361 Comments Posted by Barbara

wrote:
Very eerie...

Motts, are those holes in the floor all around the altar, or have numerous things just fallen? It looks like I can see some brickwork on the sides...
wrote:
Its so intriguing how those radiators sink into the floor like that...
wrote:
Wow Paul, I can't imagine what it must feel like to see the place like this.

In an odd way its neat how the floor just fell away from the fireplace...I keep imagining how I could get in front of the fireplace and to that little square of flooring left on its other side. Although that would be impossible and I would die in the process *scratches head*
wrote:
I love the eerie touch the black and white adds...

Anyways, does anyone have any more info on this place? Like is there a good website or something? I'm just kinda confused about its history. Does anyone living around the area know how much of this is still there?
wrote:
If you think about it, you can see those as being the legs of someone desperately holding on to the floor above after they fell through whilst exploring.
*tickle tickle* lol
Just Kidding!
wrote:
I can just hear the crash in the dead of night when this falls through the floor below.
wrote:
I just had to comment again. I don't know what it is but this photo gives me an oppresive, overwhelming feeling of sadness. Same with the pictures where things are starting to fall through holes in the floor. I guess its like seeing something on its deathbed, the last person to see it "alive." I don't know what it is, but it almost makes me feel sick with sadness.
wrote:
Ohh that's really sad : ( I love cats, and animals in general.
wrote:
I find it more of a nauseating color. The sage green you tend to see in houses now is much more pleasant, that's what I'm painting my downstairs in. Note: it doesn't look anything like this! lol
wrote:
Oh gosh, now I have a picture in my mind of Motts sliding around, camera and tripod in hand!

Anyways, that's a pretty solid sheet of ice. Had there been some flooding or something? Oh, just thought - the ice would make it harder for guards to catch you if they tried to chase you - hmm, I'll have to keep that in mind, lol.
wrote:
What a neat, nostalgic piece. I'd love to have a set like that (well, one that isn't overturned and broken).
wrote:
This is really neat...what a beautiful mezzanine!
wrote:
I ABSOLUTELY LOVE this place!! Definitely my favorite of all, though Danvers does have its presence. There is just something enchanting about this place...
wrote:
Sorry to double-post, but I couldn't figure out a way to add onto the old one. Anyways, I was thinking that if the graves there were simply marked by numbers, who knows how many unmarked graves there are? Danvers is a burial ground, a resting place. I just wish it could be preserved and turned into a musuem detailing the history of such institutions and treatment methods, serving as a memorial to all those who suffered under their walls.
wrote:
Its nauseating, really. There's an online petition to preserve Danvers, at this link:
http://www.petitiononline.com/dssehl/petition.html
Prolly won't do anything, but I feel good knowing I tried.