< Page:The Harveian oration 1866.djvu
This page needs to be proofread.

24

their remedies. Various restraints of a painful kind were regarded as not only necessary, but be- neficial. Many persons supposed that insanity was incurable, and that little or nothing could be done for the unhappy sufferer, but secluding him from the eyes of the world, and preventing him from in- juring himself and others. Public asylums were looked upon rather as prisons for dangerous per- sons than as hospitals for the cure of their malady. Hence it followed, that the treatment of the insane too often passed from the hands of the physician into those of men destitute of all medical know- ledge, unfeeling and unprincipled. Then came neglect and cruelty, and all the horrors of which •we read : — the manacles and fetters ; the iron col- lars by which the poor creatures were chained to the walls, incarcerated for years in narroAV cells, dark, damp, and cold, like mediaeval dungeons, and ' filthy beyond description, or in cages in which they were exposed as a sight for public curiosity, and made a show of like wild beasts; their beds the bare ground, or straw seldom changed; their scanty clothing, or very naliedness ; the blows and stripes that aggravated at once their sufierings and their malady, and debased them below the very

This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.