Licence: In copyright
Credit: A case of multiple personality / by Albert Wilson. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The Royal College of Surgeons of England. The original may be consulted at The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
44/82 (page 390)
![I have a little more to tell you & that is that came for a few minutes almost directly after I woke up. I think I can tell you no more until you come home I remain your Loving little Friend Poor old Nick (8) [Written by B3.] Aug. 12th, 1S97. Dear Dr. Wilson, I daresay you will be surprised to hear that I am in M and am enjoying myself exceedingly. You told me you kept the other letters I sent you so I thought I would send you another as I want to tell you how I can swim and float and dive. I go in the water nearly every day for I like being in the water very much indeed. Dear Dr. Wilson last time I saw you, you were in your carriage, and you had Mrs. Wilson with j'ou and she had some thing on her eye and I want to know if she has hurt it very much and if it is better I do hope so. We have been in M nearly a fortnight now and we have got to go home at the end of next week. Hoping you are quite well Your sincere little friend Old Nick. (9) [Written by 136.] 2nd June, [1898], Dear Dr. Wilson I am writing you a letter to tell you how I am enjoying myself in M . It is such a glorious place I have never been to such a lovely place before, [see B3’s letters of Aug. 26th, 1896, and Aug. 12th, 1897, written from M ] We are having such dreadfully bad weather here, we have hardly had a fine day yet, and it is that bitterly cold here, that I have not been able to bathe. Tomadod said that if I went in perhaps I should have a very great breckart and then get drowned so that he could never see me any more. I have not given up all hopes of going in the water yet as Munger says that if a very very warm fine day was to](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b22447337_0046.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)