CHAPTER X.
MY FIRST SUPPER.
This examination over, we heard some one yell, “Go
out into the hall.” One of the patients kindly explained
that this was an invitation to supper. We late comers
tried to keep together, so we entered the hall and stood
at the door where all the women had crowded. How we
shivered as we stood there! The windows were open and
the draught went whizzing through the hall. The patients
looked blue with cold, and the minutes stretched
into a quarter of an hour. At last one of the nurses went
forward and unlocked a door, through which we all
crowded to a landing of the stairway. Here again came
a long halt directly before an open window.
“How very imprudent for the attendants to keep these
thinly clad women standing here in the cold,” said Miss
Neville.
I looked at the poor crazy captives shivering, and
added, emphatically, “It’s horribly brutal.” While
they stood there I thought I would not relish supper that
night. They looked so lost and hopeless. Some were
chattering nonsense to invisible persons, others were
laughing or crying aimlessly, and one old, gray-haired
woman was nudging me, and, with winks and sage noddings
of the head and pitiful uplifting of the eyes and
hands, was assuring me that I must not mind the poor
creatures, as they were all mad. “Stop at the heater,”
was then ordered, “and get in line, two by two.”
“Mary, get a companion.” “How many times must I
tell you to keep in line?” “Stand still,” and, as the
orders were issued, a shove and a push were administered,
and often a slap on the ears. After this third and
final halt, we were marched into a long, narrow dining-room,
where a rush was made for the table.
58The table reached the length of the room and was
uncovered and uninviting. Long benches without backs
were put for the patients to sit on, and over these they
had to crawl in order to face the table. Placed close
together all along the table were large dressing-bowls
filled with a pinkish-looking stuff which the patients
called tea. By each bowl was laid a piece of bread, cut
thick and buttered. A small saucer containing five
prunes accompanied the bread. One fat woman made a
rush, and jerking up several saucers from those around
her emptied their contents into her own saucer. Then
while holding to her own bowl she lifted up another and
drained its contents at one gulp. This she did to a second
bowl in shorter time than it takes to tell it. Indeed,
I was so amused at her successful grabbings that when I
looked at my own share the woman opposite, without so
much as by your leave, grabbed my bread and left me
without any.
Another patient, seeing this, kindly offered me hers,
but I declined with thanks and turned to the nurse and
asked for more. As she flung a thick piece down on the
table she made some remark about the fact that if I forgot
where my home was I had not forgotten how to eat.
I tried the bread, but the butter was so horrible that one
could not eat it. A blue-eyed German girl on the opposite
side of the table told me I could have bread unbuttered
if I wished, and that very few were able to eat the
butter. I turned my attention to the prunes and found
that very few of them would be sufficient. A patient
near asked me to give them to her. I did so. My bowl
of tea was all that was left. I tasted, and one taste was
enough. It had no sugar, and it tasted as if it had been
made in copper. It was as weak as water. This was also
transferred to a hungrier patient, in spite of the protest
of Miss Neville.
“You must force the food down,” she said, “else you
59will be sick, and who knows but what, with these surroundings,
you may go crazy. To have a good brain the
stomach must be cared for.”
“It is impossible for me to eat that stuff,” I replied,
and, despite all her urging, I ate nothing that night.
It did not require much time for the patients to consume
all that was eatable on the table, and then we got
our orders to form in line in the hall. When this was
done the doors before us were unlocked and we were
ordered to proceed back to the sitting-room. Many of
the patients crowded near us, and I was again urged to
play, both by them and by the nurses. To please the
patients I promised to play and Miss Tillie Mayard was
to sing. The first thing she asked me to play was
“Rock-a-bye Baby,” and I did so. She sang it beautifully.