways are not as our
-ways—of preparing you for the great work
-which I am persuaded He has in store for
-you some day.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is touching to find her adding in parenthesis
-that before her own work was given to
-her by the Great Unseen Commander, she had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-ten years of contradictions and disappointments,
-and adding, as if with a sigh from the heart,
-“And oh, how badly I did it!”</p>
-
-<p>There we have the humility of true greatness.
-All her work was amazing in its fruitfulness,
-but those who knew her best feel
-sometimes that the part of her work which
-was greatest of all and will endure longest is
-just the part of which most people know least.
-I mean her great labour of love for India,
-which I cannot doubt has already saved the
-lives of millions, and will in the future save
-the health and working power of millions more.</p>
-
-<p>Florence Nightingale would have enriched
-our calendar of uncanonized saints even if her
-disciplined high-hearted goodness had exercised
-an unseen spell by simply <em>being</em>, and had, by
-some limitation of body or of circumstance,
-been cut off from much active <em>doing</em>: for so
-loving and obedient a human will, looking ever
-to the Highest, as a handmaiden watches the
-eyes of her mistress, is always and everywhere
-a humane influence and a divine offering. But
-in her life—a light set on a hill—being and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-doing went hand in hand in twofold beauty
-and strength, for even through those years
-when she lay on her bed, a secluded prisoner,
-her activities were world-wide.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to the work for which she is
-most widely revered and loved, Miss Nightingale
-did three things—each leaving a golden
-imprint upon the history of our time:—</p>
-
-<p>She broke down a “Chinese wall” of prejudice
-with regard to the occupations of women,
-and opened up a new and delightful sphere of
-hard, but congenial, work for girls.</p>
-
-<p>She helped to reconstruct, on the lines of
-feminine common sense, the hygiene and the
-transport service of our army—yes, of the entire
-imperial army, for what is a success in one
-branch of our dominions cannot permanently
-remain unaccepted by the rest. And in all
-her work for our army she had, up to the
-time of his death, unbounded help from her
-friend, Lord Herbert.</p>
-
-<p>Last, and perhaps greatest of all, she initiated,
-with the help of Sir Bartle Frere, Sir John
-Lawrence, and other enlightened men of her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-time, the reform of insanitary and death-dealing
-neglect throughout the length and breadth of
-India, thus saving countless lives, not only
-from death, but from what is far worse—a
-maimed or invalid existence of lowered vitality
-and lessened mental powers.</p>
-
-<p>One of her friends, himself a great army
-doctor holding a high official position, has
-repeatedly spoken of her to me as the supreme
-embodiment of citizenship. She did indeed
-exemplify what Ruskin so nobly expressed in
-his essay on “Queens’ Gardens”—the fact that,
-while men and women differ profoundly and
-essentially, and life would lose in beauty if they
-did not, the state has need of them both; for
-what the woman should be at her own hearth,
-the guardian of order, of health, of beauty, and
-of love, that also should she be at that wider
-imperial hearth where there are children to be
-educated, soldiers to be equipped, wounded lives
-to be tended, and the health of this and future
-generations to be diligently guarded.</p>
-
-<p>“Think,” she said once to one of her nurses,
-“less of what you may gain than of what you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-may give.” Herself, she gave royally—gave her
-fortune, her life, her soul’s treasure. I read in
-a recent contemporary of high standing a
-review which ended with what seemed to me
-a very heathen sentence, which stamped itself
-on my memory by its arrogant narrowness.
-“Woman,” wrote the reviewer, “is always
-either frustrate or absorbed;” and there leaped
-to my heart the exclamation, “Here in Florence
-Nightingale is the answer; for in her we have
-one, known and read of all men, who was
-neither the one nor the other.” That there
-was supreme renunciation in her life, none
-who is born to womanhood can doubt; for
-where could there be any who would have
-been more superbly fitted for what she herself
-regarded as the natural lot of woman
-as wife and mother? But she, brilliant,
-beautiful, and worshipped, was called to a
-more difficult and lonely path, and if there
-was hidden suffering, it did but make her
-service of mankind the more untiring, her
-practical and keen-edged intellect the more
-active in good work, her tenderness to pain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-and humility of self-effacement the more beautiful
-and just.</p>
-
-<p>It has been said, and said truly, that she
-did not suffer fools gladly, and she knew well
-how very human she was in this and in other
-ways, as far removed from a cold and statuesque
-faultlessness as are all ardent, swift, loving
-natures here on earth. But her words were
-words of wisdom when she wrote to one dear
-to her whom she playfully named “her Cape
-of Good Hope”: “Let us be persecuted
-for righteousness’ sake, <em>but not for unrighteousness</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>The italics are mine, because in their warning
-they seem so singularly timely. And the entire
-sentence is completely in tune with that fine
-note with which she ends one of her delightful
-volumes on nursing—</p>
-
-<p>“I would earnestly ask my sisters to keep
-clear of both the jargons now current everywhere
-(for they are equally jargons): of the
-jargon, namely, about the ‘rights’ of women
-which urges women to do all that men do,
-including the medical and other professions,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-merely because men do it, and without regard
-to whether this <em>is</em> the best that women can
-do; and of the jargon which urges women to
-do nothing that men do, merely because they
-are women, and should be ‘recalled to a sense
-of their duty as women,’ and because ‘this
-is women’s work,’ and ‘that is men’s,’ and
-‘these are things which women should not
-do,’ which is all assertion and nothing more.
-Surely woman should bring the best she has,
-<em>whatever</em> that is, to the work of God’s world,
-without attending to either of these cries.
-For what are they, both of them, the one
-<em>just</em> as much as the other, but listening to the
-‘what people will say,’ to opinion, to the
-‘voices from without’? And as a wise man
-has said, no one has ever done anything great or
-useful by listening to the voices from without.</p>
-
-<p>“You do not want the effect of your good
-things to be, ‘How wonderful for a <em>woman</em>!’
-nor would you be deterred from good things
-by hearing it said, ‘Yes, but she ought not
-to have done this, because it is not suitable
-for a woman.’ But you want to do the thing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-that is good, whether it is ‘suitable for a
-woman,’ or not.</p>
-
-<p>“It does not make a thing good, that it is
-remarkable that a woman should have been
-able to do it. Neither does it make a thing
-bad, which would have been good had a man
-done it, that it has been done by a woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, leave these jargons, and go your way
-straight to God’s work, in simplicity and
-singleness of heart.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>Florence Nightingale: her home, her birthplace, and her family.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the heart of Derbyshire there is a quaint old
-church, once a private chapel, and possessing,
-instead of a churchyard, a bit of quiet greenness,
-of which the chief ornament, besides the old
-yew tree at the church door, is a kind of lovers’
-bower made by two ancient elder trees which
-have so intertwined their branches as to form an
-arbour, where in summer-time sweethearts can
-gossip and the children play. It belonged to
-a world far away from the world of to-day,
-when, in the high-backed pews reserved for the
-“quality,” little Florence Nightingale, in her
-Sunday attire that was completed by Leghorn hat
-and sandal shoes, made, Sunday after Sunday, a
-pretty vision for the villagers, in whose cottages
-she was early a welcome visitor. It was just
-such a church as we read of in George Eliot’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-stories, clerk and parson dividing the service
-between them, and the rustic bareness of the
-stone walls matched by the visible bell-ropes and
-the benches for the labouring people. But the
-special story that has come down from those
-days suggests that the parson was more satirical
-than Mr. Gilfil or Mr. Tryan, and it is to be
-feared that when he remarked that “a lie is a
-very useful thing in trade,” the people who
-quoted him in Derby market-place merely used
-his “Devil’s text” as a convenience and saw no
-satire in it at all. Have we really travelled a
-little way towards honesty since those days, or
-have we grown more hypocritical?</p>
-
-<p>The little girl in the squire’s pew grew up in
-a home where religious shams were not likely
-to be taken at their face value.</p>
-
-<p>Her father, who was one of the chief supporters
-of the cheap schools of the neighbourhood,
-had his own ways of helping the poor
-folk on his estate, but used to reply to some of
-the beseeching people who wanted money from
-him for local charities that he was “not born
-generous.” Generous or not, he had very decided<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-views about the education of his two
-children, Florence and Parthe. They enjoyed
-nearly a hundred years ago (Florence was born
-in 1820) as liberal a course of study as any High
-School girl of to-day, and no doubt it is true that
-the orderliness of mind and character, at which
-his methods aimed, proved of countless value to
-Florence in those later days, when her marvellous
-power in providing for minutest details
-without unnecessary fuss or friction banished
-the filth and chaos of the first Crimean hospitals,
-and transformed them into abodes of healing and
-of order. She grew up to be a beautiful and
-charming woman, for whom men would gladly
-have laid down their lives; yet her beauty and
-her charm alone could not have secured for our
-wounded soldiers in the Crimea, tortured by dirt
-and neglect, the swift change to cleanness and
-comfort and good nursing which her masterly
-and unbending methods aided her commanding
-personal influence to win.</p>
-
-<p>But this is leaping too far ahead. As yet she
-is only Parthenope’s little playfellow and schoolfellow
-in the room devoted to “lessons” at Lea<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-Hall, the small maiden who climbs the hill on
-Sundays to the church where the yew tree guards
-the door, and on week-days is busy or at play in
-the house that has been the home of her father’s
-family through many generations, and in the
-grounds of the manor that surround it.</p>
-
-<p>Lea Hall is in that part of the country which
-Father Benson has described in his novel, “Come
-Rack, come Rope,” and the Nightingale children
-were within easy reach of Dethick Hall, where
-young Anthony Babington had lived. It must
-have added zest to their history lessons and their
-girlish romancings to hear of the secret passage,
-which was supposed to lead right into Wingfield
-Manor, from the underground cellar close to the
-old wall that showed still where Dethick had
-once reared its stately buildings. The fact that
-the farm bailiff now kept his potatoes there and
-could not find the opening, would only make
-it a constant new ground for adventure and
-imagination. For they would be told of course—these
-children—how Mary Stuart had once
-been a prisoner at Dethick, and Anthony had
-vowed to be her servant in life or death and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-never cease from the struggle to set her free
-so long as life was in him. Nor did he; for
-he died before her, and it was not at Wingfield,
-but at Fotheringay, as these little
-students very well knew, no doubt, that her
-lovely head soon afterwards was laid upon the
-block.</p>
-
-<p>Enviable children to have such a playground
-of imagination at their doors! But, indeed, all
-children have that, and a bare room in a slum,
-or a little patch of desert ground, may for them
-be danced over by Queen Mab and all her fairies,
-or guarded by the very angel who led St. Peter
-out of prison. Still, it is very exciting to have
-history written beside the doorstep where you
-live, and if you grow up in a home where lesson
-books are an important part of the day’s duties,
-it is pleasant to find them making adventures for
-you on your father’s own estate. It mattered
-nothing that the story would all be told by those
-contending against Anthony’s particular form of
-religion, who would be ready to paint him with
-as black an ink as their regard for justice would
-allow. To a child, that would rather enhance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-the vividness of it all. And there was the actual
-kitchen still standing, with its little harmless-looking
-trapdoor in the roof that leads into the
-secret chamber, where the persecuted priests used
-to hide when they came to celebrate a secret
-Mass. No wonder the two children delighted
-in Dethick, and wove many a tale about it. For
-had they not seen with their very own eyes the
-great open fireplace in that kitchen, where venison
-used to be roasted, and the very roasting-jack
-hanging from its central beam where all the roof-beams
-were black with age and dark with many
-tragic memories?</p>
-
-<p>Dethick is but one of the three villages included
-in the ancient manor, the other two are
-Lea and Holloway; and in the days of King
-John, long before it came to the Nightingales,
-the De Alveleys had built a chapel there. Those
-who have read Mr. Skipton’s life of Nicholas
-Ferrar and know their John Inglesant, will be
-interested to hear that half this manor had passed
-through the hands of the Ferrars among others,
-and another portion had belonged to families
-whose names suggest a French origin. But the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-two inheritances had now met in the hands of
-the Nightingales.</p>
-
-<p>It is a very enchanting part of the Midlands.
-The silvery Derwent winds through the valleys,
-keeping fresh the fields of buttercups and meadowsweet
-and clover, and in the tall hedges wild
-roses mingle their sweetness with the more powerful
-fragrance of the honeysuckle, until both yield
-to the strange and overwhelming perfume of the
-elder tree. The limestone hills, with their bold
-and mountainlike outline, their tiny rills, and
-exquisite ferns, had been less spoiled in those
-days by the tramp of tourists; and the purity of
-the air, the peacefulness of the upland solitudes,
-would have a wholesome share in the “grace
-that can mould the maiden’s form by silent
-sympathy.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;" id="illus4">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Florence Nightingale’s Father.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was a very youthful little maiden as yet
-who had been transplanted into these English
-wilds from the glory and the sunshine of the
-Italy where she was born. After the valley of
-the Arno and the splendours of Florence, it may
-have seemed somewhat cold and bracing at times.
-Rightly or wrongly, the father of the little girls—for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-our heroine’s sister, named after another
-Italian city, shared all her life at this time—seems
-to a mere outsider a little cold and bracing
-too. He came of a very old family, and we
-hear of his “pride of birth.” His wife, on the
-other hand, whom Florence Nightingale resembled,
-lives before us in more warm and glowing
-colours, as one who did much to break down
-the barriers of caste and, with a heart of overflowing
-love, “went about doing good.” Both
-were people of real cultivation—good breeding
-being theirs by a happy inheritance—and each
-seems to have had a strong and distinctive
-personality. It might not be easy to say to
-which of the two the little daughter, who grew
-to such world-wide fame, owed most; but probably
-the equipment for her life-work was fairly
-divided between the two. There is no magnet
-so powerful as force of character, and it is clear
-that her father possessed moral and intellectual
-force of a notable sort. Love, in the sense of
-enthusiasm for humanity, will always be the
-heaven-born gift of one in whom religion is such
-a reality as it was with Florence Nightingale,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-but religious ardour may be sadly ineffective if
-defeated by the slack habits of a lifetime, or even
-by a moral and mental vagueness that befogs holy
-intentions. Mr. Edward Nightingale’s daughters
-were disciplined in a schoolroom where slackness
-and disorder were not permitted, and a somewhat
-severe training in the classics was supplemented
-by the example of Mrs. Nightingale’s excellent
-housewifery, and by that fine self-control in
-manners and behaviour which in the old-fashioned
-days used to be named “deportment.” Sports
-and outdoor exercises were a part—and a delightful
-part—of the day’s routine.</p>
-
-<p>But let us go back a few years and give a few
-pages to the place of Florence Nightingale’s birth
-and the history of her family. Her name, like
-that of another social reformer among Englishwomen,
-was linked with Italy, and she took it
-from the famous old Italian town in whose
-neighbourhood she was born. I have tried in
-vain to trace the authorship<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>—was it Ruskin or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-some less known writer?—who said of that town,
-“if you wish to see it to perfection, fix upon
-such a day as Florence owes the sun, and, climbing
-the hill of Bellosguardo, or past the stages of
-the Via Crucis to the church of San Miniato,
-look forth upon the scene before you. You
-trace the course of the Arno from the distant
-mountains on the right, through the heart of the
-city, winding along the fruitful valley toward
-Pisa. The city is beneath you, like a pearl set
-in emerald. All colours are in the landscape,
-and all sounds are in the air. The hills look
-almost heathery. The sombre olive and funereal
-cypress blend with the graceful acacia and the
-clasping vine. The hum of the insect and the
-carol of bird chime with the blithe voices of
-men; while dome, tower, mountains, the yellow
-river, the quaint bridges, spires, palaces, gardens,
-and the cloudless heavens overhanging, make up
-a panorama on which to gaze in trance of rapture
-until the spirit wearies from the exceeding beauty
-of the vision.”</p>
-
-<p>When on May 12, 1820, Florence Nightingale
-was born, her parents were staying at the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-Villa Colombaia, near to this beautiful City of
-Flowers; and when the question of a name for
-her arose, they were of one mind about it—she
-must be called after the city itself. They had no
-sons, and this child’s elder sister, their only other
-daughter, having been born at Naples, had taken
-its ancient and classical name of Parthenope.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<p>Their own family name had changed. Mr.
-Nightingale, who was first known as William
-Edward Shore, was the only son of Mr. William
-Shore of Tapton, in Derbyshire, and the child
-who was to reform England’s benighted views
-of nursing, and do so much for the health, not
-only of our British troops, but also of our Indian
-Army, was related through that family to John
-Shore, a famous physician in Derby in the reign
-of Charles the Second, as well as to the Governor-General
-of India who, twenty-three years before
-her birth, took the title of Baron Teignmouth.
-It was through her father’s mother, the only
-daughter of Mr. Evans of Cromford, that she
-was linked with the family of the Nightingales,
-whose name her father afterwards took. Mary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-Evans, her paternal grandmother, was the niece
-of “Old Peter,” a rich and roystering squire, who
-was well liked in his own neighbourhood, in
-spite of his nickname of “Madman Peter” and
-the rages that now and then overtook him.
-Florence Nightingale was, however, no descendant
-of his, for he never married, and all his possessions,
-except those which he sold to Sir Richard Arkwright,
-the famous cotton-spinner, came to his
-niece, who was the mother of Miss Nightingale’s
-father. When all this landed property came into
-the hands of Mr. Edward Shore, three years
-before his marriage and five years before Florence
-was born, his name was changed under the
-Prince Regent’s sign manual from Shore to
-Nightingale, in accordance with Peter Nightingale’s
-will. But he continued to live in Italy
-for a great part of every year until Florence was
-nearly five years old, though the change of
-ownership on the English estate was at once felt
-under the new squire, who was in most ways
-the very opposite of that “Old Peter,” of
-whom we read that when he had been drinking,
-as was then the fashion, he would frighten away<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-the servant-maids by rushing into the kitchen
-and throwing the puddings on the dust-heap.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Edward Nightingale, our heroine’s father,
-bore a character without fear or reproach. Educated
-at Edinburgh and at Trinity, Cambridge,
-he had afterwards travelled a good deal, at a time
-when travel was by no means the commonplace
-that it is now.</p>
-
-<p>He is described as “tall and slim,” and from
-the descriptions we have of him it is clear that
-no one, even at a glance, could have missed the
-note of distinction in his bearing, or mistaken
-him for other than that which he was proud to
-be, the cultivated and enlightened son of a fine
-old family.</p>
-
-<p>When we read that the lady he married was
-daughter of a strong Abolitionist, Mr. William
-Smith of Parndon, in Essex, we feel that the very
-name of Abolitionist belongs to a bygone past.</p>
-
-<p>In those days the American Civil War was
-still to come, but the horizon was already beginning
-to blacken for it, just as in Europe, while
-two happy little girls were playing hide-and-seek
-in the gardens of Lea Hall and racing with their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-dogs across the meadows to Dethick, the hush
-before the tempest did not blind wise statesmen
-to those dangers in the Near East which were to
-overwhelm us in so terrible a war.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Smith, in desiring ardently the abolition
-of slavery, was ahead of many Englishmen of his
-day. He was an eager philanthropist, who for
-half a century represented Norwich in Parliament,
-and had therefore real power in urging any good
-cause he had at heart. His daughter Frances,
-when she became Mrs. Nightingale, did not cease
-to labour among the poor in the spirit of her
-father and of her own benevolent heart. She
-was a beautiful and impressive woman, and in
-her untiring service of others seems to have been
-just the wife for Mr. Nightingale, who was ready
-to further every good work in his own neighbourhood.
-He, in his artistic and scholarly
-tastes, was as humane and enlightened as was the
-woman of his choice in her own skill of hand
-and charm of household guidance.</p>
-
-<p>For Mrs. Nightingale was not only a notable
-housekeeper and her husband’s companion in the
-world of books, she was also a woman whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-individuality of thought and action had been
-deepened by her practical faith, so that even at
-a time when England was still tied and bound
-by conventions of rank, from which the last
-fifty years have released many devotees, she felt
-the call of the Master to a deeper and wider
-sense of brotherhood, and had a great wish to
-break through artificial barriers.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, she found many innocent
-ways of doing so. But she did not know in
-these early days that in giving to the world a
-little daughter who was akin to her in this,
-she had found the best way of all; for that
-daughter was to serve others in the very spirit
-of those great ones of old—S. Teresa and S.
-Catharine and the Blessed Joan of Arc—to whom
-the real things were so real and so continually
-present that the world’s voices were as nothing
-in comparison. This was true also of Mrs. Browning,
-whose memory has already come to mind,
-as linked, like that of Florence Nightingale,
-though for quite other reasons, with the City
-of Flowers; and although a life of action in
-the ordinary sense was impossible for the author<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-of “Aurora Leigh,” yet it is remarkable how
-much she also did to arouse and set free her sisters,
-for she too, like the others, was a woman of great
-practical discernment.</p>
-
-<p>The little peasant maid of France, who was
-born to be a warrior and the deliverer of her
-people, had this in common with the little English
-girl born to a great inheritance and aiming
-at a higher and humbler estate wherein she was
-the queen of nurses, that both cared so much for
-the commands from above as to be very little
-influenced by the gossip round about.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>Life at Lea Hurst and Embley.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Florence was between five and six years old
-when the Nightingales moved from Lea Hall
-into their new home at Lea Hurst, a house
-commanding a specially beautiful outlook, and
-built under Mr. Nightingale’s own supervision
-with much care and taste, about a mile from the
-old home. It is only fourteen miles out of
-Derby, though there would seem to be many
-sleepy inhabitants of that aristocratic old town—like
-the old lady of Hendon who lived on into
-the twentieth century without having been into
-the roaring city of London hard by—who know
-nothing of the attractions within a few miles of
-them; for Mrs. Tooley tells an amusing story
-of a photographer there who supposed Lea Hurst
-to be a distinguished man and a local celebrity.</p>
-
-<p>To some it seemed that there was a certain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-bleakness in the country surrounding Lea Hall,
-but, though the two dwellings are so short a
-distance apart, Lea Hurst is set in a far more
-perfect landscape. Hills and woodlands, stretching
-far away to Dovedale, are commanded by
-the broad terrace of upland on which the house
-stands, and it looks across to the bold escarpment
-known as Crich Stand, while deep below, the
-Derwent makes music on its rocky course.
-Among the foxglove and the bracken, the
-gritstone rocks jutting forth are a hovering
-place for butterflies and a haunt of the wild
-bee.</p>
-
-<p>The house itself—shaped like a cross, gabled
-and mullioned, and heightened by substantial
-chimney-stacks—is solid, unpretending, satisfying
-to the eye. Above the fine oriel window in the
-drawing-room wing is the balcony pointed out
-to visitors where, they are told, after the Crimea
-“Miss Florence used to come out and speak to
-the people.”</p>
-
-<p>The building of the house was completed in
-1825, and above the door that date is inscribed,
-together with the letter N. The drawing-room<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-and library look south, and open on to the
-garden, and “from the library a flight of stone
-steps leads down to the lawn.” In the centre
-of the garden front an old chapel has been built
-into the mansion, and it may be that the prayers
-of the unknown dead have been answered in the
-life of the child who grew up under its shadow,
-and to whom the busy toiling world has owed
-so much.</p>
-
-<p>The terraced garden at the back of the house,
-with its sweet old-fashioned flowers and blossoming
-apple trees, has doubtless grown more delightful
-with every year of its advancing age, but what
-an interest the two little girls must have had
-when it was first being planted out and each could
-find a home for her favourite flowers! Fuchsias
-were among those loved by little Florence, who,
-as has already been noted, was only six years old
-when she and her sister and father and mother
-moved into Lea Hurst, and there was a large
-bed of these outside the chapel. The old schoolroom
-and nursery at the back of the house look
-out upon the hills, and in a quiet corner of the
-garden there is a summer-house where Florence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-and her only sister, who had no brothers to share
-their games, must often have played and worked.</p>
-
-<p>Lea Hurst is a quiet, beautiful home, characteristically
-English and unpretending, with a modest
-park-gate, and beyond the park those Lea Woods
-where the hyacinths bloom and where it is still
-told how “Miss Florence” loved to walk
-through the long winding avenue with its grand
-views of the distant hills and woods.</p>
-
-<p>But the Nightingales did not spend the whole
-year at Lea Hurst. In the autumn it was their
-custom to move to Embley, in Hampshire, where
-they spent the winter and early spring. They
-usually sent the servants on ahead with the
-luggage, and drove by easy stages in their own
-carriage, taking the journey at leisure, and putting
-up at inns by the way. Sometimes, of course,
-they travelled by coach. Those of us who only
-know the Derby road in the neighbourhood of
-towns like Nottingham and Derby now that
-its coaching glories are past, find it difficult to
-picture its gaiety in those old coaching days,
-when the very horses enjoyed the liveliness of
-the running, and the many carriages with their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-gay postilions and varied occupants were on the
-alert for neighbour or friend who might be posting
-in the same direction.</p>
-
-<p>Whether in autumn or in spring, the drive
-must have been a joy. The varied beauty of
-the Midlands recalls the lines in “Aurora Leigh”
-which speak of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Such nooks of valleys lined with orchises,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fed full of noises by invisible streams;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And open pastures where you scarcely tell</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">White daisies from white dew, ...</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">... the clouds, the fields,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The happy violets hiding from the roads</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The primroses run down to, carrying gold;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The tangled hedgerows, where the cows push out</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Impatient horns and tolerant churning mouths</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">’Twixt dripping ash-boughs,—hedgerows all alive</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With birds and gnats and large white butterflies</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Which look as if the May-flower had caught life</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And palpitated forth upon the wind;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Hills, vales, woods, netted in a silver mist,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Farms, granges, doubled up among the hills;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And cattle grazing in the watered vales,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And cottage-chimneys smoking from the woods,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And cottage-gardens smelling everywhere,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Confused with smell of orchards.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Derbyshire itself, with its wild lilies of the
-valley, its ferns and daffodils and laughing
-streams, is hardly more “taking” than the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-country through which winds the silver Trent,
-past Nottingham Castle, perched on its rock and
-promontory above the fields where the wild
-crocus in those days made sheets of vivid purple,
-and the steep banks of Clifton Grove, with its
-shoals of blue forget-me-not, making a dim, tree-crowned
-outline, with here and there a gleam of
-silver, as seen by the chariots “on the road.”
-Wollaton Park, with its great beeches and limes
-and glimpses of shy deer, would give gold and
-crimson and a thousand shades of russet to the
-picture.</p>
-
-<p>And farther south, at the other end of the
-journey, what miles of orchards and pine woods
-and sweet-scented heather—what rolling Downs
-and Surrey homesteads along the turnpike roads!</p>
-
-<p>Though Parthenope and Florence had no
-brothers to play with them, they seem to have
-had a great variety of active occupations, both
-at Lea Hurst and at Embley. Of course they
-had their dolls, like other little girls; but those
-which belonged to Florence had a way of falling
-into the doctor’s hands—an imaginary doctor, of
-course—and needing a good deal of tender care<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-and attention. Florence seemed never tired of
-looking after their various ailments. In fact,
-she had at times a whole dolls’ hospital to tend.
-She probably picked up a little amateur knowledge
-of medicine quite early in life; for the
-poor people in the neighbourhood used to come
-to her mother for help in any little emergency,
-and Mrs. Nightingale was, like many another
-Lady Bountiful of her generation, equipped with
-a certain amount of traditional wisdom and kindly
-common sense, aided in her case by wider reading
-and a better educated mind than the ordinary.</p>
-
-<p>Florence, having somehow escaped measles
-and whooping-cough, was not allowed to run
-into infection in the cottages, but that did not
-prevent the sending of beef-teas and jellies and
-other helpful and neighbourly gifts, which
-could be tied to her pony’s saddle-bow and
-left by her at the door. She learned to know
-the cottagers with a frank and very human
-intimacy, and their homely wit touched her
-own, their shrewdness and sympathy met their
-like in her, and as she grew older, all this
-added to her power and her charm. She<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-learned to know both the north and the south
-in “her ain countree,” and when, later in life,
-she was the wise angel of hope to the brave
-“Tommies,” recruited from such homes, meeting
-them as she did amid unrecorded agonies
-that were far worse than the horrors of the
-battlefield, she understood them all the better
-as men, because she had known just such boys
-as they had been and was familiar with just
-such homes as those in which they grew up.
-According to Mrs. Tooley’s biography, the
-farmhouse where Adam Bede fell in love with
-Hetty was just the other side of the meadows
-at Lea Hurst, and the old mill-wheel, where
-Maggie Tulliver’s father ground the corn of
-the neighbourhood, was only two or three
-miles away. Marian Evans, of whom the
-world still thinks and speaks by her pen-name
-of George Eliot, came sometimes to visit her
-kinsfolk in the thatched cottage by Wirksworth
-Tape Mills, and has left us in her
-earlier novels a vivid picture of the cottage
-life that surrounded our heroine during that
-part of the year which she spent in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-Derbyshire home. The children, of course, had
-their own garden, which they dug and watered,
-and Florence was so fond of flowers and animals
-that that again was an added bond with her
-rustic neighbours. Flower-missions had not in
-those days been heard of, but she often tied up
-a nosegay of wild flowers for invalid villagers,
-or took some of her favourites out of her own
-garden to the sick people whom she visited.</p>
-
-<p>The story of her first patient has already been
-told several times in print, but no biography
-would be complete without it.</p>
-
-<p>She had nursed many dolls back to convalescence—to
-say nothing of “setting” their
-broken limbs—tempted their delicate appetites
-with dainties offered on toy plates, and dressed
-the burns when her sister let them tumble too
-near the nursery fire; but as yet she had had
-no real human patient, when one day, out
-riding with her friend the vicar over the
-Hampshire Downs near Embley, they noticed
-that Roger, an old shepherd whom they knew
-very well, was having endless trouble in getting
-his sheep together.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Cap?” asked the vicar, drawing
-up his horse, for Cap was a very capable and
-trusted sheep-dog.</p>
-
-<p>“T’ boys have been throwing stones at ‘n
-and they’ve broken t’ poor chap’s leg. Won’t
-ever be any good no more, a’m thinkin’. Best
-put him out of ‘s misery.”</p>
-
-<p>“O Roger!” exclaimed a clear young voice,
-“poor Cap’s leg broken? Can’t we do anything
-for him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?” added Florence eagerly,
-for the voice was that of the future “Queen
-of Nurses.” “Oh, we can’t leave him all alone
-in his pain. Just think how cruel!”</p>
-
-<p>“Us can’t do no good, miss, nor you nayther.
-I’se just take a cord to him to-night; ’tis the
-only way to ease his pain.”</p>
-
-<p>But Florence turned to plead with the vicar,
-and to beg that some further effort should be
-made.</p>
-
-<p>The vicar, urged by the compassion in the
-young face looking up to his, turned his horse’s
-head in the right direction for a visit to Cap.
-In a moment Florence’s pony was put to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-gallop, and she was the first to arrive at the
-shed where the poor dog was lying.</p>
-
-<p>Cap’s faithful brown eyes were soon lifted
-to hers, as she tenderly tried to make him
-understand her loving sympathy, caressing him
-with her little hand and speaking soothingly
-with her own lips and eyes; till, like the
-suffering men whose wounds would in the far-off
-years be eased through her skill, the dog
-looked up at her in dumb and worshipping
-gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>The vicar was equal to the occasion, and
-soon discovered that the leg was not broken at
-all, but badly bruised and swollen, and perhaps
-an even greater source of danger and pain than
-if there had merely been a broken bone.</p>
-
-<p>When he suggested a “compress,” his child-companion
-was puzzled for a moment. She
-thought she knew all about poultices and bandages,
-and I daresay she had often given her
-dolls a mustard plaster; but a “compress”
-sounded like something new and mysterious.
-It was, of course, a great relief when she learned
-that she only needed to keep soaking cloths in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-hot water, wringing them out, and folding
-them over Cap’s injured leg, renewing them
-as quickly as they cooled. She was a nimble
-little person, and, with the help of the shepherd
-boy, soon got a fire of sticks kindled in
-a neighbouring cottage and the kettle singing
-on it with the necessary boiling water. But
-now what to do for cloths? Time is of importance
-in sick-nursing when every moment
-of delay means added pain to the sufferer.
-To ride home would have meant the loss of
-an hour or two, and thrifty cottagers are not
-always ready to tear up scant and cherished
-house-linen for the nursing of dogs. But
-Florence was not to be baffled. To her great
-delight she espied the shepherd’s smock hanging
-up behind the door. She was a fearless soul,
-and felt no doubt whatever that her mother
-would pay for a new smock. “This will just
-do,” she said, and, since that delightful vicar
-gave a nod of entire approval, she promptly
-tore it into strips.</p>
-
-<p>Then back to Cap’s hut she hastened, with
-her small henchman beside her carrying the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-kettle and the basin; for by this time he, the
-boy shepherd, began to be interested too, and
-the vicar’s superintendence was no longer needed.
-A message of explanation was sent to Embley
-that Mr. and Mrs. Nightingale might not be
-anxious, and for several hours Florence gave
-herself up to nursing her patient. Cap was
-passive in her hands, and the hot fomentations
-gradually lessened the pain and the swelling.</p>
-
-<p>Imagine the wonder and gratitude of old
-Roger when he turned up with the rope in
-his hand and a leaden weight on his poor old
-heart! Cap, of course, knew his step and
-greeted him with a little whine of satisfaction,
-as if to be the first to tell him the good
-news.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, missy, you have been doing wonders,”
-he said. “I never thought to see t’ poor dog
-look up at me like that again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” exclaimed the happy young nurse;
-“doesn’t he look better? Well, Roger, you
-can throw away the rope. I shall want you
-to help me make these hot compresses.”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Florence is quite right, Roger,” interposed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-the vicar; “you’ll soon have Cap running
-about again.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I cannot thank you and the young
-lady enough, yer riv’rence. And I’ll mind all
-the instrooctions for he.”</p>
-
-<p>As the faithful dog looked up at him, eased
-and content, it was a very happy man that was
-old Roger. But the doctor-nurse was not prepared
-to lose her occupation too quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall come and see him again to-morrow,
-Roger,” she said; “I know mamma will let me,
-when I just explain to her about it all.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>The weaving of many threads, both of evil and of good.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>While Florence Nightingale and her sister were
-working hard at history and languages and all
-useful feminine arts, romping in the sunny
-Hampshire gardens, or riding amongst the
-Derbyshire hills, the big world outside their
-quiet paradise was heaping fuel for the fires
-of war, which at last, when after a quarter of
-a century it flared up out of its long-prepared
-combustibles, was “to bring to death a million
-workmen and soldiers, consume vast wealth,
-shatter the framework of the European system,
-and make it hard henceforth for any nation
-to be safe except by sheer strength.” And
-above all its devastation, remembered as a part
-of its undying record, the name of one of these
-happy children was to be blazoned on the page
-of history.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
-
-<p>Already at the beginning of the century the
-first Napoleon had said that the Czar of Russia
-was always threatening Constantinople and never
-taking it, and by the time Florence Nightingale
-was twelve years old, it might be said of that
-Czar that while “holding the boundless authority
-of an Oriental potentate,” his power was supplemented
-by the far-reaching transmission of his
-orders across the telegraph wires, and if Kinglake
-does not exaggerate, “he would touch the
-bell and kindle a war, without hearing counsel
-from any living man.”</p>
-
-<p>The project against Constantinople was a
-scheme of conquest continually to be delayed,
-but never discarded, and, happen what might,
-it was never to be endured that the prospect
-of Russia’s attaining some day to the Bosphorus
-should be shut out by the ambition of any
-other Power. Nicholas was quite aware that
-multitudes of the pious throughout his vast
-dominions dwelt upon the thought of their
-co-religionists under the Turkish rule, and
-looked to the shining cross of St. Sophia,
-symbol of their faith above the church founded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-by Constantine, as the goal of political unity
-for a “suppliant nation.”</p>
-
-<p>And Kinglake tells us with an almost acid
-irony of Louis Napoleon, that he who was by
-the Senatus-Consulte of 1804 the statutory
-heir of the great Bonaparte, and after his exile
-and imprisonment had returned to France,
-laboured to show all men “how beautifully Nature
-in her infinite wisdom had adapted that same
-France to the service of the Bonapartes; and
-how, without the fostering care of these same
-Bonapartes, the creature was doomed to degenerate,
-and to perish out of the world, and was considering
-how it was possible at the beginning of the
-nineteenth century to make the coarse Bonaparte
-yoke of 1804 sit kindly upon her neck.”</p>
-
-<p>The day was drawing near when a great war
-would seem to him to offer just the opportunity
-he wanted.</p>
-
-<p>Far away as yet was that awful massacre of
-peaceful citizens in Paris in 1851, with which
-the name of Louis Napoleon was associated as
-responsible for the <i lang="fr">coup d’état</i>—a massacre
-probably the result of brutal panic on the part<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-of the soldiers, the civilians, and that craven
-president, Louis Napoleon himself, whose conscience
-made a coward of him, and whose
-terror usually took the form of brutality—but
-long before that date, by his callous plotting
-and underhand self-seeking, he was preparing
-forces which then made for death and terror,
-and by that time had more or less broken
-the manhood of his beautiful Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Yet all over the world at all times, while
-the enemy is sowing tares in the field, the
-good seed is ripening also in the ground for
-the harvest; and through these same years far-off
-threads were being woven, ready to make
-part of the warp and woof of a life, as yet
-busied with the duties and joys of childhood,
-but one day to thrill the hearts of Europe
-and be remembered while time shall last.</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth Fry, who was to be one of its
-decisive influences, was bringing new light and
-hope into the noisome prisons of a bygone
-century, and we shall see how her life-work
-was not without its influence later on the life of
-the child growing up at Embley and Lea Hurst.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<p>And a child nearly of Florence Nightingale’s
-own age, who was one day to cross her path
-with friendly help at an important crisis, was
-playing with her sister Curlinda—Sir Walter
-Scott’s nickname for her real name of Caroline—and
-being drilled in manners in French
-schools in Paris and Versailles, before her
-family moved to Edinburgh and her more
-serious lessons began. This was Felicia Skene,
-who was afterwards able to give momentary,
-but highly important help, at a critical moment
-in Florence Nightingale’s career. Like Florence
-herself, she was born amid romantic surroundings,
-though not in Italy but in Provence,
-and was named after her French godmother,
-a certain Comtesse de Felicité. Her two
-earliest recollections were of the alarming and
-enraged gesticulations of Liszt when giving a
-music lesson to her frightened sisters, and the
-very different vision of a lumbering coach and
-six accompanied by mounted soldiers—the coach
-and six wherein sat Charles the Tenth, who was
-soon afterwards to take refuge in Holyrood.
-That was in Paris, where her family went to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-live when she was six years old, but at the
-time of Cap’s accident they had already moved
-to Edinburgh, where her chief friends and
-playmates were the little Lockharts and the
-children of the murdered Duc de Berri. It was
-there that Sir Walter Scott, on the day when
-he heard of his bankruptcy, came and sat
-quietly by the little Felicia, and bade her tell
-him fairy stories, as he didn’t want to talk
-much himself. He was an old and dear friend
-of her father, one link between them being
-the fact that Mr. Skene was related by marriage
-to the beautiful Williamina Stuart with whom
-Scott in his early days had fallen deeply and
-ardently in love.</p>
-
-<p>The little Felicia was at this time a very
-lively child and full of innocent mischief. Her
-later devotion to the sick and poor did not begin
-so early as was the case with Florence Nightingale,
-though there came a time when she and
-Florence met in after life as equals and fellow-soldiers
-in the great campaign against human
-suffering. Her travels and adventures in Greece
-and her popularity at the Athenian court were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-still hidden in the future, and while Florence at
-Embley and Lea Hurst was gradually unfolding
-a sweetness of nature that was by no means blind
-to the humorous side of things, and a highly
-practical thoroughness in all she undertook,
-Felicia was enjoying a merry home-life under the
-governorship of Miss Palmer, whom she nicknamed
-Pompey, and being prepared for confirmation
-by her father’s friend, Dean Ramsay. We
-are told of her that she might have said with
-Coppée, “J’ai eu toujours besoin de Dieu.” Full
-of fun and of interest in life’s great adventure,
-for others quite as much as for herself, religion
-was the moving force that moulded the soul
-of her to much unforeseen self-sacrifice as yet
-undreamed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>The activities of girlhood—Elizabeth Fry—Felicia Skene again.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But we are wandering away from Embley and
-from the two daughters of the squire, who were
-already the delight of the village.</p>
-
-<p>Cap was by no means the only animal who
-owed much to Florence, and Peggy, a favourite
-old pony, now holiday-making in the paddock,
-looked for frequent visits and much sport between
-lesson hours.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor old Peggy, then; would she like a
-carrot?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, where is it, then? See if you can find
-it, Peggy.”</p>
-
-<p>And then a little game followed, to which the
-beloved pony was quite accustomed—snuffing
-round her young mistress and being teased and
-tantalized for a minute or two, just to heighten
-the coming pleasure, until at last the pocket was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-found where the precious delicacy was hidden,
-and the daily feast began, a feast not of carrots
-only, for caresses were of course a part of the
-ritual.</p>
-
-<p>Florence had much good fellowship also with
-the wild squirrels of the neighbourhood, especially
-in one long avenue that was their favourite abode.
-They were not in the least afraid of her, and
-would come leaping down after the nuts that she
-dropped for them as she walked along. Sometimes
-she would turn sharp round and startle
-them back into their homes, but it was easy
-to tempt them down again. She was quick at
-finding and guarding the nests of brooding birds,
-and suffered very keenly as a child when the
-young ones were taken away from their mothers.</p>
-
-<p>Lambs and calves soon learned that she was
-fond of them, and the affection was not on her
-side only. But among the pets that the two
-girls were allowed to have, the ailing ones were
-always the most interesting to the future nurse.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot, however, be too strongly stated that
-there was nothing sentimental or lackadaisical in
-the very vigorous and hard-working life that she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-led. It was not by any means all songs and roses,
-though it was full of the happiness of a well-ordered
-and loving existence. Her father was
-a rigid disciplinarian, and nothing casual or easygoing
-was allowed in the Embley schoolroom.
-For any work carelessly done there was punishment
-as well as reproof, and no shamming of any
-sort was allowed. Hours must be punctually
-kept, and, whether the lesson for the moment
-was Latin, Greek, or mathematics, or the sewing
-of a fine and exquisite seam, it must come up to
-the necessary standard and be satisfactorily done.
-The master-mind that so swiftly transformed the
-filthy horrors of Scutari into a well-ordered hospital,
-and could dare to walk through minor
-difficulties and objections as though they did not
-exist, was educated in a severe and early school;
-and the striking modesty and gentleness of Florence
-Nightingale’s girlhood was the deeper for
-having grappled with enough real knowledge to
-know its own ignorances and limitations, and
-treat the personality of others with a deference
-which was a part of her charm.</p>
-
-<p>And if study was made a serious business, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-sisters enjoyed to the full the healthy advantages
-of country life. They scampered about the park
-with their dogs, rode their ponies over hill and
-dale, spent long days in the woods among the
-bluebells and primroses, and in summer tumbled
-about in the sweet-scented hay. “During the
-summer at Lea Hurst, lessons were a little relaxed
-in favour of outdoor life; but on the return
-to Embley for the winter, schoolroom routine
-was again enforced on very strict lines.”<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>In Florence Nightingale’s Derbyshire home
-the experiments in methods of healing which
-dispensed with drugs could not fail to arouse
-attention and discussion, for Mr. John Smedley’s
-newly-built cure-house stood at the foot of the
-hill below Lea Hurst, and before Florence Nightingale
-was twenty she had already begun to turn
-her attention definitely in the direction of nursing.
-Everything tended to deepen this idea.
-She was already able to do much for the villagers,
-and in any case of illness they were always eager
-to let her know. The consumptive girl whose
-room she gladdened with flowers was but one of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-the many ailing folk who found comfort and joy
-in her presence. “Miss Florence had a way
-with her that made them feel better,” they said.</p>
-
-<p>In those days nursing as a profession did not
-exist. When it was not done wholly for love
-by the unselfish maiden aunt or sister, who was
-supposed, as a matter of course, to be always at
-the disposal of the sick people among her kinsfolk,
-it had come to be too often a mere callous
-trade, carried on by ignorant and grasping women,
-who were not even clean or of good character.
-The turning of a Scutari hell into a hospital
-that seemed heaven by comparison, was a smaller
-miracle than that which Miss Nightingale’s influence
-was destined later to achieve in changing
-a despised and brutalized occupation throughout a
-whole empire into a noble and distinguished art.</p>
-
-<p>Of course it must never be forgotten that
-through all the centuries since the Christian
-Church was founded, there had been Catholic
-sisterhoods with whom the real and the ideal
-were one—Sisters of Mercy, who were not only
-refined and cultivated gentlewomen, but the most
-devoted and self-sacrificing of human souls.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
-
-<p>And now in England, in that Society of
-Friends, which among Christian communities
-might seem outwardly farthest away from a
-communion valuing as its very language the
-ancient symbols and ritual of the Catholic
-Church, yet was perhaps by its obedience to
-the inward voice more in sympathy with the
-sisterhoods of that Church than were many other
-religious groups, there had been lifted up by
-Elizabeth Fry a new standard of duty in this
-matter, which in her hands became a new standard
-of nursing, to be passed on in old age by
-her saintly hands into the young and powerful
-grasp of the brilliant girl who is the heroine
-of our story. The name of Elizabeth Fry is
-associated with the reform of our prisons, but
-it is less commonly known that she was also a
-pioneer of decent nursing. She understood with
-entire simplicity the words, “I was sick and in
-prison, and ye visited me.” Perhaps it was not
-mere coincidence that the words occur in the
-“lesson” appointed for the 15th of February—the
-day noted in Elizabeth Fry’s journal as the
-date of that visit to Newgate, when the poor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-felons she was yearning to help fell on their
-knees and prayed to a divine unseen Presence.
-In a recent number of the <cite>Times</cite> which celebrates
-her centenary a quotation from her diary is given
-which tells in her own words:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I heard weeping, and I thought they appeared
-much tendered; a very solemn quiet
-was observed; it was a striking scene, the
-poor people on their knees around us, in their
-deplorable condition.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And the <cite>Times</cite> goes on to say, “nothing appears
-but those qualities of helpfulness, sympathy,
-and love which could tame the most savage
-natures, silence the voice of profanity and blasphemy,
-and subdue all around her by a sense
-of her common sisterhood even with the vilest
-of them in the love of God and the service of
-man.... But the deepest note of her nature
-was an intense enthusiasm of humanity. It was
-this which inspired and sustained all her efforts
-from first to last—even in her earlier and more
-frivolous days—for the welfare and uplifting of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-her fellow-creatures; and it is only right to add
-that it was itself sustained by her deep and
-abiding conviction that it is only by the love
-of God that the service of man can be sanctified
-and made to prosper.” A letter followed next
-day from Mr. Julian Hill, who actually remembers
-her, and tells how the Institution of Nursing
-Sisters which she organized grew out of her deep
-pity for the victims of Sairey Gamp and her
-kind.</p>
-
-<p>All this was preparing the way for the wider
-and more successful nursing crusade in which
-her memory and influence were to inspire the
-brave young soul of Florence Nightingale.
-Speaking of all the difficulties that a blindly
-conventional world is always ready to throw in
-the way of any such new path, her old friend
-writes: “Such difficulties Mrs. Fry and Miss
-Nightingale brushed contemptuously aside.”</p>
-
-<p>But in our story Miss Nightingale is as yet
-only lately out of the schoolroom. And Elizabeth
-Fry’s life was by no means alone, as we
-have seen, in its preparation of her appointed
-path, for about the time that Florence Nightingale<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-was taking her place in the brilliant society
-that met about her father’s board, and Felicia
-Skene was “coming out,” a new experiment was
-being made by a devout member of the Lutheran
-Church, an experiment which was to play an
-important part in the world’s history, though
-so quietly and unobtrusively carried out.</p>
-
-<p>We must not anticipate—we shall read of
-that in a later chapter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>Home duties and pleasures—The brewing of war.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Florence was very happy as her mother’s
-almoner, and in her modest and unobtrusive way
-was the life and soul of the village festivities
-that centred in the church and school and were
-planned in many instances by her father and
-mother. It is one of the happy characteristics
-of our time that much innocent grace and
-merriment have been revived in the teaching
-of beautiful old morris dances and other peasant
-festivities that had been banished by the rigour
-of a perverted Puritanism, and the squire of Lea
-Hurst and his wife were before their time in
-such matters. There was a yearly function of
-prize-giving and speech-making and dancing,
-known as the children’s “Feast Day,” to which
-the scholars came in procession to the Hall,
-with their wreaths and garlands, to the music<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-of a good marching band provided by the squire,
-and afterwards they had tea in the fields below
-the Hall garden, served by Mrs. Nightingale
-and her daughters and the Hall servants, and then
-ended their day with merry outdoor dancing.
-For the little ones Florence planned all kinds
-of games; the children, indeed, were her special
-care, and by the time the evening sun was
-making pomp of gold and purple in the sky
-above the valley of the Derwent, there came
-the crowning event of the day when on the
-garden terrace the two daughters of the house
-distributed their gifts to the happy scholars.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Tooley in her biography calls up for us
-in a line or two a vision of Florence as she
-was remembered by one old lady, who had often
-been present and recalled her slender charm,
-herself as sweet as the rose which she often
-wore in her neatly braided hair, brown hair
-with a glint of gold in it, glossy and smooth
-and characteristic of youth and health. We
-have from one and another a glimpse of the
-harmonious simplicity also of her dress—the
-soft muslin gown, the little silk fichu crossed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-upon her breast, the modest Leghorn bonnet
-with its rose. Or in winter, riding about in
-the neighbourhood of Embley and distributing
-her little personal gifts at Christmas among
-the old women—tea and warm petticoats—her
-“ermine tippet and muff and beaver hat.”</p>
-
-<p>She helped in the training of young voices
-in the village, and was among the entertainers
-when the carol-singers enjoyed their mince-pies
-and annual coins in the hall. The workhouse
-knew her well, and any wise enterprise in the
-neighbourhood for help or healing among the
-poor and the sad was sure of her presence and of
-all the co-operation in the power of her neighbours,
-Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Herbert, with whom
-for some years before the Crimea she shared
-much companionship in such work. This
-friendship was an important influence in our
-heroine’s life, for Mr. Herbert was of those
-who reveal to the dullest a little of the divine
-beauty and love, and his wife was through all
-their married life his faithful and devoted friend,
-so that they made a strong trio of sympathetic
-workers; for “Liz,” as her husband usually<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-called her in his letters to their common friend
-Florence Nightingale, seemed to have fully shared
-his unbounded faith in the noble powers and high
-aims of the said Florence, whom she too loved
-and admired. She was a daughter of General
-Charles Ashe à Court, and she and Sidney
-Herbert had known one another as children.
-Indeed, it was in those early days, when she
-was quite a little child, that Elizabeth, who
-grew up to be one of the most beautiful women
-of her day, said of Sidney, then, of course, a mere
-boy, that that was the boy she was going to
-marry, and that she would never marry any one
-else. Many a long year, however, had rolled
-between before he rode over to Amington from
-Drayton, where he often met her, though no
-longer such near neighbours as in the early
-Wiltshire days, and asked the beautiful Elizabeth
-to be his wife. The intimacy between the two
-families had never ceased, and General à Court,
-himself member for Wilton, had worked hard
-for Sidney’s first election for the county. We
-shall hear more of these dear and early friends
-of Florence Nightingale as her story unfolds,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-but let us turn now for a moment to
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>Her life was many-sided, and her devotion
-to good works did not arise from any lack of
-knowledge of the world. She was presented, of
-course, like other girls of her order, and had her
-“seasons” in London as well as her share in
-country society. A young and lovely girl, whose
-father had been wise enough to give her all the
-education and advantages of a promising boy,
-and who excelled also in every distinctive feminine
-accomplishment and “pure womanliness,”
-had her earthly kingdom at her feet. But her
-soul was more and more deeply bent on a life
-spent in service and consecrated to the good of
-others. Her Sunday class, in the old building
-known as the “Chapel” at Lea Hurst, was but
-one of her many efforts in her father’s special
-domain in Derbyshire, and girls of every faith
-came to her there without distinction of creed.
-They were mostly workers in the hosiery mills
-owned by John Smedley, and many of them,
-like their master, were Methodists. She sang
-to them, and they still remember the sweetness<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-of her voice and “how beautifully Miss Florence
-used to talk,” as they sat together through many
-a sunny afternoon in the tiny stone building
-overlooking Lea Hurst gardens. Cromford
-Church, built by Sir Richard Arkwright, was
-then comparatively new, and time had not
-made of it the pretty picture that it is now,
-in its bosoming trees above the river; but it
-played a considerable part in Florence Nightingale’s
-youth, when the vicar and the Arkwright
-of her day—old Sir Richard’s tomb in the chancel
-bears the earlier date of 1792—organized
-many a kind scheme for the good of the parish,
-in which the squire’s two daughters gave their
-help.</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Nightingale was not of a type to
-consider these amateur pleasures a sufficient
-training for her life-work, and that life-work
-was already taking a more or less definite shape
-in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>She herself has written:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I would say to all young ladies who are
-called to any particular vocation, qualify yourselves<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-for it as a man does for his work. Don’t
-think you can undertake it otherwise. Submit
-yourselves to the rules of business as men do,
-by which alone you can make God’s business
-succeed, for He has never said that He will give
-His success and His blessing to sketchy and
-unfinished work.” And on another occasion she
-wrote that “three-fourths of the whole mischief
-in women’s lives arises from their excepting
-themselves from the rules of training considered
-needful for men.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It has already been said that her thought was
-more and more directed towards nursing, and
-in various ways she was quietly preparing herself
-to that end.</p>
-
-<p>Her interview with the Quaker-saint, Elizabeth
-Fry, though deliberately sought and of abiding
-effect, was but a brief episode. It was about
-this time that they met in London. The serene
-old Quakeress, through whose countenance looked
-forth such a heavenly soul, was no doubt keenly
-interested in the ardent, witty, beautiful girl
-who came to her for inspiration and counsel.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-They had much in common, and who knows
-but the older woman, with all her weight of
-experience, her saintly character, and ripened
-harvest, may yet in some ways have felt herself
-the younger of the two; for she had come to
-that quiet threshold of the life beyond, where
-a soul like hers has part in the simple joys of
-the Divine Child, and looks tenderly on those
-who are still in the fires of battle through which
-they have passed.</p>
-
-<p>Her own girlhood had defied in innocent
-ways the strictness of the Quaker rule. Imagine
-a young Quakeress of those days wearing, as she
-had done on occasion, a red riding habit!</p>
-
-<p>She had been fond of dancing, and would have,
-I suspect, a very healthy human interest in the
-activities of a girl in Society, though she would
-enter into Florence Nightingale’s resolve that
-her life should not be frittered away in a self-centred
-round, while men and women, for whom
-her Master died, were themselves suffering a
-slow death in workhouses and prisons and hospitals,
-with none to tend their wounds of soul
-and body.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span></p>
-
-<p>Be this as it may—and without a record of
-their conversation it is easy to go astray in
-imagining—we do know that like all the greatest
-saints they were both very practical in their
-Christianity, and did not care too much what
-was thought of their actions, so long as they
-were right in the sight of God. In their
-common sense, their humility, their warm,
-quick-beating heart of humanity, they were
-kindred spirits.</p>
-
-<p>The interview bore fruit even outwardly
-afterwards in a very important way. For it
-was from Elizabeth Fry that Florence Nightingale
-first heard of Pastor Fliedner and his
-institute for training nurses at Kaiserswerth, as
-well as of Elizabeth Fry’s own institute for a
-like purpose in London, which first suggested
-the Kaiserswerth training home, thus returning
-in ever-widening blessing the harvest of its seed.</p>
-
-<p>Her desire was for definite preparatory knowledge
-and discipline, and we of this generation
-can hardly realize how much searching must
-have been necessary before the adequate training
-could be found. Certificated nursing is now<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-a commonplace, and we forget that it dates
-from Miss Nightingale’s efforts after her return
-from the Crimea. We have only to turn to
-the life of Felicia Skene and her lonely labour
-of love at the time when the cholera visited
-Oxford—some twelve years later than Florence
-Nightingale’s seventeenth birthday, that is to
-say, in 1849-51, and again in 1854—to gain
-some idea of the bareness of the field. Sir
-Henry Acland, whose intimate friendship with
-Felicia dates from their common labours among
-the cholera patients, has described one among
-the terrible cases for which there would, it
-seems, have been no human aid, but for their
-discovery of the patient’s neglected helplessness.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“She had no blanket,” he says, “or any
-covering but the ragged cotton clothes she had
-on. She rolled screaming. One woman, scarcely
-sober, sat by; she sat with a pipe in her mouth,
-looking on. To treat her in this state was
-hopeless. She was to be removed. There was
-a press of work at the hospital, and a delay.
-When the carriers came, her saturated garments<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-were stripped off, and in the finer linen and in
-the blankets of a wealthier woman she was
-borne away, and in the hospital she died.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This is given, it would seem, as but one case
-among hundreds.</p>
-
-<p>Three old cattle-sheds were turned into a sort
-of impromptu hospital, to which some of the
-smallpox and cholera patients were carried, and
-the clergy, especially Mr. Charles Marriott and
-Mr. Venables, did all they could for old and
-young alike, seconding the doctors, with Sir
-Henry at their head, in cheering and helping
-every one in the stricken town; and Miss
-Skene’s friend, Miss Hughes, Sister Marion,
-directed the women called in to help, who there
-received a kind of rough-and-ready training.
-But more overwhelming still was Miss Skene’s
-own work of home nursing in the cottages, at
-first single-handed, and afterwards at the head
-of a band of women engaged by the deputy
-chairman as her servants in the work, of whom
-many were ignorant and needed training. “By
-day and by night she visited,” writes Sir Henry.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-“She plied this task, and when she rested—or
-where as long at least as she knew of a house
-where disease had entered—is known to herself
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile a critical moment had arisen in
-the affairs of Europe. Our own Premier, Lord
-Aberdeen, had long been regarded as the very
-head and front of the Peace Movement in England,
-and when he succeeded the wary Lord
-Palmerston, it is said that Nicholas, the Czar
-of Russia, made no secret of his pleasure in the
-event, for he saw tokens in England of what
-might at least leave him a chance of pulling
-Turkey to pieces. He seems also to have had
-a great personal liking for our ambassador, Sir
-Hamilton Seymour, who was fortunately a man
-of honour as well as a man of discretion and
-ready wit. The account given by Kinglake of
-the conversations in which the Emperor Nicholas
-disclosed his views, and was not permitted to
-hint them merely, makes very dramatic reading.
-The Czar persisted in speaking of Turkey as a
-very sick man, whose affairs had better be taken
-out of his hands by his friends before his final<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-dissolution. Sir Hamilton courteously intimated
-that England did not treat her allies in that
-manner; but Nicholas was not to be put off,
-and at a party given by the Grand Duchess
-Hereditary on February 20, 1853, he again
-took Sir Hamilton apart, and in a very gracious
-and confidential manner closed his conversation
-with the words, “I repeat to you that the sick
-man is dying, and we can never allow such an
-event to take us by surprise. We must come
-to some understanding.”</p>
-
-<p>The next day he explained how the partition
-should in his opinion be made. Servia and
-Bulgaria should be independent states under his
-protection. England should have Egypt and
-Candia. He had already made it clear that he
-should expect us to pledge ourselves not to
-occupy Constantinople, though he could not
-himself give us a like undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>“As I did not wish,” writes Sir Hamilton
-Seymour, “that the Emperor should imagine that
-an English public servant was caught by this
-sort of overture, I simply answered that I had
-always understood that the English views upon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-Egypt did not go beyond the point of securing
-a safe and ready communication between British
-India and the mother country. ‘Well,’ said the
-Emperor, ‘induce your Government to write
-again upon these subjects, to write more fully,
-and to do so without hesitation. I have confidence
-in the English Government. It is not an
-engagement, a convention, which I ask of them;
-it is a free interchange of ideas, and in case
-of need the word of a “gentleman”—that is
-enough between us.’”</p>
-
-<p>In reply, our Government disclaimed all idea
-of aiming at any of the Sultan’s possessions, or
-considering the Ottoman Empire ready to fall to
-bits; and while accepting the Emperor’s word
-that he would not himself grab any part of it,
-refused most decisively to enter on any secret
-understanding.</p>
-
-<p>All through 1853 these parleyings were kept
-secret, and in the meantime the Czar had failed
-in his rôle of tempter. In the interval the
-Sultan, who perhaps had gained some inkling
-of what was going on, suddenly yielded to
-Austria’s demand that he should withdraw certain<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-troops that had been harassing Montenegro,
-and thereby rousing the Czar’s religious zeal on
-behalf of his co-religionists in that province.
-Everything for the moment lulled his previous
-intention of a war against Turkey.</p>
-
-<p>But the Emperor Louis Napoleon had in
-cold blood been driving a wedge into the peace
-of the world by reviving a treaty of 1740, which
-had given to Latin monks a key to the chief
-door of the Church of Bethlehem, as well as
-the keys to the two doors of the Sacred Manger,
-and also the right to place a silver star adorned
-with the arms of France in the Sanctuary of the
-Nativity. That the Churches should fight for
-the key to the supposed birthplace of the Prince
-of Peace is indeed grotesque. But the old
-temple had in His day become a den of thieves;
-and even the new temple, built through His own
-loving sacrifice, is ever being put to uses that
-are childish and greedy.</p>
-
-<p>It is not difficult to understand that, by means
-of this treaty, awakening the vanity and greed
-that cloak themselves under more decent feelings
-in such rivalries, Louis Napoleon made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span>
-his profit for the moment out of the powers
-of evil.</p>
-
-<p>The Czar’s jealousy for his own empire’s
-Greek version of the faith made the triumph
-of this treaty wormwood to him and to his
-people. “To the indignation,” Count Nesselrode
-writes, “of the whole people following the
-Greek ritual, the key of the Church of Bethlehem
-has been made over to the Latins, so as publicly
-to demonstrate their religious supremacy in the
-East.” ...</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“A crowd of monks with bare foreheads,”
-says Kinglake, “stood quarrelling for a key at
-the sunny gates of a church in Palestine, but
-beyond and above, towering high in the misty
-North, men saw the ambition of the Czars.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Czars did not stand alone: “some fifty
-millions of men in Russia held one creed, and
-they held it too with the earnestness of which
-Western Europe used to have experience in
-earlier times.... They knew that in the
-Turkish dominions there were ten or fourteen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-millions of men holding exactly the same faith
-as themselves ... they had heard tales of the
-sufferings of these their brethren which seemed,”
-they blindly thought, “to call for vengeance.”</p>
-
-<p>Nicholas himself was a fanatic on such questions,
-and the end of it was that his rage hoodwinked
-his conscience, and he stole a march
-upon England and France, which destroyed their
-trust in his honour. He had already gathered
-troops in the south, to say nothing of a fleet in
-the Euxine; and having determined on an embassy
-to Constantinople, he chose Mentschikoff
-as his messenger, a man who was said to hate
-the Turks and dislike the English, and who,
-according to Kinglake, was a wit rather than
-a diplomat or a soldier. Advancing with much
-of the pomp of war, and disregarding much of
-the etiquette of peace, his arrival and behaviour
-caused such a panic in the Turkish capital that
-Colonel Rose was besought to take an English
-fleet to the protection of the Ottoman Empire.
-Colonel Rose’s friendly willingness, though afterwards
-cancelled by our Home Government, at
-once quieted the terror in Constantinople; but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span>
-the Emperor of the French cast oil upon the
-smouldering flame by sending a fleet to Salamis.
-This greatly angered Nicholas, and, although he
-was pleased to find England disapproved of what
-France had done, Mentschikoff offered a secret
-treaty to Turkey, with ships and men, if she ever
-needed help, and asked in return for complete
-control of the Greek Church. This broke all his
-promises to the Western Powers, and England
-at once was made aware of it by the Turkish
-minister.</p>
-
-<p>Prince Mentschikoff meanwhile drew to
-himself an army, and the English Vice-consul
-at Galatz reported that in Bessarabia preparations
-were already made for the passage of 120,000
-men, while battalions from all directions were
-making southward—the fleet was even then at
-Sebastopol.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;" id="illus5">
-<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Florence Nightingale.</p>
-<p class="caption">(<i>From the painting in the National Portrait Gallery by Augustus Egg, R.A.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The double-dealing of Russia was met by a
-gradual and tacit alliance between England and
-the Sultan; and Lord Aberdeen, whose love of
-peace has been described by one historian as
-“passionate” and “fanatical,” was unknowingly
-tying his own hands by the advice he gave in his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-despatches when consulted by Turkey. Moreover,
-in Turkey, our ambassador, Lord Stratford
-de Redcliffe, stiffened the back of Ottoman
-resistance against the Czar’s wily handling of
-“the sick man.” Lord Stratford’s tact and force
-of character had moulded all to his will, and our
-admiral at Malta was told to obey any directions
-he received from him. Our fleets were ordered
-into the neighbourhood of the Dardanelles, and
-Lord Stratford held his watch at Therapia against
-the gathering wrath of the Czar. Only a very
-little kindling touch was needed to light the
-fires of a terrible conflict in Europe.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>Pastor Fliedner.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A pebble thrown into a lake sends the tiny circling
-ripples very far, and one good piece of work
-leads to others of a quite different kind. Pastor
-Fliedner, inspired by love to his Master and
-deeply interested in Elizabeth Fry’s efforts, began
-to help prisoners. Finding no nurses for those
-of them who were ill, he was led to found the
-institution at Kaiserswerth, where Miss Nightingale
-afterwards received a part of her training.</p>
-
-<p>His story is a beautiful one. His father and
-grandfather had both been pastors in the Lutheran
-Church, and, like so many sons of the Manse, he
-was exceedingly poor, but he lived to justify his
-name of Theodor. He was born twenty years
-before Miss Nightingale, in the village of Eppstein,
-and perhaps he was the more determined
-to prove to himself and others that he had a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-soul, because he was one of those plump children
-who get teased for looking like dumplings, and
-when his father laughingly called him the “little
-beer-brewer” he didn’t like it, for he was a
-bit thin-skinned. He worked his way bravely
-through school and college, Giessen and Göttingen,
-and not only earned his fees by teaching,
-but also his bread and roof; and when teaching
-was not enough, he had the good sense to turn
-shoeblack and carpenter and odd man. He
-valued all that opens the eyes of the mind and
-educates what is highest and best. Many a
-time, heedless of hardship and privation, he
-would, in his holidays, tramp long distances that
-he might see more of God’s world and learn
-more of men and things. He taught himself
-in this way to speak several languages, learned
-the useful healing properties of many herbs, and
-other homely knowledge that afterwards helped
-him in his work among the sick. Then, too,
-the games and songs that he picked up on his
-travels afterwards enriched his own kindergarten.
-While tutoring at Cologne, he did quite informally
-some of the work of a curate, and, through preaching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-sometimes in the prison, became interested
-in the lot of discharged prisoners. It was at
-Cologne too that he received from the mother
-of his pupils kindly suggestions as to his own
-manners, which led him to write what is as true
-as it is quaint, that “gentle ways and polite
-manners help greatly to further the Kingdom
-of God.”</p>
-
-<p>He was only twenty-two when he became
-pastor of the little Protestant flock at Kaiserswerth,
-having walked there on foot and purposely
-taken his parishioners by surprise that they might
-not be put to the expense of a formal welcome.
-His yearly salary was only twenty pounds, and
-he helped his widowed mother by sharing the
-parsonage with a sister and two younger brothers,
-though in any case he had to house the mother
-of the man who had been there before him.
-Then came a failure in the business of the little
-town—the making of velvet—and though there
-were other rich communities that would have
-liked to claim him, he was true to his own
-impoverished flock, and set forth like a pilgrim
-in search of aid for them. In this apostolic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-journey he visited Holland and England as well
-as Germany, and it was in London that, in
-Elizabeth Fry, he found a noble kindred spirit,
-much older, of course, than himself, as we count
-the time of earth, but still full of all the tender
-enthusiasm of love’s immortal youth. Her
-wonderful work among the prisoners of Newgate
-sent him back to his own parish all on
-fire to help the prisoners of his own country,
-and he began at once with Düsseldorf, the prison
-nearest home. Through him was founded the
-first German organization for improving the
-discipline of prisons.</p>
-
-<p>Most of all he wanted to help the women
-who on leaving the prison doors were left without
-roof or protector.</p>
-
-<p>With his own hands he made clean his old
-summer-house, and in this shelter—twelve feet
-square—which he had furnished with a bed, a
-chair, and a table, he asked the All-father to lead
-some poor outcast to the little home he had
-made for her.</p>
-
-<p>It was at night that for the first time a poor
-forlorn creature came in answer to that prayer,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-and he and his wife led her in to the place prepared
-for her. Nine others followed, and, by
-the time the number had risen to twenty, a new
-building was ready for them with its own field
-and garden, and Fliedner’s wife, helped by
-Mademoiselle Gobel, who gave her services “all
-for love and nothing for reward,” had charge
-of the home, where many a one who, like the
-woman in the Gospel, “had been a great sinner”
-began to lead a new life and to follow Christ.</p>
-
-<p>For the children of some of these women a
-kindergarten arose; but the work of all others
-on which the pastor’s heart was set was the
-training of women to nurse and tend the poor;
-for in his own parish, where there was much
-illness and ignorance, there was no one to do
-this. Three years after his earlier venture, in
-1836 when Miss Nightingale in her far-away
-home was a girl of sixteen still more or less
-in the schoolroom, this new undertaking was
-begun, this quiet haven, from which her own
-great venture long afterwards took help and
-teaching, was built up by this German saint.</p>
-
-<p>The failure of the velvet industry at Kaiserswerth,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-in the pastor’s first year, had left an
-empty factory which he turned into a hospital.</p>
-
-<p>But when it was opened, the faith needed was
-much like the faith of Abraham when great
-blessing was promised to a son whom the world
-thought he would never possess; for the Deaconess
-Hospital, when the wards were fitted up by its
-pastor with “mended furniture and cracked
-earthenware,” had as yet no patients and no
-deaconesses.</p>
-
-<p>There is, however, one essential of a good
-hospital which can be bought by labour as well
-as by money; and by hard work the hospital
-was kept admirably clean.</p>
-
-<p>The first patient who knocked at its doors
-was a servant girl, and other patients followed
-so quickly that within the first year sixty patients
-were nursed there and seven nurses had entered
-as deaconess and probationers. All the deaconesses
-were to be over twenty-five, and though
-they entered for five years, they could leave at
-any moment. The code of rules drawn up by
-the pastor was very simple, and there were not
-any vows; but the form of admission was a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-solemn one and included the laying on of hands,
-while the pastor invoked the Threefold Name,
-saying: “May God the Father, the Son, and
-the Holy Ghost, three Persons in one God, bless
-you; may He stablish you in the Truth until
-death, and give you hereafter the Crown of
-Life. Amen.”</p>
-
-<p>It all had a kind of homely grace, even in
-outward things. The deaconesses wore a large
-white turned-down collar over a blue cotton
-gown, a white muslin cap tied on under the chin
-with a large bow, and a white apron—a dress so
-well suited to the work that young and old both
-looked more than usually sweet and womanly
-in it.</p>
-
-<p>The story of how the deaconesses found a
-head, and Fliedner a second helper after the
-death of his first wife, reads rather like a Hans
-Andersen fairy tale.</p>
-
-<p>He travelled to Hamburg to ask Amalie
-Sievekin to take charge of the Home, and as she
-could not do so, she advised him to go to her
-friend and pupil Caroline Berthean, who had had
-experience of nursing in the Hamburg Hospital.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
-
-<p>The pastor was so pleased with Miss Caroline
-that he then and there offered her the choice
-of becoming either his wife or the Superintendent
-of the Deaconesses’ Home.</p>
-
-<p>She said she would fill <em>both</em> the vacant places,
-and their honeymoon was spent in Berlin that
-they might “settle” the first five deaconesses
-in the Charité Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>Caroline, young though she was, made a good
-Deaconess Mother,<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> and she seems also to have
-been an excellent wife, full of devotion to the
-work her husband loved, through all the rest
-of her life. The deaconesses give their work,
-and in a sense give themselves. They do not
-pay for their board, but neither are they paid
-for their work, though they are allowed a very
-simple yearly outfit of two cotton gowns and
-aprons, and every five years a new <em>best</em> dress of
-blue woollen material and an apron of black alpaca.
-Also their outdoor garb of a long black cloak
-and bonnet is supplied to them, and each is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-allowed a little pocket money. Their private
-property remains their own to control as they
-please, whether they live or die.</p>
-
-<p>The little account of Kaiserswerth which Miss
-Nightingale wrote is most rare and precious,
-having long been out of print, but from the
-copy in the British Museum I transfer a few
-sentences to these pages, because of their quaintness
-and their interest for all who are feeling
-their way in the education of young children:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“In the Orphan Asylum,” wrote Miss Nightingale,
-“each family lives with its deaconess
-exactly as her children. Some of them have
-already become deaconesses or teachers, some
-have returned home. When a new child is
-admitted, a little feast celebrates its arrival, at
-which the pastor himself presides, who understands
-children so well that his presence, instead
-of being a constraint, serves to make the little
-new-comer feel herself at home. She chooses
-what is to be sung, she has a little present from
-the pastor, and, after tea, at the end of the
-evening, she is prayed for....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<p>“One morning, in the boys’ ward, as they
-were about to have prayers, just before breakfast,
-two of the boys quarrelled about a hymn book.
-The ‘sister’ was uncertain, for a moment, what
-to do. They could not pray in that state of
-mind, yet excluding them from the prayer was
-not likely to improve them. She told a story
-of her own childhood, how one night she had
-been cross with her parents, and, putting off her
-prayers till she felt good again, had fallen asleep.
-The children were quite silent for a moment and
-shocked at the idea that anybody should go to
-bed without praying. The two boys were reconciled,
-and prayers took place....”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the British Museum also is a copy of the
-following letter:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Messrs. Dubaw</span>,—A gentleman called here
-yesterday from you, asking for a copy of my
-‘Kaiserswerth’ for, I believe, the British Museum.</p>
-
-<p>“Since yesterday a search has been instituted—but
-only two copies have been found, and one
-of those is torn and dirty. I send you the least<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-bad-looking. You will see the date is 1851,
-and after the copies then printed were given
-away I don’t think I have ever thought of it.</p>
-
-<p>“I was twice in training there myself. Of
-course, since then hospital and district nursing
-have made great strides. Indeed, district nursing
-has been invented.</p>
-
-<p>“But never have I met with a higher love,
-a purer devotion than there. There was no
-neglect.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the more remarkable because many of
-the deaconesses had been only peasants (none were
-gentlewomen when I was there).</p>
-
-<p>“The food was poor—no coffee but bean coffee—no
-luxury but cleanliness.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Florence Nightingale.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>Years of preparation.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Florence Nightingale, like Felicia Skene, had
-that saving gift of humour which at times may
-make bearable an otherwise unbearable keenness
-of vision.</p>
-
-<p>Here, for instance, is her account of the
-customary dusting of a room in those days (is
-it always nowadays so entirely different as might
-be wished?):—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Having witnessed the morning process called
-‘tidying the room’ for many years, and with
-ever-increasing astonishment, I can describe what
-it is. From the chairs, tables, or sofa, upon
-which ‘things’ have lain during the night, and
-which are therefore comparatively clean from
-dust or blacks, the poor ‘things’ having ‘caught
-it,’ they are removed to other chairs, tables, sofas,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-upon which you could write your name with
-your finger in the dust or blacks. The other
-side of the things is therefore now evenly dirtied
-or dusted. The housemaid then flaps everything
-or some things not out of her reach with a thing
-called a duster—the dust flies up, then resettles
-more equally than it lay before the operation.
-The room has now been ‘put to rights.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>You see the shrewd humour of that observation
-touches the smallest detail. Miss Nightingale
-never wasted time in unpractical theorizing.
-In discussing the far-off attainment of ideal nursing
-she says:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Will the top of Mont Blanc ever be made
-habitable? Our answer would be, it will be
-many thousands of years before we have reached
-the bottom of Mont Blanc in making the earth
-healthy. Wait till we have reached the bottom
-before we discuss the top.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Did she with her large outlook and big heart
-see our absurdity as well as our shame when,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-pointing a finger of scorn at what we named the
-superstition of other countries, we were yet content
-to see Spain and France and Italy sending
-out daily, in religious service to the poor, whole
-regiments of gentle and refined women trained
-in the arts of healing and the methods of discipline,
-while even in our public institutions—our
-hospitals and workhouses and prisons—it
-would hardly have been an exaggeration to say
-that most of the so-called “nurses” of those
-days were but drunken sluts?</p>
-
-<p>She herself has said:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Shall the Roman Catholic Church do all the
-work? Has not the Protestant the same Lord,
-who accepted the services not only of men, but
-also of women?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>One saving clause there is for England concerning
-this matter in the history of that time,
-in the work of a distinguished member of the
-Society of Friends, even before Florence Nightingale
-or Felicia Skene had been much heard
-of. We read that “the heavenly personality of
-Elizabeth Fry (whom Miss Nightingale sought<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-out and visited) was an ever-present inspiration
-in her life.” From Elizabeth Fry our heroine
-heard of Pastor Fliedner’s training institute for
-nurses at Kaiserswerth, already described in the
-foregoing chapter; but, before going there, she
-took in the meantime a self-imposed course of
-training in Britain, visiting the hospitals in
-London, Edinburgh, and Dublin, though, so far
-as the nursing was concerned, the criticisms in
-her own <cite>Nursing Notes</cite> of later years would
-certainly suggest that what she learned was
-chiefly what <em>not</em> to do. Her gracious and winning
-dignity was far indeed from the blindness
-of a weak amiability, and it can hardly be
-doubted that what she saw of the so-called
-“nurses” in our hospitals of those days, went
-far to deepen her resolve to devote herself to
-a calling then in dire neglect and disrepute.
-Dirt, disorder, drunkenness—these are the words
-used by a trustworthy biographer in describing
-the ways of English nurses in those days—of
-whom, indeed, we are told that they were of
-a very coarse order—ill-trained, hard-hearted,
-immoral. There must surely have been exceptions,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-but they seem to have been so rare as to
-have escaped notice. Indeed, it was even said
-that in those days—so strong and stupefying is
-the force of custom—decent girls avoided this
-noble calling, fearing to lose their character if
-found in its ranks.</p>
-
-<p>But whatever were Florence Nightingale’s
-faults—and she was by no means so inhuman
-as to be without faults—conventionality of
-thought and action certainly cannot be counted
-among them; and what she saw of the poor
-degraded souls who waited on the sick in our
-hospitals did but strengthen her resolve to become
-a nurse herself.</p>
-
-<p>Since she found no good school of nursing
-in England, she went abroad, and visited, among
-other places, the peaceful old hospital of St.
-John at Bruges, where the nuns are cultivated
-and devoted women who are well skilled in the
-gentle art of nursing.</p>
-
-<p>To city after city she went, taking with her
-not only her gift of discernment, but also that
-open mind and earnest heart which made of her
-life-offering so world-wide a boon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span></p>
-
-<p>I do not think I have used too strong a word
-of the gift she was preparing. For the writer
-of an article which appeared in <cite>Nursing Notes</cite><a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
-was right when, at the end of Miss Nightingale’s
-life, she wrote of her:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Miss Nightingale belongs to that band of
-the great ones of the earth who may be
-acclaimed as citizens of the world; her influence
-has extended far beyond the limits of the nation
-to which she owed her birth, and in a very
-special sense she will be the great prototype for
-all time to those who follow more especially in
-her footsteps, in the profession she practically
-created. We must ever be grateful for the
-shining example she has given to nurses, who in
-her find united that broad-minded comprehension
-of the ultimate aim of all their work, with a patient
-and untiring devotion to its practical detail,
-which alone combine to make the perfect nurse.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But as yet she was only humbly and diligently
-preparing herself for the vocation to which she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-had determined, in face of countless obstacles,
-to devote herself, little knowing how vast would
-be the opportunities given to her when once she
-was ready for the work.</p>
-
-<p>During the winter and spring of 1849-50
-she made a long tour through Egypt with
-Mr. and Mrs. Bracebridge. On her way there
-she met in Paris two Sisters of the Order
-of St. Vincent de Paul, from whom she took
-introductions to the schools and “miséricorde”
-in Alexandria. There she saw the fruits of
-long and self-denying discipline among the
-Nursing Sisters, and in the following year she
-visited Pastor Fliedner’s Institute at Kaiserswerth,
-where, among Protestant deaconesses, the life
-of ordered simplicity and service showed some
-of the same virtues.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale’s first visit to Kaiserswerth
-was comparatively short, but in the following
-year, 1852, she went there again and took
-four months of definite training, from June to
-October.</p>
-
-<p>A deep and warm regard seems to have arisen
-between the Fliedners and their English pupil,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-and the pastor’s friendship for Miss Nightingale’s
-revered counsellor, Elizabeth Fry, must
-have been one pleasant link in the happy bond.</p>
-
-<p>Fliedner was certainly a wonderful man, and
-Miss Nightingale’s comment on the spirit of
-his work was as true as it was witty. “Pastor
-Fliedner,” she said, “began his work with two
-beds under a roof, not with a castle in the air,
-and Kaiserswerth is now diffusing its blessings
-and its deaconesses over almost every Protestant
-land.” This was literally true. Within ten
-years of founding Kaiserswerth he had established
-sixty nurses in twenty-five different centres.
-Later he founded a Mother-house on Mount
-Zion at Jerusalem, having already settled some
-of his nurses at Pittsburg in the United States.
-The building for the Jerusalem Mother-house
-was given by the King of Prussia, and, nursing
-all sick people, without any question of creed,
-is a school of training for nurses in the East.</p>
-
-<p>Alexandria, Beyrout, Smyrna, Bucharest—he
-visited them all, and it is due to his efforts
-nearer home that to-day in almost all German
-towns of any importance there is a Deaconess<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-Home, sending out trained women to nurse in
-middle-class families at very moderate fees, and
-ready to nurse the poor without any charge at all.</p>
-
-<p>When, in 1864, “he passed to his glorious
-rest”—the words are Miss Nightingale’s—there
-were already one hundred such houses, and during
-part of Miss Nightingale’s visit to Kaiserswerth,
-Pastor Fliedner was away a good deal on the
-missionary journeys which spread the Deaconess
-Homes through Germany, but they met quite
-often enough for each to appreciate the noble
-character of the other. In all his different kinds
-of work for helping the poor she was eagerly
-interested, and it may be that some of her wise
-criticisms of district visiting in later years may
-have been suggested by the courtesy and good
-manners that ruled the visiting of poor homes
-at Kaiserswerth in which she shared. It was
-there also that she made warm friendship with
-Henrietta Frickenhaus, in whose training college
-at Kaiserswerth 400 pupils had already passed
-muster. It should be added that Henrietta
-Frickenhaus was the first schoolmistress of
-Kaiserswerth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sidney Herbert visited Kaiserswerth
-while Miss Nightingale was there, and when,
-in the great moment that came afterwards, he
-asked her to go out to the Crimea, he knew
-well how detailed and definite her training had
-been.</p>
-
-<p>Pastor Fliedner’s eldest daughter told Mrs.
-Tooley how vividly she recalled her father’s
-solemn farewell blessing when Miss Nightingale
-was leaving Kaiserswerth; laying his hands on
-her bent head and, with eyes that seemed to look
-beyond the scene that lay before him, praying
-that she might be stablished in the Truth till
-death, and receive the Crown of Life.</p>
-
-<p>And even mortal eyes may read a little of
-how those prayers for her future were fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>She left vivid memories. “No one has ever
-passed so brilliant an examination,” said Fliedner,
-“or shown herself so thoroughly mistress of all
-she had to learn, as the young, wealthy, and
-graceful Englishwoman.” Agnes Jones, who
-was trained there before her work in Liverpool
-left a memorable record of life spent in
-self-denying service, tells how the workers at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-Kaiserswerth longed to see Miss Nightingale
-again, how her womanliness and lovableness were
-remembered, and how among the sick people
-were those who even in dying blessed her for
-having led them to the Redeemer; for throughout
-her whole life her religion was the very life
-of her life, as deep as it was quiet, the underlying
-secret of that compassionate self-detachment and
-subdued fire, without which her wit and shrewdness
-would have lost their absolving glow and
-underlying tenderness. Hers was ever the
-gentleness of strength, not the easy bending of
-the weak. She was a pioneer among women,
-and did much to break down the cruel limitations
-which, in the name of affection and tradition,
-hemmed in the lives of English girls in those
-days. Perhaps she was among the first of that
-day in England to realize that the Christ, her
-Master, who sent Mary as His first messenger
-of the Resurrection, was in a fine sense of the
-word “unconventional,” even though He came
-that every jot and tittle of religious law might
-be <em>spiritually</em> fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>It was after her return to England from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-Germany that she published her little pamphlet
-on Kaiserswerth, from which quotations have
-already been given.</p>
-
-<p>Her next visit was to the Convent of St.
-Vincent de Paul in Paris, where the nursing
-was a part of the long-established routine, and
-while there she was able to visit the hospitals
-in Paris, and learned much from the Sisters in
-their organized work among the houses of the
-poor. In the midst of all this she was herself
-taken ill, and was nursed by the Sisters. Her
-direct and personal experience of their tender
-skill no doubt left its mark upon her own fitness.
-On her return home to complete her recovery,
-her new capacity and knowledge made a good
-deal of delighted talk in the cottages, and Mrs.
-Tooley tells us how it was rumoured that “Miss
-Florence could set a broken leg better than a
-doctor,” and made the old rheumatic folk feel
-young again with her remedies, to say nothing
-of her “eye lotions,” which “was enough to
-ruin the spectacle folk.” She was always ahead
-of her time in her belief in simple rules of
-health and diet and hatred of all that continual<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-use of drugs which was then so much in fashion,
-and she no doubt saw many interesting experiments
-at Matlock Bank in helping Nature to do
-her own work.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;" id="illus6">
-<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Florence Nightingale in 1854.</p>
-<p class="caption">(<i>From a drawing by H. M. B. C.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>As soon as her convalescence was over she
-visited London hospitals, and in the autumn of
-1852 those of Edinburgh and Dublin, having
-spent a part of the interval in her home at
-Embley, where she had again the pleasure of
-being near her friends the Herberts, with whose
-neighbourly work among the poor she was in
-fullest sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>Her first post was at the Harley Street Home
-for Sick Governesses. She had been interested
-in many kinds of efforts on behalf of those who
-suffer; Lord Shaftesbury’s Ragged School labours,
-for instance, had appealed to her, and to that
-and other like enterprises she had given the
-money earned by her little book on Kaiserswerth.
-But she always had in view the one clear and
-definite aim—to fit herself in every possible way
-for competent nursing. It was on August 12,
-1853, that she became Superintendent of the
-Harley Street institution, which is now known<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-as the Florence Nightingale Hospital. It was
-founded in 1850 by Lady Canning, as a Home
-for Invalid Gentlewomen, and when an appeal
-was made to Miss Nightingale for money and
-good counsel, she gave in addition <em>herself</em> and
-became for a time the Lady Superintendent.</p>
-
-<p>The hospital was intended mainly for sick
-governesses, for whom the need of such a home
-of rest and care and surgical help had sometimes
-arisen, but it had been mismanaged and was in
-danger of becoming a failure. There Miss
-Nightingale, we read, was to be found “in the
-midst of various duties of a hospital—for the
-Home was largely a sanatorium—organizing
-the nurses, attending to the correspondence,
-prescriptions, and accounts; in short, performing
-all the duties of a hard-working matron, as well
-as largely financing the institution.”</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The task of dealing with sick and querulous
-women,” says Mrs. Tooley, “embittered and
-rendered sensitive and exacting by the unfortunate
-circumstances of their lives, was not
-an easy one, but Miss Nightingale had a calm<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-and cheerful spirit which could bear with the
-infirmities of the weak. And so she laboured
-on in the dull house in Harley Street, summer
-and winter, bringing order and comfort out of
-a wretched chaos, and proving a real friend and
-helper to the sick and sorrow-laden women.</p>
-
-<p>“At length the strain proved too much for
-her delicate body, and she was compelled most
-reluctantly to resign her task.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>She had worked very hard, and was seldom
-seen outside the walls of the house in Harley
-Street. Though she was not there very long,
-the effect of her presence was great and lasting,
-and the Home, which has now moved to Lisson
-Grove, has increased steadily in usefulness, though
-it has of necessity changed its lines a little,
-because the High Schools and the higher education
-of women have opened new careers and
-lessened the number of governesses, especially
-helpless governesses. It gives aid far and wide
-to the daughters and other kindred of hard-worked
-professional men, men who are serving
-the world with their brains, and nobly seeking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-to give work and service of as good a kind as
-lies within their power, rather than to snatch
-at its exact value in coin, even if that were
-possible—and in such toil as theirs, whether they
-be teachers, artists, parsons, or themselves doctors,
-it is <em>not</em> possible; for such work cannot be
-weighed in money.</p>
-
-<p>Queen Alexandra is President, and last year
-301 patients were treated, besides the 16 who
-were already within its walls when the new year
-began.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>The beginning of the war—A sketch of Sidney Herbert.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was on April 11, 1854, that war was
-declared by Russia, and four days later the invasion
-of the Ottoman Empire began. England
-and France were the sworn allies of Turkey, and
-though the war had begun with a quarrel about
-“a key and a trinket,” the key and the trinket
-were, after all, symbols, just as truly as the flags
-for which men lay down their lives.</p>
-
-<p>England had entrusted the cause of peace to
-those faithful lovers of peace, Lord Aberdeen,
-Mr. Gladstone, Mr. Cobden, and Mr. Bright;
-but no single man in our “constitutional”
-Government is in reality a free agent, and the
-peace-loving members of the Cabinet had been
-skilfully handled by the potent Lord Palmerston,
-and did not perceive soon enough that the
-understanding with Turkey and with France,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-into which they had drifted, must endanger the
-peace of Europe because the other Powers were
-ignored. If the English people had been secretly
-longing for war—and it is said that they had—then
-the terrible cup they had desired was to be
-drunk to the lees: the war on which they were
-entering was a war of agony and shame, a war
-in which men died by hundreds of neglect and
-mismanagement, before a woman’s hand could
-reach the helm and reform the hospital ordinances
-in the ship of State.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, before we plunge into the horrors
-of the Crimean War we may rest our minds
-with a few pages about Miss Nightingale’s
-friend, Mr. Sidney Herbert, who became an
-active and self-sacrificing power in the War
-Office.</p>
-
-<p>When Florence Nightingale was born, Sidney
-Herbert—afterwards Lord Herbert of Lea—was
-already a boy of ten.</p>
-
-<p>Those who know the outlook over the Thames,
-from the windows of Pembroke Lodge at Richmond,
-will realize that he too, like Florence
-Nightingale, was born in a very beautiful spot.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-His father, the eleventh Earl of Pembroke, had
-married the daughter of Count Woronzow, the
-Russian Ambassador, and, in Sidney’s knowledgeable
-help afterwards at the War Office during the
-Crimean War, it is not without interest to
-remember this.</p>
-
-<p>His birth had not been expected so soon, and
-there were no baby clothes handy at Pembroke
-Lodge, where his mother was staying. It would
-seem that shops were not so well able to supply
-every need with a ready-made garment as they
-are in these days; so the first clothes that the
-baby boy wore were lent by the workhouse until
-his own were ready.</p>
-
-<p>In later days, when he cared for the needs of
-all who crossed his path, until his people feared—or
-pretended to fear—that he would give
-away all he had, his mother used to say that
-workhouse clothes were the first he had worn
-after his birth, and were also clearly those in
-which he would die.</p>
-
-<p>He had good reason to rejoice in his lineage,
-for he was descended from the sister of Sir
-Philip Sidney, after whom he was named. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-too, like his great namesake, was all his life full
-of that high courtesy which comes of loving
-consideration for others rather than for self, and
-is never more charming than in those who,
-being in every sense “well-born,” have seen it
-in their fathers, and in their fathers before them,
-notwithstanding that in those others who, less
-fortunate, whether they be rich or poor, having
-come of an ill brood, are yet themselves well-bred,
-such courtesy is of the courts of heaven.</p>
-
-<p>The boy’s father had much individuality.
-Being the owner of some thirty villages, and lord-lieutenant
-of the county, he was naturally a
-great magnate in Wiltshire. He was very fond
-of dogs, and his favourites among them sat at
-his own table, each with its own chair and plate.</p>
-
-<p>Sidney was almost like an only son at home,
-for his elder brother, who was, of course, the
-heir to Lord Herbert’s patrimony, had married
-unhappily and lived abroad.</p>
-
-<p>The little boy seems to have been really rather
-like the little angels in Italian pictures, a child
-with golden curls and big brown eyes, with the
-look of love and sunshine gleaming out of them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-that he kept all his life, and there is a letter of
-his mother’s, describing a children’s fancy dress
-ball, at which she dressed him up as a little
-cupid, with wings and a wreath of roses, and
-was very proud of the result. He was either
-too little to mind, or if he hated it, as so many
-boys would, he bore with it to please his mother,
-who, we are told, made as much of an idol of
-him as did the rest of his family. And indeed
-it is most wonderful, from all accounts, that he
-was not completely spoiled. Here is his mother’s
-letter about it:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I never did see anything half so like an
-angel. I must say so, although it was my own
-performance. He had on a garland of roses and
-green leaves mixed; a pair of wild duck’s wings,
-put on wire to make them set well; a bow and
-arrow, and a quiver with arrows in it, tied on
-with a broad blue ribbon that went across his
-sweet neck.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In another of her letters we are told of a visit
-paid, about this time, to Queen Charlotte, and
-how the child “Boysey” climbed into the Queen’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-lap, drew up and pulled down window-blinds,
-romped at hide-and-seek with the Duke of
-Cambridge, and showed himself to be not in
-the slightest degree abashed by the presence
-of royalty.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Fitzwilliam, a friend and distant relation,
-used often to stay at Pembroke Lodge and at
-Wilton, and seems to have been pleased by the
-boy’s courteous ways and winning looks; for,
-having no children of his own, when he left
-most of his property to Lord Pembroke, the
-“remainder,” which meant big estates in Ireland
-and Shropshire, was to go to his second son,
-Sidney.</p>
-
-<p>The boy loved his father with a very special
-intimacy and tenderness, as we see by a letter
-written soon after he left Harrow and a little
-while before he went up to Oxford, where at
-Oriel he at once made friends with men of fine
-character and sterling worth. His father had
-died in 1827, and he writes from Chilmark,
-where the rector, Mr. Lear, was his tutor, and
-the Rectory was near his own old home at
-Wilton:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“You cannot think how comfortable it is to
-be in a nice little country church after that great
-noisy chapel. Everything is so quiet and the
-people all so attentive that you might hear a pin
-fall while Mr. Lear is preaching. I like, too,
-being so near Wilton, so many things here ever
-bringing to mind all <em>he</em> said and did, all places
-where I have ridden with <em>him</em>, and the home
-where we used to be so happy. In short, there
-is not a spot about Wilton now which I do not
-love as if it were a person. I hope you will be
-coming there soon and get it over, for seeing
-that place again will be a dreadful trial to you.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Among his friends at Oxford were Cardinal
-Manning, Lord Lincoln, who as Duke of Newcastle
-was afterwards closely associated with him at
-the War Office; Lord Elgin, Lord Dalhousie, and
-Lord Canning, all three Viceroys of India. It was
-there, too, that his friendship with Mr. Gladstone
-began. Lord Stanmore says that Mr. Gladstone
-told him a year or two before his death how one
-day at a University Convocation dealing with a
-petition against the Roman Catholic Relief Bill,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-to which he had himself gone as an undergraduate
-outsider, he had noticed among the
-crowd of undergraduates in the vestibule of the
-Convocation House “a tall and graceful figure,
-surmounted by a face of such singular sweetness
-and refinement that his attention was at once
-riveted by it, and with such force that the picture
-he then saw rose again as vividly before him
-while talking as when first seen sixty-eight years
-before.” Mr. Gladstone inquired the name of
-this attractive freshman. “Herbert of Oriel,”
-was the answer. They became friends; but in
-those days friendships between men of different
-colleges and different ages were not always easily
-kept up. The more intimate relations between
-himself and Herbert date only from a later time.</p>
-
-<p>Herbert’s noble and beautiful life was to be
-closely intertwined with that of his little friend
-and neighbour, in one of those friendships—holy
-in their unselfish ardour of comradeship and
-service of others—which put to shame many of
-the foolish sayings of the world, and prove that,
-while an ideal marriage is the divinest happiness
-God gives to earthly life, an ideal friendship also<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-has the power to lift both joy and pain into the
-region of heaven itself.</p>
-
-<p>This was a friendship which, as we shall see,
-arose in the first instance partly out of the fact
-that the two children grew up on neighbouring
-estates, and were both what Mrs. Tollemache
-has called “Sunday people”—people with leisure
-to give to others, as well as wealth; and at the
-end of Sidney Herbert’s life it was said that the
-following description of Sir Philip Sidney, after
-whom he was named, was in every particular a
-description of him:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“He was gentle, loving, compassionate, forgiving
-as a woman, and yet had the dignity and valour
-of a man. His liberality was so great that with
-him not to give was not to enjoy what he had.</p>
-
-<p>“In his familiarity with men he never descended,
-but raised everybody to his own level.
-So modest, so humble was he, and so inaccessible
-to flattery, that he esteemed not praise except as
-an encouragement to further exertion in well-doing.
-His tongue knew no deceit, and his
-mind no policy but frankness, courage, and sincerity,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span>
-and ... England has had greater statesmen,
-but never so choice a union of the qualities
-which make a Sidney. His fame is founded on
-those personal qualities of which his contemporaries
-were the best judges, although they may
-not leave a trace in books or in history.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And of both might it most emphatically have
-been said, as was said by Mr. Gladstone of one
-of them: “Rare indeed—God only knows how
-rare—are men with his qualities; but even a
-man with his qualities might not have been so
-happy as to possess his opportunities. He had
-them, and he used them.”</p>
-
-<p>The story of his betraying a State secret to that
-other friend, who was the original of “Diana of
-the Crossways,” is a myth which has been more
-than once disproved, and of which his biographer
-says that any one who knew him, or knew the
-real “Diana,” would have treated it with derision.</p>
-
-<p>But he was always ready to bear lightly
-undeserved blame, just as he took it as of no
-account when credit that should have been his
-was rendered elsewhere. Take, for instance, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-warrant which relieved soldiers of good conduct
-from the liability of punishment by flogging.
-He had worked hard at this warrant, and it
-originated with him, although the Duke of
-Cambridge supported him in it. But when one
-of his friends expressed annoyance that the praise
-had come to the better-known man, he replied
-impatiently: “What <em>does</em> it matter who gets the
-credit so long as the thing itself is done?”</p>
-
-<p>Nor did he ever seem to care about mere
-material reward, and he simply could not understand
-the outcry of one useful servant of the
-State who, when likely to be left out of office
-in prospective Cabinet arrangements, exclaimed,
-“And pray what is to become of <em>me</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>With him, as with Miss Nightingale, giving
-was an untold and constant joy, and he was able
-to be lavish because of his great personal economy
-and self-denial. In all his beautiful home at
-Wilton, Lord Stanmore tells us, his own were
-the only rooms that could have been called bare
-or shabby, and when he was urged to buy a good
-hunter for himself, he had spent too much on
-others to allow himself such a luxury. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-delighted in educating the sons of widows left
-by men of his own order without means. “He
-maintained,” we read, “at one and the same time
-boys at Harrow, Marlborough, and Woolwich,
-another in training for an Australian career, and
-a fifth who was being educated for missionary
-work. And he expended much in sending poor
-clergymen and their families to the seaside for a
-month’s holiday.” And to gentlepeople who
-were poor we read that the help of money “was
-given so delicately as to remove the burden of
-obligation. A thousand little attentions in time
-of sickness or sorrow helped and cheered them.
-In all these works his wife was his active coadjutor,
-but” we read that “it was not till after
-his death that she was at all aware of their extent,
-and even then not fully, so unostentatiously and
-secretly were they performed. His sunny presence,”
-says his biographer, “warmed and cheered
-all around him, and the charm of his conversation
-made him the light and centre of any company
-of which he formed a part.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> There are, however,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-many men who are brilliant and joyous in society,
-over whom a strange change comes when they
-cross their own threshold. Sidney Herbert was
-never more brilliant, never more charming, never
-more witty than when alone with his mother,
-his wife, his sisters, or his children.</p>
-
-<p>“Nowhere was he seen to greater advantage
-than in his own home. He delighted in country
-life, and took a keen and almost boyish interest
-in its sports and pursuits, into the enjoyment of
-which he threw himself with a zest and fulness
-not common among busy men ... a good shot,
-a bold rider, and an expert fisherman, he was
-welcomed by the country gentlemen as one of
-themselves, and to this he owed much of his
-great popularity in his own country. But it
-was also due to the unfailing consideration shown
-by him to those of every class around him, and
-the sure trust in his responsive sympathy which
-was felt by all, high and low alike, dwelling
-within many miles of Wilton. By all dependent
-on him, or in any way under his orders, he was
-adored, and well deserved to be so. The older
-servants were virtually members of his family,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-and he took much pains in seeing to their
-interests, and helping their children to start well
-in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never,” says Lady Herbert, “did he come
-down to Wilton, if only for a few days, without
-going to see Sally Parham, an old housemaid,
-who had been sixty years in the family, and
-Larkum, an old carpenter of whom he was very
-fond, and who on his death-bed gave him the most
-beautiful and emphatic blessing I ever heard.”</p>
-
-<p>Of his splendid work in the War Office, and
-for our soldiers long after he had laid aside War
-Office cares, we shall read in its due place.
-Meanwhile we think of him for the present as
-Florence Nightingale’s friend, and her neighbour
-when in the south, for his beautiful Wilton home
-was quite near to her own home at Embley.</p>
-
-<p>Before the Crimean War began he was already
-giving his mind to army reform, and while that
-war was in progress the horrors of insanitary carelessness,
-as he saw them through Florence Nightingale’s
-letters, made of him England’s greatest
-sanitary reformer in army matters, with the
-single exception of Florence Nightingale herself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span></p>
-
-<p>The two had from the first many tastes in
-common, and among those of minor importance
-was their great affection for animals. He was
-as devoted to his horse Andover as she had been
-to the little owl Athene, of which her sister,
-Lady Verney, in an old MS. quoted by Sir
-Stuart Grant Duff, gives the following pretty
-history:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Bought for 6 lepta from some children into
-whose hands it had dropped out of its nest in
-the Parthenon, it was brought by Miss Nightingale
-to Trieste, with a slip of a plane from the
-Ilissus and a cicala. At Vienna the owl ate
-the cicala and was mesmerized, much to the
-improvement of his temper. At Prague a waiter
-was heard to say that ‘this is the bird which
-all English ladies carry with them, because it
-tells them when they are to die.’ It came to
-England by Berlin, lived at Embley, Lea Hurst,
-and in London, travelled in Germany, and stayed
-at Carlsbad while its mistress was at Kaiserswerth.
-It died the very day she was to have started for
-Scutari (her departure was delayed two days),<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-and the only tear that she had shed during that
-tremendous week was when ⸺ put the little
-body into her hand. ‘Poor little beastie,’ she
-said, ‘it was odd how much I loved you.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And we read that before his death, Lord
-Herbert with a like tenderness bade a special
-farewell to his horse Andover, kissing him on
-the neck, feeding him with sugar, and telling
-him he should never ride again.</p>
-
-<p>That was when he was already extremely ill,
-though not too ill to take care that a young
-priest who was dying also, but too poor to buy
-all the doctor had ordered, should be cared for
-out of his own purse.</p>
-
-<p>With him, as with Florence Nightingale,
-giving and helping seem to have been unceasing.</p>
-
-<p>The friendship between them was very dear
-to both of them, and was warmly shared by
-Lord Herbert’s wife. When they all knew
-that death was waiting with a summons, and
-that Lord Herbert’s last journey abroad could
-have but one ending, even though, as things
-turned out, he was to have just a momentary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-glimpse of home again, Florence Nightingale
-was the last friend to whom he bade farewell.
-But that was not till 1861, and in the intervening
-years they worked incessantly together,
-for the good of the army and the improvement
-of sanitary conditions.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>The Crimean muddle—Explanations and excuses.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In our last chapter we ended with a word about
-those sanitary reforms which were yet to come.
-How appalling was the ignorance and confusion
-in 1854, when the war in the Crimea began, has
-now become matter of common knowledge
-everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>I note later, as a result of my talk with General
-Evatt, some of the reasons and excuses for the
-dire neglect and muddle that reigned. John Bull
-was, as usual, so arrogantly sure of himself that
-he had—also as usual—taken no sort of care to
-keep himself fit in time of peace, and there was
-no central organizing authority for the equipment
-of the army—every one was responsible,
-and therefore no one. The provisions bought
-by contract were many of them rotten and
-mouldy, so cleverly had the purchasers been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-deceived and defrauded. The clothing provided
-for the men before Sebastopol, where, in at
-least one instance, man was literally frozen
-to man, were such as would have been better
-suited to India or South Africa. Many of the
-boots sent out were fitter for women and
-children playing on green lawns than for the men
-who must tramp over rough and icy roads. The
-very horses were left to starve for want of proper
-hay. Proper medical provision there was none.
-There were doctors, some of them nobly unselfish,
-but few of them trained for that
-particular work. An army surgeon gets little
-practice in time of peace, and one lady, a Red
-Cross nurse, told me that even in our South
-African campaign the doctor with whom she
-did her first bit of bandaging out there told her
-he had not bandaged an arm for fifteen years!
-But indeed many of the doctors in the Crimea
-were not only badly prepared, they were also so
-tied up with red-tape details that, though they
-gave their lives freely, they quickly fell in with
-the helpless chaos of a hospital without a head.</p>
-
-<p>England shuddered to the heart when at last<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-she woke up under the lash of the following
-letter from William Howard Russell, the <cite>Times</cite>
-war correspondent:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The commonest accessories of a hospital are
-wanting, there is not the least attention paid to
-decency or cleanliness, the stench is appalling ...
-and, for all I can observe, the men die without
-the least effort to save them. There they lie just
-as they were let gently down on the ground by
-the poor fellows, the comrades, who brought
-them on their backs from the camp with the
-greatest tenderness, but who are not allowed to
-remain with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are there,” he wrote at a later date, “no
-devoted women among us, able and willing to go
-forth and minister to the sick and suffering
-soldiers of the East in the hospitals at Scutari?
-Are none of the daughters of England, at this
-extreme hour of need, ready for such a work of
-mercy?... France has sent forth her Sisters
-of Mercy unsparingly, and they are even now by
-the bedsides of the wounded and the dying,
-giving what woman’s hand alone can give of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-comfort and relief.... Must we fall so far
-below the French in self-sacrifice and devotedness,
-in a work which Christ so signally blesses as done
-unto Himself? ‘I was sick and ye visited me.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>What the art of nursing had fallen to in
-England may be guessed from the fact lately
-mentioned to me by a great friend of Miss
-Nightingale’s, that when Florence Nightingale
-told her family she would like to devote her life
-to nursing, they said with a smile, “Are you
-sure you would not like to be a kitchen-maid?”</p>
-
-<p>Yet the Nightingales were, on other questions,
-such as that of the education of girls, far in
-advance of their time.</p>
-
-<p>Possibly nothing short of those letters to
-the <cite>Times</cite>, touching, as they did, the very quick
-of the national pride, could have broken down
-the “Chinese wall” of that particular prejudice.</p>
-
-<p>Something may be said at this point as to what
-had been at the root of the dreadful condition of
-things in the hospitals before Miss Nightingale’s
-arrival. I have had some instructive talk with
-Surgeon-General Evatt, who knows the medical<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-administration of our army through and through,
-and whose friendship with Miss Nightingale
-arose in a very interesting way, but will be
-mentioned later on in its due place.</p>
-
-<p>General Evatt has pointed out to me in
-conversation that what is still a weakness of our
-great London hospitals, though lessened there by
-the fierce light of public opinion that is ever
-beating upon them, was the very source of the
-evil at Scutari.</p>
-
-<p>Such hospitals as the London, doing such
-magnificent work that it deserves a thousand
-times the support it receives, are, explained
-General Evatt, without any central authority.
-The doctors pay their daily visits and their code
-is a high one, but they are as varied in ability
-and in character as any other group of doctors,
-and are responsible to no one but God and their
-own conscience. The nursing staff have <em>their</em>
-duties and <em>their</em> code, but are under separate
-management. The committee secures the funds
-and manages the finance, but it is again quite
-distinct in its powers, and does not control either
-doctors or nurses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Barrack Hospital at Scutari was, said the
-General, in this respect just like a London
-hospital of sixty years ago, set down in the midst
-of the Crimea. There was, he said—to adapt
-a well-known quotation—“knowledge without
-authority, and authority without knowledge,”
-but no power to unite them in responsible effort.
-Therefore we must feel deep pity, not indignation,
-with regard to any one member of the staff; for
-each alone was helpless against the chaos, until
-Miss Nightingale, who stood outside the official
-muddle, yet with the friendship of a great War
-Minister behind her, and in her hand all the
-powers of wealth, hereditary influence, and
-personal charm, quietly cut some of the knots of
-red tape which were, as she saw clearly, strangling
-the very lives of our wounded soldiers. When I
-spoke of the miracle by which a woman who had
-been all her life fitting herself for this work, had
-suddenly received her world-wide opportunity, he
-replied: “Yes, I have often said it was as if a
-very perfect machine had through long years
-been fitted together and polished to the highest
-efficiency, and when, at last, it was ready for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-service, a hand was put forth to accept and
-use it.”</p>
-
-<p>Just as he sought to explain the awful condition
-of the army hospitals at the beginning of the
-war; so also he, as a military doctor, pointed out
-to me that there were even many excuses for the
-condition of the transport service, and the idiotic
-blunders of a government that sent soldiers to the
-freezing winters of the Crimea in clothes that
-would have been better suited to the hot climate
-of India.</p>
-
-<p>The army after the Peninsular War had been
-split up into battalions, and had, like the hospitals,
-lost all <em>centre</em> of authority. England had been
-seething with the social troubles of our transition
-from the feudal order to the new competitions
-and miseries of a commercial and mechanical age.
-Machinery was causing uproar among the
-hand-workers. Chartist riots, bread riots, were
-upsetting the customary peace. Troops were
-sent hither and thither, scattered over the country,
-and allowed a certain degree of licence and
-slackness. The army had no administrative
-head. There was no one to consider the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-question of stores or transit, and, even when the
-war broke out, it was treated with John Bull’s
-too casual self-satisfaction as a moment of
-excitement and self-glorification, from which
-our troops were to return as victors in October,
-after displaying themselves for a few weeks and
-satisfactorily alarming the enemy. The moral of
-it all is ever present and needs no pressing home.
-Not until every man has had the training of a
-man in defence of his own home, and is himself
-responsible for the defence of his own hearth,
-shall we as a nation learn the humility and
-caution of the true courage, and realize how
-much, at the best, is outside human control, and
-how great is our responsibility in every detail for
-all that lies within it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-
-<p>“<i>Five were wise, and five foolish.</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When the great moment came, there was one
-wise virgin whose lamp had long been trimmed
-and daily refilled with ever finer quality of flame.
-She was not alone. There were others, and she
-was always among the first to do them honour.
-But she stood easily first, and first, too, in the
-modesty of all true greatness. All her life had
-been a training for the work which was now
-given to her hand.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many women who longed to nurse
-and tend our soldiers, many were fast bound by
-duties to those dependent on them, many were
-tied hand and foot by the pettifogging prejudices
-of the school in which they had been brought up.
-Many, whose ardour would have burned up all
-prejudice and all secondary claim, were yet
-ignorant, weak, incapable. Florence Nightingale,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-on the contrary, was highly trained, not only in
-intellect, but in the details of what she rightly
-regarded as an art, “a craft,” the careful art
-of nursing—highly disciplined in body and in
-soul, every muscle and nerve obedient to her
-will, an international linguist, a woman in whom
-organizing power had been developed to its
-utmost capacity by a severely masculine education,
-and whose experience had been deepened
-by practical service both at home and abroad.</p>
-
-<p>Her decision was a foregone conclusion, and a
-very striking seal was set upon it. For the
-letter, in which she offered to go out to the
-Crimea as the servant of her country, was crossed
-by a letter from Mr. Sidney Herbert, that
-country’s representative at the War Office, asking
-her to go. Promptitude on both sides had its
-own reward; for each would have missed the
-honour of spontaneous initiative had there been
-a day’s delay.</p>
-
-<p>Here is a part of Mr. Herbert’s letter:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“<i>October 15, 1854.</i></p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Dear Miss Nightingale</span>,—You will have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-seen in the papers that there is a great deficiency
-of nurses at the hospital of Scutari. The other
-alleged deficiencies, namely, of medical men, lint,
-sheets, etc., must, if they ever existed, have been
-remedied ere this, as the number of medical officers
-with the army amounted to one to every ninety-five
-men in the whole force, being nearly double
-what we have ever had before; and thirty more
-surgeons went out there three weeks ago, and
-must at this time, therefore, be at Constantinople.
-A further supply went on Monday, and a fresh
-batch sail next week. As to medical stores, they
-have been sent out in profusion, by the ton
-weight—15,000 pair of sheets, medicine, wine,
-arrowroot in the same proportion; and the only
-way of accounting for the deficiency at Scutari,
-if it exists, is that the mass of the stores went to
-Varna, and had not been sent back when the
-army left for the Crimea, but four days would
-have remedied that.</p>
-
-<p>“In the meantime, stores are arriving, but the
-deficiency of female nurses is undoubted; none
-but male nurses have ever been admitted to
-military hospitals. It would be impossible to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-carry about a large staff of female nurses with an
-army in the field. But at Scutari, having now a
-fixed hospital, no military reason exists against the
-introduction; and I am confident they might be
-introduced with great benefit, for hospital orderlies
-must be very rough hands, and most of them, on
-such an occasion as this, very inexperienced
-ones.</p>
-
-<p>“I receive numbers of offers from ladies to go
-out, but they are ladies who have no conception
-of what a hospital is, nor of the nature of its
-duties; and they would, when the time came,
-either recoil from the work or be entirely useless,
-and consequently, what is worse, entirely in the
-way; nor would these ladies probably even understand
-the necessity, especially in a military
-hospital, of strict obedience to rule, etc....</p>
-
-<p>“There is but one person in England that
-I know of who would be capable of organizing
-and superintending such a scheme, and I have
-been several times on the point of asking you
-hypothetically if, supposing the attempt were
-made, you would undertake to direct it. The
-selection of the rank and file of nurses would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-be difficult—no one knows that better than yourself.
-The difficulty of finding women equal to
-the task, after all, full of horror, and requiring,
-besides knowledge and goodwill, great knowledge
-and great courage, will be great; the task of
-ruling them and introducing system among them
-great; and not the least will be the difficulty
-of making the whole work smoothly with the
-medical and military authorities out there.</p>
-
-<p>“This is what makes it so important that the
-experiment should be carried out by one with
-administrative capacity and experience. A number
-of sentimental, enthusiastic ladies turned loose
-in the hospital at Scutari would probably after
-a few days be <i lang="fr">mises à la porte</i> by those whose
-business they would interrupt, and whose authority
-they would dispute.</p>
-
-<p>“My question simply is—would you listen to
-the request to go out and supervise the whole
-thing? You would, of course, have plenary
-authority over all the nurses, and I think I could
-secure you the fullest assistance and co-operation
-from the medical staff, and you would also have
-an unlimited power of drawing on the Government<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-for whatever you think requisite for the
-success of your mission. On this part of the
-subject the details are too many for a letter, and
-I reserve it for our meeting; for, whatever
-decision you take, I know you will give me
-every assistance and advice. I do not say one
-word to press you. You are the only person who
-can judge for yourself which of conflicting or
-incompatible duties is the first or the highest;
-but I think I must not conceal from you that
-upon your decision will depend the ultimate
-success or failure of the plan.... Will you
-let me have a line at the War Office, to let
-me know?</p>
-
-<p>“There is one point which I have hardly
-a right to touch upon, but I trust you will
-pardon me. If you were inclined to undertake
-the great work, would Mr. and Mrs. Nightingale
-consent? This work would be so national, and
-the request made to you, proceeding from the
-Government which represents the nation, comes
-at such a moment that I do not despair of their
-consent.</p>
-
-<p>“Deriving your authority from the Government,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
-your position would ensure the respect
-and consideration of every one, especially in
-a service where official rank carries so much
-respect. This would secure you any attention
-or comfort on your way out there, together
-with a complete submission to your orders. I
-know these things are a matter of indifference
-to you, except so far as they may further the
-great object you may have in view; but they
-are of importance in themselves, and of every
-importance to those who have a right to take
-an interest in your personal position and comfort.</p>
-
-<p>“I know you will come to a right and wise
-decision. God grant it may be one in accordance
-with my hopes.—Believe me, dear Miss Nightingale,
-ever yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Sidney Herbert</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale’s decision was announced in
-the <cite>Times</cite>, and on October 23 the following
-paragraph appeared in that paper:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It is known that Miss Nightingale has been
-appointed by Government to the office of Superintendent
-of Nurses at Scutari. She has been
-pressed to accept of sums of money for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-general objects of the hospitals for the sick and
-wounded. Miss Nightingale neither invites nor
-can refuse these generous offers. Her bankers’
-account is opened at Messrs. Glyn’s, but it must
-be understood that any funds forwarded to her
-can only be used so as not to interfere with the
-official duties of the Superintendent.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This was written by Miss Nightingale herself,
-and the response in money was at once very large,
-but money was by no means the first or most
-difficult question.</p>
-
-<p>No time must be lost in choosing the nurses
-who were to accompany the Lady-in-Chief. It
-was not until later that she became known by
-that name, but it already well described her
-office, for every vital arrangement and decision
-seems to have centred in her. She knew well
-that her task could be undertaken in no spirit
-of lightness, and she never wasted power in mere
-fuss or flurry.</p>
-
-<p>She once wrote to Sir Bartle Frere of “that
-careless and ignorant person called the Devil,”
-and she did not want any of his careless and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-ignorant disciples to go out with her among her
-chosen band. Nor did she want any incompetent
-sentimentalists of the kind brought before us in
-that delightful story of our own South African
-War, of the soldier who gave thanks for the
-offer to wash his face, but confessed that fourteen
-other ladies had already offered the same service.
-Indeed, the rather garish merriment of that little
-tale seems almost out of place when we recall the
-rotting filth and unspeakable stench of blood and
-misery in which the men wounded in the Crimea
-were lying wrapped from head to foot. No
-antiseptic surgery, no decent sanitation, no means
-of ordinary cleanliness, were as yet found for our
-poor Tommies, and Kinglake assures us that all
-the efforts of masculine organization, seeking to
-serve the crowded hospitals with something called
-a laundry, had only succeeded in washing <em>seven</em>
-shirts for the entire army!</p>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale knew a little of the vastness
-of her undertaking, but she is described by Lady
-Canning at this critical time as “gentle and wise
-and quiet”—“in no bustle or hurry.” Yet within
-a single week from the date of Mr. Herbert’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-letter asking her to go out, all her arrangements
-were made and her nurses chosen—nay more,
-the expedition had actually started.</p>
-
-<p>The War Office issued its official intimation
-that “Miss Nightingale, a lady with greater
-practical experience of hospital administration
-and treatment than any other lady in this country,”
-had undertaken the noble and arduous work of
-organizing and taking out nurses for the soldiers;
-and it was also notified that she had been
-appointed by Government to the office of Superintendent
-of Nurses at Scutari.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Examiner</cite> published a little biographical
-sketch in reply to the question which was being
-asked everywhere. Society, of course, knew Miss
-Nightingale very well, but Society includes only
-a small knot of people out of the crowd of
-London’s millions, to say nothing of the provinces.
-Many out of those millions were asking,
-“Who is Miss Nightingale?” and, in looking
-back, it is amazing to see how many disapproved
-of the step she was taking.</p>
-
-<p>In those days, as in these, and much more
-tyrannically than in these, Mrs. Grundy had her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-silly daughters, ready to talk slander and folly
-about any good woman who disregarded her. To
-Miss Nightingale she simply did not exist. Miss
-Martineau was right when she wrote of her that
-“to her it was a small thing to be judged by
-man’s judgment.”</p>
-
-<p>And the spirit in which she chose the women
-who were to go out under her to the Crimea may
-be judged by later words of her own, called forth by
-a discussion of fees for nurses—words in which the
-italics are mine, though the sentence is quoted
-here to show the scorn she poured on fashion’s
-canting view of class distinction.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I have seen,” she said, “somewhere in print
-that nursing is a profession to be followed by the
-‘lower middle-class.’ Shall we say that painting
-or sculpture is a profession to be followed by the
-‘lower middle-class’? <em>Why limit the class at all?</em>
-Or shall we say that God is only to be served in
-His sick by the ‘lower middle-class’?</p>
-
-<p>“<em>It appears to be the most futile of all distinctions
-to classify as between ‘paid’ and unpaid art, so
-between ‘paid’ and unpaid nursing, to make into a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-test a circumstance as adventitious as whether the hair
-is black or brown—viz., whether people have private
-means or not, whether they are obliged or not to work
-at their art or their nursing for a livelihood.</em> Probably
-no person ever did that well which he did
-only for money. Certainly no person ever did
-that well which he did not work at as hard as
-if he did it solely for money. If by amateur in
-art or in nursing are meant those who take it
-up for play, it is not art at all, it is not nursing
-at all. <em>You never yet made an artist by paying him
-well; but an artist ought to be well paid.</em>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The woman who in later life wrote this, and
-all her life acted on it, could not only well afford
-to let <cite>Punch</cite> have his joke about the nightingales
-who would shortly turn into ringdoves—although,
-indeed, <cite>Punch’s</cite> verses and illustration were delightful
-in their innocent fun—but could even without
-flinching let vulgar slander insinuate its usual
-common-minded nonsense. She herself has
-written in <cite>Nursing Notes</cite>:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The everyday management of a large ward,
-let alone of a hospital, the knowing what are the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-laws of life and death for men, and what the laws
-of health for wards (and wards are healthy or unhealthy
-mainly according to the knowledge or
-ignorance of the nurse)—are not these matters
-of sufficient importance and difficulty to require
-learning by experience and careful inquiry, just
-as much as any other art? They do not come
-by inspiration to the lady disappointed in love,
-nor to the poor workhouse drudge hard up for
-a livelihood. And terrible is the injury which
-has followed to the sick from such wild notions.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Happily, too, she was not blinded by the
-narrow sectarian view of religion which was, in
-her day and generation, so often a part of the
-parrot belief of those who learned their English
-version of the faith by rote, rather than with the
-soul’s experience, for she goes on to say:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“In this respect (and why is it so?) in Roman
-Catholic countries, both writers and workers are,
-in theory at least, far before ours. They would
-never think of such a beginning for a good-working
-Superior or Sister of Charity. And
-many a Superior has refused to admit a postulant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-who appeared to have no better ‘vocation’ or
-reasons for offering herself than these.</p>
-
-<p>“It is true we make no ‘vows.’ But is a
-‘vow’ necessary to convince us that the true
-spirit for learning any art, most especially an art
-of charity, aright, is not a disgust to everything
-or something else? Do we really place the love
-of our kind (and of nursing as one branch of it)
-so low as this? What would the Mère Angélique
-of Port Royal, what would our own Mrs. Fry,
-have said to this?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>How silly, in the light of these words, was the
-gossip of the idle person, proud of her shopping
-and her visiting list and her elaborate choice
-of dinner, who greeted the news of this nursing
-embassy to the Crimea with such cheap remarks
-as that the women would be all invalided home
-in a month; that it was most improper for “young
-ladies”—for it was not only shop assistants who
-were called “young ladies” in early Victorian
-days—to nurse in a military hospital; it was only
-nonsense to try and “nurse soldiers when they did
-not even yet know what it was to nurse a baby!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span></p>
-
-<p>Such folly would only shake its hardened old
-noddle on reading, in the <cite>Times</cite> reprint of the
-article in the <cite>Examiner</cite>, that Miss Nightingale
-was “a young lady of singular endowments both
-natural and acquired. In a knowledge of the
-ancient languages and of the higher branches
-of mathematics, in general art, science, and
-literature, her attainments are extraordinary.
-There is scarcely a modern language which she
-does not understand, and she speaks French,
-German, and Italian as fluently as her native
-English. She has visited and studied all the
-various nations of Europe, and has ascended the
-Nile to its remotest cataract. Young (about
-the age of our Queen), graceful, feminine, rich,
-popular, she holds a singularly gentle and persuasive
-influence over all with whom she comes
-in contact. Her friends and acquaintances are
-of all classes and persuasions, but her happiest
-place is at home, in the centre of a very large
-band of accomplished relatives.”</p>
-
-<p>Girton and Newnham, Somerville and Lady
-Margaret did not then exist. If any one had
-dreamed of them, the dream had not yet been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-recorded. Perhaps its first recognized expression,
-in Tennyson’s “Princess” in 1847, mingling as
-it does with the story of a war and of the
-nursing of wounded men, may have imperceptibly
-smoothed away a few coarse prejudices
-from the path Florence Nightingale was to
-tread, but far more effectually was the way
-cleared by her own inspiring personality. Mrs.
-Tooley quotes from an intimate letter the following
-words: “Miss Nightingale is one of those
-whom God forms for great ends. You cannot
-hear her say a few sentences—no, not even look
-at her—without feeling that she is an extraordinary
-being. Simple, intellectual, sweet, full
-of love and benevolence, she is a fascinating and
-perfect woman. She is tall and pale. Her face
-is exceedingly lovely, but better than all is the
-soul’s glory that shines through every feature
-so exultingly. Nothing can be sweeter than
-her smile. It is like a sunny day in summer.”</p>
-
-<p>She who advised other women to make ready
-for the business of their lives as men make ready
-had been for long years preparing herself, and
-there was therefore none of the nervous waste<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-and excitement of those who in a moment of
-impulse take a path which to their ignorance
-is like leaping in the dark.</p>
-
-<p>But she knew well how much must depend
-on those she took with her, and it was clear that
-many who desired to go were quite unfitted for
-the work.</p>
-
-<p>With her usual clearsightedness she knew
-where to turn for help. Felicia Skene was
-among those whom she consulted and whose
-advice she found of good service. It has already
-been noted in these pages that Miss Skene had,
-without knowing it, been preparing one of the
-threads to be interwoven in that living tapestry
-in which Miss Nightingale’s labours were to
-endure in such glowing colours. Like Miss
-Nightingale she had real intimacy with those
-outside her own order, and by her practical
-human sympathy understood life, not only in
-one rank, but in all ranks. By night as well
-as by day her door was open to the outcast, and
-in several life-stories she had played a part
-which saved some poor girl from suicide. Full
-of humour and romance, and a welcome guest in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-every society, she will be remembered longest
-for her work in rescuing others both in body
-and in soul, and you will remember that, on the
-two occasions when the cholera visited Oxford,
-she nursed the sick and the dying by day and by
-night, and did much to direct and organize the
-helpful work of others. Miss Wordsworth
-speaks of her “innate purity of heart and mind,”
-and says of her, “one always felt of her that she
-had been brought up in the best of company, as
-indeed she had.” It was just such women that
-Miss Nightingale needed—women who, in constant
-touch with what was coarse and hard, could
-never become coarse or hard themselves; women
-versed in practical service and trained by actual
-experience as well as by hard-won knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, it chanced that after Miss Skene’s
-labour of love in the cholera visitation, her
-niece, “Miss Janie Skene, then a girl of
-fifteen, who was staying in Constantinople with
-her parents, had gone with her mother to
-visit the wounded soldiers at Scutari. Shocked
-by their terrible sufferings and the lack of all
-that might have eased their pain, she wrote<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-strongly to her grandfather, who sent her letter
-to the <cite>Times</cite>, where it did much to stir up public
-opinion.”</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It struck Felicia,” says Miss Rickards, “that
-having with great pains trained her corps of
-nurses for the cholera, they might now be utilized
-at Scutari, her great desire being to go out
-herself at the head of them. Had these events
-occurred at the present day, when ideas have
-changed as to what ladies, still young, may and
-may not do in the way of bold enterprise,
-perhaps she might have obtained her parents’
-permission to go. As it was the notion
-was too new and startling to be taken into
-consideration; and she had to content herself
-with doing all she could at home to send out
-others.</p>
-
-<p>“Her zeal was quickened by a letter she
-received from Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, who
-had been much struck by her energy and ability,
-urging her to do all she could in England to send
-to the rescue.</p>
-
-<p>“At once she set out as a pioneer in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-undertaking, delighted to encourage her nurses
-to take their part in the heroic task.</p>
-
-<p>“Meantime Miss Nightingale was hard at
-work enlisting recruits, thankful to secure Felicia’s
-services as agent at Oxford. She sent her friends
-Mr. and Mrs. Bracebridge down there, that they
-might inspect the volunteers and select the
-women they thought would be suitable.</p>
-
-<p>“The interviews took place in Mr. Skene’s
-dining-room, along the walls of which the
-candidates were ranged.</p>
-
-<p>“Kind-hearted as Mrs. Bracebridge was, her
-proceedings were somewhat in the ‘Off with
-their heads!’ style of the famous duchess in
-‘Alice in Wonderland.’ If the sudden questions
-fired at each in succession were not answered
-in a way that she thought quite satisfactory,
-‘She won’t do; send her out,’ was the decided
-command.</p>
-
-<p>“And Felicia had to administer balm to the
-wounded feelings of the rejected.”<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>The Expedition.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the thirty-eight nurses who went out with
-Miss Nightingale, twenty-four had been trained
-in sisterhoods, Roman and Anglican, and of the
-remaining fourteen, some had been chosen in
-the first instance by Lady Maria Forrester, others
-by Miss Skene and Mrs. Bracebridge, but it must
-be supposed that the final decision lay always
-with Miss Nightingale.</p>
-
-<p>The correspondence that had poured in upon
-her and upon Mr. Herbert was overwhelming,
-and there was a personal interview with all who
-seemed in the least degree likely to be admitted
-to her staff; so that she worked very hard, with
-little pause for rest, to get through her ever-increasing
-task in time. Each member of the
-staff undertook to obey her absolutely.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many who were rejected, though<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-most were unsuitable for quite other reasons,
-there were some who objected to this rule.
-Many who were full of sympathy and generosity
-had to be turned away, because they had not had
-enough training. Advertisements had appeared
-in the <cite>Record</cite> and the <cite>Guardian</cite>, but the crowd
-of fair ladies who flocked to the War Office in
-response were not always received with such
-open arms as they expected. Mr. Herbert was
-well on his guard against the charms of impulsive,
-but ignorant, goodwill, and he issued a
-sort of little manifesto in which he said that
-“many ladies whose generous enthusiasm prompts
-them to offer services as nurses are little aware
-of the hardships they would have to encounter,
-and the horrors they would have to witness.
-Were all accepted who offer,” he added, with a
-touch of humour, “I fear we should have not
-only many indifferent nurses, but many hysterical
-patients.”</p>
-
-<p>He and his wife were untiring in their efficiency
-and their help.</p>
-
-<p>The English Sisterhoods had made a difficulty
-about surrendering control over the Sisters they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-sent out, but Miss Nightingale overcame that,
-and the Roman bishop entirely freed the ten
-Sisters of his communion from any rule which
-could clash with Miss Nightingale’s orders.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the evening of October 21, 1854,
-that the “Angel Band,” as Kinglake rightly
-names them, quietly set out under cover of
-darkness, escorted by a parson and a courier
-and by Miss Nightingale’s friends, Mr. and
-Mrs. Bracebridge of Atherstone Hall.</p>
-
-<p>In this way all flourish of trumpets was
-avoided. Miss Nightingale always hated public
-fuss—or, indeed, fuss of any kind. She was
-anxious also to lighten the parting for those who
-loved her best, and who had given a somewhat
-doubting consent to her resolve.</p>
-
-<p>The Quakerish plainness of her black dress did
-but make the more striking the beauty of her
-lovely countenance, the firm, calm sweetness of
-the smiling lips and steadfast eyes, the grace of
-the tall, slender figure; and as the train whirled
-her out of sight with her carefully-chosen regiment,
-she left with her friends a vision of good
-cheer and high courage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span></p>
-
-<p>But however quiet the setting forth, the
-arrival at Boulogne could not be kept a secret,
-and the enthusiasm of our French allies for those
-who were going to nurse the wounded made
-the little procession a heart-moving triumph.
-A merry band of white-capped fishwives met
-the boat and, seizing all the luggage, insisted on
-doing everything for nothing. Boxes on their
-backs and bags in their hands, they ran along in
-their bright petticoats, pouring out their hearts
-about their own boys at the front, and asking
-only the blessing of a handshake as the sole
-payment they would take. Then, as Miss
-Nightingale’s train whistled its noisy way out
-of the station, waving their adieus while the
-tears streamed down the weather-beaten cheeks
-of more than one old wife, they stood and
-watched with longing hearts. At Paris there
-was a passing visit to the Mother-house of Miss
-Nightingale’s old friends, the Sisters of St. Vincent
-de Paul, and a little call on Lady Canning,
-also an old friend, who writes of her as “happy
-and stout-hearted.”</p>
-
-<p>The poor “Angels” had a terrible voyage to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-Malta, for the wind, as with St. Paul, was “contrary”
-and blew a hurricane dead against them,
-so that their ship, the <i>Vectis</i>, had something of a
-struggle to escape with its many lives. They
-touched at Malta on October 31, 1854, and soon
-afterwards set sail again for Constantinople.</p>
-
-<p>What an old-world story it seems now to talk
-of “setting sail”!</p>
-
-<p>On the 4th of November, the day before the
-battle of Inkermann, they had reached their
-goal, and had their work before them at Scutari.</p>
-
-<p>A friend of mine who knows Scutari well has
-described it in summer as a place of roses, the
-very graves wreathed all over with the blossoming
-briars of them; and among those graves she
-found a nameless one, on which, without revealing
-identity, the epitaph stated, in the briefest
-possible way, that this was the grave of a hospital
-matron, adding in comment the words spoken of
-Mary when she broke the alabaster box—and in
-this instance full of pathos—the six words,
-“She hath done what she could.” And I find
-from one of Miss Nightingale’s letters that it
-was she herself who inscribed those words.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span></p>
-
-<p>Unspeakable indeed must have been the difficulties
-with which any previous hospital matron
-had to contend, rigid and unbreakable for ordinary
-fingers the red tape by which she must have
-been bound. On this subject Kinglake has
-written words which are strong indeed in their
-haunting sincerity.</p>
-
-<p>He writes of an “England officially typified
-that swathes her limbs round with red tape,”
-and of those who, though dogged in routine
-duty, were so afraid of any new methods that
-they were found “surrendering, as it were, at
-discretion, to want and misery” for those in
-their care.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“But,” he adds, “happily, after a while, and
-in gentle, almost humble, disguise which put
-foes of change off their guard, there acceded
-to the State a new power.</p>
-
-<p>“Almost at one time—it was when they
-learnt how our troops had fought on the banks
-of the Alma—the hearts of many women in
-England, in Scotland, in Ireland, were stirred
-with a heavenly thought impelling them to offer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-and say that, if only the State were consenting,
-they would go out to tend our poor soldiers laid
-low on their hospital pallets by sickness or
-wounds; and the honour of welcoming into our
-public service this new and gracious aid belonged
-to Mr. Sidney Herbert.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>He goes on to explain and define Mr. Herbert’s
-exact position at the War Office; how
-he was not only official chief there, but, “having
-perhaps also learnt from life’s happy experience
-that, along with what he might owe to fortune
-and birth, his capacity for business of State, his
-frank, pleasant speech, his bright, winning manners,
-and even his glad, sunshine looks, had a
-tendency to disarm opposition, he quietly, yet
-boldly, stepped out beyond his set bounds, and
-not only became in this hospital business the
-volunteer delegate of the Duke of Newcastle,
-but even ventured to act without always asking
-the overworked Department of War to go through
-the form of supporting him by orders from the
-Secretary of State; so that thus, and to the great
-advantage of the public service, he usurped, as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-it were, an authority which all who knew what
-he was doing rejoiced to see him wield. If he
-could not in strictness command by an official
-despatch, he at least could impart what he
-wished in a ‘private letter;’ and a letter,
-though ostensibly ‘private,’ which came from
-the War Office, under the hand of its chief,
-was scarce likely to encounter resistance from
-any official personages to whom the writer might
-send it.</p>
-
-<p>“Most happily this gifted minister had formed
-a strong belief in the advantages our military
-hospitals would gain by accepting womanly aid;
-and, proceeding to act on this faith, he not only
-despatched to the East some chosen bands of
-ladies, and of salaried attendants accustomed to
-hospital duties, but also requested that they
-might have quarters and rations assigned to
-them; and, moreover, whilst requesting the
-principal medical officer at Scutari to point out
-to these new auxiliaries how best they could
-make themselves useful, Mr. Sidney Herbert
-enjoined him to receive with attention and
-deference the counsels of the Lady-in-Chief, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-was, of course, no other than Miss Nightingale
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>“That direction was one of great moment, and
-well calculated to govern the fate of a newly
-ventured experiment.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus it was that, under the sanction of a
-government acceding to the counsels of one of
-its most alert and sagacious members, there went
-out angel women from England, resolved to
-confront that whole world of horror and misery
-that can be gathered into a military hospital
-from camp or battlefield; and their plea, when
-they asked to be trusted with this painful, this
-heart-rending mission, was simply the natural
-aptitude of their sex for ministering to those
-who lie prostrate from sickness and wounds.
-Using that tender word which likened the helplessness
-of the down-stricken soldier to the helplessness
-of infancy, they only said they would
-‘nurse’ him; and accordingly, if regarded with
-literal strictness, their duty would simply be that
-of attendants in hospital wards—attendants obeying
-with strictness the orders of the medical
-officers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It was seen that the humble soldiers were
-likely to be the men most in want of care, and
-the ladies were instructed to abstain from attending
-upon any of the officers.”<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>The tribute of Kinglake and Macdonald and the Chelsea
-Pensioners.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But before continuing the story of Miss Nightingale’s
-expedition, we must turn aside for a
-moment in Kinglake’s company to realize something
-of the devotion of another brave and unselfish
-Englishwoman who, without her “commanding
-genius,” yet trod the same path of sacrifice and
-compassion. The words “commanding genius”
-were spoken by Dean Stanley of Miss Nightingale,
-and it is of Dean Stanley’s sister Mary
-that a word must now be spoken. She had been
-the right hand of her father, the Bishop of
-Norwich, and, in serving the poor, had disclosed
-special gifts, made the more winning by her
-gentle, loving nature. Having had experience
-of travel, which was much less a thing of course
-than it is in these days, she was willing to escort<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-a company of nurses chosen for work in the
-Levant, and at first this was all she expected to
-do. But there proved to be a difficulty about
-receiving them at Scutari, and she could not bring
-herself to leave them without guidance; so she
-quietly gave up all thought of returning to
-England while the war continued.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Could she,” asks Kinglake, “see them in
-that strait disband, when she knew but too well
-that their services were bitterly needed for the
-shiploads and shiploads of stricken soldiery brought
-down day by day from the seat of war? Under
-stress of the question thus put by her own
-exacting conscience, or perhaps by the simpler
-commandment of her generous heart, she formed
-the heroic resolve which was destined to govern
-her life throughout the long, dismal period of
-which she then knew not the end. Instead of
-returning to England, and leaving on the shores
-of the Bosphorus her band of sisters and nurses,
-she steadfastly remained at their head, and along
-with them entered at once upon what may be
-soberly called an appalling task—the task of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-‘nursing’ in hospitals not only overcrowded
-with sufferers, but painfully, grievously wanting
-in most of the conditions essential to all good
-hospital management.</p>
-
-<p>“The sisters and salaried nurses,” says Kinglake,
-“who placed themselves under this guidance
-were in all forty-six; and Miss Stanley, with
-great spirit and energy, brought the aid of her
-whole reinforcement—at first to the naval hospital
-newly founded at Therapia under the
-auspices of our Embassy, and afterwards to
-another establishment—to that fated hospital at
-Kullali, in which, as we saw, at one time a
-fearful mortality raged.</p>
-
-<p>“Not regarding her mission as one that needs
-should aim loftily at the reformation of the
-hospital management, Miss Stanley submitted
-herself for guidance to the medical officers,
-saying, ‘What do you wish us to do?’ The
-officers wisely determined that they would not
-allow the gentle women to exhaust their power
-of doing good by undertaking those kinds of
-work that might be as well or better performed
-by men, and their answer was to this effect:<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-‘The work that in surgical cases has been
-commonly done by our dressers will be performed
-by them, as before, under our orders. What we
-ask of you is that you will see the men take
-the medicines and the nourishment ordered for
-them, and we know we can trust that you
-will give them all that watchful care which
-alleviates suffering, and tends to restore health
-and strength.’</p>
-
-<p>“With ceaseless devotion and energy the instructions
-were obeyed. What number of lives
-were saved—saved even in that pest-stricken hospital
-of Kullali—by a long, gentle watchfulness,
-when science almost despaired, no statistics, of
-course, can show; and still less can they gauge or
-record the alleviation of misery effected by care
-such as this; but apparent to all was the softened
-demeanour of the soldier when he saw approaching
-his pallet some tender, gracious lady intent
-to assuage his suffering, to give him the blessing
-of hope, to bring him the food he liked, and
-withal—when she came with the medicine—to
-rule him like a sick child. Coarse expressions
-and oaths deriving from barracks and camps died<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-out in the wards as though exorcised by the
-sacred spell of her presence, and gave way to
-murmurs of gratitude. When conversing in this
-softened mood with the lady appointed to nurse
-him, the soldier used often to speak as though
-the worship he owed her and the worship he
-owed to Heaven were blending into one sentiment;
-and sometimes, indeed, he disclosed a wild
-faith in the ministering angel that strained beyond
-the grave. ‘Oh!’ said one to the lady
-he saw bending over his pallet, ‘you are taking
-me on the way to heaven; don’t forsake me
-now!’ When a man was under delirium, its
-magic force almost always transported him to
-the home of his childhood, and made him indeed
-a child—a child crying, ‘Mother! mother!’
-Amongst the men generally, notwithstanding
-their moments of fitful piety, there still glowed
-a savage desire for the fall of Sebastopol. More
-than once—wafted up from Constantinople—the
-sound of great guns was believed to announce
-a victory, and sometimes there came into the
-wards fresh tidings of combat brought down
-from our army in front of the long-besieged<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-stronghold. When this happened, almost all of
-the sufferers who had not yet lost their consciousness
-used to show that, however disabled, they
-were still soldiers—true soldiers. At such times,
-on many a pallet, the dying man used to raise
-himself by unwonted effort, and seem to yearn
-after the strife, as though he would answer once
-more the appeal of the bugles and drums.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus7">
-<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Florence Nightingale at the Therapia Hospital.</p>
-<p class="caption">“I was sick, and ye visited me.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Kinglake’s touching description of what
-womanly tenderness could do for our soldiers,
-and of the worship it called forth, is followed
-by these words:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“But great would be the mistake of any
-chronicler fancying that the advantage our
-country derived from womanly aid was only an
-accession of nurses; for, if gifted with the
-power to comfort and soothe, woman also—a
-still higher gift—can impel, can disturb, can
-destroy pernicious content; and when she came
-to the rescue in an hour of gloom and adversity,
-she brought to her self-imposed task that forethought,
-that agile brain power, that organizing
-and governing faculty of which our country had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-need. The males at that time in England were
-already giving proofs of the lameness in the use
-of brain power, which afterwards became more
-distinct. Owing, possibly, to their habits of
-industry, applied in fixed, stated directions, they
-had lost that command of brain force which
-kindles ‘initiative,’ and with it, of course, the
-faculty of opportunely resorting to any very new
-ways of action. They proved slow to see and to
-meet the fresh exigencies occasioned by war,
-when approaching, or even by war when present;
-and, apparently, in the hospital problem, they
-must have gone on failing and failing indefinitely,
-if they had not undergone the propulsion of the
-quicker—the woman’s—brain to ‘set them going’
-in time.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>He then goes on to tell of the arrival at “the
-immense Barrack Hospital” at Scutari of Miss
-Nightingale and her chosen band. “If,” he
-says, “the generous women thus sacrificing themselves
-were all alike in devotion to their sacred
-cause, there was one of them—the Lady-in-Chief—who
-not only came armed with the special experience<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-needed, but also was clearly transcendent
-in that subtle quality which gives to one human
-being a power of command over others. Of
-slender, delicate form, engaging, highly-bred,
-and in council a rapt, careful listener, so long
-as others were speaking; and strongly, though
-gently, persuasive whenever speaking herself, the
-Lady-in-Chief, the Lady Florence, Miss Nightingale,
-gave her heart to this enterprise in a
-spirit of absolute devotion; but her sway was
-not quite of the kind that many in England
-imagined.”</p>
-
-<p>No, indeed! Sentimentalists who talk as
-though she had been cast in the conventional
-mould of mere yielding amiability, do not realize
-what she had to do, nor with what fearless, unflinching
-force she went straight to her mark,
-not heeding what was thought of herself, overlooking
-the necessary wounds she must give to
-fools, caring only that the difficult duty should
-be done, the wholesale agony be lessened, the
-filth and disorder be swept away.</p>
-
-<p>Her sweetness was the sweetness of strength,
-not weakness, and was reserved not for the careless,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-the stupid, the self-satisfied, but for the
-men whose festering wounds and corrupting
-gangrene were suffered in their country’s pay,
-and had been increased by the heedless muddle
-of a careless peace-time and a criminally mismanaged
-transport service.</p>
-
-<p>The picture of their condition before her
-arrival is revolting in its horror. There is no
-finer thing in the history of this war, perhaps,
-than the heroism of the wounded and dying
-soldiers. We are told how, in the midst of their
-appalling privation, if they fancied a shadow on
-their General’s face—as well, indeed, there might
-be, when he saw them without the common
-necessaries and decencies of life, let alone a sick-room—they
-would seize the first possible opening
-for assuring him they had all they needed, and
-if they were questioned by him, though they
-were dying of cold and hunger—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“No man ever used to say: ‘My Lord, you
-see how I am lying wet and cold, with only this
-one blanket to serve me for bed and covering.
-The doctors are wonderfully kind, but they have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-not the medicines, nor the wine, nor any of the
-comforting things they would like to be given
-me. If only I had another blanket, I think
-perhaps I might live.’ Such words would have
-been true to the letter.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>But as for Lord Raglan, the chief whom
-they thus adored, “with the absolute hideous
-truth thus day by day spread out before him,
-he did not for a moment deceive himself by
-observing that no man complained.”</p>
-
-<p>Yet even cold and hunger were as nothing to
-the loathsome condition in which Miss Nightingale
-found the hospital at Scutari. There are
-certain kinds of filth which make life far more
-horrible than the brief moment of a brave death,
-and of filth of every sort that crowded hospital
-was full—filth in the air, for the stench was
-horrible, filth and gore as the very garment of
-the poor, patient, dying men.</p>
-
-<p>There was no washing, no clean linen. Even
-for bandages the shirts had to be stripped from
-the dead and torn up to stanch the wounds of
-the living.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span></p>
-
-<p>And there were other foul conditions which
-only the long labour of sanitary engineering
-could cure.</p>
-
-<p>The arrival day by day of more and more of
-the wounded has been described as an avalanche.
-We all know Tennyson’s “Charge of the Light
-Brigade”: that charge occurred at Balaclava the
-day before Miss Nightingale left England. And
-the terrible battle of Inkermann was fought the
-day after she arrived at Scutari.</p>
-
-<p>Here is a word-for-word description from
-Nolan’s history of the campaign, given also in
-Mrs. Tooley’s admirable “Life”:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“There were no vessels for water or utensils
-of any kind; no soap, towels, or cloths, no
-hospital clothes; the men lying in their uniforms,
-stiff with gore and covered with filth to a degree
-and of a kind no one could write about; their
-persons covered with vermin, which crawled
-about the floors and walls of the dreadful den
-of dirt, pestilence, and death to which they were
-consigned.</p>
-
-<p>“Medical assistance would naturally be expected<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-by the invalid as soon as he found himself
-in a place of shelter, but many lay waiting for
-their turn until death anticipated the doctor.
-The medical men toiled with unwearied assiduity,
-but their numbers were inadequate to
-the work.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The great hospital at Scutari is a quadrangle,
-each wing nearly a quarter of a mile long, and
-built in tiers of corridors and galleries, one above
-the other. The wounded men had been brought
-in and laid on the floor, side by side, as closely as
-they could lie, so that Kinglake was writing
-quite literally when he spoke of “miles of the
-wounded.”</p>
-
-<p>Rotting beneath an Eastern sky and filling the
-air with poison, Miss Nightingale counted the
-carcasses of six dead dogs lying under the hospital
-windows. And in all the vast building there
-was no cooking apparatus, though it did boast
-of what was supposed to be a kitchen. As for
-our modern bathrooms, the mere notion would
-have given rise to bitter laughter; for even the
-homely jugs and basins were wanting in that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-palace of a building, and water of any kind was
-a rare treasure.</p>
-
-<p>How were sick men to be “nursed,” when
-they could not even be washed, and their very
-food had to be carried long distances and was
-usually the worst possible!</p>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale—the Lady-in-Chief—had
-the capacity, the will, the driving power, to
-change all that.</p>
-
-<p>A week or two ago I had some talk with
-several of the old pensioners who remember her.
-The first to be introduced to me has lost now
-his power of speech through a paralytic stroke,
-but it was almost surprising, after all these long
-years that have passed between the Crimean day
-and our own day, to see how well-nigh overwhelming
-was the dumb emotion which moved
-the strong man at the naming of her name. The
-second, who was full of lively, chuckling talk,
-having been in active service for a month before
-her arrival in the Crimea, and himself seen the
-wondrous changes she wrought, was not only
-one of her adorers—all soldiers seem to be that—but
-also overflowing with admiration for her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-capability, her pluck. To him she was not only
-the ideal nurse, but also emphatically a woman
-of unsurpassed courage and efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>“You know, miss,” he said, “there was a
-many young doctors out there that should never
-have been there—they didn’t know their duty
-and they didn’t do as they should for us—and
-she chased ’em, ay, she did that! She got rid
-of ’em, and there was better ones come in their
-place, and it was all quite different. Oh yes,”
-and he laughed delightedly, as a schoolboy
-might. “Oh yes, she hunted ’em out.” I,
-who have a great reverence for the medical
-profession, felt rather shy and frightened and
-inclined to blush, but the gusto with which the
-veteran recalled a righteous vengeance on the
-heads of the unworthy was really very funny.
-And his gargoyle mirth set in high relief the
-tenderness with which he told of Miss Nightingale’s
-motherly ways with his poor wounded
-comrades, and how she begged them not to
-mind having their wounds washed, any more
-than if she were really their mother or sister,
-and thus overcame any false shame that might<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-have prevented their recovery. “Ah, she was
-a good woman,” he kept repeating, “there’s
-no two ways about it, a <em>good</em> woman!”</p>
-
-<p>From Pensioner John Garrett of the 3rd
-Battalion Grenadier Guards, I had one very
-interesting bit of history at first hand; for he
-volunteered the fact that on his first arrival in
-the Crimea—which was evidently about the
-same time as Miss Nightingale’s own, his first
-engagement having been the battle of Inkermann—Miss
-Nightingale being still unknown to the
-soldiers—a mere name to them—she had much
-unpopularity to overcome. Clearly jealous rumour
-had been at work against this mere woman
-who was coming, as the other pensioner had
-phrased it, “to chase the doctors.” This, of
-course, made the completeness of her rapid
-victory over the hearts of the entire army the
-more noteworthy.</p>
-
-<p>“And afterwards?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, <em>afterwards we knew what she was</em>, and
-she was very popular indeed!” Though he
-treasured and carried about with him everywhere
-a Prayer Book containing Florence Nightingale’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-autograph—which I told him ought to be a
-precious heirloom to his sons and their children,
-and therefore refused to accept, when in the
-generosity of his kind old heart he thrice tried
-to press it upon me—he had only seen her once;
-for he was camping out at the front, and it was
-on one of her passing visits that he had his
-vision of her. He is a very young-looking old
-man of eighty-two, Suffolk-born, and had been in
-the army from boyhood up to the time of taking
-his pension. He had fought in the battle of
-Inkermann and done valiant trench-duty before
-Sebastopol, and confirmed quite of his own
-accord the terrible accounts that have come to
-us of the privations suffered. “Water,” he said,
-“why, we could scarce get water to drink—much
-less to wash—why, I hadn’t a change of
-linen all the winter through.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you hadn’t much food, I hear, for your
-daily rations?” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, we didn’t have food every <em>day</em>!”
-said he, with a touch of gently scornful
-laughter. “Every <em>three</em> days or so, we may
-have had some biscuits served out. But<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-there was a lot of the food as wasn’t fit
-to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>He was, however, a man of few words, and
-when I asked him what Miss Nightingale was
-like, he answered rather unexpectedly and with
-great promptitude, “Well, she had a very nice
-figger.” All the same, though he did not dilate
-on the beauty of her countenance, and exercised
-a certain reserve of speech when I tried to draw
-him out about the Lady-in-Chief, it was clear
-that hers was a sacred name to him, and that
-the bit of her handwriting which he possessed
-in the little book, so carefully unwrapped for me
-from the tin box holding his dearest possessions,
-which he uncorded under my eyes with his own
-capable but rather tired old hands, between two
-bouts of his wearying cough, had for long been
-the great joy and pride of his present quiet
-existence.</p>
-
-<p>I had a talk with others of these veterans in
-their stately and well-earned home of rest in the
-Royal Hospital at Chelsea, and it was clear that
-to them all she was enshrined in memory’s
-highest place. This may be a fitting moment<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-for recording the tribute of Mr. Macdonald,
-the administrator of the <cite>Times</cite> Fund, who wrote
-of her before his return to England:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Wherever there is disease in its most dangerous
-form, and the hand of the spoiler distressingly
-nigh, there is that incomparable woman sure to
-be seen; her benignant presence is an influence
-for good comfort, even among the struggles of
-expiring nature. She is a ‘ministering angel,’
-without any exaggeration, in these hospitals,
-and, as her slender form glides quietly along
-each corridor, every poor fellow’s face softens
-with gratitude at the sight of her. When all
-the medical officers have retired for the night,
-and silence and darkness have settled down upon
-those miles of prostrate sick, she may be observed
-alone, with a little lamp in her hand, making
-her solitary rounds. The popular instinct was
-not mistaken, which, when she had set out from
-England on her mission of mercy, hailed her as
-a heroine; I trust she may not earn her title
-to a higher though sadder appellation. No one
-who has observed her fragile figure and delicate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-health can avoid misgivings lest these should
-fail. With the heart of a true woman, and the
-manners of a lady, accomplished and refined
-beyond most of her sex, she combines a surprising
-calmness of judgment and promptitude and
-decision of character.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The soldier who watched for her coming,
-night by night, on her quiet rounds, after dark,
-when other nurses were by her orders resting,
-and who only knew her as “the Lady with the
-Lamp,” has been quoted all over the world; but
-it has been well said that she was also “the lady
-with the brain.” Hercules had not so big a
-task before him when he cleansed the Augean
-stables, and the swiftness with which order and
-comfort were created in this “hell” of suffering—for
-so it has been named by those who saw
-and knew—might well be called one of the
-wonders of the world.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus8">
-<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“A Mission of Mercy.” Florence Nightingale at Scutari.</p>
-<p class="caption">(<i>After the painting by J. Barratt.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The secret lay partly in the fact that Florence
-Nightingale’s whole life had been an offering and
-a preparation. She knew all it had been possible
-for her to learn of hospital management and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-training. She never wasted words, nor frittered
-away her power. Her authority grew daily. Mr.
-Herbert’s support, even at so great a distance, was,
-of course, beyond price. Lord Raglan soon found
-the value of her letters. She inspired her orderlies
-with utmost devotion, and it is needless to speak
-of what her patients themselves felt to her.
-Kinglake is not, like the present writer, a woman,
-and therefore he can write with a good grace
-and from his own knowledge what might come
-with an ill grace from a woman’s pen. He shall
-again therefore be quoted, word for word, through
-a few pages.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The growth of her dominion was rapid, was
-natural, and not unlike the development of what
-men call ‘responsible government.’ One of
-others accepting a task ostensibly subordinate
-and humble, she yet could not, if she would,
-divest herself of the authority that belonged
-to her as a gentlewoman—as a gentlewoman
-abounding in all the natural gifts, and all the
-peculiar knowledge required for hospital management.
-Charged to be in the wards, to smooth<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span>
-the sufferer’s pillow, to give him his food and
-his medicine as ordered by the medical officers,
-she could not but speak with cogency of the
-state of the air which she herself had to breathe;
-she could not be bidden to acquiesce if the beds
-she approached were impure; she could scarcely
-be held to silence if the diet she had been told
-to administer were not forthcoming; and, whatever
-her orders, she could hardly be expected to
-give a sufferer food which she perceived to be
-bad or unfit. If the males<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> did not quite understand
-the peculiar contrivances fitted for the
-preparation of hospital diet, might she not,
-perhaps, disclose her own knowledge, and show
-them what to do? Or, if they could not be
-taught, or imagined that they had not the power
-to do what was needed, might not she herself
-compass her object by using the resources which
-she had at command? Might not she herself
-found and organize the requisite kitchens, when
-she knew that the difference between fit and
-unfit food was one of life and death to the
-soldier? And again, if she chose, might she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-not expend her own resources in striving against
-the foul poisons that surrounded our prostrate
-soldiery? Rather, far, than that even one man
-should suffer from those cruel wants which she
-generously chose to supply, it was well that the
-State should be humbled, and submit to the taunt
-which accused it of taking alms from her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“If we learnt that the cause of the evils afflicting
-our Levantine hospitals was a want of
-impelling and of governing power, we now see
-how the want was supplied. In the absence
-of all constituted authority proving equal to the
-emergency, there was need—dire need—of a
-firm, well-intentioned usurper; but amongst the
-males acting at Scutari there was no one with
-that resolute will, overstriding law, habit, and
-custom, which the cruel occasion required; for
-even Dr. M’Gregor, whose zeal and abilities
-were admirable, omitted to lay hold, dictatorially,
-of that commanding authority which—because
-his chief could not wield it—had fallen into
-abeyance. The will of the males was always
-to go on performing their accustomed duties
-industriously, steadily, faithfully, each labouring<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-to the utmost, and, if need be, even to death (as
-too often, indeed, was the case), in that groove-going
-‘state of life to which it had pleased God
-to call him.’ The will of the woman, whilst
-stronger, flew also more straight to the end;<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>
-for what she almost fiercely sought was—not
-to make good mere equations between official
-codes of duty and official acts of obedience, but—overcoming
-all obstacles, to succour, to save
-our prostrate soldiery, and turn into a well-ordered
-hospital the hell—the appalling hell—of the vast
-barrack wards and corridors. Nature seemed,
-as it were, to ordain that in such a conjuncture
-the all-essential power which our cramped, over-disciplined
-males had chosen to leave unexerted
-should pass to one who would seize it, should
-pass to one who could wield it—should pass to
-the Lady-in-Chief.</p>
-
-<p>“To have power was an essential condition of
-success in her sacred cause; and of power accordingly
-she knew and felt the worth, rightly judging
-that, in all sorts of matters within what she
-deemed its true range, her word must be law.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-Like other dictators, she had cast upon her one
-duty which no one can hope to perform without
-exciting cavil. For the sake of the cause, she
-had to maintain her dictatorship, and (on pain
-of seeing her efforts defeated by anarchical action)
-to check the growth of authority—of authority
-in even small matters—if not derived from herself.
-She was apparently careful in this direction;
-and, though outwardly calm when provoked,
-could give strong effect to her anger. On the
-other hand, when seeing merit in the labours
-of others, she was ready with generous praise.
-It was hardly in the nature of things that her
-sway should excite no jealousies, or that always,
-hand in hand with the energy which made her
-great enterprise possible, there should be the
-cold, accurate justice at which the slower sex
-aims; but she reigned—painful, heart-rending
-empire—in a spirit of thorough devotion to the
-objects of her care, and, upon the whole, with
-excellent wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>“To all the other sources of power which we
-have seen her commanding, she added one of a kind
-less dependent upon her personal qualities. Knowing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span>
-thoroughly the wants of a hospital, and foreseeing,
-apparently, that the State might fail to meet
-them, she had taken care to provide herself with
-vast quantities of hospital stores, and by drawing
-upon these to make good the shortcoming of any
-hampered or lazy official, she not only furnished
-our soldiery with the things they were needing,
-but administered to the defaulting administrator
-a telling, though silent, rebuke; and it would
-seem that under this discipline the groove-going
-men winced in agony, for they uttered touching
-complaints, declaring that the Lady-in-Chief did
-not choose to give them time (it was always
-time that the males wanted), and that the
-moment a want declared itself she made haste
-to supply it herself.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Another able writer—a woman—has said that
-for Miss Nightingale the testing moment of her
-life met her with the coming of the wagon-loads
-of wounded men from the battlefield of Inkermann,
-who were poured into the hospital at
-Scutari within twenty-four hours of her arrival.
-Had the sight of all that agony and of the senseless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-confusion that received it, led the Lady-in-Chief
-and her nurses to waste their power in
-rushing hither and thither in disorganized fear of
-defeat, their very sympathy and emotion dimming
-their foresight and clouding their brain, the
-whole story might have been different. But
-Miss Nightingale was of those who, by a steadfast
-obedience hour by hour to the voice within,
-have attained through the long years to a fine
-mastery of every nerve and muscle of that frail
-house wherein they dwell. The more critical
-the occasion, the more her will rose to meet it.
-She knew she must think of the welfare, not of
-one, but of thousands; and for tens of thousands
-she wrought the change from this welter of
-misery and death to that clean orderliness which
-for the moment seemed as far away as the unseen
-heaven. There were many other faithful and
-devoted nurses in the Crimea, though few, perhaps,
-so highly skilled; but her name stands alone as
-that of the high-hearted and daring spirit who
-made bold to change the evil system of the past
-when no man else had done anything but either
-consent to it or bemoan it. She, at least, had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-never been bound by red tape, and her whole
-soul rose up in arms at sight of the awful suffering
-which had been allowed under the shelter of
-dogged routine.</p>
-
-<p>Before ten days had passed, she had her
-kitchen ready and was feeding 800 men every
-day with well-cooked food, and this in spite of
-the unforeseen and overwhelming numbers in
-which the new patients had been poured into
-the hospitals after Balaclava and Inkermann. She
-had brought out with her, in the <i>Vectis</i>, stores of
-invalid food, and all sorts of little delicacies surprised
-the eyes and lips of the hitherto half-starved
-men. Their gentle nurses brought them beef tea,
-chicken broth, jelly. They were weak and in
-great pain, and may be forgiven if their gratitude
-was, as we are told, often choked with sobs.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Tooley tells us of one Crimean veteran,
-that when he received a basin of arrowroot on
-his first arrival at the hospital early in the morning,
-he said to himself, “‘Tommy, me boy, that’s
-all you’ll get into your inside this blessed day,
-and think yourself lucky you’ve got that.’ But
-two hours later, if another of them blessed angels<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-didn’t come entreating of me to have just a little
-chicken broth! Well, I took that, thinking
-maybe it was early dinner, and before I had well
-done wondering what would happen next, round
-the nurse came again with a bit o’ jelly; and all
-day long at intervals they kept on bringing me
-what they called ‘a little nourishment.’ In the
-evening, Miss Nightingale she came and had a
-look at me, and says she, ‘I hope you’re feeling
-better?’ I could have said, ‘Ma’am, I feels as
-fit as a fightin’ cock,’ but I managed to git out
-somethin’ a bit more polite.”<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-
-<p>The barracks had thirteen “coppers,” and in
-the old days meat and vegetables had just been
-tossed into these and boiled together anyhow.
-It is easy to imagine the greasy mess to which
-the fevered invalids must have been treated by
-the time the stuff had been carried round to the
-hospital.</p>
-
-<p>But now, sometimes in a single day, thirteen
-gallons of chicken broth, and forty gallons of
-arrowroot found their way from the new kitchen
-to the hospital wards.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="long"><i>The horrors of Scutari—The victory of the Lady-in-Chief—The
-Queen’s letter—Her gift of butter and treacle.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale’s discipline was strict; she
-did not mind the name of autocrat when men
-were dying by twenties for lack of what only
-an autocrat could do; and when there was continual
-loss of life for want of fitting nourishment,
-though there had been supplies sent out, as had
-been said “by the ton-weight,” she herself on
-at least one occasion, broke open the stores and
-fed her famishing patients. It is true that the
-ordinary matron would have been dismissed for
-doing so; she was not an ordinary matron—she
-was the Lady-in-Chief. To her that hath shall
-be given. She had grudged nothing to the
-service to which from childhood she had given
-herself—not strength, nor time, nor any other
-good gift of her womanhood, and having done<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-her part nobly, fortune aided her. Her friends
-were among the “powers that be,” and even her
-wealth was, in this particular battle, a very
-important means of victory. Her beauty would
-have done little for her if she had been incompetent,
-but being to the last degree efficient,
-her loveliness gave the final touch to her power—her
-loveliness and that personal magnetism
-which gave her sway over the hearts and minds
-of men, and also, let it be added, of women.
-Not only did those in authority give to her of
-their best—their best knowledge, their closest
-attention, their most untiring service—but she
-knew how to discern the true from the false,
-and to put to the best use the valuable information
-often confided to her. She had many helpers.
-Besides her thirty-eight nurses and the chaplain,
-Mr. Sidney Osborne, there were her friends,
-Mr. and Mrs. Bracebridge, and that splendid
-“fag,” as he called himself, the young “Mr.
-Stafford,”<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> who had left the gaieties of London
-to fetch and carry for the Lady-in-Chief, and—to
-quote Mrs. Tooley, “did anything and everything<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-which a handy and gallant gentleman
-could do to make himself useful to the lady
-whom he felt honoured to serve.” Among
-those who were most thoughtful in their little
-gifts for the wounded officers was the wife of
-our ambassador, Lady Stratford de Redcliffe, and
-her “beauteous guest,” as Kinglake calls her,
-Lady George Paget. But Miss Nightingale’s
-chief anxiety was not for the officers—they, like
-herself, had many influences in their favour—her
-thought was for the nameless rank and file, who
-had neither money nor rank, and were too often,
-as she knew, the forgotten pawns on the big
-chessboard. It was said “she thought only of
-the men;” she understood well that for their
-commanders her thought was less needed.</p>
-
-<p>“In the hearts of thousands and thousands of
-our people,” says Kinglake, “there was a yearning
-to be able to share the toil, the distress, the
-danger of battling for our sick and wounded
-troops against the sea of miseries that encompassed
-them on their hospital pallets; and men
-still remember how graciously, how simply, how
-naturally, if so one may speak, the ambassadress<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-Lady Stratford de Redcliffe and her beauteous
-guest gave their energies and their time to the
-work; still remember the generous exertions
-of Mr. Sidney Osborne and Mr. Joscelyne
-Percy; still remember, too, how Mr. Stafford—I
-would rather call him ‘Stafford O’Brien’—the
-cherished yet unspoilt favourite of English
-society, devoted himself heart and soul to the
-task of helping and comforting our prostrate
-soldiery in the most frightful depths of their
-misery.</p>
-
-<p>“Many found themselves embarrassed when
-trying to choose the best direction they could
-for their generous impulses; and not, I think,
-the least praiseworthy of all the self-sacrificing
-enterprises which imagination devised was that
-of the enthusiastic young fellow who, abandoning
-his life of ease, pleasure, and luxury, went out,
-as he probably phrased it, to ‘fag’ for the Lady-in-Chief.
-Whether fetching and carrying for her,
-or writing for her letters or orders, or orally
-conveying her wishes to public servants or others,
-he, for months and months, faithfully toiled,
-obeying in all things her word.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There was grace—grace almost mediæval—in
-his simple yet romantic idea; and, if humbly,
-still not the less usefully he aided the sacred
-cause, for it was one largely, mainly dependent
-on the power of the lady he served; so that,
-when by obeying her orders he augmented her
-means of action, and saved her precious time,
-there were unnumbered sufferers deriving sure
-benefit from his opportune, well-applied help.
-By no other kind of toil, however ambitiously
-aimed, could he well have achieved so much
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>But there was many a disappointment, much
-that did not seem “good luck” by any means,
-and that called for great courage and endurance.
-The stores, which Mr. Herbert had sent out in
-such abundance, had gone to Varna by mistake,
-and the loss of the <i>Prince</i>, a ship laden with
-ample supplies, a fortnight after Miss Nightingale’s
-arrival, was a very serious matter.</p>
-
-<p>Warm clothing for the frost-bitten men brought
-in from Sebastopol was so badly needed that one
-nurse, writing home, told her people: “Whenever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-a man opens his mouth with ‘Please, ma’am,
-I want to speak to you,’ my heart sinks within
-me, for I feel sure it will end in flannel shirts.”</p>
-
-<p>Every one had for too long been saying “all
-right,” when, as a matter of fact, it was all wrong.
-Here once again it is best to quote Kinglake.
-“By shunning the irksome light,” he says, “by
-choosing a low standard of excellence, and by
-vaguely thinking ‘War’ an excuse for defects
-which war did not cause, men, it seems, had
-contrived to be satisfied with the condition of
-our hospitals; but the Lady-in-Chief was one
-who would harbour no such content, seek no
-such refuge from pain. Not for her was the
-bliss—fragile bliss—of dwelling in any false
-paradise. She confronted the hideous truth.
-Her first care was—Eve-like—to dare to know,
-and—still Eve-like—to force dreaded knowledge
-on the faltering lord of creation. Then declaring
-against acquiescence in horror and misery
-which firmness and toil might remove, she
-waged her ceaseless war against custom and
-sloth, gaining every day on the enemy, and
-achieving, as we saw, in December, that which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-to eyes less intent than her own upon actual
-saving of life, and actual restoration of health,
-seemed already the highest excellence.”</p>
-
-<p>But, of course, what most made the men adore
-her was her loving individual care for each of
-those for whom she felt herself responsible.
-There was one occasion on which she begged
-to be allowed to try whether she could nurse
-back to possible life five wounded men who
-were being given up as “hopeless cases,” and
-did actually succeed in doing so.</p>
-
-<p>In all that terrible confusion of suffering that
-surrounded her soon after her first arrival, the
-first duty of the doctors was to sort out from the
-wounded as they arrived those cases which they
-could help and save from those which it seemed
-no human surgery could help.</p>
-
-<p>While this was being done she stood by: she
-never spared herself the sight of suffering, and
-her eyes—the trained eyes that had all the intuition
-of a born nurse—saw a glimmer of hope
-for five badly wounded men who were being
-set aside among those for whom nothing could
-be done.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Will you give me those five men?” she
-asked. She knew how much might be done
-by gentle and gradual feeding, and by all the
-intently watchful care of a good nurse, to give
-them just enough strength to risk the surgery
-that might save them. With her own hand,
-spoonful by spoonful, as they were able to bear
-it, she gave the nourishment, and by her own
-night-long watching and tending in the care of
-all those details which to a poor helpless patient
-may make the difference between life and death—the
-purifying of the air, the avoidance of
-draughts, the mending of the fire—she nursed
-her five patients back into a condition in which
-the risks of an operation were, to say the least
-of it, greatly lessened. The operation was in
-each case successfully performed; by all human
-standards it may be said that she saved the lives
-of all the five.</p>
-
-<p>She never spared herself, though she sometimes
-spared others. She has been known to stand for
-twenty hours out of the twenty-four, and at night,
-when she had sent her day-nurses to rest, it was
-she herself who watched in all the wards and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-silently cared for the needs of one and another.
-Is it any wonder that “there was worship almost
-in the gratitude of the prostrate sufferer, who
-saw her glide into his ward, and at last approach
-his bedside? The magic of her power over men
-used often to be felt in the room—the dreaded,
-the blood-stained room—where ‘operations’ took
-place. There, perhaps, the maimed soldier, if
-not yet resigned to his fate, might at first be
-craving death rather than meet the knife of the
-surgeon; but, when such a one looked and saw
-that the honoured Lady-in-Chief was patiently
-standing beside him, and—with lips closely set
-and hands folded—decreeing herself to go through
-the pain of witnessing pain, he used to fall into
-the mood for obeying her silent command, and—finding
-strange support in her presence—bring
-himself to submit and endure.”<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
-
-<p>M. Soyer, who placed his culinary art at her
-service, has written a book about his experiences
-in which he tells us that, after a merry evening
-in the doctors’ quarters, when on his way back
-to his own, he saw by a faint light a little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-group—shadowy in the half-darkness—in a corner of
-one of the corridors. A Sister stood beside Miss
-Nightingale with a lighted candle that she might
-see clearly enough to scribble down the last
-wishes of the dying soldier who was supported
-on the bed beside her. With its deep colouring,
-described as like a grave study by Rembrandt,
-the little picture drew the passer-by, and for a
-few minutes he watched unseen while the Lady-in-Chief
-took into those “tender womanly hands”
-the watch and trinkets of the soldier, who with
-his last gasping breath was trying to make clear
-to her his farewell message to his wife and
-children. And this seems to have been but one
-among many kindred scenes.</p>
-
-<p>We have all heard of the man who watched
-till her shadow fell across the wall by his bed
-that he might at least kiss that shadow as it
-passed; but few of us, perhaps, know the whole
-story. The man was a Highland soldier who
-had been doomed to lose his arm by amputation.
-Miss Nightingale believed that she might
-possibly be able to save the arm by careful
-nursing, and she begged that she might at least<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-be allowed to try. Nursing was to her an
-art as well as a labour of love. The ceaseless
-care in matters of detail, which she considered
-the very alphabet of that art, stand out clearly
-in her own <cite>Notes on Nursing</cite>. And in this
-instance her skill and watchfulness and untiring
-effort saved the man’s arm. No wonder that he
-wanted to kiss her shadow!</p>
-
-<p>To the wives of the soldiers she was indeed
-a saving angel. When she arrived at Scutari,
-they were living, we are told, literally in holes
-and corners of the hospital. Their clothes were
-worn out. They had neither bonnets, nor shoes,
-nor any claim on rations. Poor faithful creatures,
-many of them described in the biographies as
-respectable and decent, they had followed their
-husbands through all the horrors of the campaign,
-and now, divided from them and thrust aside for
-want of space, they were indeed in sorry case.</p>
-
-<p>Well might Miss Nightingale write later, and
-well may we all lay it to heart—“When the
-improvements in our system are discussed, let not
-the wife and child of the soldier be forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>After being moved about from one den to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-another, the poor women—some wives and some,
-alas, widows—had been quartered in a few damp
-rooms in the hospital basement, where those who
-wanted solitude or privacy could do nothing to
-secure it beyond hanging a few rags on a line
-as a sort of screen between home and home.
-And in these desolate quarters many babies had
-been born.</p>
-
-<p>It was but the last drop of misery in their cup
-when, early in 1855, a month or two after Miss
-Nightingale’s arrival, a drain broke in the basement,
-and fever followed.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale had already sought them
-out, and from her own stores given them food
-and clothing; but now she did not rest until
-through her influence a house had been requisitioned
-and cleaned and furnished for them out
-of her own funds. Next, after fitting out the
-widows to return to their homes, employment
-was found for the wives who remained. Work
-was found for some of them in Constantinople,
-but for most of them occupation was at hand
-in the laundry she had set going, and there those
-who were willing to do their part could earn<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-from 10s. to 14s. a week. In this way, through
-our heroine’s wise energy, helped by the wife
-and daughter of Dr. Blackwood, one of the army
-chaplains, we are told that about 500 women
-were cared for.</p>
-
-<p>There had already arrived through the hands of
-Mr. Sidney Herbert, who forwarded it to Miss
-Nightingale, a message from Queen Victoria—in
-effect a letter—which greatly cheered the
-army and also strengthened Miss Nightingale’s
-position.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Windsor Castle</span>, <i>December 6, ’54</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you tell Mrs. Herbert,” wrote the
-Queen to Mr. Sidney Herbert, “that I beg she
-would let me see frequently the accounts she
-receives from Miss Nightingale or Mrs. Bracebridge,
-as I hear no details of the wounded,
-though I see so many from officers, etc., about
-the battlefield, and naturally the former must
-interest me more than any one.</p>
-
-<p>“Let Mrs. Herbert also know that I wish Miss
-Nightingale and the ladies would tell these poor,
-noble wounded and sick men that no one takes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-a warmer interest or feels more for their sufferings
-or admires their courage and heroism more than
-their Queen. Day and night she thinks of her
-beloved troops. So does the Prince.</p>
-
-<p>“Beg Mrs. Herbert to communicate these my
-words to those ladies, as I know that our sympathy
-is much valued by these noble fellows.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Victoria.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale agreed with the Queen in
-her use of the word “noble” here, for she
-herself has written of the men:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Never came from any of them one word
-nor one look which a gentleman would not have
-used; and while paying this humble tribute to
-humble courtesy, the tears come into my eyes as
-I think how, amidst scenes of ... loathsome
-disease and death, there rose above it all the
-innate dignity, gentleness, and chivalry of the
-men (for never, surely, was chivalry so strikingly
-exemplified), shining in the midst of what must
-be considered as the lowest sinks of human misery,
-and preventing instinctively the use of one expression
-which could distress a gentlewoman.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span></p>
-
-<p>Having transcribed the Queen’s letter, this
-may be a good place for adding from the letters
-of Sister Aloysius a little instance of Her
-Majesty’s homely kindness to her troops whenever
-she heard of any need which she could
-supply:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“When Miss Stanley reached England, Her
-Majesty the Queen (anxious, of course, to hear
-all about her soldiers) sent for her; and when
-the interview was nearly over Her Majesty asked
-her what she thought the poor soldiers would
-like—she was anxious to send them a present.
-Miss Stanley said: ‘Oh, I do know what they
-would like—plenty of flannel shirts, mufflers,
-butter, and treacle.’ Her Majesty said they must
-have all these things; and they did come out
-in abundance: Kullali got its share of the gifts.
-But the very name of butter or treacle was
-enough for the doctors: they said they would
-not allow it into the wards, because it would be
-going about in bits of paper and daubing everything.
-So Rev. Mother at once interposed, and
-said if the doctors allowed it, she would have it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
-distributed in a way that could give no trouble.
-They apologized, and said they should have
-known that, and at once left everything to her.
-Each Sister got her portion of butter and treacle
-(which were given only to the convalescent
-patients), and when the bell rang every evening
-for tea she stood at the table in the centre of
-the ward, and each soldier walked over and got
-his bread buttered, and some treacle if he wished
-spread on like jam. We told them it was a gift
-from the Queen; and if Her Majesty could only
-have seen how gratified they were it would have
-given her pleasure. One evening Lady Stratford,
-and some distinguished guests who were staying
-at the Embassy, came, and were much pleased
-to see how happy and comfortable the men were,
-and how much they enjoyed Her Majesty’s
-gifts.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-
-<p class="long"><i>Letters from Scutari—Kinglake on Miss Nightingale and her
-dynasty—The refusal of a new contingent.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale’s saving sense of humour
-gleams forth in her letters in the most delightful
-way, even in the darkest days. In the following,
-something of the hugeness of her task is dimly
-seen through the comic background of the unbecoming
-cap that “If I’d known, ma’am, I
-wouldn’t have come, ma’am.” Here is the
-letter just as it is given in Lord Herbert’s life.
-It begins abruptly, evidently quoting from a
-conversation just held with one of the staff
-nurses:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“‘I came out, ma’am, prepared to submit to
-everything, to be put upon in every way. But
-there are some things, ma’am, one can’t submit
-to. There is the caps, ma’am, that suits one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-face and some that suits another; and if I’d
-known, ma’am, about the caps, great as was my
-desire to come out to nurse at Scutari, I wouldn’t
-have come, ma’am.’—<cite>Speech of Mrs. L., Barrack
-Hospital, Scutari, Asiatic Side, November 14, 1854.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“Time must be at a discount with the man
-who can adjust the balance of such an important
-question as the above, and I for one have none,
-as you will easily suppose when I tell you that
-on Thursday last we had 1,175 sick and wounded
-in this hospital (among whom 120 cholera patients),
-and 650 severely wounded in the other
-building, called the General Hospital, of which
-we also have charge, when a message came to
-me to prepare for 510 wounded on our side of
-the hospital, who were arriving from the dreadful
-affair of November 5, from Balaclava, in
-which battle were 1,763 wounded and 442
-killed, besides 96 officers wounded and 38 killed.
-I always expected to end my days as a hospital
-matron, but I never expected to be barrack mistress.
-We had but half an hour’s notice before
-they began landing the wounded. Between one
-and nine o’clock we had the mattresses stuffed,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-sewn up, laid down (alas! only upon matting on
-the floor), the men washed and put to bed, and
-all their wounds dressed.</p>
-
-<p>“We are very lucky in our medical heads.
-Two of them are brutes and four are angels—for
-this is a work which makes either angels
-or devils of men, and of women too. As for
-the assistants, they are all cubs, and will, while
-a man is breathing his last breath under the
-knife, lament the ‘annoyance of being called
-up from their dinners by such a fresh influx
-of wounded.’ But unlicked cubs grow up into
-good old bears, though I don’t know how; for
-certain it is, the old bears are good. We have
-now four miles of beds and not eighteen inches
-apart.</p>
-
-<p>“We have our quarters in one tower of the
-barracks, and all this fresh influx has been laid
-down between us and the main guard, in two
-corridors, with a line of beds down each side,
-just room for one person to pass between, and
-four wards. Yet in the midst of this appalling
-horror (we are steeped up to our necks in blood)
-there is good—and I can truly say, like St.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-Peter, ‘It is good for us to be here’—though
-I doubt whether, if St. Peter had been there,
-he would have said so.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile England, stirred to its depths by
-the accounts given by Mr. William Howard
-Russell, of the sufferings of our soldiers, had
-begged the <cite>Times</cite>, in whose pages his letters
-appeared, to receive funds and send them out
-by the hand of Mr. Macdonald, a man of vigour,
-firmness, and good sense, and “loyally devoted
-to his duty.” Before leaving England, he saw
-the Inspector-General of the army, Dr. Andrew
-Smith, and also the Duke of Newcastle, but was
-assured that Government had already provided
-so amply for the sick and wounded that his fund
-was not likely to be needed. When he reached
-the Bosphorus all the official people there talked
-to him in the same strain. But there leaked
-out through an officer on duty one little fact
-that showed how much such assurances were
-worth.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that the 39th Regiment was actually
-on its way to the severities of a Crimean winter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-with only the light summer clothing that would
-be worn in hot countries. Happily, the surgeon
-of the regiment appealed to Mr. Macdonald, and,
-more happily still, Mr. Macdonald dared to go
-beyond his exact instructions and give help out of
-his fund which might prevent illness, instead of
-waiting for the moment when death was already
-at the door. He went into the markets of Constantinople
-and bought then and there a suit of
-flannels or other woollens for every man in that
-regiment.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Macdonald saw that he must be ready
-to offer help, or red tape and loyalty together
-would seal the lips of men in the service, lest
-they should seem to be casting a slur on the
-army administration.</p>
-
-<p>There is humour of the grimmest kind in
-what resulted. The chief of the Scutari hospitals
-told him “nothing was wanted,” and on
-pushing his inquiry with a yet more distinguished
-personage, he was actually advised to
-spend the money on building a church at Pera!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Yet at that very time,” says Kinglake,
-“wants so dire as to include want of hospital
-furniture and of shirts for the patients, and of
-the commonest means for obtaining cleanliness,
-were afflicting our stricken soldiery in the
-hospitals.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Pera proposal—rightly described as
-“astounding”—led to an interview with the
-Lady-in-Chief. Tears and laughter must have
-met in her heart as she heard this absurdity,
-and away she took him—money as well—to
-the very centre of her commissariat, to see for
-himself the daily demands and the gaping need—furniture,
-pillows, sheets, shirts—endless appliances
-and drugs—that need seemed truly
-endless, and many hours daily he spent with
-her in the Nurses’ Tower, taking down lists
-of orders for the storekeepers in Constantinople.
-Here was the right help at last—not pretty
-mufflers for men in need of shirts, nor fine
-cambric for stout bed-linen.</p>
-
-<p>However, from the Lady-in-Chief Mr. Macdonald
-soon learned the truth, and the course he
-then took was one of the simplest kind, but it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-worked a mighty change. He bought the
-things needed, and the authorities, succumbing
-at last to this excruciating form of demonstration,
-had to witness the supply of wants which
-before they had refused to confess. So now,
-besides using the stores which she had at her own
-command, the Lady-in-Chief could impart wants
-felt in our hospitals to Mr. Macdonald with the
-certainty that he would hasten to meet them by
-applying what was called the “<cite>Times</cite> Fund” in
-purchasing the articles needed.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It was thus,” adds Kinglake, “that under
-the sway of motives superbly exalted, a great
-lady came to the rescue of our prostrate soldiery,
-made good the default of the State, won the
-gratitude, the rapt admiration of an enthusiastic
-people, and earned for the name she bears a pure,
-a lasting renown.</p>
-
-<p>“She even did more. By the very power
-of her fame, but also, I believe, by the wisdom
-and the authority of her counsels, she founded,
-if so one may speak, a gracious dynasty that
-still reigns supreme in the wards where sufferers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-lie, and even brings solace, brings guidance,
-brings hope, into those dens of misery that,
-until the blessing has reached them, seem only
-to harbour despair. When into the midst of
-such scenes the young high-bred lady now glides,
-she wears that same sacred armour—the gentle
-attire of the servitress—which seemed ‘heavenly’
-in the eyes of our soldiers at the time of the war,
-and finds strength to meet her dire task, because
-she knows by tradition what the first of the
-dynasty proved able to confront and to vanquish
-in the wards of the great Barrack Hospital.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In everything a woman’s hand and brain had
-been needed. It was, for instance, of little use
-to receive in the evening, after barrack fires were
-out, food which had been asked for from the
-supplies for some meal several hours earlier; yet
-that, it appears, was the sort of thing that happened.
-And too much of the food officially
-provided, even when it did reach the patients
-at last, had been unfit for use.</p>
-
-<p>As for the question of laundry, a washing
-contract that had only succeeded in washing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-seven shirts for two or three thousand men
-could not have been permitted to exist under any
-feminine management. Nor could any trained
-or knowledgeable nurse have allowed for a single
-day the washing of infectious bed-linen in one
-common tub with the rest. Yet this had been
-the condition of affairs before the Lady-in-Chief
-came on the scenes. In speaking of her work
-among the soldiers’ wives it has already been
-noted how she quickly hired and fitted up a
-house close to the hospital as a laundry, where
-under sanitary regulations 500 shirts and 150
-other articles were washed every week.</p>
-
-<p>Then there arose the practical question of
-what could be done for the poor fellows who
-had no clothes at all except the grimy and
-blood-stained garments in which they arrived,
-and we are told that in the first three months,
-out of her own private funds, she provided the
-men with ten thousand shirts.</p>
-
-<p>The drugs had all been in such confusion
-that once when Mrs. Bracebridge had asked
-three times for chloride of lime and been assured
-that there was none, Miss Nightingale insisted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-on a thorough search, and not less than ninety
-pounds of it were discovered.</p>
-
-<p>The semi-starvation of many hospital patients
-before Miss Nightingale’s arrival, noted on an
-earlier page, was chiefly the result of mismanagement—mismanagement
-on the part of those who
-meant well—often, indeed, meant the very best
-within their power, but among whom there was,
-until her coming, no central directing power,
-with brain and heart alike capable and energizing
-and alive to all the vital needs of deathly illness—alert
-with large foreseeing outlook, yet shrewd
-and swift in detail.</p>
-
-<p>It is at first puzzling to compare Kinglake’s
-picture of the confusion and suffering, even
-while he is defending Lord Raglan, with some
-of the letters in Lord Stanmore’s “Life of Lord
-Herbert,” especially one from General Estcourt,
-in which he says “never was an army better fed.”
-But even in this letter—dated, be it noted, a
-fortnight after Miss Nightingale’s arrival—the
-next sentence, which refers, of course, to the
-army in general and not to the hospitals under
-her management, shows the same muddling that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-had pursued the hospitals until she came to their
-aid with Mr. Herbert and the War Office at
-her back; for after saying that the ration is
-ample and most liberal, it adds—and the italics
-are mine—“<em>but the men cannot cook for want of
-camp-kettles and for want of fuel</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Yet even with regard to the hospitals, it is
-startling to find Mr. Bracebridge, in his first
-letter to Mr. Herbert, speaking of the Barrack
-Hospital as clean and airy. But people have
-such odd ideas of what is “clean and airy,” and
-it would seem that he thought it “clean and
-airy” for the patients to have no proper arrangements
-for washing, for the drains to be in such
-a noisome state as to need engineering, and for
-six dead dogs to be rotting under the windows!
-I suppose he liked the look of the walls and the
-height of the ceilings, and wanted, moreover, to
-comfort Mr. Herbert’s sad heart at a time when
-all England was up in arms at the mistakes made
-in transport and other arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>The letters of the chaplain to Mr. Herbert
-are full of interest, and in reading the following
-we have to put ourselves back into the mind<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-of a time that looked anxiously to see whether
-Miss Nightingale was really equal to her task—an
-idea which to us of to-day seems foolish and
-timorous, but which was, after all, quite natural,
-seeing that she was new and untried in this
-particular venture of army nursing, and that half
-the onlookers had no idea of the long and varied
-training she had had.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My dear Herbert</span>,—I have now had near
-a week’s opportunity of closely observing the
-details of the hospitals at Scutari. First, as to
-Miss Nightingale and her company, nothing can
-be said too strong in their praise; she works
-them wonderfully, and they are so useful that
-I have no hesitation in saying some twenty more
-of the same sort would be a very great blessing
-to the establishment. Her nerve is equal to her
-good sense; she, with one of her nurses and
-myself, gave efficient aid at an amputation of
-the thigh yesterday. She was just as cool as if
-she had had to do it herself. We are close
-allies, and through Macdonald and the funds
-at my own command, I get her everything<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
-for which she asks, and this is saying a great
-deal.</p>
-
-<p>“My honest view of the matter is this: I
-found but too great evidence of the staff and
-means being unequal to the emergency; the
-requirements have almost doubled through the
-last two unhappy actions at Balaclava. Still,
-day by day I see manifest improvement; no
-government, no nation could have provided, on
-a sudden, staff and appliances for accident
-wards miles in length, and for such sickness as
-that horrid Varna dysentery. To manage more
-than three thousand casualties of the worst nature
-is indeed a task to be met in an entirely satisfactory
-way by nothing short of a miraculous energy
-with the means it would require. The men are
-landed necessarily in a most pitiable state, and
-have to be carried up steep ground for considerable
-distance, either by those beasts of
-Turks, who are as stupid as callous, or by our
-invalids, who are not equal to the task. Still,
-it is done, and as this is war, not peace, and
-Scutari is really a battlefield, I am more disposed
-to lament than to blame.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There seems now, so far as I can see, no
-lack of lint and plaister; there is a lack of linen,—we
-have sent home for it. The surgeons are
-working their utmost, and serious cases seem
-treated with great humanity and skill. There
-was and is an awful want of shirts for the men,
-and socks, and such matters; we have already
-let Miss Nightingale have all she applies for,
-and this morning I, with Macdonald’s sanction,
-or, rather, in concert with him, have sent to the
-Crimea a large stock of shirts of warm serge,
-socks, flannel, tea, etc., etc. I spend the best
-part of every day there acting, at one time as
-priest to the dying, at another helping the surgeons
-or the men to dress their wounds; again,
-I go to the landing-place and try to work them
-into method for an hour or two, etc., etc. One
-and all are now most kind and civil to me, meet
-my wishes in every way they can. Alas! I fear,
-with every possible effort of the existing establishment,
-the crisis is still too great; there are
-wanting hundreds of beds—that is, many hundreds
-have only matting between the beds and
-the stone floor. I slept here Sunday night, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-walked the wards late and early in the morning;
-I fear the cold weather in these passages will
-produce on men so crippled and so maimed
-much supplementary evil in the way of coughs
-and chest diseases. The wounded do better than
-the sick. I scarce pray with one of the latter
-one day but I hear he is dead on the morrow....
-I am glad to say the authorities have left
-off swearing they had everything and wanted
-nothing; they are now grateful for the help
-which, with the fund at command, we liberally
-meet. The wounds are, many of them, of the
-most fearful character, and yet I have not heard
-a murmur, even from those who, from the pressing
-urgency of the case, are often left with most
-obvious grounds of complaint. Stafford O’Brien
-is here; he, at my suggestion, aids my son and
-self in letter writing for the poor creatures. My
-room is a post office; I pay the post of every
-letter from every hospital patient, and we write
-masses every day. They show one what the
-British soldier really is; I only wish to God the
-people of England, who regard the red coat as a
-mere guise of a roystering rake in the private and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-a dandified exclusive in the officer, could see the
-patience, true modesty, and courageous endurance
-of all ranks.</p>
-
-<p>“Understand me clearly. I could pick many
-a hole; I could show where head has been
-wanting, truth perverted, duty neglected, etc.;
-but I feel that the pressure was such and of so
-frightful, so severe (in one way) a character,
-there is such an effort at what we desire, that I
-for one cry out of the past ‘<i lang="it">non mi ricordo</i>;’ of
-the present, ‘If the cart is in the rut, there is
-every shoulder at the wheel.’ The things wanted
-we cannot wait for you to supply, in England;
-if the slaughter is to go on as it has done the
-last fortnight, the need must be met at once.
-Macdonald is doing his work most sensibly,
-steadily, and I believe not only with no offence
-to any, but is earning the goodwill of all.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Truth is a two-edged sword, and for purposes
-of rebuke or reform Miss Nightingale used it
-at times with keenness and daring. In that
-sense this glowing, loving-hearted woman knew
-how on occasions to be stern. Her salt never<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-lost its savour. She was swift, efficient, capable
-to the last degree, and she was also high-spirited
-and sometimes sharp-tongued. Perhaps we love
-her all the more for being so human. A person
-outwardly all perfection, if not altogether divine,
-is apt to give the idea that there are faults hidden
-up somewhere. It was not so with Miss Nightingale.
-Her determination to carry at all costs
-the purpose she had in hand laid her often open
-to criticism, for, just as she was ready on occasion
-to override her own feelings, so also she was ready
-sometimes to override the feelings of others. Mr.
-Herbert judged from her letters that an addition
-to her staff of nurses would be welcome, but we
-saw that when the new band of forty-six arrived,
-under the escort of Miss Nightingale’s old friend
-Miss Stanley, they were not admitted to the
-hospital at Scutari, and to tell the truth, Miss
-Nightingale was very angry at their being thrust
-upon her, just when she was finding her own
-staff rather a “handful.” In point of fact, she
-not only wrote a very warm letter to her old
-friend Mr. Herbert, but she also formally gave
-in her resignation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span></p>
-
-<p>This was not accepted. Mr. Herbert’s generous
-sweetness of nature, his love for the writer,
-and his belief that she was the one person needed
-in the hospitals, and was doing wonders there,
-led him to write a very noble and humble reply,
-saying that <em>he</em> had made a mistake—which, indeed,
-was true enough—in taking his well-meant step
-without consulting her. She yielded her point
-in so far as to remain at her post, now that Miss
-Stanley and her staff had moved on to Therapia
-and Smyrna, and were doing real good there,
-Miss Stanley having given up all her own plans,
-to remain and look after the nurses who had
-come under her escort.</p>
-
-<p>But, apart from the fact that it would have
-been a great hindrance to discipline to have
-forty-six women on her hands who had <em>not</em>
-promised obedience to her, as had her own
-nurses, a little sidelight is thrown upon it all
-by these words in one of Miss Stanley’s own
-letters, speaking of the nurses under her
-guardianship:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The first night there was great dissatisfaction
-among them, and a strong inclination to strike
-work. ‘We are not come out to be cooks,
-housemaids, and washerwomen,’ and they dwelt
-considerably on Mr. Herbert’s words about
-equality. <em>They are like troublesome children.</em>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Though our sympathy goes out to Miss Stanley,
-it is not impossible that Miss Nightingale’s
-decision may have saved Scutari from unavoidable
-confusions of authority which would have been
-very unseemly, and from more than a possibility
-of defeat in the experiment she was making, in
-the eyes of all Europe, as to how far women
-could be wisely admitted into military hospitals.
-Such confusion might have arisen, not from any
-fault in Miss Nightingale or Miss Stanley, but
-from the special work of reorganization which
-had to be done at Scutari, and the special code
-of obedience by which Miss Nightingale’s staff
-had been prepared for it. She did not want for
-such work any “troublesome children.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-
-<p class="long"><i>The busy nursing hive—M. Soyer and his memories—Miss
-Nightingale’s complete triumph over prejudice—The memories
-of Sister Aloysius.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Miss Stanley’s letters give us a
-very interesting informal glimpse of the work
-that was going on and of Miss Nightingale
-herself. Here is one in which she describes her
-visit to her in the hospital at Scutari:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“We passed down two or three of these
-immense corridors, asking our way as we went.
-At last we came to the guard-room, another
-corridor, then through a door into a large, busy
-kitchen, where stood Mrs. Margaret Williams,
-who seemed much pleased to see me: then a
-heavy curtain was raised; I went through a
-door, and there sat dear Flo writing on a small
-unpainted deal table. I never saw her looking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-better. She had on her black merino, trimmed
-with black velvet, clean linen collar and cuffs,
-apron, white cap with a black handkerchief tied
-over it; and there was Mrs. Bracebridge, looking
-so nice, too. I was quite satisfied with my
-welcome. It was settled at once that I was to
-sleep here, especially as, being post day, Flo
-could not attend to me till the afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“The sofa is covered with newspapers just
-come in by the post. I have been sitting for
-an hour here, having some coffee, and writing,
-Mrs. Clarke coming in to see what I have
-wanted, in spite of what I could say.</p>
-
-<p>“The work this morning was the sending off
-General Adams’s remains, and the arrangements
-consequent upon it.</p>
-
-<p>“A stream of people every minute.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Please, ma’am, have you any black-edged
-paper?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Please, what can I give which would keep
-on his stomach; is there any arrowroot to-day
-for him?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No; the tubs of arrowroot must be for
-the worst cases; we cannot spare him any, nor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-is there any jelly to-day; try him with some
-eggs, etc.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Please, Mr. Gordon wishes to see Miss
-Nightingale about the orders she gave him.’</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Sabine comes in for something else.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Bracebridge in and out about General
-Adams, and orders of various kinds.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Such was the busy life of which Miss Nightingale
-was the queen, though, unlike the queen-bee
-of the ordinary honey-hive, this queen of
-nurses was the hardest-worked and most severely
-strained worker in the whole toiling community.</p>
-
-<p>It was early in the spring of 1855 that in
-the feeding department, which she rightly
-considered of great importance to her invalids,
-she received unexpected help.</p>
-
-<p>This came from M. Soyer, who may be
-remembered by more than one old Londoner
-as at one time <i lang="fr">chef</i> of the New Reform Club,
-where his biography, which contains some
-interesting illustrations, still adorns the library.
-M. Soyer begged to be allowed the command of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-the hospital kitchen at Scutari. He was an
-expert and an enthusiast, and very amusing.</p>
-
-<p>Also what he offered was of no slight importance
-and unselfishness. In February, 1855, he
-wrote as follows to the <cite>Times</cite>:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Sir,—After carefully perusing the letter of
-your correspondent, dated Scutari, in your
-impression of Wednesday last, I perceive that,
-although the kitchen under the superintendence
-of Miss Nightingale affords so much relief, the
-system of management at the large one at the
-Barrack Hospital is far from being perfect. I
-propose offering my services gratuitously, and
-proceeding direct to Scutari at my own personal
-expense, to regulate that important department,
-if the Government will honour me with their
-confidence, and grant me the full power of
-acting according to my knowledge and experience
-in such matters.—I have the honour to remain,
-sir, your obedient servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">A. Soyer</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>His proposal was accepted, and on his arrival at
-Scutari he was welcomed by Miss Nightingale in
-what he names, after his rather florid manner, “a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
-sanctuary of benevolence.” There he presented
-his letters and parcels from the Duchess of
-Sutherland and Mr. Stafford and others, the
-Duchess especially commending him to the
-Lady-in-Chief as likely to be of service in the
-cooking department. He was found to be a
-most valuable ally, and his letters and writings,
-since published, are full of interest. He wrote
-home at once, saying: “I must especially express
-my gratitude to Miss Nightingale, who from her
-extraordinary intelligence and the good organization
-of her kitchen procured me every material
-for making a commencement, and thus saved me
-at least one week’s sheer loss of time, as my
-model kitchen did not arrive till Saturday last.”</p>
-
-<p>This is interesting, because it shows yet once
-more Miss Nightingale’s thoroughness and foresight
-and attention to detail—the more valuable
-in one whose outlook at the same time touched
-so wide a skyline, and was so large in its noble
-care for a far-off future and a world of many
-nations, never bounded by her own small island
-or her own church pew.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span></p>
-
-<p>Soyer’s description of her is worth giving in
-full, and later we shall, through his eyes, have a
-vision of her as she rode to Balaclava.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Her visage as regards expression is very
-remarkable, and one can almost anticipate by her
-countenance what she is about to say: alternately,
-with matters of the most grave importance,
-a gentle smile passes radiantly over her countenance,
-thus proving her evenness of temper; at
-other times, when wit or a pleasantry prevails,
-the heroine is lost in the happy, good-natured
-smile which pervades her face, and you recognize
-only the charming woman. Her dress is
-generally of a greyish or black tint; she wears a
-simple white cap, and often a rough apron. In
-a word, her whole appearance is religiously
-simple and unsophisticated. In conversation no
-member of the fair sex can be more amiable and
-gentle than Miss Nightingale. Removed from
-her arduous and cavalier-like duties, which require
-the nerve of a Hercules—and she possesses it
-when required—she is Rachel on the stage in
-both tragedy and comedy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span></p>
-
-<p>Soyer’s help and loyalty proved invaluable all
-through the campaign. His volume of memories
-adds a vivid bit of colour here and there to these
-pages. His own life had been romantic, and he
-saw everything from the romantic point of
-view.</p>
-
-<p>We read and know that although Sidney
-Herbert’s letter to Dr. Menzies, the principal
-medical officer at Scutari, asked that all regard
-should be paid to every wish of the Lady-in-Chief,
-and that was in itself a great means of
-power, the greatest power of all lay in her own
-personality and its compelling magnetism, which
-drew others to obedience. The attractive force
-of a strong, clear, comprehensive mind, and still
-more of a soul on fire with high purpose and deep
-compassion, which never wasted themselves in
-words, became tenfold the more powerful for the
-restraint and self-discipline which held all
-boisterous expression of them in check—her
-word, her very glance,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Winning its way with extreme gentleness</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Through all the outworks of suspicious pride.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Her strength was to be tried to the uttermost;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-for scarcely had her work in the hospital begun
-when cholera came stalking over the threshold.
-Day and night among the dying and the dead
-she and her nurses toiled with fearless devotion,
-each one carrying her life in her hand, but
-seldom, indeed, even thinking of that in the
-heroic struggle to save as many other lives as
-possible.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Nightingale long afterwards, when
-talking of services of a far easier kind, once
-said to a professional friend that no one was
-fit to be a nurse who did not really enjoy precisely
-those duties of a sick-room which the ordinary
-uneducated woman counts revolting; and if she
-was, at this time, now and then impatient with
-stupidity and incompetence and carelessness, that
-is not wonderful in one whose effort was always
-at high level, and for whom every detail was of
-vivid interest, because she realized that often on
-exactitude in details hung the balance between
-life and death.</p>
-
-<p>On their first arrival she and her nurses may, no
-doubt, have had to bear cold-shouldering and
-jealousy; but in the long agony of the cholera<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-visitation they were welcomed as veritable angels
-of light. It would be easy to be sensational in
-describing the scenes amid which they moved,
-for before long the hospital was filled, day and
-night, with two long processions: on one side
-came in those who carried the sick men in on
-their stretchers, and on the other side those who
-carried out the dead. The orderlies could not
-have been trusted to do the nursing that was
-required; the “stuping”—a professional method
-of wholesale hot fomentations and rubbings to
-release the iron rigidity of the cholera patient’s
-body—was best done by skilled and gentle hands,
-and even in <em>such</em> hands, so bad were the surrounding
-conditions—the crowding, the bad drainage,
-the impure water—that, despite the utmost
-devotion, only a small proportion of lives could
-be saved.</p>
-
-<p>It was especially at this time that the feeling
-towards the Lady-in-Chief deepened into a trust
-that was almost worship. Watchful, resourceful,
-unconquered, with a mind that, missing no
-detail, yet took account of the widest issues and
-the farthest ends, she was yet full of divine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-tenderness for each sufferer whom with her own
-hands she tended; and, although she did not
-nurse the officers—she left that to others—in her
-devotion to Tommy Atkins she had been known
-to be on her feet, as already has been said, for
-twenty hours on end; and, whether she was
-kneeling or standing, stooping or lifting, always
-an ideal nurse.</p>
-
-<p>The graves round the hospitals were not dug
-deep enough, and the air became even fouler than
-before. To the inroads of cholera the suffering
-of Sebastopol patients added a new form of death.
-Sister Aloysius writes of these men who came in
-by scores and hundreds from the trenches, and
-whom this Sister, greatly valued by the Lady-in-Chief,
-helped to nurse both at Scutari and at
-Balaclava:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I must say something of my poor frost-bitten
-patients. The men who came from the ‘front,’
-as they called it, had only thin linen suits, no
-other clothing to keep out the Crimean frost of
-1854-5. When they were carried in on the
-stretchers which conveyed so many to their last<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-resting-place, their clothes had to be cut off.
-In most cases the flesh and clothes were frozen
-together; and, as for the feet, the boots had to
-be cut off bit by bit, the flesh coming off with
-them; many pieces of the flesh I have seen
-remain in the boot.</p>
-
-<p>“We have just received some hundreds of poor
-creatures, worn out with sufferings beyond any
-you could imagine, in the Crimea, where the
-cold is so intense that a soldier described to me
-the Russians and the Allies in a sudden skirmish,
-and neither party able to draw a trigger! So
-fancy what the poor soldiers must endure in the
-‘trenches.’</p>
-
-<p>“It was a comfort to think that these brave men
-had some care, all that we could procure for
-them. For at this time the food was very bad—goat’s
-flesh, and sometimes what they called
-mutton, but black, blue, and green. Yet who
-could complain of anything after the sufferings I
-have faintly described—borne, too, with such
-patience: not a murmur!... One day, after
-a batch had arrived from the Crimea, and I
-had gone my rounds through them, one of my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-orderlies told me that a man wanted to speak one
-word to me.</p>
-
-<p>“When I had a moment I went to him. ‘Tell
-me at once what you want; I have worse cases
-to see after’—he did not happen to be very bad.
-‘All I want to know, ma’am, is, are you one of
-our own Sisters of Mercy from Ireland?’ ‘Yes,’
-I said, ‘your very own.’ ‘God be praised for
-that!’</p>
-
-<p>“Another poor fellow said to me one day,
-‘Do they give you anything good out here?’
-‘Oh yes,’ I said; ‘why do you ask me?’
-‘Because, ma’am, you gave me a piece of chicken
-for my dinner, and I kept some of it for you.’
-He pulled it out from under his head and offered
-it to me. I declined the favour with thanks.
-I never could say enough of those kind-hearted
-soldiers and their consideration for us in the
-midst of their sufferings.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-
-<p class="long"><i>Inexactitudes—Labels—Cholera—“The Lady with the Lamp”—Her
-humour—Letters of Sister Aloysius.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>About the middle of December Miss Nightingale
-had to rebuke very severely one of her own
-nurses, who had written a letter to the <cite>Times</cite>
-which made a great sensation by its lurid picture
-of the evils in the hospital—a misrepresentation
-so great that the nurse herself confessed in the
-end that it was “a tissue of exaggerations”—perhaps
-“inexactitudes” would be our modern
-word.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the small-minded parochial gossips
-at home were wasting their time in discussing
-Miss Nightingale’s religious opinions. One who
-worked so happily with all who served the same
-Master was first accused under the old cry of
-“Popery,” and then under the equally silly label
-of “Unitarianism.” Her friend Mrs. Herbert,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-in rebuking parish gossip, felt it necessary to
-unpin these two labels and loyally pin on a new
-one, by explaining that in reality she was rather
-“Low Church.” The really sensible person,
-with whom, doubtless, Lady Herbert would have
-fully agreed, was the Irish parson, and his like,
-when he replied to some foolish questions about
-her that Miss Nightingale belonged to a very
-rare sect indeed—the sect of the Good Samaritans.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Stanley tells a most amusing story of
-how one of the military chaplains complained to
-Miss Jebbut that very improper books had been
-circulated in the wards; she pressed in vain to
-know what they were. “As I was coming away
-he begged for five minutes’ conversation, said he
-was answerable for the men and what they read,
-and he must protest against sentiments he neither
-approved nor understood, and that he would
-fetch me the book. It was Keble’s ‘Christian
-Year,’ which Miss Jebbut had lent to a sick
-midshipman!”</p>
-
-<p>It was a brave heart indeed that the Good
-Samaritan needed now, with cholera added to
-the other horrors of hospital suffering, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-frost-bitten cases from Sebastopol were almost
-equally heart-rending.</p>
-
-<p>It was early in January 1855 that Miss
-Stanley escorted fifty more nurses. Most of
-them worked under Miss Anderson at the
-General Hospital at Scutari, but eight were
-sent into the midst of the fighting at Balaclava,
-and of the life there “at the front” the letters
-of Sister Aloysius give a terrible picture. We
-have, for instance, the story of a man ill and
-frost-bitten, who found he could not turn on his
-side because his feet were frozen to those of the
-soldier opposite. And it came to pass that for
-two months the death-rate in the hospitals was
-sixty per cent.</p>
-
-<p>Night after night, the restless, lonely sufferers
-watched for the coming of the slender, white-capped
-figure with the little light that she
-shaded so carefully lest it should waken any
-sleeper, as she passed through the long corridors
-watching over the welfare of her patients,
-and to them she was “the Lady with the
-Lamp.”</p>
-
-<p>We still see with the American poet:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The wounded from the battle-plain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In dreary hospitals of pain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The cheerless corridors,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The cold and stony floors.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Lo! in that house of misery</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A lady with a lamp I see</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Pass through the glimmering gloom,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And flit from room to room.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“And slow, as in a dream of bliss,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The speechless sufferer turns to kiss</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Her shadow, as it falls</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Upon the darkening walls.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Ah,” said to me old John Ball, the veteran
-of the Crimea, who had been wounded at Alma
-and been at Scutari a month before her arrival,
-so that in his later days there he saw the changes
-that she wrought, “ah, she was a <em>good</em> soul—she
-was a <em>good</em> woman!” And through his words,
-and those of the other old men who remembered
-her, it was possible to discern a little of the glow,
-the humour, the homely maternal tenderness with
-which the <i lang="de">Wohlgebohrene Dame</i> had comforted
-young and old in their hours of patriotic wounding
-and pain.</p>
-
-<p>For herself, in the long days of sacrificial service,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-was there any human solace, any dear companionship,
-any dawning light of love?</p>
-
-<p>For us at least, the mere outsiders, to whom
-she is just a very practical saint and a very great
-woman, “there lives no record of reply.” But
-we know that, though hers was the solitary path,
-which yet was no solitude because of the outpoured
-love and sympathy to others, when in
-her presence once some one was chattering about
-the advantages of “single blessedness,” she, with
-her quick sense of humour, replied that a fish
-out of water might be blessed, but a good deal
-of effort was needed to become accustomed to
-the air!</p>
-
-<p>None of the letters describing the Scutari life
-are more interesting than those of Sister Aloysius,
-the Irish Sister of Mercy, from whose graphic
-descriptions quotations have already been made.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“She and her companions had had only a few
-hours in which to prepare for a long and dangerous
-journey, with the details of which they were
-quite unacquainted, only knowing that they were
-to start for Turkey at half-past seven in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-morning, and that they went for the love of
-God.</p>
-
-<p>“‘And who is to take care of you from this to
-Turkey?’ asked one of their amazed well-wishers.
-To which the Sisters only replied that ‘they hoped
-their guardian angels would kindly do so.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Needless to say, the little party <em>did</em> reach
-its destination safely, and “at last,” writes Sister
-Aloysius, “a despatch came<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> to say that five
-Sisters were to proceed to Scutari, to the General
-Hospital; while arrangements were made for the
-other ten Sisters to proceed to a house on the
-Bosphorus, to await further orders. At once the
-five Sisters started for Scutari: Reverend Mother,
-Sister M. Agnes, Sister M. Elizabeth, Sister M.
-Winifred, and myself. When we reached Scutari
-we were shown to our quarters consisting of one
-little room, not in a very agreeable locality. However,
-we were quite satisfied none better could be
-found, and for this little nook we were thankful.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, we expected to be sent to the
-wards at once. Sister M. Agnes and the writer<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-were sent to a store to sort clothes that had been
-eaten by the rats; Rev. Mother and Sister M.
-Elizabeth either to the kitchen or to another
-store. In a dark, damp, gloomy shed we set to
-work and did the best we could; but, indeed,
-the destruction accomplished by the rats was
-something wonderful. On the woollen goods
-they had feasted sumptuously. They were running
-about us in all directions; we begged of
-the sergeant to leave the door open that we
-might make our escape if they attacked us. Our
-home rats would run if you ‘hushed’ them; but
-you might ‘hush’ away, and the Scutari rats
-would not take the least notice.</p>
-
-<p>“During my stay in the stores I saw numberless
-funerals pass by the window. Cholera was
-raging, and how I did wish to be in the wards
-amongst the poor dying soldiers! Before I leave
-the stores I must mention that Sister M. Agnes
-and myself thought the English nobility must
-have emptied their wardrobes and linen stores to
-send out bandages for the wounded—the most
-beautiful underclothing, the finest cambric sheets,
-with merely a scissors run here and there through<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-them to ensure their being used for no other
-purpose. And such large bales, too; some from
-the Queen’s Palace, with the Royal monogram
-beautifully worked. Whoever sent out these
-immense bales thought nothing too good for the
-poor soldiers. And they were right—nothing
-was too good for them. And now good-bye
-stores and good-bye rats; for I was to be in the
-cholera wards in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>“Where shall I begin, or how can I ever
-describe my first day in the hospital at Scutari?
-Vessels were arriving, and the orderlies carrying
-the poor fellows, who, with their wounds and
-frost-bites, had been tossing about on the Black
-Sea for two or three days, and sometimes more.
-Where were they to go? Not an available bed.
-They were laid on the floor one after another,
-till the beds were emptied of those dying of
-cholera and every other disease. Many died
-immediately after being brought in—their moans
-would pierce the heart—the taking of them in and
-out of the vessels must have increased their pain.</p>
-
-<p>“The look of agony in those poor dying faces
-will never leave my heart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Week in, week out, the cholera went on.
-The same remedies were continued, though
-almost always to fail. However, while there
-was life there was hope, and we kept on the
-warm applications to the last. When it came
-near the end the patients got into a sort of
-collapse, out of which they did not rally.</p>
-
-<p>“We begged the orderlies, waiting to take
-them to the dead-house, to wait a little lest they
-might not be dead; and with great difficulty we
-prevailed on them to make the least delay. As
-a rule the orderlies drank freely—‘to drown
-their grief,’ they said. I must say that their
-position was a very hard one—their work always
-increasing—and such work; death around them
-on every side; their own lives in continual danger—it
-was almost for them a continuation of the
-field of battle.</p>
-
-<p>“The poor wounded men brought in out of
-the vessels were in a dreadful state of dirt, and
-so weak that whatever cleaning they got had to
-be done cautiously. Oh, the state of those fine
-fellows, so worn out with fatigue, so full of
-vermin! Most, or all, of them required spoon-feeding.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-We had wine, sago, arrowroot. Indeed,
-I think there was everything in the stores,
-but it was so hard to get them.... An
-orderly officer took the rounds of the wards every
-night to see that all was right. He was expected
-by the orderlies, and the moment he raised the
-latch one cried out, ‘All right, your honour.’
-Many a time I said, ‘All wrong.’ The poor
-officer, of course, went his way; and one could
-scarcely blame him for not entering those wards,
-so filled with pestilence, the air so dreadful that
-to breathe it might cost him his life. And then,
-what could he do even if he did come? I remember
-one day an officer’s orderly being brought
-in—a dreadful case of cholera; and so devoted
-was his master that he came in every half-hour
-to see him, and stood over him in the bed as if
-it was only a cold he had; the poor fellow died
-after a few hours’ illness. I hope his devoted
-master escaped. I never heard.</p>
-
-<p>“Each Sister had charge of two wards, and
-there was just at this time a fresh outbreak of
-cholera. The Sisters were up every night; and
-the cases, as in Scutari and Kullali, were nearly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-all fatal. Reverend Mother did not allow the
-Sisters to remain up all night, except in cases
-of cholera, without a written order from the
-doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“In passing to the wards at night we used
-to meet the rats in droves. They would not
-even move out of our way. They were there
-before us, and were determined to keep possession.
-As for our hut, they evidently wanted
-to make it theirs, scraping under the boards,
-jumping up on the shelf where our little tin
-utensils were kept, rattling everything. One
-night dear Sister M. Paula found one licking
-her forehead—she had a real horror of them.
-Sleep was out of the question. Our third day
-in Balaclava was a very sad one for us. One of
-our dear band, Sister Winifred, got very ill during
-the night with cholera. She was a most angelic
-Sister, and we were all deeply grieved.</p>
-
-<p>“She, the first to go of all our little band, had
-been full of life and energy the day before. We
-were all very sad, and we wondered who would
-be the next.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Nightingale was at the funeral, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-even joined in the prayers. The soldiers, doctors,
-officers, and officials followed. When all was
-over we returned to our hut, very sad; but we
-had no further time to think. Patients were
-pouring in, and we should be out again to the
-cholera wards. Besides cholera there were cases
-of fever—in fact, of every disease. Others had
-been nearly killed by the blasting of rocks, and
-they came in fearfully disfigured.</p>
-
-<p>“Father Woolett brought us one day a present
-of a Russian cat; he bought it, he told us, from
-an old Russian woman for the small sum of seven
-shillings. It made a particularly handsome captive
-in the land of its fathers, for we were obliged
-to keep it tied to a chair to prevent its escape.
-But the very sight of this powerful champion
-soon relieved us of some of our unwelcome and
-voracious visitors.</p>
-
-<p>“Early in 1856 rumours of peace reached us
-from all sides. But our Heavenly Father demanded
-another sacrifice from our devoted little
-band. Dear Sister Mary Elizabeth was called
-to a martyrs’ crown.</p>
-
-<p>“She was specially beloved for her extraordinary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-sweetness of disposition. The doctor,
-when called, pronounced her illness to be fever;
-she had caught typhus in her ward. Every
-loving care was bestowed on her by our dearest
-Mother, who scarcely ever left her bedside.
-Death seemed to have no sting.... She had
-no wish to live or die, feeling she was in the
-arms of her Heavenly Father. ‘He will do for
-me what is best,’ she whispered, ‘and His will
-is all I desire.’”</p>
-
-<p>At Scutari Miss Nightingale’s work of reorganization
-was bearing swift fruit. The wives
-of the soldiers were daily employed in the laundry
-she had established, so that they had a decent
-livelihood, and the soldiers themselves had clean
-linen. But, of course, a great many of the
-soldiers had left their wives and children at
-home.</p>
-
-<p>A money office also had been formed by the
-Lady-in-Chief, which helped them in sending
-home their pay. It was she too who arranged
-for the safe return of the widows to England,
-and it was she who provided stamps and stationery<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
-for the men, that they might be able to
-write to those dear to them. No one had had a
-moment, it seemed, to give thought to anything
-but the actual warfare with all its horrors, until
-her womanly sympathy and splendid capacity
-came on the scene. With her there was always
-little time lost between planning and achieving,
-and happily she had power of every kind in her
-hand. Besides her own means, which she poured
-forth like water, the people of England had, as
-we saw, subscribed magnificently through the
-<cite>Times</cite> Fund, and with one so practical as the
-Lady-in-Chief in daily consultation with Mr.
-Macdonald, there was no longer any fear of
-giving to church walls what was intended to
-save the lives of ill-clad and dying soldiers.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>Miss Nightingale visits Balaclava—Her illness—Lord Raglan’s
-visit—The Fall of Sebastopol.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At last, in the May of 1855, the Lady-in-Chief
-was able to see such fruits of the six months’
-steady work at Scutari that the scene of her
-labours could be changed, and she set out for
-Balaclava to inspect the other hospitals, for
-which, as superintendent of the ladies in the
-military hospitals in the East, she was responsible.
-She wished to see for herself what was being
-done for the soldiers on the field. Besides Mr.
-Bracebridge and her nursing staff, M. Soyer
-accompanied her with a view to improving the
-cooking arrangements for the army in the field,
-and he writes with his usual vividness:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Thomas, Miss Nightingale’s boy, the twelve-year-old
-drummer who had left what he called<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
-his ‘instrument sticks’ to make himself her most
-devoted slave and messenger, was also allowed
-to go.</p>
-
-<p>“At nine,” says M. Soyer, “we were all on
-shore and mounted. There were about eight
-of us ready to escort our heroine to the seat of
-war. Miss Nightingale was attired simply in
-a genteel amazone, or riding habit, and had quite
-a martial air. She was mounted upon a very
-pretty mare of a golden colour which, by its
-gambols and caracoling, seemed proud to carry
-its noble charge. The weather was very fine.
-Our cavalcade produced an extraordinary effect
-upon the motley crowd of all nations assembled
-at Balaclava, who were astonished at seeing a
-lady so well escorted. It was not so, however,
-with those who knew who the lady was.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Later he gives us a most characteristic glimpse
-of the light-hearted courage and high spirit of
-his Lady-in-Chief:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Mr. Anderson proposed to have a peep at
-Sebastopol. It was four o’clock, and they were
-firing sharply on both sides. Miss Nightingale,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-to whom the offer was made, immediately accepted
-it; so we formed a column and,
-for the first time, fearlessly faced the enemy,
-and prepared to go under fire. P. M. turned
-round to me, saying quietly, but with great
-trepidation, ‘I say, Monsieur Soyer, of course
-you would not take Miss Nightingale where
-there will be any danger?’ ... The sentry then
-repeated his caution, saying, ‘Madam, even
-where you stand you are in great danger; some
-of the shot reach more than half a mile beyond
-this!’ ... ‘My good young man,’ replied Miss
-Nightingale in French, ‘more dead and wounded
-have passed through my hands than I hope you
-will ever see in the battlefield during the whole
-of your military career; believe me, I have no
-fear of death!’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>By a little guile the eager Frenchman led the
-unsuspecting idol of the troops into a position
-where she could be well seen by the soldiers;
-and while she was seated on the Morta, in view
-of them all, it hardly needed his own dramatic
-outcry for a salutation to “the Daughter of England”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-to call forth the ringing cheers which
-greeted her from the men of the 39th Regiment,
-and the shouts were taken up so loudly by all
-the rest that the Russians were actually startled
-by them at Sebastopol.</p>
-
-<p>The darkness fell quickly, and half-way back
-to Balaclava Miss Nightingale and her party
-found themselves in the midst of a merry Zouave
-camp, where the men were singing and drinking
-coffee, but warned our friends that brigands were
-in the neighbourhood. However, there was
-nothing for it but to push on, and, as a matter
-of fact, the only wound received was from the
-head of Miss Nightingale’s horse, which hit
-violently against the face of her escort at the
-bridle rein, who kept silence that he might
-not alarm her, but was found with a face black
-and bleeding at the end of the journey.</p>
-
-<p>After her night’s rest in her state-cabin in the
-<i>Robert Lowe</i>, though still feeling used up with
-the adventurous visit to the camp hospitals, Miss
-Nightingale visited the General Hospital at
-Balaclava and the collection of huts on the
-heights, which formed the sanatoria, and also<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-went to see an officer ill with typhus in the
-doctors’ huts. She renewed her visit next day,
-when, after a night at Balaclava, she settled three
-nurses into the sanatorium, and then for some
-days continued her inspection of hospitals and
-moved into the ship <i>London</i>, the <i>Robert Lowe</i>
-having been ordered home.</p>
-
-<p>Worn out by her ceaseless labours at Scutari,
-she had probably been specially open to infection
-in the sick officer’s hut, and while on board the
-<i>London</i> it became clear that she had contracted
-Crimean fever in a very bad form.</p>
-
-<p>She was ordered up to the huts amid such
-dreadful lamentations of the surrounding folk
-that, thanks to their well-meant delays, it took
-an hour to carry her up to the heights, her
-faithful nurse, Mrs. Roberts, keeping off the
-sun-glare by walking beside her with an umbrella,
-and her page-boy Thomas weeping his heart out
-at the tail of the little procession.</p>
-
-<p>A spot was found after her own heart near
-a running stream where the wild flowers were in
-bloom, and she tells in her <cite>Nursing Notes</cite> how her
-first recovery began when a nosegay of her beloved<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-flowers was brought to her bedside. But
-for some days she was desperately ill, and the
-camp was unspeakably moved and alarmed.</p>
-
-<p>Britain also shared deeply in the suspense,
-though happily the worst crisis was passed in
-about twelve days, leaving, however, a long time
-of great weakness and slow convalescence to be
-won through afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>During those twelve days some very sharp
-skirmishing took place, and there was talk of an
-attack on Balaclava from the Kamara side, in
-which case Miss Nightingale’s hut would, it was
-said, be the first outpost to be attacked. Any such
-notion was, of course, an injustice to the Russians,
-who would not knowingly have hurt a hair
-of her head—indeed, it may almost be said that
-she was sacred to all the troops, whether friends
-or foes. But at all events it gave her boy Thomas
-his opportunity, and he was prepared, we are told,
-“to die valiantly in defence of his mistress.”</p>
-
-<p>Soyer gives a picturesque account of Lord
-Raglan’s visit to Miss Nightingale when her
-recovery was first beginning. He begins by describing
-his own visit, and tells the story through<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-the lips of Mrs. Roberts, Miss Nightingale’s
-faithful nurse.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“ ... I was,” he writes, “very anxious to
-know the actual state of Miss Nightingale’s
-health, and went to her hut to inquire. I
-found Mrs. Roberts, who was quite astonished
-and very much delighted to see me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Thank God, Monsieur Soyer,’ she exclaimed,
-‘you are here again. We have all been in such a
-way about you. Why, it was reported that you
-had been taken prisoner by the Russians. I must
-go and tell Miss Nightingale you are found again.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t disturb her now. I understand Lord
-Raglan has been to see her.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, he has, and I made a serious mistake.
-It was about five o’clock in the afternoon when
-he came. Miss Nightingale was dozing, after a
-very restless night. We had a storm that day
-and it was very wet. I was in my room sewing
-when two men on horseback, wrapped in large
-gutta-percha cloaks and dripping wet, knocked
-at the door. I went out, and one inquired in
-which hut Miss Nightingale resided.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span></p>
-
-<p>“‘He spoke so loud that I said, “Hist! hist!
-don’t make such a horrible noise as that, my
-man,” at the same time making a sign with both
-hands for him to be quiet. He then repeated
-his question, but not in so loud a tone. I told
-him this was the hut.</p>
-
-<p>“‘“All right,” said he, jumping from his horse,
-and he was walking straight in when I pushed
-him back, asking what he meant and whom he
-wanted.</p>
-
-<p>“‘“Miss Nightingale,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘“And pray who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘“Oh, only a soldier,” was the reply; “but I
-must see her—I have come a long way—my
-name is Raglan: she knows me very well.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Miss Nightingale, overhearing him, called
-me in, saying, “Oh! Mrs. Roberts, it is Lord
-Raglan. Pray tell him I have a very bad fever,
-and it will be dangerous for him to come near
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘“I have no fear of fever, or anything else,”
-said Lord Raglan.</p>
-
-<p>“‘And before I had time to turn round, in
-came his lordship. He took up a stool, sat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-down at the foot of the bed, and kindly asked
-Miss Nightingale how she was, expressing his
-sorrow at her illness, and thanking her and
-praising her for the good she had done for the
-troops. He wished her a speedy recovery, and
-hoped that she might be able to continue her
-charitable and invaluable exertions, so highly
-appreciated by every one, as well as by himself.</p>
-
-<p>“‘He then bade Miss Nightingale good-bye,
-and went away. As he was going I said I
-wished to apologize.</p>
-
-<p>“‘“No, no! not at all, my dear lady,” said
-Lord Raglan; “you did very right; for I perceive
-that Miss Nightingale has not yet received
-my letter, in which I announced my intention
-of paying her a visit to-day—having previously
-inquired of the doctor if she could be seen.”’”<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The doctors, after her twelve days of dangerous
-illness, were urgent for Miss Nightingale’s
-instant return to England; but this she would
-not do: she was sure that, with time and patience,
-she would be able once more to take up her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-work at Scutari. Lord Ward placed his yacht
-at her disposal, and by slow degrees she made
-recovery, though Lord Raglan’s death, June
-18, 1855, was a great grief and shock to her.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington said of Lord Raglan that he was
-a man who would not tell a lie to save his life,
-and he was also a man of great charm and
-benevolence, adored by his troops. He felt to
-the quick the terrible repulse of our troops
-before Sebastopol that June, having yielded his
-own counsels to those of France rather than
-break the alliance, and he died two days after the
-despatch was written in which he told the story
-of this event.</p>
-
-<p>Writing to the Duke of Newcastle in October,
-he had entreated for his army a little repose—that
-brave army, worn out, not only by the
-ordinary fatigues of a military campaign, and by
-the actual collecting of wood and water to keep
-life from extinction, but by cholera, sickness,
-and the bitter purgatorial cold of a black hillside
-in a Russian winter.</p>
-
-<p>“Repose!” echoes Kinglake with sardonic
-bitterness, and we too echo it, remembering how,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-two days afterwards, it was riding through the
-devil’s jaws at Balaclava, to hurl itself but a little
-later against its myriad assailants at Inkermann!</p>
-
-<p>Repose! uncomplaining and loyal, in the
-bitter grasp of winter on the heights of the
-Chersonese, holding day and night a siege that
-seemed endless, the allied armies had proved
-their heroism through the slow tragedy. And
-when at last, on the day of victory, amid the
-fury of the elements and the avenging fury of
-their own surging hearts, they grasped the result
-of their patient agony, though</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Stormed at with shot and shell,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Boldly they rode and well,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">that final moment of onset did but crown the
-fortitude of those long, slow days of dying by
-inches in the slow clutch of starvation, that had
-been so much harder to bear, while they saw
-their comrades in the anguish of cholera and felt
-their own limbs freezing beneath them.</p>
-
-<p>But it was doubtless a brave assault, and it was
-sad that their loved commander was not there
-to see; for, while the Malakoff fell before the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-French, it was the British troops that took the
-Redan—that Redan of which it has been written
-that “three months before it had repulsed the
-attacking force with fearful carnage, and brought
-Lord Raglan to a despairing death.”</p>
-
-<p>There is tragedy, therefore, in the fact that
-when, so soon afterwards, Sebastopol fell, the
-triumph was not his.</p>
-
-<p>It was on September 8, amid a furious storm
-which suddenly broke up a summer-like day,
-that the cannonade joined with the thunder and
-the final assault was made. Though the first
-shouts of victory came at the end of an hour,
-it was nightfall before the fighting ceased and
-the Russians retreated. Sebastopol was in flames.
-And before the next day dawned the last act in
-this terrible war-drama was over.</p>
-
-<p>Within a month of leaving Scutari Miss
-Nightingale was already there again, and during
-these days of slowly returning strength, when
-she wandered sometimes through the beautiful
-cemetery where the strange, black-plumaged
-birds fly above the cypresses and, against the
-background of the blue Bosphorus, the roses<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-garland the tombs, she planned, for the soldiers
-who had fallen, the monument which now stands
-there to their undying memory, where under the
-drooping wings of the angels that support it are
-inserted the words, “This monument was erected
-by Queen Victoria and her people.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="long"><i>The Nightingale Fund—Miss Nightingale remains at her post,
-organizing healthy occupations for the men off duty—Sisters
-of Mercy—The Queen’s jewel—Its meaning.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Far and wide spread the news of the fall of
-Sebastopol, and London took the lead in rejoicings.
-The Tower guns shouted the victory,
-the arsenals fired their salutes, cathedrals and
-village churches rang out their welcome to peace.
-There were sons, husbands, brothers, fathers, for
-whom there would be no more home-coming on
-earth; and some who would come back broken
-and maimed: but all had served their country,
-and heroism lasts beyond time and death.</p>
-
-<p>All through the empire arose an outcry of
-thanksgiving to the woman who still remained at
-her post among the sick and the dying—the
-woman who had saved England’s honour in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-day of disgrace and neglect, and had saved also
-countless lives among her brave sons.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen and all her people were eager to
-know what there was that they might lay at her
-feet. In one form only would Miss Nightingale
-accept the testimony offered—namely, the means
-of yet further work. The Herberts knew she had
-longed to organize a hospital on the lines of
-unpaid nursing, but there was a difficulty for the
-moment, because she could not bring herself
-to leave the East until her work there was
-fully completed, and such a hospital must, they
-thought, have her presence from the first. Just
-now she was with Sister Aloysius at Balaclava,
-nursing one of her staff, and while there an
-accident on the rough roads, which injured not
-only herself, but also the Sister who was walking
-beside her, led to a thoughtful kindness from
-Colonel Macmurdo, who had a little carriage
-especially made for her. In this little carriage,
-through the cutting cold and snow of a Crimean
-winter, she would drive about among the camp
-hospitals with no escort but her driver, as she
-returned through the dark night at the end of her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-long day of self-imposed duties. Sometimes she
-has stood for hours on a cold, shelterless rock,
-giving her directions, and when one and another
-of her friends entreated against such risk and
-exposure, she would just smile with a quiet
-certainty that, for all that in her eyes was her
-clear duty, strength and protection would
-certainly be given.</p>
-
-<p>She was much occupied in helping and
-uplifting the convalescent, and not only these,
-but also all the soldiers in camp in the army
-of occupation, which was for a while to be left
-in the East until the treaty was signed, and would
-necessarily be surrounded by special temptations
-in time of peace. Her way of fighting drunkenness—and
-after Sebastopol you may be sure there
-was a good deal of “drinking of healths”—was
-to provide all possible means of interest and
-amusement. Huts were built, clubs were formed.
-Stationery was provided for letters home. So
-effectually was every one in England interested
-that, while Queen Victoria herself led the way in
-sending newspapers and magazines, all through
-the country her example was followed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span></p>
-
-<p>And while this was going on, the great
-testimonial fund in London was mounting and
-mounting.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Cambridge, Lord Houghton, and
-the Marquis of Ripon were members of the
-committee. The great bankers opened their
-books. The churches collected funds, <em>the rank
-and file of our impoverished army sent £4,000</em>,
-and taking Mrs. Tooley’s figures, which are
-doubtless correct, and including all ranks and
-all troops throughout the world, the military
-contributions alone appear to have risen to about
-£10,000.</p>
-
-<p>Jenny Lind, then Madame Goldschmidt, gave
-a concert, of which she herself bore all the
-expense, amounting to about £500, and then
-gave the entire proceeds, about £2,000, to the
-fund. This was so warmly appreciated by some
-of those interested in the success of the fund that,
-by private subscription, they gave a marble bust
-of Queen Victoria to the Goldschmidts as a
-thank-offering.</p>
-
-<p>From the overseas dominions came over
-£4,000; from provincial cities, towns, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>
-villages in Britain, between £6,000 and £7,000,
-and from British residents abroad also a very
-handsome sum. Indeed, it may be truly said
-that in every quarter of the globe men and
-women united to pour forth their gratitude to
-Miss Nightingale, and to enable her to complete
-the work so bravely begun, by transforming the
-old and evil methods of nursing under British
-rule to that ideal art in which fortitude, tenderness,
-and skill receive their crowning grace.
-It has been said—I know not with what exactitude—that
-no British subject has ever received
-such world-wide honour as was at this time laid
-at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>At one of the great meetings Mr. Sidney
-Herbert read the following letter from one of his
-friends:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I have just heard a pretty account from a
-soldier describing the comfort it was even to see
-Florence pass. ‘She would speak to one and
-another,’ he said, ‘and nod and smile to many
-more, but she could not do it to all, you know,
-for we lay there by hundreds; but we could kiss<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>
-her shadow<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> as it fell, and lay our heads on
-the pillow again content.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>That letter alone, we are told, brought another
-£10,000.</p>
-
-<p>The gross amount had reached £44,000,
-but in 1857 Miss Nightingale desired that
-the list should be closed and help be given
-instead to our French Allies, who were then
-suffering from the terrible floods that laid waste
-their country in that year.</p>
-
-<p>And whatever she commanded, of course, was
-done. Alike in England and in the Crimea, her
-influence was potent for all good.</p>
-
-<p>She herself was still busy nursing some of the
-Roman Catholic members of her staff in the huts
-on the snowclad heights of Balaclava, and how
-heartily she valued them may be judged from
-these closing sentences of a letter to their
-Reverend Mother:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“You know that I shall do everything I can
-for the Sisters whom you have left me. I will
-care for them as if they were my own children.
-But it will not be like you.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Not very far from the sanatorium on the
-heights above Balaclava, two new camp hospitals
-had been put up, and while superintending the
-nursing there, our Lady-in-Chief lived in a three-roomed
-hut with a medical store attached to it,
-where she was quite near to sanatorium and
-hospitals. She and the three Sisters who were
-with her had not very weather-proof quarters.
-One of them, whose letters are full of interest,
-tells of their waking one morning to find themselves
-covered with snow, and leading a life of
-such adventurous simplicity that when the
-Protestant chaplain brought some eggs tied up in
-a handkerchief the gift was regarded as princely!
-Happily, they were able to reward the gentleman
-by washing his neckties, and ironing them with
-an ingenious makeshift for the missing flat-iron,
-in the shape of a teapot filled with hot water.
-Every night everything in the huts froze, even to
-the ink. But Miss Nightingale tells how brave<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-and entirely self-forgetful the Sisters were under
-every hardship and privation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus9">
-<img src="images/illus9.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Miss Nightingale’s Medals and Decorations.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>By those who have never had the privilege of
-knowing such women intimately, her affection for
-them may be the better understood from the
-following graphic letter written by Lord
-Napier:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“At an early period of my life I held a
-diplomatic position under Lord Stratford de
-Redcliffe in Constantinople. During the
-distress of the Crimean War the Ambassador
-called me one morning and said: ‘Go down to
-the port; you will find a ship there loaded with
-Jewish exiles—Russian subjects from the Crimea.
-It is your duty to disembark them. The Turks
-will give you a house in which they may be
-placed. I turn them over entirely to you.’ I
-went down to the shore and received about two
-hundred persons, the most miserable objects that
-could be witnessed, most of them old men,
-women, and children. I placed them in the cold,
-ruinous lodging allocated to them by the Ottoman
-authorities. I went back to the Ambassador and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-said: ‘Your Excellency, these people are cold,
-and I have no fuel or blankets. They are hungry,
-and I have no food. They are dirty, and I have
-no soap. Their hair is in an indescribable
-condition, and I have no combs. What am I to
-do with these people?’ ‘Do?’ said the
-Ambassador. ‘Get a couple of Sisters of Mercy;
-they will put all to right in a moment.’ I went,
-saw the Mother Superior, and explained the case.
-I asked for two Sisters. She ordered two from
-her presence to follow me. They were ladies of
-refinement and intellect. I was a stranger and a
-Protestant, and I invoked their assistance for the
-benefit of the Jews. Yet these two women made
-up their bundles and followed me through
-the rain, without a look, a whisper, a sign of
-hesitation. From that moment my fugitives
-were saved. I witnessed the labours of those
-Sisters for months, and they never endeavoured
-to make a single convert.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The military men were not less enthusiastic.
-When Colonel Connolly, brother-in-law
-to Mr. Bruin, of Carlow, was travelling,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-after his return from the war, near the Bruin
-estate, a fellow-traveller spoke disrespectfully
-of nuns. The colonel, a Protestant, not only
-made a warm defence of the ladies who had
-nursed him in Russia and Ottoman regions, and
-for their sakes of all other nuns, but handed the
-assailant his card, saying: “If you say another
-word against these saintly gentlewomen I shall
-call you out.” The slanderer subsided very
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p>Sister Aloysius, one of those very Sisters who
-were with Miss Nightingale in the huts, has
-written in her “Memories of the Crimea”:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It was said at one time that the War Office
-was on the point of issuing a mandate forbidding
-us to speak even to the Catholic soldiers on
-religion, or to say a prayer for them. However,
-that mandate never came; we often thought the
-guardian angels of the soldiers prevented it.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It made no difference to the loyalty of their
-work together that Miss Nightingale was not a
-Roman Catholic; they all obeyed the Master who
-has taught that it is not the way in which He is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-addressed that matters, but whether we help those
-whom He gave His life to help, and in loving
-and serving whom, we love and serve Him.</p>
-
-<p>So in London and in Balaclava the good of her
-influence was felt. In London the funds mounted,
-and at Balaclava the excellent work among the
-soldiers still went on.</p>
-
-<p>Her very presence among the men helped to
-keep them sober and diligent, and in every way
-at their best, in those first months of victory
-when heads are only too easily turned. And she
-had the reward she most desired, for she was able
-to speak of these brave fellows—the nameless
-heroes of the long campaign—as having been
-“uniformly quiet and well-bred.” Those words,
-it is true, were spoken of the men attending the
-reading-huts; but they are quite in line with her
-more general verdict with regard to Tommy;
-though, alas, we cannot stretch them to cover
-his behaviour at the canteens, where we are told
-that much drunkenness prevailed.</p>
-
-<p>She had advanced money for the building of a
-coffee-house at Inkermann, and had helped the
-chaplain to get maps and slates for his school<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
-work, and the bundles of magazines and illustrated
-papers, sent out from England in answer
-to her appeal, as well as books sent out by the
-Duchess of Kent, cheered and brightened many
-a long hour for the men. She was always on
-the alert to help them about sending home their
-pay, and quick to care for the interests of their
-wives and children.</p>
-
-<p>Before she left the Crimea, her hut was beset
-by fifty or sixty poor women who had been left
-behind when their husbands sailed for home
-with their regiments. They had followed their
-husbands to the war without leave and, having
-proved themselves useful, had been allowed to
-remain. And now they were left alone in a
-strange land and, but for Florence Nightingale,
-the end of the story might have been bitter
-sorrow. But she managed to get them sent
-home in a British ship.</p>
-
-<p>Many a mother at home must already have
-blessed her; for reckless boys who had enlisted,
-without the sanction of their families, had again
-and again been by her persuaded to write home,
-and in the first months of the war she had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
-actually undertaken to stamp for the men any
-letters home which were sent to her camp. And
-at Scutari she had arranged a provisional money-order
-office where, four afternoons in each week,
-she received from the men the pay which she
-encouraged them to send home. When we are
-told that, in small sums, about £1,000 passed
-through this office month by month, we realize
-dimly something of the labour involved, and
-thinking of all her other cares and labours, which
-were nevertheless not allowed to stand in the
-way of such practical thoughtfulness as this, we
-do not wonder that “the services” loved her
-with a love that was akin to worship. The
-money, as she herself says, “was literally so
-much rescued from the canteens and from
-drunkenness;” and the Government, following
-her lead, had themselves established money-order
-offices later at Scutari, Balaclava, Constantinople,
-and the Headquarters, Crimea.</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising that, in the “Old Country,”
-songs were dedicated to her as “the good angel
-of Derbyshire,” and that her very portrait became
-a popular advertisement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span></p>
-
-<p>And we have it on good authority that her
-name was revered alike by English, French,
-Turks, and Russians.</p>
-
-<p>The Treaty of Peace was signed at Paris on
-March 30, 1856, and on July 12 General
-Codrington formally gave up Sebastopol and
-Balaclava to the Russians. When the last remnant
-of our army was ordered home and the
-hospitals were finally closed, Florence Nightingale
-was for the first time willing to leave a post
-which she had held so bravely and so long. But
-before she left she wished to leave a memorial
-to the brave men who had fallen, and the brave
-women, her comrades, who had died upon that
-other battlefield where disease, and Death himself,
-must be wrestled with on behalf of those who
-are nursed and tended.</p>
-
-<p>And so it comes to pass that among the visible
-tokens which the war has left behind, is a
-gigantic white marble cross erected by Florence
-Nightingale upon the sombre heights of Balaclava,
-where it still opens wide its arms for
-every gleam of golden sunlight, every reflected
-shimmer, through the dark night, of silvery moon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span>
-and star, to hearten the sailors voyaging northward
-and mark a prayer for the brave men and
-women who toiled and suffered there. It is
-inscribed with the words in Italian, “Lord, have
-mercy upon us.” But while she herself asked
-only mercy for herself and others, that human
-shortcomings might be forgiven, her compatriots
-were uniting to do her honour.</p>
-
-<p>On December 20, 1855, the <cite>Morning Post</cite>
-printed the following announcement:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The country will experience much satisfaction,
-though no surprise, on learning, as we
-believe we are correct in stating, that Her
-Majesty the Queen has, in a manner as honourable
-to herself as it must be gratifying to her
-people, been pleased to mark her warm appreciation
-of the unparalleled self-devotion of the good
-Miss Nightingale. The Queen has transmitted
-to that lady a jewelled ornament of great beauty,
-which may be worn as a decoration, and has
-accompanied it with an autograph letter—such
-a letter as Queen Victoria has ere now proved
-she can write—a letter not merely of graceful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span>
-acknowledgment, but full of that deep feeling
-which speaks from heart to heart, and at once
-ennobles the sovereign and the subject.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Of the symbolic meaning of this jewel the
-following exposition appeared in the issue of
-January 15, 1856, of the same paper:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The design of the jewel is admirable, and
-the effect no less brilliant than chaste. It is
-characteristic and emblematical—being formed
-of a St. George’s cross in ruby-red enamel, on a
-white field—representing England. This is
-encircled by a black band, typifying the office
-of Charity, on which is inscribed a golden legend,
-‘Blessed are the merciful.’ The Royal donor is
-expressed by the letters ‘V. R.’ surmounted by
-a crown in diamonds, impressed upon the centre
-of the St. George’s cross, from which also rays
-of gold emanating upon the field of white enamel
-are supposed to represent the glory of England.
-While spreading branches of palm, in bright
-green enamel, tipped with gold, form a framework
-for the shield, their stems at the bottom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span>
-being banded with a ribbon of blue enamel (the
-colour of the ribbon for the Crimean medal),
-on which, in golden letters, is inscribed ‘Crimea.’
-At the top of the shield, between the palm
-branches, and connecting the whole, three
-brilliant stars of diamonds illustrate the idea
-of the light of heaven shed upon the labours
-of Mercy, Peace, and Charity, in connection
-with the glory of a nation. On the back of this
-Royal jewel is an inscription on a golden tablet,
-written by Her Majesty ... recording it to be
-a gift and testimonial in memory of services
-rendered to her brave army by Miss Nightingale.
-The jewel is about three inches in depth by two
-and a half in width. It is to be worn, not as a
-brooch or ornament, but rather as the badge of
-an order. We believe the credit of the design
-is due to the illustrious consort of Her Majesty.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><cite>Punch</cite>, of course, had always taken the liveliest
-interest in Miss Nightingale’s work, and having
-begun with friendly jesting, he ended with a
-tribute so tender in its grave beauty that it
-would hardly have been out of place in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
-church window; for below a sketch of Florence
-Nightingale herself, holding a wounded soldier
-by the hand, and with the badge of Scutari
-across her breast, was a vision of the Good
-Samaritan.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
-
-<p class="long"><i>Her citizenship—Her initiative—Public recognition and gratitude—Her
-return incognito—Village excitement—The country’s welcome—Miss
-Nightingale’s broken health—The Nightingale
-Fund—St. Thomas’s Hospital—Reform of nursing as a
-profession.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It may be fairly supposed that even those
-benighted Philistines whose mockery had at the
-outset been of a less innocent quality than
-<cite>Punch’s</cite> gentle fun, now found it expedient to
-alter their tone, and if their objections had been
-mere honest stupidity, they were probably both
-convinced of their past folly and a good deal
-ashamed.</p>
-
-<p>For Britain was very proud of the daughter
-who had become so mighty a power for good in
-the State. The Sister of Mercy whom Miss
-Nightingale used laughingly to call “her Cardinal”
-had responded on one occasion by addressing her
-with equal affection as “Your Holiness,” and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-nickname was not altogether inappropriate, for
-her advice in civic and hygienic matters had an
-authority which might well be compared with
-that which the Pope himself wielded on theological
-questions.</p>
-
-<p>Among the doctors at Scutari was a friend of
-General Evatt, from whom he had many facts at
-first-hand, and it was therefore not without
-knowledge that, in his conversation with me on
-the subject, the latter confirmed and strengthened
-all that has already been written of Miss Nightingale’s
-mental grasp and supreme capacity. To
-him, knowing her well, and knowing well also
-the facts, she was the highest embodiment of
-womanhood and of citizenship. Yet, while he
-talked, my heart ached for her, thinking of the
-womanly joys of home and motherhood which
-were not for her, and all the pure and tender
-romance which woman bears in her inmost
-soul, even when, as in this noble instance, it is
-transmuted by the will of God and the woman’s
-own obedient will into service of other homes
-and other lives.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps I may here be allowed to quote a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-sentence from Mrs. Tooley’s admirable life of
-our heroine; for it could not have been better
-expressed: “No one would wish to exempt from
-due praise even the humblest of that ‘Angel
-Band’ who worked with Florence Nightingale,
-and still less would she, but in every great cause
-there is the initiating genius who stands in
-solitary grandeur above the rank and file of
-followers.”</p>
-
-<p>Nor was official recognition of the country’s
-debt to Miss Nightingale in any wise lacking.
-When the Treaty of Peace was under
-discussion in the House of Lords, Lord Ellesmere
-made it an opportunity for the following
-tribute:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“My Lords, the agony of that time has
-become a matter of history. The vegetation
-of two successive springs has obscured the
-vestiges of Balaclava and of Inkermann. Strong
-voices now answer to the roll-call, and sturdy
-forms now cluster round the colours. The
-ranks are full, the hospitals are empty. The
-Angel of Mercy still lingers to the last on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-scene of her labours; but her mission is all but
-accomplished. Those long arcades of Scutari,
-in which dying men sat up to catch the sound
-of her footstep or the flutter of her dress, and
-fell back on the pillow content to have seen
-her shadow as it passed, are now comparatively
-deserted. She may probably be thinking how
-to escape, as best she may, on her return, the
-demonstrations of a nation’s appreciation of
-the deeds and motives of Florence Nightingale.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And in the House of Commons Mr. Sidney
-Herbert said: “I have received, not only from
-medical men, but from many others who have
-had an opportunity of making observations,
-letters couched in the highest possible terms of
-praise. I will not repeat the words, but no
-higher expressions of praise could be applied to
-woman, for the wonderful energy, the wonderful
-tact, the wonderful tenderness, combined
-with the extraordinary self-devotion, which have
-been displayed by Miss Nightingale.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Ellesmere was right when he hinted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-that Miss Nightingale would be likely to do her
-best to escape all public fuss on her return. The
-Government had offered her a British man-of-war
-to take her home; but it was not her way
-to accept any such outward pomp, and, almost
-before people knew what had happened, it was
-found that she had travelled quietly home as
-Miss Smith in a French vessel, visiting in Paris
-her old friends the Sisters of St. Vincent de Paul,
-and finding that by having embarked at night,
-at a moment when Scutari was not looking for
-her departure, her little <i lang="fr">ruse</i> had been very
-successful. An eager people had not recognized
-under the passing incognito of Miss Smith, travelling
-with her aunt, Mrs. Smith, the great
-Florence Nightingale whose return they had
-wished to celebrate. The village gossips at Lea
-Hurst have it that “the closely veiled lady in
-black, who slipped into her father’s house by the
-back door, was first recognized by the family
-butler,” and it seems a pity to spoil such a
-picturesque tradition by inquiring into it too
-closely.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus10">
-<img src="images/illus10.jpg" width="700" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">The Nightingale Nursing Carriage.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There was great joy among the villagers that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-“Miss Florence had come home from the wars,”
-but it was understood that she wished to be quiet,
-and that bonfires and such-like rejoicings were
-out of the question.</p>
-
-<p>Along the roads near Lea Hurst came troops
-of people from Derby and Nottingham, and even
-from Manchester, hoping to catch a glimpse of
-her; and there is in one of the biographies a
-vivid account, given by the old lady who kept
-the lodge gates, of how the park round Lea
-Hurst was beset by these lingering crowds, how
-men came without arms or without legs, hoping
-to see the Queen of Nurses. “But,” added the
-old lady, “the squire wasn’t a-going to let Miss
-Florence be made a staring-stock of.” And,
-indeed, “Miss Florence” must have been in great
-need of repose, though never to the end of her
-life would it seem that she was allowed to have
-much of it; for the very fruitfulness of her
-work made work multiply upon her hands, and
-her friend Mrs. Sidney Herbert knew her well
-when she said that to Florence Nightingale the
-dearest guerdon of work already done was the gift
-of more work still to do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span></p>
-
-<p>Perhaps we shall never any of us fully know
-what it must have been to one so abounding in
-spiritual energy and world-wide compassion to
-have to learn slowly and painfully, through the
-years that followed, what must henceforth be the
-physical limitations of her life. When we think
-of the long, careful training that had been given
-to her fine gifts of eye and hand in the art that
-she loved—for she rightly regarded nursing as an
-art—an art in which every movement must be a
-skilled and disciplined movement—we may divine
-something of what it cost to bear, without one
-murmur of complaint, what she might so easily
-have been tempted to regard as a lifelong waste
-of faculty. Instead of allowing herself to dwell
-on any such idea, gradually, as the knowledge
-dawned on her of what she must forego, she
-gave herself, with tenfold power in other
-directions, to work which <em>could</em> be achieved
-from an invalid’s couch, and thus helped and
-guided others in that art all over the world.</p>
-
-<p>Among the greetings which pleased her
-most on her first return to England was an
-address from the workmen of Newcastle-on-Tyne,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
-to whom she replied in the following
-letter:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right"><i>August 23, 1856.</i></p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My Dear Friends</span>,—I wish it were in my
-power to tell you what was in my heart when I
-received your letter.</p>
-
-<p>“Your welcome home, your sympathy with
-what has been passing while I have been absent,
-have touched me more than I can tell in words.
-My dear friends, the things that are the deepest
-in our hearts are perhaps what it is most difficult
-for us to express. ‘She hath done what she
-could.’ These words I inscribed on the tomb of
-one of my best helpers when I left Scutari. It
-has been my endeavour, in the sight of God, to do
-as she has done.</p>
-
-<p>“I will not speak of reward when permitted
-to do our country’s work—it is what we live
-for—but I may say to receive sympathy from
-affectionate hearts like yours is the greatest support,
-the greatest gratification, that it is possible
-for me to receive from man.</p>
-
-<p>“I thank you all, the eighteen hundred, with
-grateful, tender affection. And I should have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-written before to do so, were not the business,
-which my return home has not ended, been
-almost more than I can manage.—Pray believe
-me, my dear friends, yours faithfully and
-gratefully,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Florence Nightingale</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the tokens of regard which the late
-Duke of Devonshire brought to his old friend on
-her return, when he drove over from Chatsworth
-to Lea Hurst to see her after her long, eventful
-absence, was a little silver owl, a sort of souvenir,
-I suppose, of her beloved little “Athena,” whose
-death she had felt so keenly when leaving for the
-Crimea. Queen Victoria and the young princesses
-were eager to welcome Miss Nightingale to Balmoral;
-and in looking back on her little visit
-there, which seems to have been a happiness on
-both sides, it is interesting to see how her
-influence told upon the Crown Princess and
-Princess Alice in their later organization of
-hospital work, and to be reminded by Mrs.
-Tooley, whose words we here venture to quote,
-that the “tiny Princess Helena was to become
-in after years an accomplished nurse, and an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>
-active leader in the nursing movement of this
-country; and, alas, to yield her soldier son on
-the fatal field of South Africa.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, before and after this visit, Miss
-Nightingale was quietly receiving her own friends
-and neighbours at Lea Hurst, and entertaining
-little parties of villagers from among the rustics
-she had so long known and loved. Rich and
-poor alike were all so eager to do her honour
-that it is impossible to speak separately of all the
-many forms which their expressions of gratitude
-took. They included a gift from the workmen
-of Sheffield as well as from her own more
-immediate neighbours, and found their climax
-in the fund pressed upon her by a grateful
-nation, and for convenience called the Nightingale
-Fund, which was still awaiting its final
-disposal.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, imagine the importance of the ex-drummer-boy
-Thomas, her devoted servant and
-would-be defender at Balaclava, promoted now
-to be “Miss Nightingale’s own man” in her
-home at Lea Hurst—an even more exciting
-presence to the villagers than the Russian hound<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-which was known through the country-side as
-“Miss Florence’s Crimean dog.”</p>
-
-<p>There were still living, we are told, when Mrs.
-Tooley wrote her delightful record, a few old
-people round about Lea Hurst who remembered
-those great days of “Miss Florence’s return,”
-and the cannon balls and bullets they had seen as
-trophies, the dried flowers gathered at Scutari,
-and Thomas’s thrilling stories, for if he had not
-himself been present in the famous charge at
-Balaclava, he did at least know all about it at
-first-hand.</p>
-
-<p>So little did any one dream that Miss Nightingale’s
-health had been permanently shattered
-that when the Indian Mutiny broke out in 1857,
-she offered to go out to her friend Lady Canning,
-and organize a nursing staff for the troops. And
-while, with her customary business-like clearness,
-she proceeded to draw up a detailed account of
-all the private gifts entrusted to her for the
-Crimea, and took the opportunity of putting on
-record her tribute to Lord Raglan, the final
-arrangements with regard to the Nightingale
-Fund were still for a time held in suspense, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span>
-the hope that she would so far recover strength
-as to be able to take into her own hands the
-government of that institution for the training of
-hospital nurses, to which it was to be devoted.
-When her friend Mr. Herbert talked gaily in
-public of chaining her to the oar for the rest of
-her life, that she might “raise the system of
-nursing to a pitch of efficiency never before
-known,” he did not foresee that the invisible
-chain, which was to bruise her eager spirit, was
-to be of a kind so much harder to bear. But
-when, in 1860, her health showed no signs of
-recovery, she definitely handed over to others
-the management of the fund, only reserving to
-herself the right to advise. Her friend Mr.
-Herbert was, up to the time of his death, the
-guiding spirit of the council, and it gave Miss
-Nightingale pleasure that St. Thomas’s Hospital
-should from the outset be associated with the
-scheme, because that hospital had originated in
-one of the oldest foundations in the country for
-the relief of the sick poor, and in choosing it for
-the training of lay sisters as nurses, its earliest
-tradition was being continued. The work of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-the fund began at St. Thomas’s in 1860, in
-the old building near London Bridge, before it
-moved into its present palace at Westminster,
-of which the Nightingale Training Home is a
-part. In those first early days an upper floor
-was arranged for the nurses in a new part of the
-old hospital, with a bedroom for each probationer,
-two rooms for the Sister-in-charge, and a sitting-room
-in which all shared. As the result of the
-advertisement for candidates in 1860, fifteen probationers
-were admitted in June, the first superintendent
-being Mrs. Wardroper. The probationers
-were, of course, under the authority of the
-matron, and subject to the rules of the hospital.
-They were to give help in the wards and receive
-teaching from the Sisters and medical staff, and if
-at the end of the year they passed their examination,
-they were to be registered as certified
-nurses.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus11">
-<img src="images/illus11.jpg" width="700" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Miss Nightingale visiting the Herbert Hospital, Woolwich.</p>
-<p class="caption">(<i>Bas-relief on the pedestal—Herbert Memorial.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thanks to Miss Nightingale and other pioneers,
-the fifty years that have passed since then have
-made Mrs. Grundy a little less Grundyish, but
-in those days she considered the whole business
-a terrible venture, and was too much occupied<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span>
-with the idea of possible love affairs between the
-doctors and nurses to realize what good work
-was being done. The first year was a very
-anxious one for Miss Nightingale, but all the
-world knows now how her experiment has
-justified itself and how her prayers have been
-answered; for it was in prayer that she found
-her “quietness and confidence” through those
-first months of tension when the enemy was
-watching and four probationers had to be dismissed,
-though their ranks were speedily filled
-up by others.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the year, from among those who
-were placed on the register, six received appointments
-at St. Thomas’s and two took work in
-infirmaries. There was special need of good
-nurses in workhouse infirmaries, and there was
-also throughout the whole country a crying need
-for nurses carefully trained in midwifery: lack of
-knowledge, for instance, had greatly increased
-the danger of puerperal fever, a scourge against
-which Miss Nightingale was one of the first
-to contend; and it had been wisely decided that
-while two-thirds of the fund should go to the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span>
-work at St. Thomas’s, one-third should be used
-for special training of nurses in these branches at
-King’s College.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“How has the tone and state of hospital nurses
-been raised?” Miss Nightingale asks in her little
-book on “Trained Nursing for the Sick Poor,”
-published in 1876.</p>
-
-<p>“By, more than anything else, making the
-hospital such a home as good young women—educated
-young women—can live and nurse in;
-and, secondly, by raising hospital nursing into
-such a profession as these can earn an honourable
-livelihood in.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In her “Notes on Hospitals,” published in
-1859, she pointed out what she considered the
-four radical defects in hospital construction—namely:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>1. The agglomeration of a large number of
-sick under the same roof.</p>
-
-<p>2. Deficiency of space.</p>
-
-<p>3. Deficiency of ventilation.</p>
-
-<p>4. Deficiency of light.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span></p>
-
-<p>How magnificently builders have since learned
-to remedy such defects may be seen in the
-Nightingale Wing of St. Thomas’s Hospital.</p>
-
-<p>The block system on which St. Thomas’s
-Hospital is built is what Miss Nightingale has
-always recommended, each block being divided
-from the next by a space of 125 feet, across
-which runs a double corridor by means of which
-they communicate with one another. Each has
-three tiers of wards above the ground floor.</p>
-
-<p>The six blocks in the centre are those used for
-patients, that at the south for the lecture-rooms
-and a school of medicine, the one at the north,
-adjoining Westminster Bridge, for the official
-staff. From Lambeth Palace to Westminster
-Bridge, with a frontage of 1,700 feet, the
-hospital extends; and there would be room in
-the operating theatre for 600 students. In the
-special wing in one of the northern blocks,
-reserved for the Nightingale Home and Training
-School for Nurses, everything has been ordered
-in accordance with Miss Nightingale’s wishes.</p>
-
-<p>To-day the whole <em>status</em> of nursing in Britain
-and British dominions is recognized as that of an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-honoured and certified profession, and year by
-year, at St. Thomas’s alone, thirty probationers
-are trained, of whom fifteen pay £1, 1<i>s.</i> a week
-for the privilege, whereas to the other fifteen it
-is given gratuitously. At St. Thomas’s were
-trained nurses who were among the earliest to
-be decorated with the Red Cross, that international
-badge of good army nursing throughout
-the world which, indirectly as well as directly,
-owed much to Miss Nightingale. How warmly,
-even arduously, Miss Nightingale shared in the
-trials and joys and adventures of her nurses, comes
-out very clearly in some of her letters to one of
-them, whom, as a personal friend and one of the
-first nine to receive the Red Cross, she playfully
-named “her Cape of Good Hope.” Those tender
-and intimate letters, which I will not name
-emotional, because she who wrote them had
-justified emotion by ever translating it into
-useful work, made me feel to an almost startling
-degree her warm, eager, dominating personality
-with its extraordinary mingling of utmost modesty
-and pleading authority. To me that personality
-seems to win the heart of the coldest and dullest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span>
-by its ardent enthusiasm and humility, and those
-unpublished letters, which I was privileged to
-read, brought home to me how Miss Nightingale—then
-an invalid of sixty-two—literally <em>lived</em> in
-the life of those pioneer nurses whom she had
-inspired and sent forth.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to see in them how much she feared
-for her nurses any innocent little trip of the tongue,
-with regard to the rest of the staff, which might
-set rolling the dangerous ball of hospital gossip.
-She puts the duty of obedience and forbearance
-on the highest grounds, and she draws a useful
-distinction between the sham dignity which we all
-know in the hatefulness of “the superior person,”
-and the true dignity which tries to uplift those
-less fortunate, rather than self-indulgently to lean
-on them or make to them foolish confidences.</p>
-
-<p>And while she is all aglow with sympathy for
-every detail of a nurse’s work, she entreats her
-friend to “let no want of concord or discretion
-appear to mar that blessed work. And let no
-one,” she adds, “be able justly to say what was
-said to me last month, ‘It is only Roman Catholic
-vows that can keep Sisters together.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span></p>
-
-<p>What she wrote when asking for recruits for
-St. Thomas’s at the outset still remains the basis
-of the ideal held there. “We require,” she
-wrote, “that a woman be sober, honest, truthful,
-without which there is no foundation on which
-to build.</p>
-
-<p>“We train her in habits of punctuality, quietness,
-trustworthiness, personal neatness. We
-teach her how to manage the concerns of a large
-ward or establishment. We train her in dressing
-wounds and other injuries, and in performing all
-those minor operations which nurses are called
-upon day and night to undertake.</p>
-
-<p>“We teach her how to manage helpless
-patients in regard to moving, changing, feeding,
-temperature, and the prevention of bedsores.</p>
-
-<p>“She has to make and apply bandages, line
-splints, and the like. She must know how to
-make beds with as little disturbance as possible
-to their inmates. She is instructed how to wait
-at operations, and as to the kind of aid the
-surgeon requires at her hands. She is taught
-cooking for the sick; the principle on which
-sick wards ought to be cleansed, aired, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-warmed; the management of convalescents; and
-how to observe sick and maimed patients, so as
-to give an intelligent and truthful account to the
-physician or surgeon in regard to the progress
-of cases in the intervals between visits—a much
-more difficult thing than is generally supposed.</p>
-
-<p>“We do not seek to make ‘medical women,’
-but simply nurses acquainted with the principle
-which they are required constantly to apply at
-the bedside.</p>
-
-<p>“For the future superintendent is added a
-course of instruction in the administration of a
-hospital, including, of course, the linen arrangements,
-and what else is necessary for a matron to
-be conversant with.</p>
-
-<p>“There are those who think that all this is
-intuitive in women, that they are born so, or, at
-least, that it comes to them without training.
-To such we say, by all means send us as many
-such geniuses as you can, for we are sorely in
-want of them.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</h2>
-
-<p class="long"><i>William Rathbone—Agnes Jones—Infirmaries—Nursing in the
-homes of the poor—Municipal work—Homely power of Miss
-Nightingale’s writings—Lord Herbert’s death.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A word must here be said of Mr. William Rathbone’s
-work in Liverpool. After the death of
-his first wife, realizing the comfort and help
-that had been given during her last illness by a
-trained nurse, he determined to do what he could
-to bring aid of the same kind into the homes of
-the poor, where the need was often so much
-more terrible. This brought him into touch
-with Miss Nightingale, who advised him to
-start a school of nursing in connection with the
-Liverpool Hospital. These two friends—for they
-soon became trusted and valued friends, each to
-each—were both people of prompt and efficient
-action, and one step led to another, until Liverpool
-had not only an important school of nurses
-for the sick poor, but also led the way throughout<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-the country in the reform of the hitherto scandalous
-nursing in workhouse infirmaries. Mr.
-Rathbone set his mind on securing the services
-of Miss Agnes Elizabeth Jones to help him in
-his work, a woman of character as saintly as his
-own, and the difference in their religious outlook
-only made more beautiful their mutual relations
-in this great work.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Agnes Jones, who has already been mentioned
-more than once in these pages, left an undying
-record on England’s roll of honour. It was
-of her that in 1868 Miss Nightingale wrote<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“A woman attractive and rich, and young
-and witty; yet a veiled and silent woman,
-distinguished by no other genius but the divine
-genius—working hard to train herself in order
-to train others to walk in the footsteps of Him
-who went about doing good.... She died, as
-she had lived, at her post in one of the largest
-workhouse infirmaries in this kingdom—the first
-in which trained nursing has been introduced....<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-When her whole life and image rise before me,
-so far from thinking the story of Una and her
-lion a myth, I say here is Una in real flesh and
-blood—Una and her paupers far more untamable
-than lions. In less than three years she had
-reduced one of the most disorderly hospital populations
-in the world to something like Christian
-discipline, and had converted a vestry to the conviction
-of the economy as well as humanity of
-nursing pauper sick by trained nurses.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And it was in introducing a book about the
-Liverpool Home and School for Nurses that she
-wrote:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Nursing, especially that most important of
-all its branches—nursing of the sick poor at home—is
-no amateur work. To do it as it ought
-to be done requires knowledge, practice, self-abnegation,
-and, as is so well said here, direct
-obedience to and activity under the highest of all
-masters and from the highest of all motives. It
-is an essential part of the daily service of the
-Christian Church. It has never been otherwise.
-It has proved itself superior to all religious divisions,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
-and is destined, by God’s blessing, to supply
-an opening the great value of which, in our
-densely populated towns, has been unaccountably
-overlooked until within these few years.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As early as 1858 Miss Nightingale published
-“Notes on Matters affecting the Health, Efficiency,
-and Hospital Administration of the
-British Army,” and the commission on this
-subject appointed in 1857 set a high value on
-her evidence.</p>
-
-<p>Something of the development that followed
-along both these lines—that of army reform and
-of nursing among the submerged—may be
-gleaned from the following clear statement of
-fact which appeared during the South African
-War, on May 21, 1900, in a great London
-daily:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“In the forty and more years that have elapsed
-since her return, Miss Nightingale has seen the
-whole system of army nursing and hospitals
-transformed. Netley, which has been visited
-by the Queen again this week, was designed by
-her, and for the next largest, namely, the Herbert<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span>
-Hospital, Woolwich, she assisted and advised
-Sir Douglas Galton in his plans.</p>
-
-<p>“There is not a naval or military hospital on
-any of the foreign stations or depôts on which
-she has not been consulted, and matters concerning
-the health and well-being of both services
-have been constantly brought before her. District
-nursing owes much to her, and in this
-connection may be cited a few lines from a letter
-which she wrote when Princess Louise, Duchess
-of Argyll, was initiating a movement to establish
-a home for the Queen’s Jubilee Nurses in Chiswick
-and Hammersmith. ‘I look upon district
-nursing,’ she wrote, ‘as one of the most hopeful
-of the agencies for raising the poor, physically
-as well as morally, its province being not only
-nursing the patient, but nursing the room, showing
-the family and neighbours how to second the
-nurse, and eminently how to nurse health as well
-as disease.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Everywhere,” we read in Mr. Stephen Paget’s
-contribution to the “Dictionary of National Biography,”
-“her expert reputation was paramount,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span>
-and “during the American Civil War of 1862-4,
-and the Franco-German War of 1870-1, her
-advice was eagerly sought by the governments
-concerned.” The “Dictionary of National Biography”
-also assures us that “in regard to civil
-hospitals, home nursing, care of poor women in
-childbirth, and sanitation, Miss Nightingale’s
-authority stood equally high.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In what she wrote there was a homely directness,
-a complete absence of anything like pose or
-affectation, which more than doubled her power,
-and was the more charming in a woman of
-such brilliant acquirements and—to quote once
-more Dean Stanley’s words—such “commanding
-genius”; but, then, genius is of
-its nature opposed to all that is sentimental or
-artificial.</p>
-
-<p>I believe it is in her “Notes on Nursing for
-the Labouring Classes” that she writes to those
-who are “minding baby”: “One-half of all the
-nurses in service are girls of from five to twenty
-years old. You see you are very important little
-people. Then there are all the girls who are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span>
-nursing mother’s baby at home; and in all these
-cases it seems pretty nearly to come to this, that
-baby’s health for its whole life depends upon
-you, girls, more than upon anything else.”
-Simple rules, such as a girl of six could understand,
-are given for the feeding, washing, dressing,
-nursing, and even amusement of that important
-person, “baby.”</p>
-
-<p>And it is in her best known book of all that
-she says: “The healthiest, happiest, liveliest, most
-beautiful baby I ever saw was the only child of
-a busy laundress. She washed all day in a room
-with the door open upon a larger room, where
-she put the child. It sat or crawled upon the
-floor all day with no other playfellow than a
-kitten, which it used to hug. Its mother kept
-it beautifully clean, and fed it with perfect
-regularity. The child was never frightened at
-anything. The room where it sat was the
-house-place; and it always gave notice to its
-mother when anybody came in, not by a cry,
-but by a crow. I lived for many months within
-hearing of that child, and never heard it cry day
-or night. I think there is a great deal too much<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span>
-of amusing children now, and not enough of
-letting them amuse themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>What, again, could be more useful in its simplicity
-than the following, addressed to working
-mothers:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Dear Hard-working Friends</span>,—I am a
-hard-working woman too. May I speak to
-you? And will you excuse me, though not a
-mother?</p>
-
-<p>“You feel with me that every mother who
-brings a child into the world has the duty laid
-upon her of bringing up the child in such health
-as will enable him to do the work of his life.</p>
-
-<p>“But though you toil all day for your children,
-and are so devoted to them, this is not at all an
-easy task.</p>
-
-<p>“We should not attempt to practise dressmaking,
-or any other trade, without any training
-for it; but it is generally impossible for a woman
-to get any teaching about the management of
-health; yet health is to be learnt....</p>
-
-<p>“The cottage homes of England are, after all,
-the most important of the homes of any class;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span>
-they should be pure in every sense, pure in body
-and mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Boys and girls must grow up healthy, with
-clean minds and clean bodies and clean skins.</p>
-
-<p>“And for this to be possible, the air, the
-earth, and the water that they grow up in and
-have around them must be clean. Fresh air,
-not bad air; clean earth, not foul earth; pure
-water, not dirty water; and the first teachings
-and impressions that they have at home must
-all be pure, and gentle, and firm. It is home
-that teaches the child, after all, more than any
-other schooling. A child learns before it is three
-whether it shall obey its mother or not; and
-before it is seven, wise men tell us that its
-character is formed.</p>
-
-<p>“There is, too, another thing—orderliness.
-We know your daily toil and love. May not
-the busiest and hardest life be somewhat lightened,
-the day mapped out, so that each duty has
-the same hours?...</p>
-
-<p>“Think what enormous extra trouble it entails
-on mothers when there is sickness. It is worth
-while to try to keep the family in health, to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[321]</span>
-prevent the sorrow, the anxiety, the trouble of
-illness in the house, of which so much can be
-prevented.</p>
-
-<p>“When a child has lost its health, how often
-the mother says, ‘Oh, if I had only known!
-but there was no one to tell me. And after
-all, it is health and not sickness that is our
-natural state—the state that God intends for us.
-There are more people to pick us up when we
-fall than to enable us to stand upon our feet.
-God did not intend all mothers to be accompanied
-by doctors, but He meant all children
-to be cared for by mothers. God bless your
-work and labour of love.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;" id="illus12">
-<p class="caption">Letter from Miss <span class="smcap">Florence Nightingale</span>.</p>
-<img src="images/illus12.jpg" width="700" height="550" alt="Dec 16/96
-10 South Street
-Park Lane W
-Dear Duke of Westminster
-Good speed to your
-noble effort in favour of
-District Nurses for town
-“&amp; Country”; and in
-Commemoration of our
-Queen who cares for all.
-We look upon the
-District Nurse, if she is
-what she should be, &amp;
-if we give her the training
-she should have, as the
-great civilizer of the poor,
-training as well as nursing
-them out of ill health
-into good health (Health
-Missioness), out of drink
-into self control but all
-without preaching, without
-patronizing—as friends
-in sympathy.
-But let them hold the
-standard high as Nurses.
-Pray be sure I will try
-to help all I can, tho’
-that be small, here
-I will with your leave
-let you know.
-Pray believe me
-your Grace’s faithful
-servant Florence Nightingale" />
-</div>
-
-<p>Or in a widely different field, in that fight
-against one of the most important causes of
-consumption, in which she was so far ahead of
-her time, what could be more clear and convincing,
-both in knowledge and in reasoning, than
-the following analysis with regard to army
-barracks:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The cavalry barracks, as a whole, are the
-least overcrowded, and have the freest external<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[322]</span>
-movement of air. Next come the infantry; and
-the most crowded and the least ventilated
-externally are the Guards’ barracks; <em>so that the
-mortality from consumption, which follows the same
-order of increase in the different arms, augments with
-increase of crowding and difficulty of ventilation</em>.”<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Her own well-trained mind was in extreme
-contrast with the type of mind which she
-describes in the following story:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I remember, when a child, hearing the story
-of an accident, related by some one who sent two
-girls to fetch a ‘bottle of sal volatile from her
-room.’ ‘Mary could not stir,’ she said; ‘Fanny
-ran and fetched a bottle that was not sal volatile,
-and that was not in my room.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>All her teaching, so far as I know it, is
-clearly at first-hand and carefully sifted. It is as
-far as possible from that useless kind of doctrine
-which is a mere echo of unthinking hearsay.
-For instance, how many sufferers she must have
-saved from unnecessary irritation by the following
-reminder to nurses:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[323]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Of all parts of the body, the face is perhaps
-the one which tells the least to the common
-observer or the casual visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“I have known patients dying of sheer pain,
-exhaustion, and want of sleep, from one of the
-most lingering and painful diseases known,
-preserve, till within a few days of death, not only
-the healthy colour of the cheek, but the mottled
-appearance of a robust child. And scores of
-times have I heard these unfortunate creatures
-assailed with, ‘I am glad to see you looking so
-well.’ ‘I see no reason why you should not live
-till ninety years of age.’ ‘Why don’t you take a
-little more exercise and amusement?’—with all
-the other commonplaces with which we are so
-familiar.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And then, again, how like her it is to remind
-those who are nursing that “a patient is not
-merely a piece of furniture, to be kept clean and
-arranged against the wall, and saved from injury
-or breakage.”</p>
-
-<p>She was one of the rare people who realized
-that truth of word is partly a question of education,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span>
-and that many people are quite unconscious
-of their lack of that difficult virtue. “I know I
-fibbs dreadful,” said a poor little servant girl to
-her once. “But believe me, miss, I never finds
-out I have fibbed until they tell me so!”
-And her comment suggests that in this matter
-that poor little servant girl by no means stood
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>She worked very hard. Her books and
-pamphlets<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> were important, and her correspondence,
-ever dealing with the reforms she had
-at heart all over the world, was of itself an
-immense output.</p>
-
-<p>Those who have had to write much from bed
-or sofa know only too well the abnormal fatigue
-it involves, and her labours of this kind seem to
-have been unlimited.</p>
-
-<p>How strongly she sympathized with all
-municipal efforts, we see in many such letters as
-the one to General Evatt, given him for electioneering
-purposes, but not hitherto included
-in any biography, which we are allowed to
-reproduce here:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[325]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Strenuously desiring, as we all of us must,
-that <em>Administration</em> as well as Politics should
-be well represented in Parliament, and that vital
-matters of social, sanitary, and general interest
-should find their voice, we could desire no better
-representative and advocate of these essential
-matters—matters of life and death—than a man
-who, like yourself, unites with almost exhaustless
-energy and public spirit, sympathy with the
-wronged and enthusiasm with the right, a
-persevering acuteness in unravelling the causes of
-the evil and the good, large and varied experience
-and practical power, limited only by the nature
-of the object for which it is exerted.</p>
-
-<p>“It is important beyond measure that such a
-man’s thoughtful and well-considered opinions
-and energetic voice should be heard in the
-House of Commons.</p>
-
-<p>“You have my warmest sympathy in your
-candidature for Woolwich, my best wishes that
-you should succeed, even less for your own sake
-than for that of Administration and of England.—Pray
-believe me, ever your faithful servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Florence Nightingale</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[326]</span></p>
-
-<p>And also the following letter written to the
-Buckinghamshire County Council in 1892,
-begging them to appoint a sanitary committee:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“We must create a public opinion which will
-drive the Government, instead of the Government
-having to drive us—an enlightened public
-opinion, wise in principles, wise in details. We
-hail the County Council as being or becoming
-one of the strongest engines in our favour, at once
-fathering and obeying the great impulse for
-national health against national and local disease.
-For we have learned that we have national
-health in our own hands—local sanitation, national
-health. But we have to contend against
-centuries of superstition and generations of
-indifference. Let the County Council take
-the lead.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And how justly, how clearly, she was able to
-weigh the work of those who had borne the
-brunt of sanitary inquiry in the Crimea, with but
-little except kicks for their pains, may be judged
-by the following sentences from a letter to
-Lady Tulloch in 1878:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[327]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My Dear Lady Tulloch</span>,—I give you joy,
-I give you both joy, for this crowning recognition
-of one of the noblest labours ever done on earth.
-You yourself cannot cling to it more than I do;
-hardly so much, in one sense, for I saw how Sir
-John MacNeill’s and Sir A. Tulloch’s reporting
-was the salvation of the army in the Crimea.
-Without them everything that happened would
-have been considered ‘all right.’</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Martin’s note is perfect, for it does not
-look like an afterthought, nor as prompted by
-others, but as the flow of a generous and able man’s
-own reflection, and careful search into authentic
-documents. Thank you again and again for
-sending it to me. It is the greatest consolation I
-could have had. Will you remember me gratefully
-to Mr. Paget, also to Dr. Balfour? <em>I look
-back upon these twenty years as if they were yesterday,
-but also as if they were a thousand years.</em> Success
-be with us and the noble dead—and it has been
-success.—Yours ever,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Florence Nightingale</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We see from this letter how warmly the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[328]</span>
-old memories dwelt with her, even while
-her hands were full of good work for the
-future.</p>
-
-<p>The death of Lord Herbert in 1868 had been
-a blow that struck very deeply at her health and
-spirits.</p>
-
-<p>In all her work of army reform she had looked
-up to him as her “Chief,” hardly realizing,
-perhaps, how much of the initiating had been her
-own. Their friendship, too, had been almost lifelong,
-and in every way ideal. The whole nation
-mourned his loss, but only the little intimate group
-which centred in his wife and children and those
-dearest friends, of whom Miss Nightingale was
-one, knew fully all that the country had lost
-in him.</p>
-
-<p>It may be worth while for a double reason to
-quote here from Mr. Gladstone’s tribute at a
-meeting held to decide on a memorial.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“To him,” said Gladstone, “we owe the commission
-for inquiry into barracks and hospitals;
-to him we are indebted for the reorganization of
-the medical department of the army. To him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a>[329]</span>
-we owe the commission of inquiry into, and remodelling
-the medical education of, the army.
-And, lastly, we owe him the commission for
-presenting to the public the vital statistics of
-the army in such a form, from time to time,
-that the great and living facts of the subject are
-brought to view.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Lord Herbert had toiled with ever-deepening
-zeal to reform the unhealthy conditions to which,
-even in times of peace, our soldiers had been
-exposed—so unhealthy that, while the mortality
-lists showed a death of eight in every thousand for
-civilians, for soldiers the number of deaths was
-seventeen per thousand. And of every two
-deaths in the army it was asserted that one was
-preventable. Lord Herbert was the heart and
-soul of the Royal Commission to inquire into
-these preventable causes, and through his working
-ardour the work branched forth into
-four supplementary commissions concerning
-hospitals and barracks. When he died, Miss
-Nightingale not only felt the pang of parting
-from one of her oldest and most valued friends, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330"></a>[330]</span>
-she also felt that in this cause, so specially
-dear to her heart, she had lost a helper who
-could never be replaced, though she dauntlessly
-stood to her task and helped to carry on his
-work.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331"></a>[331]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
-
-<p class="long"><i>Multifarious work and many honours—Jubilee Nurses—Nursing
-Association—Death of father and mother—Lady Verney and
-her husband—No respecter of persons—From within four
-walls—South Africa and America.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Her activities were so multitudinous that it is
-difficult even to name them all in such a brief
-sketch as this. Besides those at which we have
-already glanced, prison reform, help to Bosnian
-fugitives, Manchester Police Court Mission for
-Lads, Indian Famine Fund—merely glancing
-down two pages of her biography, I find all
-these mentioned. She was herself, of course,
-decorated with the Red Cross, but M. Henri
-Dunant’s magnificent Red Cross scheme for
-helping the wounded on the battlefield may be
-said to have been really the outcome of her own
-work and example. For it was the extension
-of her own activities, by means of the Red Cross<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332"></a>[332]</span>
-Societies, which throughout the European continent
-act in concert with their respective armies
-and governments.</p>
-
-<p>She was the first woman to be decorated with
-the Order of Merit, which was bestowed on her
-in 1907, and in the following year she received,
-as the Baroness Burdett Coutts had done, the
-“Freedom of the City of London,” having already
-been awarded, among many like honours, the
-French Gold Medal of Secours aux blessés Militaires,
-and the German Order of the Cross of
-Merit. On May 10, 1910, she received the
-badge of honour of the Norwegian Red Cross
-Society. But there was another distinction,
-even more unique, which was already hers. For
-when £70,000 came into Queen Victoria’s hands
-as a gift from the women of her empire at the
-time of her Jubilee, so much had the Queen been
-impressed by the work of the Nursing Association
-and all that had been done for the sick poor,
-that the interest of this Women’s Jubilee Fund,
-£2,000 a year, was devoted to an Institution for
-Training and Maintaining Nurses for the Sick
-Poor; and the National Association for Providing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a>[333]</span>
-Trained Nurses, which owed so much to Miss
-Nightingale, was affiliated with it, though it still
-keeps its old headquarters at 23 Bloomsbury
-Square, where for so many years would arrive
-at Christmas from her old home a consignment
-of beautiful holly and other evergreens
-for Christmas festivities. H.R.H. the Princess
-Christian is President of the Nursing Association,
-and Miss Nightingale’s old friend and
-fellow-worker, Mr. Henry Bonham Carter, is
-the Secretary. The influence of Miss Florence
-Lees, described by Kinglake as “the gifted
-and radiant pupil of Florence Nightingale,” who
-afterwards became Mrs. Dacre Craven, and was
-the first Superintendent-General, has been a
-very vitalizing influence there, and the home
-owes much also to her husband, the Rev. Dacre
-Craven, of St. Andrew’s, Holborn. Miss Nightingale’s
-warm friendship for Miss Florence Lees
-brought her into peculiarly intimate relations with
-the home, and both the Association and the Queen’s
-Jubilee Institute are the fruit of Miss Nightingale’s
-teaching, and a noble double memorial of the
-national—nay, imperial—recognition of its value.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334"></a>[334]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Royal Pension Fund for Nurses also, in
-which Queen Alexandra was so specially interested,
-helped to crown the fulfilment of Miss
-Nightingale’s early dream and long, steadfast
-life-work.</p>
-
-<p>But equally important, though less striking,
-has been the growing harvest of her quiet,
-courteous efforts to help village mothers to
-understand the laws of health, her pioneer-work
-in regard to all the dangers of careless milk-farms,
-her insistence on the importance of pure air as
-well as pure water, though she had always been
-careful to treat the poor man’s rooftree as his
-castle and never to cross his doorstep except by
-permission or invitation.</p>
-
-<p>After the death of her father at Embley in
-1874—a very peaceful death, commemorated in
-the inscription on his tomb, “In Thy light we
-shall see light,” which suggests in him a nature
-at once devout and sincere—she was much with
-her mother, in the old homes at Embley and
-Lea Hurst, though Lea Hurst was the one she
-loved best, and the beech-wood walk in Lea
-Woods, with its radiant shower of golden leaves<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335"></a>[335]</span>
-in the autumn, for which she would sometimes
-delay her leaving, is still specially associated with
-her memory: and her thoughtfulness for the
-poor still expressed itself in many different ways—in
-careful gifts, for instance, through one
-whom she trusted for knowledge and tact; in
-her arrangement that pure milk should be sent
-daily from the home dairy at Lea Hurst to those
-in need of it.</p>
-
-<p>With faithful love she tended her mother to
-the time of her death in 1880, and there seems
-to be a joyous thanksgiving for that mother’s
-beauty of character in the words the two sisters
-inscribed to her memory: “God is love—Bless
-the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His
-benefits.”</p>
-
-<p>After her mother’s death, when the property
-had passed into the hands of Mr. William Shore
-Nightingale, she still visited her kinsman there
-and kept up her interest in the people of the
-district.</p>
-
-<p>Among the outward events of her life, after
-her return from the Crimea, one of the earliest
-had been the marriage of her sister Parthenope,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336"></a>[336]</span>
-who in 1858 became the second wife of Sir
-Harry Verney,<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> and her home at Claydon in
-Buckinghamshire was thenceforth a second home
-to Miss Nightingale. It need hardly be said
-that in Sir Harry Verney’s various generous
-schemes for the good of the neighbourhood,
-schemes in which his wife cordially co-operated,
-Miss Nightingale took a warm and sympathetic
-pleasure. His keen interest in army reform was,
-of course, a special ground of comradeship.
-Miss Nightingale divided her time chiefly between
-her own home in South Street, Park Lane,
-and visits to the rooms that were reserved for
-her at Claydon. One of her great interests
-while at Claydon, soon after her sister’s marriage,
-had been the building of the new Buckinghamshire
-Infirmary in 1861, of which her sister laid
-the foundation; and her bust still adorns the
-entrance hall.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Tooley reminds us that not only was
-Lady Verney well known in literary and political
-circles, but also her books on social questions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>[337]</span>
-had the distinction of being quoted in the House
-of Commons. She gives many interesting details
-with regard to the philanthropic and political
-work of Sir Harry Verney and his family, but
-it is hardly necessary to duplicate them here,
-since her book is still available. Lady Verney’s
-death in 1890, after a long and painful illness,
-following on that of her father and mother,
-bereaved Miss Nightingale of a lifelong companionship,
-and might have left her very lonely but
-for her absorbing work and her troops of friends.</p>
-
-<p>How fruitful that work was we may dimly
-see when we remember that—to instance one
-branch of it only—in ten years the death-rate
-in the army in India, which her efforts so determinately
-strove to lessen, fell from sixty-nine per
-thousand to eighteen per thousand.<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> She strove—and
-not in vain—to improve the sanitary conditions
-of immense areas of undrained country, but
-she also endeavoured to bring home to the rank
-and file of the army individual teaching.</p>
-
-<p>She gives in one of her pamphlets a delightful
-story of men who came to a district in India<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a>[338]</span>
-supposed to be fatal to any new-comer, but, strong
-in their new hygienic knowledge, determined <em>not</em>
-to have cholera. They lived carefully, they grew
-their own garden produce, they did not give way
-to fear, and <em>all</em>, without exception, escaped.</p>
-
-<p>To return for a moment to Britain, since a
-separate chapter is reserved for India. She was
-before her day in contending that foul air was
-one of the great causes of consumption and other
-diseases. And her teaching was ever given with
-courtesy and consideration. How strongly she
-felt on this and kindred subjects, and how practical
-her help was, we see clearly in her letters
-and pamphlets. She delighted in making festivities
-for companies of nurses and of her other
-hard-working friends. And in St. Paul’s fine
-sense of the phrase, she was no “respecter of
-persons”: she reverenced personality, not accidental
-rank. She had no patience with those
-visiting ladies who think they may intrude at
-all hours of the day into the homes of the poor,
-and her quick sense of humour delighted in
-many of the odd speeches which would have
-shocked the prim and conventional. She thought<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339"></a>[339]</span>
-the highest compliment ever paid to her staff
-of nurses who visited in the homes of the poor
-was the speech of the grubby ragamuffin, who
-seemed to think they could wash off even the
-blackness of the Arch-fiend and, when being
-scrubbed, cried out, “You may bathe the divil.”</p>
-
-<p>But with all her fun and relish of life, how
-sane, how practical, she was!</p>
-
-<p>Do you remember how she laughed at the
-silly idea that nothing was needed to make a
-good nurse except what the “Early Victorian”
-used to call “a disappointment in love”?</p>
-
-<p>Here are other of her shrewd sayings from
-her <cite>Nursing Notes</cite>:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Another extraordinary fallacy is the dread
-of night air. What air can we breathe at night
-but night air? The choice is between pure
-night air from without and foul air from within.
-Most people prefer the latter.... Without
-cleanliness within and without your house, ventilation
-is comparatively useless.... And now,
-you think these things trifles, or at least exaggerated.
-But what you ‘think’ or what I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340"></a>[340]</span>
-‘think’ matters little. Let us see what God
-thinks of them. God always justifies His ways.
-While we are thinking, He has been teaching.
-I have known cases of hospital pyæmia quite as
-severe in handsome private houses as in any of
-the worst hospitals, and from the same cause—viz.,
-foul air. Yet nobody learnt the lesson.
-Nobody learnt <em>anything</em> at all from it. They
-went on <em>thinking</em>—thinking that the sufferer had
-scratched his thumb, or that it was singular that
-‘all the servants’ had ‘whitlows,’ or that something
-was ‘much about this year.’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>If there had been any hope at first that Miss
-Nightingale might grow strong enough to stand
-visibly among those who were being trained as
-nurses by the fund raised in her honour, that
-hope was now past, and when the great new
-wing of St. Thomas’s was built—the finest building
-for its purpose in Europe—the outward reins
-of government had to be delivered over into the
-hands of another, though hers was throughout
-the directing hand. And the results of her work
-are written in big type upon the page of history.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341"></a>[341]</span></p>
-
-<p>In India and America she is acclaimed as an
-adored benefactress, but what has she not done
-for our own country alone? To sum up even
-a few of the points on which I have touched:
-she initiated sick nursing among the poor,
-through her special appeal was built the Central
-Home for Nurses, she was the pioneer in the
-hygienic work of county councils, and, besides
-the great nursing school at St. Thomas’s, to
-her was largely due the reform of nursing in
-workhouses and infirmaries. And in 1890, with
-the £70,000 of the Women’s Jubilee Fund, the
-establishment of the Queen’s Nurses received its
-charter.</p>
-
-<p>In affairs of military nursing it is no exaggeration
-to say that she was consulted throughout
-the world. America came to her in the Civil
-War; South Africa owed much to her; India
-infinitely more; and so vital have been the
-reforms introduced by Lord Herbert and herself
-that even as early as 1880, when General
-Gordon was waging war in China during the
-Taiping Rebellion, the death-rate as compared
-with the Crimea was reduced from sixty per<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342"></a>[342]</span>
-cent. to little more than three in every hundred
-yearly.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
-
-<p>We have seen that, though she was so much
-more seriously broken in health than any one
-at first realized, that did not prevent her incessant
-work, though it did in the end make
-her life more or less a hidden life, spent within
-four walls, and chiefly on her bed.</p>
-
-<p>Yet from those four walls what electric
-messages of help and common sense were continuously
-flashing across the length and breadth of
-the world! She was regarded as an expert in
-her own subjects, and long before her Jubilee
-Fund enabled her to send forth the Queen’s
-Nurses, she was, as we have already seen, busy
-writing and working to improve not only nursing
-in general, but especially the nursing of
-the sick poor; and unceasingly she still laboured
-for the army.</p>
-
-<p>Repeated mention has been made of General
-Evatt, to whose memory of Miss Nightingale
-I am much indebted.</p>
-
-<p>General Evatt served in the last Afghan<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343"></a>[343]</span>
-campaign, and what he there experienced determined
-him to seek an interview, as soon as
-he returned to England, with her whom he
-regarded as the great reformer of military hygiene—Florence
-Nightingale. In this way and on
-this subject there arose between them a delightful
-and enduring friendship. Many and many a
-time in that quiet room in South Street where
-she lay upon her bed—its dainty coverlet all
-strewn with the letters and papers that might
-have befitted the desk or office of a busy statesman,
-and surrounded by books and by the flowers
-that she loved so well—he had talked with her
-for four hours on end, admiring with a sort
-of wonder her great staying power and her
-big, untiring brain.</p>
-
-<p>He did not, like another acquaintance of mine,
-say that he came away feeling like a sucked
-orange, with all hoarded knowledge on matters
-great and small gently, resistlessly drawn from
-him by his charming companion; but so voracious
-was the eager, sympathetic interest of Miss
-Nightingale in the men and women of that active
-world whose streets, at the time he learned to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344"></a>[344]</span>
-know her, she no longer walked, that no conversation
-on human affairs ever seemed, he said,
-to tire her.</p>
-
-<p>And her mind was ever working towards new
-measures for the health and uplifting of her
-fellow-creatures.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen how eager she was to use for
-good every municipal opportunity, but she did
-not stop at the municipality, for she knew that
-there are many womanly duties also at the
-imperial hearth; and without entering on any
-controversy, it is necessary to state clearly that
-she very early declared herself in favour of
-household suffrage for women, and that “the
-North of England Society for Women’s Suffrage
-is the proud possessor of her signature to an
-address to Mr. Disraeli, thanking him for his
-favourable vote in the House of Commons, and
-begging him to do his utmost to remove the
-injustice under which women householders
-suffered by being deprived of the parliamentary
-vote.”<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;" id="illus13">
-<img src="images/illus13.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Florence Nightingale’s London House, 10 South Street,
-Park Lane (house with balcony), where she died,
-August 14, 1910.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345"></a>[345]</span></p>
-
-<p>Whatever could aid womanly service—as a
-voice in choosing our great domestic executive
-nowadays undoubtedly can—had her sympathy
-and interest; but what she emphasized most,
-I take it, at all times, was that when any door
-opened for service, woman should be not only
-willing, but also nobly <em>efficient</em>. She herself
-opened many such doors, and her lamp was
-always trimmed and filled and ready to give light
-and comfort in the darkest room.</p>
-
-<p>It has been well said that in describing a friend
-in the following words, she unconsciously drew
-a picture of herself:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“She had the gracefulness, the wit, the
-unfailing cheerfulness—qualities so remarkable,
-but so much overlooked, in our Saviour’s life.
-She had the absence of all ‘mortification’ for
-mortification’s sake, which characterized His
-work, and any real work in the present day
-as in His day. And how did she do all this?... She
-was always filled with the thought
-that she must be about her Father’s business.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346"></a>[346]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>India—Correspondence with Sir Bartle Frere—Interest in village
-girls—The Lamp.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>We come now to Miss Nightingale’s most
-monumental achievement of all, the reform of
-sanitary conditions in India—a reform ever
-widening and developing, branching forth and
-striking its roots deeper. Her interest in that
-vast population, that world-old treasury of subtle
-religious thought and ever-present mystical faith,
-may perhaps have been in part an inheritance
-from the Anglo-Indian Governor who was
-counted in her near ancestry. But there can
-be little doubt that her ardent and practical
-desire to improve the conditions of camp life
-in India began in her intimate care for the
-soldiers, and her close knowledge of many things
-unknown to the ordinary English subject. The
-world-wide freemasonry of the rank and file in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347"></a>[347]</span>
-our army enabled her to hear while at Scutari
-much of the life of the army in the vast and
-distant dominions of Burma and Bengal, and
-she had that gift for seeing through things to
-their farthest roots which enabled her to perceive
-clearly that no mere mending of camp conditions
-could stay the continual ravages of disease among
-our men. The evil was deeper and wider, and
-only as conditions were improved in sanitary matters
-could the mortality of the army be lessened.
-She saw, and saw clearly, that the reason children
-died like flies in India, so that those who
-loved them best chose the agony of years of parting
-rather than take the risks, lay not so much
-in the climate as in the human poisons and
-putrefactions so carelessly treated and so quickly
-raised to murder-power by the extreme heat.</p>
-
-<p>Much of this comes out clearly in her letter
-to Sir Bartle Frere, with whom her first ground
-of friendship had arisen out of their common
-interest in sanitary matters.</p>
-
-<p>What manner of man Sir Bartle was may be
-divined from a letter to him written by Colonel
-W. F. Marriott, one of the secretaries of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348"></a>[348]</span>
-Bombay Government, at the time of his leaving
-Bombay:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The scene of your departure stirred me
-much. That bright evening, the crowd on the
-pier and shore as the boat put off, the music
-from the <i>Octavia</i>, as the band played ‘Auld
-Lang Syne’ as we passed, were all typical and
-impressive by association of ideas. But it was
-not a shallow sympathy with which I took in
-all the circumstances. I could divine some of
-your thoughts. If I felt like Sir Bedivere, left
-behind ‘among new men, strange faces, other
-minds,’ you must have felt in some degree like
-King Arthur in the barge, ‘I have lived my
-life, and that which I have done may He
-Himself make pure.’ I do not doubt that you
-felt that all this ‘mouth honour’ is only worth
-so far as it is the seal of one’s own approving
-conscience, and though you could accept it freely
-as deserved from their lips, yet at that hour you
-judged your own work hardly. You measured
-the palpable results with your conceptions and
-hopes, and were inclined to say, ‘I am no better<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_349"></a>[349]</span>
-than my fathers.’ But I, judging now calmly
-and critically, feel—I may say, see—that though
-the things that seem to have failed be amongst
-those for which you have taken most pains, yet
-they are small things compared with the work
-which has not failed. You have made an
-impression of earnest human sympathy with the
-people of this country, which will deepen and
-expand, so that it will be felt as a perpetual
-witness against any narrower and less noble
-conception of our relation to them, permanently
-raising the moral standard of highest policy
-towards them; and your name will become a
-traditional embodiment of a good governor.”<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Frere had seen that the filthy condition of
-many of the roads, after the passing of animals
-and the failure to cleanse from manure, was of
-itself a source of poison, though the relation between
-garbage and disease-bearing flies was then
-less commonly understood, and he was never tired
-of urging the making of decent roads; but this,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_350"></a>[350]</span>
-he knew, was only a very small part of the improvements
-needed.</p>
-
-<p>His correspondence with Miss Nightingale
-began in 1867, and in that and the five following
-years they exchanged about one hundred letters,
-chiefly on sanitary questions.</p>
-
-<p>It was part of her genius always to see and
-seize her opportunity, and she rightly thought
-that, as she says in one of her letters, “We
-might never have such a favourable conjunction
-of the larger planets again:</p>
-
-<p>“You, who are willing and most able to
-organize the machinery here; Sir John Lawrence,
-who is able and willing, provided only he knew
-what to do; and a Secretary of State who is
-willing and in earnest. And I believe nothing
-would bring them to their senses in India more
-than an annual report of what they have done, with
-your comments upon it, laid before Parliament.”</p>
-
-<p>In order to set in motion the machinery of a
-sanitary department for all India, a despatch had
-to be written, pointing out clearly and concisely
-what was to be done.</p>
-
-<p>Frere consulted Miss Nightingale at every<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_351"></a>[351]</span>
-point about this despatch, but spoke of the
-necessity for some sort of peg to hang it on—“not,”
-he said, “that the Secretary of State is
-at all lukewarm, nor, I think, that he has any
-doubt as to what should be said, or how—that,
-I think, your memoranda have fixed; the only
-difficulty is as to the when....</p>
-
-<p>“No governor-general, I believe, since the
-time of Clive has had such powers and such
-opportunities, but he fancies the want of progress
-is owing to some opposing power which does
-not exist anywhere but in his own imagination.</p>
-
-<p>“He cannot see that perpetual inspection by
-the admiral of the drill and kit of every sailor is
-not the way to make the fleet efficient, and he
-gets disheartened and depressed because he finds
-that months and years of this squirrel-like activity
-lead to no real progress.”</p>
-
-<p>The despatch with its accompanying documents
-went to Miss Nightingale for her remarks before it
-was sent out. Her commentary was as follows:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I find nothing to add or to take away in the
-memorandum (sanitary). It appears to me quite<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352"></a>[352]</span>
-perfect in itself—that is, it is quite as much as
-the enemy will bear, meaning by the enemy—not
-at all the Government of India in India,
-still less the Government of India at home, but—that
-careless and ignorant person called the
-Devil, who is always walking about taking
-knowledge out of people’s heads, who said that
-he was coming to give us the knowledge of
-good and evil, and who has done just the
-contrary.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a noble paper, an admirable paper—and
-what a present to make to a government!
-You have included in it all the great principles—sanitary
-and administrative—which the country
-requires. And now you must work, work these
-points until they are embodied in local works in
-India. This will not be in our time, for it takes
-more than a few years to fill a continent with
-civilization. But I never despair that in God’s
-good time every man of us will reap the common
-benefit of obeying all the laws which He has
-given us for our well-being.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall give myself the pleasure of writing to
-you again about these papers. But I write this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_353"></a>[353]</span>
-note merely to say that I don’t think this memorandum
-requires any addition.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless you for it! I think it is a great
-work.”<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It <em>was</em> a great work, and it might have been
-delayed for scores of years, with a yearly unnecessary
-waste of thousands of lives, if she had
-not initiated it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;" id="illus14">
-<img src="images/illus14.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Florence Nightingale in her Last Days.</p>
-<p class="caption">(<i>From a drawing from memory. Copyright A. Rischgitz.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Her words to Sir Bartle Frere at the outset
-had been: “It does seem that there is no element
-in the scheme of government (of India) by which
-the public health can be taken care of. And the
-thing is now to create such an element.”</p>
-
-<p>As early as 1863, in her “Observations on the
-Sanitary State of the Army in India,” she had
-written:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Native ‘caste’ prejudices appear to have
-been made the excuse for European laziness, as
-far as regards our sanitary and hospital neglects
-of the natives. Recent railroad experience is
-a striking proof that ‘caste,’ in their minds, is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_354"></a>[354]</span>
-no bar to intercommunication in arrangements
-tending to their benefit.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Sir C. Trevelyan justly says that “a good sanitary
-state of the military force cannot be secured
-without making similar arrangements for the
-populations settled in and around the military
-cantonments; that sanitary reform must be
-generally introduced into India for the civil as
-well as the military portion of the community.”</p>
-
-<p>And now that the opportunity arrived, all was
-done with wise and swift diplomacy. The way
-was smoothed by a call from Frere on his old
-friend Sir Richard Temple, at that time Finance
-Minister at Calcutta, asking him to help.</p>
-
-<p>Those who know India best, and know Miss
-Nightingale best, are those who are most aware
-of the mighty tree of ever-widening health improvement
-that grew from this little seed, and
-of the care with which Miss Nightingale helped
-to guard and foster it.</p>
-
-<p>“She was a great Indian,” her friend General
-Evatt repeated to me more than once, “and
-what a head she had! She was the only human<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_355"></a>[355]</span>
-being I have ever met, for instance, man or
-woman, who had thoroughly mastered the intricate
-details of the Bengal land-purchase system.
-She loved India, and she knew it through and
-through. It was no wonder that every distinguished
-Indian who came to England went
-to see Miss Nightingale.”</p>
-
-<p>She bore her ninety years very lightly, and
-made a vision serene and noble, as will be seen
-from our picture, though that does not give the
-lovely youthful colouring in contrast with the
-silvery hair, and we read of the great expressiveness
-of her hands, which, a little more, perhaps,
-than is usual with Englishwomen, she used in
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very secluded life that she lived at
-No. 10 South Street; but she was by no means
-without devotees, and the bouquet that the
-German Emperor sent her was but one of many
-offerings from many high-hearted warriors at
-her shrine.</p>
-
-<p>And when she visited her old haunts at Lea
-Hurst and Embley she delighted in sending
-invitations to the girls growing up in those<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_356"></a>[356]</span>
-village families that she had long counted among
-her friends, so that to her tea-table were lovingly
-welcomed guests very lowly, as well as those
-better known to the world.</p>
-
-<p>Her intense and sympathetic interest in all
-the preparations for nursing in the South African
-campaign has already been touched upon, as well
-as her joy that some of her own nurses from
-among the first probationers at St. Thomas’s
-were accepted in that enterprise with praise and
-gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>It would be a serious omission not to refer my
-readers to a very moving letter which she wrote
-to Cavaliere Sebastiano Fenzi, during the Italian
-War of Independence in 1866, of which a part
-is given in Mrs. Tooley’s book, and from which
-I am permitted to quote the following:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I have given dry advice as dryly as I could.
-But you must permit me to say that if there
-is anything I could do for you at any time, and
-you would command me, I should esteem it the
-greatest honour and pleasure. I am a hopeless
-invalid, entirely a prisoner to my room, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_357"></a>[357]</span>
-overwhelmed with business. Otherwise how
-gladly would I answer to your call and come
-and do my little best for you in the dear city
-where I was born. If the giving my miserable
-life could hasten your success but by half an
-hour, how gladly would I give it!”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>How far she was ahead of her time becomes
-every day more obvious; for every day the
-results of her teaching are gradually making
-themselves felt. For example, it can no longer,
-without qualification, be said, as she so truly said
-in her own day, that while “the coxcombries of
-education are taught to every schoolgirl” there is
-gross ignorance, not only among schoolgirls, but
-also even among mothers and nurses, with regard
-to “those laws which God has assigned to the
-relations of our bodies with the world in which
-He has put them. In other words, the laws
-which make these bodies, into which He has
-put our minds, healthy or unhealthy organs of
-those minds, are all but unlearnt. Not but that
-these laws—the laws of life—are in a certain
-measure understood, but not even mothers think<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_358"></a>[358]</span>
-it worth their while to study them—to study
-how to give their children healthy existences.
-They call it medical or physiological knowledge,
-fit only for doctors.”</p>
-
-<p>In her old age, loved and honoured far and
-wide, she toiled on with all the warm enthusiasm
-of a girl, and the ripe wisdom of fourscore
-years and ten spent in the service of her one
-Master, for she was not of those who ever
-tried to serve two. And when she died at
-No. 10 South Street, on August 10, 1910—so
-peacefully that the tranquil glow of
-sunset descended upon her day of harvest—the
-following beautiful incident was recorded in
-<cite>Nursing Notes</cite>, to whose editor I am specially
-indebted for bringing to my notice the verses in
-which the story is told<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“At Chelsea, under the lime tree’s stir,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I read the news to a pensioner</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That a noble lord and a judge were dead—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘They were younger men than me,’ he said.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“I read again of another death;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The old man turned, and caught his breath—</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_359"></a>[359]</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘She’s gone?’ he said; ‘she too? In camp</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We called her the Lady of the Lamp.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“He would not listen to what I read,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But wanted it certain—‘The Lady’s dead?’</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I showed it him to remove his doubt,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And added, unthinking, ‘The Lamp is out.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“He rose—and I had to help him stand—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Then, as he saluted with trembling hand,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I was abashed to hear him say,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘The Lamp she lit is alight to-day.’”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse right">F. S.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_360"></a>[360]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
-
-<p class="short"><i>A brief summing up.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Those who write of Florence Nightingale
-sentimentally, as though she spent herself in
-a blind, caressing tenderness, would have earned
-her secret scorn, not unflavoured by a jest; for
-she stood always at the opposite pole from the
-sentimentalists, and perhaps had a little of her
-father in her—that father who, when he was
-<em>giving</em> right and left, would say to some plausible
-beggar of society who came to him for wholesale
-subscriptions, “You see, I was not born
-generous,” well knowing that his ideas of
-generosity and theirs differed by a whole heaven,
-and that his were the wider and the more
-generous of the two.</p>
-
-<p>She had a will of iron. That is what one of
-her greatest admirers has more than once said to
-me—and he knew her well. No doubt it was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_361"></a>[361]</span>
-true. Only a will of iron could have enabled
-a delicate woman to serve, for twenty hours
-at a time, with unwearying tenderness and
-courage among the wounded and the dying.
-Even her iron resolution and absolute fearlessness
-could not prevent her from taking Crimean fever
-when she insisted on visiting a second time
-the lonely typhus patient outside Balaclava, at
-a moment when she was worn out with six
-months of nursing and administration combined.
-But it did enable her to go back to her post
-when barely recovered, and, later in life, even
-when a prisoner within four walls, who seldom
-left her bed, that will of iron did enable her
-to go on labouring till the age of ninety, and
-to fulfil for the good of mankind the dearest
-purpose of her heart. Nothing is harder than
-iron, and that which is made of it after it has
-been through the furnace has long been the very
-symbol of loyalty and uprightness when we
-say of a man that he is “true as steel.”</p>
-
-<p>Yes, iron is hard and makes a pillar of strength
-in time of need. But he who forges out of
-it weapons and tools that are at once delicate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_362"></a>[362]</span>
-and resistless, knows that it will humbly shoe
-the feet of horses, and cut the household bread,
-and will make for others besides Lombardy a
-kingly crown. And when iron is truly on fire,
-nothing commoner or softer nor anything more
-yielding—not even gold itself—can glow with a
-more steadfast and fervent heat to warm the
-hands and hearts of men.</p>
-
-<p>The picture of Miss Nightingale that dwells
-in the popular mind no doubt owes its outline
-to the memories of the men she nursed with such
-tenderness and skill. And it is a true picture.
-Like all good workmen, she loved her work, and
-nursing was her chosen work so long as her
-strength remained. None can read her writing,
-and especially her <cite>Nursing Notes</cite> and her pamphlet
-on nursing among the sick poor, without
-feeling how much she cared for every minutest
-detail, and how sensitively she felt with, and for,
-her patients.</p>
-
-<p>But such a picture, as will have been made
-clear by this time, shows only one aspect of her
-life-work. One of her nearest intimates writes
-to me of her difficulties in reforming military<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_363"></a>[363]</span>
-hospitals, and her determination therefore to give
-herself later in life to the reform of civilian
-nursing; but in reality she did both, for through
-the one she indirectly influenced the other, and
-began what has been widening and unfolding in
-every direction ever since.</p>
-
-<p>Those who knew her best speak almost with
-awe of her constructive and organizing power.
-She was indeed a pioneer and a leader, and
-girt about with the modesty of all true greatness.</p>
-
-<p>Like Joan of Arc, she heeded not the outward
-voices, but, through all faults and sorrows,
-sought to follow always and only the voice of the
-Divine One. This gave her life unity and
-power. And when she passed on into the life
-beyond, the door opened and closed again very
-quietly, leaving the whole world the better for
-her ninety years in our midst. “When I have
-done with this old suit,” says George Meredith,
-“so much in need of mending;” but hers,
-like his, was a very charming suit to the last, and
-even to the end of her ninety years the colouring
-was clear and fresh as a girl’s.</p>
-
-<p>Like all strong, true, disinterested people, she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_364"></a>[364]</span>
-made enemies—where is there any sanitary reformer
-who does not?—yet seldom indeed has
-any one, man or woman, won deeper and more
-world-wide love. But that was not her aim;
-her aim was to do the will of her Commander
-and leave the world better than she found it.</p>
-
-<p>Seldom has there been a moment when
-women have more needed the counsel given
-in one of the letters here published for the first
-time, when she begs of a dear friend that her
-name may be that “of one who obeys authority,
-however unreasonable, in the name of Him who
-is above all, and who is Reason itself.”</p>
-
-<p>And as we think of the debt the world owes
-to Florence Nightingale and of all she did for
-England, for India, and not only for the British
-Empire, but for the world, we may well pause
-for a moment on the words that closed our
-opening chapter, in which she begs her fellow-workers
-to give up considering their actions
-in any light of rivalry as between men and
-women, and ends with an entreaty:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_365"></a>[365]</span></p><div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It does not make a thing good, that it
-is remarkable that a woman should have been
-able to do it. Neither does it make a thing
-bad, which would have been good had a man
-done it, that it has been done by a woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, leave these jargons, and go your way
-straight to God’s work, in simplicity and singleness
-of heart.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The well-remembered words of Ruskin’s appeal
-to girls in “Sesame and Lilies,” published
-but a few years earlier, were evidently in Miss
-Nightingale’s mind when she wrote the closing
-sentences of her tribute to Agnes Jones—sentences
-which set their seal upon this volume,
-and will echo long after it is forgotten.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Let us,” she writes, “add living flowers to
-her grave, ‘lilies with full hands,’ not fleeting
-primroses, nor dying flowers. Let us bring the
-work of our hands and our heads and our hearts
-to finish her work which God has so blessed.
-Let us not merely rest in peace, but let hers be
-the life which stirs up to fight the good fight
-against vice and sin and misery and wretchedness,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_366"></a>[366]</span>
-as she did—the call to arms which she was ever
-obeying:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘The Son of God goes forth to war—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Who follows in His train?’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“O daughters of God, are there so few to
-answer?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_367"></a>[367]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX">APPENDIX.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>LIST OF PUBLICATIONS BY FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.</h3>
-
-<div class="bibliography">
-
-<p>Letter (on the Madras Famine): The Great
-Lesson of the Indian Famine, etc. 1877.</p>
-
-<p>Life or Death in India. A Paper read at the
-Meeting of the National Association for the
-Promotion of Social Science, Norwich, 1873,
-with an Appendix on Life or Death by
-Irrigation. 1874.</p>
-
-<p>Notes on Hospitals: being two Papers read
-before the National Association for the Promotion
-of Science ... 1858, with the
-evidence given to the Royal Commissioners
-on the state of the Army in 1857 (Appendix,
-Sites and Construction of Hospitals, etc.).</p>
-
-<p>Do., 3rd Edition, enlarged, and for the most
-part rewritten. 1863.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_368"></a>[368]</span></p>
-
-<p>Notes on Matters affecting the Health,
-Efficiency, and Hospital Administration of
-the British Army, founded chiefly on the
-experience of the late war. 1858.</p>
-
-<p>Notes on Nursing: What it is, and what it is
-not. 1860.</p>
-
-<p>New Edition, revised and enlarged, 1860;
-another Edition, 1876.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Florence Nightingale ovy knitra o oŝctr̂ování
-nemocnŷch. z anglického pr̂eloẑila. Králova,
-1872.</p>
-
-<p>Des Soins à donner aux malades ce qu’il faut
-faire, ce qu’il faut eviter. Ouvrage traduit de
-l’Anglais. 1862.</p>
-
-<p>Notes on Nursing for the Labouring Classes,
-with a Chapter on Children. 1861.</p>
-
-<p>Do., New Edition, 1868 and 1876.</p>
-
-<p>Observations on the ... Sanitary State of the
-Army in India. Reprinted from the Report
-of the Royal Commission. 1863.</p>
-
-<p>On Trained Nursing for the Sick Poor.... A
-Letter ... to <cite>The Times</cite> ... April 14, 1876.</p>
-
-<p>Sanitary Statistics of Native Nursing Schools
-and Hospitals. 1863.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_369"></a>[369]</span></p>
-
-<p>Reproduction of a printed Report originally
-submitted to the Bucks County Council in
-the year 1892, containing Letters from Miss
-Florence Nightingale on Health Visiting in
-Rural Districts. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Statements exhibiting the Voluntary Contributions
-received by Miss Nightingale for the
-Use of the British War Hospitals in the East,
-with the mode of their Distribution in 1854,
-1855, 1856. Published, London, 1857.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_370"></a>[370]</span></p>
-
-<h3>A LIST OF SOME OF THE BOOKS CONSULTED</h3>
-
-<p>In case any of my readers wish to read further
-for themselves:—</p>
-
-<div class="bibliography">
-
-<p>Kinglake’s <cite>Invasion of the Crimea</cite>. (William
-Blackwood.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>Memoir of Sidney Herbert</cite>, by Lord Stanmore.
-(John Murray.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>Life of Sir Bartle Frere</cite>, by John Martineau.
-(John Murray.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>Letters of John Stuart Mill</cite>, edited by John Elliot.
-(Longmans.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>William Rathbone</cite>, a Memoir by Eleanor F. Rathbone.
-(Macmillan.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>The Life of Florence Nightingale</cite>, by Sarah Tooley.
-(Cassell.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>Felicia Skene of Oxford</cite>, by E. C. Rickards. (John
-Murray.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>Memoir of Sir John MacNeill, G.C.B.</cite>, by his
-Granddaughter. (John Murray.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_371"></a>[371]</span></p>
-
-<p><cite>Agnes Elizabeth Jones</cite>, by her Sister. (Alexander
-Strahan.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>A History of Nursing</cite>, by M. Adelaide Nutting,
-R.N., and Lavinia L. Dock, R.N. (G. P.
-Putnam and Sons.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>A Sister of Mercy’s Memories of the Crimea</cite>, by
-Sister Aloysius. (Burns and Oates.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>The Story of Florence Nightingale</cite>, by W. I. W.
-(Pilgrim Press.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>Soyer’s Culinary Campaign</cite>, by Alexis Soyer.
-(Routledge.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>Kaiserswerth</cite>, by Florence Nightingale.</p>
-
-<p><cite>Florence Nightingale</cite>, a Cameo Life-Sketch by
-Marion Holmes. (Women’s Freedom
-League.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>Paterson’s Roads</cite>, edited by Edward Mogg.
-(Longmans, Green, Orme.)</p>
-
-<p><cite>The London Library</cite>, No. 3, vol. of <cite>The Times</cite> for
-1910.</p>
-
-<p><cite>Nursing Notes</cite>, by Florence Nightingale, and
-other writings of Miss Nightingale included
-in the foregoing list.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_372"></a>[372]</span></p>
-
-<h3>A BRIEF SKETCH OF GENERAL EVATT’S CAREER.<br />
-<span class="smaller">[As given in <cite>Who’s Who</cite>.]</span></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Evatt, Surgeon-General George Joseph
-Hamilton</span>, C.B., 1903; M.D., R.A.M.C.;
-retired; Member, Council British Medical
-Association, 1904; born, 11th Nov. 1843; son
-of Captain George Evatt, 70th Foot; married,
-1877, Sophie Mary Frances, daughter of William
-Walter Raleigh Kerr, Treasurer of Mauritius,
-and granddaughter of Lord Robert Kerr; one
-son, one daughter. Educated, Royal College of
-Surgeons, and Trinity College, Dublin. Entered
-Army Medical Service, 1865; joined 25th
-(K.O.S.B.) Regiment, 1866; Surgeon-Major,
-1877; Lieutenant-Colonel, R.A.M.C., 1885;
-Colonel, 1896; Surgeon-General, 1899; served
-Perak Expedition with Sir H. Ross’s Bengal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_373"></a>[373]</span>
-Column, 1876 (medal and clasp); Afghan War,
-1878-80; capture of Ali Musjid (despatches);
-action in Bazaar Valley, with General Tytler’s
-Column (despatches); advance on Gundamak,
-and return in “Death March,” 1879 (specially
-thanked in General Orders by Viceroy of India
-in Council and Commander-in-Chief in India
-for services); commanded Field Hospital in
-second campaign, including advance to relief
-of Cabul under General Sir Charles Gough,
-1879; action on the Ghuzni Road; return to
-India, 1880 (medal and two clasps); Suakin
-Expedition, 1885, including actions at Handoub,
-Tamai, and removal of wounded from MacNeill’s
-zareba (despatches, medal and clasp, Khedive’s
-Star); Zhob Valley Expedition, 1890; commanded
-a Field Hospital (despatches); Medical
-Officer, Royal Military Academy, Woolwich,
-1880-96; Senior Medical Officer, Quetta
-Garrison, Baluchistan, 1887-91; Sanitary Officer,
-Woolwich Garrison, 1892-94; Secretary, Royal
-Victoria Hospital, Netley, 1894-96; P.M.O.,
-China, 1896-99; P.M.O., Western District,
-1899-1902; Surgeon-General, 2nd Army Corps,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_374"></a>[374]</span>
-Salisbury, 1902-3; raised with Mr. Cantlie
-R.A.M.C. Volunteers, 1883; founded, 1884,
-Medical Officers of Schools Association, London;
-and, 1886, drew up scheme for Army Nursing
-Service Reserve; Member, Committee International
-Health Exhibition, 1884; Member of
-Council, Royal Army Temperance Association,
-1903; President, Poor Law Medical Officers’
-Association; contested (L.) Woolwich, 1886,
-Fareham Division, Hampshire, 1906, and
-Brighton, 1910; Honorary Colonel, Home
-Counties Division, R.A.M.C., Territorial Force,
-1908; received Distinguished Service Reward,
-1910. <i>Publications</i>: Travels in the Euphrates
-Valley and Mesopotamia, 1873; and many
-publications on military and medical subjects.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> I wrote to the author of the charming sketch of Florence
-Nightingale in which I found it quoted, but he has quite forgotten
-who was the writer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> Her full name was Frances Parthenope Nightingale.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Mrs. Tooley, p. 37.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> For a charming sketch of Fliedner’s first wife, a woman of
-rare excellence, my readers are referred to “A History of Nursing,”
-by M. Adelaide Nutting, R.N., and Lavinia P. Dock, R.N. (G. P.
-Putnam and Sons.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> The reference here is not to Miss Nightingale’s book, but to
-the periodical which at present bears that name.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> “Memoir of Sidney Herbert,” by Lord Stanmore. (John
-Murray.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> “Felicia Skene of Oxford,” by E. C. Rickards.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> Kinglake’s “Invasion of the Crimea,” vol. vi. (William Blackwood
-and Sons.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> Kinglake’s “Invasion of the Crimea,” vol. vi. p. 426.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> Kinglake’s “Invasion of the Crimea,” vol. vi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> “The Life of Florence Nightingale,” by Sarah Tooley.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> Stafford O’Brien.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> Kinglake’s “Invasion of Crimea.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> “Memories of the Crimea,” by Sister Mary Aloysius. (Burns
-and Oates.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> “Soyer’s Culinary Campaign,” Alexis Soyer. (Routledge, 1857.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> I know not whether this was the man whose arm she had
-saved; probably many others echoed his feeling, and he was not
-by any means the only soldier who thus reverently greeted her
-passing presence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> “Introduction to Memorials of Agnes Elizabeth Jones.” Reprinted
-from <cite>Good Words</cite> for June 1868. Florence Nightingale.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> The italics are added.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> A complete list is subjoined in the Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> Sir Harry Verney died four years later, and Claydon then
-passed to Sir Edmund Hope Verney, the son of his first marriage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> “Life of Florence Nightingale,” by Sarah Tooley, p. 295.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> See “Life of Florence Nightingale,” by Sarah Tooley, p. 268.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> “Florence Nightingale,” a Cameo Life-Sketch by Marion
-Holmes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> “Life of Sir Bartle Frere,” by John Martineau. (John
-Murray.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> “Life of Sir Bartle Frere,” by John Martineau. (John Murray.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> “The Lady of the Lamp,” by F. S., reprinted from the <cite>Evening
-News</cite> of August 16, 1910, in <cite>Nursing Notes</cite> of September 1, 1910.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
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