5/13/2023 0 Comments Gilman the yellow wallpaperThis wise man put me to bed and applied the rest cure, to which a still good physique responded so promptly that he concluded there was nothing much the matter with me, and sent me home with solemn advice to “live as domestic a life as far as possible,” to “have but two hours’ intellectual life a day,” and “never to touch pen, brush or pencil again as long as I lived.” This was in 1887. During about the third year of this trouble I went, in devout faith and some faint stir of hope, to a noted specialist in nervous diseases, the best known in the country. Such a story ought not to be written, he said it was enough to drive anyone mad to read it.Īnother physician, in Kansas I think, wrote to say that it was the best description of incipient insanity he had ever seen, and - begging my pardon - had I been there?įor many years, I suffered from a severe and continuous nervous breakdown tending to melancholia - and beyond. When the story first came out, in the New England Magazine about 1891, a Boston physician made protest in The Transcript.
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