The Life of Florence Nightingale, vol. 2 of 2
ii. 126, 128, 140-1, 142
_Volunteer Movement_, Letter on the (1861), ii. 441; quoted or referred to, i. 284 _n._, 496, ii. 7, 8 _Water Arrival in India, A_ (1878), ii. 289, 451 _Zemindar, the Sun and the Watering-Pot_ (1874), ii. 449; general account of, ii. 295; maps for, ii. 289, 296, 297 Nightingale, Frances Parthenope._See_ Verney, Lady Nightingale, Louis Shore, ii. 392 Nightingale, Peter, of Lea, i. 3 Nightingale, William Edward (father of F. N.): changes his name from Shore to Nightingale (1815), i. 3; education, i. 12; marries Frances Smith (1818), i. 3; circumstances, i. 7; character, temperament, and views, i. 5, 6, 40, 41, ii. 235, 236; educates his daughters, i. 12, 13; makes inquiries about nursing, i. 60; gives F. N. a separate allowance (1853), i. 130; inclines to give her freedom, i. 123; but is overborne, i. 125; accompanies F. N. to Scotland (1856), i. 324; visits her in London, i. 503; with F. N. at Malvern, i. 380; provides her with a London house, ii. 16; affection and admiration for F. N., i. 123, 138, 503; interest in F. N.'s religious speculations, i. 480, 481, 482, 483, ii. 235-236; friendship with Jowett, ii. 96; death of, ii. 235, 452; letters:--to F. N., i. 138, 260, 380, 483, 503; to others, i. 36, 270, 492-3; various references, i. 20, 499, 506, ii. 88, 116, 303, 391 Nightingale, Mrs. W. E. (Frances Smith), her father, i. 4; brothers and sisters, i. 4, 29; opposes F. N.'s schemes for hospital life, i. 44, 114, 115, 125, 130, 141; "has hatched a wild swan," i. 139; F. N. sees little of (1857 _seq._), i. 380, 503; F. N. spends some months with (1866), ii. 119; (1868) ii. 163; (1874-80) ii. 311, 313; death, ii. 323, 452; character, i. 41, 105, ii. 119; letters: to F. N., i. 161, 269; to a friend, i. 198 Nightingale Fund, the, origin of, i. 268; meeting at Willis's Rooms in aid of (1855), i. 269 _seq._; subscriptions invited in General Orders, i. 273; controversy on, i. 443; the Fund invested, i. 456; scheme for utilizing it adopted (1859), i. 457, 459; purposes to which it was applied:--(1) School at St. Thomas's Hospital, i. 458 _seq._ (_see further_ Nightingale Training School); (2) Midwifery training, King's College Hospital (_q.v._), i. 464; (3) support of District Nursing in London, ii. 355; Reports of, bibliography, ii. 461, 462, quoted or referred to, i. 271, 463, 465, ii. 248 _n._, 256 "Nightingale in the East," the, i. 266, ii. 460 "Nightingale Power," the, i. 214, 332 Nightingale Training School, St. Thomas's Hospital, opened (1860), i. 456, 459; impressions of (1860), i. 462; first year's results, i. 463; novelty of the scheme and medical opposition, i. 466, 467; principles of, i. 460 _seq._:--(1) to give technical training: examination and reports, i. 460, 463, ii. 248; probationers' diaries, 463, ii. 251; cookery lessons, 326; (2) to give moral influence: to be a "home," i. 461, ii. 247; _esprit de corps_, ii. 259; (3) to train nurses who would introduce improved methods elsewhere and train others,