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I am lifted by two nurses; (I hear them talk to each other) and stare at each in turn with my blind eyes, hoping they won't drop me. They lay me on a trolley, and then push me on the trolley past others, and voices and sounds coming and going. Where are we going ? I ask. To see Doctor Quinn, he wants to see how the leg stumps are healing, a nurse says close to me. How are my stumps? I ask. They seem to be healing quite well, a nurse says, but the doctor wants to see for himself. I lie quiet after that and we enter a warmer room, and I grab sounds as I pass trying to make a picture in my mind about where we are. We come to a standstill, and a man's voice says: ah, Miss Meadows, I am Doctor Quinn, I am here to examine your leg stumps to see how they are healing. I say nothing; I just nod my head, and wait. I sense his fingers unwrap the bandages, and I feel his fingers near my skin; he removes the bandages, and fresh air hits my skin. Yes they look fine, he says, his fingers touch me, lifts the stumps one after the other: I think we can soon decide about maybe artificial legs. Artificial legs? I say, imagining god knows what. You will need to learn how to walk again in a sense of course, he says, but it will come and we will have you on your feet again I am sure, he says, but it will be a time as there is a huge demand at the moment in wartime for them as you can appreciate, he adds, not giving me a chance to speak. Right nurse re-bandage fresh bandages, and keep the stumps clean. He goes and I lie there thinking and looking into darkness with a dumb stare.
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Oct 26, 2016
Oct 26, 2016 at 4:29 AM UTC
GRACE'S DUMB STARE 1940.
I am lifted by two nurses; (I hear them talk to each other) and stare at each in turn with my blind eyes, hoping they won't drop me. They lay me on a trolley, and then push me on the trolley past others, and voices and sounds coming and going. Where are we going ? I ask. To see Doctor Quinn, he wants to see how the leg stumps are healing, a nurse says close to me. How are my stumps? I ask. They seem to be healing quite well, a nurse says, but the doctor wants to see for himself. I lie quiet after that and we enter a warmer room, and I grab sounds as I pass trying to make a picture in my mind about where we are. We come to a standstill, and a man's voice says: ah, Miss Meadows, I am Doctor Quinn, I am here to examine your leg stumps to see how they are healing. I say nothing; I just nod my head, and wait. I sense his fingers unwrap the bandages, and I feel his fingers near my skin; he removes the bandages, and fresh air hits my skin. Yes they look fine, he says, his fingers touch me, lifts the stumps one after the other: I think we can soon decide about maybe artificial legs. Artificial legs? I say, imagining god knows what. You will need to learn how to walk again in a sense of course, he says, but it will come and we will have you on your feet again I am sure, he says, but it will be a time as there is a huge demand at the moment in wartime for them as you can appreciate, he adds, not giving me a chance to speak. Right nurse re-bandage fresh bandages, and keep the stumps clean. He goes and I lie there thinking and looking into darkness with a dumb stare.
A BLIND LEGLESS WOMAN IN A  LONDON HOSPITAL IN 1940
TerryCollett
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Oct 26, 2016
Oct 26, 2016 at 4:29 AM UTC
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