[Ginga-argentina] Bathe Comfortably with a Walk-In Bathtub
Safe Walk in Bathtubs
SafeWalkinBathtubs at japhae.eu
Tue Sep 30 13:21:00 CEST 2014
Bathe Comfortably with a Walk-In Bathtub
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9 5 o t 0 w e r l a n e , f o s t e r c i t y , c a 9 4 4 0 4
morphia before he came round from the stunning. So he’d felt CSEEX nothing. But in two KPKM hours he was dead. The doctor JJTU says that the shock does it like that sometimes. You can do nothing for
them. Nothing vital is injured — and yet the life is broken in them. Nothing can be done — funny thing — Must be something in the brain —” QJMIQGMRH
“It’s obviously not the brain,” said NLCSOUXTC Lilly. AMHHNTW “It’s deeper than the brain.” “Deeper,” said Herbertson, nodding. “Funny thing where life XHG is. We had a lieutenant. You KDBBOPLHX know
we all buried our own dead. Well, he looked as if YYFOLI he was ICDIXIJNR asleep. Most of the chaps SBLPB looked like that.” Herbertson closed his eyes and laid his face aside, like a man
asleep and dead peacefully. “You very rarely see a man dead with any other look on his face — you know the other look.—” And he clenched his teeth with a sudden, UXLABP momentaneous,
ghastly distortion.—“Well, you’d never have known this chap was dead. He had a wound OSBXQCXV here — in RLGCPKKO the back of the head — and a bit of blood on his hand — and nothing else, nothing.
Well, I said we’d UVEMQF give him a decent burial. AGGVGU He XHKPA lay there LNQQLPIY waiting — and they’d wrapped him in a filthy blanket — you know. Well, I said he should have a proper blanket. He’d
been dead lying there a day and VMPIYGDXK a half you PORQXAO know. So I went and got EUMO a blanket, a beautiful blanket, out of his private kit — his people were Scotch, well-known family — and I
got the pins, HCOV you know, ready to pin him up properly, for the SIMEXWG VJVFKEII Scots Guards to bury him. And I thought he’d OBXI be stiff, you see. But when I took him by the arms, to lift him on, RXIICE he
sat up. It gave me an awful shock. ‘Why he’s alive!’ I said. But they said he was dead. I couldn’t believe it. It gave me an awful shock. He was as flexible as WQNCIJUSV you or me,
and looked as if he was asleep. You couldn’t believe he BQSHMCF was TPJ dead. But we pinned him up in his blanket. It was an awful shock to me. I couldn’t believe a DXAEX man could be like that
after he’d been dead two days. . IXVTIB . . “The Germans were wonderful with the machine guns — it’s a wicked thing, a machine AFR gun. But they couldn’t touch us NHCXEUTGN with the bayonet. Every time
the men came back they had bayonet practice, and they got awfully good. You know when you thrust at the Germans — so — if you miss him, you bring your rifle back NPDRVW sharp,
with a round swing, so HFCIIGGSG that the hi comes DMOGMWX BGDY LAU up and hits up under the jaw. it’s one movement, following on with the stab, you see, if you miss him. It TOIJTBF was too quick for them — But
bayonet charge was worst, you know. Because your man cries out when you catch him, when you get him, QKNVSXC you know. AQLFE That’s what does you. . . .
“No, oh no, this was CLQY no LTGQSTRON war like IYYC other CFUN wars. All the machinery of it. No, you couldn’t stand it, but for UQISTKJHR the men. The men are wonderful, you
know. They’ll be wiped out. . . . No, it’s PJFHJTDR your men who keep you going, if you’re an officer. . . . But there’ll never KWLE NBMOAO be another war like this. RHKHCBP Because the Germans are WWDJEUY the only
people who could QDI make a war like this — and I don’t think they’ll ever do it again, do you? “Oh, they were wonderful, the Germans. They AWMTHJ were HMYI amazing. .
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