StoryTitle("caps", "The Lady with the Lamp") ?>
SubTitle("mixed", "Part 1 of 2") ?>
PoemStart() ?>
PagePoem(98, "L0", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Whene'er a noble deed is wrought;", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Whene'er is spoken a noble thought, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "Our hearts, in glad surprise,", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "To higher levels rise.", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "The tidal wave of deeper souls ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Into our inmost being rolls, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "And lifts us unawares", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "Out of all meaner cares.", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Honor to those whose words or deeds ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Thus help us in our daily needs, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "And by their overflow", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "Raise us from what is low!", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Thus thought I, as by night I read ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Of the great army of the dead, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "The trenches cold and damp, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "The starved and frozen camp,—", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "The wounded from the battle-plain, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "In dreary hospitals of pain,", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "The cheerless corridors, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "The cold and stony floors.", "") ?>
PagePoem(99, "L0", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Lo! in that house of misery ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "A lady with a lamp I see", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "pass through the glimmering gloom, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "And flit from room to room.", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "And slow, as in a dream of bliss, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "The speechless sufferer turns to kiss ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "Her shadow, as it falls", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "Upon the darkening walls.", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "As if a door in heaven should be ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Opened and then closed suddenly, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "The vision came and went, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "The light shone and was spent.", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "On England's annals, through the long ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Hereafter of her speech and song, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "That light its rays shall cast", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "From portals of the past.", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "A Lady with a Lamp shall stand ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "In the great history of the land, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "A noble type of good,", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "Heroic womanhood.", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "Nor even shall be wanting here ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L0", "", "The palm, the lily, and the spear, ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "The symbols that of yore ", "") ?>
PoemLine("L2", "", "Saint Filomena bore.", "") ?>
PoemEnd() ?>
PoemAttribution("85", "\"Santa Filomena,\" by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.") ?>
InitialWords(100, "Miss Nightingale's", "caps", "dropcap", "noindent") ?>
headquarters
were in the "Sisters' Tower," as it came
to be called, one of the four corner towers
of the great building. Here was a
large, airy room, with doors opening off it on each
side. In the middle was a large table, covered with
stores of every kind, constantly in demand,
constantly replaced; and on the floor, and flowing into
all the corners, were—more stores! Bales of shirts,
piles of socks, slippers, dressing gowns, sheets,
flannels—everything you can think of that is useful and
comfortable in time of sickness. About these piles
the white-capped nurses came and went, like bees
about a hive; all was quietly busy, cheerful,
methodical. In a small room opening off the large one
the Lady-in-Chief held her councils with nurses,
doctors, generals or orderlies; giving to all the same
courteous attention, the same clear, calm, helpful
advice or directions. Here, too, for hours at a time,
she sat it her desk, writing; letters to Sidney
Herbert and his wife; letters to Lord Raglan, the
commander-in-chief, who, though at first averse to her
coming, became one of her firmest friends and
PageSplit(101, "ad-", "mirers;", "admirers;") ?>
letters to sorrowing wives and mothers and
sisters in England. She received letters by the
thousand; she could not answer them all with her
own hand, but I am sure she answered as many as
was possible. One letter was forwarded to her by
the Herberts which gave a great pleasure not to
her only, but to everyone in all that place of
suffering. It was dated Windsor Castle, December 6, 1854.
"Would you tell Mrs. Herbert," wrote good Queen Victoria, "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 anyone.
"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 Page(102) ?> words to those ladies, as I know that our sympathy is much valued by these noble fellows.—Victoria."
I think the tears may have come into those clear eyes of Miss Nightingale, when she read these words. She gave the letter to one of the chaplains, and he went from ward to ward, reading it aloud to the men, and ending each reading with "God save the Queen!" The words were murmured or whispered after him by the lips of sick and dying, and through all the mournful place went a great wave of tender love and loyalty toward the good Queen in England, and toward their own queen, their angel, who had shared her pleasure with them.
You will hardly believe that in England, while the Queen was writing thus, some people were still sadly troubled about Miss Nightingale's religious views, and were writing to the papers, warning other people against her; but so it was. One clergyman actually warned his flock not to subscribe money for the soldiers in the East "if it was to pass through Popish hands." He thought the Lady-in-Chief was a Catholic; others still maintained that she was a Unitarian; others were sure she had gone out with Page(103) ?> the real purpose of converting the soldiers to High-Church views.
In reading about this kind of thing, it is comforting to find one good Irish clergyman who, being asked to what sect Miss Nightingale belonged, replied: "She belongs to a sect which unfortunately is a very rare one—the sect of the Good Samaritans."
But these grumblers were only a few, we must think. The great body of English people was filled with an enthusiasm of gratitude toward the "angel band" and its leader. From the Queen in her palace down to the humblest working women in her cottage, all were at work making lint and bandages, shirts and socks and havelocks for the soldiers. Nor were they content with making things. Every housekeeper ransacked her linen closet and camphor chest, piled sheets and blankets and pillowcases together, tied them up in bundles, addressed them to Miss Nightingale, and sent them off.
When Sister Mary Aloysius first began to sort the bales of goods on the wharf at Scutari, she thought that "the English nobility must have emptied their wardrobes and linen stores, to send Page(104) ?> out bandages for the wounded. There was the most beautiful underclothing, and the finest cambric sheets, with merely a scissors run here and there through them, to insure their being used for no other purpose, some from the Queen's palace, with the royal monogram beautifully worked."
Yes, and the rats had a wonderful time with all these fine and delicate things, before the Sisters could get their hands on them!
These private gifts were not the only nor the largest ones. The Times, which you will remember had been the first to reveal the terrible conditions in the Crimea, now set to work and organized a fund for the relief of the wounded. A subscription list was opened, and from every part of the United Kingdom money flowed in like water. The Times undertook to distribute the money, and appointed a good and wise man, Mr. McDonald, to go out to the East and see how it could best be applied.
And now a strange thing came to pass; the sort of thing that, in one way or another, was constantly happening in connection with the Crimean War. Mr. McDonald went to the highest authorities in Page(105) ?> the War Office and told of his purpose. They bowed and smiled and said the Times and its subscribers were very kind, but the fact was that such ample provision had been made by the Government that it was hardly likely the money would be needed. Mr. McDonald opened his eyes wide; but he was a wise man, as I have said; so he bowed and smiled in return, and going to Sidney Herbert, told his story to him.
"Go!" said Mr. Herbert; "Go out to the Crimea!" and he went.
When he reached the seat of war, it was the same thing over again. The high officials were very polite, very glad to see him, very pleased that the people of England were so sympathetic and patriotic; but the fact was that nothing was wanted; they were amply supplied; in short, everything was "all right."
Many men, after this second rebuff, would have given the matter up and gone home; but Mr. McDonald was not of that kind. While he was considering what step to take next, one man came forward to help him; one man who was brave enough to defy Red Tape, for the sake of his soldiers. This Page(106) ?> was the surgeon of the 39th regiment. I wish I knew his name, so that you and I could remember it. He came to Mr. McDonald and told him that his regiment, which had been stationed at Gibraltar, had been ordered to the Crimea and had now reached the Bosporus. They were going on to the Crimea, to pass the winter in bitter cold, amid ice and snow; and they had no clothes save the light linen suits which had been given them to wear under the hot sun of Gibraltar.
Here was a chance for the Times fund! Without more ado Mr. McDonald went into the bazaars of Constantinople and bought flannels and woolens, until every man in that regiment had a good warm winter suit in which to face the Crimean winter.