书城公版A JOURNAL OF THE PLAGUE YEAR
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第90章 Part 6(17)

This,however,is certain,not a man of them appeared for a great while in or about London.There were,indeed,several doctors who published bills recommending their several physical preparations for cleansing the body,as they call it,after the plague,and needful,as they said,for such people to take who had been visited and had been cured;whereas I must own I believe that it was the opinion of the most eminent physicians at that time that the plague was itself a sufficient purge,and that those who escaped the infection needed no physic to cleanse their bodies of any other things;the running sores,the tumours,&c.,which were broke and kept open by the directions of the physicians,having sufficiently cleansed them;and that all other distempers,and causes of distempers,were effectually carried off that way;and as the physicians gave this as their opinions wherever they came,the quacks got little business.

There were,indeed,several little hurries which happened after the decrease of the plague,and which,whether they were contrived to fright and disorder the people,as some imagined,I cannot say,but sometimes we were told the plague would return by such a time;and the famous Solomon Eagle,the naked Quaker I have mentioned,prophesied evil tidings every day;and several others telling us that London had not been sufficiently scourged,and that sorer and severer strokes were yet behind.Had they stopped there,or had they descended to particulars,and told us that the city should the next year be destroyed by fire,then,indeed,when we had seen it come to pass,we should not have been to blame to have paid more than a common respect to their prophetic spirits;at least we should have wondered at them,and have been more serious in our inquiries after the meaning of it,and whence they had the foreknowledge.But as they generally told us of a relapse into the plague,we have had no concern since that about them;yet by those frequent clamours,we were all kept with some kind of apprehensions constantly upon us;and if any died suddenly,or if the spotted fevers at any time increased,we were presently alarmed;much more if the number of the plague increased,for to the end of the year there were always between 200and 300of the plague.On any of these occasions,I say,we were alarmed anew.

Those who remember the city of London before the fire must remember that there was then no such place as we now call Newgate Market,but that in the middle of the street which is now called Blow-bladder Street,and which had its name from the butchers,who used to kill and dress their sheep there (and who,it seems,had a custom to blow up their meat with pipes to make it look thicker and fatter than it was,and were punished there for it by the Lord Mayor);I say,from the end of the street towards Newgate there stood two long rows of shambles for the selling meat.

It was in those shambles that two persons falling down dead,as they were buying meat,gave rise to a rumour that the meat was all infected;which,though it might affright the people,and spoiled the market for two or three days,yet it appeared plainly afterwards that there was nothing of truth in the suggestion.But nobody can account for the possession of fear when it takes hold of the mind.

However,it Pleased God,by the continuing of the winter weather,so to restore the health of the city that by February following we reckoned the distemper quite ceased,and then we were not so easily frighted again.

There was still a question among the learned,and at first perplexed the people a little:and that was in what manner to purge the house and goods where the plague had been,and how to render them habitable again,which had been left empty during the time of the plague.

Abundance-of perfumes and preparations were prescribed by physicians,some of one kind and some of another,in which the people who listened to them put themselves to a great,and indeed,in my opinion,to an unnecessary expense;and the poorer people,who only set open their windows night and day,burned brimstone,pitch,and gunpowder,and such things in their rooms,did as well as the best;nay,the eager people who,as I said above,came home in haste and at all hazards,found little or no inconvenience in their houses,nor in the goods,and did little or nothing to them.

However,in general,prudent,cautious people did enter into some measures for airing and sweetening their houses,and burned perfumes,incense,benjamin,rozin,and sulphur in their rooms close shut up,and then let the air carry it all out with a blast of gunpowder;others caused large fires to be made all day and all night for several days and nights;by the same token that two or three were pleased to set their houses on fire,and so effectually sweetened them by burning them down to the ground;as particularly one at Ratcliff,one in Holbourn,and one at Westminster;besides two or three that were set on fire,but the fire was happily got out again before it went far enough to bum down the houses;and one citizen's servant,I think it was in Thames Street,carried so much gunpowder into his master's house,for clearing it of the infection,and managed it so foolishly,that he blew up part of the roof of the house.But the time was not fully come that the city was to he purged by fire,nor was it far off;for within nine months more I saw it all lying in ashes;when,as some of our quacking philosophers pretend,the seeds of the plague were entirely destroyed,and not before;a notion too ridiculous to speak of here:since,had the seeds of the plague remained in the houses,not to be destroyed but by fire,how has it been that they have not since broken out,seeing all those buildings in the suburbs and liberties,all in the great parishes of Stepney,Whitechappel,Aldgate,Bishopsgate,Shoreditch,Cripplegate,and St Giles,where the fire never came,and where the plague raged with the greatest violence,remain still in the same condition they were in before?