The Life of Florence Nightingale, vol. 2 of 2 by Sir Edward Tyas Cook
CHAPTER III
6174 words | Chapter 27
SETTING REFORMERS TO WORK
(1863-1865)
I am more hopeful than you appear to be in regard to the good
likely to be effected by the Report. Although our Indian
administration has great difficulties to contend with owing to the
nature of the country and the people, it is both honest and able;
and I never knew a public measure, the advantage of which was
generally admitted, which ultimately was not properly taken in
hand.--SIR CHARLES TREVELYAN (_Letter to Florence Nightingale_,
Aug. 24, 1862).
In the last chapter we traced Miss Nightingale's hand throughout the
famous Report of the Indian Sanitary Commission. We saw how she worked
for the inclusion, in the Commissioners' recommendations, of machinery
for getting the other recommendations adopted; we saw, too, how cleverly
she man[oe]uvred to obtain wide publicity and discussion for the whole
subject. But this was not enough for her. She had created a favourable
atmosphere; she had provided suitable machinery; it remained to set the
wheels going round. "Reports are not self-executive": she applied her
words in this fresh direction; and, as in the case of the Home
Commission five years before, so now she gave not a moment's rest to
herself or to anybody else whom she could influence until reforms,
recommended by the Report, were set on foot.
Miss Nightingale was as eager, in as great a hurry to begin, as
determined to have her way, as before; but the difficulties were now
greater. In the case of the Home Army, only one department (though that,
to be sure, was a dual one) was concerned; in the case of Sanitary
measures for the Army in India, there were the India Office and the
Government of India to be considered as well as the War Office. And
everybody, who knows anything about public affairs, knows what it means
to the cause of prompt efficiency if departments begin wrangling with
each other. And then Miss Nightingale had no longer her "dear master."
Lord Stanley, the Chairman of the Indian Commission, was friendly, and
sincerely desirous to see things done; but he was not an enthusiast. His
temperament was cool; his judgment, critical. But, as I have already
said, he had a great belief in Miss Nightingale, and though she did not
always find him an easy man to drive, she did it. The moment the Report
was signed she was up and at him. He must do as Sidney Herbert did; that
is, go at once to Ministers and insist on immediate steps being taken to
put the recommendations of the Report into operation. Otherwise, all
their labour might dissolve in air. Lord Stanley proposed to wait and
see:--
(_Lord Stanley to Miss Nightingale._) _July_ 10, 1863. ... Do not
fear that Lord Herbert's work will be left unfinished: sanitary
ideas have taken root in the public mind, and they cannot be
treated as visionary. The test of experience is conclusive. The
ground that has been gained cannot be lost again.----_July_ 12....
The first step is to ask what the War and India departments will
do. If on consideration they consent to the appointment of the
commissions recommended with or without modification of our plan,
the thing is fairly started. I am inclined to believe that they
will be found willing. But we must give them time to read the
report. If they object to do anything, other methods may be tried.
We have friends in the Indian Council, and Lord de Grey is a
Sanitarist. I quite agree in what you say as to its being a duty to
help the ministry of the day in working out their plans.
Practically I have acted on this rule. Few matters pass in the
India Office that do not come before me. But such help cannot be
offered by an outsider--it must be asked by those who are
responsible. If Sir C. Wood desires assistance in giving effect to
the sanitary projects, I will not refuse it. There is ample time to
consider all this.
So Lord Stanley was waiting to be asked. Then it became Miss
Nightingale's business to contrive that he should be asked. She saw Lord
de Grey, begged him to go forthwith to the India Office, and to suggest
to Sir Charles Wood that he should talk matters over with Lord Stanley.
The thing was done:--
(_Lord Stanley to Miss Nightingale._) _July_ 24. I have had several
conversations with Sir C. Wood, and from the language he now holds,
I consider it settled that the report of the commissioners will be
acted upon--the W.O. Commission being enlarged for the purpose of
dealing with Indian questions. I have also arranged with him for
the settlement of all personal claims arising out of our
enquiry.[27] I hope, therefore, that we may look on our work as
done for the present. It is probable that difficulties will arise
out of the conflicting claims of the Indian and home authorities:
but these we must be prepared for, and deal with as they come
up. So far, all has gone well.
[27] Mr. Herbert had promised, but apparently only by word of mouth,
that the services rendered by Dr. Farr and Dr. Sutherland to the
Commission should be paid. Miss Nightingale was able to confirm the
promise.
The Duke of Newcastle wrote to her to like effect (Aug. 31): "The Report
on the Indian Army is attracting much attention, and I have no doubt it
will do a great deal of good, tho' there is supposed to be still a very
strong obstructive power in the India Office." For a time, it seemed as
if official measures would be taken with reasonable celerity. Two
members, to represent India, were added to the Barrack and Hospital
Improvement Commission. The Secretary for India sent a dispatch (Aug.
15) suggesting the formation of Sanitary Commissions as recommended in
the Report. Miss Nightingale was asked to draft a code of suggestions
which might be sent out to India. But soon there was a hitch. The
military element in the India Office quarrelled with the Report, and it
was intimated that there might be similar criticism from the military
element in the Government of India. The accuracy of Dr. Farr's
statistics was to be impugned; and it was to be objected that Miss
Nightingale's "Observations" did not in all cases reflect the present
state of the Indian stations. As if reports, which had taken and must
have taken months and months to collect, could possibly have been
brought up to the last moment! And as if the mere fact that such reports
had been called for was not likely to lead to some improvement! These
things need not detain us. They were, as Miss Nightingale put it, "the
Crimea over again," "these and those" protesting that things were not so
bad as they had been painted, and that in any case it was not A who was
to blame, but B. But meanwhile everything was hung up. Lord Stanley, the
Chairman of the Commission, whose Report was impugned, was in the
country. Miss Nightingale "urged and baited him" (so she described it)
to come up to London and return to the charge. He came in November, and
had an interview with her before seeing Sir Charles Wood.
II
And now an event occurred which was followed by results of consequence
to her cause. Lord Elgin, the Viceroy, while travelling in the
Himalayas, was stricken down by a heart complaint from which he was not
expected to recover. The question of a successor became urgent. The
minds of many turned to Sir John Lawrence, but, with one exception, no
Indian civilian since Warren Hastings had permanently held the office of
Viceroy. Miss Nightingale had unbounded admiration for him. The
soldier's heart in her loved his heroic deeds. "What would Homer have
been," she once said, "if he had had such heroes as the Lawrences to
sing?"[28] Personal intercourse had filled her with closer admiration
for what Lord Stanley called "a certain heroic simplicity" in the man,
for his unaffected piety, his rugged honesty, his deep sympathy with
human suffering. In later years a photograph of Watts's portrait of
Lawrence always hung in Miss Nightingale's room. At the moment with
which we are now concerned, she regarded him as the indispensable man
for India, not more on account of the threatening border war on the
north-west frontier (the consideration which doubtless most moved Lord
Palmerston), than on account of his sympathy with the cause of sanitary
reform. An opportunity came for putting in her word. Sir Charles Wood
consulted his predecessor at the India Office, and Lord Stanley in turn
talked matters over with Miss Nightingale. She urged him with fervent
eagerness to do everything in his power to promote the appointment of
Sir John Lawrence. Lord Elgin died on November 20. Lawrence was
appointed on November 30, and was to start for India immediately:--
(_Lord Stanley to Miss Nightingale._) _Dec._ 1. I saw Sir C. Wood
yesterday. The sanitary question was gone into, tho' not so fully
as I could have wished. Sir J. Lawrence's appointment is a great
step gained. He knows what is wanted, and has no prejudices in
favour of the existing military administration. I shall see him
to-night and shall probably be able to have some talk with him on
the subject. But why should not he see you? The plans are in the
main yours; no one can explain them better: you have been in
frequent correspondence with him. I believe there will now be but
little difficulty in India.... Let me repeat--you must manage to
see Sir John Lawrence. He does not go till the 10th. Your position
in respect of this whole subject is so peculiar that advice from
you will come with greater weight than from anyone else.
[28] Letter to Harriet Martineau (Feb. 2, 1865).
Miss Nightingale was among the first to offer congratulations to the new
Viceroy; the terms in which she addressed him expressed what she
sincerely and intensely believed:--
(_Miss Nightingale to Sir John Lawrence._) Among the multitude of
affairs and congratulations which will be pouring in upon you,
there is no more fervent joy, there are no stronger good wishes,
than those of one of the humblest of your servants. For there is no
greater position for usefulness under heaven than that of the
government of the vast Empire you saved for us. And you are the
only man to fill it. So thought a statesman with whom I worked not
daily, but hourly, for five years, Sidney Herbert--when the last
appointment was made. In the midst of your pressure pray think of
us, and of our sanitary things on which such millions of lives and
health depend.[29]
[29] From the _Life of Lord Lawrence_, by R. Bosworth Smith, 1885,
vol. ii. p. 278.
Prompted by Lord Stanley, Miss Nightingale asked the new Viceroy to
call. He was the first of a succession of high Indian officials who made
a point of coming to Miss Nightingale before leaving for their posts.
The interview took place on December 4. Miss Nightingale never forgot
either the interview itself or Lord Stanley's kindly anxiety that it
should take place. Thirty years later (Feb. 17, 1893), in sending
Aitchison's Memoir of Lord Lawrence to Sir Harry Verney, she wrote: "How
many touches--short but sweet--I could add to the book! The real tale of
Sir J. Lawrence's appointment as Viceroy will never be told. During the
only ten days left to Lawrence before he started, he came to see me. How
kind it was of Lord Stanley. He came like a footman to my door, and,
without giving his name, sent up to ask whether Sir John Lawrence was
coming. The interview was one never to be forgotten."
Sir John Lawrence discussed the sanitary question with Miss Nightingale
in all its bearings, and they exchanged views further by correspondence
before he left London:--
(_Miss Nightingale to Dr. Farr._) _Dec._ 10. I have had the great joy
of being in constant communication with Sir John Lawrence, and of
receiving his commands to do what I had almost lost the hope of
being allowed to do--viz. of sending out full statements and
schemes of what we want the Presidency Commissions to do. I should
be glad to submit to you copies of papers of mine which he desired
me to write and which he took out with him, as to the constitution
of the Presidency Commissions, if you care to see them. They are,
of course, confidential. I have also seen Lord Stanley more than
once during these busy days. And with Sir John Lawrence's command,
we feel ourselves empowered to begin the Home Commission,[30] and
to further our plans upon it. Sir John Lawrence, so far from
considering our Report exaggerated, considers it under the mark.
[30] That is the Barrack and Hospital Improvement Commission (Army
Sanitary Committee), reinforced by India Office representatives,
which was to issue Sanitary Suggestions for the Government of India.
Thus was preparation made for putting the Report into execution in
India. During Lawrence's Viceroyalty, Sir Bartle Frere was governor of
Bombay. "Men used to say," he told Miss Nightingale, "that they always
knew when the Viceroy had received a letter from Florence Nightingale:
it was like the ringing of a bell to call for sanitary progress."
III
Within a month of his arrival in India, Sir John Lawrence had set the
Sanitary Commissions on foot, and nothing was wanting except hints and
instructions from home:--
(_Sir John Lawrence to Miss Nightingale._) CALCUTTA, _Feb._ 5
[1864]. I write a line to say that we have commenced work by
establishing our Sanitary Committees for Calcutta, Madras, and
Bombay. They are composed of five members. A Civilian is at their
head, and a Medical Officer as Secretary. I hope that you will
expedite the transmission to India of the codes and rules and plans
which have been approved of for home and the colonies. We shall
then have an idea in a practical shape of the main features of the
sanitary system, and can readily adapt it to the peculiar
circumstances of the country. Without such a guide we shall often
be perhaps working in direct opposition to your views. Where we
differ, it will become our duty to set forth the grounds for so
doing, in sending our plans and reports home. Pray excuse this
hurried scrawl, and believe me, Sincerely yours, JOHN LAWRENCE.
It was not Miss Nightingale's fault that this plea for expedition was
necessary. In December 1863 Lord de Grey had again asked her to draft a
letter to the India Office, as from the War Office, on the measures
recommended by the Royal Commission, and she had done it. But days,
weeks, months passed, and nothing happened. In January 1864 her
"Suggestions in regard to Sanitary Works required for the Improvement of
Indian Stations,"[31] written at the urgent request of the
Governor-General, were ready, Dr. Sutherland, Dr. Farr, and
Mr. Rawlinson collaborating with her. Again months passed and nothing
happened. The Barrack and Hospital Improvement Committee had been
officially informed in December of the appointment of the Indian
members, and requested to report on any matters which might be referred
to it by the Secretary for India or the Secretary for War; but as yet no
Indian reference had been made. Miss Nightingale chafed sorely at the
needless delay. The Governor-General wrote to her again and again
pressing for the Suggestions. She had done her part long ago; the War
Office had been in possession of her Draft for months. She tried plain
pressure, and pressure barbed with sarcasm. "Poor man!" she wrote in
forwarding to the War Office one of the Governor-General's letters
(March 10); "he really expects despatch. He thinks we can write a letter
in three months! He must be more fit for a Lunatic Asylum than for a
Governor-Generalship." Or, when the Government had been having a close
division in the House,[32] she tried to play the India Office against
the War Office. "You will all be 'out' this session," she wrote to the
War Office (March 7, 1864); "after which I shall be able to get what I
like from Lord Stanley [I.O.], but _you_ will not be able to get what
you like from Gen. Peel [W.O.]. It is therefore very desirable that this
letter should be written now at once while you are still 'in.'" It
turned out that the reason of the delay was this: the War Office _had_
sent a preliminary letter to the India Office, and the India Office
resented it. Sir Charles Wood, it was explained to Miss Nightingale, had
"snubbed" Lord de Grey. The War Office was sulking in its tents
accordingly. The India Office, on its part, was standing on its dignity,
and was not going to place itself in the humiliating position of taking
action proposed to it by the War Office. And this was the reason why
Miss Nightingale's Suggestions, for which the Governor-General was
asking, were still pigeon-holed. As for minor recommendations in the
Royal Commission's Report, it was quite true that many of them could be
carried out by administrative order, and some of them were; but the
difficulty in the case of others was that it had hitherto passed the wit
of man to discover with whom the power, or the responsibility, of making
the order lay. Well may Miss Nightingale have written, as she did in
more than one letter of this time (Jan. 1864): "No impression in all my
life was ever 'borne in upon me' more strongly than this, that the
Ministers have never considered the respective jurisdictions of the W.O.
and the I.O., and that I.O., W.O., Horse Guards at home,
Commander-in-Chief in India, Governor-General in India are as little
defined as to the respective powers and duties as if India were the
Sandwich Islands."
[31] Bibliography A, No. 24.
[32] On March 1, on a debate on the Yeomanry, the majority had been 1.
On the major matter, the dispatch of sanitary suggestions to guide the
Indian authorities, Miss Nightingale now resolved that the delay should
come to an end. She had drafted an ultimatum to the War Office,
threatening an attack in the House of Commons, when Lord Stanley, a
prominent member of the Opposition, appeared on the scene. He had
forewarned Miss Nightingale, as we have heard, that departmental
jealousies would cause some delay; but seven months had now passed since
the Report of his Commission had been issued, and he seems to have
thought that this was time enough to allow for the two offices to let
off steam between themselves. He wrote to Miss Nightingale suggesting
that he should come to see her, and offering, if she approved, to put
pressure either upon Lord de Grey or upon Sir Charles Wood. Miss
Nightingale loyally gave her friends at the War Office a last chance,
but they did not care to take it. Lord Stanley saw Sir Charles Wood
accordingly, promised him parliamentary support in any action which he
might take, and matters were at last arranged. Miss Nightingale's draft
"Suggestions" were submitted to the Barrack and Hospital Improvement
Commission, and with slight alterations were adopted by that body. It
was a War Office Commission, but the dignity of the India Office was
consulted by the statement on the title-page of the Blue-book, that the
Suggestions had been prepared by the said Commission "in accordance with
Letters from the Secretary of State for India in Council." The fact was
that they were prepared by Miss Nightingale in accordance with the
wishes of Sir John Lawrence.
When once the "Suggestions" had been passed officially, it was within
her power, by the simple expedient of laying in a stock of early copies,
to prevent a moment's further delay. She used the power; and could not
deny herself a few genial taunts at her official friends. "I beg to
inform you," she wrote to Captain Galton at the War Office (Aug. 8),
"that by the first mail after signature I sent off by H.M.'s book-post,
at an enormous expense (I have a good mind to charge it to you!), to Sir
John Lawrence direct no end of copies of _Suggestions_ (also to the
Presidency Commissions); and that, as he is always more ready to hear
than you are to pray (you sinners!), I have not the least doubt that
they will have been _put in execution_ long before the India Office has
even begun to send them."[33] She was not far wrong; six or seven weeks
elapsed before the official copies were sent,[34] and meanwhile Miss
Nightingale was able to get in another gibe. She heard from Sir John
Lawrence that he had ordered the _Suggestions_ to be reprinted in India.
"It might be as well," she wrote to the War Office, "to hurry your
copies for the India Office, who will otherwise receive them first from
India."
[33] This was no idle taunt. The Government of India had already put in
force some of the recommendations of the Royal Commission before it
had officially received copies of the Report: see above, p. 34 and
_n._
[34] Miss Nightingale conducted a secret inquiry, which would have done
credit to a detective-inspector, into the causes of this delay.
According to "information received," the first cause was that the
final printing order was delayed while communications went to and
fro between the War Office and the India Office upon the number of
copies required. Then the supply ultimately ordered by the latter
passed leisurely from one sub-department to another. Finally, the
stock reposed a while at a warehouse across the water, until there
were sufficient official papers to fill certain regulation cases of
a regulation size.
IV
In India itself, advance, with Sir John Lawrence at the helm, was rapid.
The President and the Secretary of each Sanitary Commission were
required to devote their whole attention to the work. They were charged
to "consider and afford advice and assistance in all matters relative to
the health of the Army, and to supervise the gradual introduction of
sanitary improvements in Barracks, Hospitals, and Stations, as well as
in Towns in proximity to Military Stations." Of every step taken, Miss
Nightingale was kept informed. Sir John wrote to her frequently to
report progress; he described to her the condition of all the Stations
he had inspected on his way up to Simla; he applied to her for
information on special points. His private secretary, Dr. Hathaway, who
also had seen Miss Nightingale before he left England, wrote yet more
fully and frequently. The President of the Bengal Commission was
Mr. Strachey.[35] He, too, had made Miss Nightingale's acquaintance, and
they corresponded at great length. Dr. J. P. Walker, a surgeon in the
Indian Army, was in England in December 1863. He wrote to Miss
Nightingale, as a devoted follower of her school. He went out to India,
was appointed Secretary of the Bengal Commission, and at every stage
consulted her and reported to her. Mr. R. J. Ellis, President of the
Madras Commission, and Dr. Leith, President of the Bombay one, also
corresponded with her. To any official in India, from the
Governor-General downwards, who was ready to listen, Miss Nightingale
had much to say. The correspondence with Sir John Lawrence is the most
interesting:--
(_Sir John Lawrence to Miss Nightingale._) SIMLEH, _June_ 12
[1864]. It was truly kind of you to write and give me so nice an
account of my children.... What an exciting time must Garibaldi's
visit to England have been. He is indeed a noble fellow, and fully
worthy of all our sympathies. I only trust that he will be
persuaded to keep quiet and bide his time. A good day for his
country, if the people only deserve it, must surely come. I am
doing what I can to put things in order out here; but it is a very
uphill work, and many influences have to be managed and overcome. I
often think of the last visit I paid you before leaving England and
of your conversation on that occasion. You will recollect how much
I dwelt on the difficulties which meet one on every side. These
have been exemplified in a way I could scarcely understand or
anticipate, by the good folks of England really believing that I
had sanctioned an attack on the religion of the Hindoos, because I
desired to improve the health of the people in Calcutta!
[35] John Strachey (1823-1907); afterwards Chief Commissioner of
Oudh, Lieut.-Governor of the N.W. Provinces, financial member of
the Governor-General's Council; knighted, 1872; G.C.S.I., 1878; and
member of the Secretary of State's Council.
(_Miss Nightingale to Sir John Lawrence._) 32 SOUTH STREET, _Sept._
26 [1864]. MY DEAR SIR JOHN LAWRENCE--I always feel it a kind of
presumption in me to write to you--and a kind of wonder at your
permitting it. I always feel that you are the greatest figure in
history, and yours the greatest work in history, in modern times.
But that is my very reason. We have but one Sir John Lawrence. Your
Bengal Sanitary Commission is doing its work, like men--like
martyrs, in fact,--and what a work it is! All we have in Europe is
mere child's play to it. Health is the product of civilization,
_i.e._ of real civilization. In Europe we have a kind of
civilization to proceed upon. In India your work represents, not
only diminished Mortality as with us, but increase of energy,
increase of power of the populations. I always feel, as if God had
said: mankind is to create mankind. In this sense you are the
greatest creator of mankind in modern history....
Would there be any impropriety in your Sanitary Commissions sending
copies of their printed Minutes to the Barrack and Hospital
Improvement Commission here, through the India Office--merely for
information? As far as your Bengal Commission goes: these men don't
want urging: they have not now to be taught. Anything which might
even appear to interfere with the responsibilities of your
Commissions, unless at their own request, is not only undesirable:
but, as far as the Bengal Comm^n. is concerned, useless. But, if
you saw no objection to sending the Minutes for information to the
War Office Commission here, I am sure they would very much like it.
Or, if that would be too formal and official (as regards the India
Office here), if they, the Minutes, might be sent to me, with
permission to shew them to one or two, such as Lord Stanley (our
late Chairman of the Royal Commission), Dr. Sutherland, and Capt.
Galton, of the War Office, &c., it would answer the same purpose.
The India Office here does not shew _now_ the least jealousy of the
Barrack and Hosp^l. (War Office) Commission. On the contrary, one
can scarcely help smiling at the small things it is glad to throw
off its responsibility for upon said Commission.
There are three glaring (tho' lesser) evils in Calcutta about which
I know you have been employed--lesser tho' they are--and your
attention and Dr. Hathaway's have been aroused by them. These are:
(1) The Police Hospitals (or state of Hosp^l. accommodation) for
sick poor at Calcutta. The Police establishments seem about as bad
as possible. Indeed the poor wretches are brought in mostly to die.
The Parisian system of relief is very good: every Police station at
Paris has means of temporary help in cases of emergency until the
sufferers can be removed to Hospital. Some such arrangement with a
thorough reform of the Hospitals, and such additional accommodation
as may be wanted, might meet Calcutta's case.
(2) The condition of Jails and Lunatic Asylums in India. Certainly
it is not for me to draw your attention or Dr. Hathaway's to this.
Probably he knows more about them than any man living. The reports
and recommendations of one or two of the Jail Inspectors shew that
they want experience: as I am sure Dr. Hathaway will agree with me.
Perhaps we might help you by sending out such Reports on the
subject as may be useful.
(3) The seamen at the great Ports. You have already done so much.
But Rome can't be built in a day. Bad water, bad food bought in
Bazaars, and bad drinks cause a vast amount of disease and death.
Self-supporting Institutions, such as our Sailors' Homes (of which,
indeed, I believe you have already founded more than one), would
give the men wholesome food and drink, and lodgings and day-rooms
at little cost. So many men perish for want of this kind of
accommodation at Calcutta, where the evil seems greatest.
It seems to me so base to be writing while you are doing. Oh that I
could come out to Calcutta and organize at least the Hospital
accommodation for the poor wretches in the streets. There is
nothing I should like so much. But it is nonsense to wish for what
is an impossibility. I am sure you will be glad to hear that one of
my life-long wishes, viz. the nursing of Workhouse Infirmaries by
proper Nurses, is about to be fulfilled. By the munificence of a
Liverpool man (who actually gives £1200 a year for the object, but
desires not to be named), we undertake next month the Liverpool
Workhouse Infirmary (of 1000 beds)--the first Workhouse that ever
has been nursed--with 15 Head Nurses, trained by ourselves, and a
Lady (Volunteer) Matron (who underwent a most serious course of
training at our Nurses' School at St. Thomas' Hospital), 15
Assistants, and 52 ex-pauper women, whom we are to train as
Nurses.[36] I am sure it is not for us to talk of Civilization. For
I have seen, in our English Workhouse Infirmaries, neglect,
cruelty, and malversation such as can scarcely be surpassed in
semi-barbarous countries. And it was then I felt I must found a
school for Nurses for Workhouses, &c. The opportunity has come too
late for me to do the Workhouse Nursing myself. But, so it is well
done, we care not how. I think with the greatest satisfaction upon
your re-union with Lady Lawrence and (some of) your children. God
bless you.--I am yours devotedly, FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE.
_P.S._--The Calcutta Municipality does not seem yet to have wakened
up to a sense of its existence. It does not know that it exists:
much less, what it exists for. Still, you are conquering India anew
by civilization, taking possession of the Empire for the first time
by knowledge instead of by the sword.--F. N.
[36] On this subject, see below, p. 128.
The Commander-in-Chief in India, Sir Hugh Rose (Lord Strathnairn) was
hardly less helpful in the cause than the Governor-General. The War
Office had sent to him, through the Horse Guards, a letter inviting his
attention to the regimental recommendations in the Royal Commission's
Report. His reply was most sympathetic, and his period of command was
marked, amongst other things, by two reforms specially near to Miss
Nightingale's desires: he introduced regimental workshops and soldiers'
gardens in cantonments. The War Office forwarded his letter to Miss
Nightingale. "It is quite worth while," she wrote in reply (Aug. 11,
1864), "all that has been suffered,--to have this letter from Sir Hugh
Rose. And I forgive everybody everything." "I sing for joy every day,"
she had written previously (June 6), "at Sir John Lawrence's
Government." She made public thanksgiving. To the Social Science
Congress at Edinburgh in October 1863, she had contributed a paper,
entitled, "How People may Live and not Die in India," in which she gave,
in concise and popular form, a _résumé_ of the Royal Commission's
Report. The reading of her paper had been followed by "Three Cheers for
Florence Nightingale." She now (Aug. 1864) republished the Paper, with a
Preface, in which, as it were, she gave "Three Cheers for Sir John
Lawrence." She described how the Commissions of Health had been
appointed in India, and how they had now been put in possession of all
the more recent results of sanitary works and measures which had been of
use at home. Then she turned to the military authorities, and described
how "several of the worst personal causes of ill-health to which the
soldier was in former times exposed have been, or are being, removed."
"The men," she wrote, "have begun to find out that it is better to work
than to sleep and drink, even during the heat of the day. One regiment
marching into a Station, where cholera had been raging for two years,
were chaffed by the regiments marching out, and told they would never
come out of it alive. The men of the entering battalion answered, they
would see; we _won't_ have cholera, they think. And they made gardens
with such good effect that they had the pleasure, not only of eating
their own vegetables, but of being paid for them too by the
Commissariat. And this in a soil which no regiment had been able to
cultivate before. And not a man had cholera. These good soldiers fought
against disease, too, by workshops and gymnasia."[37] She gave account
of trades, savings' banks, games, libraries; noting what had been done
and what yet remained to be done. "In the meantime the regulation two
drams have been reduced to one. A Legislative Act imposes a heavy fine
or imprisonment on the illicit sale of spirits near cantonments. Where
there _are_ recreation rooms, refreshments (prices all marked) are
spread on a nice clean table." All these things, which in 1864 were new
or exceptional, became in later years well-established and the rule. The
main causes of disease among the Army in India were, however, as Miss
Nightingale went on to say, want of drainage, want of proper
water-supply, want of proper barracks and hospitals. But in these
respects she had set the reformers to a work which has continued from
that day to this.
[37] This incident was told in Sir Hugh Rose's letter.
There was, indeed, some criticism at the start, but this touched only
the past, and did not seriously affect the future. Indian officials felt
aggrieved, as I have already said, at the strictures contained in the
Report of the Royal Commission, and this movement came to a head in two
documents--one, a counter-Report by Dr. Leith, the Chairman of the
Bombay Sanitary Commission (Oct. 1864); the other, a dispatch (Dec. 8)
from the Government of India (Sir John Lawrence on an important point
dissenting). Lord Stanley thought that Dr. Leith ought to be answered at
once, and wrote to Miss Nightingale (Oct. 25) for her advice on the
subject. She suggested that the answer should be sent in the form of a
Report on Dr. Leith's letter by the Barrack and Hospital Improvement
Commission--an ingenious plan, as it gave opportunity to that expert
body for giving further advice to one of the Presidency Commissions.
Miss Nightingale and Dr. Sutherland drafted the Report, which was
adopted by the Commission on January 6, 1865. "I have pleasure," wrote
Lord Stanley to her (Dec. 26), "in sending back the draft reply to Dr.
Leith with only one or two verbal amendments suggested. It seems to me
well done, moderate in tone, and conclusive in argument." A reply to the
Indian Government's Dispatch, signed by Lord Stanley, Dr. Farr, and Dr.
Sutherland, was sent on May 20. Miss Nightingale in her eagerness was
much annoyed by these criticisms,[38] and Lord Stanley often told her
that she made too much of what were only temporary ebullitions. "Don't
be discouraged, dear Miss Nightingale," he wrote (Jan. 22) when the
Government of India's dispatch arrived; "the practical work may go on
while the controversy is proceeding. My idea of the matter is that the
Indian authorities only want time to set things a little in order--that
they are willing to mend, but not inclined to give us the credit of
having first put them in the right way. That is human nature." Lord
Stanley was a true prophet. The Indian authorities did mend; and so
successfully has the work been carried out by a long line of Commanders,
Administrators, and Engineers that the death-rate from preventable
disease among the British Army in India has fallen far below the figure
which the Royal Commission named as a counsel of perfection.[39]
[38] If any reader should desire to follow up the criticisms and the
replies, he will find the Reply to Dr. Leith in Parliamentary
Papers, 1865, No. 329; and the Government of India's dispatch
with the Reply, in Nos. 108 and 324. Dr. Leith's Report does not
appear to have been reprinted as a Parliamentary Paper. A copy of
it, printed at Bombay, 1864, is among Miss Nightingale's papers.
[39] The Commission looked forward to a rate of not more than 10 per
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