Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

pounds of theirs; the agents have nearly a hundred pounds more and

many of them have left money in Indian banks besides.’

‘Hah!’ said I to myself, as we went up-stairs, ‘this is not the

best of all possible stories, I doubt!’

We went into a large ward, containing some twenty or five-andtwenty

beds. We went into several such wards, one after another.

I find it very difficult to indicate what a shocking sight I saw in

them, without frightening the reader from the perusal of these

lines, and defeating my object of making it known.

O the sunken eyes that turned to me as I walked between the rows of

beds, or – worse still – that glazedly looked at the white ceiling,

and saw nothing and cared for nothing! Here, lay the skeleton of a

man, so lightly covered with a thin unwholesome skin, that not a

bone in the anatomy was clothed, and I could clasp the arm above

the elbow, in my finger and thumb. Here, lay a man with the black

scurvy eating his legs away, his gums gone, and his teeth all gaunt

and bare. This bed was empty, because gangrene had set in, and the

patient had died but yesterday. That bed was a hopeless one,

because its occupant was sinking fast, and could only be roused to

turn the poor pinched mask of face upon the pillow, with a feeble

moan. The awful thinness of the fallen cheeks, the awful

brightness of the deep set eyes, the lips of lead, the hands of

ivory, the recumbent human images lying in the shadow of death with

a kind of solemn twilight on them, like the sixty who had died

aboard the ship and were lying at the bottom of the sea, O

Pangloss, GOD forgive you!

In one bed, lay a man whose life had been saved (as it was hoped)

by deep incisions in the feet and legs. While I was speaking to

him, a nurse came up to change the poultices which this operation

had rendered necessary, and I had an instinctive feeling that it

was not well to turn away, merely to spare myself. He was sorely

wasted and keenly susceptible, but the efforts he made to subdue

any expression of impatience or suffering, were quite heroic. It

was easy to see, in the shrinking of the figure, and the drawing of

the bed-clothes over the head, how acute the endurance was, and it

made me shrink too, as if I were in pain; but, when the new

bandages were on, and the poor feet were composed again, he made an

apology for himself (though he had not uttered a word), and said

plaintively, ‘I am so tender and weak, you see, sir!’ Neither from

him nor from any one sufferer of the whole ghastly number, did I

hear a complaint. Of thankfulness for present solicitude and care,

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Dickens, Charles – The Uncommercial Traveller

I heard much; of complaint, not a word.

I think I could have recognised in the dismalest skeleton there,

the ghost of a soldier. Something of the old air was still latent

in the palest shadow of life I talked to. One emaciated creature,

in the strictest literality worn to the bone, lay stretched on his

back, looking so like death that I asked one of the doctors if he

were not dying, or dead? A few kind words from the doctor, in his

ear, and he opened his eyes, and smiled – looked, in a moment, as

if he would have made a salute, if he could. ‘We shall pull him

through, please God,’ said the Doctor. ‘Plase God, surr, and

thankye,’ said the patient. ‘You are much better to-day; are you

not?’ said the Doctor. ‘Plase God, surr; ’tis the slape I want,

surr; ’tis my breathin’ makes the nights so long.’ ‘He is a

careful fellow this, you must know,’ said the Doctor, cheerfully;

‘it was raining hard when they put him in the open cart to bring

him here, and he had the presence of mind to ask to have a

sovereign taken out of his pocket that he had there, and a cab

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