Pen-Knife Blade
A Leaf from a Surgeon's Diary
by Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.
Some very strange and curious things happen in this world; and he who would deal in the marvelous, need not go out from the field of facts. “Truth is stranger than fiction,” is an old and common saying, though I could never see much sense in it, since all proper fiction is but the reflex of truth. In fact, they go hand in hand, and one is just as strange as the other. The man who originated the saying had probably found some truth which was so strange, that he feared people would hesitate to believe it, so he claimed that the strangest kind of stories were the true ones. Now, I have a story to tell, which I am sure will be held by the reader as both strange and curious; and such, in fact, it is; and it is true—every word of it. Concerning names and dates, I must be a little reticent, wherefore you will see when you read what I have to tell.
One cold, blustering evening in mid winter, I was seated before my cheerful fire, with my book in my hand—a medical magazine—engaged in reading an account of a curious operation which had lately been performed by Valentine Mott. I had come to an uncut page, and was looking for my paper-cutter, when my wife, who sat at the opposite side of the stand, remarked to me that Harriet Roberts had been to see her that afternoon, and that she wished to come and work in our family.
“Harriet Roberts wants to work in our family!” I cried, with much astonishment.
I thought my wife must be mistaken; but… Read More