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She said this so charmingly he was surprised into kissing her fair hand; then blushed; and thanked her warmly。 Thus she established a chain between them。 When he let too long elapse without appealing to her; she would ask his advice about the welfare of this or that patient; and so she cajoled him by the two foibles she had discerned in himhis vanity and his humanity。
Besides Alfred; there were two patients in Drayton House who had never been insane; a young man; and an old woman; of whom anon。 There were also three ladies and one gentleman; who had been deranged; but had recovered years ago。 This little incident; Recovery; is followed in a public asylum by instant discharge; but; in a private one; Money; not Sanity; is apt to settle the question of egress。 The gentleman's case was scarce credible in the nineteenth century: years ago; being undeniably cracked; he had done what Dr。 Wycherley told Alfred was a sure sign of sanity: _i。e。;_ he had declared himself insane; and had even been so reasonable as to sign his own order and certificates; and so imprison himself illegally; but with perfect ease; no remonstrance against that illegality from the guardians of the law! When he got what plain men call sane; he naturally wanted to be free; and happening to remember he alone had signed the order of imprisonment; and the imaginary doctor's certificates; he claimed his discharge from illegal confinement。 Answer: 〃First obtain a legal order for your discharge。〃 On this he signed an order for his discharge。 〃That is not a legal order。〃〃It is as legal as the order on which I am here。〃 〃Granted; but; legally or not; the asylum has got you; the open air has not got you。 Possession is ninety…nine points of Lunacy law。 Die your own illegal prisoner; and let your kinsfolk eat your land; and drink your consols; and bury you in a pauper's shroud〃 All that Alfred could do for these victims was to promise to try and get them out some day; D。V。 But there was a weak…minded youth; Francis Beverley; who had the honour to be under the protection of the Lord Chancellor。 Now a lunatic or a Softy; protected by that functionary; is literally a lamb protected by a wolf; and that wolf _ex officio_ the cruellest; cunningest old mangler and fleecer of innocents in Christendom。 Chancery lunatics are the richest class; yet numbers of them are flung among pauper and even criminal lunatics; at a few pounds a year; while their committees bag four…fifths of the money that has been assigned to keep the patient in comfort。
Unfortunately the protection of the Chancellor extends to Life and Reason; as well as Fleece; with the following result:
In public asylums about forty per cent。 are said to be cured。
In private ones twenty…five per cent; at least; most of them poorish。
Of Chancery Lunatics not five per cent。
Finally; one…third of all the Chancery Lunatics do every six years exchange the living tombs they are fleeced and bullied in for dead tombs where they rest; and go from the sham protection of the Lord Chancellor of England to the real protection of their Creator and their Judge。
These statistics have been long before the world; and are dead figures to the Skimmer of things; but tell a dark tale to the Reader of things; so dark; that I pray Heaven to protect me; and all other weak inoffensive persons; from the protection of my Lord Chancellor in this kind。
Beverley was so unfortunate as to exist before the date of the above petition: and suffered the consequences。
He was an aristocrat by birth; noble on both sides of his house; and unluckily had money。 But for that he would have been a labouring man; and free。 My Lord Protector committed him with six hundred pounds a year maintenance money to the care of his committee; the Honourable Fynes Beverley。
Now this corporate; yet honourable individual; to whom something was committed; and so Chancery Lane called him in its own sweet French the thing committed; was a gentleman of birth; breeding; and intelligence。 He undertook to take care of his simple cousin; and what he did take care of was himself。
THE SUB…LETTING SWINDLE。
I。 The Honourable Fynes Beverley; Anglo…French committee; or crown tenant; sub…let soft Francis for L。 300 a year; pocketed L。 300; and washed his hands of Frank。
2。 Mr。 Heselden; the sub…tenant; sub…let the Softy of high degree for L。 150; pocketed the surplus; and washed his hands of him。
3。 The L。 150 man sub…let him to Dr。 Wolf at L。 60 a year; pouched the surplus; and washed his hands of him。
And now what on earth was left for poor Dr。 Wolf to do? Could he sub…embezzle a Highlander's breeks? Could he subtract more than her skin from off the singed cat? Could he peel the core of a rotten apple? Could he pare a grated cheese rind? Could he flay a skinned flint? Could he fleece a hog after Satan had shaved it as clean as a bantam's egg?
Let no man dare to limit genius; least of all the genius of extortion。
Dr。 Wolf screwed comparatively more out of young Frank than did any of the preceding screws。 He turned him into a servant of all work and half starved him; money profit; L。 45 out of the L。 60; or three…fourths; whereas the others had only bagged one…half。 But by this means he got a good servant without wages; and on half a servant's food; clearing L。 22 and L。 12 in these two items。
Victim of our great national vice and foible; Vicariousness; this scion of a noble house; protected in theory by the Crown; vicariously sub…protected by the Chancellor; sub…vicariously sub…sham protected by his kin; was really flung unprotected into the fleece market; and might be seenat the end of the long chain of subs。 pros; vices; locos; shams; shuffles; swindles; and liesshaking the carpets; making the beds; carrying the water; sweeping the rooms; and scouring the sordid vessels; of thirty patients in Drayton House; not one of whom was his equal either in birth or wealth; and of four menials; who were all his masters and hard ones。 His work was always doing; never done。 He was not the least mad nor bad; but merely of feeble intellect all round。 Fifty thousand gentlemen's families would have been glad of him at L。 300 a year; and made a son and a brother of him。 But he was under the vicarious protection of the Lord Chancellor。 Thin; half…starved; threadbare; out at elbows; the universal butt; scoffed at by the very lunatics; and especially ill treated by the attendants whose work he did gratis; he was sworn at; jeered; insulted; cuffed and even kicked; every day of his hard; hard life。 And yet he was a gentleman; though a soft one; his hands; his features; his carriage; his address; had all an indefinable stamp of race。 How had it outlived such crushing; degrading usage? I don't know; how does a daisy survive the iron roller? Alfred soon found him out; and to everybody's amazement; especially Frank's; remonstrated gently but resolutely and eloquently; and soon convinced the majority; sane and insane; that a creature so meek and useful merited special kindness; not cruelty。 One keeper; The Robin; _alias_ Tom Wales; an exprize fighter; was a warm convert to this view。 Among the maniacs only one held out; and said contemptuously he couldn't see it。
〃We