[170] See Bibliography B, No. 15.
[171] Robert Robinson, on his return to England, was sent to school and an agricultural college by Miss Nightingale, and obtained employment on Lord Berners's estate in Scotland. Miss Nightingale was constantly befriending him, e.g. in paying his expenses for a visit to London to see the Exhibition of 1862, and in sending him illustrated newspapers, and even the Times. There was another Crimean lad, besides Tommy, one William Jones, with a wooden leg. See below, p. [304], where account is also given of another protégé, Peter.
[172] See, e.g., below, pp. [317], [488], and Vol. II. p. [411].
[173] Found among the Prince Consort's papers, and printed in Sir Theodore Martin's Life of him, vol. iii. p. 214.
[174] Letter on the Volunteers, 1861. See Bibliography A, No. 25.
[175] Panmure Papers, vol. i. p. 215.
[176] Blackwood, p. 115.
[177] Memoirs of Lady Eastlake, vol. ii. p. 44.
[178] She was especially pleased when in March 1856 her name appeared for the first time in General Orders; see below, p. [293].