A STORY ABOUT A REAL MAN {45 at the corners of his inflamed eyes continuously throbbed. On the evening round he looked shrunken and percepti- bly aged. In a low voice, he reproved the ward maid for leaving a duster on the door handle, looked at the Commissar's temperature chart, prescribed something for him and walked out silently, followed by his also silent and disturbed-looking retinue. At the threshold he stumbled and would have fallen had not somebody caught him by the elbow. It seemed entirely out of place for this tall, heavy, hoarse-voiced, boisterous martinet to be so quiet and polite. The inmates of ward forty-two followed him out with wondering eyes. They had all learned to love this big, kind-hearted man, and the change in him disquieted them. Next morning they learned the reason. Vasily Vasilyevich's only son, whose name was likewise Vasily Vasilyevich, who was also a medical man and a promis- ing scientist, his father's pride and joy, was killed on the Western Front. At the usual hour the entire hospital waited with bated breath to see whether the professor would arrive for his customary round of the wards. In ward forty-two everybody closely watched the slow, almost imperceptible movement of the sunbeam across the floor. At last it touched the spot where the piece of parqueting was missing and they all glanced at each other as if saying he will not come. But at that very moment the familiar heavy tread and the footsteps of the numerous retinue were heard in the corridor. The professor even looked a little better. True, his eyes were inflamed and the eyelids and nose were swollen, as happens when one has a severe cold, and his puffy, peel- ing hands trembled noticeably when he picked the Commissar's temperature chart up from the table; but he was as energetic and business-like as ever. His boisterous- ness and raillery had vanished, however. As if by common agreement, the wounded and sick vied with each other that day to please him in every way they could. Everybody assured him that they felt better, even the severest cases made no complaint and averred that they were on the road to recovery. And everybody zealously praised the arrangements in the hospital and testified to the positively miraculous effect 10-1872