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CHAPTER 5 Florence Nightingale’s Legacy of Caring and Its Applications 45

Welch, 1986; Widerquist, 1992; Slater, 1994;
Calabria & Macrae, 1994; Macrae, 1995).
There were four miles of beds in the Barrack
Hospital at Scutari, a suburb of Constantinople. A
letter to the London Timesdated February 24, 1855,
reported the following:


When all the medical officers have retired for the
night and silence and darkness have settled upon
those miles of prostrate sick, she may be observed,
alone with a little lamp in her hand, making her
solitary rounds (Kalisch & Kalisch, 1987).

In April 1855, after having been in Scutari for six
months, Florence wrote to her mother, “[A]m in
sympathy with God, fulfilling the purpose I came
into the world for” (Woodham-Smith, 1983, p. 97).
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow authored “Santa
Filomena” to commemorate Miss Nightingale.


Lo! In That House of Misery
A lady with a lamp I see
Pass through the glimmering gloom
And flit from room to room
And slow as if in a dream of bliss
The speechless sufferer turns to kiss
Her shadow as it falls
Upon the darkening walls
As if a door in heaven should be
Opened and then closed suddenly
The vision came and went
The light shone and was spent.
A lady with a lamp shall stand
In the great history of the land
A noble type of good
Heroic womanhood
(Longfellow, cited in Dolan, 1971, p. 5).

Miss Nightingale slipped home quietly, arriving
at Lea Hurst in Derbyshire on August 7, 1856, after
22 months in the Crimea and after sustained illness
from which she was never to recover; after ceaseless
work; and after witnessing suffering, death, and
despair that would haunt her for the remainder of
her life. Her hair was shorn; she was pale and drawn
(Figure 5–4). She took her family by surprise. The
next morning, a peal of the village church bells
and a prayer of Thanksgiving were, her sister wrote,
“‘all the innocent greeting’ except for those pro-
vided by the spoils of war that had proceeded her—
a one-legged sailor boy, a small Russian orphan,
and a large puppy found in some rocks near
Balaclava. All England was ringing with her name,


but she had left her heart on the battlefields of the
Crimea and in the graveyards of Scutari” (Huxley,
1975, p. 147).

Introducing the Theory


In watching disease, both in private homes and
public hospitals, the thing which strikes the expe-
rienced observer most forcefully is this, that the
symptoms or the sufferings generally considered to be
inevitable and incident to the disease are very often
not symptoms of the disease at all, but of some-
thing quite different—of the want of fresh air, or
light, or of warmth, or of quiet, or of cleanliness, or of

FIGURE 5–4 A rare photograph of Florence taken on her re-
turn from the Crimea. Although greatly weakened by her illness,
she refused to accept her friends’ advice to rest, and pressed on
relentlessly with her plans to reform the army medical services.
From Elspeth Huxley, Florence Nightingale (1975), p. 139, G. P.
Putnam’s Sons, New York.
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