Essential Edinburgh City Tours
Edinburgh - Living City Education Pack
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Leith
image copyright Rachel Windsor
The history of Leith Hospital starts in 1788, when the Leith branch of the London Humane Society was formed to give emergency treatment to ‘those presumed drowned’. Treatments included hot baths and forced vomiting, alongside the more curious treatment of inflating the patient’s rectum with tobacco smoke. In 1825, the Humane Society joined forces with the Leith Dispensary, which had founded in 1816 at Broad Wynd, and in 1837, Leith’s first Casualty Hospital opened on Quality Street (now Maritime Street). In 1846 a meeting was held with the intention of bringing together the work of the Dispensary with that of the Casualty Hospital, and in 1849 land at the top of Sheriff Brae, once owned by Mr Tod recently deceased, was chosen as the ideal place for the new Leith Hospital. The original building shown above on Mill Lane was much expanded, and new wings built on either side of King Street (the nurses home and new surgical wing), as well as the Children’s Memorial Ward, which served as Leith’s War Memorial, an apt association. The site immediately west of the children’s ward was acquired and the existing poorhouse demolished in order to create Taylor Gardens. Since the closing of the hospital, the buildings have been redeveloped as residential accommodation, although a peace memorial of metalwork still surrounds a tree in Taylor Gardens.
O! mither, mither, my head was sair,
And my een wi' tears were weet;
But the pain has gane for evermair,
Sae, mither, dinna greet:
And I ha'e had sic a bonnie dream,
Since last asleep I fell,
O' a' that is holy an' guid to name,
That I've wauken'd my dream to tell.
I thought on the morn o' a simmer day
That awa' through the clouds I flew,
While my silken hair did wavin' play
'Mang breezes steep'd in dew;
And the happy things o' life and light
Were around my gowden way,
As they stood in their parent Heaven's sight
In the hames o' nightless day.
An' sangs o' love that nae tongue may tell,
Frae their hearts cam' flowin' free,
Till the starns stood still, while alang did swell
The plaintive melodie;
And ane o' them sang wi' my mither's voice,
Till through my heart did gae
That chanted hymn o' my bairnhood's choice
Sae dowie, saft, an' wae.
Thae happy things o' the glorious sky
Did lead me far away,
Where the stream o' life rins never dry,
Where naething kens decay;
And they laid me down in a mossy bed,
Wi' curtains o' spring leaves green,
And the name o' God they praying said,
And a light came o'er my een.
And I saw the earth that I had left,
And I saw my mither there;
And I saw her grieve that she was bereft
O' the bairn she thought sae fair;
And I saw her pine till her spirit fled—
Like a bird to its young one's nest—
To that land of love ; and my head was laid
Again on my mither's breast.
And, mither, ye took me by the hand,
As ye were wont to do;
And your loof, sae saft and white, I fand
Laid on my caller brow;
And my lips you kiss'd, and my curling hair
You round your fingers wreath'd;
And I kent that a happy mither's prayer
Was o'er me silent breath'd—
And we wander'd through that happy land,
That was gladly glorious a';
The dwellers there were an angel-band,
And their voices o' love did fa'
On our ravish'd ears like the deein' tones
O' an anthem far away,
In a starn-lit hour, when the woodland moans
That its green is turn'd to grey.
And, mither, amang the sorrowless there,
We met my brithers three,
And your bonnie May, my sister fair,
And a happy bairn was she;
And she led me awa' 'mang living flowers,
As on earth she aft has done;
And thegither we sat in the holy bowers
Where the blessed rest aboon;—
And she tauld me I was in paradise,
Where God in love doth dwell—
Where the weary rest, and the mourner's voice
Forgets its warld-wail;
And she tauld me they kent na dule nor care:
And bade me be glad to dee,
That yon sinless land and the dwellers there
Might be hame and kin to me.
Then sweetly a voice came on my ears,
And it sounded sae holily,
That my heart grew saft, and blabs o' tears
Sprung up in my sleepin' e'e;
And my inmost soul was sairly moved
Wi' its mair than mortal joy;—
'Twas the voice o' Him who bairnies loved
That wauken'd your dreamin' boy!
Robert Nicoll
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