Albert Schweitzer Dr Schweitzer didn't mind not preaching. He had come to Africa to work, not talk. He wanted to show the high value be put on life by his own work and manner of living. His mission was to heal the 41 and to save life. One day, _42_ a journey up the great Ogowe River , the words 'reverence for life' came into his mind. These words expressed better than any others his respect 43 the worth and goodness of all _44_things. And that meant animals, birds, trees and flowers, as well as human beings. Patients 45 near and far arrived to get help from the new doctor at Lambarene. He had a kind appearance and a smile in his eyes. The Africans usually slept on the ground, so they were eager to try out the wooden hospital 46 The doctor sometimes found his sick patients asleep on the 47 while their brothers or cousins, who had come to look after them, used the beds. By the end of the first year two small hospital buildings 48 been built and about two thousand patients had passed through them. - But things 49 not go smoothly. In 1914 war began between France and Germany, the First World War, and Africa felt its 50. The doctor and his wife became prisoners of war in their own hospital. Towards the end of the war they were taken to a prison camp in France, leaving Lambarene without a doctor.
what is the answers to the missing spaces in the story above