CHAPTER XIII.
CHOKING AND BEATING PATIENTS.
Miss Tillie Mayard suffered greatly from cold. One
morning she sat on the bench next to me and was livid
with the cold. Her limbs shook and her teeth chattered.
I spoke to the three attendants who sat with coats on at
the table in the center of the floor.
“It is cruel to lock people up and then freeze them,”
I said. They replied she had on as much as any of the
rest, and she would get no more. Just then Miss Mayard
took a fit and every patient looked frightened. Miss
Neville caught her in her arms and held her, although
the nurses roughly said:
“Let her fall on the floor and it will teach her
a lesson.” Miss Neville told them what she thought of
their actions, and then I got orders to make my appearance
in the office.
Just as I reached there Superintendent Dent came to
the door and I told him how we were suffering from the
cold, and of Miss Mayard’s condition. Doubtless, I
spoke incoherently, for I told of the state of the food,
the treatment of the nurses and their refusal to give
more clothing, the condition of Miss Mayard, and the
nurses telling us, because the asylum was a public institution,
we could not expect even kindness. Assuring
76him that I needed no medical aid, I told him to go to
Miss Mayard. He did so. From Miss Neville and other
patients I learned what transpired. Miss Mayard was
still in the fit, and he caught her roughly between the
eyebrows or thereabouts, and pinched until her face was
crimson from the rush of blood to the head, and her
senses returned. All day afterward she suffered from
terrible headache, and from that on she grew worse.
Insane? Yes, insane; and as I watched the insanity
slowly creep over the mind that had appeared to be all right
I secretly cursed the doctors, the nurses and all public
institutions. Some one may say that she was insane at
some time previous to her consignment to the asylum.
Then if she were, was this the proper place to send a
woman just convalescing, to be given cold baths, deprived
of sufficient clothing and fed with horrible food?
On this morning I had a long conversation with Dr.
Ingram, the assistant superintendent of the asylum. I
found that he was kind to the helpless beings in his charge.
I began my old complaint of the cold, and he called Miss
Grady to the office and ordered more clothing given the
patients. Miss Grady said if I made a practice of telling
it would be a serious thing for me, she warned me in
time.
Many visitors looking for missing girls came to see me.
Miss Grady yelled in the door from the hall one day:
“Nellie Brown, you’re wanted.”
I went to the sitting-room at the end of the hall, and
there sat a gentleman who had known me intimately for
years. I saw by the sudden blanching of his face and his
inability to speak that the sight of me was wholly unexpected
and had shocked him terribly. In an instant I
determined, if he betrayed me as Nellie Bly, to say I had
never seen him before. However, I had one card to
play and I risked it. With Miss Grady within touching
77distance I whispered hurriedly to him, in language more
expressive than elegant:
“Don’t give me away.”
I knew by the expression of his eye that he understood,
so I said to Miss Grady:
“I do not know this man.”
“Do you know her?” asked Miss Grady.
“No; this is not the young lady I came in search of,”
he replied, in a strained voice.
“If you do not know her you cannot stay here,” she
said, and she took him to the door. All at once a fear
struck me that he would think I had been sent there
through some mistake and would tell my friends and
make an effort to have me released. So I waited until
Miss Grady had the door unlocked. I knew that she
would have to lock it before she could leave, and the time
required to do so would give me opportunity to speak, so
I called:
“One moment, senor.” He returned to me and I
asked aloud:
“Do you speak Spanish, senor?” and then whispered,
“It’s all right. I’m after an item. Keep still.” “No,”
he said, with a peculiar emphasis, which I knew meant
that he would keep my secret.
People in the world can never imagine the length of
days to those in asylums. They seemed never ending,
and we welcomed any event that might give us something
to think about as well as talk of. There is nothing
to read, and the only bit of talk that never wears out is
conjuring up delicate food that they will get as soon as
they get out. Anxiously the hour was watched for when
the boat arrived to see if there were any new unfortunates
to be added to our ranks. When they came and
were ushered into the sitting-room the patients would
express sympathy to one another for them and were
anxious to show them little marks of attention. Hall
786 was the receiving hall so that was how we saw all
newcomers.
Soon after my advent a girl called Urena Little-Page
was brought in. She was, as she had been born, silly, and
her tender spot was, as with many sensible women, her
age. She claimed eighteen, and would grow very angry
if told to the contrary. The nurses were not long in finding
this out, and then they teased her.
“Urena,” said Miss Grady, “the doctors say that you
are thirty-three instead of eighteen,” and the other
nurses laughed. They kept up this until the simple
creature began to yell and cry, saying she wanted to go
home and that everybody treated her badly. After they
had gotten all the amusement out of her they wanted
and she was crying, they began to scold and tell her to
keep quiet. She grew more hysterical every moment
until they pounced upon her and slapped her face and
knocked her head in a lively fashion. This made the
poor creature cry the more, and so they choked her.
Yes, actually choked her. Then they dragged her out
to the closet, and I heard her terrified cries hush into
smothered ones. After several hours’ absence she returned
to the sitting-room, and I plainly saw the marks of
their fingers on her throat for the entire day.
This punishment seemed to awaken their desire to administer
more. They returned to the sitting-room and
caught hold of an old gray-haired woman whom I have
heard addressed both as Mrs. Grady and Mrs. O’Keefe.
She was insane, and she talked almost continually to herself
and to those near her. She never spoke very loud,
and at the time I speak of was sitting harmlessly chattering
to herself. They grabbed her, and my heart ached
as she cried:
“For God sake, ladies, don’t let them beat me.”
“Shut up, you hussy!” said Miss Grady as she caught
the woman by her gray hair and dragged her shrieking
79and pleading from the room. She was also taken to the
closet, and her cries grew lower and lower, and then
ceased.
The nurses returned to the room and Miss Grady remarked
that she had “settled the old fool for awhile.”
I told some of the physicians of the occurrence, but they
did not pay any attention to it.
One of the characters in Hall 6 was Matilda, a little
old German woman, who, I believe, went insane over the
loss of money. She was small, and had a pretty pink
complexion. She was not much trouble, except at times.
She would take spells, when she would talk into the
steam-heaters or get up on a chair and talk out of the
windows. In these conversations she railed at the lawyers
who had taken her property. The nurses seemed to
find a great deal of amusement in teasing the harmless
old soul. One day I sat beside Miss Grady and Miss
Grupe, and heard them tell her perfectly vile things to
call Miss McCarten. After telling her to say these things
they would send her to the other nurse, but Matilda
proved that she, even in her state, had more sense than
they.
“I cannot tell you. It is private,” was all she would
say. I saw Miss Grady, on a pretense of whispering to
her, spit in her ear. Matilda quietly wiped her ear and
said nothing.