Churchill himself offers a slightly less heroic, but more humorous --
and human -- account. He sometimes adjusted accounts after, of course,
in the case of My Early Life to inspire young men of Britain to follow
his example as an average man. Same reason he often focused on stories
of how poor he'd been as a student. The phonetics of the accent are a
nice touch.

Here's his account from My Early Life:

In Cairo I found Dick Molyneux, a subaltern in the Blues, who like
myself had been attached to the 2 ist. He had been seriously wounded
by a sword-cutabove his right wrist. This had severed all the muscles
and forced him to drop his revolver. At the same time his horse had
been shot at close quarters. Molyneux had been rescued from certain
slaughter by the heroism of one of his troopers. He was now proceeding
to England in charge of a hospital nurse. I decided to keep him
company. While we were talking, the doctor came in to dress his wound.
It was a horrible gash, and the doctor was anxious that it should be
skinned  over as soon as possible. He said something in a low tone to
the nurse, who bared her arm. They retired into a corner,  where he
began to cut a piece of skin off her to transfer to  Molyneux's wound.
The poor nurse blanched, and the doc  tor turned upon me. He was a
great raw-boned Irishman.  'Oi'll have to take it off you,' he said.
There was no escape, and as I rolled up my sleeve he added genially,
"Y'eva heeard of a man being flayed aloive? Well, this is what  it
feels loike." He then proceeded to cut a piece of skin  and some flesh
about the size of a shilling from the inside  of my forearm. My
sensations as he sawed the razor slowly  to and fro fully justified
his description of the ordeal. However, I managed to hold out until he
had cut a beautiful piece of skin with a thin layer of flesh attached
to it. This precious fragment was then grafted on to my friend's
wound. It remains there to this day and did him lasting good in many
ways. I for my part keep the scar as a souvenir."



On Jun 17, 5:25 pm, [email protected] wrote:
>
> Churchill did one better than just a hospital visit to a fellow officer in 
> his early career during 1898 in the Sudan.  Hearing that fellow officer 
> Richard Molyneaux was badly wounded and needed a skin graft, he promptly 
> showed up at the hospital and donated a piece of himself for a skin graft; 
> Churchill received  a letter 47 years later from the donee  See  a charming 
> description of the incident from WSC himself on page 100 of  "Churchill A 
> Life by Sir Martin Gilbert", the Owl Book Edition by Henry Holt for the tale 
> (among other sources).
>
> Carol

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