CHAPTER XIV.
SOME UNFORTUNATE STORIES.
By this time I had made the acquaintance of the
greater number of the forty-five women in hall 6. Let
me introduce a few. Louise, the pretty German girl
whom I have spoken of formerly as being sick with fever,
had the delusion that the spirits of her dead parents
were with her. “I have gotten many beatings from
80Miss Grady and her assistants,” she said, “and I am unable
to eat the horrible food they give us. I ought not
to be compelled to freeze for want of proper clothing.
Oh! I pray nightly that I may be taken to my papa and
mamma. One night, when I was confined at Bellevue,
Dr. Field came; I was in bed, and weary of the examination.
At last I said: ‘I am tired of this. I will talk
no more.’ ‘Won’t you?’ he said, angrily. ‘I’ll see if I
can’t make you.’ With this he laid his crutch on the
side of the bed, and, getting up on it, he pinched me
very severely in the ribs. I jumped up straight in bed,
and said: ‘What do you mean by this?’ ‘I want to
teach you to obey when I speak to you,’ he replied. If
I could only die and go to papa!” When I left she was
confined to bed with a fever, and maybe by this time she
has her wish.
There is a Frenchwoman confined in hall 6, or was
during my stay, whom I firmly believe to be perfectly
sane. I watched her and talked with her every day, excepting
the last three, and I was unable to find any delusion
or mania in her. Her name is Josephine Despreau,
if that is spelled correctly, and her husband and all her
friends are in France. Josephine feels her position
keenly. Her lips tremble, and she breaks down crying
when she talks of her helpless condition. “How did you
get here?” I asked.
“One morning as I was trying to get breakfast I grew
deathly sick, and two officers were called in by the woman
of the house, and I was taken to the station-house. I
was unable to understand their proceedings, and they paid
little attention to my story. Doings in this country were
new to me, and before I realized it I was lodged as an insane
woman in this asylum. When I first came I cried
that I was here without hope of release, and for crying
Miss Grady and her assistants choked me until they hurt
my throat, for it has been sore ever since.”
81A pretty young Hebrew woman spoke so little English
I could not get her story except as told by the nurses.
They said her name is Sarah Fishbaum, and that her husband
put her in the asylum because she had a fondness
for other men than himself. Granting that Sarah was
insane, and about men, let me tell you how the nurses
tried to cure(?) her. They would call her up and say:
“Sarah, wouldn’t you like to have a nice young man?”
“Oh, yes; a young man is all right,” Sarah would
reply in her few English words.
“Well, Sarah, wouldn’t you like us to speak a good
word to some of the doctors for you? Wouldn’t you like
to have one of the doctors?”
And then they would ask her which doctor she preferred,
and advise her to make advances to him when he
visited the hall, and so on.
I had been watching and talking with a fair-complexioned
woman for several days, and I was at a loss to see
why she had been sent there, she was so sane.
“Why did you come here?” I asked her one day, after
we had indulged in a long conversation.
“I was sick,” she replied.
“Are you sick mentally?” I urged.
“Oh, no; what gave you such an idea? I had been
overworking myself, and I broke down. Having some
family trouble, and being penniless and nowhere to go, I
applied to the commissioners to be sent to the poorhouse
until I would be able to go to work.”
“But they do not send poor people here unless they
are insane,” I said. “Don’t you know there are only insane
women, or those supposed to be so, sent here?”
“I knew after I got here that the majority of these
women were insane, but then I believed them when they
told me this was the place they sent all the poor who applied
for aid as I had done.”
“How have you been treated?” I asked. “Well, so
82far I have escaped a beating, although I have been sickened
at the sight of many and the recital of more. When
I was brought here they went to give me a bath, and the
very disease for which I needed doctoring and from which
I was suffering made it necessary that I should not bathe.
But they put me in, and my sufferings were increased
greatly for weeks thereafter.”
A Mrs. McCartney, whose husband is a tailor, seems
perfectly rational and has not one fancy. Mary Hughes
and Mrs. Louise Schanz showed no obvious traces of insanity.
One day two newcomers were added to our list. The
one was an idiot, Carrie Glass, and the other was a nice-looking
German girl—quite young, she seemed, and when
she came in all the patients spoke of her nice appearance
and apparent sanity. Her name was Margaret. She told
me she had been a cook, and was extremely neat. One
day, after she had scrubbed the kitchen floor, the chambermaids
came down and deliberately soiled it. Her temper
was aroused and she began to quarrel with them; an
officer was called and she was taken to an asylum.
“How can they say I am insane, merely because I allowed
my temper to run away with me?” she complained.
“Other people are not shut up for crazy when they get
angry. I suppose the only thing to do is to keep quiet
and so avoid the beatings which I see others get. No one
can say one word about me. I do everything I am told,
and all the work they give me. I am obedient in every
respect, and I do everything to prove to them that I am
sane.”
One day an insane woman was brought in. She was
noisy, and Miss Grady gave her a beating and blacked
her eye. When the doctors noticed it and asked if it
was done before she came there the nurses said it was.
While I was in hall 6 I never heard the nurses address
the patients except to scold or yell at them, unless it was
83to tease them. They spent much of their time gossiping
about the physicians and about the other nurses in a
manner that was not elevating. Miss Grady nearly always
interspersed her conversation with profane language,
and generally began her sentences by calling on
the name of the Lord. The names she called the patients
were of the lowest and most profane type. One
evening she quarreled with another nurse while we were
at supper about the bread, and when the nurse had gone
out she called her bad names and made ugly remarks
about her.
In the evenings a woman, whom I supposed to be head
cook for the doctors, used to come up and bring raisins,
grapes, apples, and crackers to the nurses. Imagine the
feelings of the hungry patients as they sat and watched
the nurses eat what was to them a dream of luxury.
One afternoon, Dr. Dent was talking to a patient,
Mrs. Turney, about some trouble she had had with a
nurse or matron. A short time after we were taken down
to supper and this woman who had beaten Mrs. Turney,
and of whom Dr. Dent spoke, was sitting at the door of
our dining-room. Suddenly Mrs. Turney picked up her
bowl of tea, and, rushing out of the door flung it at the
woman who had beat her. There was some loud screaming
and Mrs. Turney was returned to her place. The
next day she was transferred to the “rope gang,” which
is supposed to be composed of the most dangerous and
most suicidal women on the island.
At first I could not sleep and did not want to so long
as I could hear anything new. The night nurses may
have complained of the fact. At any rate one night they
came in and tried to make me take a dose of some mixture
out of a glass “to make me sleep,” they said. I told
them I would do nothing of the sort and they left me, I
hoped, for the night. My hopes were vain, for in a few
minutes they returned with a doctor, the same that received
84us on our arrival. He insisted that I take it, but
I was determined not to lose my wits even for a few
hours. When he saw I was not to be coaxed he grew
rather rough, and said he had wasted too much time with
me already. That if I did not take it he would put it into
my arm with a needle. It occurred to me that if he put
it into my arm I could not get rid of it, but if I swallowed
it there was one hope, so I said I would take it. I smelt
it and it smelt like laudanum, and it was a horrible
dose. No sooner had they left the room and locked me
in than I tried to see how far down my throat my finger
would go, and the chloral was allowed to try its effect
elsewhere.
I want to say that the night nurse, Burns, in hall 6,
seemed very kind and patient to the poor, afflicted people.
The other nurses made several attempts to talk to
me about lovers, and asked me if I would not like to
have one. They did not find me very communicative on
the—to them—popular subject.
Once a week the patients are given a bath, and that is
the only time they see soap. A patient handed me a
piece of soap one day about the size of a thimble. I
considered it a great compliment in her wanting to be
kind, but I thought she would appreciate the cheap soap
more than I, so I thanked her but refused to take it. On
bathing day the tub is filled with water, and the patients
are washed, one after the other, without a change of
water. This is done until the water is really thick, and
then it is allowed to run out and the tub is refilled without
being washed. The same towels are used on all the
women, those with eruptions as well as those without.
The healthy patients fight for a change of water, but they
are compelled to submit to the dictates of the lazy, tyrannical
nurses. The dresses are seldom changed oftener
than once a month. If the patient has a visitor,
I have seen the nurses hurry her out and change her
85dress before the visitor comes in. This keeps up the appearance
of careful and good management.
The patients who are not able to take care of themselves
get into beastly conditions, and the nurses never
look after them, but order some of the patients to do so.
For five days we were compelled to sit in the room all
day. I never put in such a long time. Every patient
was stiff and sore and tired. We would get in little
groups on benches and torture our stomachs by conjuring
up thoughts of what we would eat first when we got out.
If I had not known how hungry they were and the pitiful
side of it, the conversation would have been very amusing.
As it was it only made me sad. When the subject
of eating, which seemed to be the favorite one, was worn
out, they used to give their opinions of the institution
and its management. The condemnation of the nurses
and the eatables was unanimous.
As the days passed Miss Tillie Mayard’s condition grew
worse. She was continually cold and unable to eat of the
food provided. Day after day she sang in order to try to
maintain her memory, but at last the nurse made her
stop it. I talked with her daily, and I grieved to find her
grow worse so rapidly. At last she got a delusion. She
thought that I was trying to pass myself off for her, and
that all the people who called to see Nellie Brown were
friends in search of her, but that I, by some means, was
trying to deceive them into the belief that I was the girl.
I tried to reason with her, but found it impossible, so I
kept away from her as much as possible, lest my presence
should make her worse and feed the fancy.
One of the patients, Mrs. Cotter, a pretty, delicate
woman, one day thought she saw her husband coming up
the walk. She left the line in which she was marching
and ran to meet him. For this act she was sent to the
Retreat. She afterward said:
“The remembrance of that is enough to make me mad.
86For crying the nurses beat me with a broom-handle and
jumped on me, injuring me internally, so that I shall
never get over it. Then they tied my hands and feet,
and, throwing a sheet over my head, twisted it tightly
around my throat, so I could not scream, and thus put
me in a bathtub filled with cold water. They held me
under until I gave up every hope and became senseless.
At other times they took hold of my ears and beat my
head on the floor and against the wall. Then they
pulled my hair out by the roots, so that it will never grow
in again.”
Mrs. Cotter here showed me proofs of her story, the
dent in the back of her head and the bare spots where
the hair had been taken out by the handful. I give her
story as plainly as possible: “My treatment was not as
bad as I have seen others get in there, but it has ruined
my health, and even if I do get out of here I will be a
wreck. When my husband heard of the treatment given
me he threatened to expose the place if I was not removed,
so I was brought here. I am well mentally now.
All that old fear has left me, and the doctor has promised
to allow my husband to take me home.”
I made the acquaintance of Bridget McGuinness, who
seems to be sane at the present time. She said she was
sent to Retreat 4, and put on the “rope gang.” “The
beatings I got there were something dreadful. I was
pulled around by the hair, held under the water until I
strangled, and I was choked and kicked. The nurses
would always keep a quiet patient stationed at the window
to tell them when any of the doctors were approaching.
It was hopeless to complain to the doctors, for they
always said it was the imagination of our diseased brains,
and besides we would get another beating for telling.
They would hold patients under the water and threaten
to leave them to die there if they did not promise not to
tell the doctors. We would all promise, because we knew
87the doctors would not help us, and we would do anything
to escape the punishment. After breaking a window I
was transferred to the Lodge, the worst place on the
island. It is dreadfully dirty in there, and the stench
is awful. In the summer the flies swarm the place.
The food is worse than we get in other wards and we
are given only tin plates. Instead of the bars being
on the outside, as in this ward, they are on the inside.
There are many quiet patients there who have been
there for years, but the nurses keep them to do the
work. Among other beatings I got there, the nurses
jumped on me once and broke two of my ribs.
“While I was there a pretty young girl was brought in.
She had been sick, and she fought against being put in
that dirty place. One night the nurses took her and,
after beating her, they held her naked in a cold bath,
then they threw her on her bed. When morning came
the girl was dead. The doctors said she died of convulsions,
and that was all that was done about it.
“They inject so much morphine and chloral that the
patients are made crazy. I have seen the patients wild
for water from the effect of the drugs, and the nurses
would refuse it to them. I have heard women beg for a
whole night for one drop and it was not given them. I
myself cried for water until my mouth was so parched
and dry that I could not speak.”
I saw the same thing myself in hall 7. The patients
would beg for a drink before retiring, but the nurses—Miss
Hart and the others—refused to unlock the bathroom
that they might quench their thirst.