Memoirs of Mrs. Seacole by Mary Seacole
Author:Mary Seacole [Seacole, Mary]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9788027308750
Barnesnoble:
Publisher: e-artnow
Published: 2020-12-30T00:00:00+00:00
âDear Mrs. SeacoleâI am very sorry to hear that you have been unfortunate in business; but I am glad to hear that you have found friends in Lord Rââ and others, who are ready to help you. No one knows better than I do how much you did to help poor sick and wounded soldiers; and I feel sure you will find in your day of trouble that they have not forgotten it.â
Major Rââ was a brave and experienced officer, but the scenes on the sick-wharf unmanned him often. I have known him nervously restless if the people were behindhand, even for a few minutes, in their preparations for the wounded. But in this feeling all shared alike. Only women could have done more than they did who attended to this melancholy duty; and they, not because their hearts could be softer, but because their hands are moulded for this work.
But it must not be supposed that we had no cheerful scenes upon the sick-wharf. Sometimes a light-hearted fellowâgenerally a sailorâwould forget his pain, and do his best to keep the rest in good spirits. Once I heard my name eagerly pronounced, and turning round, recognised a sailor whom I remembered as one of the crew of the âAlarm,â stationed at Kingston, a few years back.
âWhy, as I live, if this ainât Aunty Seacole, of Jamaica! Shiver all thatâs left of my poor timbersââand I saw that the left leg was goneââif this ainât a rum go, mates!â
âAh! my man, Iâm sorry to see you in this sad plight.â
âNever fear for me, Aunty Seacole; Iâll make the best of the leg the Rooshians have left me. Iâll get at them soon again, never fear. You donât think, messmatesââhe never left his wounded comrades aloneââthat theyâll think less of us at home for coming back with a limb or so short?â
âYou bear your troubles well, my son.â
âEh! do I, Aunty?â and he seemed surprised. âWhy, lookâye, when Iâve seen so many pretty fellows knocked off the shipâs roll altogether, donât you think I ought to be thankful if I can answer the boâswainâs call anyhow?â
And this was the sailorsâ philosophy always. And this brave fellow, after he had sipped some lemonade, and laid down, when he heard the men groaning, raised his head and comforted them in the same strain again; and, it may seem strange, but it quieted them.
I used to make sponge-cakes on board the âMedora,â with eggs brought from Constantinople. Only the other day, Captain Sââ, who had charge of the âMedora,â reminded me of them. These, with some lemonade, were all the doctors would allow me to give to the wounded. They all liked the cake, poor fellows, better than anything else: perhaps because it tasted of âhome.â
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