| Sir Edward Tyas Cook - 1913 - 556 Seiten
...dressers or nurses to carry out the surgeon's directions, and to attend on the sick during the intervals between his visits. Here the French are greatly our...who have accompanied the expedition in incredible numbers.1 These devoted women are excellent nurses." These scathing attacks changed the mood of the... | |
| Sir Edward Tyas Cook - 1913 - 566 Seiten
...dressers or nurses to carry out the surgeon's directions, and to attend on the sick during the intervals between his visits. Here the French are greatly our...who have accompanied the expedition in incredible numbers.1 These devoted women are excellent nurses." These scathing attacks changed the mood of the... | |
| Sir Edward Tyas Cook - 1914 - 562 Seiten
...dressers or nurses to carry out the surgeon's directions, and to attend on the sick during the intervals between his visits. Here the French are greatly our...who have accompanied the expedition in incredible numbers.1 These devoted women are excellent nurses." These scathing attacks changed the mood of the... | |
| Sir Edward Tyas Cook - 1914 - 584 Seiten
...sick during the intervals between his visits. Here the French are greatly our superiors. Thenmedical arrangements are extremely good, their surgeons more...who have accompanied the expedition in incredible numbers.1 These devoted women are excellent nurses." These scathing attacks changed the mood of the... | |
| Constantine Edward McGuire - 1923 - 446 Seiten
...facilities arranged for the British soldiers and the good fortune of the French who had the nursing Sisters: Here the French are greatly our superiors. Their medical...numbers. These devoted women are excellent nurses. Immediately letters piled up in the Times office asking, "Why have we no Sisters of Charity?" Florence... | |
| Clare A. Simmons - 2000 - 250 Seiten
...cause of British feelings of inferiority: also in October 1854, The Times admitted that in medical care the French are greatly our superiors. Their medical...for the sick and wounded all the offices which could he rendered in the most complete hospitals. We have nothing.5" Florence Nightingale was already organizing... | |
| Mary S. Lovell - 2000 - 948 Seiten
...is worthy only of the savages of Dahome!' thundered a despatch from William Russell in The Times.* 'Here the French are greatly our superiors. Their...extremely good, their surgeons more numerous and they have the Sisters of Charity . . .' A letter in the following day's edition asked, 'Why have we no Sisters... | |
| Linda Grant De Pauw - 2000 - 440 Seiten
...military hospital at Scutari, a piece in the London Times went so far as to praise the French hospitals: "Here the French are greatly our superiors. Their medical arrangements are extremely good . . . and they have the help of the Sisters of Charity. . . . These devoted women are excellent nurses."... | |
| Susan E. Dinan - 2006 - 208 Seiten
...hospitals and praising those of the French: Our whole medical system is shamefully bad. The wom-out pensioners who were brought out as an ambulance corps...good, their surgeons more numerous, and they have the help of the "Sisters of Charity" who have accompanied the expedition in incredible numbers. These... | |
| Jimmie E. Cain, Jr. - 2006 - 216 Seiten
...dressers or nurses to carry out the surgeon's directions and to attend on the sick during intervals between his visits. Here the French are greatly our...numbers These devoted women are excellent nurses" (qtd. in Knightley 12-13). 18. In the estimation of Barbara Dossey, the "vermin-infested wards were... | |
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