CHAPTER XII.
PROMENADING WITH LUNATICS.
I shall never forget my first walk. When all the patients
had donned the white straw hats, such as bathers
wear at Coney Island, I could not but laugh at their comical
appearances. I could not distinguish one woman
from another. I lost Miss Neville, and had to take my
hat off and search for her. When we met we put our
hats on and laughed at one another. Two by two we
formed in line, and guarded by the attendants we went
out a back way on to the walks.
We had not gone many paces when I saw, proceeding
from every walk, long lines of women guarded by nurses.
How many there were! Every way I looked I could see
them in the queer dresses, comical straw hats and shawls,
marching slowly around. I eagerly watched the passing
lines and a thrill of horror crept over me at the sight.
Vacant eyes and meaningless faces, and their tongues uttered
meaningless nonsense. One crowd passed and I
69noted, by nose as well as eyes, that they were fearfully
dirty.
“Who are they?” I asked of a patient near me.
“They are considered the most violent on the island,”
she replied. “They are from the Lodge, the first building
with the high steps.” Some were yelling, some were
cursing, others were singing or praying or preaching, as
the fancy struck them, and they made up the most miserable
collection of humanity I had ever seen. As the
din of their passing faded in the distance there came another
sight I can never forget:
A long cable rope fastened to wide leather belts, and
these belts locked around the waists of fifty-two women.
At the end of the rope was a heavy iron cart, and in it
two women—one nursing a sore foot, another screaming
at some nurse, saying: “You beat me and I shall not
forget it. You want to kill me,” and then she would
sob and cry. The women “on the rope,” as the patients
call it, were each busy on their individual freaks. Some
were yelling all the while. One who had blue eyes saw
me look at her, and she turned as far as she could, talking
and smiling, with that terrible, horrifying look of
absolute insanity stamped on her. The doctors might
safely judge on her case. The horror of that sight to
one who had never been near an insane person before,
was something unspeakable.
“God help them!” breathed Miss Neville, “It is so
dreadful I cannot look.”
On they passed, but for their places to be filled by
more. Can you imagine the sight? According to one
of the physicians there are 1600 insane women on Blackwell’s
Island.
Mad! What can be half so horrible? My heart thrilled
with pity when I looked on old, gray-haired women talking
aimlessly to space. One woman had on a straight-jacket,
and two women had to drag her along. Crippled,
70blind, old, young, homely, and pretty; one senseless
mass of humanity. No fate could be worse.
I looked at the pretty lawns, which I had once thought
was such a comfort to the poor creatures confined on the
Island, and laughed at my own notions. What enjoyment
is it to them? They are not allowed on the grass—it
is only to look at. I saw some patients eagerly and
caressingly lift a nut or a colored leaf that had fallen on
the path. But they were not permitted to keep them.
The nurses would always compel them to throw their little
bit of God’s comfort away.
QUIET INMATES OUT FOR A WALK.
As I passed a low pavilion, where a crowd of helpless
lunatics were confined, I read a motto on the wall, “While
I live I hope.” The absurdity of it struck me forcibly. I
would have liked to put above the gates that open to the
asylum, “He who enters here leaveth hope behind.”
During the walk I was annoyed a great deal by nurses
who had heard my romantic story calling to those in
71charge of us to ask which one I was. I was pointed out
repeatedly.
It was not long until the dinner hour arrived, and I
was so hungry that I felt I could eat anything. The same
old story of standing for a half and three-quarters of an
hour in the hall was repeated before we got down to our
dinners. The bowls in which we had had our tea were
now filled with soup, and on a plate was one cold boiled
potato and a chunk of beef, which, on investigation,
proved to be slightly spoiled. There were no knives or
forks, and the patients looked fairly savage as they took
the tough beef in their fingers and pulled in opposition
to their teeth. Those toothless or with poor teeth could
not eat it. One tablespoon was given for the soup,
and a piece of bread was the final entree. Butter is
never allowed at dinner nor coffee or tea. Miss Mayard
could not eat, and I saw many of the sick ones turn away
in disgust. I was getting very weak from the want of
food and tried to eat a slice of bread. After the first
few bites hunger asserted itself, and I was able to eat all
but the crusts of the one slice.
Superintendent Dent went through the sitting-room,
giving an occasional “How do you do?” “How are you
to-day?” here and there among the patients. His voice
was as cold as the hall, and the patients made no movement
to tell him of their sufferings. I asked some of
them to tell how they were suffering from the cold and
insufficiency of clothing, but they replied that the nurse
would beat them if they told.
I was never so tired as I grew sitting on those benches.
Several of the patients would sit on one foot or sideways
to make a change, but they were always reproved and
told to sit up straight. If they talked they were scolded
and told to shut up; if they wanted to walk around in
order to take the stiffness out of them, they were told to
sit down and be still. What, excepting torture, would
72produce insanity quicker than this treatment? Here is a
class of women sent to be cured. I would like the expert
physicians who are condemning me for my action,
which has proven their ability, to take a perfectly sane
and healthy woman, shut her up and make her sit from
6 A. M. until 8 P. M. on straight-back benches, do not
allow her to talk or move during these hours, give her no
reading and let her know nothing of the world or its
doings, give her bad food and harsh treatment, and see
how long it will take to make her insane. Two months
would make her a mental and physical wreck.
I have described my first day in the asylum, and as my
other nine were exactly the same in the general run of
things it would be tiresome to tell about each. In giving
this story I expect to be contradicted by many who
are exposed. I merely tell in common words, without
exaggeration, of my life in a mad-house for ten days.
The eating was one of the most horrible things. Excepting
the first two days after I entered the asylum, there
was no salt for the food. The hungry and even famishing
women made an attempt to eat the horrible messes.
Mustard and vinegar were put on meat and in soup to
give it a taste, but it only helped to make it worse.
Even that was all consumed after two days, and the patients
had to try to choke down fresh fish, just boiled in
water, without salt, pepper or butter; mutton, beef and
potatoes without the faintest seasoning. The most insane
refused to swallow the food and were threatened
with punishment. In our short walks we passed the
kitchen where food was prepared for the nurses and doctors.
There we got glimpses of melons and grapes and
all kinds of fruits, beautiful white bread and nice meats,
and the hungry feeling would be increased tenfold. I
spoke to some of the physicians, but it had no effect, and
when I was taken away the food was yet unsalted.
My heart ached to see the sick patients grow sicker
73over the table. I saw Miss Tillie Mayard so suddenly
overcome at a bite that she had to rush from the dining-room
and then got a scolding for doing so. When the
patients complained of the food they were told to shut
up; that they would not have as good if they were at
home, and that it was too good for charity patients.
A German girl, Louise—I have forgotten her last name—did
not eat for several days and at last one morning
she was missing. From the conversation of the nurses I
found she was suffering from a high fever. Poor thing!
She told me she unceasingly prayed for death. I watched
the nurses make a patient carry such food as the well
ones were refusing up to Louise’s room. Think of that
stuff for a fever patient! Of course, she refused it.
Then I saw a nurse, Miss McCarten, go to test her temperature,
and she returned with the report of it being
some 150 degrees. I smiled at the report, and Miss
Grupe, seeing it, asked me how high my temperature had
ever run. I refused to answer. Miss Grady then decided
to try her ability. She returned with the report of
99 degrees.
Miss Tillie Mayard suffered more than any of us from
the cold, and yet she tried to follow my advice to be cheerful
and try to keep up for a short time. Superintendent
Dent brought in a man to see me. He felt my pulse and
my head and examined my tongue. I told them how
cold it was, and assured them that I did not need medical
aid, but that Miss Mayard did, and they should transfer
their attentions to her. They did not answer me, and I
was pleased to see Miss Mayard leave her place and come
forward to them. She spoke to the doctors and told them
she was ill, but they paid no attention to her. The nurses
came and dragged her back to the bench, and after the doctors
left they said, “After awhile, when you see that the
doctors will not notice you, you will quit running up to
them.” Before the doctors left me I heard one say—I
74cannot give it in his exact words—that my pulse and eyes
were not that of an insane girl, but Superintendent Dent
assured him that in cases such as mine such tests failed.
After watching me for awhile he said my face was the
brightest he had ever seen for a lunatic. The nurses had
on heavy undergarments and coats, but they refused to
give us shawls.
Nearly all night long I listened to a woman cry about
the cold and beg for God to let her die. Another one
yelled “Murder!” at frequent intervals and “Police!” at
others until my flesh felt creepy.
The second morning, after we had begun our endless
“set” for the day, two of the nurses, assisted by some
patients, brought the woman in who had begged the night
previous for God to take her home. I was not surprised
at her prayer. She appeared easily seventy years old,
and she was blind. Although the halls were freezing-cold,
that old woman had no more clothing on than the
rest of us, which I have described. When she was
brought into the sitting-room and placed on the hard
bench, she cried:
“Oh, what are you doing with me? I am cold, so
cold. Why can’t I stay in bed or have a shawl?” and
then she would get up and endeavor to feel her way to
leave the room. Sometimes the attendants would jerk
her back to the bench, and again they would let her walk
and heartlessly laugh when she bumped against the table
or the edge of the benches. At one time she said the
heavy shoes which charity provides hurt her feet, and she
took them off. The nurses made two patients put them
on her again, and when she did it several times, and
fought against having them on, I counted seven people
at her at once trying to put the shoes on her. The old
woman then tried to lie down on the bench, but they
pulled her up again. It sounded so pitiful to hear her
cry:
75“Oh, give me a pillow and pull the covers over me, I
am so cold.”
At this I saw Miss Grupe sit down on her and run her
cold hands over the old woman’s face and down inside
the neck of her dress. At the old woman’s cries she
laughed savagely, as did the other nurses, and repeated
her cruel action. That day the old woman was carried
away to another ward.