第80部分(第1/8 页)
passing away; and so forth。
I had never taken a major anaesthetic before; and I must say I did not find the process pleasant。 I can still see the face of my friend Dr。 Lyne Stivens; and the jovial; rubicund countenance of the late Professor Rose; bending over me as through a mist; both grown so strangely solemn; and feel the grip of my hand tightening upon that of the nurse which afterwards it proved almost impossible to free。
Then came the whirling pit and the blackness。 I suppose that it was like death; only I hope that death is not quite so dark!
From this blackness I awoke in a state of utter intoxication to find the nurses of the establishment gathered round me with sheets of paper and the familiar; hateful autograph books in which; even in that place and hour; they insisted I should write。 Heaven knows what I set down therein: I imagine they must have been foolish words; which mayhap one day will be brought up against me。
Another question: Why cannot the public authorities establish really suitable nursing homes for paying patients? This would be a great boon to thousands; and; I should imagine; self…supporting。
However; of one of these nurses at any rate; a widow; I have grateful recollections。 I amused myself; and; I trust; her; by reading “Ayesha” aloud to her during my long wakeful hours — for she was a night nurse。
This book “Ayesha;” which was published while I was in the nursing home; is a sequel to “She;” which; in o