REFERS TO TWO IMPORTANT LETTERS, AND A SECRET MISSION
It is a curious coincidence that,
about the very time when my servant was appointed
to serve in the Turkish Ambulance Corps, I received
permission to act as a surgeon in the Russian army.
Through the influence of Nicholas Naranovitsch, I
was attached to his own regiment, and thus enjoyed
the pleasure of his society for a considerable time
after the breaking out of the war.
I preferred this course to that of
returning home, because, first, I could not bear the
thought of leaving the country without making every
possible exertion to ascertain the fate of my yacht’s
crew, and rendering them succour if possible; and,
secondly, because I felt an irresistible desire to
alleviate, professionally, the sufferings of those
who were certain to be wounded during the war.
I also experienced much curiosity to know something
more of the power and influence of modern war-engines.
Perhaps some people will think this latter an unworthy
motive. It may have been so; I cannot tell.
All I can say is that it was a very secondary one,
and would not, of itself, have been sufficient to
induce me to remain for an hour to witness the horrors
and carnage of battle-fields. Still, putting
the various motives together, I felt justified in
remaining.
In order that I might render still
more effective service to the cause of humanity, I
wrote, immediately after my appointment as surgeon,
to an intimate friend, north of the Tweed, offering
my services as war correspondent to a paper of which
he was editor, namely, the Scottish Bawbee.
That celebrated journal, well
known on the east, west, and north coasts of Scotland,
and extensively circulated in the centre and south
of the country, including England, is liberal
in its principles, conservative in reference only
to things that are good, and violently radical when
treating of those that are bad. It enjoys the
credit of being curt in its statements, brief in the
expression of its opinions, perfectly silent in reference
to its surmises, distinctly repudiative of the gift
of prophecy, consistently averse to the attribution
of motives, persistently wise in giving the shortest
possible account of murders and scandalous cases,
and copious in its references to literature, art, and
religious progress, besides being extremely methodical
in its arrangement.
In regard to the latter quality, I
cannot refrain from referring to its sensible mode
of treating births, marriages, and deaths, by putting
the Christian and surname of the born, married, or
defunct as the first words in each announcement,
so that one’s digestion at breakfast is aided
by reading with some comfort of the joys and sorrows
of one’s friends, instead of having incipient
dyspepsia engendered by a painful search for the main
facts in confusing sentences.
The editor’s reply came by return
of post. It contained the acceptance of my services,
and a proposal of extremely liberal terms, allowing
me, besides a handsome retaining fee, two horses,
and such travelling attendants as might be found necessary.
There were also certain emphatic stipulations which
are worth recording. I was not, on any pretext
whatever, to attempt the divination, much less the
revelation, of the future. I was never, upon
any consideration, to be seduced into lengthy descriptions
of things that I did not see, or minute particulars
about matters which I did not know. I was utterly
to ignore, and refuse to be influenced by, personal
predilections or prejudices in regard to either combatant.
I was to say as little about scenery as was consistent
with a correct delineation of the field of war, and
never to venture on sentimental allusions to sunsets,
moonlights, or water-reflections of any kind.
I was not to forget that a newspaper was a vehicle
for the distribution of news, the announcement of facts
and the discussion thereof, not a medium for the dissemination
of fancies and fiddlededee. Above all, I was
never to write a column and a half of speculation
as to the possible and probable movements of
armies; to be followed “in our next” by
two columns of the rumoured movements of armies;
to be continued “in our next” by two columns
and a half of the actual movements of armies;
to wind up “in our next” with three columns
of retrospective consideration as to what might, could,
would, or should have been the movements of
armies; but that I was, on the contrary, to bear in
remembrance the adage about “brevity” being
the “soul of wit,” and, when I had nothing
to write, to write nothing. By so doing, it
was added, I should please the editor and charm the
public, one of whose minor griefs is, as regards newspapers,
that it is brought into a state of disgust with every
event of this life long before it has happened, and
thoroughly nauseated with it long after it is past, to
say nothing of the resulting mental confusion.
In case any gentleman of the press
should feel injured by these statements, I must remind
him that I am not responsible for them. They
are the sentiments of the Scottish Bawbee, which
must be taken for what they are worth. It is
true, I heartily agree with them, but that is an entirely
different subject, on which I do not enter.
I readily agreed to fall in with the
wishes of the editor, and thenceforward devoted myself,
heart and soul, to correspondence and surgery.
In both fields of labour I found ample scope for all
the powers of body and mind that I possessed.
Just about this time I received a
letter from my dear mother, who was aware of my plans.
It cost me some anxiety, as it was utterly impossible
that I should comply with the injunctions it contained.
“Jeffry, my dear boy,” she wrote, “let
me entreat you, with all the solemnity of maternal
solicitude, to take care of your health. Let
Russians and Turks kill and expose themselves as they
please, but ever bear in remembrance that it is your
duty to avoid danger. Whatever you do, keep
your feet dry and your I need not go further
into particulars; medical allusions cannot always
be couched in language such as one desires.
Never sleep on damp ground, nor, if possible, without
a roof or a covering of some sort over your head.
Even a parasol is better than nothing. If,
despite your precautions, you should catch cold, tie
a worsted sock one of the red and black
striped ones I have knitted for you round
your neck, and take one drop of aconite only
one, remember before going to bed.
I know how, with your allopathic notions, you will
smile at this advice, but I assure you, as your mother,
that it will prove an infallible cure. Never
sit in a draught when you can avoid it. If you
ever come under fire, which I trust you never may,
be sure to get behind a house, or a wall, or a stone,
if possible; if you cannot do so, get behind a soldier,
one larger than yourself would be preferable of course,
but if you have not the opportunity of doing this,
then turn your side to the enemy, because in that
position you are a much narrower target, and more
likely to escape their bullets. I need not caution
you not to run away. I would rather see you,
dear boy, in a premature grave, than hear that you
had run away. But you could not run away.
No Childers ever did so except from school.
“Let the phial of globules
which I gave you at parting be your bosom friends,
till their friendship is required in another and a
lower region. They are a sovereign remedy against
rheumatism, catarrh, bronchitis, dyspepsia, lumbago,
nervous affections, headaches, loss of memory, debility,
monomania, melancholia, botherolia, theoretica, and,
in short, all the ills that flesh is heir to, if only
taken in time.”
It struck me, as I folded my mother’s
letter and that of the editor, that there never was
a man who went into any course of action better guarded
and advised than myself. At the moment when this
thought occurred to me, my friend Nicholas burst into
my room in a state of unusual excitement.
“Come, Jeff,” he said,
“I’m detailed for another secret duty.
People seem to have inordinate faith in me, for all
my duties are secret! Are you willing to go
with me?”
“Go where?” I asked.
“That I may not tell,”
he replied; “anywhere, or nowhere, or everywhere.
All I can say is, that if you go, it will be to act
as surgeon to a squadron of cavalry. I see you
have letters. Good news from home eh?
What of Bella?”
“Yes” I replied, “good news and
good advice listen.”
I reopened the letters and read them aloud.
“Capital!” exclaimed Nicholas,
“just the thing for you. No doubt my expedition
will furnish a column and a half, if not more, of
unquestionable facts for the Scottish Bawbee.
Get ready, my boy; I start in half-an-hour.”
He swung off in the same hearty, reckless
manner with which he had entered; and I immediately
set about packing up my surgical instruments and note-books,
and making other preparations for a journey of unknown
extent and duration.