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If she does not recognize you, her condition is graver than I think. If she does recognize you, well, I hope that we shall be able to cure her. Come!" Dr. Sims motioned the Prince to precede them. "Shall I accompany you, gentlemen?" asked Vogotzine. "Certainly, General!" "You see, I don't like lunatics; they produce a singular effect upon me; they don't interest me at all. But still, after all, she is my niece!" And he gave a sharp pull to his frock-coat, as he would have tightened his belt before an assault. They descended a short flight of steps, and found themselves in a large garden, with trees a century old, beneath which were several men and women walking about or sitting in chairs. A large, new building, one story high, appeared at one end of the garden; in this were the dormitories of Dr. Sims's patients. "Are those people insane?" asked Zilah, pointing to the peaceful groups. "Yes," said Dr. Sims; "it requires a stretch of the imagination to believe it, does it not? You can speak to them as we pass by. All these here are harmless." "Shall we cross the garden?" "Our invalid is below there, in another garden, behind that house." As he passed by, Zilah glanced curiously at these poor beings, who bowed, or exchanged a few words with the two physicians. It seemed to him that they had the happy look of people who had reached the desired goal. Vogotzine, coughing nervously, kept close to the Prince and felt very ill at ease. Andras, on the contrary, found great difficulty in realizing that he was really among lunatics. "See," said Dr. Sims, pointing out an old gentleman, dressed in the style of 1840, like an old-fashioned lithograph of a beau of the time of Gavarni, "that man has been more than thirty-five years in the institution. He will not change the cut of his garments, and he is very careful to have his tailor make his clothes in the same style he dressed when he was young. He is very happy. He thinks that he is the enchanter Merlin, and he listens to Vivian, who makes appointments with him under the trees." As they passed the old man, his neck imprisoned in a high stock, his surtout cut long and very tight in the waist, and his trousers very full about the hips and very close about the ankles, he bowed politely. "Good-morning, Doctor Sims! Good-morning, Doctor Fargeas!" Then, as the director of the establishment approached to speak, he placed a finger upon his lips: "Hush,"
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