[99] St. John's House: a Record, p. 8.
[100] W. E. Henley, In Hospital.
[101] Memories of the Crimea, by Sister Mary Aloysius, p. 17. The “frightful scarf” was a plain band worn, I suppose, over one arm and under the other.
[102] Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps (Bibliography B, No. 52), p. 393.
[103] The manuscript of this document is preserved among the archives of the War Office. The text of these, “the earliest rules defining the position and duties of a female nurse in any military hospital,” has been printed elsewhere (Bibliography B, No. 52).
[104] Especially by Lord Stanmore in his Memoir of Sidney Herbert. He handles it, I think, with some needless asperity, and he might have mentioned Mr. Herbert's letter which is here quoted.
[106] It was Mr. Bracebridge who took the notes of the interview.
[107] Miss Nightingale made some criticisms in an official letter to the War Office, May 1, 1855; printed at pp. 389, 390 of the pamphlet No. 52 in Bibliography B. And in another letter (March 5) she begged Lord Panmure to relieve her of responsibility for the hospitals at Koulali.
[108] In an appendix to the second edition (1880) of his Memorials of Edward and Catherine Stanley.