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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of
+The Black Death and The Dancing Mania by J. F. C. Hecker
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+The Black Death and The Dancing Mania
+
+by J. F. C. Hecker (translated by B. G. Babington)
+
+May, 1999 [Etext #1739]
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Etext of
+The Black Death and The Dancing Mania by J. F. C. Hecker
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+This etext was transcribed by Jane Duff and proofed by David Price,
+email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk from the 1888 Cassell & Company edition.
+
+
+
+
+
+The Black Death and The Dancing Mania
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+
+Justus Friedrich Karl Hecker was one of three generations of
+distinguished professors of medicine. His father, August
+Friedrich Hecker, a most industrious writer, first practised as a
+physician in Frankenhausen, and in 1790 was appointed Professor of
+Medicine at the University of Erfurt. In 1805 he was called to
+the like professorship at the University of Berlin. He died at
+Berlin in 1811.
+
+Justus Friedrich Karl Hecker was born at Erfurt in January, 1795.
+He went, of course--being then ten years old--with his father to
+Berlin in 1805, studied at Berlin in the Gymnasium and University,
+but interrupted his studies at the age of eighteen to fight as a
+volunteer in the war for a renunciation of Napoleon and all his
+works. After Waterloo he went back to his studies, took his
+doctor's degree in 1817 with a treatise on the "Antiquities of
+Hydrocephalus," and became privat-docent in the Medical Faculty of
+the Berlin University. His inclination was strong from the first
+towards the historical side of inquiries into Medicine. This
+caused him to undertake a "History of Medicine," of which the
+first volume appeared in 1822. It obtained rank for him at Berlin
+as Extraordinary Professor of the History of Medicine. This
+office was changed into an Ordinary professorship of the same
+study in 1834, and Hecker held that office until his death in
+1850.
+
+The office was created for a man who had a special genius for this
+form of study. It was delightful to himself, and he made it
+delightful to others. He is regarded as the founder of historical
+pathology. He studied disease in relation to the history of man,
+made his study yield to men outside his own profession an
+important chapter in the history of civilisation, and even took
+into account physical phenomena upon the surface of the globe as
+often affecting the movement and character of epidemics.
+
+The account of "The Black Death" here translated by Dr. Babington
+was Hecker's first important work of this kind. It was published
+in 1832, and was followed in the same year by his account of "The
+Dancing Mania." The books here given are the two that first gave
+Hecker a wide reputation. Many other such treatises followed,
+among them, in 1865, a treatise on the "Great Epidemics of the
+Middle Ages." Besides his "History of Medicine," which, in its
+second volume, reached into the fourteenth century, and all his
+smaller treatises, Hecker wrote a large number of articles in
+Encyclopaedias and Medical Journals. Professor J.F.K. Hecker was,
+in a more interesting way, as busy as Professor A.F. Hecker, his
+father, had been. He transmitted the family energies to an only
+son, Karl von Hecker, born in 1827, who distinguished himself
+greatly as a Professor of Midwifery, and died in 1882.
+
+Benjamin Guy Babington, the translator of these books of Hecker's,
+belonged also to a family in which the study of Medicine has
+passed from father to son, and both have been writers. B.G.
+Babington was the son of Dr. William Babington, who was physician
+to Guy's Hospital for some years before 1811, when the extent of
+his private practice caused him to retire. He died in 1833. His
+son, Benjamin Guy Babington, was educated at the Charterhouse, saw
+service as a midshipman, served for seven years in India, returned
+to England, graduated as physician at Cambridge in 1831. He
+distinguished himself by inquiries into the cholera epidemic in
+1832, and translated these pieces of Hecker's in 1833, for
+publication by the Sydenham Society. He afterwards translated
+Hecker's other treatises on epidemics of the Middle Ages. Dr.
+B.G. Babington was Physician to Guy's Hospital from 1840 to 1855,
+and was a member of the Medical Council of the General Board of
+Health. He died on the 8th of April, 1866.
+
+H.M.
+
+
+
+
+THE BLACK DEATH
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I--GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
+
+
+
+That Omnipotence which has called the world with all its living
+creatures into one animated being, especially reveals Himself in
+the desolation of great pestilences. The powers of creation come
+into violent collision; the sultry dryness of the atmosphere; the
+subterraneous thunders; the mist of overflowing waters, are the
+harbingers of destruction. Nature is not satisfied with the
+ordinary alternations of life and death, and the destroying angel
+waves over man and beast his flaming sword.
+
+These revolutions are performed in vast cycles, which the spirit
+of man, limited, as it is, to a narrow circle of perception, is
+unable to explore. They are, however, greater terrestrial events
+than any of those which proceed from the discord, the distress, or
+the passions of nations. By annihilations they awaken new life;
+and when the tumult above and below the earth is past, nature is
+renovated, and the mind awakens from torpor and depression to the
+consciousness of an intellectual existence.
+
+Were it in any degree within the power of human research to draw
+up, in a vivid and connected form, an historical sketch of such
+mighty events, after the manner of the historians of wars and
+battles, and the migrations of nations, we might then arrive at
+clear views with respect to the mental development of the human
+race, and the ways of Providence would be more plainly
+discernible. It would then be demonstrable, that the mind of
+nations is deeply affected by the destructive conflict of the
+powers of nature, and that great disasters lead to striking
+changes in general civilisation. For all that exists in man,
+whether good or evil, is rendered conspicuous by the presence of
+great danger. His inmost feelings are roused--the thought of
+self-preservation masters his spirit--self-denial is put to severe
+proof, and wherever darkness and barbarism prevail, there the
+affrighted mortal flies to the idols of his superstition, and all
+laws, human and divine, are criminally violated.
+
+In conformity with a general law of nature, such a state of
+excitement brings about a change, beneficial or detrimental,
+according to circumstances, so that nations either attain a higher
+degree of moral worth, or sink deeper in ignorance and vice. All
+this, however, takes place upon a much grander scale than through
+the ordinary vicissitudes of war and peace, or the rise and fall
+of empires, because the powers of nature themselves produce
+plagues, and subjugate the human will, which, in the contentions
+of nations, alone predominates.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II--THE DISEASE
+
+
+
+The most memorable example of what has been advanced is afforded
+by a great pestilence of the fourteenth century, which desolated
+Asia, Europe, and Africa, and of which the people yet preserve the
+remembrance in gloomy traditions. It was an oriental plague,
+marked by inflammatory boils and tumours of the glands, such as
+break out in no other febrile disease. On account of these
+inflammatory boils, and from the black spots, indicatory of a
+putrid decomposition, which appeared upon the skin, it was called
+in Germany and in the northern kingdoms of Europe the Black Death,
+and in Italy, la mortalega grande, the Great Mortality.
+
+Few testimonies are presented to us respecting its symptoms and
+its course, yet these are sufficient to throw light upon the form
+of the malady, and they are worthy of credence, from their
+coincidence with the signs of the same disease in modern times.
+
+The imperial writer, Kantakusenos, whose own son, Andronikus, died
+of this plague in Constantinople, notices great imposthumes of the
+thighs and arms of those affected, which, when opened, afforded
+relief by the discharge of an offensive matter. Buboes, which are
+the infallible signs of the oriental plague, are thus plainly
+indicated, for he makes separate mention of smaller boils on the
+arms and in the face, as also in other parts of the body, and
+clearly distinguishes these from the blisters, which are no less
+produced by plague in all its forms. In many cases, black spots
+broke out all over the body, either single, or united and
+confluent.
+
+These symptoms were not all found in every case. In many, one
+alone was sufficient to cause death, while some patients
+recovered, contrary to expectation, though afflicted with all.
+Symptoms of cephalic affection were frequent; many patients became
+stupefied and fell into a deep sleep, losing also their speech
+from palsy of the tongue; others remained sleepless and without
+rest. The fauces and tongue were black, and as if suffused with
+blood; no beverage could assuage their burning thirst, so that
+their sufferings continued without alleviation until terminated by
+death, which many in their despair accelerated with their own
+hands. Contagion was evident, for attendants caught the disease
+of their relations and friends, and many houses in the capital
+were bereft even of their last inhabitant. Thus far the ordinary
+circumstances only of the oriental plague occurred. Still deeper
+sufferings, however, were connected with this pestilence, such as
+have not been felt at other times; the organs of respiration were
+seized with a putrid inflammation; a violent pain in the chest
+attacked the patient; blood was expectorated, and the breath
+diffused a pestiferous odour.
+
+In the West, the following were the predominating symptoms on the
+eruption of this disease. An ardent fever, accompanied by an
+evacuation of blood, proved fatal in the first three days. It
+appears that buboes and inflammatory boils did not at first come
+out at all, but that the disease, in the form of carbuncular
+(anthrax-artigen) affection of the lungs, effected the destruction
+of life before the other symptoms were developed.
+
+Thus did the plague rage in Avignon for six or eight weeks, and
+the pestilential breath of the sick, who expectorated blood,
+caused a terrible contagion far and near; for even the vicinity of
+those who had fallen ill of plague was certain death; so that
+parents abandoned their infected children, and all the ties of
+kindred were dissolved. After this period, buboes in the axilla
+and in the groin, and inflammatory boils all over the body, made
+their appearance; but it was not until seven months afterwards
+that some patients recovered with matured buboes, as in the
+ordinary milder form of plague.
+
+Such is the report of the courageous Guy de Chauliac, who
+vindicated the honour of medicine, by bidding defiance to danger;
+boldly and constantly assisting the affected, and disdaining the
+excuse of his colleagues, who held the Arabian notion, that
+medical aid was unavailing, and that the contagion justified
+flight. He saw the plague twice in Avignon, first in the year
+1348, from January to August, and then twelve years later, in the
+autumn, when it returned from Germany, and for nine months spread
+general distress and terror. The first time it raged chiefly
+among the poor, but in the year 1360, more among the higher
+classes. It now also destroyed a great many children, whom it had
+formerly spared, and but few women.
+
+The like was seen in Egypt. Here also inflammation of the lungs
+was predominant, and destroyed quickly and infallibly, with
+burning heat and expectoration of blood. Here too the breath of
+the sick spread a deadly contagion, and human aid was as vain as
+it was destructive to those who approached the infected.
+
+Boccacio, who was an eye-witness of its incredible fatality in
+Florence, the seat of the revival of science, gives a more lively
+description of the attack of the disease than his non-medical
+contemporaries.
+
+It commenced here, not as in the East, with bleeding at the nose,
+a sure sign of inevitable death; but there took place at the
+beginning, both in men and women, tumours in the groin and in the
+axilla, varying in circumference up to the size of an apple or an
+egg, and called by the people, pest-boils (gavoccioli). Then
+there appeared similar tumours indiscriminately over all parts of
+the body, and black or blue spots came out on the arms or thighs,
+or on other parts, either single and large, or small and thickly
+studded. These spots proved equally fatal with the pest-boils,
+which had been from the first regarded as a sure sign of death.
+No power of medicine brought relief--almost all died within the
+first three days, some sooner, some later, after the appearance of
+these signs, and for the most part entirely without fever or other
+symptoms. The plague spread itself with the greater fury, as it
+communicated from the sick to the healthy, like fire among dry and
+oily fuel, and even contact with the clothes and other articles
+which had been used by the infected, seemed to induce the disease.
+As it advanced, not only men, but animals fell sick and shortly
+expired, if they had touched things belonging to the diseased or
+dead. Thus Boccacio himself saw two hogs on the rags of a person
+who had died of plague, after staggering about for a short time,
+fall down dead as if they had taken poison. In other places
+multitudes of dogs, cats, fowls, and other animals, fell victims
+to the contagion; and it is to be presumed that other epizootes
+among animals likewise took place, although the ignorant writers
+of the fourteenth century are silent on this point.
+
+In Germany there was a repetition in every respect of the same
+phenomena. The infallible signs of the oriental bubo-plague with
+its inevitable contagion were found there as everywhere else; but
+the mortality was not nearly so great as in the other parts of
+Europe. The accounts do not all make mention of the spitting of
+blood, the diagnostic symptom of this fatal pestilence; we are
+not, however, thence to conclude that there was any considerable
+mitigation or modification of the disease, for we must not only
+take into account the defectiveness of the chronicles, but that
+isolated testimonies are often contradicted by many others. Thus
+the chronicles of Strasburg, which only take notice of boils and
+glandular swellings in the axillae and groins, are opposed by
+another account, according to which the mortal spitting of blood
+was met with in Germany; but this again is rendered suspicious, as
+the narrator postpones the death of those who were thus affected,
+to the sixth, and (even the) eighth day, whereas, no other author
+sanctions so long a course of the disease; and even in Strasburg,
+where a mitigation of the plague may, with most probability, be
+assumed since the year 1349, only 16,000 people were carried off,
+the generality expired by the third or fourth day. In Austria,
+and especially in Vienna, the plague was fully as malignant as
+anywhere, so that the patients who had red spots and black boils,
+as well as those afflicted with tumid glands, died about the third
+day; and lastly, very frequent sudden deaths occurred on the
+coasts of the North Sea and in Westphalia, without any further
+development of the malady.
+
+To France, this plague came in a northern direction from Avignon,
+and was there more destructive than in Germany, so that in many
+places not more than two in twenty of the inhabitants survived.
+Many were struck, as if by lightning, and died on the spot, and
+this more frequently among the young and strong than the old;
+patients with enlarged glands in the axillae and groins scarcely
+survive two or three days; and no sooner did these fatal signs
+appear, than they bid adieu to the world, and sought consolation
+only in the absolution which Pope Clement VI. promised them in the
+hour of death.
+
+In England the malady appeared, as at Avignon, with spitting of
+blood, and with the same fatality, so that the sick who were
+afflicted either with this symptom or with vomiting of blood, died
+in some cases immediately, in others within twelve hours, or at
+the latest two days. The inflammatory boils and buboes in the
+groins and axillae were recognised at once as prognosticating a
+fatal issue, and those were past all hope of recovery in whom they
+arose in numbers all over the body. It was not till towards the
+close of the plague that they ventured to open, by incision, these
+hard and dry boils, when matter flowed from them in small
+quantity, and thus, by compelling nature to a critical
+suppuration, many patients were saved. Every spot which the sick
+had touched, their breath, their clothes, spread the contagion;
+and, as in all other places, the attendants and friends who were
+either blind to their danger, or heroically despised it, fell a
+sacrifice to their sympathy. Even the eyes of the patient were
+considered a sources of contagion, which had the power of acting
+at a distance, whether on account of their unwonted lustre, or the
+distortion which they always suffer in plague, or whether in
+conformity with an ancient notion, according to which the sight
+was considered as the bearer of a demoniacal enchantment. Flight
+from infected cities seldom availed the fearful, for the germ of
+the disease adhered to them, and they fell sick, remote from
+assistance, in the solitude of their country houses.
+
+Thus did the plague spread over England with unexampled rapidity,
+after it had first broken out in the county of Dorset, whence it
+advanced through the counties of Devon and Somerset, to Bristol,
+and thence reached Gloucester, Oxford and London. Probably few
+places escaped, perhaps not any; for the annuals of contemporaries
+report that throughout the land only a tenth part of the
+inhabitants remained alive.
+
+From England the contagion was carried by a ship to Bergen, the
+capital of Norway, where the plague then broke out in its most
+frightful form, with vomiting of blood; and throughout the whole
+country, spared not more than a third of the inhabitants. The
+sailors found no refuge in their ships; and vessels were often
+seen driving about on the ocean and drifting on shore, whose crews
+had perished to the last man.
+
+In Poland the affected were attacked with spitting blood, and died
+in a few days in such vast numbers, that, as it has been affirmed,
+scarcely a fourth of the inhabitants were left.
+
+Finally, in Russia the plague appeared two years later than in
+Southern Europe; yet here again, with the same symptoms as
+elsewhere. Russian contemporaries have recorded that it began
+with rigor, heat, and darting pain in the shoulders and back; that
+it was accompanied by spitting of blood, and terminated fatally in
+two, or at most three days. It is not till the year 1360 that we
+find buboes mentioned as occurring in the neck, in the axillae,
+and in the groins, which are stated to have broken out when the
+spitting of blood had continued some time. According to the
+experience of Western Europe, however, it cannot be assumed that
+these symptoms did not appear at an earlier period.
+
+Thus much, from authentic sources, on the nature of the Black
+Death. The descriptions which have been communicated contain,
+with a few unimportant exceptions, all the symptoms of the
+oriental plague which have been observed in more modern times. No
+doubt can obtain on this point. The facts are placed clearly
+before our eyes. We must, however, bear in mind that this violent
+disease does not always appear in the same form, and that while
+the essence of the poison which it produces, and which is
+separated so abundantly from the body of the patient, remains
+unchanged, it is proteiform in its varieties, from the almost
+imperceptible vesicle, unaccompanied by fever, which exists for
+some time before it extends its poison inwardly, and then excites
+fever and buboes, to the fatal form in which carbuncular
+inflammations fall upon the most important viscera.
+
+Such was the form which the plague assumed in the fourteenth
+century, for the accompanying chest affection which appeared in
+all the countries whereof we have received any account, cannot, on
+a comparison with similar and familiar symptoms, be considered as
+any other than the inflammation of the lungs of modern medicine, a
+disease which at present only appears sporadically, and, owing to
+a putrid decomposition of the fluids, is probably combined with
+hemorrhages from the vessels of the lungs. Now, as every
+carbuncle, whether it be cutaneous or internal, generates in
+abundance the matter of contagion which has given rise to it, so,
+therefore, must the breath of the affected have been poisonous in
+this plague, and on this account its power of contagion
+wonderfully increased; wherefore the opinion appears
+incontrovertible, that owing to the accumulated numbers of the
+diseased, not only individual chambers and houses, but whole
+cities were infected, which, moreover, in the Middle Ages, were,
+with few exceptions, narrowly built, kept in a filthy state, and
+surrounded with stagnant ditches. Flight was, in consequence, of
+no avail to the timid; for even though they had sedulously avoided
+all communication with the diseased and the suspected, yet their
+clothes were saturated with the pestiferous atmosphere, and every
+inspiration imparted to them the seeds of the destructive malady,
+which, in the greater number of cases, germinated with but too
+much fertility. Add to which, the usual propagation of the plague
+through clothes, beds, and a thousand other things to which the
+pestilential poison adheres--a propagation which, from want of
+caution, must have been infinitely multiplied; and since articles
+of this kind, removed from the access of air, not only retain the
+matter of contagion for an indefinite period, but also increase
+its activity and engender it like a living being, frightful ill-
+consequences followed for many years after the first fury of the
+pestilence was past.
+
+The affection of the stomach, often mentioned in vague terms, and
+occasionally as a vomiting of blood, was doubtless only a
+subordinate symptom, even if it be admitted that actual
+hematemesis did occur. For the difficulty of distinguishing a
+flow of blood from the stomach, from a pulmonic expectoration of
+that fluid, is, to non-medical men, even in common cases, not
+inconsiderable. How much greater then must it have been in so
+terrible a disease, where assistants could not venture to approach
+the sick without exposing themselves to certain death? Only two
+medical descriptions of the malady have reached us, the one by the
+brave Guy de Chauliac, the other by Raymond Chalin de Vinario, a
+very experienced scholar, who was well versed in the learning of
+the time. The former takes notice only of fatal coughing of
+blood; the latter, besides this, notices epistaxis, hematuria, and
+fluxes of blood from the bowels, as symptoms of such decided and
+speedy mortality, that those patients in whom they were observed
+usually died on the same or the following day.
+
+That a vomiting of blood may not, here and there, have taken
+place, perhaps have been even prevalent in many places, is, from a
+consideration of the nature of the disease, by no means to be
+denied; for every putrid decomposition of the fluids begets a
+tendency to hemorrhages of all kinds. Here, however, it is a
+question of historical certainty, which, after these doubts, is by
+no means established. Had not so speedy a death followed the
+expectoration of blood, we should certainly have received more
+detailed intelligence respecting other hemorrhages; but the malady
+had no time to extend its effects further over the extremities of
+the vessels. After its first fury, however, was spent, the
+pestilence passed into the usual febrile form of the oriental
+plague. Internal carbuncular inflammations no longer took place,
+and hemorrhages became phenomena, no more essential in this than
+they are in any other febrile disorders. Chalin, who observed not
+only the great mortality of 1348, and the plague of 1360, but also
+that of 1373 and 1382, speaks moreover of affections of the
+throat, and describes the back spots of plague patients more
+satisfactorily than any of his contemporaries. The former
+appeared but in few cases, and consisted in carbuncular
+inflammation of the gullet, with a difficulty of swallowing, even
+to suffocation, to which, in some instances, was added
+inflammation of the ceruminous glands of the ears, with tumours,
+producing great deformity. Such patients, as well as others, were
+affected with expectoration of blood; but they did not usually die
+before the sixth, and, sometimes, even as late as the fourteenth
+day. The same occurrence, it is well known, is not uncommon in
+other pestilences; as also blisters on the surface of the body, in
+different places, in the vicinity of which, tumid glands and
+inflammatory boils, surrounded by discoloured and black streaks,
+arose, and thus indicated the reception of the poison. These
+streaked spots were called, by an apt comparison, the girdle, and
+this appearance was justly considered extremely dangerous.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III--CAUSES--SPREAD
+
+
+
+An inquiry into the causes of the Black Death will not be without
+important results in the study of the plagues which have visited
+the world, although it cannot advance beyond generalisation
+without entering upon a field hitherto uncultivated, and, to this
+hour entirely unknown. Mighty revolutions in the organism of the
+earth, of which we have credible information, had preceded it.
+From China to the Atlantic, the foundations of the earth were
+shaken--throughout Asia and Europe the atmosphere was in
+commotion, and endangered, by its baneful influence, both
+vegetable and animal life.
+
+The series of these great events began in the year 1333, fifteen
+years before the plague broke out in Europe: they first appeared
+in China. Here a parching drought, accompanied by famine,
+commenced in the tract of country watered by the rivers Kiang and
+Hoai. This was followed by such violent torrents of rain, in and
+about Kingsai, at that time the capital of the empire, that,
+according to tradition, more than 400,000 people perished in the
+floods. Finally the mountain Tsincheou fell in, and vast clefts
+were formed in the earth. In the succeeding year (1334), passing
+over fabulous traditions, the neighbourhood of Canton was visited
+by inundations; whilst in Tche, after an unexampled drought, a
+plague arose, which is said to have carried off about 5,000,000 of
+people. A few months afterwards an earthquake followed, at and
+near Kingsai; and subsequent to the falling in of the mountains of
+Ki-ming-chan, a lake was formed of more than a hundred leagues in
+circumference, where, again, thousands found their grave. In
+Houkouang and Honan, a drought prevailed for five months; and
+innumerable swarms of locusts destroyed the vegetation; while
+famine and pestilence, as usual, followed in their train.
+Connected accounts of the condition of Europe before this great
+catastrophe are not to be expected from the writers of the
+fourteenth century. It is remarkable, however, that
+simultaneously with a drought and renewed floods in China, in
+1336, many uncommon atmospheric phenomena, and in the winter,
+frequent thunderstorms, were observed in the north of France; and
+so early as the eventful year of 1333 an eruption of Etna took
+place. According to the Chinese annuals, about 4,000,000 of
+people perished by famine in the neighbourhood of Kiang in 1337;
+and deluges, swarms of locusts, and an earthquake which lasted six
+days, caused incredible devastation. In the same year, the first
+swarms of locusts appeared in Franconia, which were succeeded in
+the following year by myriads of these insects. In 1338 Kingsai
+was visited by an earthquake of ten days' duration; at the same
+time France suffered from a failure in the harvest; and
+thenceforth, till the year 1342, there was in China a constant
+succession of inundations, earthquakes, and famines. In the same
+year great floods occurred in the vicinity of the Rhine and in
+France, which could not be attributed to rain alone; for,
+everywhere, even on tops of mountains, springs were seen to burst
+forth, and dry tracts were laid under water in an inexplicable
+manner. In the following year, the mountain Hong-tchang, in
+China, fell in, and caused a destructive deluge; and in Pien-
+tcheon and Leang-tcheou, after three months' rain, there followed
+unheard-of inundations, which destroyed seven cities. In Egypt
+and Syria, violent earthquakes took place; and in China they
+became, from this time, more and more frequent; for they recurred,
+in 1344, in Ven-tcheou, where the sea overflowed in consequence;
+in 1345, in Ki-tcheou, and in both the following years in Canton,
+with subterraneous thunder. Meanwhile, floods and famine
+devastated various districts, until 1347, when the fury of the
+elements subsided in China.
+
+The signs of terrestrial commotions commenced in Europe in the
+year 1348, after the intervening districts of country in Asia had
+probably been visited in the same manner.
+
+On the island of Cyprus, the plague from the East had already
+broken out; when an earthquake shook the foundations of the
+island, and was accompanied by so frightful a hurricane, that the
+inhabitants who had slain their Mahometan slaves, in order that
+they might not themselves be subjugated by them, fled in dismay,
+in all directions. The sea overflowed--the ships were dashed to
+pieces on the rocks, and few outlived the terrific event, whereby
+this fertile and blooming island was converted into a desert.
+Before the earthquake, a pestiferous wind spread so poisonous an
+odour, that many, being overpowered by it, fell down suddenly and
+expired in dreadful agonies.
+
+This phenomenon is one of the rarest that has ever been observed,
+for nothing is more constant than the composition of the air; and
+in no respect has nature been more careful in the preservation of
+organic life. Never have naturalists discovered in the atmosphere
+foreign elements, which, evident to the senses, and borne by the
+winds, spread from land to land, carrying disease over whole
+portions of the earth, as is recounted to have taken place in the
+year 1348. It is, therefore, the more to be regretted, that in
+this extraordinary period, which, owing to the low condition of
+science, was very deficient in accurate observers, so little that
+can be depended on respecting those uncommon occurrences in the
+air, should have been recorded. Yet, German accounts say
+expressly, that a thick, stinking mist advanced from the East, and
+spread itself over Italy; and there could be no deception in so
+palpable a phenomenon. The credibility of unadorned traditions,
+however little they may satisfy physical research, can scarcely be
+called in question when we consider the connection of events; for
+just at this time earthquakes were more general than they had been
+within the range of history. In thousands of places chasms were
+formed, from whence arose noxious vapours; and as at that time
+natural occurrences were transformed into miracles, it was
+reported, that a fiery meteor, which descended on the earth far in
+the East, had destroyed everything within a circumference of more
+than a hundred leagues, infecting the air far and wide. The
+consequences of innumerable floods contributed to the same effect;
+vast river districts had been converted into swamps; foul vapours
+arose everywhere, increased by the odour of putrified locusts,
+which had never perhaps darkened the sun in thicker swarms, and of
+countless corpses, which even in the well-regulated countries of
+Europe, they knew not how to remove quickly enough out of the
+sight of the living. It is probable, therefore, that the
+atmosphere contained foreign, and sensibly perceptible, admixtures
+to a great extent, which, at least in the lower regions, could not
+be decomposed, or rendered ineffective by separation.
+
+Now, if we go back to the symptoms of the disease, the ardent
+inflammation of the lungs points out, that the organs of
+respiration yielded to the attack of an atmospheric poison--a
+poison which, if we admit the independent origin of the Black
+Plague at any one place of the globe, which, under such
+extraordinary circumstances, it would be difficult to doubt,
+attacked the course of the circulation in as hostile a manner as
+that which produces inflammation of the spleen, and other animal
+contagions that cause swelling and inflammation of the lymphatic
+glands.
+
+Pursuing the course of these grand revolutions further, we find
+notice of an unexampled earthquake, which, on the 25th January,
+1348, shook Greece, Italy, and the neighbouring countries.
+Naples, Rome, Pisa, Bologna, Padua, Venice, and many other cities,
+suffered considerably; whole villages were swallowed up. Castles,
+houses, and churches were overthrown, and hundreds of people were
+buried beneath their ruins. In Carinthia, thirty villages,
+together with all the churches, were demolished; more than a
+thousand corpses were drawn out of the rubbish; the city of
+Villach was so completely destroyed that very few of its
+inhabitants were saved; and when the earth ceased to tremble it
+was found that mountains had been moved from their positions, and
+that many hamlets were left in ruins. It is recorded that during
+this earthquake the wine in the casks became turbid, a statement
+which may be considered as furnishing proof that changes causing a
+decomposition of the atmosphere had taken place; but if we had no
+other information from which the excitement of conflicting powers
+of nature during these commotions might be inferred, yet
+scientific observations in modern times have shown that the
+relation of the atmosphere to the earth is changed by volcanic
+influences. Why then, may we not, from this fact, draw
+retrospective inferences respecting those extraordinary phenomena?
+
+Independently of this, however, we know that during this
+earthquake, the duration of which is stated by some to have been a
+week, and by others a fortnight, people experienced an unusual
+stupor and headache, and that many fainted away.
+
+These destructive earthquakes extended as far as the neighbourhood
+of Basle, and recurred until the year 1360 throughout Germany,
+France, Silesia, Poland, England, and Denmark, and much further
+north.
+
+Great and extraordinary meteors appeared in many places, and were
+regarded with superstitious horror. A pillar of fire, which on
+the 20th of December, 1348, remained for an hour at sunrise over
+the pope's palace in Avignon; a fireball, which in August of the
+same year was seen at sunset over Paris, and was distinguished
+from similar phenomena by its longer duration, not to mention
+other instances mixed up with wonderful prophecies and omens, are
+recorded in the chronicles of that age.
+
+The order of the seasons seemed to be inverted; rains, flood, and
+failures in crops were so general that few places were exempt from
+them; and though an historian of this century assure us that there
+was an abundance in the granaries and storehouses, all his
+contemporaries, with one voice, contradict him. The consequences
+of failure in the crops were soon felt, especially in Italy and
+the surrounding countries, where, in this year, a rain, which
+continued for four months, had destroyed the seed. In the larger
+cities they were compelled, in the spring of 1347, to have
+recourse to a distribution of bread among the poor, particularly
+at Florence, where they erected large bakehouses, from which, in
+April, ninety-four thousand loaves of bread, each of twelve ounces
+in weight, were daily dispensed. It is plain, however, that
+humanity could only partially mitigate the general distress, not
+altogether obviate it.
+
+Diseases, the invariable consequence of famine, broke out in the
+country as well as in cities; children died of hunger in their
+mother's arms--want, misery, and despair were general throughout
+Christendom.
+
+Such are the events which took place before the eruption of the
+Black Plague in Europe. Contemporaries have explained them after
+their own manner, and have thus, like their posterity, under
+similar circumstances, given a proof that mortals possess neither
+senses nor intellectual powers sufficiently acute to comprehend
+the phenomena produced by the earth's organism, much less
+scientifically to understand their effects. Superstition,
+selfishness in a thousand forms, the presumption of the schools,
+laid hold of unconnected facts. They vainly thought to comprehend
+the whole in the individual, and perceived not the universal
+spirit which, in intimate union with the mighty powers of nature,
+animates the movements of all existence, and permits not any
+phenomenon to originate from isolated causes. To attempt, five
+centuries after that age of desolation, to point out the causes of
+a cosmical commotion, which has never recurred to an equal extent,
+to indicate scientifically the influences, which called forth so
+terrific a poison in the bodies of men and animals, exceeds the
+limits of human understanding. If we are even now unable, with
+all the varied resources of an extended knowledge of nature, to
+define that condition of the atmosphere by which pestilences are
+generated, still less can we pretend to reason retrospectively
+from the nineteenth to the fourteenth century; but if we take a
+general view of the occurrences, that century will give us copious
+information, and, as applicable to all succeeding times, of high
+importance.
+
+In the progress of connected natural phenomena from east to west,
+that great law of nature is plainly revealed which has so often
+and evidently manifested itself in the earth's organism, as well
+as in the state of nations dependent upon it. In the inmost
+depths of the globe that impulse was given in the year 1333, which
+in uninterrupted succession for six and twenty years shook the
+surface of the earth, even to the western shores of Europe. From
+the very beginning the air partook of the terrestrial concussion,
+atmospherical waters overflowed the land, or its plants and
+animals perished under the scorching heat. The insect tribe was
+wonderfully called into life, as if animated beings were destined
+to complete the destruction which astral and telluric powers had
+begun. Thus did this dreadful work of nature advance from year to
+year; it was a progressive infection of the zones, which exerted a
+powerful influence both above and beneath the surface of the
+earth; and after having been perceptible in slighter indications,
+at the commencement of the terrestrial commotions in China,
+convulsed the whole earth.
+
+The nature of the first plague in China is unknown. We have no
+certain intelligence of the disease until it entered the western
+countries of Asia. Here it showed itself as the Oriental plague,
+with inflammation of the lungs; in which form it probably also may
+have begun in China, that is to say, as a malady which spreads,
+more than any other, by contagion--a contagion that, in ordinary
+pestilences, requires immediate contact, and only under favourable
+circumstances of rare occurrence is communicated by the mere
+approach to the sick. The share which this cause had in the
+spreading of the plague over the whole earth was certainly very
+great; and the opinion that the Black Death might have been
+excluded from Western Europe by good regulations, similar to those
+which are now in use, would have all the support of modern
+experience, provided it could be proved that this plague had been
+actually imported from the East, or that the Oriental plague in
+general, whenever it appears in Europe, has its origin in Asia or
+Egypt. Such a proof, however, can by no means be produced so as
+to enforce conviction; for it would involve the impossible
+assumption, either that there is no essential difference between
+the degree of civilisation of the European nations, in the most
+ancient and in modern times, or that detrimental circumstances,
+which have yielded only to the civilisation of human society and
+the regular cultivation of countries, could not formerly keep up
+the glandular plague.
+
+The plague was, however, known in Europe before nations were
+united by the bonds of commerce and social intercourse; hence
+there is ground for supposing that it sprang up spontaneously, in
+consequence of the rude manner of living and the uncultivated
+state of the earth, influences which peculiarly favour the origin
+of severe diseases. Now we need not go back to the earlier
+centuries, for the fourteenth itself, before it had half expired,
+was visited by five or six pestilences.
+
+If, therefore, we consider the peculiar property of the plague,
+that in countries which it has once visited it remains for a long
+time in a milder form, and that the epidemic influences of 1342,
+when it had appeared for the last time, were particularly
+favourable to its unperceived continuance, till 1348, we come to
+the notion that in this eventful year also the germs of plague
+existed in Southern Europe, which might be vivified by
+atmospherical deteriorations; and that thus, at least in part, the
+Black Plague may have originated in Europe itself. The corruption
+of the atmosphere came from the East; but the disease itself came
+not upon the wings of the wind, but was only excited and increased
+by the atmosphere where it had previously existed.
+
+This source of the Black Plague was not, however, the only one;
+for far more powerful than the excitement of the latent elements
+of the plague by atmospheric influences was the effect of the
+contagion communicated from one people to another on the great
+roads and in the harbours of the Mediterranean. From China the
+route of the caravans lay to the north of the Caspian Sea, through
+Central Asia, to Tauris. Here ships were ready to take the
+produce of the East to Constantinople, the capital of commerce,
+and the medium of connection between Asia, Europe, and Africa.
+Other caravans went from India to Asia Minor, and touched at the
+cities south of the Caspian Sea, and, lastly, from Bagdad through
+Arabia to Egypt; also the maritime communication on the Red Sea,
+from India to Arabia and Egypt, was not inconsiderable. In all
+these directions contagion made its way; and, doubtless,
+Constantinople and the harbours of Asia Minor are to be regarded
+as the foci of infection, whence it radiated to the most distant
+seaports and islands.
+
+To Constantinople the plague had been brought from the northern
+coast of the Black Sea, after it had depopulated the countries
+between those routes of commerce, and appeared as early as 1347 in
+Cyprus, Sicily, Marseilles, and some of the seaports of Italy.
+The remaining islands of the Mediterranean, particularly Sardinia,
+Corsica, and Majorca, were visited in succession. Foci of
+contagion existed also in full activity along the whole southern
+coast of Europe; when, in January, 1348, the plague appeared in
+Avignon, and in other cities in the south of France and north of
+Italy, as well as in Spain.
+
+The precise days of its eruption in the individual towns are no
+longer to be ascertained; but it was not simultaneous; for in
+Florence the disease appeared in the beginning of April, in Cesena
+the 1st June, and place after place was attacked throughout the
+whole year; so that the plague, after it had passed through the
+whole of France and Germany--where, however, it did not make its
+ravages until the following year--did not break out till August in
+England, where it advanced so gradually, that a period of three
+months elapsed before it reached London. The northern kingdoms
+were attacked by it in 1349; Sweden, indeed, not until November of
+that year, almost two years after its eruption in Avignon. Poland
+received the plague in 1349, probably from Germany, if not from
+the northern countries; but in Russia it did not make its
+appearance until 1351, more than three years after it had broken
+out in Constantinople. Instead of advancing in a north-westerly
+direction from Tauris and from the Caspian Sea, it had thus made
+the great circuit of the Black Sea, by way of Constantinople,
+Southern and Central Europe, England, the northern kingdoms, and
+Poland, before it reached the Russian territories, a phenomenon
+which has not again occurred with respect to more recent
+pestilences originating in Asia.
+
+Whether any difference existed between the indigenous plague,
+excited by the influence of the atmosphere, and that which was
+imported by contagion, can no longer be ascertained from facts;
+for the contemporaries, who in general were not competent to make
+accurate researches of this kind, have left no data on the
+subject. A milder and a more malignant form certainly existed,
+and the former was not always derived from the latter, as is to be
+supposed from this circumstance--that the spitting of blood, the
+infallible diagnostic of the latter, on the first breaking out of
+the plague, is not similarly mentioned in all the reports; and it
+is therefore probable that the milder form belonged to the native
+plague--the more malignant, to that introduced by contagion.
+Contagion was, however, in itself, only one of many causes which
+gave rise to the Black Plague.
+
+This disease was a consequence of violent commotions in the
+earth's organism--if any disease of cosmical origin can be so
+considered. One spring set a thousand others in motion for the
+annihilation of living beings, transient or permanent, of mediate
+or immediate effect. The most powerful of all was contagion; for
+in the most distant countries, which had scarcely yet heard the
+echo of the first concussion, the people fell a sacrifice to
+organic poison--the untimely offspring of vital energies thrown
+into violent commotion.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV--MORTALITY
+
+
+
+We have no certain measure by which to estimate the ravages of the
+Black Plague, if numerical statements were wanted, as in modern
+times. Let us go back for a moment to the fourteenth century.
+The people were yet but little civilised. The Church had indeed
+subdued them; but they all suffered from the ill consequences of
+their original rudeness. The dominion of the law was not yet
+confirmed. Sovereigns had everywhere to combat powerful enemies
+to internal tranquillity and security. The cities were fortresses
+for their own defence. Marauders encamped on the roads. The
+husbandman was a feudal slave, without possessions of his own.
+Rudeness was general, humanity as yet unknown to the people.
+Witches and heretics were burned alive. Gentle rulers were
+contemned as weak; wild passions, severity and cruelty, everywhere
+predominated. Human life was little regarded. Governments
+concerned not themselves about the numbers of their subjects, for
+whose welfare it was incumbent on them to provide. Thus, the
+first requisite for estimating the loss of human life, namely, a
+knowledge of the amount of the population, is altogether wanting;
+and, moreover, the traditional statements of the amount of this
+loss are so vague, that from this source likewise there is only
+room for probable conjecture.
+
+Cairo lost daily, when the plague was raging with its greatest
+violence, from 10,000 to 15,000; being as many as, in modern
+times, great plagues have carried off during their whole course.
+In China, more than thirteen millions are said to have died; and
+this is in correspondence with the certainly exaggerated accounts
+from the rest of Asia. India was depopulated. Tartary, the
+Tartar kingdom of Kaptschak, Mesopotamia, Syria, Armenia, were
+covered with dead bodies--the Kurds fled in vain to the mountains.
+In Caramania and Caesarea none were left alive. On the roads--in
+the camps--in the caravansaries--unburied bodies alone were seen;
+and a few cities only (Arabian historians name Maarael-Nooman,
+Schisur, and Harem) remained, in an unaccountable manner, free.
+In Aleppo, 500 died daily; 22,000 people, and most of the animals,
+were carried off in Gaza, within six weeks. Cyprus lost almost
+all its inhabitants; and ships without crews were often seen in
+the Mediterranean, as afterwards in the North Sea, driving about,
+and spreading the plague wherever they went on shore. It was
+reported to Pope Clement, at Avignon, that throughout the East,
+probably with the exception of China, 23,840,000 people had fallen
+victims to the plague. Considering the occurrences of the
+fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, we might, on first view,
+suspect the accuracy of this statement. How (it might be asked)
+could such great wars have been carried on--such powerful efforts
+have been made; how could the Greek Empire, only a hundred years
+later, have been overthrown, if the people really had been so
+utterly destroyed?
+
+This account is nevertheless rendered credible by the ascertained
+fact, that the palaces of princes are less accessible to
+contagious diseases than the dwellings of the multitude; and that
+in places of importance, the influx from those districts which
+have suffered least, soon repairs even the heaviest losses. We
+must remember, also, that we do not gather much from mere numbers
+without an intimate knowledge of the state of society. We will
+therefore confine ourselves to exhibiting some of the more
+credible accounts relative to European cities.
+
+
+In Florence there died of the Black Plague--60,000
+In Venice--100,000
+In Marseilles, in one month--16,000
+In Siena--70,000
+In Paris--50,000
+In St. Denys--14,000
+In Avignon--60,000
+In Strasburg--16,000
+In Lubeck--9,000
+In Basle--14,000
+In Erfurt, at least--16,000
+In Weimar--5,000
+In Limburg--2,500
+In London, at least--100,000
+In Norwich--51,100
+
+
+To which may be added -
+
+
+Franciscan Friars in German--124,434
+Minorites in Italy--30,000
+
+
+This short catalogue might, by a laborious and uncertain
+calculation, deduced from other sources, be easily further
+multiplied, but would still fail to give a true picture of the
+depopulation which took place. Lubeck, at that time the Venice of
+the North, which could no longer contain the multitudes that
+flocked to it, was thrown into such consternation on the eruption
+of the plague, that the citizens destroyed themselves as if in
+frenzy.
+
+Merchants whose earnings and possessions were unbounded, coldly
+and willingly renounced their earthly goods. They carried their
+treasures to monasteries and churches, and laid them at the foot
+of the altar; but gold had no charms for the monks, for it brought
+them death. They shut their gates; yet, still it was cast to them
+over the convent walls. People would brook no impediment to the
+last pious work to which they were driven by despair. When the
+plague ceased, men thought they were still wandering among the
+dead, so appalling was the livid aspect of the survivors, in
+consequence of the anxiety they had undergone, and the unavoidable
+infection of the air. Many other cities probably presented a
+similar appearance; and it is ascertained that a great number of
+small country towns and villages, which have been estimated, and
+not too highly, at 200,000, were bereft of all their inhabitants.
+
+In many places in France, not more than two out of twenty of the
+inhabitants were left alive, and the capital felt the fury of the
+plague, alike in the palace and the cot.
+
+Two queens, one bishop, and great numbers of other distinguished
+persons, fell a sacrifice to it, and more than 500 a day died in
+the Hotel Dieu, under the faithful care of the sisters of charity,
+whose disinterested courage, in this age of horror, displayed the
+most beautiful traits of human virtue. For although they lost
+their lives, evidently from contagion, and their numbers were
+several times renewed, there was still no want of fresh
+candidates, who, strangers to the unchristian fear of death,
+piously devoted themselves to their holy calling.
+
+The churchyards were soon unable to contain the dead, and many
+houses, left without inhabitants, fell to ruins.
+
+In Avignon, the Pope found it necessary to consecrate the Rhone,
+that bodies might be thrown into the river without delay, as the
+churchyards would no longer hold them; so likewise, in all
+populous cities, extraordinary measures were adopted, in order
+speedily to dispose of the dead. In Vienna, where for some time
+1,200 inhabitants died daily, the interment of corpses in the
+churchyards and within the churches was forthwith prohibited; and
+the dead were then arranged in layers, by thousands, in six large
+pits outside the city, as had already been done in Cairo and
+Paris. Yet, still many were secretly buried; for at all times the
+people are attached to the consecrated cemeteries of their dead,
+and will not renounce the customary mode of interment.
+
+In many places it was rumoured that plague patients were buried
+alive, as may sometimes happen through senseless alarm and
+indecent haste; and thus the horror of the distressed people was
+everywhere increased. In Erfurt, after the churchyards were
+filled, 12,000 corpses were thrown into eleven great pits; and the
+like might, more or less exactly, be stated with respect to all
+the larger cities. Funeral ceremonies, the last consolation of
+the survivors, were everywhere impracticable.
+
+In all Germany, according to a probable calculation, there seem to
+have died only 1,244,434 inhabitants; this country, however, was
+more spared than others: Italy, on the contrary, was most
+severely visited. It is said to have lost half its inhabitants;
+and this account is rendered credible from the immense losses of
+individual cities and provinces: for in Sardinia and Corsica,
+according to the account of the distinguished Florentine, John
+Villani, who was himself carried off by the Black Plague, scarcely
+a third part of the population remained alive; and it is related
+of the Venetians, that they engaged ships at a high rate to
+retreat to the islands; so that after the plague had carried off
+three-fourths of her inhabitants, that proud city was left forlorn
+and desolate. In Padua, after the cessation of the plague, two-
+thirds of the inhabitants were wanting; and in Florence it was
+prohibited to publish the numbers of dead, and to toll the bells
+at their funerals, in order that the living might not abandon
+themselves to despair.
+
+We have more exact accounts of England; most of the great cities
+suffered incredible losses; above all, Yarmouth, in which 7,052
+died; Bristol, Oxford, Norwich, Leicester, York, and London, where
+in one burial ground alone, there were interred upwards of 50,000
+corpses, arranged in layers, in large pits. It is said that in
+the whole country scarcely a tenth part remained alive; but this
+estimate is evidently too high. Smaller losses were sufficient to
+cause those convulsions, whose consequences were felt for some
+centuries, in a false impulse given to civil life, and whose
+indirect influence, unknown to the English, has perhaps extended
+even to modern times.
+
+Morals were deteriorated everywhere, and the service of God was in
+a great measure laid aside; for, in many places, the churches were
+deserted, being bereft of their priests. The instruction of the
+people was impeded; covetousness became general; and when
+tranquillity was restored, the great increase of lawyers was
+astonishing, to whom the endless disputes regarding inheritances
+offered a rich harvest. The want of priests too, throughout the
+country, operated very detrimentally upon the people (the lower
+classes being most exposed to the ravages of the plague, whilst
+the houses of the nobility were, in proportion, much more spared),
+and it was no compensation that whole bands of ignorant laymen,
+who had lost their wives during the pestilence, crowded into the
+monastic orders, that they might participate in the respectability
+of the priesthood, and in the rich heritages which fell in to the
+Church from all quarters. The sittings of Parliament, of the
+King's Bench, and of most of the other courts, were suspended as
+long as the malady raged. The laws of peace availed not during
+the dominion of death. Pope Clement took advantage of this state
+of disorder to adjust the bloody quarrel between Edward III and
+Philip VI; yet he only succeeded during the period that the plague
+commanded peace. Philip's death (1350) annulled all treaties; and
+it is related that Edward, with other troops indeed, but with the
+same leaders and knights, again took the field. Ireland was much
+less heavily visited that England. The disease seems to have
+scarcely reached the mountainous districts of that kingdom; and
+Scotland too would perhaps have remained free, had not the Scots
+availed themselves of the discomfiture of the English to make an
+irruption into their territory, which terminated in the
+destruction of their army, by the plague and by the sword, and the
+extension of the pestilence, through those who escaped, over the
+whole country.
+
+At the commencement, there was in England a superabundance of all
+the necessaries of life; but the plague, which seemed then to be
+the sole disease, was soon accompanied by a fatal murrain among
+the cattle. Wandering about without herdsmen, they fell by
+thousands; and, as has likewise been observed in Africa, the birds
+and beasts of prey are said not to have touched them. Of what
+nature this murrain may have been, can no more be determined, than
+whether it originated from communication with plague patients, or
+from other causes; but thus much is certain, that it did not break
+out until after the commencement of the Black Death. In
+consequence of this murrain, and the impossibility of removing the
+corn from the fields, there was everywhere a great rise in the
+price of food, which to many was inexplicable, because the harvest
+had been plentiful; by others it was attributed to the wicked
+designs of the labourers and dealers; but it really had its
+foundation in the actual deficiency arising from circumstances by
+which individual classes at all times endeavour to profit. For a
+whole year, until it terminated in August, 1349, the Black Plague
+prevailed in this beautiful island, and everywhere poisoned the
+springs of comfort and prosperity.
+
+In other countries, it generally lasted only half a year, but
+returned frequently in individual places; on which account, some,
+without sufficient proof, assigned to it a period of seven years.
+
+Spain was uninterruptedly ravaged by the Black Plague till after
+the year 1350, to which the frequent internal feuds and the wars
+with the Moors not a little contributed. Alphonso XI., whose
+passion for war carried him too far, died of it at the siege of
+Gibraltar, on the 26th of March, 1350. He was the only king in
+Europe who fell a sacrifice to it; but even before this period,
+innumerable families had been thrown into affliction. The
+mortality seems otherwise to have been smaller in Spain than in
+Italy, and about as considerable as in France.
+
+The whole period during which the Black Plague raged with
+destructive violence in Europe was, with the exception of Russia,
+from the year 1347 to 1350. The plagues which in the sequel often
+returned until the year 1383, we do not consider as belonging to
+"the Great Mortality." They were rather common pestilences,
+without inflammation of the lungs, such as in former times, and in
+the following centuries, were excited by the matter of contagion
+everywhere existing, and which, on every favourable occasion,
+gained ground anew, as is usually the case with this frightful
+disease.
+
+The concourse of large bodies of people was especially dangerous;
+and thus the premature celebration of the Jubilee to which Clement
+VI. cited the faithful to Rome (1350) during the great epidemic,
+caused a new eruption of the plague, from which it is said that
+scarcely one in a hundred of the pilgrims escaped.
+
+Italy was, in consequence, depopulated anew; and those who
+returned, spread poison and corruption of morals in all
+directions. It is therefore the less apparent how that Pope, who
+was in general so wise and considerate, and who knew how to pursue
+the path of reason and humanity under the most difficult
+circumstances, should have been led to adopt a measure so
+injurious; since he himself was so convinced of the salutary
+effect of seclusion, that during the plague in Avignon he kept up
+constant fires, and suffered no one to approach him; and in other
+respects gave such orders as averted, or alleviated, much misery.
+
+The changes which occurred about this period in the north of
+Europe are sufficiently memorable to claim a few moments'
+attention. In Sweden two princes died--Haken and Knut, half-
+brothers of King Magnus; and in Westgothland alone, 466 priests.
+The inhabitants of Iceland and Greenland found in the coldness of
+their inhospitable climate no protection against the southern
+enemy who had penetrated to them from happier countries. The
+plague caused great havoc among them. Nature made no allowance
+for their constant warfare with the elements, and the parsimony
+with which she had meted out to them the enjoyments of life. In
+Denmark and Norway, however, people were so occupied with their
+own misery, that the accustomed voyages to Greenland ceased.
+Towering icebergs formed at the same time on the coast of East
+Greenland, in consequence of the general concussion of the earth's
+organism; and no mortal, from that time forward, has ever seen
+that shore or its inhabitants.
+
+It has been observed above, that in Russia the Black Plague did
+not break out until 1351, after it had already passed through the
+south and north of Europe. In this country also, the mortality
+was extraordinarily great; and the same scenes of affliction and
+despair were exhibited, as had occurred in those nations which had
+already passed the ordeal: the same mode of burial--the same
+horrible certainty of death--the same torpor and depression of
+spirits. The wealthy abandoned their treasures, and gave their
+villages and estates to the churches and monasteries; this being,
+according to the notions of the age, the surest way of securing
+the favour of Heaven and the forgiveness of past sins. In Russia,
+too, the voice of nature was silenced by fear and horror. In the
+hour of danger, fathers and mothers deserted their children, and
+children their parents.
+
+Of all the estimates of the number of lives lost in Europe, the
+most probable is, that altogether a fourth part of the inhabitants
+were carried off. Now, if Europe at present contain 210,000,000
+inhabitants, the population, not to take a higher estimate, which
+might easily by justified, amounted to at least 105,000,000 in the
+sixteenth century.
+
+It may therefore be assumed, without exaggeration, that Europe
+lost during the Black Death 25,000,000 of inhabitants.
+
+That her nations could so quickly overcome such a fearful
+concussion in their external circumstances, and, in general,
+without retrograding more than they actually did, could so develop
+their energies in the following century, is a most convincing
+proof of the indestructibility of human society as a whole. To
+assume, however, that it did not suffer any essential change
+internally, because in appearance everything remained as before,
+is inconsistent with a just view of cause and effect. Many
+historians seem to have adopted such an opinion; accustomed, as
+usual, to judge of the moral condition of the people solely
+according to the vicissitudes of earthly power, the events of
+battles, and the influence of religion, but to pass over with
+indifference the great phenomena of nature, which modify, not only
+the surface of the earth, but also the human mind. Hence, most of
+them have touched but superficially on the "Great Mortality" of
+the fourteenth century. We, for our parts, are convinced that in
+the history of the world the Black Death is one of the most
+important events which have prepared the way for the present state
+of Europe.
+
+He who studies the human mind with attention, and forms a
+deliberate judgment on the intellectual powers which set people
+and States in motion, may perhaps find some proofs of this
+assertion in the following observations:- at that time, the
+advancement of the hierarchy was, in most countries,
+extraordinary; for the Church acquired treasures and large
+properties in land, even to a greater extent than after the
+Crusades; but experience has demonstrated that such a state of
+things is ruinous to the people, and causes them to retrograde, as
+was evinced on this occasion.
+
+After the cessation of the Black Plague, a greater fecundity in
+women was everywhere remarkable--a grand phenomenon, which, from
+its occurrence after every destructive pestilence, proves to
+conviction, if any occurrence can do so, the prevalence of a
+higher power in the direction of general organic life. Marriages
+were, almost without exception, prolific; and double and triple
+births were more frequent than at other times; under which head,
+we should remember the strange remark, that after the "Great
+Mortality" the children were said to have got fewer teeth than
+before; at which contemporaries were mightily shocked, and even
+later writers have felt surprise.
+
+If we examine the grounds of this oft-repeated assertion, we shall
+find that they were astonished to see children, cut twenty, or at
+most, twenty-two teeth, under the supposition that a greater
+number had formerly fallen to their share. Some writers of
+authority, as, for example, the physician Savonarola, at Ferrara,
+who probably looked for twenty-eight teeth in children, published
+their opinions on this subject. Others copied from them, without
+seeing for themselves, as often happens in other matters which are
+equally evident; and thus the world believed in the miracle of an
+imperfection in the human body which had been caused by the Black
+Plague.
+
+The people gradually consoled themselves after the sufferings
+which they had undergone; the dead were lamented and forgotten;
+and, in the stirring vicissitudes of existence, the world belonged
+to the living.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V--MORAL EFFECTS
+
+
+
+The mental shock sustained by all nations during the prevalence of
+the Black Plague is without parallel and beyond description. In
+the eyes of the timorous, danger was the certain harbinger of
+death; many fell victims to fear on the first appearance of the
+distemper, and the most stout-hearted lost their confidence.
+Thus, after reliance on the future had died away, the spiritual
+union which binds man to his family and his fellow-creatures was
+gradually dissolved. The pious closed their accounts with the
+world--eternity presented itself to their view--their only
+remaining desire was for a participation in the consolations of
+religion, because to them death was disarmed of its sting.
+
+Repentance seized the transgressor, admonishing him to consecrate
+his remaining hours to the exercise of Christian virtues. All
+minds were directed to the contemplation of futurity; and
+children, who manifest the more elevated feelings of the soul
+without alloy, were frequently seen, while labouring under the
+plague, breathing out their spirit with prayer and songs of
+thanksgiving.
+
+An awful sense of contrition seized Christians of every communion;
+they resolved to forsake their vices, to make restitution for past
+offences, before they were summoned hence, to seek reconciliation
+with their Maker, and to avert, by self-chastisement, the
+punishment due to their former sins. Human nature would be
+exalted, could the countless noble actions which, in times of most
+imminent danger, were performed in secret, be recorded for the
+instruction of future generations. They, however, have no
+influence on the course of worldly events. They are known only to
+silent eyewitnesses, and soon fall into oblivion. But hypocrisy,
+illusion, and bigotry stalk abroad undaunted; they desecrate what
+is noble, they pervert what is divine, to the unholy purposes of
+selfishness, which hurries along every good feeling in the false
+excitement of the age. Thus it was in the years of this plague.
+In the fourteenth century, the monastic system was still in its
+full vigour, the power of the ecclesiastical orders and
+brotherhoods was revered by the people, and the hierarchy was
+still formidable to the temporal power. It was therefore in the
+natural constitution of society that bigoted zeal, which in such
+times makes a show of public acts of penance, should avail itself
+of the semblance of religion. But this took place in such a
+manner, that unbridled, self-willed penitence, degenerated into
+lukewarmness, renounced obedience to the hierarchy, and prepared a
+fearful opposition to the Church, paralysed as it was by
+antiquated forms.
+
+While all countries were filled with lamentations and woe, there
+first arose in Hungary, and afterwards in Germany, the Brotherhood
+of the Flagellants, called also the Brethren of the Cross, or
+Cross-bearers, who took upon themselves the repentance of the
+people for the sins they had committed, and offered prayers and
+supplications for the averting of this plague. This Order
+consisted chiefly of persons of the lower class, who were either
+actuated by sincere contrition, or who joyfully availed themselves
+of this pretext for idleness, and were hurried along with the tide
+of distracting frenzy. But as these brotherhoods gained in
+repute, and were welcomed by the people with veneration and
+enthusiasm, many nobles and ecclesiastics ranged themselves under
+their standard; and their bands were not unfrequently augmented by
+children, honourable women, and nuns; so powerfully were minds of
+the most opposite temperaments enslaved by this infatuation. They
+marched through the cities, in well-organised processions, with
+leaders and singers; their heads covered as far as the eyes; their
+look fixed on the ground, accompanied by every token of the
+deepest contrition and mourning. They were robed in sombre
+garments, with red crosses on the breast, back, and cap, and bore
+triple scourges, tied in three or four knots, in which points of
+iron were fixed. Tapers and magnificent banners of velvet and
+cloth of gold were carried before them; wherever they made their
+appearance, they were welcomed by the ringing bells, and the
+people flocked from all quarters to listen to their hymns and to
+witness their penance with devotion and tears.
+
+In the year 1349, two hundred Flagellants first entered Strasburg,
+where they were received with great joy, and hospitably lodged by
+citizens. Above a thousand joined the brotherhood, which now
+assumed the appearance of a wandering tribe, and separated into
+two bodies, for the purpose of journeying to the north and to the
+south. For more than half a year, new parties arrived weekly; and
+on each arrival adults and children left their families to
+accompany them; till at length their sanctity was questioned, and
+the doors of houses and churches were closed against them. At
+Spires, two hundred boys, of twelve years of age and under,
+constituted themselves into a Brotherhood of the Cross, in
+imitation of the children who, about a hundred years before, had
+united, at the instigation of some fanatic monks, for the purpose
+of recovering the Holy Sepulchre. All the inhabitants of this
+town were carried away by the illusion; they conducted the
+strangers to their houses with songs of thanksgiving, to regale
+them for the night. The women embroidered banners for them, and
+all were anxious to augment their pomp; and at every succeeding
+pilgrimage their influence and reputation increased.
+
+It was not merely some individual parts of the country that
+fostered them: all Germany, Hungary, Poland, Bohemia, Silesia,
+and Flanders, did homage to the mania; and they at length became
+as formidable to the secular as they were to the ecclesiastical
+power. The influence of this fanaticism was great and
+threatening, resembling the excitement which called all the
+inhabitants of Europe into the deserts of Syria and Palestine
+about two hundred and fifty years before. The appearance in
+itself was not novel. As far back as the eleventh century, many
+believers in Asia and Southern Europe afflicted themselves with
+the punishment of flagellation. Dominicus Loricatus, a monk of
+St. Croce d'Avellano, is mentioned as the master and model of this
+species of mortification of the flesh; which, according to the
+primitive notions of the Asiatic Anchorites, was deemed eminently
+Christian. The author of the solemn processions of the
+Flagellants is said to have been St. Anthony; for even in his time
+(1231) this kind of penance was so much in vogue, that it is
+recorded as an eventful circumstance in the history of the world.
+In 1260, the Flagellants appeared in Italy as Devoti. "When the
+land was polluted by vices and crimes, an unexampled spirit of
+remorse suddenly seized the minds of the Italians. The fear of
+Christ fell upon all: noble and ignoble, old and young, and even
+children of five years of age, marched through the streets with no
+covering but a scarf round the waist. They each carried a scourge
+of leathern thongs, which they applied to their limbs, amid sighs
+and tears, with such violence that the blood flowed from the
+wounds. Not only during the day, but even by night, and in the
+severest winter, they traversed the cities with burning torches
+and banners, in thousands and tens of thousands, headed by their
+priests, and prostrated themselves before the altars. They
+proceeded in the same manner in the villages: and the woods and
+mountains resounded with the voices of those whose cries were
+raised to God. The melancholy chaunt of the penitent alone was
+heard. Enemies were reconciled; men and women vied with each
+other in splendid works of charity, as if they dreaded that Divine
+Omnipotence would pronounce on them the doom of annihilation."
+
+The pilgrimages of the Flagellants extended throughout all the
+province of Southern Germany, as far as Saxony, Bohemia, and
+Poland, and even further; but at length the priests resisted this
+dangerous fanaticism, without being able to extirpate the
+illusion, which was advantageous to the hierarchy as long as it
+submitted to its sway. Regnier, a hermit of Perugia, is recorded
+as a fanatic preacher of penitence, with whom the extravagance
+originated. In the year 1296 there was a great procession of the
+Flagellants in Strasburg; and in 1334, fourteen years before the
+Great Mortality, the sermon of Venturinus, a Dominican friar of
+Bergamo, induced above 10,000 persons to undertake a new
+pilgrimage. They scourged themselves in the churches, and were
+entertained in the market-places at the public expense. At Rome,
+Venturinus was derided, and banished by the Pope to the mountains
+of Ricondona. He patiently endured all--went to the Holy Land,
+and died at Smyrna, 1346. Hence we see that this fanaticism was a
+mania of the middle ages, which, in the year 1349, on so fearful
+an occasion, and while still so fresh in remembrance, needed no
+new founder; of whom, indeed, all the records are silent. It
+probably arose in many places at the same time; for the terror of
+death, which pervaded all nations and suddenly set such powerful
+impulses in motion, might easily conjure up the fanaticism of
+exaggerated and overpowering repentance.
+
+The manner and proceedings of the Flagellants of the thirteenth
+and fourteenth centuries exactly resemble each other. But, if
+during the Black Plague, simple credulity came to their aid, which
+seized, as a consolation, the grossest delusion of religious
+enthusiasm, yet it is evident that the leaders must have been
+intimately united, and have exercised the power of a secret
+association. Besides, the rude band was generally under the
+control of men of learning, some of whom at least certainly had
+other objects in view independent of those which ostensibly
+appeared. Whoever was desirous of joining the brotherhood, was
+bound to remain in it thirty-four days, and to have fourpence per
+day at his own disposal, so that he might not be burthensome to
+any one; if married, he was obliged to have the sanction of his
+wife, and give the assurance that he was reconciled to all men.
+The Brothers of the Cross were not permitted to seek for free
+quarters, or even to enter a house without having been invited;
+they were forbidden to converse with females; and if they
+transgressed these rules, or acted without discretion, they were
+obliged to confess to the Superior, who sentenced them to several
+lashes of the scourge, by way of penance. Ecclesiastics had not,
+as such, any pre-eminence among them; according to their original
+law, which, however, was often transgressed, they could not become
+Masters, or take part in the Secret Councils. Penance was
+performed twice every day: in the morning and evening they went
+abroad in pairs, singing psalms amid the ringing of the bells; and
+when they arrived at the place of flagellation, they stripped the
+upper part of their bodies and put off their shoes, keeping on
+only a linen dress, reaching from the waist to the ankles. They
+then lay down in a large circle, in different positions, according
+to the nature of the crime: the adulterer with his face to the
+ground; the perjurer on one side, holding up three of his fingers,
+&c., and were then castigated, some more and some less, by the
+Master, who ordered them to rise in the words of a prescribed
+form. Upon this they scourged themselves, amid the singing of
+psalms and loud supplications for the averting of the plague, with
+genuflexions and other ceremonies, of which contemporary writers
+give various accounts; and at the same time constantly boasted of
+their penance, that the blood of their wounds was mingled with
+that of the Saviour. One of them, in conclusion, stoop up to read
+a letter, which it was pretended an angel had brought from heaven
+to St. Peter's Church, at Jerusalem, stating that Christ, who was
+sore displeased at the sins of man, had granted, at the
+intercession of the Holy Virgin and of the angels, that all who
+should wander about for thirty-four days and scourge themselves,
+should be partakers of the Divine grace. This scene caused as
+great a commotion among the believers as the finding of the holy
+spear once did at Antioch; and if any among the clergy inquired
+who had sealed the letter, he was boldly answered, the same who
+had sealed the Gospel!
+
+All this had so powerful an effect, that the Church was in
+considerable danger; for the Flagellants gained more credit than
+the priests, from whom they so entirely withdrew themselves, that
+they even absolved each other. Besides, they everywhere took
+possession of the churches, and their new songs, which went from
+mouth to mouth, operated strongly on the minds of the people.
+Great enthusiasm and originally pious feelings are clearly
+distinguishable in these hymns, and especially in the chief psalm
+of the Cross-bearers, which is still extant, and which was sung
+all over Germany in different dialects, and is probably of a more
+ancient date. Degeneracy, however, soon crept in; crimes were
+everywhere committed; and there was no energetic man capable of
+directing the individual excitement to purer objects, even had an
+effectual resistance to the tottering Church been at that early
+period seasonable, and had it been possible to restrain the
+fanaticism. The Flagellants sometimes undertook to make trial of
+their power of working miracles; as in Strasburg, where they
+attempted, in their own circle, to resuscitate a dead child:
+they, however, failed, and their unskilfulness did them much harm,
+though they succeeded here and there in maintaining some
+confidence in their holy calling, by pretending to have the power
+of casting out evil spirits.
+
+The Brotherhood of the Cross announced that the pilgrimage of the
+Flagellants was to continue for a space of thirty-four years; and
+many of the Masters had doubtless determined to form a lasting
+league against the Church; but they had gone too far. So early as
+the first year of their establishment, the general indignation set
+bounds to their intrigues: so that the strict measures adopted by
+the Emperor Charles IV., and Pope Clement, who, throughout the
+whole of this fearful period, manifested prudence and noble-
+mindedness, and conducted himself in a manner every way worthy of
+his high station, were easily put into execution.
+
+The Sorbonne, at Paris, and the Emperor Charles, had already
+applied to the Holy See for assistance against these formidable
+and heretical excesses, which had well-nigh destroyed the
+influence of the clergy in every place; when a hundred of the
+Brotherhood of the Cross arrived at Avignon from Basle, and
+desired admission. The Pope, regardless of the intercession of
+several cardinals, interdicted their public penance, which he had
+not authorised; and, on pain of excommunication, prohibited
+throughout Christendom the continuance of these pilgrimages.
+Philip VI., supported by the condemnatory judgment of the
+Sorbonne, forbade their reception in France. Manfred, King of
+Sicily, at the same time threatened them with punishment by death;
+and in the East they were withstood by several bishops, among whom
+was Janussius, of Gnesen, and Preczlaw, of Breslau, who condemned
+to death one of their Masters, formerly a deacon; and, in
+conformity with the barbarity of the times, had him publicly
+burnt. In Westphalia, where so shortly before they had venerated
+the Brothers of the Cross, they now persecuted them with
+relentless severity; and in the Mark, as well as in all the other
+countries of Germany, they pursued them as if they had been the
+authors of every misfortune.
+
+The processions of the Brotherhood of the Cross undoubtedly
+promoted the spreading of the plague; and it is evident that the
+gloomy fanaticism which gave rise to them would infuse a new
+poison into the already desponding minds of the people.
+
+Still, however, all this was within the bounds of barbarous
+enthusiasm; but horrible were the persecutions of the Jews, which
+were committed in most countries, with even greater exasperation
+than in the twelfth century, during the first Crusades. In every
+destructive pestilence the common people at first attribute the
+mortality to poison. No instruction avails; the supposed
+testimony of their eyesight is to them a proof, and they
+authoritatively demand the victims of their rage. On whom, then,
+was it so likely to fall as on the Jews, the usurers and the
+strangers who lived at enmity with the Christians? They were
+everywhere suspected of having poisoned the wells or infected the
+air. They alone were considered as having brought this fearful
+mortality upon the Christians. They were, in consequence, pursued
+with merciless cruelty; and either indiscriminately given up to
+the fury of the populace, or sentenced by sanguinary tribunals,
+which, with all the forms of the law, ordered them to be burnt
+alive. In times like these, much is indeed said of guilt and
+innocence; but hatred and revenge bear down all discrimination,
+and the smallest probability magnifies suspicion into certainty.
+These bloody scenes, which disgraced Europe in the fourteenth
+century, are a counterpart to a similar mania of the age, which
+was manifested in the persecutions of witches and sorcerers; and,
+like these, they prove that enthusiasm, associated with hatred,
+and leagued with the baser passions, may work more powerfully upon
+whole nations than religion and legal order; nay, that it even
+knows how to profit by the authority of both, in order the more
+surely to satiate with blood the sword of long-suppressed revenge.
+
+The persecution of the Jews commenced in September and October,
+1348, at Chillon, on the Lake of Geneva, where the first criminal
+proceedings were instituted against them, after they had long
+before been accused by the people of poisoning the wells; similar
+scenes followed in Bern and Freyburg, in January, 1349. Under the
+influence of excruciating suffering, the tortured Jews confessed
+themselves guilty of the crime imputed to them; and it being
+affirmed that poison had in fact been found in a well at
+Zoffingen, this was deemed a sufficient proof to convince the
+world; and the persecution of the abhorred culprits thus appeared
+justifiable. Now, though we can take as little exception at these
+proceedings as at the multifarious confessions of witches, because
+the interrogatories of the fanatical and sanguinary tribunals were
+so complicated, that by means of the rack the required answer must
+inevitably be obtained; and it is, besides, conformable to human
+nature that crimes which are in everybody's mouth may, in the end,
+be actually committed by some, either from wantonness, revenge, or
+desperate exasperation: yet crimes and accusations are, under
+circumstances like these, merely the offspring of a revengeful,
+frenzied spirit in the people; and the accusers, according to the
+fundamental principles of morality, which are the same in every
+age, are the more guilty transgressors.
+
+Already in the autumn of 1348 a dreadful panic, caused by this
+supposed empoisonment, seized all nations; in Germany especially
+the springs and wells were built over, that nobody might drink of
+them or employ their contents for culinary purposes; and for a
+long time the inhabitants of numerous towns and villages used only
+river and rain water. The city gates were also guarded with the
+greatest caution: only confidential persons were admitted; and if
+medicine or any other article, which might be supposed to be
+poisonous, was found in the possession of a stranger--and it was
+natural that some should have these things by them for their
+private use--they were forced to swallow a portion of it. By this
+trying state of privation, distrust, and suspicion, the hatred
+against the supposed poisoners became greatly increased, and often
+broke out in popular commotions, which only served still further
+to infuriate the wildest passions. The noble and the mean
+fearlessly bound themselves by an oath to extirpate the Jews by
+fire and sword, and to snatch them from their protectors, of whom
+the number was so small, that throughout all Germany but few
+places can be mentioned where these unfortunate people were not
+regarded as outlaws and martyred and burnt. Solemn summonses were
+issued from Bern to the towns of Basle, Freyburg in the Breisgau,
+and Strasburg, to pursue the Jews as poisoners. The burgomasters
+and senators, indeed, opposed this requisition; but in Basle the
+populace obliged them to bind themselves by an oath to burn the
+Jews, and to forbid persons of that community from entering their
+city for the space of two hundred years. Upon this all the Jews
+in Basle, whose number could not have been inconsiderable, were
+enclosed in a wooden building, constructed for the purpose, and
+burnt together with it, upon the mere outcry of the people,
+without sentence or trial, which, indeed, would have availed them
+nothing. Soon after the same thing took place at Freyburg. A
+regular Diet was held at Bennefeld, in Alsace, where the bishops,
+lords, and barons, as also deputies of the counties and towns,
+consulted how they should proceed with regard to the Jews; and
+when the deputies of Strasburg--not indeed the bishop of this
+town, who proved himself a violent fanatic--spoke in favour of the
+persecuted, as nothing criminal was substantiated against them, a
+great outcry was raised, and it was vehemently asked, why, if so,
+they had covered their wells and removed their buckets. A
+sanguinary decree was resolved upon, of which the populace, who
+obeyed the call of the nobles and superior clergy, became but the
+too willing executioners. Wherever the Jews were not burnt, they
+were at least banished; and so being compelled to wander about,
+they fell into the hands of the country people, who, without
+humanity, and regardless of all laws, persecuted them with fire
+and sword. At Spires, the Jews, driven to despair, assembled in
+their own habitations, which they set on fire, and thus consumed
+themselves with their families. The few that remained were forced
+to submit to baptism; while the dead bodies of the murdered, which
+lay about the streets, were put into empty wine-casks and rolled
+into the Rhine, lest they should infect the air. The mob was
+forbidden to enter the ruins of the habitations that were burnt in
+the Jewish quarter; for the senate itself caused search to be made
+for the treasure, which is said to have been very considerable.
+At Strasburg two thousand Jews were burnt alive in their own
+burial-ground, where a large scaffold had been erected: a few who
+promised to embrace Christianity were spared, and their children
+taken from the pile. The youth and beauty of several females also
+excited some commiseration, and they were snatched from death
+against their will; many, however, who forcibly made their escape
+from the flames were murdered in the streets.
+
+The senate ordered all pledges and bonds to be returned to the
+debtors, and divided the money among the work-people. Many,
+however, refused to accept the base price of blood, and, indignant
+at the scenes of bloodthirsty avarice, which made the infuriated
+multitude forget that the plague was raging around them, presented
+it to monasteries, in conformity with the advice of their
+confessors. In all the countries on the Rhine, these cruelties
+continued to be perpetrated during the succeeding months; and
+after quiet was in some degree restored, the people thought to
+render an acceptable service to God, by taking the bricks of the
+destroyed dwellings, and the tombstones of the Jews, to repair
+churches and to erect belfries.
+
+In Mayence alone, 12,000 Jews are said to have been put to a cruel
+death. The Flagellants entered that place in August; the Jews, on
+this occasion, fell out with the Christians and killed several;
+but when they saw their inability to withstand the increasing
+superiority of their enemies, and that nothing could save them
+from destruction, they consumed themselves and their families by
+setting fire to their dwellings. Thus also, in other places, the
+entry of the Flagellants gave rise to scenes of slaughter; and as
+thirst for blood was everywhere combined with an unbridled spirit
+of proselytism, a fanatic zeal arose among the Jews to perish as
+martyrs to their ancient religion. And how was it possible that
+they could from the heart embrace Christianity, when its precepts
+were never more outrageously violated? At Eslingen the whole
+Jewish community burned themselves in their synagogue, and mothers
+were often seen throwing their children on the pile, to prevent
+their being baptised, and then precipitating themselves into the
+flames. In short, whatever deeds fanaticism, revenge, avarice and
+desperation, in fearful combination, could instigate mankind to
+perform,--and where in such a case is the limit?--were executed in
+the year 1349 throughout Germany, Italy, and France, with
+impunity, and in the eyes of all the world. It seemed as if the
+plague gave rise to scandalous acts and frantic tumults, not to
+mourning and grief; and the greater part of those who, by their
+education and rank, were called upon to raise the voice of reason,
+themselves led on the savage mob to murder and to plunder. Almost
+all the Jews who saved their lives by baptism were afterwards
+burnt at different times; for they continued to be accused of
+poisoning the water and the air. Christians also, whom
+philanthropy or gain had induced to offer them protection, were
+put on the rack and executed with them. Many Jews who had
+embraced Christianity repented of their apostacy, and, returning
+to their former faith, sealed it with their death.
+
+The humanity and prudence of Clement VI. must, on this occasion,
+also be mentioned to his honour; but even the highest
+ecclesiastical power was insufficient to restrain the unbridled
+fury of the people. He not only protected the Jews at Avignon, as
+far as lay in his power, but also issued two bulls, in which he
+declared them innocent; and admonished all Christians, though
+without success, to cease from such groundless persecutions. The
+Emperor Charles IV. was also favourable to them, and sought to
+avert their destruction wherever he could; but he dared not draw
+the sword of justice, and even found himself obliged to yield to
+the selfishness of the Bohemian nobles, who were unwilling to
+forego so favourable an opportunity of releasing themselves from
+their Jewish creditors, under favour of an imperial mandate. Duke
+Albert of Austria burnt and pillaged those of his cities which had
+persecuted the Jews--a vain and inhuman proceeding, which,
+moreover, is not exempt from the suspicion of covetousness; yet he
+was unable, in his own fortress of Kyberg, to protect some
+hundreds of Jews, who had been received there, from being
+barbarously burnt by the inhabitants. Several other princes and
+counts, among whom was Ruprecht von der Pfalz, took the Jews under
+their protection, on the payment of large sums: in consequence of
+which they were called "Jew-masters," and were in danger of being
+attacked by the populace and by their powerful neighbours. These
+persecuted and ill-used people, except indeed where humane
+individuals took compassion on them at their own peril, or when
+they could command riches to purchase protection, had no place of
+refuge left but the distant country of Lithuania, where Boleslav
+V., Duke of Poland (1227-1279) had before granted them liberty of
+conscience; and King Casimir the Great (1333-1370), yielding to
+the entreaties of Esther, a favourite Jewess, received them, and
+granted them further protection; on which account, that country is
+still inhabited by a great number of Jews, who by their secluded
+habits have, more than any people in Europe, retained the manners
+of the Middle Ages.
+
+But to return to the fearful accusations against the Jews; it was
+reported in all Europe that they were in connection with secret
+superiors in Toledo, to whose decrees they were subject, and from
+whom they had received commands respecting the coining of base
+money, poisoning, the murder of Christian children, &c; that they
+received the poison by sea from remote parts, and also prepared it
+themselves from spiders, owls, and other venomous animals; but, in
+order that their secret might not be discovered, that it was known
+only to their Rabbis and rich men. Apparently there were but few
+who did not consider this extravagant accusation well founded;
+indeed, in many writings of the fourteenth century, we find great
+acrimony with regard to the suspected poison-mixers, which plainly
+demonstrates the prejudice existing against them. Unhappily,
+after the confessions of the first victims in Switzerland, the
+rack extorted similar ones in various places. Some even
+acknowledged having received poisonous powder in bags, and
+injunctions from Toledo, by secret messengers. Bags of this
+description were also often found in wells, though it was not
+unfrequently discovered that the Christians themselves had thrown
+them in; probably to give occasion to murder and pillage; similar
+instances of which may be found in the persecutions of the
+witches.
+
+This picture needs no additions. A lively image of the Black
+Plague, and of the moral evil which followed in its train, will
+vividly represent itself to him who is acquainted with nature and
+the constitution of society. Almost the only credible accounts of
+the manner of living, and of the ruin which occurred in private
+life during this pestilence, are from Italy; and these may enable
+us to form a just estimate of the general state of families in
+Europe, taking into consideration what is peculiar in the manners
+of each country.
+
+"When the evil had become universal" (speaking of Florence), "the
+hearts of all the inhabitants were closed to feelings of humanity.
+They fled from the sick and all that belonged to them, hoping by
+these means to save themselves. Others shut themselves up in
+their houses, with their wives, their children and households,
+living on the most costly food, but carefully avoiding all excess.
+None were allowed access to them; no intelligence of death or
+sickness was permitted to reach their ears; and they spent their
+time in singing and music, and other pastimes. Others, on the
+contrary, considered eating and drinking to excess, amusements of
+all descriptions, the indulgence of every gratification, and an
+indifference to what was passing around them, as the best
+medicine, and acted accordingly. They wandered day and night from
+one tavern to another, and feasted without moderation or bounds.
+In this way they endeavoured to avoid all contact with the sick,
+and abandoned their houses and property to chance, like men whose
+death-knell had already tolled.
+
+"Amid this general lamentation and woe, the influence and
+authority of every law, human and divine, vanished. Most of those
+who were in office had been carried off by the plague, or lay
+sick, or had lost so many members of their family, that they were
+unable to attend to their duties; so that thenceforth every one
+acted as he thought proper. Others in their mode of living chose
+a middle course. They ate and drank what they pleased, and walked
+abroad, carrying odoriferous flowers, herbs, or spices, which they
+smelt to from time to time, in order to invigorate the brain, and
+to avert the baneful influence of the air, infected by the sick
+and by the innumerable corpses of those who had died of the
+plague. Others carried their precaution still further, and
+thought the surest way to escape death was by flight. They
+therefore left the city; women as well as men abandoning their
+dwellings and their relations, and retiring into the country. But
+of these also many were carried off, most of them alone and
+deserted by all the world, themselves having previously set the
+example. Thus it was that one citizen fled from another--a
+neighbour from his neighbours--a relation from his relations; and
+in the end, so completely had terror extinguished every kindlier
+feeling, that the brother forsook the brother--the sister the
+sister--the wife her husband; and at last, even the parent his own
+offspring, and abandoned them, unvisited and unsoothed, to their
+fate. Those, therefore, that stood in need of assistance fell a
+prey to greedy attendants, who, for an exorbitant recompense,
+merely handed the sick their food and medicine, remained with them
+in their last moments, and then not unfrequently became themselves
+victims to their avarice and lived not to enjoy their extorted
+gain. Propriety and decorum were extinguished among the helpless
+sick. Females of rank seemed to forget their natural bashfulness,
+and committed the care of their persons, indiscriminately, to men
+and women of the lowest order. No longer were women, relatives or
+friends, found in the house of mourning, to share the grief of the
+survivors--no longer was the corpse accompanied to the grave by
+neighbours and a numerous train of priests, carrying wax tapers
+and singing psalms, nor was it borne along by other citizens of
+equal rank. Many breathed their last without a friend to soothe
+their dying pillow; and few indeed were they who departed amid the
+lamentations and tears of their friends and kindred. Instead of
+sorrow and mourning, appeared indifference, frivolity and mirth;
+this being considered, especially by the females, as conducive to
+health. Seldom was the body followed by even ten or twelve
+attendants; and instead of the usual bearers and sextons,
+mercenaries of the lowest of the populace undertook the office for
+the sake of gain; and accompanied by only a few priests, and often
+without a single taper, it was borne to the very nearest church,
+and lowered into the grave that was not already too full to
+receive it. Among the middling classes, and especially among the
+poor, the misery was still greater. Poverty or negligence induced
+most of these to remain in their dwellings, or in the immediate
+neighbourhood; and thus they fell by thousands; and many ended
+their lives in the streets by day and by night. The stench of
+putrefying corpses was often the first indication to their
+neighbours that more deaths had occurred. The survivors, to
+preserve themselves from infection, generally had the bodies taken
+out of the houses and laid before the doors; where the early
+morning found them in heaps, exposed to the affrighted gaze of the
+passing stranger. It was no longer possible to have a bier for
+every corpse--three or four were generally laid together--husband
+and wife, father and mother, with two or three children, were
+frequently borne to the grave on the same bier; and it often
+happened that two priests would accompany a coffin, bearing the
+cross before it, and be joined on the way by several other
+funerals; so that instead of one, there were five or six bodies
+for interment."
+
+Thus far Boccacio. On the conduct of the priests, another
+contemporary observes: "In large and small towns they had
+withdrawn themselves through fear, leaving the performance of
+ecclesiastical duties to the few who were found courageous and
+faithful enough to undertake them." But we ought not on that
+account to throw more blame on them than on others; for we find
+proofs of the same timidity and heartlessness in every class.
+During the prevalence of the Black Plague, the charitable orders
+conducted themselves admirably, and did as much good as can be
+done by individual bodies in times of great misery and
+destruction, when compassion, courage, and the nobler feelings are
+found but in the few, while cowardice, selfishness and ill-will,
+with the baser passions in their train, assert the supremacy. In
+place of virtue which had been driven from the earth, wickedness
+everywhere reared her rebellious standard, and succeeding
+generations were consigned to the dominion of her baleful tyranny.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI--PHYSICIANS
+
+
+
+If we now turn to the medical talent which encountered the "Great
+Mortality," the Middle Ages must stand excused, since even the
+moderns are of opinion that the art of medicine is not able to
+cope with the Oriental plague, and can afford deliverance from it
+only under particularly favourable circumstances. We must bear in
+mind, also, that human science and art appear particularly weak in
+great pestilences, because they have to contend with the powers of
+nature, of which they have no knowledge; and which, if they had
+been, or could be, comprehended in their collective effects, would
+remain uncontrollable by them, principally on account of the
+disordered condition of human society. Moreover, every new plague
+has its peculiarities, which are the less easily discovered on
+first view because, during its ravages, fear and consternation
+humble the proud spirit.
+
+The physicians of the fourteenth century, during the Black Death,
+did what human intellect could do in the actual condition of the
+healing art; and their knowledge of the disease was by no means
+despicable. They, like the rest of mankind, have indulged in
+prejudices, and defended them, perhaps, with too much obstinacy:
+some of these, however, were founded on the mode of thinking of
+the age, and passed current in those days as established truths;
+others continue to exist to the present hour.
+
+Their successors in the nineteenth century ought not therefore to
+vaunt too highly the pre-eminence of their knowledge, for they too
+will be subjected to the severe judgment of posterity--they too
+will, with reason, be accused of human weakness and want of
+foresight.
+
+The medical faculty of Paris, the most celebrated of the
+fourteenth century, were commissioned to deliver their opinion on
+the causes of the Black Plague, and to furnish some appropriate
+regulations with regard to living during its prevalence. This
+document is sufficiently remarkable to find a place here.
+
+"We, the Members of the College of Physicians of Paris, have,
+after mature consideration and consultation on the present
+mortality, collected the advice of our old masters in the art, and
+intend to make known the causes of this pestilence more clearly
+than could be done according to the rules and principles of
+astrology and natural science; we, therefore, declare as follows:-
+
+"It is known that in India and the vicinity of the Great Sea, the
+constellations which combated the rays of the sun, and the warmth
+of the heavenly fire, exerted their power especially against that
+sea, and struggled violently with its waters. (Hence vapours
+often originate which envelop the sun, and convert his light into
+darkness.) These vapours alternately rose and fell for twenty-
+eight days; but, at last, sun and fire acted so powerfully upon
+the sea that they attracted a great portion of it to themselves,
+and the waters of the ocean arose in the form of vapour; thereby
+the waters were in some parts so corrupted that the fish which
+they contained died. These corrupted waters, however, the heat of
+the sun could not consume, neither could other wholesome water,
+hail or snow and dew, originate therefrom. On the contrary, this
+vapour spread itself through the air in many places on the earth,
+and enveloped them in fog.
+
+"Such was the case all over Arabia, in a part of India, in Crete,
+in the plains and valleys of Macedonia, in Hungary, Albania, and
+Sicily. Should the same thing occur in Sardinia, not a man will
+be left alive, and the like will continue so long as the sun
+remains in the sign of Leo, on all the islands and adjoining
+countries to which this corrupted sea-wind extends, or has already
+extended, from India. If the inhabitants of those parts do not
+employ and adhere to the following or similar means and precepts,
+we announce to them inevitable death, except the grace of Christ
+preserve their lives.
+
+"We are of opinion that the constellations, with the aid of
+nature, strive by virtue of their Divine might, to protect and
+heal the human race; and to this end, in union with the rays of
+the sun, acting through the power of fire, endeavour to break
+through the mist. Accordingly, within the next ten days, and
+until the 17th of the ensuing month of July, this mist will be
+converted into a stinking deleterious rain, whereby the air will
+be much purified. Now, as soon as this rain shall announce itself
+by thunder or hail, every one of you should protect himself from
+the air; and, as well before as after the rain, kindle a large
+fire of vine-wood, green laurel, or other green wood; wormwood and
+camomile should also be burnt in great quantity in the market-
+places, in other densely inhabited localities, and in the houses.
+Until the earth is again completely dry, and for three days
+afterwards, no one ought to go abroad in the fields. During this
+time the diet should be simple, and people should be cautious in
+avoiding exposure in the cool of the evening, at night, and in the
+morning. Poultry and water-fowl, young pork, old beef, and fat
+meat in general, should not be eaten; but, on the contrary, meat
+of a proper age, of a warm and dry, but on no account of a heating
+and exciting nature. Broth should be taken, seasoned with ground
+pepper, ginger, and cloves, especially by those who are accustomed
+to live temperately, and are yet choice in their diet. Sleep in
+the day-time is detrimental; it should be taken at night until
+sunrise, or somewhat longer. At breakfast one should drink
+little; supper should be taken an hour before sunset, when more
+may be drunk than in the morning. Clear light wine, mixed with a
+fifth or six part of water, should be used as a beverage. Dried
+or fresh fruits, with wine, are not injurious, but highly so
+without it. Beet-root and other vegetables, whether eaten pickled
+or fresh, are hurtful; on the contrary, spicy pot-herbs, as sage
+or rosemary, are wholesome. Cold, moist, watery food in is
+general prejudicial. Going out at night, and even until three
+o'clock in the morning, is dangerous, on account of dew. Only
+small river fish should be used. Too much exercise is hurtful.
+The body should be kept warmer than usual, and thus protected from
+moisture and cold. Rain-water must not be employed in cooking,
+and every one should guard against exposure to wet weather. If it
+rain, a little fine treacle should be taken after dinner. Fat
+people should not sit in the sunshine. Good clear wine should be
+selected and drunk often, but in small quantities, by day. Olive
+oil as an article of food is fatal. Equally injurious are fasting
+and excessive abstemiousness, anxiety of mind, anger, and
+immoderate drinking. Young people, in autumn especially, must
+abstain from all these things if they do not wish to run a risk of
+dying of dysentery. In order to keep the body properly open, an
+enema, or some other simple means, should be employed when
+necessary. Bathing is injurious. Men must preserve chastity as
+they value their lives. Every one should impress this on his
+recollection, but especially those who reside on the coast, or
+upon an island into which the noxious wind has penetrated."
+
+On what occasion these strange precepts were delivered can no
+longer be ascertained, even if it were an object to know it. It
+must be acknowledged, however, that they do not redound to the
+credit either of the faculty of Paris, or of the fourteenth
+century in general. This famous faculty found themselves under
+the painful necessity of being wise at command, and of firing a
+point-blank shot of erudition at an enemy who enveloped himself in
+a dark mist, of the nature of which they had no conception. In
+concealing their ignorance by authoritative assertions, they
+suffered themselves, therefore, to be misled; and while
+endeavouring to appear to the world with eclat, only betrayed to
+the intelligent their lamentable weakness. Now some might suppose
+that, in the condition of the sciences of the fourteenth century,
+no intelligent physicians existed; but this is altogether at
+variance with the laws of human advancement, and is contradicted
+by history. The real knowledge of an age is shown only in the
+archives of its literature. Here alone the genius of truth speaks
+audibly--here alone men of talent deposit the results of their
+experience and reflection without vanity or a selfish object.
+There is no ground for believing that in the fourteenth century
+men of this kind were publicly questioned regarding their views;
+and it is, therefore, the more necessary that impartial history
+should take up their cause, and do justice to their merits.
+
+The first notice on this subject is due to a very celebrated
+teacher in Perugia, Gentilis of Foligno, who, on the 18th of June,
+1348, fell a sacrifice to the plague, in the faithful discharge of
+his duty. Attached to Arabian doctrines, and to the universally
+respected Galen, he, in common with all his contemporaries,
+believed in a putrid corruption of the blood in the lungs and in
+the heart, which was occasioned by the pestilential atmosphere,
+and was forthwith communicated to the whole body. He thought,
+therefore, that everything depended upon a sufficient purification
+of the air, by means of large blazing fires of odoriferous wood,
+in the vicinity of the healthy as well as of the sick, and also
+upon an appropriate manner of living, so that the putridity might
+not overpower the diseased. In conformity with notions derived
+from the ancients, he depended upon bleeding and purging, at the
+commencement of the attack, for the purpose of purification;
+ordered the healthy to wash themselves frequently with vinegar or
+wine, to sprinkle their dwellings with vinegar, and to smell often
+to camphor, or other volatile substances. Hereupon he gave, after
+the Arabian fashion, detailed rules, with an abundance of
+different medicines, of whose healing powers wonderful things were
+believed. He had little stress upon super-lunar influences, so
+far as respected the malady itself; on which account, he did not
+enter into the great controversies of the astrologers, but always
+kept in view, as an object of medical attention, the corruption of
+the blood in the lungs and heart. He believed in a progressive
+infection from country to country, according to the notions of the
+present day; and the contagious power of the disease, even in the
+vicinity of those affected by plague, was, in his opinion, beyond
+all doubt. On this point intelligent contemporaries were all
+agreed; and, in truth, it required no great genius to be convinced
+of so palpable a fact. Besides, correct notions of contagion have
+descended from remote antiquity, and were maintained unchanged in
+the fourteenth century. So far back as the age of Plato a
+knowledge of the contagious power of malignant inflammations of
+the eye, of which also no physician of the Middle Ages entertained
+a doubt, was general among the people; yet in modern times
+surgeons have filled volumes with partial controversies on this
+subject. The whole language of antiquity has adapted itself to
+the notions of the people respecting the contagion of pestilential
+diseases; and their terms were, beyond comparison, more expressive
+than those in use among the moderns.
+
+Arrangements for the protection of the healthy against contagious
+diseases, the necessity of which is shown from these notions, were
+regarded by the ancients as useful; and by man, whose
+circumstances permitted it, were carried into effect in their
+houses. Even a total separation of the sick from the healthy,
+that indispensable means of protection against infection by
+contact, was proposed by physicians of the second century after
+Christ, in order to check the spreading of leprosy. But it was
+decidedly opposed, because, as it was alleged, the healing art
+ought not to be guilty of such harshness. This mildness of the
+ancients, in whose manner of thinking inhumanity was so often and
+so undisguisedly conspicuous, might excite surprise if it were
+anything more than apparent. The true ground of the neglect of
+public protection against pestilential diseases lay in the general
+notion and constitution of human society--it lay in the disregard
+of human life, of which the great nations of antiquity have given
+proofs in every page of their history. Let it not be supposed
+that they wanted knowledge respecting the propagation of
+contagious diseases. On the contrary, they were as well informed
+on this subject as the modern; but this was shown where individual
+property, not where human life, on the grand scale was to be
+protected. Hence the ancients made a general practice of
+arresting the progress of murrains among cattle by a separation of
+the diseased from the healthy. Their herds alone enjoyed that
+protection which they held it impracticable to extend to human
+society, because they had no wish to do so. That the governments
+in the fourteenth century were not yet so far advanced as to put
+into practice general regulations for checking the plague needs no
+especial proof. Physicians could, therefore, only advise public
+purifications of the air by means of large fires, as had often
+been practised in ancient times; and they were obliged to leave it
+to individual families either to seek safety in flight, or to shut
+themselves up in their dwellings, a method which answers in common
+plagues, but which here afforded no complete security, because
+such was the fury of the disease when it was at its height, that
+the atmosphere of whole cities was penetrated by the infection.
+
+Of the astral influence which was considered to have originated
+the "Great Mortality," physicians and learned men were as
+completely convinced as of the fact of its reality. A grand
+conjunction of the three superior planets, Saturn, Jupiter, and
+Mars, in the sign of Aquarius, which took place, according to Guy
+de Chauliac, on the 24th of March, 1345, was generally received as
+its principal cause. In fixing the day, this physician, who was
+deeply versed in astrology, did not agree with others; whereupon
+there arose various disputations, of weight in that age, but of
+none in ours. People, however, agree in this--that conjunctions
+of the planets infallibly prognosticated great events; great
+revolutions of kingdoms, new prophets, destructive plagues, and
+other occurrences which bring distress and horror on mankind. No
+medical author of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries omits an
+opportunity of representing them as among the general prognostics
+of great plagues; nor can we, for our part, regard the astrology
+of the Middle Ages as a mere offspring of superstition. It has
+not only, in common with all ideas which inspire and guide
+mankind, a high historical importance, entirely independent of its
+error or truth--for the influence of both is equally powerful--but
+there are also contained in it, as in alchemy, grand thoughts of
+antiquity, of which modern natural philosophy is so little ashamed
+that she claims them as her property. Foremost among these is the
+idea of general life which diffuses itself throughout the whole
+universe, expressed by the greatest Greek sages, and transmitted
+to the Middle Ages, through the new Platonic natural philosophy.
+To this impression of an universal organism, the assumption of a
+reciprocal influence of terrestrial bodies could not be foreign,
+nor did this cease to correspond with a higher view of nature,
+until astrologers overstepped the limits of human knowledge with
+frivolous and mystical calculations.
+
+Guy de Chauliac considers the influence of the conjunction, which
+was held to be all-potent, as the chief general cause of the Black
+Plague; and the diseased state of bodies, the corruption of the
+fluids, debility, obstruction, and so forth, as the especial
+subordinate causes. By these, according to his opinion, the
+quality of the air, and of the other elements, was so altered that
+they set poisonous fluids in motion towards the inward parts of
+the body, in the same manner as the magnet attracts iron; whence
+there arose in the commencement fever and the spitting of blood;
+afterwards, however, a deposition in the form on glandular
+swellings and inflammatory boils. Herein the notion of an
+epidemic constitution was set forth clearly, and conformably to
+the spirit of the age. Of contagion, Guy de Chauliac was
+completely convinced. He sought to protect himself against it by
+the usual means; and it was probably he who advised Pope Clement
+VI. to shut himself up while the plague lasted. The preservation
+of this Pope's life, however, was most beneficial to the city of
+Avignon, for he loaded the poor with judicious acts of kindness,
+took care to have proper attendants provided, and paid physicians
+himself to afford assistance wherever human aid could avail--an
+advantage which, perhaps, no other city enjoyed. Nor was the
+treatment of plague-patients in Avignon by any means
+objectionable; for, after the usual depletions by bleeding and
+aperients, where circumstances required them, they endeavoured to
+bring the buboes to suppuration; they made incisions into the
+inflammatory boils, or burned them with a red-hot iron, a practice
+which at all times proves salutary, and in the Black Plague saved
+many lives. In this city, the Jews, who lived in a state of the
+greatest filth, were most severely visited, as also the Spaniards,
+whom Chalin accuses of great intemperance.
+
+Still more distinct notions on the causes of the plague were
+stated to his contemporaries in the fourteenth century by Galeazzo
+di Santa Sofia, a learned man, a native of Padua, who likewise
+treated plague-patients at Vienna, though in what year is
+undetermined. He distinguishes carefully PESTILENCE from EPIDEMY
+and ENDEMY. The common notion of the two first accords exactly
+with that of an epidemic constitution, for both consist, according
+to him, in an unknown change or corruption of the air; with this
+difference, that pestilence calls forth diseases of different
+kinds; epidemy, on the contrary, always the same disease. As an
+example of an epidemy, he adduces a cough (influenza) which was
+observed in all climates at the same time without perceptible
+cause; but he recognised the approach of a pestilence,
+independently of unusual natural phenomena, by the more frequent
+occurrence of various kinds of fever, to which the modern
+physicians would assign a nervous and putrid character. The
+endemy originates, according to him, only in local telluric
+changes--in deleterious influences which develop themselves in the
+earth and in the water, without a corruption of the air. These
+notions were variously jumbled together in his time, like
+everything which human understanding separates by too fine a line
+of limitation. The estimation of cosmical influences, however, in
+the epidemy and pestilence, is well worthy of commendation; and
+Santa Sofia, in this respect, not only agrees with the most
+intelligent persons of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, but
+he has also promulgated an opinion which must, even now, serve as
+a foundation for our scarcely commenced investigations into
+cosmical influences. Pestilence and epidemy consist not in
+alterations of the four primary qualities, but in a corruption of
+the air, powerful, though quite immaterial, and not cognoscible by
+the senses--(corruptio aeris non substantialis, sed qualitativa)
+in a disproportion of the imponderables in the atmosphere, as it
+would be expressed by the moderns. The causes of the pestilence
+and epidemy are, first of all, astral influences, especially on
+occasions of planetary conjunctions; then extensive putrefaction
+of animal and vegetable bodies, and terrestrial corruptions
+(corruptio in terra): to which also bad diet and want may
+contribute. Santa Sofia considers the putrefaction of locusts,
+that had perished in the sea and were again thrown up, combined
+with astral and terrestrial influences, as the cause of the
+pestilence in the eventful year of the "Great Mortality."
+
+All the fevers which were called forth by the pestilence are,
+according to him, of the putrid kind; for they originate
+principally from putridity of the heart's blood, which inevitably
+follows the inhalation of infected air. The Oriental Plague is,
+sometimes, but by no means always occasioned by pestilence (?),
+which imparts to it a character (qualitas occulta) hostile to
+human nature. It originates frequently from other causes, among
+which this physician was aware that contagion was to be reckoned;
+and it deserves to be remarked that he held epidemic small-pox and
+measles to be infallible forerunners of the plague, as do the
+physicians and people of the East at the present day.
+
+In the exposition of his therapeutical views of the plague, a
+clearness of intellect is again shown by Santa Sofia, which
+reflects credit on the age. It seemed to him to depend, 1st, on
+an evacuation of putrid matters by purgatives and bleeding; yet he
+did not sanction the employment of these means indiscriminately
+and without consideration; least of all where the condition of the
+blood was healthy. He also declared himself decidedly against
+bleeding ad deliquium (venae sectio eradicativa). 2nd,
+Strengthening of the heart and prevention of putrescence. 3rd,
+Appropriate regimen. 4th, Improvement of the air. 5th,
+Appropriate treatment of tumid glands and inflammatory boils, with
+emollient, or even stimulating poultices (mustard, lily-bulbs), as
+well as with red-hot gold and iron. Lastly, 6th, Attention to
+prominent symptoms. The stores of the Arabian pharmacy, which he
+brought into action to meet all these indications, were indeed
+very considerable; it is to be observed, however, that, for the
+most part, gentle means were accumulated, which, in case of abuse,
+would do no harm: for the character of the Arabian system of
+medicine, whose principles were everywhere followed at this time,
+was mildness and caution. On this account, too, we cannot believe
+that a very prolix treatise by Marsigli di Santa Sofia, a
+contemporary relative of Galeazzo, on the prevention and treatment
+of plague, can have caused much harm, although perhaps, even in
+the fourteenth century, an agreeable latitude and confident
+assertions respecting things which no mortal has investigated, or
+which it is quite a matter of indifference to distinguish, were
+considered as proofs of a valuable practical talent.
+
+The agreement of contemporary and later writers shows that the
+published views of the most celebrated physicians of the
+fourteenth century were those generally adopted. Among these,
+Chalin de Vinario is the most experienced. Though devoted to
+astrology still more than his distinguished contemporary, he
+acknowledges the great power of terrestrial influences, and
+expresses himself very sensibly on the indisputable doctrine of
+contagion, endeavouring thereby to apologise for many surgeons and
+physicians of his time who neglected their duty. He asserted
+boldly and with truth, "that all epidemic diseases might become
+contagious, and all fevers epidemic," which attentive observers of
+all subsequent ages have confirmed.
+
+He delivered his sentiments on blood-letting with sagacity, as an
+experienced physician; yet he was unable, as may be imagined, to
+moderate the desire for bleeding shown by the ignorant monks. He
+was averse to draw blood from the veins of patients under fourteen
+years of age; but counteracted inflammatory excitement in them by
+cupping, and endeavoured to moderate the inflammation of the tumid
+glands by leeches. Most of those who were bled, died; he
+therefore reserved this remedy for the plethoric; especially for
+the papal courtiers and the hypocritical priests, whom he saw
+gratifying their sensual desires, and imitating Epicurus, whilst
+they pompously pretended to follow Christ. He recommended burning
+the boils with a red-hot iron only in the plague without fever,
+which occurred in single cases; and was always ready to correct
+those over-hasty surgeons who, with fire and violent remedies, did
+irremediable injury to their patients. Michael Savonarola,
+professor in Ferrara (1462), reasoning on the susceptibility of
+the human frame to the influence of pestilential infection, as the
+cause of such various modifications of disease, expresses himself
+as a modern physician would on this point; and an adoption of the
+principle of contagion was the foundation of his definition of the
+plague. No less worthy of observation are the views of the
+celebrated Valescus of Taranta, who, during the final visitation
+of the Black Death, in 1382, practised as a physician at
+Montpellier, and handed down to posterity what has been repeated
+in innumerable treatises on plague, which were written during the
+fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
+
+Of all these notions and views regarding the plague, whose
+development we have represented, there are two especially, which
+are prominent in historical importance:- 1st, The opinion of
+learned physicians, that the pestilence, or epidemic constitution,
+is the parent of various kinds of disease; that the plague
+sometimes, indeed, but by no means always, originates from it:
+that, to speak in the language of the moderns, the pestilence
+bears the same relation to contagion that a predisposing cause
+does to an occasional cause; and 2ndly, the universal conviction
+of the contagious power of that disease.
+
+Contagion gradually attracted more notice: it was thought that in
+it the most powerful occasional cause might be avoided; the
+possibility of protecting whole cities by separation became
+gradually more evident; and so horrifying was the recollection of
+the eventful year of the "Great Mortality," that before the close
+of the fourteenth century, ere the ill effects of the Black Plague
+had ceased, nations endeavoured to guard against the return of
+this enemy by an earnest and effectual defence.
+
+The first regulation which was issued for this purpose, originated
+with Viscount Bernabo, and is dated the 17th January, 1374.
+"Every plague-patient was to be taken out of the city into the
+fields, there to die or to recover. Those who attended upon a
+plague-patient, were to remain apart for ten days before they
+again associated with anybody. The priests were to examine the
+diseased, and point out to special commissioners the persons
+infected, under punishment of the confiscation of their goods and
+of being burned alive. Whoever imported the plague, the state
+condemned his goods to confiscation. Finally, none except those
+who were appointed for that purpose were to attend plague-
+patients, under penalty of death and confiscation.
+
+These orders, in correspondence with the spirit of the fourteenth
+century, are sufficiently decided to indicate a recollection of
+the good effects of confinement, and of keeping at a distance
+those suspected of having plague. It was said that Milan itself,
+by a rigorous barricade of three houses in which the plague had
+broken out, maintained itself free from the "Great Mortality" for
+a considerable time; and examples of the preservation of
+individual families, by means of a strict separation, were
+certainly very frequent. That these orders must have caused
+universal affliction from their uncommon severity, as we know to
+have been especially the case in the city of Reggio, may be easily
+conceived; but Bernabo did not suffer himself to be deterred from
+his purpose by fear--on the contrary, when the plague returned in
+the year 1383, he forbade the admission of people from infected
+places into his territories on pain of death. We have now, it is
+true, no account how far he succeeded; yet it is to be supposed
+that he arrested the disease, for it had long lost the property of
+the Black Death, to spread abroad in the air the contagious matter
+which proceeded from the lungs, charged with putridity, and to
+taint the atmosphere of whole cities by the vast numbers of the
+sick. Now that it had resumed its milder form, so that it
+infected only by contact, it admitted being confined within
+individual dwellings, as easily as in modern times.
+
+Bernabo's example was imitated; nor was there any century more
+appropriate for recommending to governments strong regulations
+against the plague that the fourteenth; for when it broke out in
+Italy, in the year 1399, and still demanded new victims, it was
+for the sixteenth time, without reckoning frequent visitations of
+measles and small-pox. In this same year, Viscount John, in
+milder terms than his predecessor, ordered that no stranger should
+be admitted from infected places, and that the city gates should
+be strictly guarded. Infected houses were to be ventilated for at
+least eight or ten days, and purified from noxious vapours by
+fires, and by fumigations with balsamic and aromatic substances.
+Straw, rags, and the like were to be burned; and the bedsteads
+which had been used, set out for four days in the rain or the
+sunshine, so that by means of the one or the other, the morbific
+vapour might be destroyed. No one was to venture to make use of
+clothes or beds out of infected dwellings unless they had been
+previously washed and dried either at the fire or in the sun.
+People were, likewise, to avoid, as long as possible, occupying
+houses which had been frequented by plague-patients.
+
+We cannot precisely perceive in these an advance towards general
+regulations; and perhaps people were convinced of the
+insurmountable impediments which opposed the separation of open
+inland countries, where bodies of people connected together could
+not be brought, even by the most obdurate severity, to renounce
+the habit of profitable intercourse.
+
+Doubtless it is nature which has done the most to banish the
+Oriental plague from western Europe, where the increasing
+cultivation of the earth, and the advancing order in civilised
+society, have prevented it from remaining domesticated, which it
+most probably was in the more ancient times.
+
+In the fifteenth century, during which it broke out seventeen
+times in different places in Europe, it was of the more
+consequence to oppose a barrier to its entrance from Asia, Africa,
+and Greece (which had become Turkish); for it would have been
+difficult for it to maintain itself indigenously any longer.
+Among the southern commercial states, however, which were called
+on to make the greatest exertions to this end, it was principally
+Venice, formerly so severely attacked by the Black Plague, that
+put the necessary restraint upon perilous profits of the merchant.
+Until towards the end of the fifteenth century, the very
+considerable intercourse with the East was free and unimpeded.
+Ships of commercial cities had often brought over the plague:
+nay, the former irruption of the "Great Mortality" itself had been
+occasioned by navigators. For, as in the latter end of autumn,
+1347, four ships full of plague-patients returned from the Levant
+to Genoa, the disease spread itself there with astonishing
+rapidity. On this account, in the following year, the Genoese
+forbade the entrance of suspected ships into their port. These
+sailed to Pisa and other cities on the coast, where already nature
+had made such mighty preparations for the reception of the Black
+Plague, and what we have already described took place in
+consequence.
+
+In the year 1485, when, among the cities of northern Italy, Milan
+especially felt the scourge of the plague, a special Council of
+Health, consisting of three nobles, was established at Venice, who
+probably tried everything in their power to prevent the entrance
+of this disease, and gradually called into activity all those
+regulations which have served in later times as a pattern for the
+other southern states of Europe. Their endeavours were, however,
+not crowned with complete success; on which account their powers
+were increased, in the year 1504, by granting them the right of
+life and death over those who violated the regulations. Bills of
+health were probably first introduced in the year 1527, during a
+fatal plague which visited Italy for five years (1525-30), and
+called forth redoubled caution.
+
+The first lazarettos were established upon islands at some
+distance from the city, seemingly as early as the year 1485. Here
+all strangers coming from places where the existence of plague was
+suspected were detained. If it appeared in the city itself, the
+sick were despatched with their families to what was called the
+Old Lazaretto, were there furnished with provisions and medicines,
+and when they were cured, were detained, together with all those
+who had had intercourse with them, still forty days longer in the
+New Lazaretto, situated on another island. All these regulations
+were every year improved, and their needful rigour was increased,
+so that from the year 1585 onwards, no appeal was allowed from the
+sentence of the Council of Health; and the other commercial
+nations gradually came to the support of the Venetians, by
+adopting corresponding regulations. Bills of health, however,
+were not general until the year 1665.
+
+The appointment of a forty days' detention, whence quarantines
+derive their name, was not dictated by caprice, but probably had a
+medical origin, which is derivable in part from the doctrine of
+critical days; for the fortieth day, according to the most ancient
+notions, has been always regarded as the last of ardent diseases,
+and the limit of separation between these and those which are
+chronic. It was the custom to subject lying-in women for forty
+days to a more exact superintendence. There was a good deal also
+said in medical works of forty-day epochs in the formation of the
+foetus, not to mention that the alchemists expected more durable
+revolutions in forty days, which period they called the
+philosophical month.
+
+This period being generally held to prevail in natural processes,
+it appeared reasonable to assume, and legally to establish it, as
+that required for the development of latent principles of
+contagion, since public regulations cannot dispense with decisions
+of this kind, even though they should not be wholly justified by
+the nature of the case. Great stress has likewise been laid on
+theological and legal grounds, which were certainly of greater
+weight in the fifteenth century than in the modern times.
+
+On this matter, however, we cannot decide, since our only object
+here is to point out the origin of a political means of protection
+against a disease which has been the greatest impediment to
+civilisation within the memory of man; a means that, like Jenner's
+vaccine, after the small-pox had ravaged Europe for twelve hundred
+years, has diminished the check which mortality puts on the
+progress of civilisation, and thus given to the life and manners
+of the nations of this part of the world a new direction, the
+result of which we cannot foretell.
+
+
+
+
+THE DANCING MANIA
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I--THE DANCING MANIA IN GERMANY AND THE NETHERLANDS
+
+
+
+SECT. 1--ST. JOHN'S DANCE
+
+
+The effects of the Black Death had not yet subsided, and the
+graves of millions of its victims were scarcely closed, when a
+strange delusion arose in Germany, which took possession of the
+minds of men, and, in spite of the divinity of our nature, hurried
+away body and soul into the magic circle of hellish superstition.
+It was a convulsion which in the most extraordinary manner
+infuriated the human frame, and excited the astonishment of
+contemporaries for more than two centuries, since which time it
+has never reappeared. It was called the dance of St. John or of
+St. Vitus, on account of the Bacchantic leaps by which it was
+characterised, and which gave to those affected, whilst performing
+their wild dance, and screaming and foaming with fury, all the
+appearance of persons possessed. It did not remain confined to
+particular localities, but was propagated by the sight of the
+sufferers, like a demoniacal epidemic, over the whole of Germany
+and the neighbouring countries to the north-west, which were
+already prepared for its reception by the prevailing opinions of
+the time.
+
+So early as the year 1374, assemblages of men and women were seen
+at Aix-la-Chapelle, who had come out of Germany, and who, united
+by one common delusion, exhibited to the public both in the
+streets and in the churches the following strange spectacle. They
+formed circles hand in hand, and appearing to have lost all
+control over their senses, continued dancing, regardless of the
+bystanders, for hours together, in wild delirium, until at length
+they fell to the ground in a state of exhaustion. They then
+complained of extreme oppression, and groaned as if in the agonies
+of death, until they were swathed in cloths bound tightly round
+their waists, upon which they again recovered, and remained free
+from complaint until the next attack. This practice of swathing
+was resorted to on account of the tympany which followed these
+spasmodic ravings, but the bystanders frequently relieved patients
+in a less artificial manner, by thumping and trampling upon the
+parts affected. While dancing they neither saw nor heard, being
+insensible to external impressions through the senses, but were
+haunted by visions, their fancies conjuring up spirits whose names
+they shrieked out; and some of them afterwards asserted that they
+felt as if they had been immersed in a stream of blood, which
+obliged them to leap so high. Others, during the paroxysm, saw
+the heavens open and the Saviour enthroned with the Virgin Mary,
+according as the religious notions of the age were strangely and
+variously reflected in their imaginations.
+
+Where the disease was completely developed, the attack commenced
+with epileptic convulsions. Those affected fell to the ground
+senseless, panting and labouring for breath. They foamed at the
+mouth, and suddenly springing up began their dance amidst strange
+contortions. Yet the malady doubtless made its appearance very
+variously, and was modified by temporary or local circumstances,
+whereof non-medical contemporaries but imperfectly noted the
+essential particulars, accustomed as they were to confound their
+observation of natural events with their notions of the world of
+spirits.
+
+It was but a few months ere this demoniacal disease had spread
+from Aix-la-Chapelle, where it appeared in July, over the
+neighbouring Netherlands. In Liege, Utrecht, Tongres, and many
+other towns of Belgium, the dancers appeared with garlands in
+their hair, and their waists girt with cloths, that they might, as
+soon as the paroxysm was over, receive immediate relief on the
+attack of the tympany. This bandage was, by the insertion of a
+stick, easily twisted tight: many, however, obtained more relief
+from kicks and blows, which they found numbers of persons ready to
+administer: for, wherever the dancers appeared, the people
+assembled in crowds to gratify their curiosity with the frightful
+spectacle. At length the increasing number of the affected
+excited no less anxiety than the attention that was paid to them.
+In towns and villages they took possession of the religious
+houses, processions were everywhere instituted on their account,
+and masses were said and hymns were sung, while the disease
+itself, of the demoniacal origin of which no one entertained the
+least doubt, excited everywhere astonishment and horror. In Liege
+the priests had recourse to exorcisms, and endeavoured by every
+means in their power to allay an evil which threatened so much
+danger to themselves; for the possessed assembling in multitudes,
+frequently poured forth imprecations against them, and menaced
+their destruction. They intimidated the people also to such a
+degree that there was an express ordinance issued that no one
+should make any but square-toed shoes, because these fanatics had
+manifested a morbid dislike to the pointed shoes which had come
+into fashion immediately after the "Great Mortality" in 1350.
+They were still more irritated at the sight of red colours, the
+influence of which on the disordered nerves might lead us to
+imagine an extraordinary accordance between this spasmodic malady
+and the condition of infuriated animals; but in the St. John's
+dancers this excitement was probably connected with apparitions
+consequent upon their convulsions. There were likewise some of
+them who were unable to endure the sight of persons weeping. The
+clergy seemed to become daily more and more confirmed in their
+belief that those who were affected were a kind of sectarians, and
+on this account they hastened their exorcisms as much as possible,
+in order that the evil might not spread amongst the higher
+classes, for hitherto scarcely any but the poor had been attacked,
+and the few people of respectability among the laity and clergy
+who were to be found among them, were persons whose natural
+frivolity was unable to withstand the excitement of novelty, even
+though it proceeded from a demoniacal influence. Some of the
+affected had indeed themselves declared, when under the influence
+of priestly forms of exorcism, that if the demons had been allowed
+only a few weeks' more time, they would have entered the bodies of
+the nobility and princes, and through these have destroyed the
+clergy. Assertions of this sort, which those possessed uttered
+whilst in a state which may be compared with that of magnetic
+sleep, obtained general belief, and passed from mouth to mouth
+with wonderful additions. The priesthood were, on this account,
+so much the more zealous in their endeavours to anticipate every
+dangerous excitement of the people, as if the existing order of
+things could have been seriously threatened by such incoherent
+ravings. Their exertions were effectual, for exorcism was a
+powerful remedy in the fourteenth century; or it might perhaps be
+that this wild infatuation terminated in consequence of the
+exhaustion which naturally ensued from it; at all events, in the
+course of ten or eleven months the St. John's dancers were no
+longer to be found in any of the cities of Belgium. The evil,
+however, was too deeply rooted to give way altogether to such
+feeble attacks.
+
+A few months after this dancing malady had made its appearance at
+Aix-la-Chapelle, it broke out at Cologne, where the number of
+those possessed amounted to more than five hundred, and about the
+same time at Metz, the streets of which place are said to have
+been filled with eleven hundred dancers. Peasants left their
+ploughs, mechanics their workshops, housewives their domestic
+duties, to join the wild revels, and this rich commercial city
+became the scene of the most ruinous disorder. Secret desires
+were excited, and but too often found opportunities for wild
+enjoyment; and numerous beggars, stimulated by vice and misery,
+availed themselves of this new complaint to gain a temporary
+livelihood. Girls and boys quitted their parents, and servants
+their masters, to amuse themselves at the dances of those
+possessed, and greedily imbibed the poison of mental infection.
+Above a hundred unmarried women were seen raving about in
+consecrated and unconsecrated places, and the consequences were
+soon perceived. Gangs of idle vagabonds, who understood how to
+imitate to the life the gestures and convulsions of those really
+affected, roved from place to place seeking maintenance and
+adventures, and thus, wherever they went, spreading this
+disgusting spasmodic disease like a plague; for in maladies of
+this kind the susceptible are infected as easily by the appearance
+as by the reality. At last it was found necessary to drive away
+these mischievous guests, who were equally inaccessible to the
+exorcisms of the priests and the remedies of the physicians. It
+was not, however, until after four months that the Rhenish cities
+were able to suppress these impostures, which had so alarmingly
+increased the original evil. In the meantime, when once called
+into existence, the plague crept on, and found abundant food in
+the tone of thought which prevailed in the fourteenth and
+fifteenth centuries, and even, though in a minor degree,
+throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth, causing a permanent
+disorder of the mind, and exhibiting in those cities to whose
+inhabitants it was a novelty, scenes as strange as they were
+detestable.
+
+
+SECT. 2--ST. VITUS'S DANCE
+
+
+Strasburg was visited by the "Dancing Plague" in the year 1418,
+and the same infatuation existed among the people there, as in the
+towns of Belgium and the Lower Rhine. Many who were seized at the
+sight of those affected, excited attention at first by their
+confused and absurd behaviour, and then by their constantly
+following swarms of dancers. These were seen day and night
+passing through the streets, accompanied by musicians playing on
+bagpipes, and by innumerable spectators attracted by curiosity, to
+which were added anxious parents and relations, who came to look
+after those among the misguided multitude who belonged to their
+respective families. Imposture and profligacy played their part
+in this city also, but the morbid delusion itself seems to have
+predominated. On this account religion could only bring
+provisional aid, and therefore the town council benevolently took
+an interest in the afflicted. They divided them into separate
+parties, to each of which they appointed responsible
+superintendents to protect them from harm, and perhaps also to
+restrain their turbulence. They were thus conducted on foot and
+in carriages to the chapels of St. Vitus, near Zabern and
+Rotestein, where priests were in attendance to work upon their
+misguided minds by masses and other religious ceremonies. After
+divine worship was completed, they were led in solemn procession
+to the altar, where they made some small offering of alms, and
+where it is probable that many were, through the influence of
+devotion and the sanctity of the place, cured of this lamentable
+aberration. It is worthy of observation, at all events, that the
+Dancing Mania did not recommence at the altars of the saint, and
+that from him alone assistance was implored, and through his
+miraculous interposition a cure was expected, which was beyond the
+reach of human skill. The personal history of St. Vitus is by no
+means important in this matter. He was a Sicilian youth, who,
+together with Modestus and Crescentia, suffered martyrdom at the
+time of the persecution of the Christians, under Diocletian, in
+the year 303. The legends respecting him are obscure, and he
+would certainly have been passed over without notice among the
+innumerable apocryphal martyrs of the first centuries, had not the
+transfer of his body to St. Denys, and thence, in the year 836, to
+Corvey, raised him to a higher rank. From this time forth it may
+be supposed that many miracles were manifested at his new
+sepulchre, which were of essential service in confirming the Roman
+faith among the Germans, and St. Vitus was soon ranked among the
+fourteen saintly helpers (Nothhelfer or Apotheker). His altars
+were multiplied, and the people had recourse to them in all kinds
+of distresses, and revered him as a powerful intercessor. As the
+worship of these saints was, however, at that time stripped of all
+historical connections, which were purposely obliterated by the
+priesthood, a legend was invented at the beginning of the
+fifteenth century, or perhaps even so early as the fourteenth,
+that St. Vitus had, just before he bent his neck to the sword,
+prayed to God that he might protect from the Dancing Mania all
+those who should solemnise the day of his commemoration, and fast
+upon its eve, and that thereupon a voice from heaven was heard,
+saying, "Vitus, thy prayer is accepted." Thus St. Vitus became
+the patron saint of those afflicted with the Dancing Plague, as
+St. Martin of Tours was at one time the succourer of persons in
+small-pox, St. Antonius of those suffering under the "hellish
+fire," and as St. Margaret was the Juno Lucina of puerperal women.
+
+
+SECT. 3--CAUSES
+
+
+The connection which John the Baptist had with the Dancing Mania
+of the fourteenth century was of a totally different character.
+He was originally far from being a protecting saint to those who
+were attacked, or one who would be likely to give them relief from
+a malady considered as the work of the devil. On the contrary,
+the manner in which he was worshipped afforded an important and
+very evident cause for its development. From the remotest period,
+perhaps even so far back as the fourth century, St. John's day was
+solemnised with all sorts of strange and rude customs, of which
+the originally mystical meaning was variously disfigured among
+different nations by superadded relics of heathenism. Thus the
+Germans transferred to the festival of St. John's day an ancient
+heathen usage, the kindling of the "Nodfyr," which was forbidden
+them by St. Boniface, and the belief subsists even to the present
+day that people and animals that have leaped through these flames,
+or their smoke, are protected for a whole year from fevers and
+other diseases, as if by a kind of baptism by fire. Bacchanalian
+dances, which have originated in similar causes among all the rude
+nations of the earth, and the wild extravagancies of a heated
+imagination, were the constant accompaniments of this half-
+heathen, half-Christian festival. At the period of which we are
+treating, however, the Germans were not the only people who gave
+way to the ebullitions of fanaticism in keeping the festival of
+St. John the Baptist. Similar customs were also to be found among
+the nations of Southern Europe and of Asia, and it is more than
+probable that the Greeks transferred to the festival of John the
+Baptist, who is also held in high esteem among the Mahomedans, a
+part of their Bacchanalian mysteries, an absurdity of a kind which
+is but too frequently met with in human affairs. How far a
+remembrance of the history of St. John's death may have had an
+influence on this occasion, we would leave learned theologians to
+decide. It is only of importance here to add that in Abyssinia, a
+country entirely separated from Europe, where Christianity has
+maintained itself in its primeval simplicity against Mahomedanism,
+John is to this day worshipped, as protecting saint of those who
+are attacked with the dancing malady. In these fragments of the
+dominion of mysticism and superstition, historical connection is
+not to be found.
+
+When we observe, however, that the first dancers in Aix-la-
+Chapelle appeared in July with St. John's name in their mouths,
+the conjecture is probable that the wild revels of St. John's day,
+A.D. 1374, gave rise to this mental plague, which thenceforth has
+visited so many thousands with incurable aberration of mind, and
+disgusting distortions of body.
+
+This is rendered so much the more probable because some months
+previously the districts in the neighbourhood of the Rhine and the
+Main had met with great disasters. So early as February, both
+these rivers had overflowed their banks to a great extent; the
+walls of the town of Cologne, on the side next the Rhine, had
+fallen down, and a great many villages had been reduced to the
+utmost distress. To this was added the miserable condition of
+western and southern Germany. Neither law nor edict could
+suppress the incessant feuds of the Barons, and in Franconia
+especially, the ancient times of club law appeared to be revived.
+Security of property there was none; arbitrary will everywhere
+prevailed; corruption of morals and rude power rarely met with
+even a feeble opposition; whence it arose that the cruel, but
+lucrative, persecutions of the Jews were in many places still
+practised through the whole of this century with their wonted
+ferocity. Thus, throughout the western parts of Germany, and
+especially in the districts bordering on the Rhine, there was a
+wretched and oppressed populace; and if we take into consideration
+that among their numerous bands many wandered about, whose
+consciences were tormented with the recollection of the crimes
+which they had committed during the prevalence of the Black
+Plague, we shall comprehend how their despair sought relief in the
+intoxication of an artificial delirium. There is hence good
+ground for supposing that the frantic celebration of the festival
+of St. John, A.D. 1374, only served to bring to a crisis a malady
+which had been long impending; and if we would further inquire how
+a hitherto harmless usage, which like many others had but served
+to keep up superstition, could degenerate into so serious a
+disease, we must take into account the unusual excitement of men's
+minds, and the consequences of wretchedness and want. The bowels,
+which in many were debilitated by hunger and bad food, were
+precisely the parts which in most cases were attacked with
+excruciating pain, and the tympanitic state of the intestines
+points out to the intelligent physician an origin of the disorder
+which is well worth consideration.
+
+
+SECT. 4--MORE ANCIENT DANCING PLAGUES
+
+
+The Dancing Mania of the year 1374 was, in fact, no new disease,
+but a phenomenon well known in the Middle Ages, of which many
+wondrous stories were traditionally current among the people. In
+the year 1237 upwards of a hundred children were said to have been
+suddenly seized with this disease at Erfurt, and to have proceeded
+dancing and jumping along the road to Arnstadt. When they arrived
+at that place they fell exhausted to the ground, and, according to
+an account of an old chronicle, many of them, after they were
+taken home by their parents, died, and the rest remained affected,
+to the end of their lives, with a permanent tremor. Another
+occurrence was related to have taken place on the Moselle Bridge
+at Utrecht, on the 17th day of June, A.D. 1278, when two hundred
+fanatics began to dance, and would not desist until a priest
+passed, who was carrying the Host to a person that was sick, upon
+which, as if in punishment of their crime, the bridge gave way,
+and they were all drowned. A similar event also occurred so early
+as the year 1027, near the convent church of Kolbig, not far from
+Bernburg. According to an oft-repeated tradition, eighteen
+peasants, some of whose names are still preserved, are said to
+have disturbed divine service on Christmas Eve by dancing and
+brawling in the churchyard, whereupon the priest, Ruprecht,
+inflicted a curse upon them, that they should dance and scream for
+a whole year without ceasing. This curse is stated to have been
+completely fulfilled, so that the unfortunate sufferers at length
+sank knee-deep into the earth, and remained the whole time without
+nourishment, until they were finally released by the intercession
+of two pious bishops. It is said that, upon this, they fell into
+a deep sleep, which lasted three days, and that four of them died;
+the rest continuing to suffer all their lives from a trembling of
+their limbs. It is not worth while to separate what may have been
+true, and what the addition of crafty priests, in this strangely
+distorted story. It is sufficient that it was believed, and
+related with astonishment and horror, throughout the Middle Ages;
+so that when there was any exciting cause for this delirious
+raving and wild rage for dancing, it failed not to produce its
+effects upon men whose thoughts were given up to a belief in
+wonders and apparitions.
+
+This disposition of mind, altogether so peculiar to the Middle
+Ages, and which, happily for mankind, has yielded to an improved
+state of civilisation and the diffusion of popular instruction,
+accounts for the origin and long duration of this extraordinary
+mental disorder. The good sense of the people recoiled with
+horror and aversion from this heavy plague, which, whenever
+malevolent persons wished to curse their bitterest enemies and
+adversaries, was long after used as a malediction. The
+indignation also that was felt by the people at large against the
+immorality of the age, was proved by their ascribing this
+frightful affliction to the inefficacy of baptism by unchaste
+priests, as if innocent children were doomed to atone, in after-
+years, for this desecration of the sacrament administered by
+unholy hands. We have already mentioned what perils the priests
+in the Netherlands incurred from this belief. They now, indeed,
+endeavoured to hasten their reconciliation with the irritated,
+and, at that time, very degenerate people, by exorcisms, which,
+with some, procured them greater respect than ever, because they
+thus visibly restored thousands of those who were affected. In
+general, however, there prevailed a want of confidence in their
+efficacy, and then the sacred rites had as little power in
+arresting the progress of this deeply-rooted malady as the prayers
+and holy services subsequently had at the altars of the greatly-
+revered martyr St. Vitus. We may therefore ascribe it to accident
+merely, and to a certain aversion to this demoniacal disease,
+which seemed to lie beyond the reach of human skill, that we meet
+with but few and imperfect notices of the St. Vitus's dance in the
+second half of the fifteenth century. The highly-coloured
+descriptions of the sixteenth century contradict the notion that
+this mental plague had in any degree diminished in its severity,
+and not a single fact is to be found which supports the opinion
+that any one of the essential symptoms of the disease, not even
+excepting the tympany, had disappeared, or that the disorder
+itself had become milder in its attacks. The physicians never, as
+it seems, throughout the whole of the fifteenth century, undertook
+the treatment of the Dancing Mania, which, according to the
+prevailing notions, appertained exclusively to the servants of the
+Church. Against demoniacal disorders they had no remedies, and
+though some at first did promulgate the opinion that the malady
+had its origin in natural circumstances, such as a hot
+temperament, and other causes named in the phraseology of the
+schools, yet these opinions were the less examined as it did not
+appear worth while to divide with a jealous priesthood the care of
+a host of fanatical vagabonds and beggars.
+
+
+SECT. 5--PHYSICIANS
+
+
+It was not until the beginning of the sixteenth century that the
+St. Vitus's dance was made the subject of medical research, and
+stripped of its unhallowed character as a work of demons. This
+was effected by Paracelsus, that mighty but, as yet, scarcely
+comprehended reformer of medicine, whose aim it was to withdraw
+diseases from the pale of miraculous interpositions and saintly
+influences, and explain their causes upon principles deduced from
+his knowledge of the human frame. "We will not, however, admit
+that the saints have power to inflict diseases, and that these
+ought to be named after them, although many there are who, in
+their theology, lay great stress on this supposition, ascribing
+them rather to God than to nature, which is but idle talk. We
+dislike such nonsensical gossip as is not supported by symptoms,
+but only by faith--a thing which is not human, whereon the gods
+themselves set no value."
+
+Such were the words which Paracelsus addressed to his
+contemporaries, who were, as yet, incapable of appreciating
+doctrines of this sort; for the belief in enchantment still
+remained everywhere unshaken, and faith in the world of spirits
+still held men's minds in so close a bondage that thousands were,
+according to their own conviction, given up as a prey to the
+devil; while at the command of religion, as well as of law,
+countless piles were lighted, by the flames of which human society
+was to be purified.
+
+Paracelsus divides the St. Vitus's dance into three kinds. First,
+that which arises from imagination (Vitista, Chorea imaginativa,
+aestimativa), by which the original Dancing Plague is to be
+understood. Secondly, that which arises from sensual desires,
+depending on the will (Chorea lasciva). Thirdly, that which
+arises from corporeal causes (Chorea naturalis, coacta), which,
+according to a strange notion of his own, he explained by
+maintaining that in certain vessels which are susceptible of an
+internal pruriency, and thence produce laughter, the blood is set
+in commotion in consequence of an alteration in the vital spirits,
+whereby involuntary fits of intoxicating joy and a propensity to
+dance are occasioned. To this notion he was, no doubt, led from
+having observed a milder form of St. Vitus's dance, not uncommon
+in his time, which was accompanied by involuntary laughter; and
+which bore a resemblance to the hysterical laughter of the
+moderns, except that it was characterised by more pleasurable
+sensations and by an extravagant propensity to dance. There was
+no howling, screaming, and jumping, as in the severer form;
+neither was the disposition to dance by any means insuperable.
+Patients thus affected, although they had not a complete control
+over their understandings, yet were sufficiently self-possessed
+during the attack to obey the directions which they received.
+There were even some among them who did not dance at all, but only
+felt an involuntary impulse to allay the internal sense of
+disquietude, which is the usual forerunner of an attack of this
+kind, by laughter and quick walking carried to the extent of
+producing fatigue. This disorder, so different from the original
+type, evidently approximates to the modern chorea; or, rather, is
+in perfect accordance with it, even to the less essential symptom
+of laughter. A mitigation in the form of the Dancing Mania had
+thus clearly taken place at the commencement of the sixteenth
+century.
+
+On the communication of the St. Vitus's dance by sympathy,
+Paracelsus, in his peculiar language, expresses himself with great
+spirit, and shows a profound knowledge of the nature of sensual
+impressions, which find their way to the heart--the seat of joys
+and emotions--which overpower the opposition of reason; and whilst
+"all other qualities and natures" are subdued, incessantly impel
+the patient, in consequence of his original compliance, and his
+all-conquering imagination, to imitate what he has seen. On his
+treatment of the disease we cannot bestow any great praise, but
+must be content with the remark that it was in conformity with the
+notions of the age in which he lived. For the first kind, which
+often originated in passionate excitement, he had a mental remedy,
+the efficacy of which is not to be despised, if we estimate its
+value in connection with the prevalent opinions of those times.
+The patient was to make an image of himself in wax or resin, and
+by an effort of thought to concentrate all his blasphemies and
+sins in it. "Without the intervention of any other persons, to
+set his whole mind and thoughts concerning these oaths in the
+image;" and when he had succeeded in this, he was to burn the
+image, so that not a particle of it should remain. In all this
+there was no mention made of St. Vitus, or any of the other
+mediatory saints, which is accounted for by the circumstance that
+at this time an open rebellion against the Romish Church had
+begun, and the worship of saints was by many rejected as
+idolatrous. For the second kind of St. Vitus's dance, arising
+from sensual irritation, with which women were far more frequently
+affected than men, Paracelsus recommended harsh treatment and
+strict fasting. He directed that the patients should be deprived
+of their liberty; placed in solitary confinement, and made to sit
+in an uncomfortable place, until their misery brought them to
+their senses and to a feeling of penitence. He then permitted
+them gradually to return to their accustomed habits. Severe
+corporal chastisement was not omitted; but, on the other hand,
+angry resistance on the part of the patient was to be sedulously
+avoided, on the ground that it might increase his malady, or even
+destroy him: moreover, where it seemed proper, Paracelsus allayed
+the excitement of the nerves by immersion in cold water. On the
+treatment of the third kind we shall not here enlarge. It was to
+be effected by all sorts of wonderful remedies, composed of the
+quintessences; and it would require, to render it intelligible, a
+more extended exposition of peculiar principles than suits our
+present purpose.
+
+
+SECT. 6--DECLINE AND TERMINATION OF THE DANCING PLAGUE
+
+
+About this time the St. Vitus's dance began to decline, so that
+milder forms of it appeared more frequently, while the severer
+cases became more rare; and even in these, some of the important
+symptoms gradually disappeared. Paracelsus makes no mention of
+the tympanites as taking place after the attacks, although it may
+occasionally have occurred; and Schenck von Graffenberg, a
+celebrated physician of the latter half of the sixteenth century,
+speaks of this disease as having been frequent only in the time of
+his forefathers; his descriptions, however, are applicable to the
+whole of that century, and to the close of the fifteenth. The St.
+Vitus's dance attacked people of all stations, especially those
+who led a sedentary life, such as shoemakers and tailors; but even
+the most robust peasants abandoned their labours in the fields, as
+if they were possessed by evil spirits; and thus those affected
+were seen assembling indiscriminately, from time to time, at
+certain appointed places, and, unless prevented by the lookers-on,
+continuing to dance without intermission, until their very last
+breath was expended. Their fury and extravagance of demeanour so
+completely deprived them of their senses, that many of them dashed
+their brains out against the walls and corners of buildings, or
+rushed headlong into rapid rivers, where they found a watery
+grave. Roaring and foaming as they were, the bystanders could
+only succeed in restraining them by placing benches and chairs in
+their way, so that, by the high leaps they were thus tempted to
+take, their strength might be exhausted. As soon as this was the
+case, they fell as it were lifeless to the ground, and, by very
+slow degrees, again recovered their strength. Many there were
+who, even with all this exertion, had not expended the violence of
+the tempest which raged within them, but awoke with newly-revived
+powers, and again and again mixed with the crowd of dancers, until
+at length the violent excitement of their disordered nerves was
+allayed by the great involuntary exertion of their limbs; and the
+mental disorder was calmed by the extreme exhaustion of the body.
+Thus the attacks themselves were in these cases, as in their
+nature they are in all nervous complaints, necessary crises of an
+inward morbid condition which was transferred from the sensorium
+to the nerves of motion, and, at an earlier period, to the
+abdominal plexus, where a deep-seated derangement of the system
+was perceptible from the secretion of flatus in the intestines.
+
+The cure effected by these stormy attacks was in many cases so
+perfect, that some patients returned to the factory or the plough
+as if nothing had happened. Others, on the contrary, paid the
+penalty of their folly by so total a loss of power, that they
+could not regain their former health, even by the employment of
+the most strengthening remedies. Medical men were astonished to
+observe that women in an advanced state of pregnancy were capable
+of going through an attack of the disease without the slightest
+injury to their offspring, which they protected merely by a
+bandage passed round the waist. Cases of this kind were not
+infrequent so late as Schenck's time. That patients should be
+violently affected by music, and their paroxysms brought on and
+increased by it, is natural with such nervous disorders, where
+deeper impressions are made through the ear, which is the most
+intellectual of all the organs, than through any of the other
+senses. On this account the magistrates hired musicians for the
+purpose of carrying the St. Vitus's dancers so much the quicker
+through the attacks, and directed that athletic men should be sent
+among them in order to complete the exhaustion, which had been
+often observed to produce a good effect. At the same time there
+was a prohibition against wearing red garments, because, at the
+sight of this colour, those affected became so furious that they
+flew at the persons who wore it, and were so bent upon doing them
+an injury that they could with difficulty be restrained. They
+frequently tore their own clothes whilst in the paroxysm, and were
+guilty of other improprieties, so that the more opulent employed
+confidential attendants to accompany them, and to take care that
+they did no harm either to themselves or others. This
+extraordinary disease was, however, so greatly mitigated in
+Schenck's time, that the St. Vitus's dancers had long since ceased
+to stroll from town to town; and that physician, like Paracelsus,
+makes no mention of the tympanitic inflation of the bowels.
+Moreover, most of those affected were only annually visited by
+attacks; and the occasion of them was so manifestly referable to
+the prevailing notions of that period, that if the unqualified
+belief in the supernatural agency of saints could have been
+abolished, they would not have had any return of the complaint.
+Throughout the whole of June, prior to the festival of St. John,
+patients felt a disquietude and restlessness which they were
+unable to overcome. They were dejected, timid, and anxious;
+wandered about in an unsettled state, being tormented with
+twitching pains, which seized them suddenly in different parts,
+and eagerly expected the eve of St. John's day, in the confident
+hope that by dancing at the altars of this saint, or of St. Vitus
+(for in the Breisgau aid was equally sought from both), they would
+be freed from all their sufferings. This hope was not
+disappointed; and they remained, for the rest of the year, exempt
+from any further attack, after having thus, by dancing and raving
+for three hours, satisfied an irresistible demand of nature.
+There were at that period two chapels in the Breisgau visited by
+the St. Vitus's dancers; namely, the Chapel of St. Vitus at
+Biessen, near Breisach, and that of St. John, near Wasenweiler;
+and it is probable that in the south-west of Germany the disease
+was still in existence in the seventeenth century.
+
+However, it grew every year more rare, so that at the beginning of
+the seventeenth century it was observed only occasionally in its
+ancient form. Thus in the spring of the year 1623, G. Horst saw
+some women who annually performed a pilgrimage to St. Vitus's
+chapel at Drefelhausen, near Weissenstein, in the territory of
+Ulm, that they might wait for their dancing fit there, in the same
+manner as those in the Breisgau did, according to Schenck's
+account. They were not satisfied, however, with a dance of three
+hours' duration, but continued day and night in a state of mental
+aberration, like persons in an ecstasy, until they fell exhausted
+to the ground; and when they came to themselves again they felt
+relieved from a distressing uneasiness and painful sensation of
+weight in their bodies, of which they had complained for several
+weeks prior to St. Vitus's Day.
+
+After this commotion they remained well for the whole year; and
+such was their faith in the protecting power of the saint, that
+one of them had visited this shrine at Drefelhausen more than
+twenty times, and another had already kept the saint's day for the
+thirty-second time at this sacred station.
+
+The dancing fit itself was excited here, as it probably was in
+other places, by music, from the effects of which the patients
+were thrown into a state of convulsion. Many concurrent
+testimonies serve to show that music generally contributed much to
+the continuance of the St. Vitus's dance, originated and increased
+its paroxysms, and was sometimes the cause of their mitigation.
+So early as the fourteenth century the swarms of St. John's
+dancers were accompanied by minstrels playing upon noisy
+instruments, who roused their morbid feelings; and it may readily
+be supposed that by the performance of lively melodies, and the
+stimulating effects which the shrill tones of fifes and trumpets
+would produce, a paroxysm that was perhaps but slight in itself,
+might, in many cases, be increased to the most outrageous fury,
+such as in later times was purposely induced in order that the
+force of the disease might be exhausted by the violence of its
+attack. Moreover, by means of intoxicating music a kind of
+demoniacal festival for the rude multitude was established, which
+had the effect of spreading this unhappy malady wider and wider.
+Soft harmony was, however, employed to calm the excitement of
+those affected, and it is mentioned as a character of the tunes
+played with this view to the St. Vitus's dancers, that they
+contained transitions from a quick to a slow measure, and passed
+gradually from a high to a low key. It is to be regretted that no
+trace of this music has reached out times, which is owing partly
+to the disastrous events of the seventeenth century, and partly to
+the circumstance that the disorder was looked upon as entirely
+national, and only incidentally considered worthy of notice by
+foreign men of learning. If the St. Vitus's dance was already on
+the decline at the commencement of the seventeenth century, the
+subsequent events were altogether adverse to its continuance.
+Wars carried on with animosity, and with various success, for
+thirty years, shook the west of Europe; and although the
+unspeakable calamities which they brought upon Germany, both
+during their continuance and in their immediate consequences, were
+by no means favourable to the advance of knowledge, yet, with the
+vehemence of a purifying fire, they gradually effected the
+intellectual regeneration of the Germans; superstition, in her
+ancient form, never again appeared, and the belief in the dominion
+of spirits, which prevailed in the middle ages, lost for ever its
+once formidable power.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II--THE DANCING MANIA IN ITALY
+
+
+
+SECT. 1--TARANTISM
+
+
+It was of the utmost advantage to the St. Vitus's dancers that
+they made choice of a favourite patron saint; for, not to mention
+that people were inclined to compare them to the possessed with
+evil spirits described in the Bible, and thence to consider them
+as innocent victims to the power of Satan, the name of their great
+intercessor recommended them to general commiseration, and a magic
+boundary was thus set to every harsh feeling, which might
+otherwise have proved hostile to their safety. Other fanatics
+were not so fortunate, being often treated with the most
+relentless cruelty, whenever the notions of the middle ages either
+excused or commanded it as a religious duty. Thus, passing over
+the innumerable instances of the burning of witches, who were,
+after all, only labouring under a delusion, the Teutonic knights
+in Prussia not unfrequently condemned those maniacs to the stake
+who imagined themselves to be metamorphosed into wolves--an
+extraordinary species of insanity, which, having existed in Greece
+before our era, spread, in process of time over Europe, so that it
+was communicated not only to the Romaic, but also to the German
+and Sarmatian nations, and descended from the ancients as a legacy
+of affliction to posterity. In modern times Lycanthropy--such was
+the name given to this infatuation--has vanished from the earth,
+but it is nevertheless well worthy the consideration of the
+observer of human aberrations, and a history of it by some writer
+who is equally well acquainted with the middle ages as with
+antiquity is still a desideratum. We leave it for the present
+without further notice, and turn to a malady most extraordinary in
+all its phenomena, having a close connection with the St. Vitus's
+dance, and, by a comparison of facts which are altogether similar,
+affording us an instructive subject for contemplation. We allude
+to the disease called Tarantism, which made its first appearance
+in Apulia, and thence spread over the other provinces of Italy,
+where, during some centuries, it prevailed as a great epidemic.
+In the present times, it has vanished, or at least has lost
+altogether its original importance, like the St. Vitus's dance,
+lycanthropy, and witchcraft.
+
+
+SECT. 2--MOST ANCIENT TRACES--CAUSES
+
+
+The learned Nicholas Perotti gives the earliest account of this
+strange disorder. Nobody had the least doubt that it was caused
+by the bite of the tarantula, a ground-spider common in Apulia:
+and the fear of this insect was so general that its bite was in
+all probability much oftener imagined, or the sting of some other
+kind of insect mistaken for it, than actually received. The word
+tarantula is apparently the same as terrantola, a name given by
+the Italians to the stellio of the old Romans, which was a kind of
+lizard, said to be poisonous, and invested by credulity with such
+extraordinary qualities, that, like the serpent of the Mosaic
+account of the Creation, it personified, in the imaginations of
+the vulgar, the notion of cunning, so that even the jurists
+designated a cunning fraud by the appellation of a "stellionatus."
+Perotti expressly assures us that this reptile was called by the
+Romans tarantula; and since he himself, who was one of the most
+distinguished authors of his time, strangely confounds spiders and
+lizards together, so that he considers the Apulian tarantula,
+which he ranks among the class of spiders, to have the same
+meaning as the kind of lizard called [Greek text], it is the less
+extraordinary that the unlearned country people of Apulia should
+confound the much-dreaded ground-spider with the fabulous star-
+lizard, and appropriate to the one the name of the other. The
+derivation of the word tarantula, from the city of Tarentum, or
+the river Thara, in Apulia, on the banks of which this insect is
+said to have been most frequently found, or, at least, its bite to
+have had the most venomous effect, seems not to be supported by
+authority. So much for the name of this famous spider, which,
+unless we are greatly mistaken, throws no light whatever upon the
+nature of the disease in question. Naturalists who, possessing a
+knowledge of the past, should not misapply their talents by
+employing them in establishing the dry distinction of forms, would
+find here much that calls for research, and their efforts would
+clear up many a perplexing obscurity.
+
+Perotti states that the tarantula--that is, the spider so called--
+was not met with in Italy in former times, but that in his day it
+had become common, especially in Apulia, as well as in some other
+districts. He deserves, however, no great confidence as a
+naturalist, notwithstanding his having delivered lectures in
+Bologna on medicine and other sciences. He at least has neglected
+to prove his assertion, which is not borne out by any analogous
+phenomenon observed in modern times with regard to the history of
+the spider species. It is by no means to be admitted that the
+tarantula did not make its appearance in Italy before the disease
+ascribed to its bite became remarkable, even though tempests more
+violent than those unexampled storms which arose at the time of
+the Black Death in the middle of the fourteenth century had set
+the insect world in motion; for the spider is little if at all
+susceptible of those cosmical influences which at times multiply
+locusts and other winged insects to a wonderful extent, and compel
+them to migrate.
+
+The symptoms which Perotti enumerates as consequent on the bite of
+the tarantula agree very exactly with those described by later
+writers. Those who were bitten, generally fell into a state of
+melancholy, and appeared to be stupefied, and scarcely in
+possession of their senses. This condition was, in many cases,
+united with so great a sensibility to music, that at the very
+first tones of their favourite melodies they sprang up, shouting
+for joy, and danced on without intermission, until they sank to
+the ground exhausted and almost lifeless. In others, the disease
+did not take this cheerful turn. They wept constantly, and as if
+pining away with some unsatisfied desire, spent their days in the
+greatest misery and anxiety. Others, again, in morbid fits of
+love, cast their longing looks on women, and instances of death
+are recorded, which are said to have occurred under a paroxysm of
+either laughing or weeping.
+
+From this description, incomplete as it is, we may easily gather
+that tarantism, the essential symptoms of which are mentioned in
+it, could not have originated in the fifteenth century, to which
+Perotti's account refers; for that author speaks of it as a well-
+known malady, and states that the omission to notice it by older
+writers was to be ascribed solely to the want of education in
+Apulia, the only province probably where the disease at that time
+prevailed. A nervous disorder that had arrived at so high a
+degree of development must have been long in existence, and
+doubtless had required an elaborate preparation by the concurrence
+of general causes.
+
+The symptoms which followed the bite of venomous spiders were well
+known to the ancients, and had excited the attention of their best
+observers, who agree in their descriptions of them. It is
+probable that among the numerous species of their phalangium, the
+Apulian tarantula is included, but it is difficult to determine
+this point with certainty, more especially because in Italy the
+tarantula was not the only insect which caused this nervous
+affection, similar results being likewise attributed to the bite
+of the scorpion. Lividity of the whole body, as well as of the
+countenance, difficulty of speech, tremor of the limbs, icy
+coldness, pale urine, depression of spirits, headache, a flow of
+tears, nausea, vomiting, sexual excitement, flatulence, syncope,
+dysuria, watchfulness, lethargy, even death itself, were cited by
+them as the consequences of being bitten by venomous spiders, and
+they made little distinction as to their kinds. To these symptoms
+we may add the strange rumour, repeated throughout the middle
+ages, that persons who were bitten, ejected by the bowels and
+kidneys, and even by vomiting, substances resembling a spider's
+web.
+
+Nowhere, however, do we find any mention made that those affected
+felt an irresistible propensity to dancing, or that they were
+accidentally cured by it. Even Constantine of Africa, who lived
+500 years after Aetius, and, as the most learned physician of the
+school of Salerno, would certainly not have passed over so
+acceptable a subject of remark, knows nothing of such a memorable
+course of this disease arising from poison, and merely repeats the
+observations of his Greek predecessors. Gariopontus, a Salernian
+physician of the eleventh century, was the first to describe a
+kind of insanity, the remote affinity of which to the tarantula
+disease is rendered apparent by a very striking symptom. The
+patients in their sudden attacks behaved like maniacs, sprang up,
+throwing their arms about with wild movements, and, if perchance a
+sword was at hand, they wounded themselves and others, so that it
+became necessary carefully to secure them. They imagined that
+they heard voices and various kinds of sounds, and if, during this
+state of illusion, the tones of a favourite instrument happened to
+catch their ear, they commenced a spasmodic dance, or ran with the
+utmost energy which they could muster until they were totally
+exhausted. These dangerous maniacs, who, it would seem, appeared
+in considerable numbers, were looked upon as a legion of devils,
+but on the causes of their malady this obscure writer adds nothing
+further than that he believes (oddly enough) that it may sometimes
+be excited by the bite of a mad dog. He calls the disease
+Anteneasmus, by which is meant no doubt the Enthusiasmus of the
+Greek physicians. We cite this phenomenon as an important
+forerunner of tarantism, under the conviction that we have thus
+added to the evidence that the development of this latter must
+have been founded on circumstances which existed from the twelfth
+to the end of the fourteenth century; for the origin of tarantism
+itself is referable, with the utmost probability, to a period
+between the middle and the end of this century, and is
+consequently contemporaneous with that of the St. Vitus's dance
+(1374). The influence of the Roman Catholic religion, connected
+as this was, in the middle ages, with the pomp of processions,
+with public exercises of penance, and with innumerable practices
+which strongly excited the imaginations of its votaries, certainly
+brought the mind to a very favourable state for the reception of a
+nervous disorder. Accordingly, so long as the doctrines of
+Christianity were blended with so much mysticism, these unhallowed
+disorders prevailed to an important extent, and even in our own
+days we find them propagated with the greatest facility where the
+existence of superstition produces the same effect, in more
+limited districts, as it once did among whole nations. But this
+is not all. Every country in Europe, and Italy perhaps more than
+any other, was visited during the middle ages by frightful
+plagues, which followed each other in such quick succession that
+they gave the exhausted people scarcely any time for recovery.
+The Oriental bubo-plague ravaged Italy sixteen times between the
+years 1119 and 1340. Small-pox and measles were still more
+destructive than in modern times, and recurred as frequently. St.
+Anthony's fire was the dread of town and country; and that
+disgusting disease, the leprosy, which, in consequence of the
+Crusades, spread its insinuating poison in all directions,
+snatched from the paternal hearth innumerable victims who,
+banished from human society, pined away in lonely huts, whither
+they were accompanied only by the pity of the benevolent and their
+own despair. All these calamities, of which the moderns have
+scarcely retained any recollection, were heightened to an
+incredible degree by the Black Death, which spread boundless
+devastation and misery over Italy. Men's minds were everywhere
+morbidly sensitive; and as it happened with individuals whose
+senses, when they are suffering under anxiety, become more
+irritable, so that trifles are magnified into objects of great
+alarm, and slight shocks, which would scarcely affect the spirits
+when in health, gave rise in them to severe diseases, so was it
+with this whole nation, at all times so alive to emotions, and at
+that period so sorely oppressed with the horrors of death.
+
+The bite of venomous spiders, or rather the unreasonable fear of
+its consequences, excited at such a juncture, though it could not
+have done so at an earlier period, a violent nervous disorder,
+which, like St. Vitus's dance in Germany, spread by sympathy,
+increasing in severity as it took a wider range, and still further
+extending its ravages from its long continuance. Thus, from the
+middle of the fourteenth century, the furies of THE DANCE
+brandished their scourge over afflicted mortals; and music, for
+which the inhabitants of Italy, now probably for the first time,
+manifested susceptibility and talent, became capable of exciting
+ecstatic attacks in those affected, and then furnished the magical
+means of exorcising their melancholy.
+
+
+SECT. 3--INCREASE
+
+
+At the close of the fifteenth century we find that tarantism had
+spread beyond the boundaries of Apulia, and that the fear of being
+bitten by venomous spiders had increased. Nothing short of death
+itself was expected from the wound which these insects inflicted,
+and if those who were bitten escaped with their lives, they were
+said to be seen pining away in a desponding state of lassitude.
+Many became weak-sighted or hard of hearing, some lost the power
+of speech, and all were insensible to ordinary causes of
+excitement. Nothing but the flute or the cithern afforded them
+relief. At the sound of these instruments they awoke as it were
+by enchantment, opened their eyes, and moving slowly at first,
+according to the measure of the music, were, as the time
+quickened, gradually hurried on to the most passionate dance. It
+was generally observable that country people, who were rude, and
+ignorant of music, evinced on these occasions an unusual degree of
+grace, as if they had been well practised in elegant movements of
+the body; for it is a peculiarity in nervous disorders of this
+kind, that the organs of motion are in an altered condition, and
+are completely under the control of the over-strained spirits.
+Cities and villages alike resounded throughout the summer season
+with the notes of fifes, clarinets, and Turkish drums; and
+patients were everywhere to be met with who looked to dancing as
+their only remedy. Alexander ab Alexandro, who gives this
+account, saw a young man in a remote village who was seized with a
+violent attack of tarantism. He listened with eagerness and a
+fixed stare to the sound of a drum, and his graceful movements
+gradually became more and more violent, until his dancing was
+converted into a succession of frantic leaps, which required the
+utmost exertion of his whole strength. In the midst of this over-
+strained exertion of mind and body the music suddenly ceased, and
+he immediately fell powerless to the ground, where he lay
+senseless and motionless until its magical effect again aroused
+him to a renewal of his impassioned performances.
+
+At the period of which we are treating there was a general
+conviction, that by music and dancing the poison of the tarantula
+was distributed over the whole body, and expelled through the
+skin, but that if there remained the slightest vestige of it in
+the vessels, this became a permanent germ of the disorder, so that
+the dancing fits might again and again be excited ad infinitum by
+music. This belief, which resembled the delusion of those insane
+persons who, being by artful management freed from the imagined
+causes of their sufferings, are but for a short time released from
+their false notions, was attended with the most injurious effects:
+for in consequence of it those affected necessarily became by
+degrees convinced of the incurable nature of their disorder. They
+expected relief, indeed, but not a cure, from music; and when the
+heat of summer awakened a recollection of the dances of the
+preceding year, they, like the St. Vitus's dancers of the same
+period before St. Vitus's day, again grew dejected and
+misanthropic, until, by music and dancing, they dispelled the
+melancholy which had become with them a kind of sensual enjoyment.
+
+Under such favourable circumstances, it is clear that tarantism
+must every year have made further progress. The number of those
+affected by it increased beyond all belief, for whoever had either
+actually been, or even fancied that he had been, once bitten by a
+poisonous spider or scorpion, made his appearance annually
+wherever the merry notes of the tarantella resounded. Inquisitive
+females joined the throng and caught the disease, not indeed from
+the poison of the spider, but from the mental poison which they
+eagerly received through the eye; and thus the cure of the
+tarantati gradually became established as a regular festival of
+the populace, which was anticipated with impatient delight.
+
+Without attributing more to deception and fraud than to the
+peculiar nature of a progressive mental malady, it may readily be
+conceived that the cases of this strange disorder now grew more
+frequent. The celebrated Matthioli, who is worthy of entire
+confidence, gives his account as an eye-witness. He saw the same
+extraordinary effects produced by music as Alexandro, for, however
+tortured with pain, however hopeless of relief the patients
+appeared, as they lay stretched on the couch of sickness, at the
+very first sounds of those melodies which made an impression on
+them--but this was the case only with the tarantellas composed
+expressly for the purpose--they sprang up as if inspired with new
+life and spirit, and, unmindful of their disorder, began to move
+in measured gestures, dancing for hour together without fatigue,
+until, covered with a kindly perspiration, they felt a salutary
+degree of lassitude, which relieved them for a time at least,
+perhaps even for a whole year, from their defection and oppressive
+feeling of general indisposition. Alexandro's experience of the
+injurious effects resulting from a sudden cessation of the music
+was generally confirmed by Matthioli. If the clarinets and drums
+ceased for a single moment, which, as the most skilful payers were
+tired out by the patients, could not but happen occasionally, they
+suffered their limbs to fall listless, again sank exhausted to the
+ground, and could find no solace but in a renewal of the dance.
+On this account care was taken to continue the music until
+exhaustion was produced; for it was better to pay a few extra
+musicians, who might relieve each other, than to permit the
+patient, in the midst of this curative exercise, to relapse into
+so deplorable a state of suffering. The attack consequent upon
+the bite of the tarantula, Matthioli describes as varying much in
+its manner. Some became morbidly exhilarated, so that they
+remained for a long while without sleep, laughing, dancing, and
+singing in a state of the greatest excitement. Others, on the
+contrary, were drowsy. The generality felt nausea and suffered
+from vomiting, and some had constant tremors. Complete mania was
+no uncommon occurrence, not to mention the usual dejection of
+spirits and other subordinate symptoms.
+
+
+SECT. 4--IDIOSYNCRASIES--MUSIC
+
+
+Unaccountable emotions, strange desires, and morbid sensual
+irritations of all kinds, were as prevalent as in the St. Vitus's
+dance and similar great nervous maladies. So late as the
+sixteenth century patients were seen armed with glittering swords
+which, during the attack, they brandished with wild gestures, as
+if they were going to engage in a fencing match. Even women
+scorned all female delicacy, and, adopting this impassioned
+demeanour, did the same; and this phenomenon, as well as the
+excitement which the tarantula dancers felt at the sight of
+anything with metallic lustre, was quite common up to the period
+when, in modern times, the disease disappeared.
+
+The abhorrence of certain colours, and the agreeable sensations
+produced by others, were much more marked among the excitable
+Italians than was the case in the St. Vitus's dance with the more
+phlegmatic Germans. Red colours, which the St. Vitus's dancers
+detested, they generally liked, so that a patient was seldom seen
+who did not carry a red handkerchief for his gratification, or
+greedily feast his eyes on any articles of red clothing worn by
+the bystanders. Some preferred yellow, others black colours, of
+which an explanation was sought, according to the prevailing
+notions of the times, in the difference of temperaments. Others,
+again, were enraptured with green; and eye-witnesses describe this
+rage for colours as so extraordinary, that they can scarcely find
+words with which to express their astonishment. No sooner did the
+patients obtain a sight of the favourite colour than, new as the
+impression was, they rushed like infuriated animals towards the
+object, devoured it with their eager looks, kissed and caressed it
+in every possible way, and gradually resigning themselves to
+softer sensations, adopted the languishing expression of enamoured
+lovers, and embraced the handkerchief, or whatever other article
+it might be, which was presented to them, with the most intense
+ardour, while the tears streamed from their eyes as if they were
+completely overwhelmed by the inebriating impression on their
+senses.
+
+The dancing fits of a certain Capuchin friar in Tarentum excited
+so much curiosity, that Cardinal Cajetano proceeded to the
+monastery, that he might see with his own eyes what was going on.
+As soon as the monk, who was in the midst of his dance, perceived
+the spiritual prince clothed in his red garments, he no longer
+listened to the tarantella of the musicians, but with strange
+gestures endeavoured to approach the Cardinal, as if he wished to
+count the very threads of his scarlet robe, and to allay his
+intense longing by its odour. The interference of the spectators,
+and his own respect, prevented his touching it, and thus the
+irritation of his senses not being appeased, he fell into a state
+of such anguish and disquietude, that he presently sank down in a
+swoon, from which he did not recover until the Cardinal
+compassionately gave him his cape. This he immediately seized in
+the greatest ecstasy, and pressed now to his breast, now to his
+forehead and cheeks, and then again commenced his dance as if in
+the frenzy of a love fit.
+
+At the sight of colours which they disliked, patients flew into
+the most violent rage, and, like the St. Vitus's dancers when they
+saw red objects, could scarcely be restrained from tearing the
+clothes of those spectators who raised in them such disagreeable
+sensations.
+
+Another no less extraordinary symptom was the ardent longing for
+the sea which the patients evinced. As the St. John's dancers of
+the fourteenth century saw, in the spirit, the heavens open and
+display all the splendour of the saints, so did those who were
+suffering under the bite of the tarantula feel themselves
+attracted to the boundless expanse of the blue ocean, and lost
+themselves in its contemplation. Some songs, which are still
+preserved, marked this peculiar longing, which was moreover
+expressed by significant music, and was excited even by the bare
+mention of the sea. Some, in whom this susceptibility was carried
+to the greatest pitch, cast themselves with blind fury into the
+blue waves, as the St. Vitus's dancers occasionally did into rapid
+rivers. This condition, so opposite to the frightful state of
+hydrophobia, betrayed itself in others only in the pleasure
+afforded them by the sight of clear water in glasses. These they
+bore in their hands while dancing, exhibiting at the same time
+strange movements, and giving way to the most extravagant
+expressions of their feeling. They were delighted also when, in
+the midst of the space allotted for this exercise, more ample
+vessels, filled with water, and surrounded by rushes and water
+plants, were placed, in which they bathed their heads and arms
+with evident pleasure. Others there were who rolled about on the
+ground, and were, by their own desire, buried up to the neck in
+the earth, in order to alleviate the misery of their condition;
+not to mention an endless variety of other symptoms which showed
+the perverted action of the nerves.
+
+All these modes of relief, however, were as nothing in comparison
+with the irresistible charms of musical sound. Attempts had
+indeed been made in ancient times to mitigate the pain of
+sciatica, or the paroxysms of mania, by the soft melody of the
+flute, and, what is still more applicable to the present purpose,
+to remove the danger arising from the bite of vipers by the same
+means. This, however, was tried only to a very small extent. But
+after being bitten by the tarantula, there was, according to
+popular opinion, no way of saving life except by music; and it was
+hardly considered as an exception to the general rule, that every
+now and then the bad effects of a wound were prevented by placing
+a ligature on the bitten limb, or by internal medicine, or that
+strong persons occasionally withstood the effects of the poison,
+without the employment of any remedies at all. It was much more
+common, and is quite in accordance with the nature of so exquisite
+a nervous disease, to hear accounts of many who, when bitten by
+the tarantula, perished miserably because the tarantella, which
+would have afforded them deliverance, was not played to them. It
+was customary, therefore, so early as the commencement of the
+seventeenth century, for whole bands of musicians to traverse
+Italy during the summer months, and, what is quite unexampled
+either in ancient or modern times, the cure of the Tarantati in
+the different towns and villages was undertaken on a grand scale.
+This season of dancing and music was called "the women's little
+carnival," for it was women more especially who conducted the
+arrangements; so that throughout the whole country they saved up
+their spare money, for the purpose of rewarding the welcome
+musicians, and many of them neglected their household employments
+to participate in this festival of the sick. Mention is even made
+of one benevolent lady (Mita Lupa) who had expended her whole
+fortune on this object.
+
+The music itself was of a kind perfectly adapted to the nature of
+the malady, and it made so deep an impression on the Italians,
+that even to the present time, long since the extinction of the
+disorder, they have retained the tarantella, as a particular
+species of music employed for quick, lively dancing. The
+different kinds of tarantella were distinguished, very
+significantly, by particular names, which had reference to the
+moods observed in the patients. Whence it appears that they aimed
+at representing by these tunes even the idiosyncrasies of the mind
+as expressed in the countenance. Thus there was one kind of
+tarantella which was called "Panno rosso," a very lively,
+impassioned style of music, to which wild dithyrambic songs were
+adapted; another, called "Panno verde," which was suited to the
+milder excitement of the senses caused by green colours, and set
+to Idyllian songs of verdant fields and shady groves. A third was
+named "Cinque tempi:" a fourth "Moresca," which was played to a
+Moorish dance; a fifth, "Catena;" and a sixth, with a very
+appropriate designation, "Spallata," as if it were only fit to be
+played to dancers who were lame in the shoulder. This was the
+slowest and least in vogue of all. For those who loved water they
+took care to select love songs, which were sung to corresponding
+music, and such persons delighted in hearing of gushing springs
+and rushing cascades and streams. It is to be regretted that on
+this subject we are unable to give any further information, for
+only small fragments of songs, and a very few tarantellas, have
+been preserved which belong to a period so remote as the beginning
+of the seventeenth, or at furthest the end of the sixteenth
+century.
+
+The music was almost wholly in the Turkish style (aria Turchesca),
+and the ancient songs of the peasantry of Apulia, which increased
+in number annually, were well suited to the abrupt and lively
+notes of the Turkish drum and the shepherd's pipe. These two
+instruments were the favourites in the country, but others of all
+kinds were played in towns and villages, as an accompaniment to
+the dances of the patients and the songs of the spectators. If
+any particular melody was disliked by those affected, they
+indicated their displeasure by violent gestures expressive of
+aversion. They could not endure false notes, and it is remarkable
+that uneducated boors, who had never in their lives manifested any
+perception of the enchanting power of harmony, acquired, in this
+respect, an extremely refined sense of hearing, as if they had
+been initiated into the profoundest secrets of the musical art.
+It was a matter of every day's experience, that patients showed a
+predilection for certain tarantellas, in preference to others,
+which gave rise to the composition of a great variety of these
+dances. They were likewise very capricious in their partialities
+for particular instruments; so that some longed for the shrill
+notes of the trumpet, others for the softest music produced by the
+vibration of strings.
+
+Tarantism was at its greatest height in Italy in the seventeenth
+century, long after the St. Vitus's Dance of Germany had
+disappeared. It was not the natives of the country only who were
+attacked by this complaint. Foreigners of every colour and of
+every race, negroes, gipsies, Spaniards, Albanians, were in like
+manner affected by it. Against the effects produced by the
+tarantula's bite, or by the sight of the sufferers, neither youth
+nor age afforded any protection; so that even old men of ninety
+threw aside their crutches at the sound of the tarantella, and, as
+if some magic potion, restorative of youth and vigour, were
+flowing through their veins, joined the most extravagant dancers.
+Ferdinando saw a boy five years old seized with the dancing mania,
+in consequence of the bite of a tarantula, and, what is almost
+past belief, were it not supported by the testimony of so credible
+an eye-witness, even deaf people were not exempt from this
+disorder, so potent in its effect was the very sight of those
+affected, even without the exhilarating emotions caused by music.
+
+Subordinate nervous attacks were much more frequent during this
+century than at any former period, and an extraordinary icy
+coldness was observed in those who were the subject of them; so
+that they did not recover their natural heat until they had
+engaged in violent dancing. Their anguish and sense of oppression
+forced from them a cold perspiration; the secretion from the
+kidneys was pale, and they had so great a dislike to everything
+cold, that when water was offered them they pushed it away with
+abhorrence. Wine, on the contrary, they all drank willingly,
+without being heated by it, or in the slightest degree
+intoxicated. During the whole period of the attack they suffered
+from spasms in the stomach, and felt a disinclination to take food
+of any kind. They used to abstain some time before the expected
+seizures from meat and from snails, which they thought rendered
+them more severe, and their great thirst for wine may therefore in
+some measure be attributable to the want of a more nutritious
+diet; yet the disorder of the nerves was evidently its chief
+cause, and the loss of appetite, as well as the necessity for
+support by wine, were its effects. Loss of voice, occasional
+blindness, vertigo, complete insanity, with sleeplessness,
+frequent weeping without any ostensible cause, were all usual
+symptoms. Many patients found relief from being placed in swings
+or rocked in cradles; others required to be roused from their
+state of suffering by severe blows on the soles of their feet;
+others beat themselves, without any intention of making a display,
+but solely for the purpose of allaying the intense nervous
+irritation which they felt; and a considerable number were seen
+with their bellies swollen, like those of the St. John's dancers,
+while the violence of the intestinal disorder was indicated in
+others by obstinate constipation or diarrhoea and vomiting. These
+pitiable objects gradually lost their strength and their colour,
+and creeping about with injected eyes, jaundiced complexions, and
+inflated bowels, soon fell into a state of profound melancholy,
+which found food and solace in the solemn tolling of the funeral
+bell, and in an abode among the tombs of cemeteries, as is related
+of the Lycanthropes of former times.
+
+The persuasion of the inevitable consequences of being bitten by
+the tarantula, exercised a dominion over men's minds which even
+the healthiest and strongest could not shake off. So late as the
+middle of the sixteenth century, the celebrated Fracastoro found
+the robust bailiff of his landed estate groaning, and, with the
+aspect of a person in the extremity of despair, suffering the very
+agonies of death from a sting in the neck, inflicted by an insect
+which was believed to be a tarantula. He kindly administered
+without delay a potion of vinegar and Armenian bole, the great
+remedy of those days for the plague of all kinds of animal
+poisons, and the dying man was, as if by a miracle, restored to
+life and the power of speech. Now, since it is quite out of the
+question that the bole could have anything to do with the result
+in this case, notwithstanding Fracastoro's belief in its virtues,
+we can only account for the cure by supposing, that a confidence
+in so great a physician prevailed over this fatal disease of the
+imagination, which would otherwise have yielded to scarcely any
+other remedy except the tarantella. Ferdinando was acquainted
+with women who, for thirty years in succession, had overcome the
+attacks of this disorder by a renewal of their annual dance--so
+long did they maintain their belief in the yet undestroyed poison
+of the tarantula's bite, and so long did that mental affection
+continue to exist, after it had ceased to depend on any corporeal
+excitement.
+
+Wherever we turn, we find that this morbid state of mind
+prevailed, and was so supported by the opinions of the age, that
+it needed only a stimulus in the bite of the tarantula, and the
+supposed certainty of its very disastrous consequences, to
+originate this violent nervous disorder. Even in Ferdinando's
+time there were many who altogether denied the poisonous effects
+of the tarantula's bite, whilst they considered the disorder,
+which annually set Italy in commotion, to be a melancholy
+depending on the imagination. They dearly expiated this
+scepticism, however, when they were led, with an inconsiderate
+hardihood, to test their opinions by experiment; for many of them
+became the subjects of severe tarantism, and even a distinguished
+prelate, Jo. Baptist Quinzato, Bishop of Foligno, having allowed
+himself, by way of a joke, to be bitten by a tarantula, could
+obtain a cure in no other way than by being, through the influence
+of the tarantella, compelled to dance. Others among the clergy,
+who wished to shut their ears against music, because they
+considered dancing derogatory to their station, fell into a
+dangerous state of illness by thus delaying the crisis of the
+malady, and were obliged at last to save themselves from a
+miserable death by submitting to the unwelcome but sole means of
+cure. Thus it appears that the age was so little favourable to
+freedom of thought, that even the most decided sceptics, incapable
+of guarding themselves against the recollection of what had been
+presented to the eye, were subdued by a poison, the powers of
+which they had ridiculed, and which was in itself inert in its
+effect.
+
+
+SECT. 5--HYSTERIA
+
+
+Different characteristics of the morbidly excited vitality having
+been rendered prominent by tarantism in different individuals, it
+could not but happen that other derangements of the nerves would
+assume the form of this whenever circumstances favoured such a
+transition. This was more especially the case with hysteria, that
+proteiform and mutable disorder, in which the imaginations, the
+superstitions, and the follies of all ages have been evidently
+reflected. The "Carnevaletto delle Donne" appeared most
+opportunely for those who were hysterical. Their disease received
+from it, as it had at other times from other extraordinary
+customs, a peculiar direction; so that, whether bitten by the
+tarantula or not, they felt compelled to participate in the dances
+of those affected, and to make their appearance at this popular
+festival, where they had an opportunity of triumphantly exhibiting
+their sufferings. Let us here pause to consider the kind of life
+which the women in Italy led. Lonely, and deprived by cruel
+custom of social intercourse, that fairest of all enjoyments, they
+dragged on a miserable existence. Cheerfulness and an inclination
+to sensual pleasures passed into compulsory idleness, and, in
+many, into black despondency. Their imaginations became
+disordered--a pallid countenance and oppressed respiration bore
+testimony to their profound sufferings. How could they do
+otherwise, sunk as they were in such extreme misery, than seize
+the occasion to burst forth from their prisons and alleviate their
+miseries by taking part in the delights of music? Nor should we
+here pass unnoticed a circumstance which illustrates, in a
+remarkable degree, the psychological nature of hysterical
+sufferings, namely, that many chlorotic females, by joining the
+dancers at the Carnevaletto, were freed from their spasms and
+oppression of breathing for the whole year, although the corporeal
+cause of their malady was not removed. After such a result, no
+one could call their self-deception a mere imposture, and
+unconditionally condemn it as such.
+
+This numerous class of patients certainly contributed not a little
+to the maintenance of the evil, for their fantastic sufferings, in
+which dissimulation and reality could scarcely be distinguished
+even by themselves, much less by their physicians, were imitated
+in the same way as the distortions of the St. Vitus's dancers by
+the impostors of that period. It was certainly by these persons
+also that the number of subordinate symptoms was increased to an
+endless extent, as may be conceived from the daily observation of
+hysterical patients who, from a morbid desire to render themselves
+remarkable, deviate from the laws of moral propriety. Powerful
+sexual excitement had often the most decided influence over their
+condition. Many of them exposed themselves in the most indecent
+manner, tore their hair out by the roots, with howling and
+gnashing of their teeth; and when, as was sometimes the case,
+their unsatisfied passion hurried them on to a state of frenzy,
+they closed their existence by self destruction; it being common
+at that time for these unfortunate beings to precipitate
+themselves into the wells.
+
+It might hence seem that, owing to the conduct of patients of this
+description, so much of fraud and falsehood would be mixed up with
+the original disorder that, having passed into another complaint,
+it must have been itself destroyed. This, however, did not happen
+in the first half of the seventeenth century; for, as a clear
+proof that tarantism remained substantially the same and quite
+unaffected by hysteria, there were in many places, and in
+particular at Messapia, fewer women affected than men, who, in
+their turn, were in no small proportion led into temptation by
+sexual excitement. In other places, as, for example, at Brindisi,
+the case was reversed, which may, as in other complaints, be in
+some measure attributable to local causes. Upon the whole it
+appears, from concurrent accounts, that women by no means enjoyed
+the distinction of being attacked by tarantism more frequently
+than men.
+
+It is said that the cicatrix of the tarantula bite, on the yearly
+or half-yearly return of the fit, became discoloured, but on this
+point the distinct testimony of good observers is wanting to
+deprive the assertion of its utter improbability.
+
+It is not out of place to remark here that, about the same time
+that tarantism attained its greatest height in Italy, the bite of
+venomous spiders was more feared in distant parts of Asia likewise
+than it had ever been within the memory of man. There was this
+difference, however--that the symptoms supervening on the
+occurrence of this accident were not accompanied by the Apulian
+nervous disorder, which, as has been shown in the foregoing pages,
+had its origin rather in the melancholic temperament of the
+inhabitants of the south of Italy than in the nature of the
+tarantula poison itself. This poison is therefore, doubtless, to
+be considered only as a remote cause of the complaint, which, but
+for that temperament, would be inadequate to its production. The
+Persians employed a very rough means of counteracting the bad
+consequences of a poison of this sort. They drenched the wounded
+person with milk, and then, by a violent rotatory motion in a
+suspended box, compelled him to vomit.
+
+
+SECT. 6--DECREASE
+
+
+The Dancing Mania, arising from the tarantula bite, continued with
+all those additions of self-deception and of the dissimulation
+which is such a constant attendant on nervous disorders of this
+kind, through the whole course of the seventeenth century. It was
+indeed, gradually on the decline, but up to the termination of
+this period showed such extraordinary symptoms that Baglivi, one
+of the best physicians of that time, thought he did a service to
+science by making them the subject of a dissertation. He repeats
+all the observations of Ferdinando, and supports his own
+assertions by the experience of his father, a physician at Lecce,
+whose testimony, as an eye-witness, may be admitted as
+unexceptionable.
+
+The immediate consequences of the tarantula bite, the supervening
+nervous disorder, and the aberrations and fits of those who
+suffered from hysteria, he describes in a masterly style, not does
+he ever suffer his credulity to diminish the authenticity of his
+account, of which he has been unjustly accused by later writers.
+
+Finally, tarantism has declined more and more in modern times, and
+is now limited to single cases. How could it possibly have
+maintained itself unchanged in the eighteenth century, when all
+the links which connected it with the Middle Ages had long since
+been snapped asunder? Imposture grew more frequent, and wherever
+the disease still appeared in its genuine form, its chief cause,
+namely, a peculiar cast of melancholy, which formerly had been the
+temperament of thousands, was now possessed only occasionally by
+unfortunate individuals. It might, therefore, not unreasonably be
+maintained that the tarantism of modern times bears nearly the
+same relation to the original malady as the St. Vitus's dance
+which still exists, and certainly has all along existed, bears, in
+certain cases, to the original dancing mania of the dancers of St.
+John.
+
+To conclude. Tarantism, as a real disease, has been denied in
+toto, and stigmatised as an imposition by most physicians and
+naturalists, who in this controversy have shown the narrowness of
+their views and their utter ignorance of history. In order to
+support their opinion they have instituted some experiments
+apparently favourable to it, but under circumstances altogether
+inapplicable, since, for the most part, they selected as the
+subjects of them none but healthy men, who were totally
+uninfluenced by a belief in this once so dreaded disease. From
+individual instances of fraud and dissimulation, such as are found
+in connection with most nervous affections without rendering their
+reality a matter of any doubt, they drew a too hasty conclusion
+respecting the general phenomenon, of which they appeared not to
+know that it had continued for nearly four hundred years, having
+originated in the remotest periods of the Middle Ages. The most
+learned and the most acute among these sceptics is Serao the
+Neapolitan. His reasonings amount to this, that he considers the
+disease to be a very marked form of melancholia, and compares the
+effect of the tarantula bite upon it to stimulating with spurs a
+horse which is already running. The reality of that effect he
+thus admits, and, therefore, directly confirms what in appearance
+only he denies. By shaking the already vacillating belief in this
+disorder he is said to have actually succeeded in rendering it
+less frequent, and in setting bounds to imposture; but this no
+more disproves the reality of its existence than the oft repeated
+detection of imposition has been able in modern times to banish
+magnetic sleep from the circle of natural phenomena, though such
+detection has, on its side, rendered more rare the incontestable
+effects of animal magnetism. Other physicians and naturalists
+have delivered their sentiments on tarantism, but as they have not
+possessed an enlarged knowledge of its history their views do not
+merit particular exposition. It is sufficient for the
+comprehension of everyone that we have presented the facts from
+all extraneous speculation.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III--THE DANCING MANIA IN ABYSSINIA
+
+
+
+SECT. 1--TIGRETIER
+
+
+Both the St. Vitus's dance and tarantism belonged to the ages in
+which they appeared. They could not have existed under the same
+latitude at any other epoch, for at no other period were the
+circumstances which prepared the way for them combined in a
+similar relation to each other, and the mental as well as
+corporeal temperaments of nations, which depend on causes such as
+have been stated, are as little capable of renewal as the
+different stages of life in individuals. This gives so much the
+more importance to a disease but cursorily alluded to in the
+foregoing pages, which exists in Abyssinia, and which nearly
+resembles the original mania of the St. John's dancers, inasmuch
+as it exhibits a perfectly similar ecstasy, with the same violent
+effect on the nerves of motion. It occurs most frequently in the
+Tigre country, being thence call Tigretier, and is probably the
+same malady which is called in Ethiopian language Astaragaza. On
+this subject we will introduce the testimony of Nathaniel Pearce,
+an eye-witness, who resided nine years in Abyssinia. "The
+Tigretier," he says he, "is more common among the women than among
+the men. It seizes the body as if with a violent fever, and from
+that turns to a lingering sickness, which reduces the patients to
+skeletons, and often kills them if the relations cannot procure
+the proper remedy. During this sickness their speech is changed
+to a kind of stuttering, which no one can understand but those
+afflicted with the same disorder. When the relations find the
+malady to be the real tigretier, they join together to defray the
+expense of curing it; the first remedy they in general attempt is
+to procure the assistance of a learned Dofter, who reads the
+Gospel of St. John, and drenches the patient with cold water daily
+for the space of seven days, an application that very often proves
+fatal. The most effectual cure, though far more expensive than
+the former, is as follows:- The relations hire for a certain sum
+of money a band of trumpeters, drummers, and fifers, and buy a
+quantity of liquor; then all the young men and women of the place
+assemble at the patient's house to perform the following most
+extraordinary ceremony.
+
+"I was once called in by a neighbour to see his wife, a very young
+woman, who had the misfortune to be afflicted with this disorder;
+and the man being an old acquaintance of mine, and always a close
+comrade in the camp, I went every day, when at home, to see her,
+but I could not be of any service to her, though she never refused
+my medicines. At this time I could not understand a word she
+said, although she talked very freely, nor could any of her
+relations understand her. She could not bear the sight of a book
+or a priest, for at the sight of either she struggled, and was
+apparently seized with acute agony, and a flood of tears, like
+blood mingled with water, would pour down her face from her eyes.
+She had lain three months in this lingering state, living upon so
+little that it seemed not enough to keep a human body alive; at
+last her husband agreed to employ the usual remedy, and, after
+preparing for the maintenance of the band during the time it would
+take to effect the cure, he borrowed from all his neighbours their
+silver ornaments, and loaded her legs, arms and neck with them.
+
+"The evening that the band began to play I seated myself close by
+her side as she lay upon the couch, and about two minutes after
+the trumpets had begun to sound I observed her shoulders begin to
+move, and soon afterwards her head and breast, and in less than a
+quarter of an hour she sat upon her couch. The wild look she had,
+though sometimes she smiled, made me draw off to a greater
+distance, being almost alarmed to see one nearly a skeleton move
+with such strength; her head, neck, shoulders, hands and feet all
+made a strong motion to the sound of the music, and in this manner
+she went on by degrees, until she stood up on her legs upon the
+floor. Afterwards she began to dance, and at times to jump about,
+and at last, as the music and noise of the singers increased, she
+often sprang three feet from the ground. When the music slackened
+she would appear quite out of temper, but when it became louder
+she would smile and be delighted. During this exercise she never
+showed the least symptom of being tired, though the musicians were
+thoroughly exhausted; and when they stopped to refresh themselves
+by drinking and resting a little she would discover signs of
+discontent.
+
+"Next day, according to the custom in the cure of this disorder,
+she was taken into the market-place, where several jars of maize
+or tsug were set in order by the relations, to give drink to the
+musicians and dancers. When the crowd had assembled, and the
+music was ready, she was brought forth and began to dance and
+throw herself into the maddest postures imaginable, and in this
+manner she kept on the whole day. Towards evening she began to
+let fall her silver ornaments from her neck, arms, and legs, one
+at a time, so that in the course of three hours she was stripped
+of every article. A relation continually kept going after her as
+she danced, to pick up the ornaments, and afterwards delivered
+them to the owners from whom they were borrowed. As the sun went
+down she made a start with such swiftness that the fastest runner
+could not come up with her, and when at the distance of about two
+hundred yards she dropped on a sudden as if shot. Soon afterwards
+a young man, on coming up with her, fired a matchlock over her
+body, and struck her upon the back with the broad side of his
+large knife, and asked her name, to which she answered as when in
+her common senses--a sure proof of her being cured; for during the
+time of this malady those afflicted with it never answer to their
+Christian names. She was now taken up in a very weak condition
+and carried home, and a priest came and baptised her again in the
+name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, which ceremony concluded
+her cure. Some are taken in this manner to the market-place for
+many days before they can be cured, and it sometimes happens that
+they cannot be cured at all. I have seen them in these fits dance
+with a BRULY, or bottle of maize, upon their heads without
+spilling the liquor, or letting the bottle fall, although they
+have put themselves into the most extravagant postures.
+
+"I could not have ventured to write this from hearsay, nor could I
+conceive it possible, until I was obliged to put this remedy in
+practice upon my own wife, who was seized with the same disorder,
+and then I was compelled to have a still nearer view of this
+strange disorder. I at first thought that a whip would be of some
+service, and one day attempted a few strokes when unnoticed by any
+person, we being by ourselves, and I having a strong suspicion
+that this ailment sprang from the weak minds of women, who were
+encouraged in it for the sake of the grandeur, rich dress, and
+music which accompany the cure. But how much was I surprised, the
+moment I struck a light blow, thinking to do good, to find that
+she became like a corpse, and even the joints of her fingers
+became so stiff that I could not straighten them; indeed, I really
+thought that she was dead, and immediately made it known to the
+people in the house that she had fainted, but did not tell them
+the cause, upon which they immediately brought music, which I had
+for many days denied them, and which soon revived her; and I then
+left the house to her relations to cure her at my expense, in the
+manner I have before mentioned, though it took a much longer time
+to cure my wife than the woman I have just given an account of.
+One day I went privately, with a companion, to see my wife dance,
+and kept at a short distance, as I was ashamed to go near the
+crowd. On looking steadfastly upon her, while dancing or jumping,
+more like a deer than a human being, I said that it certainly was
+not my wife; at which my companion burst into a fit of laughter,
+from which he could scarcely refrain all the way home. Men are
+sometimes afflicted with this dreadful disorder, but not
+frequently. Among the Amhara and Galla it is not so common."
+
+Such is the account of Pearce, who is every way worthy of credit,
+and whose lively description renders the traditions of former
+times respecting the St. Vitus's dance and tarantism intelligible,
+even to those who are sceptical respecting the existence of a
+morbid state of the mind and body of the kind described, because,
+in the present advanced state of civilisation among the nations of
+Europe, opportunities for its development no longer occur. The
+credibility of this energetic but by no means ambitious man is not
+liable to the slightest suspicion, for, owing to his want of
+education, he had no knowledge of the phenomena in question, and
+his work evinces throughout his attractive and unpretending
+impartiality.
+
+Comparison is the mother of observation, and may here elucidate
+one phenomenon by another--the past by that which still exists.
+Oppression, insecurity, and the influence of a very rude
+priestcraft, are the powerful causes which operated on the Germans
+and Italians of the Middle Ages, as they now continue to operate
+on the Abyssinians of the present day. However these people may
+differ from us in their descent, their manners and their customs,
+the effects of the above mentioned causes are the same in Africa
+as they were in Europe, for they operate on man himself
+independently of the particular locality in which he may be
+planted; and the conditions of the Abyssinians of modern times is,
+in regard to superstition, a mirror of the condition of the
+European nations of the middle ages. Should this appear a bold
+assertion it will be strengthened by the fact that in Abyssinia
+two examples of superstitions occur which are completely in
+accordance with occurrences of the Middle Ages that took place
+contemporarily with the dancing mania. THE ABYSSINIANS HAVE THEIR
+CHRISTIAN FLAGELLANTS, AND THERE EXISTS AMONG THEM A BELIEF IN A
+ZOOMORPHISM, WHICH PRESENTS A LIVELY IMAGE OF THE LYCANTHROPY OF
+THE MIDDLE AGES. Their flagellants are called Zackarys. They are
+united into a separate Christian fraternity, and make their
+processions through the towns and villages with great noise and
+tumult, scourging themselves till they draw blood, and wounding
+themselves with knives. They boast that they are descendants of
+St. George. It is precisely in Tigre, the country of the
+Abyssinian dancing mania, where they are found in the greatest
+numbers, and where they have, in the neighbourhood of Axum, a
+church of their own, dedicated to their patron saint, Oun Arvel.
+Here there is an ever-burning lamp, and they contrive to impress a
+belief that this is kept alight by supernatural means. They also
+here keep a holy water, which is said to be a cure for those who
+are affected by the dancing mania.
+
+The Abyssinian Zoomorphism is a no less important phenomenon, and
+shows itself a manner quite peculiar. The blacksmiths and potters
+form among the Abyssinians a society or caste called in Tigre
+TEBBIB, and in Amhara BUDA, which is held in some degree of
+contempt, and excluded from the sacrament of the Lord's Supper,
+because it is believed that they can change themselves into
+hyaenas and other beasts of prey, on which account they are feared
+by everybody, and regarded with horror. They artfully contrive to
+keep up this superstition, because by this separation they
+preserve a monopoly of their lucrative trades, and as in other
+respects they are good Christians (but few Jews or Mahomedans live
+among them), they seem to attach no great consequence to their
+excommunication. As a badge of distinction they wear a golden
+ear-ring, which is frequently found in the ears of Hyaenas that
+are killed, without its having ever been discovered how they catch
+these animals, so as to decorate them with this strange ornament,
+and this removes in the minds of the people all doubt as to the
+supernatural powers of the smiths and potters. To the Budas is
+also ascribed the gift of enchantment, especially that of the
+influence of the evil eye. They nevertheless live unmolested, and
+are not condemned to the flames by fanatical priests, as the
+lycanthropes were in the Middle Ages.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV--SYMPATHY
+
+
+
+Imitation--compassion--sympathy, these are imperfect designations
+for a common bond of union among human beings--for an instinct
+which connects individuals with the general body, which embraces
+with equal force reason and folly, good and evil, and diminishes
+the praise of virtue as well as the criminality of vice. In this
+impulse there are degrees, but no essential differences, from the
+first intellectual efforts of the infant mind, which are in a
+great measure based on imitation, to that morbid condition of the
+soul in which the sensible impression of a nervous malady fetters
+the mind, and finds its way through the eye directly to the
+diseased texture, as the electric shock is propagated by contact
+from body to body. To this instinct of imitation, when it exists
+in its highest degree, is united a loss of all power over the
+will, which occurs as soon as the impression on the senses has
+become firmly established, producing a condition like that of
+small animals when they are fascinated by the look of a serpent.
+By this mental bondage morbid sympathy is clearly and definitely
+distinguished from all subordinate degrees of this instinct,
+however closely allied the imitation of a disorder may seem to be
+to that of a mere folly, of an absurd fashion, of an awkward habit
+in speech and manner, or even of a confusion of ideas. Even these
+latter imitations, however, directed as they are to foolish and
+pernicious objects, place the self-independence of the greater
+portion of mankind in a very doubtful light, and account for their
+union into a social whole. Still more nearly allied to morbid
+sympathy than the imitation of enticing folly, although often with
+a considerable admixture of the latter, is the diffusion of
+violent excitements, especially those of a religious or political
+character, which have so powerfully agitated the nations of
+ancient and modern times, and which may, after an incipient
+compliance, pass into a total loss of power over the will, and an
+actual disease of the mind. Far be it from us to attempt to
+awaken all the various tones of this chord, whose vibrations
+reveal the profound secrets which lie hid in the inmost recesses
+of the soul. We might well want powers adequate to so vast an
+undertaking. Our business here is only with that morbid sympathy
+by the aid of which the dancing mania of the Middle Ages grew into
+a real epidemic. In order to make this apparent by comparison, it
+may not be out of place, at the close of this inquiry, to
+introduce a few striking examples:-
+
+1. "At a cotton manufactory at Hodden Bridge, in Lancashire, a
+girl, on the fifteenth of February, 1787, put a mouse into the
+bosom of another girl, who had a great dread of mice. The girl
+was immediately thrown into a fit, and continued in it, with the
+most violent convulsions, for twenty-four hours. On the following
+day three more girls were seized in the same manner, and on the
+17th six more. By this time the alarm was so great that the whole
+work, in which 200 or 300 were employed, was totally stopped, and
+an idea prevailed that a particular disease had been introduced by
+a bag of cotton opened in the house. On Sunday the 18th, Dr. St.
+Clare was sent for from Preston; before he arrived three more were
+seized, and during that night and the morning of the 19th, eleven
+more, making in all twenty-four. Of these, twenty-one were young
+women, two were girls of about ten years of age, and one man, who
+had been much fatigued with holding the girls. Three of the
+number lived about two miles from the place where the disorder
+first broke out, and three at another factory at Clitheroe, about
+five miles distant, which last and two more were infected entirely
+from report, not having seen the other patients, but, like them
+and the rest of the country, strongly impressed with the idea of
+the plague being caught from the cotton. The symptoms were
+anxiety, strangulation, and very strong convulsions; and these
+were so violent as to last without any intermission from a quarter
+of an hour to twenty-four hours, and to require four or five
+persons to prevent the patients from tearing their hair and
+dashing their heads against the floor or walls. Dr. St. Clare had
+taken with him a portable electrical machine, and by electric
+shocks the patients were universally relieved without exception.
+As soon as the patients and the country were assured that the
+complaint was merely nervous, easily cured, and not introduced by
+the cotton, no fresh person was affected. To dissipate their
+apprehensions still further, the best effects were obtained by
+causing them to take a cheerful glass and join in a dance. On
+Tuesday the 20th, they danced, and the next day were all at work,
+except two or three, who were much weakened by their fits."
+
+The occurrence here described is remarkable on this account, that
+there was no important predisposing cause for convulsions in these
+young women, unless we consider as such their miserable and
+confined life in the work-rooms of a spinning manufactory. It did
+not arise from enthusiasm, nor is it stated that the patients had
+been the subject of any other nervous disorders. In another
+perfectly analogous case, those attacked were all suffering from
+nervous complaints, which roused a morbid sympathy in them at the
+sight of a person seized with convulsions. This, together with
+the supervention of hysterical fits, may aptly enough be compared
+to tarantism.
+
+2. "A young woman of the lowest order, twenty-one years of age,
+and of a strong frame, came on the 13th of January, 1801, to visit
+a patient in the Charite Hospital at Berlin, where she had herself
+been previously under treatment for an inflammation of the chest
+with tetanic spasms, and immediately on entering the ward, fell
+down in strong convulsions. At the sight of her violent
+contortions six other female patients immediately became affected
+in the same way, and by degrees eight more were in like manner
+attacked with strong convulsions. All these patients were from
+sixteen to twenty-five years of age, and suffered without
+exception, one from spasms in the stomach, another from palsy, a
+third from lethargy, a fourth from fits with consciousness, a
+fifth from catalepsy, a sixth from syncope, &c. The convulsions,
+which alternated in various ways with tonic spasms, were
+accompanied by loss of sensibility, and were invariably preceded
+by languor with heavy sleep, which was followed by the fits in the
+course of a minute or two; and it is remarkable that in all these
+patients their former nervous disorders, not excepting paralysis,
+disappeared, returning, however, after the subsequent removal of
+their new complaint. The treatment, during the course of which
+two of the nurses, who were young women, suffered similar attacks,
+was continued for four months. It was finally successful, and
+consisted principally in the administration of opium, at that time
+the favourite remedy.
+
+Now every species of enthusiasm, every strong affection, every
+violent passion, may lead to convulsions--to mental disorders--to
+a concussion of the nerves, from the sensorium to the very finest
+extremities of the spinal chord. The whole world is full of
+examples of this afflicting state of turmoil, which, when the mind
+is carried away by the force of a sensual impression that destroys
+its freedom, is irresistibly propagated by imitation. Those who
+are thus infected do not spare even their own lives, but as a
+hunted flock of sheep will follow their leader and rush over a
+precipice, so will whole hosts of enthusiasts, deluded by their
+infatuation, hurry on to a self-inflicted death. Such has ever
+been the case, from the days of the Milesian virgins to the modern
+associations for self-destruction. Of all enthusiastic
+infatuations, however, that of religion is the most fertile in
+disorders of the mind as well as of the body, and both spread with
+the greatest facility by sympathy. The history of the Church
+furnishes innumerable proofs of this, but we need go no further
+than the most recent times.
+
+3. In a methodist chapel at Redruth, a man during divine service
+cried out with a loud voice, "What shall I do to be saved?" at the
+same time manifesting the greatest uneasiness and solicitude
+respecting the condition of his soul. Some other members of the
+congregation, following his example, cried out in the same form of
+words, and seemed shortly after to suffer the most excruciating
+bodily pain. This strange occurrence was soon publicly known, and
+hundreds of people who had come thither, either attracted by
+curiosity or a desire from other motives to see the sufferers,
+fell into the same state. The chapel remained open for some days
+and nights, and from that point the new disorder spread itself,
+with the rapidity of lightning, over the neighbouring towns of
+Camborne, Helston, Truro, Penryn and Falmouth, as well as over the
+villages in the vicinity. Whilst thus advancing, it decreased in
+some measure at the place where it had first appeared, and it
+confined itself throughout to the Methodist chapels. It was only
+by the words which have been mentioned that it was excited, and it
+seized none but people of the lowest education. Those who were
+attacked betrayed the greatest anguish, and fell into convulsions;
+others cried out, like persons possessed, that the Almighty would
+straightway pour out His wrath upon them, that the wailings of
+tormented spirits rang in their ears, and that they saw hell open
+to receive them. The clergy, when in the course of their sermons
+they perceived that persons were thus seized, earnestly exhorted
+them to confess their sins, and zealously endeavoured to convince
+them that they were by nature enemies to Christ; that the anger of
+God had therefore fallen upon them; and that if death should
+surprise them in the midst of their sins the eternal torments of
+hell would be their portion. The over-excited congregation upon
+this repeated their words, which naturally must have increased the
+fury of their convulsive attacks. When the discourse had produced
+its full effect the preacher changed his subject; reminded those
+who were suffering of the power of the Saviour, as well as of the
+grace of God, and represented to them in glowing colours the joys
+of heaven. Upon this a remarkable reaction sooner or later took
+place. Those who were in convulsions felt themselves raised from
+the lowest depths of misery and despair to the most exalted bliss,
+and triumphantly shouted out that their bonds were loosed, their
+sins were forgiven, and that they were translated to the wonderful
+freedom of the children of God. In the meantime their convulsions
+continued, and they remained during this condition so abstracted
+from every earthly thought that they stayed two and sometimes
+three days and nights together in the chapels, agitated all the
+time by spasmodic movements, and taking neither repose nor
+nourishment. According to a moderate computation, 4,000 people
+were, within a very short time, affected with this convulsive
+malady.
+
+The course and symptoms of the attacks were in general as
+follows:- There came on at first a feeling of faintness, with
+rigour and a sense of weight at the pit of the stomach, soon after
+which the patient cried out, as if in the agonies of death or the
+pains of labour. The convulsions then began, first showing
+themselves in the muscles of the eyelids, though the eyes
+themselves were fixed and staring. The most frightful contortions
+of the countenance followed, and the convulsions now took their
+course downwards, so that the muscles of the neck and trunk were
+affected, causing a sobbing respiration, which was performed with
+great effort. Tremors and agitation ensued, and the patients
+screamed out violently, and tossed their heads about from side to
+side. As the complaint increased it seized the arms, and its
+victims beat their breasts, clasped their hands, and made all
+sorts of strange gestures. The observer who gives this account
+remarked that the lower extremities were in no instance affected.
+In some cases exhaustion came on in a very few minutes, but the
+attack usually lasted much longer, and there were even cases in
+which it was known to continue for sixty or seventy hours. Many
+of those who happened to be seated when the attack commenced bent
+their bodies rapidly backwards and forwards during its
+continuance, making a corresponding motion with their arms, like
+persons sawing wood. Others shouted aloud, leaped about, and
+threw their bodies into every possible posture, until they had
+exhausted their strength. Yawning took place at the commencement
+in all cases, but as the violence of the disorder increased the
+circulation and respiration became accelerated, so that the
+countenance assumed a swollen and puffed appearance. When
+exhaustion came on patients usually fainted, and remained in a
+stiff and motionless state until their recovery. The disorder
+completely resembled the St. Vitus's dance, but the fits sometimes
+went on to an extraordinarily violent extent, so that the author
+of the account once saw a woman who was seized with these
+convulsions resist the endeavours of four or five strong men to
+restrain her. Those patients who did not lose their consciousness
+were in general made more furious by every attempt to quiet them
+by force, on which account they were in general suffered to
+continue unmolested until nature herself brought on exhaustion.
+Those affected complained more or less of debility after the
+attacks, and cases sometimes occurred in which they passed into
+other disorders; thus some fell into a state of melancholy, which,
+however, in consequence of their religious ecstasy, was
+distinguished by the absence of fear and despair; and in one
+patient inflammation of the brain is said to have taken place. No
+sex or age was exempt from this epidemic malady. Children five
+years old and octogenarians were alike affected by it, and even
+men of the most powerful frame were subject to its influence.
+Girls and young women, however, were its most frequent victims.
+
+4. For the last hundred years a nervous affection of a perfectly
+similar kind has existed in the Shetland Islands, which furnishes
+a striking example, perhaps the only one now existing, of the very
+lasting propagation by sympathy of this species of disorders. The
+origin of the malady was very insignificant. An epileptic woman
+had a fit in church, and whether it was that the minds of the
+congregation were excited by devotion, or that, being overcome at
+the sight of the strong convulsions, their sympathy was called
+forth, certain it is that many adult women, and even children,
+some of whom were of the male sex, and not more than six years
+old, began to complain forthwith of palpitation, followed by
+faintness, which passed into a motionless and apparently
+cataleptic condition. These symptoms lasted more than an hour,
+and probably recurred frequently. In the course of time, however,
+this malady is said to have undergone a modification, such as it
+exhibits at the present day. Women whom it has attacked will
+suddenly fall down, toss their arms about, writhe their bodies
+into various shapes, move their heads suddenly from side to side,
+and with eyes fixed and staring, utter the most dismal cries. If
+the fit happen on any occasion of pubic diversion, they will, as
+soon as it has ceased, mix with their companions and continue
+their amusement as if nothing had happened. Paroxysms of this
+kind used to prevail most during the warm months of summer, and
+about fifty years ago there was scarcely a Sabbath in which they
+did not occur. Strong passions of the mind, induced by religious
+enthusiasm, are also exciting causes of these fits, but like all
+such false tokens of divine workings, they are easily encountered
+by producing in the patient a different frame of mind, and
+especially by exciting a sense of shame: thus those affected are
+under the control of any sensible preacher, who knows how to
+"administer to a mind diseased," and to expose the folly of
+voluntarily yielding to a sympathy so easily resisted, or of
+inviting such attacks by affectation. An intelligent and pious
+minister of Shetland informed the physician, who gives an account
+of this disorder as an eye-witness, that being considerably
+annoyed on his first introduction into the country by these
+paroxysms, whereby the devotions of the church were much impeded,
+he obviated their repetition by assuring his parishioners that no
+treatment was more effectual than immersion in cold water; and as
+his kirk was fortunately contiguous to a freshwater lake, he gave
+notice that attendants should be at hand during divine service to
+ensure the proper means of cure. The sequel need scarcely be
+told. The fear of being carried out of the church, and into the
+water, acted like a charm; not a single Naiad was made, and the
+worthy minister for many years had reason to boast of one of the
+best regulated congregations in Scotland. As the physician above
+alluded to was attending divine service in the kirk of Baliasta,
+on the Isle of Unst, a female shriek, the indication of a
+convulsion fit, was heard; the minister, Mr. Ingram, of Fetlar,
+very properly stopped his discourse until the disturber was
+removed; and after advising all those who thought they might be
+similarly affected to leave the church, he gave out in the
+meantime a psalm. The congregation was thus preserved from
+further interruption; yet the effect of sympathy was not
+prevented, for as the narrator of the account was leaving the
+church he saw several females writhing and tossing about their
+arms on the green grass, who durst not, for fear of a censure from
+the pulpit, exhibit themselves after this manner within the sacred
+walls of the kirk.
+
+In the production of this disorder, which no doubt still exists,
+fanaticism certainly had a smaller share than the irritable state
+of women out of health, who only needed excitement, no matter of
+what kind, to throw them into prevailing nervous paroxysms. When,
+however, that powerful cause of nervous disorders takes the lead,
+we find far more remarkable symptoms developed, and it then
+depends on the mental condition of the people among whom they
+appear whether in their spread they shall take a narrow or an
+extended range--whether confined to some small knot of zealots
+they are to vanish without a trace, or whether they are to attain
+even historical importance.
+
+5. The appearance of the Convulsionnaires in France, whose
+inhabitants, from the greater mobility of their blood, have in
+general been the less liable to fanaticism, is in this respect
+instructive and worthy of attention. In the year 1727 there died
+in the capital of that country the Deacon Paris, a zealous opposer
+of the Ultramontanists, division having arisen in the French
+Church on account of the bull "Unigenitus." People made frequent
+visits to his tomb in the cemetery of St. Medard, and four years
+afterwards (in September, 1731) a rumour was spread that miracles
+took place there. Patients were seized with convulsions and
+tetanic spasms, rolled upon the ground like persons possessed,
+were thrown into violent contortions of their heads and limbs, and
+suffered the greatest oppression, accompanied by quickness and
+irregularity of pulse. This novel occurrence excited the greatest
+sensation all over Paris, and an immense concourse of people
+resorted daily to the above-named cemetery in order to see so
+wonderful a spectacle, which the Ultramontanists immediately
+interpreted as a work of Satan, while their opponents ascribed it
+to a divine influence. The disorder soon increased, until it
+produced, in nervous women, clairvoyance (Schlafwachen), a
+phenomenon till then unknown; for one female especially attracted
+attention, who, blindfold, and, as it was believed, by means of
+the sense of smell, read every writing that was placed before her,
+and distinguished the characters of unknown persons. The very
+earth taken from the grave of the Deacon was soon thought to
+possess miraculous power. It was sent to numerous sick persons at
+a distance, whereby they were said to have been cured, and thus
+this nervous disorder spread far beyond the limits of the capital,
+so that at one time it was computed that there were more than
+eight hundred decided Convulsionnaires, who would hardly have
+increased so much in numbers had not Louis XV directed that the
+cemetery should be closed. The disorder itself assumed various
+forms, and augmented by its attacks the general excitement. Many
+persons, besides suffering from the convulsions, became the
+subjects of violent pain, which required the assistance of their
+brethren of the faith. On this account they, as well as those who
+afforded them aid, were called by the common title of Secourists.
+The modes of relief adopted were remarkably in accordance with
+those which were administered to the St. John's dancers and the
+Tarantati, and they were in general very rough; for the sufferers
+were beaten and goaded in various parts of the body with stones,
+hammers, swords, clubs, &c., of which treatment the defenders of
+this extraordinary sect relate the most astonishing examples in
+proof that severe pain is imperatively demanded by nature in this
+disorder as an effectual counter-irritant. The Secourists used
+wooden clubs in the same manner as paviors use their mallets, and
+it is stated that some Convulsionnaires have borne daily from six
+to eight thousand blows thus inflicted without danger. One
+Secourist administered to a young woman who was suffering under
+spasm of the stomach the most violent blows on that part, not to
+mention other similar cases which occurred everywhere in great
+numbers. Sometimes the patients bounded from the ground, impelled
+by the convulsions, like fish when out of water; and this was so
+frequently imitated at a later period that the women and girls,
+when they expected such violent contortions, not wishing to appear
+indecent, put on gowns make like sacks, closed at the feet. If
+they received any bruises by falling down they were healed with
+earth from the grave of the uncanonised saint. They usually,
+however, showed great agility in this respect, and it is scarcely
+necessary to remark that the female sex especially was
+distinguished by all kinds of leaping and almost inconceivable
+contortions of body. Some spun round on their feet with
+incredible rapidity, as is related of the dervishes; others ran
+their heads against walls, or curved their bodies like rope-
+dancers, so that their heels touched their shoulders.
+
+All this degenerated at length into decided insanity. A certain
+Convulsionnaire, at Vernon, who had formerly led rather a loose
+course of life, employed herself in confessing the other sex; in
+other places women of this sect were seen imposing exercises of
+penance on priests, during which these were compelled to kneel
+before them. Others played with children's rattles, or drew about
+small carts, and gave to these childish acts symbolical
+significations. One Convulsionnaire even made believe to shave
+her chin, and gave religious instruction at the same time, in
+order to imitate Paris, the worker of miracles, who, during this
+operation, and whilst at table, was in the habit of preaching.
+Some had a board placed across their bodies, upon which a whole
+row of men stood; and as, in this unnatural state of mind, a kind
+of pleasure is derived from excruciating pain, some too were seen
+who caused their bosoms to be pinched with tongs, while others,
+with gowns closed at the feet, stood upon their heads, and
+remained in that position longer than would have been possible had
+they been in health. Pinault, the advocate, who belonged to this
+sect, barked like a dog some hours every day, and even this found
+imitation among the believers.
+
+The insanity of the Convulsionnaires lasted without interruption
+until the year 1790, and during these fifty-nine years called
+forth more lamentable phenomena that the enlightened spirits of
+the eighteenth century would be willing to allow. The grossest
+immorality found in the secret meetings of the believers a sure
+sanctuary, and in their bewildering devotional exercises a
+convenient cloak. It was of no avail that, in the year 1762, the
+Grand Secours was forbidden by act of parliament; for thenceforth
+this work was carried on in secrecy, and with greater zeal than
+ever; it was in vain, too, that some physicians, and among the
+rest the austere, pious Hecquet, and after him Lorry, attributed
+the conduct of the Convulsionnaires to natural causes. Men of
+distinction among the upper classes, as, for instance, Montgeron
+the deputy, and Lambert an ecclesiastic (obt. 1813), stood forth
+as the defenders of this sect; and the numerous writings which
+were exchanged on the subject served, by the importance which they
+thus attached to it, to give it stability. The revolution finally
+shook the structure of this pernicious mysticism. It was not,
+however, destroyed; for even during the period of the greatest
+excitement the secret meetings were still kept up; prophetic
+books, by Convulsionnaires of various denominations, have appeared
+even in the most recent times, and only a few years ago (in 1828)
+this once celebrated sect still existed, although without the
+convulsions and the extraordinarily rude aid of the brethren of
+the faith, which, amidst the boasted pre-eminence of French
+intellectual advancement, remind us most forcibly of the dark ages
+of the St. John's dancers.
+
+6. Similar fanatical sects exhibit among all nations of ancient
+and modern times the same phenomena. An overstrained bigotry is
+in itself, and considered in a medical point of view, a
+destructive irritation of the senses, which draws men away from
+the efficiency of mental freedom, and peculiarly favours the most
+injurious emotions. Sensual ebullitions, with strong convulsions
+of the nerves, appear sooner or later, and insanity, suicidal
+disgust of life, and incurable nervous disorders, are but too
+frequently the consequences of a perverse, and, indeed,
+hypocritical zeal, which has ever prevailed, as well in the
+assemblies of the Maenades and Corybantes of antiquity as under
+the semblance of religion among the Christians and Mahomedans.
+
+There are some denominations of English Methodists which surpass,
+if possible, the French Convulsionnaires; and we may here mention
+in particular the Jumpers, among whom it is still more difficult
+than in the example given above to draw the line between religious
+ecstasy and a perfect disorder of the nerves; sympathy, however,
+operates perhaps more perniciously on them than on other fanatical
+assemblies. The sect of Jumpers was founded in the year 1760, in
+the county of Cornwall, by two fanatics, who were, even at that
+time, able to collect together a considerable party. Their
+general doctrine is that of the Methodists, and claims our
+consideration here only in so far as it enjoins them during their
+devotional exercises to fall into convulsions, which they are able
+to effect in the strangest manner imaginable. By the use of
+certain unmeaning words they work themselves up into a state of
+religious frenzy, in which they seem to have scarcely any control
+over their senses. They then begin to jump with strange gestures,
+repeating this exercise with all their might until they are
+exhausted, so that it not unfrequently happens that women who,
+like the Maenades, practise these religious exercises, are carried
+away from the midst of them in a state of syncope, whilst the
+remaining members of the congregations, for miles together, on
+their way home, terrify those whom they meet by the sight of such
+demoniacal ravings. There are never more than a few ecstatics,
+who, by their example, excite the rest to jump, and these are
+followed by the greatest part of the meeting, so that these
+assemblages of the Jumpers resemble for hours together the wildest
+orgies, rather than congregations met for Christian edification.
+
+In the United States of North America communities of Methodists
+have existed for the last sixty years. The reports of credible
+witnesses of their assemblages for divine service in the open air
+(camp meetings), to which many thousands flock from great
+distances, surpass, indeed, all belief; for not only do they there
+repeat all the insane acts of the French Convulsionnaires and of
+the English Jumpers, but the disorder of their minds and of their
+nerves attains at these meetings a still greater height. Women
+have been seen to miscarry whilst suffering under the state of
+ecstasy and violent spasms into which they are thrown, and others
+have publicly stripped themselves and jumped into the rivers.
+They have swooned away by hundreds, worn out with ravings and
+fits; and of the Barkers, who appeared among the Convulsionnaires
+only here and there, in single cases of complete aberration of
+intellect, whole bands are seen running on all fours, and growling
+as if they wished to indicate, even by their outward form, the
+shocking degradation of their human nature. At these camp-
+meetings the children are witnesses of this mad infatuation, and
+as their weak nerves are with the greatest facility affected by
+sympathy, they, together with their parents, fall into violent
+fits, though they know nothing of their import, and many of them
+retain for life some severe nervous disorder which, having arisen
+from fright and excessive excitement, will not afterwards yield to
+any medical treatment.
+
+But enough of these extravagances, which even in our now days
+embitter the live of so many thousands, and exhibit to the world
+in the nineteenth century the same terrific form of mental
+disturbance as the St. Vitus's dance once did to the benighted
+nations of the Middle Ages.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg eText of The Black Death and The Dancing Mania
+by Hecker
+