Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Reminiscences of Dr. J. Marion Sims in Paris
Early one morning in the latter part of October, 1861, the year the War of Secession broke out, I was going to the hospital, and, as I was about to enter the gate, my attention was attracted at once by the face and appear ance of a man who was coming toward the gate also, but from the opposite direction. T hat the face and appear ance struck me at once will readily be believed by all those who have had the happiness of knowing our great American surgeon. Its characteristic soft and sweet ex pression, together with his deep-set, bright eyes and prominent, bushy eyebrows, the half smiling expression of his mouth, left uncovered by the absence of mustache or beard, made a much deeper impression on me than a glance ordinarily produces. I also at once recognized that he was a foreigner, and no Englishman at that, but surely and unmistakably an American, perhaps, hastily thought my young rebel heart, a Southerner; he must be that, I thought immediately afterward, because he looked so gentle and good, and yet, withal, so firm and self reliant. All this took but a few seconds, and I con tinned my course toward the ward to which I was as signed, walking through the yards with another student and the stranger coming up behind. When I reached the door of my ward I went through and closed it it was soon opened again and closed turning around I noticed my American. The doctor told me later that at the foot of the stairs the other student went in another direction than I, and he was perplexed for a moment as to which one he would follow after a little hesitation he said to himself Well, I think I Will stick to the little one. The little one was myself.
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