The New Book of Martyrs by Georges Duhamel;Florence Simmonds
page 27 of 170 (15%)
page 27 of 170 (15%)
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I Were modesty banished from the rest of the earth, it would no doubt find a refuge in Mouchon's heart. I see him still as he arrived, on a stretcher full of little pebbles, with his mud be-plastered coat, and his handsome, honest face, like that of a well-behaved child. "You must excuse me," he said; "we can't keep ourselves very clean." "Have you any lice?" asks the orderly, as he undresses him. Mouchon flushes and looks uneasy. "Well, if I have, they don't really belong to me." He has none, but he has a broken leg, "due to a torpedo." The orderly cuts open his trouser, and I tell him to take off the boot. Mouchon puts out his hand, and says diffidently: "Never mind the boot." "But, my good fellow, we can't dress your leg without taking off your boot." |
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