<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</SPAN><br/> <span class="small">LOOKING OUT.</span></h2>
<p>Step by step, and all unconsciously, Florence
Nightingale had been training her
hand and eye to follow the dictates of
her keen mind and loving heart. Now,
grown a young woman, she began to think seriously
how she should apply this training. What
should she do with her life? Should she go on
like her friends, in the quiet pleasant ways of country
life? The squire's daughter was busy enough,
surely. Every hour of the day was full of useful,
kindly work, of happy, healthy play; should
she be content with this? Her heart told her that
she was not content. In her friendly visiting among
the sick poor she had seen much misery and suffering,
far more than she and all the other kindly
ladies could attempt to relieve. She felt that something
more was needed; she began to look around
to see what was being done in the larger world.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was about this time that she met Elizabeth
Fry, the noble and beautiful friend of the prisoner.
Mrs. Fry was then an elderly woman, with all the
glory of her saintly life shining about her; Florence
Nightingale an earnest and thoughtful girl of perhaps
eighteen or twenty. It is pleasant to think of
that meeting. I do not know what words passed
between them, but I can almost see them together,
the beautiful stately woman in her Quaker dress,
the slender girl with her quiet face and earnest eyes;
can almost hear the young voice, questioning, eager
and ardent; the elder answering, grave and sedate,
words full of weight and wisdom, of sweetness and
tenderness. This interview was one of the great
moments of Florence Nightingale's early life.</p>
<p>A little later than this, in 1843, she met another
person whose words and counsel impressed her
deeply; and of this meeting I can give you a clearer
account, for that person was my own dear father,
Dr. Samuel G. Howe. Some ten years before this
my father had decided to devote his life to helping
people who needed help. He had established a
school for the blind in Boston; he had brought
Laura Bridgman, the blind, deaf mute, out of her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span>
loneliness and taught her to read, write, and talk
with her fingers; the first time this had ever been
done with a person so afflicted. He had labored
to help the prisoners and captives in the North, and
the slaves in the South; in short he was what is
called a <i>philanthropist</i>, that is, one who loves his
fellow-men and tries to help them.</p>
<p>My father and mother were traveling in England
soon after their marriage, and were invited
by Mr. and Mrs. Nightingale to spend a few days
at Embley Park. One morning Miss Nightingale
(for so I must call her now that she is a woman)
met my father in the garden and said to him:</p>
<p>"Dr. Howe, you have had much experience in
the world of philanthropy; you are a medical man
and a gentleman; now may I ask you to tell me,
upon your word, whether it would be anything unsuitable
or unbecoming to a young Englishwoman,
if she should devote herself to works of charity, in
hospitals and elsewhere, as the Catholic Sisters
do?"</p>
<p>My father replied: "My dear Miss Florence, it
would be unusual, and in England whatever is unusual
is apt to be thought unsuitable; but I say to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</SPAN></span>
you, go forward, if you have a vocation for that
way of life; act up to your aspiration, and you
will find that there is never anything unbecoming
or unladylike in doing your duty for the good of
others. Choose your path, go on with it, wherever
it may lead you, and God be with you!"</p>
<p>It was in this spirit that Miss Nightingale now
began to train herself for her life work.</p>
<p>It is hard for you children of to-day to imagine
what nursing was in the early part of the nineteenth
century. To you a nurse means a trim, alert,
cheerful person in spotless raiment, who knows just
what to do when you are ill, and does it in the
pleasantest possible manner; you are glad when she
comes into the room, sorry when she leaves. But
this pleasant person did not exist in those days,
except in the guise of a Catholic Sister of Charity.
The other nurses were for the most part coarse and
ignorant women, often cruel, often intemperate.
When you read "Martin Chuzzlewit" you will
find out more about them than I can tell you. But
"Martin Chuzzlewit" was not written when Miss
Nightingale determined to find out the condition
of nursing in England and on the Continent. She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</SPAN></span>
first spent some months in the London hospitals,
and then visited those in Scotland and Ireland. She
was horrified at what she found there; dirt and
misery and needless suffering among the patients,
drunkenness and ignorance and brutality among
the nurses. Then she turned to the Continent and
found a very different state of things. The hospitals
were clean and cheerful, and the Sisters of
Mercy in their white caps and aprons were as good
and kind and capable as our trained nurses to-day.</p>
<p>Up to this time these good sisters had been the
only trained nurses in Europe; but in Germany
Miss Nightingale found a Protestant sisterhood
which was working along the same lines, and in a
more enlightened and modern way; these were the
Deaconesses of Kaiserswerth, the pupils of Pastor
Fliedner.</p>
<p>This good man—one of the best men, surely,
that ever lived—was the son of a Lutheran minister.
His father was poor, and Theodore had to work
his way through college, but this he did cheerfully,
for he loved work. He studied very hard and also
gave lessons, sawed wood, blacked boots, and did
other odd jobs. When his clothes began to wear<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</SPAN></span>
out he sewed up the holes with white thread, all
he had, and then inked it over. He loved children,
and on the long tramps he used to take in
vacation time he was always collecting songs and
games, and teaching them to the children.</p>
<p>When he was twenty-two years old Theodore
Fliedner became pastor of a small Protestant parish
at Kaiserswerth on the Rhine. The people were so
poor that they could do little either for their church
or themselves, so the young pastor set out on foot
to seek aid from other Christian people. He traveled
in Germany, Holland and England, and everywhere
people felt his goodness and gave him help.
In London he met Elizabeth Fry, and the noble
work she was doing among the prisoners at Newgate
made a deep impression on him. He determined
to do something to help the prisoners in Germany,
especially the poor women, who, after being
imprisoned for a certain time, were cast upon the
world with no possession save an ill name.</p>
<p>In his little garden stood an old summerhouse,
partly ruinous, but with strong walls. With his
own hands the good pastor mended the roof and
made the place clean and habitable. He put in a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</SPAN></span>
bed, a table and a chair, and then prayed that God
would send to this shelter some poor soul who
needed it.</p>
<p>One night a homeless outcast woman came to the
door, and the pastor and his wife bade her welcome,
and took her to the clean pleasant room that was
all ready.</p>
<p>In this humble way opened the now famous institution
of Kaiserswerth. Other poor women soon
found out the friendly shelter; in a short time a new
and larger building was needed, and more helping
hands beside those of the good pastor and his devoted
wife. The good work grew and grew; some
of the poor women had children, and so a school
was started; the school must have good teachers,
and so a training school for teachers was opened.</p>
<p>But most of all Pastor Fliedner wished to help
the condition of the sick poor; three years after the
first opening of the summerhouse shelter in the garden
he founded the Deaconess Hospital. We are
told that it was opened "practically without patients
and without deaconesses." He obtained the use of
part of a deserted factory, and begged from his
neighbors old furniture and broken crockery, which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span>
he mended carefully, and put in the big empty
rooms. He had only six sheets, but there was plenty
of water to wash them, and when the first patient,
a poor suffering servant maid, came to the door,
she was made comfortable in a spotless bed, in a
clean though bare room.</p>
<p>I wish I could tell you the whole beautiful story,
but it would take too long. By the end of the year
there were sixty patients in the hospital, and seven
deaconess nurses to care for them. To-day there
is a deaconess hospital or home in almost every
town in Germany, and thousands upon thousands
of sick and poor people bless the deaconesses,
though they may never have heard the name of
Pastor Fliedner.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</SPAN></span></p>
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