THE PLAGUE AT ITS HEIGHT
Amabel’s departure for Berkshire
caused no change in her father’s mode of life.
Everything proceeded as before within his quiet dwelling;
and, except that the family were diminished in number,
all appeared the same. It is true they wanted
the interest, and indeed the occupation, afforded
them by the gentle invalid, but in other respects,
no difference was observable. Devotional exercises,
meals, the various duties of the house, and cheerful
discourse, filled up the day, which never proved wearisome.
The result proved the correctness of Mr. Bloundel’s
judgment. While the scourge continued weekly
to extend its ravages throughout the city, it never
crossed his threshold; and, except suffering in a slight
degree from scorbutic affections, occasioned by the
salt meats to which they were now confined, and for
which the lemon and lime-juice, provided against such
a contingency, proved an efficacious remedy, all the
family enjoyed perfect health. For some weeks
after her separation from her daughter, Mrs. Bloundel
continued in a desponding state, but after that time
she became more reconciled to the deprivation, and
partially recovered her spirits. Mr. Bloundel
did not dare to indulge a hope that Amabel would ever
return; but though he suffered much in secret, he
never allowed his grief to manifest itself. The
circumstance that he had not received any intelligence
of her did not weigh much with him, because the difficulty
of communication became greater and greater, as each
week the scourge increased in violence, and he was
inclined to take no news as good news. It was
not so in the present case, but of this he was happily
ignorant.
In this way, a month passed on.
And now every other consideration was merged in the
alarm occasioned by the daily increasing fury of the
pestilence. Throughout July the excessive heat
of the weather underwent no abatement, but in place
of the clear atmosphere that had prevailed during
the preceding month, unwholesome blights filled the
air, and, confining the pestilential effluvia, spread
the contagion far and wide with extraordinary rapidity.
Not only was the city suffocated with heat, but filled
with noisome smells, arising from the carcasses with
which the close alleys and other out-of-the-way places
were crowded, and which were so far decomposed as
not to be capable of removal. The aspect of the
river was as much changed as that of the city.
Numbers of bodies were thrown into it, and, floating
up with the tide, were left to taint the air on its
banks, while strange, ill-omened fowl, attracted thither
by their instinct, preyed upon them. Below the
bridge, all captains of ships moored in the Pool,
or off Wapping, held as little communication as possible
with those on shore, and only received fresh provisions
with the greatest precaution. As the plague increased,
most of these removed lower down the river, and many
of them put out entirely to sea. Above the bridge,
most of the wherries and other smaller craft had disappeared,
their owners having taken them up the river, and moored
them against its banks at different spots, where they
lived in them under tilts. Many hundreds of persons
remained upon the river in this way during the whole
continuance of the visitation.
August had now arrived, but the distemper
knew no cessation. On the contrary, it manifestly
increased in violence and malignity. The deaths
rose a thousand in each week, and in the last week
in this fatal month amounted to upwards of sixty thousand!
But, terrible as this was, the pestilence
had not yet reached its height. Hopes were entertained
that when the weather became cooler, its fury would
abate; but these anticipations were fearfully disappointed.
The bills of mortality rose the first week in September
to seven thousand, and though they slightly decreased
during the second week awakening a momentary
hope on the third they advanced to twelve
thousand! In less than ten days, upwards of two
thousand persons perished in the parish of Aldgate
alone; while Whitechapel suffered equally severely.
Out of the hundred parishes in and about the city,
one only, that of Saint John the Evangelist in Watling-street,
remained uninfected, and this merely because there
was scarcely a soul left within it, the greater part
of the inhabitants having quitted their houses, and
fled into the country.
The deepest despair now seized upon
all the survivors. Scarcely a family but had
lost half of its number many, more than
half while those who were left felt assured
that their turn would speedily arrive. Even the
reckless were appalled, and abandoned their evil courses.
Not only were the dead lying in the passages and alleys,
but even in the main thoroughfares, and none would
remove them. The awful prediction of Solomon
Eagle that “grass would grow in the streets,
and that the living should not be able to bury the
dead,” had come to pass. London had become
one vast lazar-house, and seemed in a fair way
of becoming a mighty sepulchre.
During all this time, Saint Paul’s
continued to be used as a pest-house, but it was not
so crowded as heretofore, because, as not one in fifty
of the infected recovered when placed under medical
care, it was not thought worth while to remove them
from their own abodes. The number of attendants,
too, had diminished. Some had died, but the greater
part had abandoned their offices from a fear of sharing
the fate of their patients. In consequence of
these changes, Judith Malmayns had been advanced to
the post of chief nurse at the cathedral. Both
she and Chowles had been attacked by the plague, and
both had recovered. Judith attended the coffin-maker,
and it was mainly owing to her that he got through
the attack. She never left him for a moment, and
would never suffer any one to approach him a
necessary precaution, as he was so much alarmed by
his situation that he would infallibly have made some
awkward revelations. When Judith, in her turn,
was seized, Chowles exhibited no such consideration
for her, and scarcely affected to conceal his disappointment
at her recovery. This want of feeling on his
part greatly incensed her against him, and though he
contrived in some degree to appease her, it was long
before she entirely forgave him. Far from being
amended by her sufferings, she seemed to have grown
more obdurate, and instantly commenced a fresh career
of crime. It was not, however, necessary now
to hasten the end of the sick. The distemper had
acquired such force and malignity that it did its work
quickly enough often too quickly and
all she sought was to obtain possession of the poor
patients’ attire, or any valuables they might
possess worth appropriating. To turn to the brighter
side of the picture, it must not be omitted that when
the pestilence was at its height, and no offers could
induce the timorous to venture forth, or render assistance
to the sufferers, Sir John Lawrence the Lord Mayor,
the Duke of Albermarle, the Earl of Craven, and the
Archbishop of Canterbury, devoted themselves to the
care of the infected, and supplied them with every
necessary they required. Among the physicians,
no one deserves more honourable mention than Doctor
Hodges, who was unremitting in his attentions to the
sufferers.
To return to the grocer. While
the plague was thus raging around him, and while every
house in Wood-street except one or two, from which
the inmates had fled, was attacked by the pestilence,
he and his family had remained untouched. About
the middle of August, he experienced a great alarm.
His second son, Hubert, fell sick, and he removed him
to one of the upper rooms which he had set aside as
an hospital, and attended upon him himself. In
a few days, however, his fears were removed and he
found, to his great satisfaction, that the youth had
not been attacked by the plague, but was only suffering
from a slight fever, which quickly yielded to the
remedies applied. About the same time, too, he
lost his porter, Dallison. The poor fellow did
not make his appearance as usual for two days, and
intelligence of his fate was brought on the following
day by his wife, who came to state that her husband
was dead, and had been thrown into the plague-pit
at Aldgate. The same night, however, she brought
another man, named Allestry, who took the place of
the late porter, and acquainted his employer with
the deplorable state of the city.
Two days afterwards, Allestry himself
died, and Mr. Bloundel had no one to replace him.
He thus lost all means of ascertaining what was going
forward; but the deathlike stillness around him, broken
only by the hoarse tolling of a bell, by a wild shriek
or other appalling cry, proclaimed too surely the
terrible state of things. Sometimes, too, a passenger
would go by, and would tell him the dreadful height
to which the bills of mortality had risen, assuring
him that ere another month had expired, not a soul
would be left alive in London.
One night, as Solomon Eagle, who had
likewise been miraculously preserved, pursued his
course through the streets, he paused before Mr. Roundel’s
house, and looking up at the window, at which the latter
had chanced to be stationed, cried in a loud voice,
“Be of good cheer. You have served God
faithfully, and there shall no evil befall you, neither
shall the plague come nigh your dwelling.”
And raising his arms, as if invoking a blessing upon
the habitation, he departed.
It was now the second week in September,
and as yet Mr. Bloundel had received no tidings of
his daughter. At any other season he would have
been seriously uneasy, but now, as has been already
stated, all private grief was swallowed up in the
horror of the general calamity. Satisfied that
she was in a healthful situation, and that her chance
of preservation from the pestilence was better than
that of any other member of his family, he turned
his thoughts entirely to them. Redoubling his
precautions, he tried by every means to keep up the
failing spirits of his household, and but rarely ventured
to open his shutter, and look forth on the external
world.
On the tenth of September, which was
afterwards accounted the most fatal day of this fatal
month, a young man of a very dejected appearance, and
wearing the traces of severe suffering in his countenance,
entered the west end of London, and took his way slowly
towards the city. He had passed Saint Giles’s
without seeing a single living creature, or the sign
of one in any of the houses. The broad thoroughfare
was completely grown over with grass, and the habitations
had the most melancholy and deserted air imaginable.
Some doors and windows were wide open, discovering
rooms with goods and furniture scattered about, having
been left in this state by their inmates; but most
part of them were closely fastened up.
As he proceeded along Holborn, the
ravages of the scourge were yet more apparent.
Every house, on either side of the way, had a red cross,
with the fatal inscription above it, upon the door.
Here and there, a watchman might be seen, looking
more like a phantom than a living thing. Formerly,
the dead were conveyed away at night, but now the carts
went about in the daytime. On reaching Saint
Andrew’s, Holborn, several persons were seen
wheeling hand-barrows filled with corpses, scarcely
covered with clothing, and revealing the blue and white
stripes of the pestilence, towards a cart which was
standing near the church gates. The driver of
the vehicle, a tall, cadaverous-looking man, was ringing
his bell, and jesting with another person, whom the
young man recognised, with a shudder, as Chowles.
The coffin-maker also recognised him at the same moment,
and called to him, but the other paid no attention
to the summons and passed on.
Crossing Holborn Bridge, he toiled
faintly up the opposite hill, for he was evidently
suffering from extreme debility, and on gaining the
summit was obliged to support himself against a wall
for a few minutes, before he could proceed. The
same frightful evidences of the ravages of the pestilence
were observable here, as elsewhere. The houses
were all marked with the fatal cross, and shut up.
Another dead-cart was heard rumbling along, accompanied
by the harsh cries of the driver, and the doleful
ringing of the bell. The next moment the loathly
vehicle was seen coming along the Old Bailey.
It paused before a house, from which four bodies were
brought, and then passed on towards Smithfield.
Watching its progress with fearful curiosity, the young
man noted how often it paused to increase its load.
His thoughts, coloured by the scene, were of the saddest
and dreariest complexion. All around wore the
aspect of death. The few figures in sight seemed
staggering towards the grave, and the houses appeared
to be plague-stricken like the inhabitants. The
heat was intolerably oppressive, and the air tainted
with noisome exhalations. Ever and anon, a window
would be opened, and a ghastly face thrust from it,
while a piercing shriek, or lamentable cry, was uttered.
No business seemed going on there were no
passengers no vehicles in the streets.
The mighty city was completely laid prostrate.
After a short rest, the young man
shaped his course towards Saint Paul’s, and
on reaching its western precincts, gazed for some time
at the reverend structure, as if its contemplation
called up many and painful recollections. Tears
started to his eyes, and he was about to turn away,
when he perceived the figure of Solomon Eagle stationed
near the cross at the western extremity of the roof.
The enthusiast caught sight of him at the same moment,
and motioned him to come nearer. “What
has happened?” he demanded, as the other approached
the steps of the portico.
The young man shook his head mournfully.
“It is a sad tale,” he said, “and
cannot be told now.”
“I can conjecture what it is,”
replied Solomon Eagle. “But come to the
small door near the northern entrance of the cathedral
at midnight. I will meet you there.”
“I will not fail,” replied the young man.
“One of the terrible judgments
which I predicted would befall this devoted city has
come to pass,” cried Solomon Eagle. “Another
yet remains the judgment by fire and
if its surviving inhabitants repent not, of which
there is as yet no sign, it will assuredly follow.”
“Heaven avert it!” groaned the other,
turning away.
Proceeding along Cheapside, he entered
Wood-street, and took his way towards the grocer’s
dwelling. When at a little distance from it, he
paused, and some minutes elapsed before he could muster
strength to go forward. Here, as elsewhere, there
were abundant indications of the havoc occasioned
by the fell disease. Not far from the grocer’s
shop, and in the middle of the street, lay the body
of a man, with the face turned upwards, while crouching
in an angle of the wall sat a young woman watching
it. As the young man drew nearer, he recognised
in the dead man the principal of the Brotherhood of
Saint Michael, and in the poor mourner one of his
profligate female associates. “What has
become of your unhappy companions?” he demanded
of the woman.
“The last of them lies there,”
she rejoined mournfully. “All the rest
died long ago. My lover was true to his vow; and
instead of deploring their fate, lived with me and
three other women in mirth and revelry till yesterday,
when the three women died, and he fell sick. He
did not, however, give in, but continued carousing
until an hour before his death.”
Too much shocked to make any reply,
the young man proceeded towards the hutch. Beneath
a doorway, at a little distance from it, sat a watchman
with a halberd on his shoulder, guarding the house;
but it was evident he would be of little further use.
His face was covered with his hands, and his groans
proclaimed that he himself was attacked by the pestilence.
Entering the hutch, the young man pulled the cord of
the bell, and the summons was soon after answered
by the grocer, who appeared at the window. “What,
Leonard Holt!” he exclaimed, in surprise, on
seeing the young man “is it you? what
ails you? you look frightfully ill.”
“I have been attacked a second
time by the plague,” replied the apprentice,
“and am only just recovered from it.”
“What of my child?” cried
the grocer eagerly “what of her?”
“Alas! alas!” exclaimed the apprentice.
“Do not keep me in suspense,” rejoined
the grocer. “Is she dead?”
“No, not dead,” replied the apprentice,
“but ”
“But what?” ejaculated the grocer.
“In Heaven’s name, speak!”
“These letters will tell you
all,” replied the apprentice, producing a packet.
“I had prepared them to send to you in case of
my death. I am not equal to further explanation
now.”
With trembling eagerness the grocer
lowered the rope, and Leonard having tied the packet
to it, it was instantly drawn up. Notwithstanding
his anxiety to ascertain the fate of Amabel, Mr. Bloundel
would not touch the packet until he had guarded against
the possibility of being infected by it. Seizing
it with a pair of tongs, he plunged it into a pan
containing a strong solution of vinegar and sulphur,
which he had always in readiness in the chamber, and
when thoroughly saturated, laid it in the sun to dry.
On first opening the shutter to answer Leonard’s
summons, he had flashed off a pistol, and he now thought
to expel the external air by setting fire to a ball
composed of quick brimstone, saltpetre, and yellow
amber, which being placed on an iron plate, speedily
filled the room with a thick vapour, and prevented
the entrance of any obnoxious particles. These
precautions taken, he again addressed himself, while
the packet was drying, to Leonard, whom he found gazing
anxiously at the window, and informed him that all
his family had hitherto escaped contagion.
“A special providence must have
watched over you, sir,” replied the apprentice,
“and I believe yours is the only family in the
whole city that has been so spared. I have reason
to be grateful for my own extraordinary preservation,
and yet I would rather it had pleased Heaven to take
me away than leave me to my present misery.”
“You keep me in a frightful
state of suspense, Leonard,” rejoined the grocer,
regarding the packet wistfully, “for I dare not
open your letters till they are thoroughly fumigated.
You assure me my child is living. Has she been
attacked by the plague?”
“Would she had!” groaned Leonard.
“Is she still at Ashdown?”
pursued the grocer. “Ah! you shake your
head. I see! I must be beside myself
not to have thought of it before. She is in the
power of the Earl of Rochester.”
“She is,” cried Leonard,
catching at the angle of the shed for support.
“And I am here!” exclaimed
Mr. Bloundel, forgetting his caution, and thrusting
himself far out of the window, as if with the intention
of letting himself down by the rope “I
am here, when I ought to be near her!”
“Calm yourself, I beseech you,
sir,” cried Leonard; “a moment’s
rashness will undo all you have done.”
“True!” replied the grocer,
checking himself. “I must think of others
as well as of her. But where is she? Hide
nothing from me.”
“I have reason to believe she
is in London,” replied the apprentice. “I
traced her hither, and should not have desisted from
my search if I had not been checked by the plague,
which attacked me on the night of my arrival.
I was taken to the pesthouse near Westbourne Green,
where I have been for the last three weeks.”
“If she was brought to London,
as you state,” rejoined the grocer, “I
cannot doubt but she has fallen a victim to the scourge.”
“It may be,” replied Leonard,
moodily, “and I would almost hope it is so.
When you peruse my letters, you will learn that she
was carried off by the earl from the residence of
a lady at Kingston Lisle, whither she had been removed
for safety; and after being taken from place to place,
was at last conveyed to an old hall in the neighbourhood
of Oxford, where she was concealed for nearly a month.”
“Answer me, Leonard,”
cried the grocer, “and do not attempt to deceive
me. Has she preserved her honour?”
“Up to the time of quitting
Oxford she had preserved it,” replied the apprentice.
“She herself assured me she had resisted all
the earl’s importunities, and would die rather
than yield to him. But I will tell you how I
obtained an interview with her. After a long search,
I discovered the place of her concealment, the old
hall I have just mentioned, and climbed in the night,
and at the hazard of my life, to the window of the
chamber where she was confined. I saw and spoke
with her; and having arranged a plan by which I hoped
to accomplish her deliverance on the following night,
descended. Whether our brief conference was overheard,
and communicated to the earl, I know not; but it would
seem so, for he secretly departed with her the next
morning, taking the road, as I subsequently learnt,
to London. I instantly started in pursuit, and
had reached Paddington, when I fell ill, as I have
related.”
“What you tell me in some measure
eases my mind,” replied Mr. Bloundel, after
a pause; “for I feel that my daughter, if alive,
will be able to resist her persecutor. What has
become of your companions?”
“Nizza Macascree has met with
the same fate as Amabel,” replied Leonard.
“She was unfortunate enough to attract the king’s
attention, when he visited Ashdown Lodge in company
of the Earl of Rochester, and was conveyed to Oxford,
where the court is now held, and must speedily have
fallen a victim to her royal lover if she had not disappeared,
having been carried off, it was supposed, by Sir Paul
Parravicin. But the villain was frustrated in
his infamous design. The king’s suspicion
falling upon him, he was instantly arrested; and though
he denied all knowledge of Nizza’s retreat,
and was afterwards liberated, his movements were so
strictly watched, that he had no opportunity of visiting
her.”
“You do not mention Blaize,”
said Mr. Bloundel. “No ill, I trust, has
befallen him?”
“I grieve to say he has been
attacked by the distemper he so much dreaded,”
replied Leonard. “He accompanied me to London,
but quitted me when I fell sick, and took refuge with
a farmer named Wingfield, residing near Kensal Green.
I accidentally met Wingfield this morning, and he
informed me that Blaize was taken ill the day before
yesterday, and removed to the pest-house in Finsbury
Fields. I will go thither presently, and see
what has become of him. Is Doctor Hodges still
among the living?”
“I trust so,” replied
Mr. Bloundel, “though I have not seen him for
the last ten days.”
He then disappeared for a few minutes,
and on his return lowered a small basket containing
a flask of canary, a loaf which he himself had baked,
and a piece of cold boiled beef. The apprentice
thankfully received the provisions, and retiring to
the hutch, began to discuss them, fortifying himself
with a copious draught of canary. Having concluded
his repast, he issued forth, and acquainting Mr. Bloundel,
who had at length ventured to commence reading the
contents of the packet by the aid of powerful glasses,
that he was about to proceed to Dr. Hodges’s
residence, to inquire after him, set off in that direction.
Arrived in Great Knightrider-street,
he was greatly shocked at finding the door of the
doctor’s habitation fastened, nor could he make
any one hear, though he knocked loudly and repeatedly
against it. The shutters of the lower windows
were closed, and the place looked completely deserted.
All the adjoining houses were shut up, and not a living
being could be discerned in the street from whom information
could be obtained relative to the physician.
Here, as elsewhere, the pavement was overgrown with
grass, and the very houses had a strange and melancholy
look, as if sharing in the general desolation.
On looking down a narrow street leading to the river,
Leonard perceived a flock of poultry scratching among
the staves in search of food, and instinctively calling
them, they flew towards him, as if delighted at the
unwonted sound of a human voice. These, and a
half-starved cat, were the only things living that
he could perceive. At the further end of the street
he caught sight of the river, speeding in its course
towards the bridge, and scarcely knowing whither he
was going, sauntered to its edge. The tide had
just turned, and the stream was sparkling in the sunshine,
but no craft could be discovered upon its bosom; and
except a few barges moored to its sides, all vestiges
of the numberless vessels with which it was once crowded
were gone. Its quays were completely deserted.
Boxes and bales of goods lay untouched on the wharves;
the cheering cries with which the workmen formerly
animated their labour were hushed. There was no
sound of creaking cords, no rattle of heavy chains none
of the busy hum ordinarily attending the discharge
of freight from a vessel, or the packing of goods
and stores on board. All traffic was at an end;
and this scene, usually one of the liveliest possible,
was now forlorn and desolate. On the opposite
shore of the river it appeared to be the same indeed,
the borough of Southwark was now suffering the utmost
rigour of the scourge, and except for the rows of houses
on its banks, and the noble bridge by which it was
spanned, the Thames appeared as undisturbed as it
must have been before the great city was built upon
its banks.
The apprentice viewed this scene with
a singular kind of interest. He had become so
accustomed to melancholy sights, that his feelings
had lost their acuteness, and the contemplation of
the deserted buildings and neglected wharves around
him harmonized with his own gloomy thoughts.
Pursuing his walk along the side of the river, he was
checked by a horrible smell, and looking downward,
he perceived a carcass in the last stage of decomposition
lying in the mud. It had been washed ashore by
the tide, and a large bird of prey was contending for
the possession of it with a legion of water-rats.
Sickened by the sight, he turned up a narrow thoroughfare
near Baynard’s Castle, and crossing Thames-street,
was about to ascend Addle-hill, when he perceived a
man wheeling a hand-barrow, containing a couple of
corpses, in the direction of the river, with the intention,
doubtless, of throwing them into it, as the readiest
means of disposing of them. Both bodies were stripped
of their clothing, and the blue tint of the nails,
as well as the blotches with which they were covered,
left no doubt as to the disease of which they had
died. Averting his gaze from the spectacle, Leonard
turned off on the right along Carter-lane, and threading
a short passage, approached the southern boundary
of the cathedral; and proceeding towards the great
door opposite him, passed through it. The mighty
lazar-house was less crowded than he expected
to find it, but its terrible condition far exceeded
his worst conceptions. Not more than half the
pallets were occupied; but as the sick were in a great
measure left to themselves, the utmost disorder prevailed.
A troop of lazars, with sheets folded around them,
glided, like phantoms, along Paul’s Walk, and
mimicked in a ghastly manner the air and deportment
of the gallants who had formerly thronged the place.
No attempt being made to maintain silence, the noise
was perfectly stunning; some of the sick were shrieking some
laughing in a wild unearthly manner some
praying some uttering loud exécrations others
groaning and lamenting. The holy building seemed
to have become the abode of evil and tormented spirits.
Many dead were lying in the beds the few
attendants who were present not caring to remove them;
and Leonard had little doubt, that before another sun
went down the whole of the ghastly assemblage before
him would share their fate. If the habitations
he had recently gazed upon had appeared plague-stricken,
the sacred structure in which he was now standing
seemed yet more horribly contaminated. Ill-kept
and ill-ventilated, the air was loaded with noxious
effluvia, while the various abominations that met
the eye at every turn would have been sufficient to
produce the distemper in any one who had come in contact
with them. They were, however, utterly disregarded
by the miserable sufferers and their attendants.
The magnificent painted windows were dimmed by a thick
clammy steam, which could scarcely be washed off while
the carved oak screens, the sculptured tombs, the
pillars, the walls, and the flagged floors were covered
with impurities.
Satisfied with a brief survey of this
frightful scene, Leonard turned to depart, and was
passing the entrance to Saint Faith’s, which
stood open, when he caught sight of Judith standing
at the foot of the broad stone steps, and holding
a lamp in her hand. She was conversing with a
tall richly-dressed man, whose features he fancied
he had seen before, though he could not at the moment
call them to mind. After a brief conversation,
they moved off into the depths of the vault, and he
lost eight of them. All at once it occurred to
Leonard that Judith’s companion was the unfortunate
stranger whose child he had interred, and who had
been so strangely affected at the sight of Nizza Macascree.
Determined to ascertain the point, he hurried down
the steps and plunged into the vault. It was
buried in profound darkness, and he had not proceeded
far when he stumbled over something lying in his path,
and found from the groan that followed that it was
a plague-patient. Before he could regain his
feet, the unfortunate sufferer whom he had thus disturbed
implored him, in piteous accents, which, with a shudder,
he recognised as those of Blaize, to remove him.
Leonard immediately gave the poor porter to understand
that he was near him, and would render him every aid
in his power.
“Your assistance comes too late,
Leonard,” groaned Blaize “it’s
all over with me now, but I don’t like to breathe
my last in this dismal vault, without medicine or
food, both of which I am denied by that infernal hag
Mother Malmayns, who calls herself a nurse, but who
is in reality a robber and murderess. Oh! the
frightful scenes I have witnessed since I have been
brought here! I told you I should not escape
the plague. I shall die of it I am
sure I shall.”
“I thought you were at the pest-house
in Finsbury Fields,” said Leonard.
“I was taken there,” replied
Blaize; “but the place was full, and they would
not admit me, so I was sent to Saint Paul’s,
where there was plenty of room. Yesterday I did
pretty well, for I was in the great ward above, and
one of the attendants obeyed my directions implicitly,
and I am certain if they had been fully carried out,
I should have got well. I will tell you what
I did. As soon as I was placed on a pallet, and
covered with blankets, I ordered a drink to be prepared
of the inner bark of an ash-tree, green walnuts, scabious
vervain, and saffron, boiled in two quarts of the
strongest vinegar. Of this mixture I drank plentifully,
and it soon produced a plentiful perspiration.
I next had a hen a live one, of course stripped
of the feathers, and brought to me. Its bill
was held to the large blotch under my arm, and kept
there till the fowl died from the noxious matter it
drew forth. I next repeated the experiment with
a pigeon, and derived the greatest benefit from it.
The tumour had nearly subsided, and if I had been
properly treated afterwards, I should now be in a
fair way of recovery. But instead of nice strengthening
chicken-broth, flavoured with succory and marigolds;
or water-gruel, mixed with rosemary and winter-savory;
or a panado, seasoned with verjuice or wood-sorrel;
instead of swallowing large draughts of warm beer;
or water boiled with carduus seeds; or a posset
drink, made with sorrel, bugloss, and borage; instead
of these remedies, or any other, I was carried to
this horrible place when I was asleep, and strapped
to my pallet, as you perceive. Unloose me, if
you can do nothing else.”
“That I will readily do,”
replied Leonard; “but I must first procure a
light.” With this, he groped his way among
the close ranks of ponderous pillars, but though he
proceeded with the utmost caution, he could not avoid
coming in contact with the beds of some of the other
patients, and disturbing them. At length he descried
a glimmer of light issuing from a door which he knew
to be that of the vestry, and which was standing slightly
ajar. Opening it, he perceived a lamp burning
on the table, and without stopping to look around
him, seized it, and hurried back to the porter.
Poor Blaize presented a lamentable, and yet grotesque
appearance. His plump person was greatly reduced
in bulk, and his round cheeks had become hollow and
cadaverous. He was strapped, as he had stated,
to the pallet, which in its turn was fastened to the
adjoining pillar. A blanket was tightly swathed
around him, and a large cloth was bound round his
head in lieu of a nightcap. Leonard instantly
set about releasing him, and had just unfastened the
straps when he heard footsteps approaching, and looking
up, perceived the stranger and Judith Malmayns advancing
towards him.