A. "Not so well as I could wish; I am becoming more wakeful than usual; I awoke last night two or three times: I got up twice, walked about my room here, and then went to bed again."
Q. "Do you always get up when you awake, sir?"
A. "No, sir, not always; but I get up and walk about as soon as I feel myself—there, now, it is all gone" (putting his hand upon his forehead).
Q. "You get up, sir, I suppose, as soon as you feel yourself uneasy in bed?"
A. "Yes, sir, when I begin to be troublesome to myself."
Q. "Do not you, sir, find it unpleasant to walk about here alone, and to have nobody to converse with?"
A. "Not at all, sir, I get up when I am tired abed, and I walk about till I am tired, and then I go to bed again; and so forth."
Q. "But does it not afford you great pleasure when any person comes to see you?"
A. "Why, not so much as one would expect, sir."
Q. "Are you not pleased when your friends come and converse with you?"