登陆注册
19626200000038

第38章 VI(4)

Here again, in my association with the women of the streets, I realized the limitations of my work in the ministry and in medicine. As minister to soul and body one could do little for these women. For such as them, one's efforts must begin at the very foundation of the social structure. Laws for them must be made and enforced, and some of those laws could only be made and enforced by women. So many great avenues of life were opening up before me that my Cape Cod environment seemed almost a prison where I was held with tender force. I l oved my people and they loved me--but the big outer world was calling, and I could not close my ears to its summons. The suffrage lectures helped to keep me contented, however, and I was certainly busy enough to find happiness in my work.

I was in Boston three nights a week, and during these nights subject to sick calls at any hour. My favorite associates were Dr. Caroline Hastings, our professor of anatomy, and little Dr. Mary Safford, a mite of a woman with an indomitable soul. Dr.

Safford was especially prominent in philanthropic work in Massachusetts, and it was said of her that at any hour of the day or night she could be found working in the slums of Boston. I, too, could fre- q uently be found there--often, no doubt, to the dis- a dvantage of my patients. I was quite famous in three Boston alleys--Maiden's Lane, Fellows Court, and Andrews Court. It most fortunately happened that I did not lose a case in those alleys, though I t ook all kinds, as I had to treat a certain number of surgical and obstetrical cases in my course. No doubt my patients and I had many narrow escapes of which we were blissfully ignorant, but I remember two which for a long time afterward continued to be features of my most troubled dreams.

The first was that of a big Irishman who had pneumonia. When I looked him over I was as much frightened as he was. I had got as far as pneu- m onia in my course, and I realized that here was a bad case of it. I knew what to do. The patient must be carefully packed in towels wrung out of cold water. When I called for towels I found that there was nothing in the place but a dish-towel, which I washed with portentous gravity. The man owned but one shirt, and, in deference to my visit, his wife had removed that to wash it. I packed the patient in the dish-towel, wrapped him in a piece of an old shawl, and left after instructing his wife to repeat the process. When I reached home I remem- b ered that the patient must be packed ``carefully,'' a nd I knew that his wife would do it carelessly.

That meant great risk to the man's life. My im- p ulse was to rush back to him at once, but this would never do. It would destroy all confidence in the doctor. I walked the floor for three hours, and then casually strolled in upon my patient, finding him, to my great relief, better than I had left him. As I was leaving, a child rushed into the room, begging me to come to an upper floor in the same building.

``The baby's got the croup,'' she gasped, ``an' h e's chokin' to death.''

We had not reached croup in our course, and I h ad no idea what to do, but I valiantly accompanied the little girl. As we climbed the long flights of stairs to the top floor I remembered a conversation I had overheard between two medical students. One of them had said: ``If the child is strangling when it inhales, as if it were breathing through a sponge, then give it spongia; but if it is strangling when it breathes out, give it aconite.''

When I reached the baby I listened, but could not tell which way it was strangling. However, I happened to have both medicines with me, so I c alled for two glasses and mixed the two remedies, each in its own glass. I gave them both to the mother, and told her to use them alternately, every fifteen minutes, until the baby was better. The baby got well; but whether its recovery was due to the spongia or to the aconite I never knew.

In my senior year I fell in love with an infant of three, named Patsy. He was one of nine children when I was called to deliver his mother of her tenth child. She was drunk when I reached her, and so were two men who lay on the floor in the same room.

I had them carried out, and after the mother and baby had been attended to I noticed Patsy. He was the most beautiful child I had ever seen--with eyes like Italian skies and yellow hair in tight curls over his adorable little head; but he was covered with filthy rags. I borrowed him, took him home with me, and fed and bathed him, and the next day fitted him out with new clothes. Every hour I had him tightened his hold on my heart-strings. I went to his mother and begged her to let me keep him, but she refused, and after a great deal of argument and entreaty I had to return him to her. When I went to see him a few days later I found him again in his horrible rags. His mother had pawned his new clothes for drink, and she was deeply under its in- f luence. But no pressure I could exert then or later would make her part with Patsy. Finally, for my own peace of mind, I had to give up hope of getting him--but I have never ceased to regret the little adopted son I might have had.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 异界之霸道武僧

    异界之霸道武僧

    林凡在意外之下获得了一本达摩笔记,习得了少林绝技。在统一了地下势力之后迷上了一款虚拟网游“荣耀”。李菡是林凡在少林寺时从小玩到大的朋友,二人在游戏中也都是高手。一日,在龙穴里,程序像是发生了错乱,二人穿越到了异世"豪格大陆",开始了一场惊心动魄的异界之旅……
  • 霸道王爷疯小姐

    霸道王爷疯小姐

    她是天界九星女神。。。穿进异界成了痴傻六小姐。。。她本是逃婚而来,不解内情的她在异界第二天就被披上大红嫁袍................
  • 将军,请给我休书

    将军,请给我休书

    千不该万不该,不该为了多看一眼帅哥,忘了手里的方向盘,结果,遭报应了吧,穿了,还穿成了小三……天知道她最恨的就是抢人家老公的小三!士可杀不可辱,打死也不做小三,找他要休书去!可是这什么答复嘛:等我不要你了,自然会给你休书!好嘛,她忍,可是休书没忍到,忍掉了他的初吻?还是当朝太子!老天,她只是穿越而已,桃花不用这么旺吧?呵呵,青衣新文出炉啦,http://novel.hongxiu.com/a/233904/请大家去支持哦,青衣拜谢啦!
  • 穿越与另类卷(全球华语小说大系)

    穿越与另类卷(全球华语小说大系)

    本卷《穿越与另类》,既包括最近几年非常流行的穿越小说这一类型,也收入了一些题材比较“另类”的小说。穿越小说中,既有典型的网络穿越小说,也有发表于流行阅读杂志的穿越作品,还有“另类”的穿越小说。“另类”小说中,既收入了贾平凹、莫言等纯文学作家的作品,也选入了耽美和奇幻这两种类型的网络小说。既有文坛巨匠,也有文学新人;既有成名已久的传统作家,也有人气旺盛的网络作家,超越雅俗界限。将穿越小说和“另类”小说汇集于一册,是本卷的特色,而“另类”中,纯文学与网络小说的并行不悖也是本卷选目的特点。
  • 明月何处

    明月何处

    从大宋到北汉再到辽国,尽管经历的很多事情,明月贪玩的心仍没有改变。不如德芳他们,经历一生,都不为情所困。平日里,只知道胡作非为,玩玩闹闹,好像什么事情都不放在心上。她从来不会想,大宋皇宫,有一个俊逸潇洒的男子,心始终为他所系。耶律无邪爱美人不爱江山的情意,于她只是玩笑一场。心无牵挂,你怨她恼她不得。只有在沉睡时,很多旧事涌了上来,才明白,她还是挂念的...
  • 意外的前后生活

    意外的前后生活

    她,是一个初中生,本是一个很平凡的女生,每天都神经嘻嘻,大大咧咧的,有时有点小小的暴力,有时性格变化莫测,但这只是她的外表,在别人不知道的地方,她也会很脆弱,脆弱的像一个玻璃瓶子。一次意外,让她向神提出了多项不合理的要求,但也没办法,谁让是神创造了这次意外呢?于是呢,她的生活也发生了改变……一年后,她回到了她的学校,又开启了一系列的青春校园生活。
  • 魂魄天地

    魂魄天地

    人有三魂七魄,天地二魂常在外,唯有命魂独住身,命魂住胎,衍化七魄:气魄、力魄、精魄、英魄、天冲魄、灵慧魄、天绝魄。这是一个修魂炼魄的世界,强大的魄术,逆天的魂术,让我们共同踏出一条强者之路。
  • 诺未门:犹太人的家教圣经

    诺未门:犹太人的家教圣经

    通过一个个生动典型的故事和精辟独到的点评,全面系统地揭示了造就犹太奇迹的根本原因,告诉世人:犹太奇迹并非神秘莫测、不可超越的神话,而是建立在教育之上的。只要像犹太人那样重视教育、抓好教育,我们的孩子完全可以像犹太人一样优秀,我们也可以创造出比犹太奇迹更辉煌的中华奇迹。本书通过各种案例和实例展现了犹太家庭的“真正的教育经验”,可以说是每一位父母都需要学习的知识。通过此书,您会更深刻的理解“教育是一门艺术”这句话的真正含义。
  • 心醉红颜

    心醉红颜

    举手投足皆大家风范,一颦一笑尽风情魅惑,为报夺嫡之仇,她耗十载年华,隐身于青楼之间,换得今日妖媚风情。何其可悲,当初的嫡女如棋子一般任人挑选,当初的庶女却一举翻身成为尊贵无比的世家嫡女。世家无情,为庶妻庶女逐她母女出府,她便用无情催破他们的荣华,以慰母亲在天之灵!她代所谓嫡女入宫,天子冷酷,她便用柔情瓦解天子的冷酷城墙!嫡女之位,她要!后位,她也要!且看一青楼女子,如何一步步问鼎后位!
  • 其实,你所知道的世界很陌生

    其实,你所知道的世界很陌生

    我们最缺少的,不是独立思考的能力,而是独立思考的欲望。《其实,你所知道的世界很陌生》的作者给读者提供了与惯常思维不同的看待事情的方式,他以另类又熨贴的方式告诉读者,如何思考生活,找到学习的方法。以另一种姿态审视世界,你也许会发现另一片豁然的天空。