Read Ten Days in a Mad-House and Other Stories Online
Authors: Nellie Bly
Tags: #Psychology, #Medical, #General, #Psychiatry, #Mental Illness, #People With Disabilities, #Hospital Administration & Care, #Biography & Autobiography, #Editors; Journalists; Publishers, #Social Science
donned the old clothing I had selected for the occasion. I was in the
mood to look at everything through very serious glasses. It’s just as
well to take a last “fond look,” I mused, for who could tell but that
the strain of playing crazy, and being shut up with a crowd of mad
people, might turn my own brain, and I would never get back. But
not once did I think of shirking my mission. Calmly, outwardly at
least, I went out to my crazy business.
I first thought it best to go to a boarding-house, and, after securing
lodging, confidentially tell the landlady, or lord, whichever it might
chance to be, that I was seeking work, and, in a few days after,
apparently go insane. When I reconsidered the idea, I feared it
would take too long to mature. Suddenly I thought how much easier
it would be to go to a boarding-home for working women. I knew, if
once I made a houseful of women believe me crazy, that they would
never rest until I was out of their reach and in secure quarters.
From a directory I selected the Temporary Home for Females, No. 84
Second Avenue. As I walked down the avenue, I determined that,
once inside the Home, I should do the best I could to get started on
my journey to Blackwell’s Island and the Insane Asylum.
Ten Days in a Mad-House
CHAPTER III.
IN THE TEMPORARY HOME.
I WAS left to begin my career as Nellie Brown, the insane girl. As I
walked down the avenue I tried to assume the look which maidens
wear in pictures entitled “Dreaming.” “Far-away” expressions have
a crazy air. I passed through the little paved yard to the entrance of
the Home. I pulled the bell, which sounded loud enough for a
church chime, and nervously awaited the opening of the door to the
Home, which I intended should ere long cast me forth and out upon
the charity of the police. The door was thrown back with a
vengeance, and a short, yellow-haired girl of some thirteen summers
stood before me.
“Is the matron in?” I asked, faintly.
“Yes, she’s in; she’s busy. Go to the back parlor,” answered the girl,
in a loud voice, without one change in her peculiarly matured face.
I followed these not overkind or polite instructions and found myself
in a dark, uncomfortable back-parlor. There I awaited the arrival of
my hostess. I had been seated some twenty minutes at the least,
when a slender woman, clad in a plain, dark dress entered and,
stopping before me, ejaculated inquiringly, “Well?”
“Are you the matron?” I asked.
“No,” she replied, “the matron is sick; I am her assistant. What do
you want?”
“I want to stay here for a few days, if you can accommodate me.”
“Well, I have no single rooms, we are so crowded; but if you will
occupy a room with another girl, I shall do that much for you.”
“I shall be glad of that,” I answered. “How much do you charge?” I
had brought only about seventy cents along with me, knowing full
well that the sooner my funds were exhausted the sooner I should be
put out, and to be put out was what I was working for.
“We charge thirty cents a night,” was her reply to my question, and
with that I paid her for one night’s lodging, and she left me on the
plea of having something else to look after. Left to amuse myself as
best I could, I took a survey of my surroundings.
They were not cheerful, to say the least. A wardrobe, desk, book-
case, organ, and several chairs completed the furnishment of the
room, into which the daylight barely came.
By the time I had become familiar with my quarters a bell, which
rivaled the door-bell in its loudness, began clanging in the basement,
and simultaneously women went trooping down-stairs from all
parts of the house. I imagined, from the obvious signs, that dinner
was served, but as no one had said anything to me I made no effort
to follow in the hungry train. Yet I did wish that some one would
invite me down. It always produces such a lonely, homesick feeling
to know others are eating, and we haven’t a chance, even if we are
not hungry. I was glad when the assistant matron came up and
asked me if I did not want something to eat. I replied that I did, and
then I asked her what her name was. Mrs. Stanard, she said, and I
immediately wrote it down in a notebook I had taken with me for
the purpose of making memoranda, and in which I had written
several pages of utter nonsense for inquisitive scientists.
Thus equipped I awaited developments. But my dinner–well, I
followed Mrs. Stanard down the uncarpeted stairs into the basement;
where a large number of women were eating. She found room for
me at a table with three other women. The short-haired slavey who
had opened the door now put in an appearance as waiter. Placing
her arms akimbo and staring me out of countenance she said:
“Boiled mutton, boiled beef, beans, potatoes, coffee or tea?”
“Beef, potatoes, coffee and bread,” I responded.
“Bread goes in,” she explained, as she made her way to the kitchen,
which was in the rear. It was not very long before she returned with
what I had ordered on a large, badly battered tray, which she banged
down before me. I began my simple meal. It was not very enticing,
so while making a feint of eating I watched the others.
I have often moralized on the repulsive form charity always
assumes! Here was a home for deserving women and yet what a
mockery the name was. The floor was bare, and the little wooden
tables were sublimely ignorant of such modern beautifiers as
varnish, polish and table-covers. It is useless to talk about the
cheapness of linen and its effect on civilization. Yet these honest
workers, the most deserving of women, are asked to call this spot of
bareness–home.
When the meal was finished each woman went to the desk in the
corner, where Mrs. Stanard sat, and paid her bill. I was given a
much-used, and abused, red check, by the original piece of humanity
in shape of my waitress. My bill was about thirty cents.
After dinner I went up-stairs and resumed my former place in the
back parlor. I was quite cold and uncomfortable, and had fully made
up my mind that I could not endure that sort of business long, so the
sooner I assumed my insane points the sooner I would be released
from enforced idleness. Ah! that was indeed the longest day I had
ever lived. I listlessly watched the women in the front parlor, where
all sat except myself.
One did nothing but read and scratch her head and occasionally call
out mildly, “Georgie,” without lifting her eyes from her book.
“Georgie” was her over-frisky boy, who had more noise in him than
any child I ever saw before. He did everything that was rude and
unmannerly, I thought, and the mother never said a word unless she
heard some one else yell at him. Another woman always kept going
to sleep and waking herself up with her own snoring. I really felt wickedly thankful it was only herself she awakened. The majority of
the women sat there doing nothing, but there were a few who made
lace and knitted unceasingly. The enormous door-bell seemed to be
going all the time, and so did the short-haired girl. The latter was,
besides, one of those girls who sing all the time snatches of all the
songs and hymns that have been composed for the last fifty years.
There is such a thing as martyrdom in these days. The ringing of the
bell brought more people who wanted shelter for the night.
Excepting one woman, who was from the country on a day’s
shopping expedition, they were working women, some of them with
children.
As it drew toward evening Mrs. Stanard came to me and said:
“What is wrong with you? Have you some sorrow or trouble?”
“No,” I said, almost stunned at the suggestion. “Why?”
“Oh, because,” she said, womanlike, “I can see it in your face. It tells
the story of a great trouble.”
“Yes, everything is so sad,” I said, in a haphazard way, which I had
intended to reflect my craziness.
“But you must not allow that to worry you. We all have our troubles,
but we get over them in good time. What kind of work are you
trying to get?”
“I do not know; it’s all so sad,” I replied.
“Would you like to be a nurse for children and wear a nice white cap
and apron?” she asked.
I put my handkerchief up to my face to hide a smile, and replied in a
muffled tone, “I never worked; I don’t know how.”
“But you must learn,” she urged; “all these women here work.”
“Do they?” I said, in a low, thrilling whisper. “Why, they look
horrible to me; just like crazy women. I am so afraid of them.”
“They don’t look very nice,” she answered, assentingly, “but they
are good, honest working women. We do not keep crazy people
here.”
I again used my handkerchief to hide a smile, as I thought that
before morning she would at least think she had one crazy person
among her flock.
“They all look crazy,” I asserted again, “and I am afraid of them.
There are so many crazy people about, and one can never tell what
they will do. Then there are so many murders committed, and the
police never catch the murderers,” and I finished with a sob that
would have broken up an audience of
blase
critics. She gave a sudden
and convulsive start, and I knew my first stroke had gone home. It
was amusing to see what a remarkably short time it took her to get
up from her chair and to whisper hurriedly: “I’ll come back to talk
with you after a while.” I knew she would not come back and she
did not.
When the supper-bell rang I went along with the others to the
basement and partook of the evening meal, which was similar to
Ten Days in a Mad-House
dinner, except that there was a smaller bill of fare and more people,
the women who are employed outside during the day having
returned. After the evening meal we all adjourned to the parlors,
where all sat, or stood, as there were not chairs enough to go round.
It was a wretchedly lonely evening, and the light which fell from the
solitary gas jet in the parlor, and oil-lamp the hall, helped to envelop
us in a dusky hue and dye our spirits navy blue. I felt it would not
require many inundations of this atmosphere to make me a fit
subject for the place I was striving to reach.
I watched two women, who seemed of all the crowd to be the most
sociable, and I selected them as the ones to work out my salvation,
or, more properly speaking, my condemnation and conviction.
Excusing myself and saying that I felt lonely, I asked if I might join
their company. They graciously consented, so with my hat and
gloves on, which no one had asked me to lay aside, I sat down and
listened to the rather wearisome conversation, in which I took no
part, merely keeping up my sad look, saying “Yes,” or “No,” or “I
can’t say,” to their observations. Several times I told them I thought
everybody in the house looked crazy, but they were slow to catch on
to my very original remark. One said her name was Mrs. King and