Volume 1
The life of Florence Nightingale. Vol. II (1862-1910) / Sir Edward Cook.
- Cook, Sir Edward Tyas, 1857-1919.
- Date:
- 1913
Licence: In copyright
Credit: The life of Florence Nightingale. Vol. II (1862-1910) / Sir Edward Cook. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Library & Archives Service. The original may be consulted at London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Library & Archives Service.
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![article, see Vol. I. p. 87 n,). The third describes the work of a Sanitary Commissioner in normal times with special reference to Bombay. Both the second and the third articles close with panegyrics of Lord Lawrence. (98) Letter on Co-operation in India. Printed at pp. 219-221 of the Journal of the National Indian Association, May 1879. (99) Irrigation and Water Transit in India. Three articles in the Illustrated London News, May 10, 24, 31. (100) Can we educate Education in India to educate Men ? Three articles in the Journal of the National Indian Association, August, September, October 1879, pp. 417-430, 478-491, 527-558. 1880 (101) In Memoriam. A card (pp. 4), from F. P. V. and F. N. in memory of Frances and William Edward Nightingale (F. N.'s mother and father). The card was composed by F. N., whose choice of texts, etc., was characteristic—e.g. Live for Him : then come life, come death, we are His. God help us to use ourselves more entirely for Him in our work. (102) Woman Slavery in Natal. A letter from Miss Nightin- gale (dated Nov. 22, 1879) to Mr. James Heywood, printed in the Aborigines' Friend, April 1880. (103) Hospitals and Patients. An article put into type for the Nineteenth Century of September 1880, but not used. 1881 (104) Letter from Florence Nightingale, May 6, 1881 [to the Nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital]. Lithographed, pp. 16. 1882 (105) Hints and Suggestions on Thrift. A paper printed in a monthly journal entitled Thrift, January 1882, p. 4. (106) Training of Nurses and Nursing the Sick. Articles occupy- ing pp. 1038-1043, 1043-1049 of Quain's Dictionary of Medicine. Copies of Miss Nightingale's article were separately struck off, as a pamphlet (without wrapper), pp. 12. In later editions of the Dictionary the articles were revised by Florence Nightingale Boyd. Extracts from the original articles were printed on a card for use in the Salisbury Infirmary, 1902. (107) Infection. By Sir J. Clarke Jervoise, Bart., with Remarks by Miss Nightingale. Second edition. London : Vacher & Sons, 1882. Pamphlet, in blue paper wrappers, pp. 63. Miss Nightingale's remarks, at pp. 62, 63, were on the first edition of the pamphlet (published anonymously in 1867). They are an attack on the germ hypothesis.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21352173_002_0488.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)