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Various - Who was Edith Cavell? A Collection of Essays Celebrating the Great British Nurse

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WHO WAS EDITH CAVELL A COLLECTION OF ESSAYS CELEBRATING THE GREAT BRITISH - photo 1
WHO WAS EDITH CAVELL A COLLECTION OF ESSAYS CELEBRATING THE GREAT BRITISH - photo 2
WHO WAS
EDITH CAVELL?
A COLLECTION OF
ESSAYS CELEBRATING
THE GREAT BRITISH NURSE
By
VARIOUS
Copyright 2021 Brilliant Women This edition is published by Brilliant Women an - photo 3
Copyright 2021 Brilliant Women
This edition is published by Brilliant Women,
an imprint of Read & Co.
This book is copyright and may not be reproduced or copied in any
way without the express permission of the publisher in writing.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available
from the British Library.
Read & Co. is part of Read Books Ltd.
For more information visit
www.readandcobooks.co.uk
Contents
EDITH CAVELL
By George Edwa rd Woodberry
THE STORY OF EDITH CAVELL
By Ri chard Wilson
A NOBLE WOMAN
By Erne st Protheroe
THE CASE OF EDITH CAVELL
By J ames M. Beck
EDITH CAVELL
A Lecture by Maurice Maeterlinck
EDITH CAVELL
By George Edward Woodberry
THE world hath its own dead; great motions start
In human breasts, and make for them a place
In that hushed sanctuary of the race
Where every day men come, kneel, and depart.
Of them, O English nurse, henceforth thou art,
A name to pray on, and to all a face
Of household consecration; such His grace
Whose universal dwelling is the heart
O gentle hands that soothed the sol dier's brow,
And knew no service save of Christ the Lord!
Thy country now is all humanity!
How like a flower thy womanho od doth show
In the harsh scything of the German sword,
And beautifies the world that saw it die!
A poem from
A Treasury of War Poetry - British and American Poems of the World War , 1917
Nurse Cavell with her Fa vourite Dogs Who was Edith Cavell THE STORY OF - photo 4
Nurse Cavell with her Favourite Dogs
Who was Edith Cavell?
THE STORY
OF EDITH CAVELL
By Richard Wilson
There is a lofty, snow-clad peak in the Canadian Rockies which is known by the name of Mount Edith Cavell. It was named in the year 1915 to enshrine the memory of a noble woman who laid down her life for the love of humanity. She was an English patriot, but, as we shall see as we go on with her story, she was much mor e than that.
Edith Cavell was a hospital nurse who was trained in London and went to Belgium in 1900 to take charge of a training school for nurses in a suburb of Brussels. She threw herself into her work with great devotion and in a few years made it a real success. Then the war began and the Germans marched into Brussels as victors; but Miss Cavell was allowed to stay at h er hospital.
The Germans seemed to know that she might be useful even to their own men; and they were not mistaken. The course of events brought many German wounded to Brussels and these men received the same care as the Belgian wounded. All hurt or sick men were the same to Edith Cavell, and her one aim was to get them well again.
After the retreat from Mons and from Namur, a number of French and English soldiers were cut off from the main army and were left behind91 in Belgium. These men hid themselves in the woods or in the ruins of shattered towns, watching for an opportunity to escape either into France or Holland. Some of them were captured by the Germans, and many were shot at once without any form of trial. Others were taken care of by the country people and many stories could be told, and probably will be told in the future, of the adventures of these refugees in the ir own land.
There were many Belgians, too, who had been left behind after the earlier battles of the war, and these poor fugitives in their native land had the same experiences. Some were taken and instantly shot; others were dressed in civilian clothing and given work on the land, and when the chance came were helped across the frontier into Holland. Many were shot by the German guards as they made their last dash for freedom across the barbed-wire fence which marked off Holland f rom Belgium.
There was constant movement among the English, French, and Belgians to get away. Many of them had been brought into touch with Miss Cavell at one or other of her hospitals and they seem to have begged for her help. She had means of helping them and she did not hesitate to use them. She did not count the cost to herself. Here were men who, if taken, would most probably be shot out of hand. What could a good woman do but help them to escape? She would thereby break the German military law, but she would be faithful to the higher law of kindness.
It was afterwards told against her by the Germans that she helped 130 men to leave Belgium. We do not know whether this number is correct, but if it were halved the record would still be a proud one.
After a time the Germans began to be suspicious of Miss Cavell. Spies were ordered to watch her. One of these men, it is said, went to ask her to help him to leave the country; she listened to his story, promised to help him, and then in accordance with his duty he betrayed her to his higher officers. She was made a prisoner on the 5th of August 1915.
In the military prison she was closely confined and no one was allowed to see her. She was considered a most dangerous person, as indeed she was when it was a question of mercy and pity before obedience to a brutal law. The Germans tell that she made no effort to hide or excuse the fact that she had helped men to escape from the country. She had acted as she did, knowing full well that she was breaking the rule of the Germans. It was said that she fully expected to be caught some day and to suffer punishment, but that she thought it would take the form of imprisonment for a time.
There was living in Brussels at this time a Mr. Brand Whitlock who was American Minister, that is to say, he was in charge of American affairs in Belgium. As soon as he heard that Miss Cavell had been arrested, he wrote to the German officers and did all he could to get a fair trial for the lady. The Germans said that no one would be allowed to see Miss Cavell, but that she should have a trial in accordance with the so ldiers law.
Mr. Whitlock was told that Miss Cavell had said that she was guilty; that she had hidden in her house French, English, and Belgians who were anxious to get away from Belgium; and that she had given them money and other help, sometimes providing guides to conduct them to t he frontier.
Her trial began on the 7th October, and thirty-four other prisoners were tried with her. The language used in the court was German, and when a question was put to Miss Cavell it was translated into French, with which she was familiar. She was allowed to have a lawyer to speak in her defence, but she did not see him until the day of the trial, so that his help was of no great service to her. She had, however, confessed her fault, so that it did not matter. She probably thought of cases in English military history where women had been found guilty of military offences and had been imprisoned; and the punishment seemed light when she thought of the young lives that she had saved and of the mothers and sisters and sweethearts who would bless her name until thei r dying day.
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