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diff --git a/58233-8.txt b/58233-0.txt index 65f5172..6efb002 100644 --- a/58233-8.txt +++ b/58233-0.txt @@ -1,28 +1,7 @@ -The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Surgeon in Arms, by R. J. Manion +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 58233 *** -This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most -other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions -whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of -the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at -www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have -to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. -Title: A Surgeon in Arms -Author: R. J. Manion - -Release Date: November 4, 2018 [EBook #58233] - -Language: English - -Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 - -*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SURGEON IN ARMS *** - - - - -Produced by Al Haines @@ -117,11 +96,11 @@ same ideals, and enjoy the same free institutions? XV. Staff Officers XVI. The Battle of Vimy Ridge XVII. A Trip to Arras - XVIII. Ragoût à la Mode de Guerre (Trench Stew) + XVIII. Ragoût à la Mode de Guerre (Trench Stew) XIX. Leave XX. Paris During the War XXI. Paris in Wartime - XXII. In a Château Hospital + XXII. In a Château Hospital XXIII. On a Transport XXIV. Decorations XXV. On a Hill @@ -1447,7 +1426,7 @@ thoughts, and this saying might be enlarged by adding that slang was given us to hide our language. The Frenchman, in making this witticism, was referring not only to the beautiful -language of Corneille and Molière, but to +language of Corneille and Molière, but to speech in general. However, if he visited the lines of the Canadian or British troops today, even though his knowledge of English were @@ -2424,7 +2403,7 @@ are sailing thousands of feet in the air, or leagues under the surface of the sea. We pass through a village, Camblain -L'Abbé, where we go into the town major's to +L'Abbé, where we go into the town major's to inquire about water supplies for our men. The town major, a Canadian of fifty, reminds one of us of an old friend of the same name in @@ -2437,7 +2416,7 @@ this war has made the world an even smaller place than it was before. Our information obtained, we move on to our new camp, a virgin forest one-half mile above Camblain -L'Abbé, where there is no sign of tent, hut, or +L'Abbé, where there is no sign of tent, hut, or dwelling of any kind. But the men are already lolling happily on the bare ground, ignoring the pounding of our guns a few miles @@ -2541,7 +2520,7 @@ It is probably true in dugouts, as in many of the other necessities of war, that we learned much from the German, for he was probably the first to recognize the protection rendered -by a well-built--or, rather, well-dug--reënforced +by a well-built--or, rather, well-dug--reënforced hole in the ground. At various times when we have taken portions of the German lines we have found well-made homes underground, @@ -3635,7 +3614,7 @@ when he and any others who may have come in are put into ambulances and taken to the M.D.S.--main dressing station--of the field ambulance, another two or three miles behind. -The M.D.S. may be in some old château, or +The M.D.S. may be in some old château, or in a group of huts, or, if the weather is mild, in tents. Here a light case, or slightly wounded man, may be kept for a few days and then @@ -5284,7 +5263,7 @@ disappointed. Outside the fact that Staff Officers, like Medical Officers, are a necessary evil, the writer has the vivid recollection of one occasion on which he might have been -court-martialed, and perhaps shot, for _lèse majesté_, +court-martialed, and perhaps shot, for _lèse majesté_, or something akin to it, but for the good humor of a well-known Brigadier General. So there will be no scathing denunciation of Staff Officers here. @@ -5954,10 +5933,10 @@ built, loopholes being left for machine-guns, to prevent a possible German advance. Notices told all to keep near the walls and away from the open streets to avoid shell fire. -Estaminets, cafés, épiceries, and restaurants were +Estaminets, cafés, épiceries, and restaurants were all damaged and closed. Joyful nights and gay days were things of the past in this shadow -of a prosperous city. _À la mode Parisienne_, +of a prosperous city. _À la mode Parisienne_, the sign over a ladies' suit store, was all that remained of the center of fashion of the women of Arras. @@ -5988,7 +5967,7 @@ kultur. CHAPTER XVIII -RAGOÛT À LA MODE DE GUERRE +RAGOÛT À LA MODE DE GUERRE (Trench Stew) @@ -6055,7 +6034,7 @@ and carrots from last night's rations, I made a stew of it. All agreed--perhaps my boys didn't dare to disagree--that it was delicious. -This is the recipe for _Ragoût à la mode de +This is the recipe for _Ragoût à la mode de guerre_: Shoot a partridge over the parapet on a bright day; take your life in your hands to go out and get the victim; clean it--but @@ -6069,8 +6048,8 @@ you have carefully carried out all these directions, then, being sufficiently hungry, add a goodly portion of that most savory of sauces--appetite--to the dish. I promise you that, -though your tastes are _blasé_ to the last degree, -you will admit that _Ragoût à la mode de +though your tastes are _blasé_ to the last degree, +you will admit that _Ragoût à la mode de guerre_ makes a meal fit for the discriminating palate of a king. @@ -6180,7 +6159,7 @@ leave. My old b-bus hit the earth s-s-suddenly, and I'm g-going for a rest. I d-d-didn't always talk l-l-like this." And in an engaging way he stammers out an invitation for you to -take a Crême de Menthe with him. Of course, +take a Crême de Menthe with him. Of course, courtesy compels you, much against your desire, to accept. He has with him two others of the R.F.C., all young like himself, and @@ -6327,7 +6306,7 @@ junkers were to engineer within four months' time. Paris at that time was enjoying bright and balmy spring weather; the boulevards were crowded with visiting tourists, the -Champs-Elysées with gay and merry crowds, and the +Champs-Elysées with gay and merry crowds, and the Bois de Boulogne with riders and motorists in its wooded avenues, and rowers and paddlers on its lakes. It remained in my memory a @@ -6349,7 +6328,7 @@ of himself not required in peace times. The following morning he must call at the nearest police station and obtain, after many more questions as to nationality, occupation, and -reasons for being there, a _permis de séjour_--permit +reasons for being there, a _permis de séjour_--permit to remain--good for a certain length of time, at the expiration of which the permit must be renewed. @@ -6409,7 +6388,7 @@ its original staff was the concierge, and he was a Dutchman from Amsterdam. The manager, accountant, and all the other help were women. No meals were served except a French -déjeuner--so hateful to hungry Anglo-Saxons--of +déjeuner--so hateful to hungry Anglo-Saxons--of bread, and tea, coffee, or cocoa. And the same condition was noticeable all @@ -6423,7 +6402,7 @@ bread was served no longer. In its place we were given some of a much inferior quality and not nearly so white. When this had occurred in many different restaurants and -cafés, I asked the reason. +cafés, I asked the reason. "_Mais, monsieur_," was the reply, accompanied by that Gallic gesture of helplessness, the @@ -6450,7 +6429,7 @@ ordinary man would not accept a fortune and have them found on his corpse; all these fellows still plied their trade. They were not quite so obtrusive or so numerous as usual, but it -was difficult to cross the Place de l'Opéra +was difficult to cross the Place de l'Opéra without having one of them step up behind you and whisper his enterprise, whatever it was. @@ -6471,7 +6450,7 @@ business, whose eyes were so busy studying his engagement book, or reading the market reports, that they had not time to meet the roaming glances of the girls of the boulevards. New -friends were hard to find, for _les riches Américains_ +friends were hard to find, for _les riches Américains_ came no more except on business, and the old friends in the persons of gay Pierre or gallant Paul were serving in the trenches--perhaps @@ -6482,7 +6461,7 @@ eyes fixed steadily on some imaginary object straight in front, as he walked down the Boulevard des Italiens or the Boulevard des Capucines, to avoid receiving too many inquiring -glances from the boulevardières. Generally +glances from the boulevardières. Generally speaking the annoyances were limited to glances, as the rules of the city are strict. @@ -6500,7 +6479,7 @@ would imagine that if this kept on till they met, some kind of catastrophe would be likely to happen, even though it were Paris! -At that famous corner of the Café de la +At that famous corner of the Café de la Paix the chairs on the street were well patronized, though the weather was chilly; and I found myself wondering if it were the same @@ -6517,7 +6496,7 @@ Venus, and more of those who pursue Mammon. But, after all, men and women are much the same the world over, and this was much the same group of coffee-sipping, liqueur-tasting -people that one finds in the cafés from +people that one finds in the cafés from 4 to 6 p.m. in any of the continental cities from Paris to Vienna, from Naples to Berlin. There were a few more men in uniform, @@ -6648,7 +6627,7 @@ chefs, though their clientele was considerably smaller in numbers. You could still get a delicious cut off the -joint at Boeuf à la Mode near the Palais +joint at Boeuf à la Mode near the Palais Royal; or you could have a choice of many luscious dishes at Voison's well-known dining place. If you preferred French society, you @@ -6659,7 +6638,7 @@ apparently as busy as it had been in the piping times of peace and tourists; and the most deliciously cooked fish in Europe--according to my taste--was still being served at Marguery's -under the title of _Sole à la Marguery_. +under the title of _Sole à la Marguery_. The less pretentious eating places of the modest diner, such as Duval's dining-rooms @@ -6810,7 +6789,7 @@ notorious Moulin Rouge music hall, well known to all visitors to Paris, had been burned a short time before, and had but recently reopened its doors at the Folies Dramatique in the Place -République. Wandering one evening along +République. Wandering one evening along the boulevards I came to it, and entered. A very ordinary vaudeville was in progress, equaling neither in quality nor in gayety the @@ -6826,14 +6805,14 @@ performance, and made my exit to find the streets in pitch black darkness, only broken here and there by the small side-lights of a flitting automobile or a dim light far back in -a boulevard café. A gendarme, with whom I +a boulevard café. A gendarme, with whom I accidentally collided as I strolled slowly along the street, told me that a warning had been sent out that the Zeppelins were coming. Rain was pattering on the pavement which glistened as the automobiles hurried by, and occasionally searchlights swept overhead, flashing from -l'Étoile. The people were good naturedly +l'Étoile. The people were good naturedly jostling their way along, and as someone near me struck a match to help him grope his way, a giggle was heard and a bright-eyed French girl @@ -6862,7 +6841,7 @@ the inhabitants had no way of knowing that such would be the case. The following day I had dinner with some -friends who live on the Champs Elysées, and +friends who live on the Champs Elysées, and the hostess was envying one of her maids who had had "the good fortune" to be spending the previous night with her family on the outskirts @@ -6920,7 +6899,7 @@ The service was an elaborate high mass, and I found it high in more ways than one, for four collections were taken up: the first for the seats; the second for the clergy; the third for -_les blessés_--the wounded; and the fourth for +_les blessés_--the wounded; and the fourth for the soldiers. I could not help but think that they should have taken up a fifth from the soldiers, the clergy, and the wounded, for the rest @@ -7014,7 +6993,7 @@ hotel that you were leaving the city. Then you had to go to the office of the Consul of the country to which you were going, explain the purpose of your change of residence, and -have the consul or his representative _visé_ your +have the consul or his representative _visé_ your passport. Then finally you had to call at the Prefecture of Police--akin to our central police station in a large city--and again get your @@ -7134,7 +7113,7 @@ day. CHAPTER XXII -IN A CHÂTEAU HOSPITAL +IN A CHÂTEAU HOSPITAL Early in the conflict, after the Germans had been pushed back from their rush on @@ -7185,10 +7164,10 @@ manned by Britons were doing excellent work behind the French lines. It was my good fortune to serve at the -beginning of 1915 in one of these, the Château +beginning of 1915 in one of these, the Château de Rimberlieu, just three miles from the point at which the German lines came nearest to -Paris, and seven miles north of Compiègne +Paris, and seven miles north of Compiègne where a little over one hundred years ago Napoleon for the first time met Marie Louise of Austria when she came to replace the @@ -7200,7 +7179,7 @@ across from New York to London I had been refused a position by the British unless I could enlist, which personal reasons prevented at the time. Then, after two days interviewing, -taxicabbing, viséing, pleading, and +taxicabbing, viséing, pleading, and explaining, I obtained a permit to go to France. At Boulogne the authorities of the British Red Cross and St. Johns Ambulance Association @@ -7282,15 +7261,15 @@ not be of service. Sickly visions of returning home after a futile attempt to be of use came to me, when suddenly luck changed. The director of the -Ambulance Anglo-Française in the Château +Ambulance Anglo-Française in the Château de Rimberlieu came to Paris in search of assistance. Being an Englishman, he looked in -at the British Red Cross in the Avenue d'Ièna +at the British Red Cross in the Avenue d'Ièna where they told him of this forlorn Canadian who had been haunting their offices, but of whom they had lost track. By a bit of luck their commanding officer met me that afternoon -on the Place de l'Opéra, and gave me the +on the Place de l'Opéra, and gave me the director's address at the Hotel de Crillon. I hurried at once to call upon him, and offered to take any position from chauffeur to surgeon. @@ -7304,7 +7283,7 @@ which must be supplied by the inheritor. After obtaining a _sauf conduit_ from the military authorities to take me as far as Creille, I left on the train that afternoon for -Compiègne, sixty miles to the north, accompanied +Compiègne, sixty miles to the north, accompanied by an affable young Red Cross orderly, of English parents and Paris birth, who in civil life was a drygoods salesman. At Creille, @@ -7323,10 +7302,10 @@ I had in my pocket. Presto! The officer knew his name, and by I went. -We arrived at Compiègne about midnight, +We arrived at Compiègne about midnight, and for the first time we heard the sound of the guns ten miles away. As we were now only -seven miles from the Château, we thought our +seven miles from the Château, we thought our troubles were over. But we had reckoned without the sous-prefet de police, who said in the morning when we called that we could go @@ -7352,7 +7331,7 @@ authorities. The director ran some slight risk in thus smuggling me through the lines, but nothing ever came of it; and I gave a sigh of relief when we at last swung into the -spacious grounds of the château. +spacious grounds of the château. The house was a large stone building, used in peace times as the summer home for the @@ -7390,7 +7369,7 @@ in all things. And at that our life was so much easier than that of the boys in the trenches that we often felt a bit ashamed of the difference. -The château was surrounded by some two +The château was surrounded by some two or three hundred acres of well-laid-out gardens, artificial lakes, fountains, and woods. These grounds had been cut up to a certain @@ -7399,7 +7378,7 @@ dugouts, funk-holes, and gun emplacements, all in order and ready for use if the enemy should drive the French back in this direction. The fighting trenches were only three or four miles -to the north of us, this château being said to +to the north of us, this château being said to be the nearest hospital to the lines in the whole theater of war. We worked, slept, ate, and killed time to the sound of the guns and shells, @@ -7411,7 +7390,7 @@ surgeons, a French military medical officer, Villechaise; Allwood, a Jamaican, an old college friend of mine whom I had neither seen nor heard of for twelve years until the day -I arrived at the château, when he came +I arrived at the château, when he came forward to give an anesthetic for me to a case which General Berthier had ordered me to operate upon; King, a Scotsman; and myself. @@ -7470,7 +7449,7 @@ professor in the University; here he acted as chauffeur on his own automobile ambulance, and his wife looked after the checking and arranging of the laundry for the whole hospital. -One afternoon I went into Compiègne with him +One afternoon I went into Compiègne with him in his car, and he delighted some French African troops by chatting to them in Arabic, after which they followed him around like little @@ -7655,7 +7634,7 @@ well the sacrifices that were made daily by these aristocrats who had given up their luxurious homes, their autos, their servants and their money, to live in the servants' quarters of this -old château, and to wait hand and foot upon +old château, and to wait hand and foot upon wounded poilus, with at any moment of the day or night the chance of a shell coming through the roof and stirring things up. No @@ -7675,7 +7654,7 @@ vouched for by many a lonely, hard-hit common soldier, sick in a strange land, far from his home and his loved ones. -A field telephone line ran from the château +A field telephone line ran from the château up to the rear trenches. The cases were brought out of the trenches to a sheltered spot and one of our ambulances was telephoned for. @@ -7744,22 +7723,22 @@ Africa. Since that time she has served with the Italians in Italy and has been decorated by King Victor Emmanuel. -In Compiègne was another very interesting +In Compiègne was another very interesting hospital presided over by that wonderful Frenchman, Alexis Carrel, of the Rockefeller Institute of New York. Here he has done research work that has made his name familiar in every scientific circle the world over. And -here in Compiègne, in this newer field, his +here in Compiègne, in this newer field, his researches have brought forth new methods of treating wounds which have been adopted in hospitals throughout the war zone. His hospital was a government institution, not one of the voluntary ambulances of which our -château was an example. +château was an example. At the time of writing, two years from my -period of service at the Château de Rimberlieu, +period of service at the Château de Rimberlieu, it is still doing good service as a hospital, though now it is entirely directed by the French military authorities. But a number @@ -8231,363 +8210,4 @@ And all this in the cause of the great god, Mars! End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Surgeon in Arms, by R. J. 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