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the maniacs only one held out; and said contemptuously he couldn't see it。
〃Well;〃 said Alfred; 〃lay a finger on him after this; and I'll lay a hand on you; and aid your intellectual vision。〃
Rooke and Hayes treated remonstrance with open and galling contempt。 Yet the tide of opinion changed so; they did not care to defy it openly: but they bullied poor Beverley now and then on the sly; and he never told。 He was too inoffensive for this world。 But one day; as Alfred was sitting with his door ajar; writing a letter of earnest expostulation to the Commissioners; who had left his first unanswered; he heard Hayes at the head of the stairs call roughly; 〃Frank! Frank!〃
〃Sir;〃 replied the soft little voice of young Beverley。
〃Come; be quick; young shaver。〃
〃I'm coming; sir;〃 and up ran Beverley。
〃Here; take this tray downstairs。〃
〃Yes; sir。〃
〃Stop; there's a bit of bread for you。〃 And Hayes chucked him a crust; as one throws it to another man's dog。
〃Thank you; sir;〃 said Mr。 Beverley; stooping down for it; and being habitually as hungry as a ratcatcher's tyke; took an eager bite in that position。
〃How dare you eat it there;〃 said Hayes brutally: 〃take it to your own crib: come; mizzle。〃 And with that lent him a contemptuous kick behind; which owing to his position sent him off his balance flat on the tray; a glass broke under him。 Poor young Mr。 Beverley uttered a cry of dismay; for he knew Hayes would not own himself the cause。 Hayes cursed him for an awkward idiot; and the oath went off into a howl; for Alfred ran out at him brimful of Moses; and with a savage kick in the back and blow on the neck; administered simultaneously; hurled him head foremost down the stairs。 Alighting on the seventh step; he turned a somersault; and bounded like a ball on to the landing below; and there lay stupefied。 He picked himself up by slow degrees; and glared round with speechless awe and amazement up at the human thunderbolt that had shot out on him and sent him flying like a feather。 He shook his fist; and limped silently away all bruises and curses; to tell Rooke and concert vengeance。 Alfred; trembling still with ire; took Beverley to his room (the boy was as white as a sheet); and encouraged him; and made him wash properly; brushed his hair; dressed him in a decent tweed suit he had outgrown; and taking him under his arm; and walking with his own nose haughtily in the air; paraded him up and down the asylum; to show them all the best man in the house respected the poor soft gentleman。 Ah; what a grand thing it is to be young! Beverley clung to his protector too much like a girl; but walked gracefully and kept step; and every now and then looked up at Alfred with a loving adoration; that was sweet; yet sad to see。 Alfred marched him to Mrs。 Archbold; and told his tale; for he knew Hayes would misrepresent it; and get him into trouble。 She smiled on the pair; gently deplored her favourite's impetuosity; entreated him not to go fighting with that great monster Rooke; and charmed him by saying; 〃Well; and Frank _is_ a gentleman; when he is dressed like one。〃
〃Isn't he?〃 said Alfred eagerly。 〃And whose fault is it he is not always dressed like one? Whose fault that here's an earl's nephew; 'Boots in Hell'?〃
〃Not yours; Alfred; nor mine;〃 was the honeyed reply。
In vain did Mr。 Hayes prefer his complaint to Dr。 Wolf。 The Archbold had been before him; and the answer was; 〃Served you right。〃
These and many other good deeds did Alfred Hardie in Drayton House。 But; as the days rolled on; and no answer came from the Commissioners; his own anxiety; grief; and dismay left him less and less able to sympathise with the material but smaller wrongs around him。 He became silent; dejected。
At last he came to Mrs。 Archbold; and said sternly his letters to the Commissioners were intercepted。
〃I can't believe that;〃 said she。 〃It is against the law。〃
So it was: but law and custom are two。
〃I am sure of it;〃 said he; 〃and may the eternal curse of Heaven light on the cowardly traitor and miscreant who has done it。〃 And he stalked gloomily away。
When he left her; she sighed at this imprecation from his lips; but did not repent。 〃I _can't_ part with him;〃 she said despairingly; 〃and if I did not stop his poor dear letters; Wolf would:〃 and the amorous crocodile shed a tear; and persisted in her double…faced course。
By…and…by; when she saw him getting thinner and paler; and his bright face downcast and inexpressibly sad; she shared his misery: ay; shed scalding tears for him: yet could not give him up; for her will was as strong as the rest of her was supple; and hers was hot love; but not true love like Julia's。
Perhaps a very subtle observer; seeing this man and woman wax pale and spiritless together in one house; might have divined her secret。 Dr。 Wolf; then; was no such observer; for she made him believe she had a rising _penchant_ for him。 He really had a strong one for her。
While Alfred's visible misery pulled at her heart…strings; and sometimes irritated; sometimes melted her; came curious complications; one of which requires preface。
Mrs。 Dodd then was not the wife to trust blindly where her poor husband was concerned。 She bribed so well that a keeperess in David's first asylum told her David had been harshly used by an attendant。 She instantly got Eve Dodd to take him away: and transfer him to a small asylum nearer London; and kept by a Mrs。 Ellis。 〃Women are not cruel to men;〃 said the sagacious Lucy Dodd。
But; alas! if women are not cruel where sex comes in and mimics that wider sentiment; Humanity; women are deadly economical。 Largely gifted with that household virtue; Mrs。 Ellis kept too few servants; and; sure consequence in a madhouse; too many straitjackets; hobbles; muffs; leg…locks; bodybelts; &c。 &c。 Hence half her patients were frequently kept out of harm's way by cruel restraints administered; not out of hearty cruelty; but female parsimony。 Mrs。 and Miss Dodd invaded the house one day when the fair economist was out; and found seven patients out of the twelve kept out of mischief thus: one in a restraint chair; two hobbled like asses; two chained like dogs; and two in straight…waistcoats; and fastened to beds by webbing and straps; amongst the latter; David; though quiet as a lamb。
Mrs。 Dodd cried over him as if her heart would break; and made Miss Dodd shift him to a large asylum; where I believe he was very well used。 But here those dreadful newspapers interfered; a prying into sweet secluded spots。 They diversified Mrs。 Dodd's breakfast by informing her that the doctor of this asylum had just killed a patient; the mode of execution bloodless and sure; as became fair science。 It was a man between sixty and seventy; an age at which the heart can seldom stand very much shocking; or lowering; especially where the brain is diseased。 So they placed him in a shower…bath; narrow enough to impede respiration; without the falling water; which of necessity drives out air。 In short a vertical box with holes all round the top。
Here the doctor ordered him a cold shower…bath of unparalleled duration: half an hour。 To be followed by an unprecedented dose of tartar emetic。 This double…bar