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the price of that was so much, I think it was half a-crown: but, Sir, says one poor woman, I am a poor alms-woman, and am kept by the parish, and your bills say, you give the poor your help for nothing. Ay, good woman, says the doctor, so I do, as I published there: I give my advice to the poor for nothing, but not my physic! Alas, Sir, says she, that is a snare laid for the poor then; for you give them your advice for nothing, that is to say, you advise them gratis, to buy your physic for their money; so does every shopkeeper with his wares. Here the woman began to give him ill words, and stood at his door all that day, telling her tale to all the people that came, till the doctor, finding she turned away his customers, was obliged to call her up stairs again, and give her his box of physic for nothing, which, perhaps too, was good for nothing when she had it.

But to return to the people, whose confusions fitted them to be imposed upon by all sorts of pretenders, and by every mountebank. There is no doubt but these quacking sort of fellows raised great gains out of the miserable people; for we daily found the crowds that ran after them were infinitely greater, and their doors were more thronged than those of Dr. Brooks, Dr. Upton, Dr Hodges, Dr. Berwick, or any, though the most famous men of the time: and I was told that some of them got five pound a day by their physic.

But there was still another madness beyond all this, which may serve to give an idea of the distracted humour of the poor people at that time; and this was their following a worse sort of deceivers than any of these; for these petty thieves only deluded them to pick their pockets, and get their money, in which their wickedness, whatever it was, lay chiefly on the side of the deceiver's

deceiving, not upon the deceived: but in this part I am going to mention, it lay chiefly in the people deceived, or equally in both; and this was in wearing charms, philters, exorcisms, amulets, and I know not what preparations, to fortify the body with them against the Plague; as if the Plague was not the hand of God, but a kind of a possession of an evil spirit; and that it was to be kept off with crossings, signs of the zodiac, papers tied up with so many knots, and certain words or figures written on them, as particularly the word Abracadabra, formed in triangle, or pyramid, thus:

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I might spend a great deal of time in my exclamations against the follies, and indeed the wickedness of those things, in a time of such danger, in a matter of such consequences as this, of a national infection. But my memorandums of these things relate rather to take notice only of the fact, and mention only that it was so how the poor people found the insufficiency of those things, and how many of them were afterwards carried away in the dead-carts, and thrown into the common graves of every parish, with these hellish charms

and trumpery hanging about their necks, remains to be spoken of as we go along.

All this was the effect of the hurry the people were in, after the first notion of the Plague being at hand was among them, and which may be said to be from about Michaelmas, 1664, but more. particularly after the two men died in St. Giles's, in the beginning of December; and again, after another alarm, in February: for when the Plague evidently spread itself, they soon began to see the folly of trusting to those unperforming creatures, who had gulled them of their money; and then their fears worked another way, namely, to amazement and stupidity, not knowing what course to take, or what to do, either to help or relieve themselves but they ran about from one neighbour's house to another, and even in the streets from one door to another, with repeated cries of, Lord, have mercy upon us, what shall we do?

Indeed, the poor people were to be pitied in one particular thing, in which they had little or no relief, and which I desire to mention with a serious awe and reflection, which, perhaps, every one that reads this may not relish; namely, that whereas Death now began not, as we may say, to hover over every one's head only, but to look into their houses and chambers, and stare in their faces though there might be some stupidity, and dulness of the mind, and there was so, a great deal; yet there was a great deal of just alarm, sounded in the very inmost soul, if I may so say of others many consciences were awakened; many hard hearts melted into tears; many a penitent confession was made of crimes long concealed it would have wounded the soul of any christian to have heard the dying groans of many a despairing creature; and none durst come near

to comfort them: many a robbery, many a murder, was then confessed aloud, and nobody surviving to record the accounts of it. People might be heard even into the streets as we passed along, calling upon God for mercy, through Jesus Christ, and saying, I have been a thief, I have been an adulterer, I have been a murderer, and the like; and none durst stop to make the least enquiry into such things, or to administer comfort to the poor creatures, that in the anguish both of soul and body thus cried out. Some of the ministers did visit the sick at first, and for a little while, but it was not to be done; it would have been present death to have gone into some houses: the very buryers of the dead, who were the most hardened creatures in town, were sometimes beaten back, and so terrified, that they durst not go into houses where the whole families were swept away together, and where the circumstances were more particularly horrible, as some were; but this was indeed at the first heat of the distemper.

Time inured them to it all; and they ventured every where afterwards, without hesitation, as I shall have occasion to mention at large hereafter.

I am supposing now the Plague to be began, as I have said, and that the magistrates began to take the condition of the people into their serious consideration what they did as to the regulation of inhabitants, and of infected families, I shall speak to by itself; but as to the affair of health, it is proper to mention it here, that having seen the foolish humour of the people in running after quacks, and mountebanks, wizards, and fortune-tellers, which they did as above, even to madness; the Lord Mayor, a very sober and religious gentleman, appointed physicians and surgeons for relief of the poor; I mean the diseased

poor; and, in particular, ordered the college of physicians to publish directions for cheap remedies for the poor, in all the circumstances of the distemper. This, indeed, was one of the most charitable and judicious things that could be done at that time; for this drove the people from haunting the doors of every disperser of bills, and from taking down blindly, and without consideration, poison for physic, and death instead of life.

This direction of the physicians was done by a consultation of the whole college; and, as it was particularly calculated for the use of the poor, and for cheap medicines, it was made public, so that every body might see it; and copies were given gratis to all that desired it: but as it is public, and to be seen on all occasions, I need not give the reader of this the trouble of it.

I shall not be supposed to lessen the authority or capacity of the physicians when I say, that the violence of the distemper, when it came to its extremity, was like the fire the next year; the fire, which consumed what the Plague could not touch, defied all the application of remedies; the fire-engines were broken, the buckets thrown away, and the power of man was baffled and brought to an end; so the Plague defied all medicines; the very physicians were seized with it, with their preservatives in their mouths; and men went about prescribing to others, and telling them what to do, till the tokens were upon them, and they dropped down dead; destroyed by that very enemy they directed others to oppose. was the case of several physicians, even some of them the most eminent, and of several of the most skilful surgeons; abundance of quacks too died, who had the folly to trust to their own medicines, which they must needs be conscious to

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