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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Doctor in History, Literature,
+Folk-Lore, Etc., ed. by William Andrews
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Doctor in History, Literature, Folk-Lore, Etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Andrews
+
+Release Date: April 23, 2012 [EBook #39514]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DOCTOR IN HISTORY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DOCTOR.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY VIII. RECEIVING THE BARBER-SURGEONS.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE DOCTOR IN HISTORY,
+ LITERATURE, FOLK-LORE, ETC.
+
+
+ EDITED BY
+ WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.,
+ AUTHOR OF "BYGONE ENGLAND,"
+ "OLD CHURCH LORE," ETC.
+
+
+ HULL:
+ WILLIAM ANDREWS & CO., THE HULL PRESS.
+ LONDON:
+ SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT, & CO., LTD.
+
+ 1896.
+
+
+
+
+Preface.
+
+
+In the following pages I have attempted to bring together from the pens of
+several authors who have written expressly for this book, the more
+interesting phases of the history, literature, folk-lore, etc., of the
+medical profession.
+
+If the same welcome be given to this work as was accorded to those I have
+previously produced, my labours will not have been in vain.
+
+WILLIAM ANDREWS.
+
+ THE HULL PRESS,
+ HULL, _November 11th, 1895_.
+
+
+
+
+Contents.
+
+
+ BARBER-SURGEONS. By William Andrews, F.R.H.S. 1
+
+ TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL. By William Andrews, F.R.H.S. 8
+
+ VISITING PATIENTS 22
+
+ ASSAYING MEAT AND DRINK. By William Andrews, F.R.H.S. 24
+
+ THE GOLD-HEADED CANE. By Tom Robinson, M.D. 32
+
+ MAGIC AND MEDICINE. By Cuming Walters 42
+
+ CHAUCER'S DOCTOR OF PHYSIC. By W. H. Thompson 70
+
+ THE DOCTORS SHAKESPEARE KNEW. By A. H. Wall 76
+
+ DICKENS' DOCTORS. By Thomas Frost 90
+
+ FAMOUS LITERARY DOCTORS. By Cuming Walters 102
+
+ THE "DOCTOR" IN TIME OF PESTILENCE. By William E. A.
+ Axon, F.R.S.L. 125
+
+ MOUNTEBANKS AND MEDICINE. By Thomas Frost 140
+
+ THE STRANGE STORY OF THE FIGHT WITH THE SMALL-POX.
+ By Thomas Frost 153
+
+ BURKERS AND BODY-SNATCHERS. By Thomas Frost 167
+
+ REMINISCENCES OF THE CHOLERA. By Thomas Frost 181
+
+ SOME OLD DOCTORS. By Mrs. G. Linnĉus Banks 192
+
+ THE LEE PENNY 209
+
+ HOW OUR FATHERS WERE PHYSICKED. By J. A. Langford, LL.D. 216
+
+ MEDICAL FOLK-LORE. By John Nicholson 234
+
+ OF PHYSICIANS AND THEIR FEES, with some Personal
+ Reminiscences. By Andrew James Symington, F.R.S.N.A. 252
+
+ INDEX 285
+
+
+
+
+THE DOCTOR IN HISTORY, LITERATURE, AND FOLK-LORE.
+
+
+
+
+Barber-Surgeons.
+
+BY WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.
+
+
+The calling of the barber is of great antiquity. We find in the Book of
+the Prophet Ezekiel (v. 1) allusions to the Jewish custom of the barber
+shaving the head as a sign of mourning.
+
+In the remote past the art of surgery and the trade of barber were
+combined. It is clear that in all parts of the civilized world, in bygone
+times, the barber acted as a kind of surgeon, or to state his position
+more precisely, he practised phlebotomy.
+
+Barbers appear to have gained their experience from the monks whom they
+assisted in surgical operations. The clergy up to about the twelfth
+century had the care of men's bodies as well as of their souls, and
+practised surgery and medicine. The operations of surgery involved the
+shedding of blood, and it was felt that this was incompatible with the
+functions of the clergy. After much consideration and discussion, in 1163
+the council of Tours, under Pope Alexander III., forbade the clergy to act
+as surgeons, but they were permitted to dispense medicine.
+
+The edict of Tours must have given satisfaction to the barbers, and they
+were not slow to avail themselves of the opportunities the change afforded
+them. In London, and we presume in other places, the barbers advertised
+their blood-letting in a most objectionable manner. It was customary to
+put blood in their windows to attract the attention of the public. An
+ordinance was passed in 1307, directing the barbers to have the blood
+"privily carried into the Thames under pain of paying two shillings to the
+use of the Sheriffs."
+
+At an early period in London the barbers were banded together, and a gild
+was formed. In the first instance it seems that the chief object was the
+bringing together of the members at religious observances. They attended
+the funerals and obits of deceased members and their wives. Eventually it
+was transformed into a semi-social and religious gild, and subsequently
+became a trade gild.
+
+In 1308, Richard le Barber, the first master of the Barbers' Company, was
+sworn at the Guildhall, London. As time progressed, the London Company of
+Barbers increased in importance.
+
+In the first year of the reign of Edward IV. (1462) the barbers were
+incorporated by a royal charter, and it was confirmed by succeeding
+monarchs.
+
+A change of title occurred in 1540, and it was then named the Company of
+Barber-Surgeons. Holbein painted a picture of Henry VIII. and the
+Barber-Surgeons. The painting is still preserved, and may be seen at the
+Barber-Surgeons' Hall, Monkwell Street, London. We give a carefully
+executed wood engraving of the celebrated picture. Pepys calls this "not a
+pleasant though a good picture." It is the largest and last painting of
+Holbein. In the _Leisure Hour_ for September 1895, are some interesting
+details respecting it, that are well worth reproducing. "It is painted,"
+we are told, "on vertical oak boards, being 5ft. 11in. high by 10ft. 2in.
+long. It seems to have been begun about 1541, and finished after
+Holbein's death in 1543, and it has evidently been altered since its first
+delivery. The tablet, for instance, was not always in the background, for
+the old engraving in the College of Surgeons has a window in its place,
+showing the old tower of St. Bride's, and thus indicating Bridewell as the
+site of the ceremony. The outermost figure to the left, too, is omitted,
+and, according to some critics, the back row of heads are all
+post-Holbeinic. The names over the heads appear to have been added in
+Charles I.'s time, and it is significant that only two portraits in the
+back row are so distinguished." The king is represented wearing his robes,
+and is seated on a chair of state, holding erect his sword of state, and
+about him are the leading members of the fraternity. "The men whose
+portraits appear in the picture," says the _Leisure Hour_, "are not
+nonentities. The first figure to the king's right, with his hands in his
+gown, is Dr. John Chambre, king's physician, Fellow and Warden of Merton,
+and happy in his multitudinous appointments, both clerical and lay. Behind
+him is the Doctor Butts of Shakespeare's 'Henry VIII.'--the Sir William
+Butts who was the king's and Princess Mary's physician, and whose wife is
+known by Holbein's splendid portrait of her. Behind Butts is Alsop, the
+king's apothecary. To the king's left the first figure is Thomas Vicary,
+surgeon to Bartholomew's Hospital, serjeant-surgeon to the king, and
+author of 'The Anatomie of the Bodie of Man.' Next to him is Sir John
+Ayleff, an exceptionally good portrait. Then come in the undernamed:
+Nicholas Simpson, Edmund Harman (one of the witnesses to the king's will),
+James Monforde (who gave the company the silver hammer still used by the
+Master in presiding at the courts), John Pen (another fine portrait),
+Nicholas Alcocke, and Richard Ferris (also serjeant-surgeon to the king).
+In the back row the only names given are those of Christopher Salmond and
+William Tilley."
+
+In the reign of Henry VIII. an enactment as follows was in force:--"No
+person using any shaving or barbery in London shall occupy any surgery,
+letting of blood, or other matter, except of drawing teeth." Laws were
+made, but they could not be, or at all events were not, enforced. Disputes
+were frequent. The barbers acted often as surgeons, and the surgeons
+increased their income by the use of the razor and shears. At this period
+vigorous attempts were made to confine each to their legitimate work.
+
+The barber's pole, it is said, owes its origin to the barber-surgeons.
+Much has been written on this topic, but we believe that the following are
+the facts of the matter. We know that in the days of old bleeding was a
+frequent occurrence, and during the operation the patient used to grasp a
+staff, stick, or pole which the barber-surgeon kept ready for use, and
+round it was bound a supply of bandages for tying the arm of the patient.
+The pole, when not in use, was hung at the door as a sign. In course of
+time a painted pole was displayed instead of that used in the operation.
+
+Lord Thurlow addressing the House of Lords, July 17th, 1797, stated, "by a
+statute, still in force, barbers and surgeons were each to use a pole [as
+a sign]. The barbers were to have theirs blue and white, striped, with no
+other appendage; but the surgeons', which was to be the same in other
+respects, was likewise to have a gully-pot and a red rag, to denote the
+particular nature of their vocations."
+
+The Rev. J. L. Saywell has a note on bleeding in his "History and Annals
+of Northallerton" (1885):--"Towards the early part of this century,"
+observes Mr. Saywell, "a singular custom prevailed in the town and
+neighbourhood of Northallerton (Yorkshire). In the spring of the year
+nearly all the robust male adults, and occasionally females, repaired to a
+surgeon to be bled, a process which they considered essentially conduced
+to vigorous health." The charge for the operation was one shilling.
+
+Parliament was petitioned, in 1542, praying that surgeons might be exempt
+from bearing arms and serving on juries, and thus be enabled without
+hindrance to attend to their professional duties. The request was granted,
+and to the present time medical men enjoy the privileges granted so long
+ago.
+
+In 1745, the surgeons and the barbers separated by Act of Parliament. The
+barber-surgeons lingered for a long time, the last in London, named
+Middleditch, of Great Suffolk Street, in the Borough, only dying in 1821.
+Mr. John Timbs, the popular writer, left on record that he had a vivid
+recollection of Middleditch's dentistry.
+
+
+
+
+Touching for the King's Evil.
+
+BY WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.
+
+
+The practice of touching for the cure of scrofula--a disease more
+generally known as king's evil--prevailed for a long period in England.
+Edward the Confessor who reigned from 1042 to 1066, appears to be the
+first monarch in this country who employed this singular mode of
+treatment.
+
+About a century after the death of Edward the Confessor, William of
+Malmesbury compiled his "Chronicle of the Kings of England," and in this
+work is the earliest allusion to the subject. Holinshed has placed on
+record some interesting details respecting Edward the Confessor. "As it
+has been thought," says Holinshed, in writing of the king, "he was
+inspired with the gift of prophecy, and also to have the gift of healing
+infirmities and disease commonly called the king's evil, and left that
+virtue, as it were, a portion of inheritance to his successors, the kings
+of this realm." The first edition of the "Chronicle" was published in
+1577, and from it Shakespeare drew much material for his historical
+dramas. There is an allusion to this singular superstition in _Macbeth_,
+which it will be interesting to reproduce.
+
+Malcolm and Macduff are in England, "in a room in the King's palace" (the
+palace of King Edward the Confessor):--
+
+ "_Malcolm._ Comes the King forth I pray you?
+
+ _Doctor._ Aye, sir! There are a crew of wretched souls
+ That stay his cure: their malady convinces
+ The great assay of art; but at his touch--
+ Such sanctity hath heaven given his hand--
+ They presently amend.
+
+ _Malcolm._ I thank you, Doctor.
+
+ _Macduff._ What's the disease he means?
+
+ _Malcolm._ 'Tis called the evil:
+ A most miraculous work in this good King;
+ Which often, since my here-remain in England,
+ I've seen him do. How he solicits heaven,
+ Himself best knows: but strangely visited people
+ All swoln and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,
+ The mere despair of surgery, he cures,
+ Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,
+ Put on with holy prayers: and 'tis spoken,
+ To the succeeding royalty he leaves
+ The healing benediction. With this strange virtue,
+ He hath a heavenly gift of prophecy,
+ And sundry blessings hang about his throne
+ That speak him full of grace."
+
+History does not furnish any facts respecting touching by the four kings
+of the House of Normandy. It is generally believed that the Norman
+monarchs did not practise the rite.
+
+Henry II., the first of the Plantagenet line, emulated the Confessor. We
+know this fact from a record made by Peter of Blois, the royal chaplain,
+in which it is clearly stated that the king performed certain cures by
+touch. John of Gaddesden, in the days of Edward II., wrote a treatise in
+which he gave instructions for several modes of treatment for the disease,
+and if they failed, recommended the sufferers to seek cure by royal touch.
+Bradwardine, Archbishop of Canterbury, lived in the reigns of Edward III.
+and Richard II., and from his statements we learn that both kings kept up
+the observance.
+
+Henry IV., the first king of the House of Lancaster, touched for the evil.
+This we learn from a "Defence to the title of House of Lancaster," written
+by Sir John Fortesque, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench. He
+speaks of the practice as "belonging to the kings of England from time
+immemorial." This pamphlet is preserved among the Cottonian manuscripts in
+the British Museum.
+
+The earliest king of the House of Tudor, Henry VII., was the first to give
+a small gold piece, known as a touch-piece, to those undergoing the
+ceremony.
+
+During the reign of the next monarch, Henry VIII., little attention
+appears to have been given to the subject. It was at this period largely
+practised in France. Cardinal Wolsey, when at the Court of Francis I., in
+1527, witnessed the king touch two hundred people. On Easter Sunday, 1686,
+Louis XIV. is recorded to have touched 1,600. He used these words:--"_Le
+Roy te touche, Dieu te guéisse._" ("The King touches thee. May God cure
+thee!")
+
+Coming back to the history of our own country, and dealing with the more
+interesting passages bearing on this theme, we find that in the reign of
+Queen Elizabeth, William Clowes, the Court Surgeon, believed firmly in the
+efficacy of the royal touch. "The king's queen's evil," he says, "is a
+disease repugnant to nature, which grievous malady is known to be
+miraculously cured and healed by the sacred hands of the Queen's most
+Royal Majesty, even by Divine inspiration and wonderful work and power of
+God, above man's will, act, and expectation." In this reign, under the
+title of "_Charisma; sive Donum Sanationis_," a book was published by
+William Fookes bearing testimony to the cures effected by royal touch on
+all sorts and conditions of people from various parts of the country.
+
+The Stuarts paid particular attention to the practice. No fewer than
+eleven proclamations published during the reign of Charles I. are
+preserved at the State Paper Office, and chiefly relate to the times the
+afflicted might attend the court to receive the royal touch. In course of
+time the king's pecuniary means became limited, and he was unable to
+present gold touch-pieces, so silver was substituted, and many received
+the rite of touch only.
+
+During the Commonwealth we have not any trace of Cromwell touching for the
+malady. During the rising in the West of England, the Duke of Monmouth,
+who claimed to be the rightful heir to the throne, touched several persons
+for the evil, and, said a newspaper of the time, with success. One of the
+charges made against him on his trial at Edinburgh for high treason, was,
+that he had "touched children of the King's Evil." Two witnesses proved
+the charge, having witnessed the ceremony at Taunton.
+
+No sooner had another Stuart obtained the English crown than the ceremony
+was again performed. During the first year of the reign of Charles II.,
+six thousand seven hundred and twenty-five persons were brought to His
+Majesty to be healed. The ceremony was often performed on a Sunday. Evelyn
+and Pepys were witnesses of these proceedings, and in their Diaries have
+recorded interesting particulars. Under date of 6th July, 1660, "His
+Majesty," writes Evelyn, "began first to touch for ye evil, according to
+custome thus: Sitting under his state in the Banqueting House, the
+chirurgeons cause the sick to be brought or led up to the throne, where,
+they kneeling, ye king strokes their faces and cheeks with both his hands
+at once, at which instant a chaplaine in his fermalities says:--'He put
+his hands upon them and healed them.' This he said to every one in
+particular. When they have been all totched, they come up again in the
+same order; and the other chaplaine kneeling, and having an angel of gold
+strung on white ribbon on his arme, delivers them one by one to His
+Majestie, who puts them about the necks of the touched as they passe,
+while the first chaplaine repeats 'That is ye true light which came into
+ye world.' Then follows an epistle (as at first a gospel) with the
+liturgy, prayers for the sick, with some alteration, and then the Lord
+Chamberlain and the Comptroller of the Household bring a basin, ewer, and
+towel, for his Majesty to wash."
+
+Samuel Pepys witnessed the ceremony on April 13th, 1661, and refers to it
+in his Diary. "Went to the Banquet House, and there saw the King heal, the
+first time I ever saw him do it, which he did with great gravity, and it
+seemed to me to be an ugly office and a simple one."
+
+In Evelyn's Diary on March 28th, 1684, there is a record of a serious
+accident, "There was," he writes, "so great a concourse of people with
+their children to be touched for the evil, that six or seven were crushed
+to death by pressing at the chirurgeon's door for tickets."
+
+According to Macaulay, Charles II. during his reign touched nearly a
+hundred thousand persons. In the year 1682 he performed the rite eight
+thousand five hundred times.
+
+No person was allowed to enter the King's presence for the purpose of
+receiving the rite without first obtaining a certificate from the minister
+of his parish from whence he came, nor unless he had not previously been
+touched. A proclamation of Charles II., dated January 9th, 1683, ordered a
+register of the certificates to be made. Here is a record drawn from the
+Old Town's Book of Birmingham:--
+
+ "March 14th, 1683, Elizabeth, daughter of John and Anne Dickens, of
+ Birmingham, in the county of Warwick, was certified for in order to
+ obtayne his Majesty's touch for her cure.
+
+ HENRY GROVE, Minister.
+ JOHN BIRCH, }
+ HENRY PATER, } Churchwardens."
+
+We cull from the churchwardens' accounts of Terling, Essex, the following
+item:--
+
+ "1683 Dec{r}. Pd. for his Majestie's order for touching 00.00.06."
+
+A page in the register book of Bisley, Surrey, is headed thus,
+"Certificates for the Evill commonly called the kings Evill." Two entries
+occur as follow:--
+
+ "Elizabeth Collier and Thomas Collier the children of Thomas Collier,
+ Senior, had a certificate from the minister and churchwardens of
+ Bisley, August 7th 1686."
+
+ "Sarah Massey, the daughter of Richard Massey, had a certificate from
+ the minister and churchwardens of Bisley, 1st April 1688."
+
+Old parish accounts often contain entries similar to the following, from
+Ecclesfield, Yorkshire:--
+
+ "1641. Given to John Parkin wife towards her
+ trauell to London to get cure of his Matie.
+ for the disease called Euill which her
+ soone Thom is visited withall 0. 6. 8."
+
+"The following extracts," says a contributor to _The Reliquary_ of
+January, 1894, "from the Minute Books of the Corporation of the city of
+York, show that general belief in the virtue of the touching by the King
+was unshaken at the end of the seventeenth century. It must be borne in
+mind that these Minutes do not record the acts of individuals, but were
+those of the Corporation of what was at that time one of the most
+important cities in the country, and that it was in administering Poor Law
+Relief that the grants were made.
+
+In Vol. 38 of the Corporation Records, fo. 74b, under the date of February
+28th, 1671, is the following:--
+
+ "Ordered that Elizabeth Trevis haue x{s} given her for charges in
+ carrying her daughter to London to be touched for the Evill."
+
+A few years later, on March 12th, 1678 (fo. 156b), occurs the
+following:--
+
+ "Anne Thornton to haue x{s} for goeing to London to be touched for the
+ euill."
+
+And again on March 3, 1687 (fo. 249b), ten shillings was granted for
+"carrying of Judith Gibbons & her Child & one Dorothy Browne to London to
+be touched by his Majestie in order to be healed of the Kings Evil."
+
+The Records of the Corporation of Preston, Lancashire, contain at least
+two references to this matter. In the year 1682 the bailiffs were
+instructed to "pay unto James Harrison, bricklayer, 10s. towards carrying
+his son to London, in order to the procuring of His Majesty's touch."
+
+Five years later, when James II. was at Chester, the council passed a vote
+that "the Bailiff pay unto the persons undermentioned each of them 5s.
+towards their charge in going to Chester to get his Majesty's
+touch:--Anne, daughter of Abel Mope; ---- daughter Richard Letmore."
+
+It is recorded that James II. touched eight hundred persons in the choir
+of the Cathedral of Chester.
+
+The ceremony cost, we learn from Macaulay, about £10,000 a year, and the
+amount would have been much greater but for the vigilance of the royal
+surgeons, whose business it was to examine the applicants, and to
+distinguish those who came for the cure, and those who came for the gold.
+
+William III. declined to have anything to do with a ceremony he regarded
+as an imposture. "It is a silly superstition," he said, when he heard that
+at the close of Lent his palace was besieged by a crowd of sick. "Give the
+poor creatures some money, and send them away." On one occasion only was
+he induced to lay his hand on a sufferer. "God give you better health," he
+said, "and more sense."
+
+The next to wear the crown was Queen Anne, and she revived the rite. In
+the _London Gazette_ of March 12th, 1712, appeared an official
+announcement that the queen intended to touch for the evil. In Lent of
+that year, Dr. Johnson, then a child, went up to London with his mother in
+the stage coach that he might have the benefit of the royal touch. He was
+then between two and three years of age. "His mother," writes Boswell,
+"yielding to the superstitious notion which, it is wonderful to think,
+prevailed so long in this country as to the virtue of regal touch (a
+notion to which a man of such inquiry and such judgment as Carte, the
+historian, could give credit), carried him to London, where he was
+actually touched by Queen Anne. Mrs. Johnson, indeed, as Mr. Hector
+informed me, acted by the advice of the celebrated Sir John Floyer, then a
+physician in Lichfield. Johnson used to talk of this very frankly, and
+Mrs. Piozzi has preserved his very picturesque description of the scene as
+it remained upon his fancy. Being asked if he could remember Queen Anne,
+'He had,' he said, 'a confused but somehow a sort of solemn recollection
+of a lady in diamonds and a long black hood.' This touch, however, was
+without any effect." The malady remained with Dr. Johnson to his death.
+
+[Illustration: TOUCH-PIECE OF CHARLES II. (GOLD).]
+
+After the death of Queen Anne, no other English sovereign kept up the
+custom, although the service remained in the "Book of Common Prayer" as
+late as 1719.
+
+The latest instance we have found of the ceremony being performed was in
+October, 1745, when Charles Edward, at Holyrood House, touched a child.
+
+[Illustration: (GOLD). TOUCH-PIECES OF JAMES II. (SILVER).]
+
+In the preceding pages we have referred to "touch pieces," and it will not
+be without interest to direct attention to some of the more notable
+examples. A small sum of money was given by Edward I., and it has been
+suggested that it was probably presented in the form of alms. Henry VII.
+gave a small gold coin known as the angel noble. It was of about six
+shillings and eight pence in value, and was a current coin of the period,
+and the smallest gold coin issued. On one side of the coin was a figure of
+the angel Michael overcoming the dragon, and on the other a ship on the
+waves. During the residence of Charles II. on the continent, those who
+visited him to receive the royal rite had to give him gold, but after the
+Restoration, "touch-pieces" were made expressly for presentation at the
+healings. They were small gold medals resembling angels, but they were not
+equal in value to the angels previously given. However they met a want
+when gold was in great demand. James II. had two kinds of touch pieces,
+one of gold and the other of silver, but they were not half the size of
+those given by Charles II. Queen Anne gave a touch-piece a little larger
+than that of James II. The touch-piece presented by this Queen to Dr.
+Johnson may, with other specimens, be seen in the British Museum.
+
+[Illustration: TOUCH-PIECE OF ANNE (GOLD).]
+
+In a carefully-compiled article in the _Archĉological Journal_, vol. x.,
+p. 187-211, will be found some interesting particulars of touch-pieces,
+and to it we are indebted for the few details we have given bearing on
+this part of our subject.
+
+
+
+
+Visiting Patients.
+
+
+The doctor made his daily rounds, before the reign of Charles II., on
+horseback, sitting sideways on foot-clothes. He must have cut an
+undignified figure as he rode through the streets of London and our chief
+towns.
+
+A change came after the Restoration, and we meet with the physicians
+making their visits in a carriage and pair. It seems that increased fees
+were expected with the introduction of the carriage. A curious note
+appears on this subject in _Lex Talionis_. "For there must now be a little
+coach and two horses," says the author, "and, being thus attended,
+half-a-piece their usual fee is but ill taken, and popped into their left
+pocket, and possibly may cause the patient to send for his worship twice
+before he will come again in the hazard of another angel." The carriage
+was popular, and physicians vied with each other in making the greatest
+display.
+
+In the days of Queen Anne, a doctor would even drive half-a-dozen horses
+attached to his chariot, and not fewer than four was the general rule.
+
+In our own time the doctor's carriage and pair is to be seen in all
+directions. It is now driven for use and not for display as in the days of
+Queen Anne.
+
+We have seen the bicycle used by doctors of good standing, and we predict
+the time is not far distant when it will be more generally ridden by
+members of the medical profession.
+
+
+
+
+Assaying Meat and Drink.
+
+BY WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.
+
+
+From the time of our earliest Norman king down to the days of James I.,
+the chief people of the land partook of their food in fear. Treachery was
+a not infrequent occurrence, and poison was much used as a means of taking
+life. As a precaution against murder, assayers of food, drink, etc., were
+appointed. Doctors usually filled the office, and by their unremitting
+attention to their duties crime was to a great extent prevented. In a
+royal household the physician acted as assayer.
+
+Let us imagine ourselves in an old English home, the palace of a king, or
+the stronghold of a leading nobleman. The cloth is laid by subordinate
+servants, but not without considerable ceremony. Next a chief officer of
+the household sees that every article on the table is free from poison.
+The bread about to be consumed is cut, and, in the presence of the "taker
+of assay," is tasted, and the salt is also tested. The knives, spoons,
+and table linen are kissed by a responsible person, so that assurance
+might be given that they were free from poison. Then the salt dish is
+covered with a lid, and the bread is wrapped in a napkin, and afterwards
+the whole table is covered with a fair white cloth. The coverlet remains
+until the head of the household comes to take his repast, and then his
+chief servant removes the covering of the table. If any person attempted
+to touch the covered bread or the covered salt after the spreading of the
+coverlet, they ran the risk of a severe flogging, and sometimes even death
+at the hands of a hangman.
+
+The time of bringing up the meats having arrived, the assayer proceeds to
+the kitchen, and tests the loyalty of the steward and cook by compelling
+them to partake of small quantities of the food prepared before it is
+taken to the table. Pieces of bread were cut and dipped into every mess,
+and were afterwards eaten by cook and steward. The crusts of closed pies
+were raised, and the contents tasted; small pieces of the more substantial
+viands were tasted, and not a single article of food was suffered to leave
+the kitchen without being assayed. After the ceremony had been completed,
+each dish was covered, no matter if hot or cold, and these were taken by
+servitors to the banqueting hall, a marshal with wand of office preceding
+the procession. The bearers on no account were permitted to linger on the
+way, no matter if their hands were burnt they must bear the pain, far
+better to suffer that than be suspected of tampering with the food. On no
+pretext were the covers to be removed until the proper time, and by the
+servants appointed for that purpose. If very hot, the bearers might
+perhaps protect their hands with bread, which was to be kept out of sight.
+
+We produce from the Rev. Charles Bullock's interesting volume entitled
+"How they Lived in the Olden Time," a picture of bringing in the dinner.
+It will be observed that the steward, bearing his staff of office, heads
+the procession.
+
+Each dish as it was brought to the table was again tasted in the presence
+of the personage who purposed partaking of it. This entailed considerable
+ceremony, and took up much time. To render the delay as little unpleasant
+as possible to the guests, music was usually performed.
+
+[Illustration: BRINGING IN THE DINNER.]
+
+In the stately homes of old England, as a mark of respect to the
+distinguished visitor, it was customary to assign to him an assayer.
+History furnishes a notable instance of an omission of the official. When
+Richard II. was at Pontefract Castle, we gather from _Hall's Chronicle_,
+edition 1548, folio 14, that Sir Piers Exton intended poisoning the King,
+and, to use the chronicler's words, forbade the "esquire whiche was
+accustumed to serve and take the assaye beefore Kyng Richarde, to again
+use that manner of service." According to Hall, the King "sat downe to
+dyner, and was served withoute curtesie or assaye; he much mervaylyng at
+the sodayne mutacion of the thynge, demanded of the esquire why he did not
+do his duty." He replied that Sir Piers had forbidden him performing the
+duties pertaining to his position. The King immediately picked up a
+carving-knife, struck upon the head of the assayer, and exclaimed, "The
+devil take Henry of Lancaster and thee together."
+
+Paul Hentzner, a German tutor, visited England in 1598, and wrote a
+graphic account of his travels in the country, which were translated into
+English by Horace Walpole. The work contains a curious account of the
+ceremonies of laying the cloth, etc., for Queen Elizabeth at Greenwich
+Palace. The notice is rather long, but is so entertaining and informing
+that it well merits reproduction. "A gentleman," it is stated, "entered
+the room bearing a rod, and along with him another who had a table-cloth,
+which, after they had both kneeled three times, with the utmost
+veneration, he spread upon the table, and after kneeling again, they both
+retired. Then came two others, one with the rod again, and the other with
+a salt-cellar and a plate of bread: when they had kneeled, as the others
+had done, and placed what was brought upon the table, they, too, retired
+with the same ceremonies performed by the first. At last came an unmarried
+lady (we were told she was a Countess), and along with her a married one,
+bearing a tasting-knife; the former was dressed in white silk, who when
+she prostrated herself three times in the most graceful manner, approached
+the table, and rubbed the plates with bread and salt with as much care as
+if the Queen had been present; when they had waited there a little time,
+the Yeomen of the Guard entered bareheaded, clothed in scarlet, with a
+golden rose upon their backs, bringing in at each turn a course of
+twenty-four dishes, served in plate, most of it gilt; these dishes were
+received by a gentleman in the same order they were brought, and placed
+upon the table, while the lady-taster gave to each guard a mouthful to
+eat, for fear of poison. During the time that this guard, which consists
+of the tallest and stoutest men that can be found in all England, being
+carefully selected for this service, were bringing dinner, twelve trumpets
+and two kettle-drums made the hall ring for half-an-hour together. At the
+end of the ceremonial, a number of unmarried ladies appeared, who, with
+particular solemnity, lifted the meat off the table and conveyed it into
+the Queen's inner and more private chamber, where, after she had chosen
+for herself, the rest goes to the ladies of the Court."
+
+[Illustration: ASSAYING WINE.]
+
+Drink as well as food had to be assayed twice, once in the buttery and
+again in the hall. The butler drank of the wine in the buttery, and then
+handed it to the cup-bearer in a covered vessel. When he arrived at the
+hall, he removed the lid of the cup, and poured into the inverted cover a
+little of the wine, and drank it under the eye of his master. We give an
+illustration, reproduced from an ancient manuscript, of an assayer tasting
+wine. The middle of the twelfth century is most probably the period
+represented.
+
+In the ancient assay cup, it is related on reliable authority, a charm was
+attached to a chain of gold, or embedded in the bottom of the vessel.
+This was generally a valuable carbuncle or a piece of tusk of a narwhal,
+usually regarded as the horn of the unicorn, and which was believed to
+have the power of neutralising or even detecting the presence of poison.
+
+Edward IV. presented to the ambassadors of Charles of Burgundy a costly
+assay cup of gold, ornamented with pearls and a great sapphire, and, to
+use the words of an old writer, "in the myddes of the cuppe ys a grete
+pece of a Vnicornes horne."
+
+The water used for washing the hands of the great had to be tasted by the
+yeoman who placed it on the table, to prove that no poison was contained
+in the fluid. This ceremony had to be performed in the presence of an
+assayer.
+
+
+
+
+The Gold-headed Cane.
+
+BY TOM ROBINSON, M.D.
+
+
+The stick takes many forms. It is the sceptre of kings, the club of a
+police constable, the baton of a field marshal. The mace is but a stick of
+office, being ornamental and merely symbolical.
+
+In history we may go back to the pilgrim's staff, which was four feet
+long, and hollow at the top to carry away relics from the Holy Land. It
+was also used to carry contraband goods, such as seeds, or silk-worms'
+eggs, which the Chinese, Turks, or Greeks forbade to be exported. It is
+occasionally used for eluding the customs now. Some people smuggle
+diamonds into the United States in that way.
+
+Prometheus' reed, or marthex, in which he conveyed fire to "wretched
+mortals," as Aeschylus tells us, is a well-known fable.
+
+An enormous amount of interest centres around the walking stick, and there
+are few families in which we do not find an old stick handed down
+generation after generation. Such an inheritance was at one time a common
+possession of those who belonged to the medical profession.
+
+[Illustration: DR. RADCLIFFE'S CANE.]
+
+The College of Physicians possesses at the present time the gold cane
+which Radcliffe, Mead, Askew, Pitcairn, and Baillie successively carried
+about with them, and which Mrs. Baillie presented to that learned body.
+The drawing here given is a representation of this cane, and it will be
+seen that it has not a gold knob, but consists of an engraved handle or
+crook. It is, I think, quite clear that the custom which the doctors of
+the last century always followed in carrying their stick about with them,
+even to the bed-side, was due entirely to the fact that the handle of the
+cane could be, and was, filled with strong smelling disinfectants, such as
+rosemary and camphor. The doctor held this against his nose obviously for
+two reasons. One, to destroy any poison which might be floating about in
+the air but chiefly to prevent him smelling unpleasant odours. This stick
+was as long as a footman's, smooth and varnished.
+
+A belief in the protective power of camphor and other pleasant-smelling
+herbs is still in existence, and we know quite a number of individuals who
+carry about with them bags of camphor during the prevalence of an
+epidemic.
+
+Before Howard exposed the deadly sanitary state of the prisons of this
+country, it was the custom to sprinkle aromatic herbs before the
+prisoners, so powerful was the noxious effluvium which exhaled from their
+filthy bodies. The bouquet which the chaplain always carried when
+accompanying a prisoner to Tyburn, was used for the same defensive
+purpose.
+
+The stick of the physician's cane was probably a relic of the legerdemain
+of the healer, who in superstitious times worked upon the ignorance of the
+credulous. The modern conjuror always uses a wand in his entertainment.
+These baubles die hard, because there is a strong conservative instinct in
+the race which clings with tremendous tenacity to anything which has the
+sanction of antiquity.
+
+The barber's pole is still seen even in London, and is striped blue and
+white, emblems of the phlebotomist, and symbolical of the blue venous
+blood, which was so ungrudgingly given by the sufferers from almost all
+maladies. The white stripe represented the bandage used to bind up the
+wound on the arm.
+
+The practice of the bleeders continued in fashion in England until the
+beginning of this century. John Coutsley Lettsom, who possessed high
+literary attainments, and who was President of the Philosophical Society
+of London, and who entertained at his house at Grove Hill, Camberwell,
+many of the most distinguished men of his time, including Boswell and Dr.
+Johnson, and whose writings shew he was an enlightened physician, was bold
+in his treatment of disease, and a heroic bleeder. He used to say of
+himself:--
+
+ "When patients sick to me apply,
+ I physics, bleeds, and sweats 'em
+ Then if they choose to die,
+ What's that to me--I lets 'em."
+
+The wig also constituted an essential part of the dress of the older
+physicians. It was a three tailed one, and this with silk stockings,
+clothes well trimmed, velvet coat with stiff skirts, large cuffs and
+buckled shoes, made quite an imposing show, and when they rode in their
+gilt carriages with two running footmen, as was the custom, no one would
+be better recognised. It is interesting to contrast the dress and mode of
+practice of the modern physician with those who built up the honourable
+calling of medicine. It is so easy to laugh at those who practised the art
+of medicine before modern scientific investigation had laid naked so many
+of the secrets of physiology, pathology, and vital chemistry. Slowly but
+surely as the true nature and progress of disease has become known, so
+have all the adventitious and unnecessary surroundings of dress
+disappeared, and now we may meet the most eminent of our doctors, clad in
+the same garments as a man on Change. All this was inevitable, but running
+through the whole history of medicine is a magnificent desire on the part
+of those who have made a mark, and of all its humbler followers to "go
+about doing good." The difficulties are enormous, the labour is colossal,
+but there could be no convictions were there no perplexities. Credulity is
+the disease of a feeble intellect. Accepting all things and understanding
+nothing, kills a man's intellect and checks all scientific investigation.
+The physician has to knock at the temple of the human frame, and patiently
+pick up the knowledge which nature always gives to those who love her
+best. But the investigator must approach his subject with humility, and
+with the recognition that there is a limit to the human intellect, and
+that behind and above this big round world is a supreme being, that around
+the intellect is the atmosphere of spiritual convictions from which our
+highest and best impulses spring, that the universe not only embraces
+material phenomena, but it also includes the sublime and the moral
+attributes, which no man has, or ever will, weigh in the physical balance
+or distil from a retort.
+
+The union of Intellect and Piety will grow stronger as the world grows
+older. When men began to think, they began to doubt, but when men have
+thought more deeply they will cease to doubt.
+
+An idea is in the air that the study of science has a tendency to make men
+sceptical. This is an error. For surely the study of Nature in any of its
+manifold aspects has a direct tendency to lead us into the inscrutable.
+Amongst those who demonstrate the ennobling influence of science let us
+only name Boyle, Bacon, Kepler, and Newton. If we would select a few names
+from the number of medical celebrities of the past who have felt this
+elevating influence, the following will readily occur to us, Linacre,
+Sydenham, Brodie, Astley Cooper, Graves Watson, and Abernethy. The latter,
+who is chiefly remembered as a coiner of quaint sayings and personal
+originality, had, notwithstanding his biting wit, a deep sense of the
+nobility and the sacredness of his calling, as the following extract from
+a lecture which he delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons will prove.
+He says:--"When we examine our bodies we see an assemblance of organs
+formed of what we call matter, but when we examine our minds, we feel that
+there is something sensitive and intelligible which inhabits our bodies.
+We naturally believe in the existence of a first cause. We feel our own
+free agency. We distinguish right and wrong. We feel as if we were
+responsible for our conduct, and the belief in a future state seems
+indigenous to the mind of man."
+
+The noiseless tread of time will cause many doctors whose names are now
+household words to be forgotten, but we may rest assured that the wreath
+of memory will cluster round the brows of these grand, noble workers in
+the field of medicine who have shown by their daily life that they never
+flinched from the arduous duties, aye and the dangers of their profession,
+but steadfastly plodded on. Originality, integrity, and honesty are
+attributes which grace the life of any man, and although the history of
+medicine claims no monopoly of these virtues, for they serve all men
+alike, yet they are the handmaids of greatness; without them no human
+being will ever win that true success which enables us to look back upon
+such lives and say, "Here are examples which show us the possibilities of
+the race." Doctors ought to be great burden lifters. Their mission is to
+carry into the chamber of disease--and even of death itself--that calm
+courage, that buoyant hope, which has around it a halo of sympathy and of
+encouragement.
+
+The public are loyal to the profession of medicine, and seldom do we hear
+of any members of that calling who abuse their high privileges. Their work
+is an absorbing work; it says to a man:--"You have placed in your hands
+the lives of the human race. You are the true soldier whose business it
+is to give life and health and happiness to those with whom you come in
+contact. You must not lean upon the baubles of your calling, so as to
+inspire confidence, but you must night and day let the one abiding thought
+be concentrated upon the good of humanity," and there is no field of
+professional experience which has given us so many men who have as nobly
+done their duty as the doctors of the past and of the present day. We seem
+to be on the threshold of a new era in the treatment of disease, and
+already do we find an increase in the average lives of the race. No one
+need despair of the future in that direction; indiscretion and ignorance
+kill more human beings than plague, pestilence, or famine. The public must
+help to tear away the veil which hides the _Truth_, by not worshipping at
+the foot of Quackery, Chicanery, or Superstition.
+
+The medical profession has so far escaped the pernicious tendency of
+modern thought, which tendency is to hamper every institution. This is a
+noteworthy fact; our hospitals, medical schools, College of Physicians,
+and College of Surgeons are not cramped and hindered by legislative
+interference; but unostentatiously, silently, and with a never-failing
+sense of their responsibilities, do they educate and pass through their
+gates the doctors of the future--and no man dare point his finger at any
+one of these, and say he does not do his duty.
+
+
+
+
+Magic and Medicine.
+
+BY CUMING WALTERS.
+
+
+Coleridge once said that in the treatment of nervous cases "he is the best
+physician who is the most ingenious inspirer of hope." The great "faith
+cures" are worked by such physicians, and the dealers in magic at all
+times and in all parts achieved their successes by inspiring hope in their
+patients. The more credulous the invalid the more easy the cure, no matter
+what remedy is applied. Is it surprising, then, to find that among the
+more childlike races, or that among the infant civilizations, magic often
+supersedes medicine, or is combined with it? Ceremonies which impress the
+mind and act upon the imagination considerably aid the physician in his
+treatment of susceptible persons. Paracelsus himself combined astrology
+with alchemy and medicine, and his host of followers often went further
+than their master, and relied more upon magic than upon specific remedies.
+It was the crowd of charlatans, astrologers, wonder-workers, and their
+sort who substituted magic for medicine, and who had so great an influence
+in England three centuries ago, that Ben Jonson scourged with the lash of
+his satire in "The Alchemist," the impostor described as
+
+ "A rare physician,
+ An excellent Paracelsian, and has done
+ Strange cures with mineral physic. He deals all
+ With spirits, he; he will not hear a word
+ Of Galen, or his tedious recipes."
+
+There has generally been sufficient superstition in all races to make
+amulets the popular means of averting calamity and preserving from
+sickness. The Greeks, the Romans, the Jews, the Turks, and the Arabs, to
+say nothing of less civilized races, have thoroughly believed that disease
+can be charmed away by the simple expedient of wearing a token, or
+carrying a talisman. The magical formula of Abracadabra, written in the
+form of a triangle, sufficed to cure agues and fevers; the Abraxas stones
+warded off epidemics; the coins of St. Helena served as talismans, and
+cured epilepsy. So strong was the belief in these magical protectors in
+the fourth century that the clergy were forbidden, under heavy penalties
+to make or to sell the charms, and in the eighth century the Christian
+Church forbade amulets to be longer worn. In this connection it may be
+mentioned that the custom of placing the wedding-ring upon the fourth
+finger of the left hand owes its origin to the ancients who resorted to
+magic for the cure of their ailments. The Greeks and the Romans believed
+that the finger in question contained a vein communicating directly with
+the heart, and that nothing could come in contact with it without giving
+instant warning to the seat of life. For this reason they were accustomed
+to stir up mixtures and potions with this "medicated finger," as it was
+called, and when the ring became the symbol of marriage that finger was
+chosen of all others for the wearing of it. Thus do we unknowingly keep
+alive the superstitions of other times.
+
+The Hindoos, whose books on the healing art date back to 1500 B.C.,
+regarded sickness as the result of the operation of malevolent deities who
+were either to be propitiated by prayers, offerings, charms, and
+sacrifices, or to be overcome with the aid of friendly gods. The early
+Greeks when suffering from disease were cured, not by means of medicine,
+but by religious observances, and particularly by the "temple-sleep," in
+which they dreamt dreams which the priests interpreted, and in which were
+found the suggestions for remedy. It was Hippocrates, in 460 B.C., who
+first proclaimed that disease was not of supernatural origin, and that it
+could not be combated or cured by magic. But for many centuries later in
+Europe the Black Art had greater sway than rational treatment. In Sweden
+it is even now common for the lower classes to ascribe sickness to the
+visitation of spirits (Nisse), who must be mollified by pouring liquor
+into a goblet and mixing with it the filings of a bride-ring, or filings
+of silver, or of any metal that has been inherited. The mixture is taken
+to the place where the man is supposed to have caught his illness, and is
+poured over the left shoulder, not a syllable being uttered the while.
+After the performance of this ceremony the invalid may hope to recover.
+
+Consecrated grave-mould is supposed by many primitive races to have
+particular properties as a medicine. The Shetlander who has a "stitch in
+his side," cures himself by applying to the affected part, some dry mould
+brought from a grave, and heated, care being taken to remove the mould and
+to return it before the setting of the sun. In the neighbouring isles of
+Orkney, magic is also resorted to as a remedy for disease. Perhaps the
+least harmful of the rites is the washing of a cat in the water which had
+previously served for an invalid's ablutions, the confident belief being
+that the disease would by this means be transferred to the animal. This
+custom of "substitution" is found in many races, and is one of the most
+interesting subjects introduced to the student of folk-lore.
+
+In Tibet, for example, when all ordinary remedies have failed, the Lamas
+make a dummy to represent the sick person, and they adorn the image with
+trinkets. By ceremonies and prayers the sickness of the patient is laid
+upon the dummy, after which it is taken out and burned, the Lamas
+appropriating the ornaments as a reward. Sir Walter Scott tells of a
+similar case which occurred in Scotland. Lady Katharine Fowlis made a
+model in clay of a person whom she wished to afflict, and shot at the
+image in the hope that the wound would be transferred to the real person.
+We have only to turn to Scott's "Demonology and Witchcraft" to find
+hundreds of instances of the unshaken belief of the Highlanders in mystic
+potions, pills, drugs, and drops; and not even wholesale burnings of the
+dealers in white magic could induce the people to forsake their
+superstitions. Bessie Dunlop told the Court, before which she was
+arraigned, of the magic elixirs given to her by Thome Reid, who had been
+killed in battle centuries before, but had appeared to her as an
+apparition, and begged her to fly with him to Elf-land. By means of his
+medicines she cured the most stubborn diseases, obtained the reputation of
+a wise woman, and grew so rich that the eye of the law was drawn upon her,
+and, after her confession was made, she was ordered to be burnt. As Scott
+said, in one of his chapters, the Scottish law did not acquit those who
+accomplished even praiseworthy actions, and "the proprietor of a patent
+medicine who should in those days have attested his having wrought such
+miracles as we see sometimes advertised might have forfeited his life."
+
+The idea of sacrificing something, or someone, to appease the anger of the
+powers who bring affliction upon mankind, is extremely common, and by no
+means confined to savage nations or to very ancient times. At the time of
+the Black Plague in the fourteenth century the fanaticism of the French
+led them to sacrifice 12,000 Jews by torture and burning, these
+Israelites being deemed the cause of the affliction. In the "Ingoldsby
+Legends" may be read a ghastly account of a similar sacrifice in Spain, in
+order to secure the good-will of the over-ruling powers on behalf of the
+Queen. Even in comparatively modern times the practice of sacrificing in
+order to cure or avert disease has not been unknown, and this in civilized
+lands, too. The sacrifices in these cases have, of course, been of animals
+only, but the germ of the old and worse ritual is found in the custom. In
+1767, the people of Mull, in consequence of a disease among the cattle,
+agreed to perform an incantation. They carried to the top of Carnmoor a
+wheel and nine spindles of oakwood. Every fire in the houses was
+extinguished; and the wheel was then turned from east to west over the
+nine spindles long enough to produce fire by friction. They then
+sacrificed a heifer, which they cut in pieces and burnt while yet alive.
+Finally they lighted their own hearths from the pile, while an old man
+repeated the words of incantation. This custom is prevalent in Ireland, in
+various parts of Scotland, and even in England and Wales it has been
+practised with variations and some modification. In Cornwall, in 1800, a
+calf was burnt alive to arrest the murrain. Mr. Laurence Gomme has traced
+the custom back to the sacrifice of animals for human sickness, for in
+1678 four men were actually prosecuted for "sacrificing a bull in a
+heathenish manner for the recovery of the health of Custane Mackenzie." In
+Ireland a cure for small-pox consisted in sacrificing a sheep to a wooden
+image, wrapping the skin about the sick person, and then eating the sheep.
+
+In Scotland strange and weird customs linger, and Sir H. G. Reid in his
+entertaining volume, "'Tween Gloamin' and the Mirk," has related how he
+himself, during infancy, underwent a mysterious cure for the "falling
+sickness." He was carried secretly away to a lonely hut on the distant
+moor, and the party were admitted to a long, low-roofed apartment, dimly
+lighted from two small windows. In one corner sat an old woman, wrinkled
+and silent, busily knitting; a huge peat-fire blazed on the open hearth,
+shooting heavy sparks up through the hole in the roof, and filling the
+apartment with smoke. No word was spoken, and the scene must have been as
+eerie as the lover of mystery or the believer in witchcraft could have
+desired. "I was placed on a three-legged stool in the middle of the
+floor" (the writer continues); "the old woman rose, and with the aid of
+immense tongs, took deliberately from the fire seven large smooth round
+stones, they were planted one by one in an irregular circle about me; with
+her dull dark eyes closed, and open white palms outstretched, the
+enchantress muttered some mystic words; it was over--the tremulous patient
+was taken up as 'cured!'" In Scotland the belief in witches who have power
+both to cure and to cause maladies is so deeply founded that it would be
+rash to deny its continued existence. These creatures are credited with
+opening graves for the purpose of taking out joints of the fingers and
+toes of dead bodies, with some of the winding-sheet, in order to prepare
+powders. In Kirkwall a small portion of the human skull was taken from the
+graveyard and grated to a powder in order to be used in a mixture for the
+cure of fits; while in Caithness the patient was made to drink from a
+suicide's skull, and the beverage so taken was regarded as a sovereign
+specific for epilepsy. In 1643 one John Drugh was indicted for this
+despoiling of corpses for some such purpose. The Australian aborigines
+had a belief not altogether dissimilar to this. They rubbed weak persons
+with the fat of a corpse, and thought that the strength, courage, and
+valour of the dead man was communicated to the body subjected to the
+treatment. Analogies may be found among savage tribes all over the world,
+and the culmination is found in the devouring of enemies, not out of
+revenge, but because the widespread primitive idea prevails that by eating
+the flesh and by drinking the blood of the slain, a man absorbs the nature
+or the life of the deceased into his own body. In other words, cannibalism
+has a medical origin which the most depraved superstition suggested and
+fortified.
+
+The Lhoosai, a savage hill-tribe in India, teach their young warriors to
+eat a piece of the liver of the first man they kill in order to strengthen
+their hearts, and here we see the development of the magic power of the
+medicines which is not only efficacious for the body, but for the spirit.
+
+When Coleridge was a little boy at the Blue Coat School, he relates in his
+Table Talk, there was a "charm for one's foot when asleep," which he
+believed had been in the school since its foundation in the time of King
+Edward VI. Its potency lay in the words--
+
+ "Crosses three we make to ease us,
+ Two for the thieves, and one for Christ Jesus."
+
+The same charm served for cramp in the leg, and Coleridge quaintly adds:
+"Really, upon getting out of bed, where the cramp most frequently
+occurred, pressing the sole of the foot on the cold floor, and then
+repeating this charm, I can safely affirm that I do not remember an
+instance in which the cramp did not go away in a few seconds." Charms like
+this, by which a simple method of cure is invested with marvel, are common
+enough among primitive races, and not infrequently provide the key to the
+solution of the mystery of the magician's triumph. The cunning leaders,
+priests, or medicine-men of ignorant nations maintain their ascendency by
+ascribing to miracle the simplest feats they perform.
+
+The superstitious red man is completely at the mercy of the medicine-man
+who claims to possess supernatural powers, and who assumes the ability to
+work marvellous cures by magic. Each North American Indian carries with
+him a medicine bag obtained under very curious circumstances. When he is
+approaching manhood he sets forth in search of the patent drug which is to
+shield him from all danger, and act as an all-powerful talisman. He lies
+down alone in the woods upon a litter of twigs, eats and drinks nothing
+for several days, and at last falls asleep from sheer exhaustion. Then he
+dreams--or should do so--and whatever bird, or beast, or reptile, forms
+the subject of his dream, he must seek as his medicine. He goes forth upon
+the quest directly his strength has returned, and when he has discovered
+the animal of his vision, he turns its skin into a pouch, and wears it
+ever afterwards round his neck. In peace or war he will never part with
+this talisman; it is the treasure of his life, a sacred possession, a
+charm against all maladies, and a protection from foes. It is scarcely
+necessary to add, after this, that the medicine-man of the tribe is held
+in highest honour, and regarded as a worker of veritable miracles. All
+things are possible to him. By his prayers, his rites, and his
+incantations he causes the sun to shine, the rain to descend, the rivers
+to deepen, the plants to thrive. A traveller tells us that a drought had
+withered the maize fields, and the medicine-man was sent for to compel
+the rain to fall. On the first day one Wah-ku, or the Shield, came to the
+front, but failed; so did Om-pah, or the Elk. On succeeding days another
+was tried, but without success; but at last recourse was made to
+Wak-a-dah-ha-Ku, or the White Buffalo Hair, who possessed a shield
+coloured with red lightnings, and carried an arrow in his hand. Much was
+expected of him, and the people were not disappointed. "Taking his station
+by the medicine-lodge," we are told, "he harangued the people, protesting
+that for the good of his tribe he was willing to sacrifice himself, and
+that if he did not bring the much desired rain he was content to live for
+the rest of his life with the old women and the dogs. He asserted that the
+first medicine-man had failed because his shield warded off the rain
+clouds; the second, who wore a head-dress made of a raven's skin, because
+the raven was a bird that soared above the storm, and cared not whether
+the rain came or stayed; and the third who wore a beaver skin, because the
+beaver was always wet and required no rain. But as for him, the red
+lightnings on his shield would attract the rain-clouds, and his arrow
+would pierce them, and pour the water over the thirsty fields. It chanced
+that as he ended his oration, a steamer fired a salute from a twelve
+pounder gun. To the Indians the roar of the cannon was like the voice of
+thunder, and their joy knew no bounds. The successful medicine-man was
+loaded with valuable gifts; mothers hastened to offer their daughters to
+him in marriage; and the elder medicine-men hastened from the lodge to
+enrol him in their order.... Just before sunset his quick eyes discovered
+a black cloud which, unobserved by the noisy multitude, swiftly came up
+from the horizon. At once he assumed his station on the roof of the lodge,
+strung his bow, and made ready his arrow; arrested the attention of his
+fellows by his loud and exultant speech; and as the cloud impended over
+the village, shot his arrow into the sky. Lo, the rain descended in
+torrents, wetting the rain-maker to the skin, but establishing in
+everybody's mind a firm and deep conviction of his power."
+
+The influence of the medicine-man in time of sickness is illustrated in
+the narrative of Mr. Kane, who wrote "The Wanderings of an Artist." He
+heard a great noise in one of the villages, and found that a handsome
+Indian girl was extremely ill. The medicine-man sat in the middle of the
+room, crossed-legged and naked; a wooden dish filled with water was before
+him, and he had guaranteed to rid the girl of her disease which afflicted
+her side. He commenced by singing and gesticulating in a violent manner,
+the others who surrounded him beating drums with sticks. This lasted
+half-an-hour. Then the medicine-man determined on a radical cure of the
+patient, for he darted suddenly upon the girl, dug his teeth into her side
+(for she was undressed), and shook her for several minutes. This increased
+her agony, but the medicine-man declared he had "got it," and held his
+hands to his mouth. After this he plunged his hands into a bowl of water,
+leaving the spectators to believe that he had torn out the disease with
+his teeth, and was now destroying it by drowning. Eventually he withdrew
+his hand from the bowl, and it was found that he held a piece of cartilage
+between the finger and thumb. This was cut in two, and half cast into the
+fire, half into the water. So ended the operation, and Mr. Kane records
+that though the doctor was perfectly satisfied, the patient seemed, if
+anything, to be worse for the treatment.
+
+The belief in magic was ingrained in the Egyptians, who, notwithstanding
+that the art of medicine was far advanced with them, preferred to trust in
+the workers of miracles and enchantments. In his recent collection of
+Egyptian Tales, Mr. Flinders-Petrie is able to supply a striking instance
+of this credulity. A man named Dedi was said to have such powers over life
+and death that he could restore the head that had been smitten from the
+body. He was brought before the King, who desired to put this marvellous
+power to the test, and the story thus proceeds:--"His Majesty said, 'Let
+one bring me a prisoner who is in prison that his punishment may be
+fulfilled.' And Dedi said, 'Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold
+we do not even thus to our cattle.' And a duck was brought unto him, and
+its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall,
+and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic
+speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came
+likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked.
+And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it.
+His Majesty caused an ox to be brought, and its head cast on the ground.
+And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and
+followed him with his halter trailing on the ground." This story prepares
+us in every way for the information that the Egyptians, despite their
+great knowledge of the curative powers of herbs and drugs, preferred to
+rely upon enchanters, soothsayers, and magicians in their time of illness
+and peril.
+
+Professor Douglas, in his "Society in China," devotes a very interesting
+and entertaining chapter to medicine as regarded and practised by the
+Celestials. From this we learn that while there are plenty of doctors in
+the land, they are one and all the merest empirics, who prey on the folly,
+the ignorance, and the dread of the uneducated people. The failure to cure
+any disease brings no odium upon the quack, though when the late Emperor
+"ascended on a dragon to be a guest on high," or, in other words, died of
+small-pox, his physicians who could not save him from that distinction
+were deprived of honours and rewards. The Chinese are centuries behind
+other nations in medicine, and they have not yet learnt that the blood
+circulates in the body, or that a limb may be removed with beneficial
+effects in case of some diseases or accidents. They believe that arteries
+and veins are one and the same, and that the pulses communicate with the
+various organs of the body. The object of the physician is to "strengthen
+the breath, stimulate the gate of life, restore harmony." "The heart is
+the husband, and the hinges are the wife," and they must be brought into
+agreement, or evil arises. Good results may be obtained, it is believed,
+by such tonics as dog-flesh, dried red-spotted lizard-skins,
+tortoise-shell, fresh tops of stag-horns, bones and teeth of dragons (when
+obtainable), shavings of rhinoceros-horns, and such like. For dyspepsia
+the doctor has no nostrum, but he thrusts a needle into the patient's
+liver and expects him to be immediately cured. When cholera or any other
+pestilence sweeps over the land, the Chinese feel the helplessness of
+their physicians, so they resort to charms, and to the offering of gifts
+to the gods by way of staying the plague. Hydrophobia is common among the
+half-starved curs which infest the streets, and the cure for it--quite
+unknown to Pasteur--is the curd of the black pea dried and pulverised,
+mixed with hemp oil, and formed into a large ball; this is to be rolled
+over the wound, then broken open, and kept on rolling until it has lost
+its hair-like appearance. To complete the cure the patient must abstain
+from eating "anything in a state of decomposition." He might just as well
+be told not to poison himself. If, by the way, the prescription does not
+work, but hydrophobia continues, the patient is strongly commended to try
+the effect of "the skull, teeth, and toes of a tiger ground up, and given
+in wine in doses of one-fifth of an ounce." While the tiger is being
+caught, however, a fatal result may occur, but of course the Chinese
+doctor is not to be blamed for that. He has done his best, and the fault
+is obviously the tiger's. The Chinese believe in astrology, the
+philosopher's stone, and the elixir of life. A plant known as ginseng is
+said to greatly prolong and sweeten existence, and sometimes as much as a
+thousand taels of silver are given for a pound's weight of the precious
+root. It will be seen, therefore, from such facts as these that a Galen in
+China would have a vast revolution to undertake, and that a thousand
+Galens at least would be required to overcome the prejudices and uproot
+the superstitions of the race. The great value which the Chinese attach to
+the bones, horns, tusks, and eyes of animals may be judged from various
+tonics and remedies which are in great request among all classes. A dose
+of tigers' bones inspires courage; an elephant's eye burnt to powder and
+mixed with human milk is a sovereign remedy for inflammation of the eye;
+pulverised elephants' bones cure indigestion; a preparation of elephants'
+ivory is the recognised cure for diabetes; and the same animal's teeth may
+be used for epilepsy. But if the patient cannot eat rice his case is
+abandoned as hopeless, and not even the physician who deals most
+extensively in magic pills, ointments, and decoctions will attempt to save
+the obstinate person's life.
+
+The medicine-men of the Eskimos were called angekoks, and enjoyed the
+unlimited confidence of the people. They were said to have equal power
+over heaven and earth, this world and the next. This made them useful as
+friends and dangerous as enemies. The Eskimo, therefore, set out upon no
+enterprise without consulting the angekoks, who granted blessings,
+exorcised demons, and gave charms against disease. These medicine-men have
+a profound belief in themselves, and though they resort to jugglery and
+ventriloquism to deceive their visitors, they appear to have no idea that
+they are perpetrating an imposture. Their particular powers, they think,
+are derived from more than human sources. Dr. Nansen, in his "Eskimo
+Life," points out that it has always been to the interests of the
+medicine-men and the priests to sustain and mature superstitions or
+religious ideas. "They must therefore themselves appear to believe in
+them; they may even discover new precepts of divinity to their own
+advantage, and thereby increase both their power and their revenues." The
+Greenlanders believe that the angekoks work with the help of ministering
+spirits, called _tôrnat_, who are often none other than the souls of dead
+persons, especially of grandfathers; but not infrequently the _tôrnat_ are
+supposed to be the souls of departed animals, or of fairies. The angekok
+is assumed to have several of these councillors always at hand. They
+render help in the time of danger, and may even act as avengers or
+destroyers. In the latter case they show themselves as ghosts, and so
+frighten to death the persons against whom vengeance is directed.
+Therefore, as Dr. Nansen reports, the angekoks are the wisest and also the
+craftiest of all Eskimos. They assert that they have the power of
+conversing with spirits, of travelling in the under-world, of conjuring
+up powerful spirits, and of obtaining revelations. "They influence and
+work upon their countrymen principally through their mystic exorcisms and
+_seances_, which occur as a rule in the winter, when they are living in
+houses. The lamps are extinguished, and skins hung before the windows. The
+angekok himself sits upon the floor. By dint of making a horrible noise so
+that the whole house shakes, changing his voice, bellowing and shrieking,
+ventriloquising, groaning, moaning, and whining, beating on drums,
+bursting forth into diabolical shrieks of laughter and all sorts of other
+tricks, he persuades his companions that he is visited by the various
+spirits he personates, and that it is they who make the disturbance." They
+cure diseases by reciting charms, and "give men a new soul." He demands
+large fees, not for himself, he explains, but for the spirits whose agent
+he is. Apparently these spirits have similar ideas to the London
+consulting physician.
+
+Mr. Theodore Bent, in his "Ruined Cities of Mashonaland," gives a specimen
+of the credulity excited by the medicine-men. The explorer desired to
+interview a chief, Mtoko by name, but permission was refused. The reason,
+he afterwards ascertained, was that the chief's father had died shortly
+after another white man's visit, and the common belief was that he had
+been bewitched. The chief thought that the "white lady" who ruled over the
+nation to which Mr. Bent belonged had sent him purposely to cast a glamour
+over him. It may be remembered that the ill-fated Lobengula refused to
+have his portrait taken because he believed that by means of the image of
+himself he could be magically infected with a dread disease. This idea of
+substitution, which has already been referred to, is akin to that of the
+belief in witchcraft during the middle ages--namely, that the witches
+could, by sticking pins into the wax image of a person, bring upon that
+person agonising maladies. The dreadful results of such beliefs among
+savage tribes is told by the two hospital nurses who a year or so ago
+produced a lively book, "Adventures in Mashonaland." One morning a native
+entered their camp, bringing a tale of horror. A chief called Maronka,
+whose kraal was about forty miles away, had boiled his family alive. He
+had been convinced by the native doctors that after death the souls of the
+chiefs passed into the bodies of lions. His medicine-men had "smelt out"
+his own family as witches, and boiling alive was the requisite punishment.
+Mr. Rider Haggard has told many such stories as this in his books on South
+Africa. The Zulu doctors were in the habit, not only of "smelling out"
+witches and evil spirits, but of sprinkling the soldiers with medicine, in
+order to "put a great heart into them," and ensure their victory in
+battle.
+
+Customs like these gave Charles Dickens his opportunity of writing two of
+his most scathing satires "The Noble Savage" and "The Medicine Man of
+Civilisation." He refused to subscribe to the popular and amiable
+sentiment that the African barbarian was an interesting survival, or that
+the Ojibbeway Indian was picturesque. After a severe indictment of them,
+Dickens instanced their customs in medicine as a proof of their
+irremediable depravity. "When the noble savage finds himself a little
+unwell," he wrote, "and mentions the circumstance to his friends, it is
+immediately perceived that he is under the influence of witchcraft. A
+learned personage, called an Imyanger, or Witch Doctor, is sent for to
+Nooker the Umtargartie, or smell out the witch. The male inhabitants of
+the kraal being seated on the ground, the learned doctor, got up like a
+grizzly bear, appears and administers a dance of the most terrific nature,
+during the exhibition of which remedy he incessantly gnashes his teeth,
+and howls,--'I am the original physician to Nooker the Umtargartie. Yow,
+yow, yow! No connection with any other establishment. Till, till, till!
+All other Umtargarties are feigned Umtargarties, Boroo, Boroo! but I
+perceive here a genuine and real Umtargartie, Hoosh, Hoosh, Hoosh! in
+whose blood, I, the original Imyanger and Nookerer, will wash these bear's
+claws of mine!' All this time the learned physician is looking out among
+the attentive faces for some unfortunate man who owes him a cow, or who
+has given him any small offence, or against whom, without offence, he has
+conceived a spite. Him he never fails to Nooker as the Umtargartie, and he
+is instantly killed." This is no burlesque, and I have given the record in
+Dickens's inimitable language because it most vividly sets before us the
+custom of the medicine-men of barbarous races. But the medicine-men of
+Longfellow's description, the men who came to appease and console
+Hiawatha, who
+
+ "Walked in silent, grave procession,
+ Bearing each a pouch of healing,
+ Skin of beaver, lynx, or otter,
+ Filled with magic roots and simples,
+ Filled with very potent medicines,"
+
+--these may be accepted as the milder type of magicians who, among a
+primitive people, claimed not only to be able to heal the living, but to
+restore the dead.
+
+Mr. Austine Waddell, in his exhaustive work on the Buddhism of Tibet,
+tells us that a very popular form of Buddha is as "the supreme physician"
+or Buddhist Ĉsculapius, the idea of whom is derived from an ancient legend
+of the "medicine-king" who dispensed spiritual medicine. The images of
+this Buddha are worshipped as fetishes, and they cure by sympathetic
+magic. The supplicant, after bowing and praying, rubs his finger over the
+eye, knee, or particular part of the image corresponding to the affected
+part on his own body, and then applies the finger carrying this hallowed
+touch to the afflicted spot. Mr. Waddell says that this constant friction
+is rather detrimental to the features of the god; whether it is beneficial
+to the man's body is of course largely a matter of faith and
+circumstances. As might be expected, talismans to ward off evils from
+malignant planets and demons, whence come all diseases, are in great
+request. The eating of the paper on which a charm has been written is
+considered by the Tibetan to be the easiest and most certain method of
+curing a malady, and the spells which the Lamas use in this way are called
+"za-yig," or edible letters. A still more mystical way of applying these
+remedies, according to Mr. Waddell, is by the washings of the reflection
+of the writing in a mirror, a habit common in other quarters of the globe.
+In Gambia, for instance, this treatment is relied upon by the natives. A
+doctor is called in, he examines the patient, and then sits down at the
+bedside and writes in Arabic characters on a slate some sentences from the
+Koran. The slate is then washed, and the dirty infusion is drunk by the
+patient. In Tibet, Chinese ink is smeared on wood, and every twenty-nine
+days the inscription reflected in a mirror. The face of the mirror during
+the reflection is washed with beer, and the drainings are collected in a
+cup for the patient's use. This is a special cure for the evil eye. The
+medicine-men of Tibet can also supply charms against bullets and weapons,
+charms for the clawing of animals, charms to ward off cholera, and even
+charms to prevent domestic broils. This is surely evidence of high
+civilisation.
+
+It would be hopeless to endeavour to exhaust this subject. Only a few
+selected instances can be given to illustrate how large a part magic has
+played, and still plays, in the healing art. Medicine is by no means freed
+of its superstitions yet, and the success of quack advertisements of the
+day abundantly proves that the civilised public is still prone to believe
+that universal remedies are obtainable, and that miracles can be wrought.
+
+Modern medical science, as one of its great exponents has pointed out,
+plays a waiting game when miracles are spoken of, and when magic is
+claimed to supersede specific remedies. "When it is asked to believe in
+the violent and erratic violation of laws of matter and force, science
+stands on an impregnable rock, fenced round by bulwarks of logical fact,
+and flanked by the bastions of knowledge of nature and her constitution."
+And as exact knowledge spreads, Prospero will have no alternative but to
+break his staff, and bury it fathoms deep.
+
+
+
+
+Chaucer's Doctor of Physic.
+
+BY W. H. THOMPSON.
+
+
+In the "Canterbury Tales" we have an inimitable gallery of fourteenth
+century portraits, drawn from life, with all a great master's delicacy of
+finish and touch. And in none of these pictures does Chaucer excel himself
+more than in that of his "Doctor of Physic." We may take it for granted
+that the portrait is no mere fanciful one, with its pre-Raphaelite
+minuteness of detail, sketched with the poet's own peculiar skill. With
+what mischievous and yet altogether playful and good-natured humour is the
+man of medicine presented to us!
+
+ "With us there was a doctour of phisike
+ In all this world ne was there none like him
+ To speak of phisike and of surgerie."
+
+What manner of man was this paragon of medical knowledge? In personal
+appearance he was somewhat of an exquisite. "Clothes are unspeakably
+significant" saith the immortal Teufelsdrockh, and every practitioner who
+has his _clientele_ largely yet to make knows the importance of being
+well dressed. Chaucer's grave graduate was apparelled in a purple surcoat,
+and a blue and white furred hood.
+
+ "In sanguine and in perse he clad was all
+ Lined with taffata and with sendall,"
+
+and yet no luxurious sybarite by any means was he,
+
+ "Of his diet measureable was he,
+ For it was no superfluity,
+ But of great nourishing and digestable."
+
+A man of simple habits, even perhaps given to holding his purse strings
+somewhat tightly.
+
+ "He was but easy of expense,
+ He kept that he won in pestilence."
+
+For, as the poet adds with his characteristic merry sly humour,
+
+ "Gold in physic is a cordial,
+ Therefore he loved gold in special."
+
+The science of medicine since Chaucer's day has made extraordinary
+advances, and it is only fair to judge his doctor by contemporary
+standards. To-day, we fear, he would be largely regarded as little better
+than a charlatan and a quack. It is true, he was acquainted with all the
+authorities, ancient and modern, from Ĉsculapius and Galen down to
+Gaddesden, the author of the "Rosa Anglica," the great English book of
+fourteenth century medicine. But this last named luminary of physic would
+aid him very little on the road to true knowledge. This medical "Rose,"
+which Leland calls a "large and learned work," only serves to illustrate
+the impotence of the professors of the healing arts at that period. This
+is the recipe of Gaddesden for the small-pox. "After this (the appearance
+of the eruption) cause the whole body of your patient to be wrapped in red
+scarlet cloth, and command everything about the bed to be made red. This
+is an excellent cure. It was in this manner I treated the son of the noble
+king of England when he had the small-pox, and I cured him without leaving
+any marks." To cure epilepsy, he orders the patient "and his parents" to
+fast three days, and then go to church. "The patient must first confess,
+and he must have mass on Friday and Saturday, and then on Sunday the
+priest must read over the patient's head the gospel for September, in the
+time of vintage after the feast of the Holy Cross. After this the priest
+shall write out this portion of the gospel reverently, and bind it about
+the patient's neck, and he shall be cured." If epilepsy was to be
+exorcised by such a remedy as this, we venture to assert that it must have
+been largely a case of faith-healing.
+
+[Illustration: GEOFFREY CHAUCER.
+
+(_From Harleian M.S.--4866 fol. 91._)]
+
+Seeing then that such was the condition of the science of medicine in
+Chaucer's days, we must take with a good deal of reservation his statement
+that his doctor
+
+ "Knew the cause of every malady
+ Were it of cold, or hot, or moist, or dry,
+ And where engendered, and of what humour."
+
+Anyhow, some of the remedies prescribed for the "sick man," and the
+"drugs," which his friends the apothecaries were so ready to supply, would
+have seemed extraordinary enough to us.
+
+The poet tells us the doctor's study was but "little in the Bible," and
+that though a "perfect practitioner," the ground of his scientific
+knowledge was astronomy, _i.e._, astrology; the "better part of medicine,"
+as Roger Bacon calls it. In dealing with his patients he was guided by
+"natural magic."
+
+To this practice Chaucer alludes in another of his poems, the "House of
+Fame."
+
+ "And clerks eke, which con well,
+ All this magic naturell,
+ That craftily do her intents,
+ To make in certain ascendents,
+ Images--lo through which magic,
+ To make a man be whole or sick."
+
+So that in spite of what appears to us the charlatanry in his make up, the
+doctor was supposed to be a person of importance in the eyes of his fellow
+pilgrims, with quite the standing of an accredited medical man of to-day,
+is evidenced by the manner in which mine host Bailly addresses him. Master
+Bailly was no particular respecter of persons, indeed, on the contrary, he
+was somewhat of a Philistine; yet he was all respect to this man of
+medicine. It is as "Sir" Doctor of Physic, the host addresses him; also
+declaring him to be a "proper man," and like a prelate. After the story of
+chicanery related by the Canon's Yeoman, it is to the physician he looks
+to tell a tale of "honest matter." Such is his bearing towards him
+throughout.
+
+The doctor's contribution to the "Canterbury Tales," too, is of a serious,
+sober kind, in keeping with his character; and concludes with some sound
+moral advice. Therefore, whatever foibles he may have, the "doctor of
+physic" is presented to us as a sterling gentleman, no unworthy
+predecessor of those who to-day, on more modern lines, still follow in his
+footsteps.
+
+
+
+
+The Doctors Shakespeare Knew.
+
+BY A. H. WALL.
+
+ "O, mickle is the powerful grace that lies
+ In herbs, plants, shrubs, and their true qualities.
+ For nought so vile that on the earth doth live
+ But to the earth some special good doth give;
+ Nor ought so good, but, strained from that fair use
+ Revolts from true birth, stumbling on abuse."
+ --_Romeo and Juliet._
+
+ "By medicine life may be prolong'd."--_Cymbeline V. 5._
+
+
+In Walckenaer's "Memoirs of Madame de Sévigné," and in the amusing,
+interesting volume which Gaston Boissier devoted to her works and letters,
+we have glimpses of the medical profession in France, which show us it was
+in her time and country, just what it was in England in the same century
+when it was known to Shakespeare. For one more or less genuine physician
+there were thousands of charlatans and quacks, and the contempt which our
+great dramatic poet frequently expresses in his works for medical
+practitioners must, in fairness, be regarded as applicable to the latter,
+not to the former. In 1884, an American writer on this subject (Dr. Rush
+Field, in his "Medical Thoughts of Shakespeare") strove to show that our
+great philosophic poet and playwright's opinion of all the medical
+practitioners was a low one. "He uses them frequently," he says, "as a
+tool by which deaths are produced through the means of poison, and
+generally treats them with contempt." That he might fairly do this, and
+that in doing it he rather displayed respect and regard for the genuine,
+more or less scientific professors of the healing art, can be very readily
+demonstrated by anyone at all familiar with his plays. But to return to
+Madame de Sévigné. At a time when she was growing old, when her letters
+speak so sadly of the dying condition of Cardinal de Retz at Commercy, of
+Madame de la Fayette's being consumed by slow fever, and La Roche confined
+to his armchair by gout, of Corbinelle's threatened insanity, and of his
+taking "potable gold" as a remedy for headache, she writes also of
+small-pox and other fevers having permanently settled at Versailles and
+Saint-Germain, where the King and Queen were attacked, and ladies and
+gentlemen of the Court were decimated, and cases of apoplexy and
+rheumatism were rapidly increasing in every direction. "Fashionable folk,
+used up with pleasure-making, sick through disappointed ambition,
+fidgetting without motive, agitating without aim, tainted with morbid
+fancies and suspicion," found themselves in the doctor's hands, and were
+far more ready to select practitioners who promised magically swift and
+easy cures, than those who spoke of slow and gradual recovery by means
+which were neither painless nor pleasurable. "Everybody," says Boissur,
+"women included, battled with one another to possess marvellous secrets
+whereby obstinate complaints should be immediately cured. Madame Fouquet
+applied a plaster to the dying Queen, which cured her, to the great
+scandal of the Faculty unable to save her; and the Princess de Tarente
+served out drugs to all her people at Vitre.
+
+[Illustration: WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE.
+
+(_The Stratford Portrait._)]
+
+Madame Sévigné wrote of her as "the best doctor in the upper classes; she
+has rare and valuable compounds of which she gives us three pinches with
+prodigious effect." When writing to her daughter, she begs her not to
+neglect taking such medicines as "cherry water," "extract of periwinkles,"
+"viper-broth," "uric acid," and "powdered crab's-eyes." She says the
+extract of periwinkles "endowed Madame de Grignam with a second youth."
+Writing to her daughter, "If you use it, when you re-appear so fair
+people will cry, 'O'er what blessed flower can she have walked,' then I
+will answer 'On the periwinkle.'" She tells, too, how the Capuchins, who
+still retained their ancient medical reputation, treated the rheumatism in
+her leg "with plants bruised and applied twice a day; taken off while wet
+twice a day, and buried in the earth, so that as they rotted away her
+pains might in like way decrease." "It's a pity you ran and told the
+surgeons this," she says to her daughter, "for they roar with laughter at
+it, but I do not care a fig for them." In like way Madame de Scudery tells
+Bassy, "There is an abbé here who is making a great bother by curing by
+sympathy. For fever of all kinds, so they say, he takes the patient's
+spittle and mingles it with an egg, and gives it to a dog; the dog dies
+and the patient recovers.... They say he has cured a quantity of people."
+
+Turning from these illustrations of medical practice in France to see how
+identical it is with that adopted in England when Shakespeare lived, we
+recall the advice of that eminent gentleman, Andrew Rourde, who recommends
+people to wash their faces once a week only, using a scarlet cloth to wipe
+them dry upon, as a sure remedy in certain cases. In other instances we
+find that certain pills made from the skulls of murderers taken down from
+gibbets, and ground to powder for that purpose, were popular as medicine,
+that a draught of water drunk from a murdered man's skull had wonderful
+medicinal properties, and that the blood of a dragon was absolutely
+miraculous in the cures it effected. The touch of a dead man's hand was
+another ghastly remedy in common use, and the powder of mummy was a
+wonderful cure for certain grave complaints. Love-philtres were also
+regarded from a medicinal point of view, and the strange doings of quack
+_accoucheurs_ are not less absurdly terrible. That the seventeenth century
+physician himself was not always proof against these products of ancient
+ignorance and superstition, is abundantly apparent. Van Helmont, the son
+of a nobleman, born in Brussels, and very carefully educated for his
+profession, practised both medicine and magic medicinally. He rejected
+Galen, inclined to that illiterate pretender Paracelsus, and determined
+that the only way by which he could defy disease, and utterly destroy it,
+was through what he called _Archĉus_. Speaking of digestion, for instance,
+he denied that it was either chemical or mechanical in its nature, but the
+result of this _Archĉus_, a spiritual activity, working in a very
+mysteriously complicated way, for both evil and good. It has been said
+that he was one of Lord Bacon's disciples, but for that assertion there
+certainly is no sufficient foundation, for Bacon, if a mystic by
+inclination, was logical in reasoning. In England Van Helmont had an
+English follower in the person of another physician, Dr. Fludd, a disciple
+of the famous inventor of the camera obscura, and conjecturally the first
+photographer. His grand quack remedy was "the powder of sympathy," which
+was the "sword-salve" of Paracelsus (composed of moss taken from the skull
+of a gibbetted murderer, of warm human blood, human suet, linseed oil,
+turpentine, etc.). This was applied, not to the wound, but to the sword
+that inflicted it, kept "in a cool place!" Certain plants pulled up with
+the left hand were regarded as a sure remedy in fever cases, but the
+gatherer, while gathering, was not to look behind, for that deprived the
+plants of their medicinal value.
+
+Amongst other physicians of Shakespeare's century was Mr. Valentine
+Greatrake, who came to London from Ireland, where his supposed magical
+cures had been awakening a great sensation. He hired a large house in
+Lincoln's Inn Fields, to which vast crowds of patients of all kinds and
+conditions crowded daily, all clamouring to be cured. He received them in
+their order, says an eye-witness, with "a grave and simple countenence."
+For, as Shakespeare wrote, "Thus credulous fools are caught." ("Comedy of
+Errors," 1, 2.) Greatrake (afterwards executed for high treason) asserted
+that every diseased person was possessed by a devil, and that by his
+prayers and laying on of hands the devil could be cast out. Lord Conway
+sent for him to cure an incurable disease from which his wife was
+suffering, and even some of the most learned and eminent people of the
+time were amongst his patrons. St. Evremond wrote, "You can hardly imagine
+what a reputation he gained in a short time. Catholics and Protestants
+visited him from every part, all believing that power from heaven was in
+his hands."
+
+In an Act of Parliament which was passed in the year 1511, we read, in its
+preamble, that "the science and cunning of Physic and Surgery" was
+exercised by "a great multitude of ignorant persons, of whom the greater
+part have no manner of insight in the same, nor in any other kind of
+learning--some also can read no letters in the book--so far forth that
+common artificers, as smiths, weavers, and women, boldly and accostumably
+took upon them great cures, and things of great difficulty, in which they
+partly used sorceries and witchcraft, and partly supplied such medicines
+unto the diseased as are very noisome, and nothing meet therefore; to the
+high displeasure of God," etc.
+
+A large number of the pretended remedies thus used in medical practice are
+clearly traceable back to the ancient Magi, who were professors of
+medicine, as well as priests and astrologers.
+
+With these facts before you, turn to your Shakespeare, and see how he
+regarded the popular delusions thus created and fostered, with their
+
+ "Distinguished cheaters, prating mountebanks,
+ And many such libertines of sin."
+ --_Comedy of Errors._
+
+Do you remember the other lines from this source, in which the poet speaks
+of "This pernicious slave," who "forsooth took on him as a conjurer, and,
+gazing in mine eyes, feeling my pulse, and with no face, as't were,
+outfacing me, cried out I was possessed." This is not the stern, grave
+doctor in "Macbeth," who did not pretend to "raze out the written troubles
+of the brain," but said, "Therein the patient must minister unto himself."
+There is no depreciation of the healing art in Shakespeare's painting of
+Lear's physician, as there is of the "caitiff wretch" of an apothecary,
+who sold poison to Romeo in a very different way to that in which the
+physician in Cymbeline supplied a deadly drug to the Queen. "I beseech
+your grace," says he, speaking in solemn earnestness, "without offence
+(my conscience bids me ask) wherefore you have commanded of me these most
+poisonous compounds." In "All's well that Ends Well," you will recognize
+the foregoing descriptions of medicinal delusions in the interview between
+Helena and the King, who says, we "may not be so credulous of cure, when
+our most learned doctors leave us, and the congregated college have
+concluded that labouring art can never ransom Nature from her maid estate,
+I say we must not so stain our judgment, or corrupt our hope, to
+prostitute our past-cure malady to empirics." In this play both "Galen and
+Paracelsus" are mentioned, and their names then represented rival schools
+of medicine.
+
+How smartly and merrily Shakespeare wrote of such cures as Greatrake
+professed to effect, we see in Henry VI., where Simpcox, supposed to be
+miraculously cured of blindness, is asked to and does describe what he
+sees, "If thou _hadst_ been born blind, thou might'st as well have known
+all our names as thus to name the several colours we do wear."
+
+In the "Merry Wives of Windsor" we have "Master Caius that calls himself
+doctor of physic," and is called by Dame Quickly a "fool and physician."
+The two were in Shakespeare's time very commonly combined, and often, as
+we have shown, very strangely. Dr. Caius was a real name borne by a
+learned gentleman who was physician to Queen Elizabeth. In Cymbeline the
+name of the physician is Cornelius. This again was the name of a real
+physician, who, in the sixteenth century, gained great reputation in
+Europe chiefly by restoring Charles V. to health after a tediously long
+illness. We may presume that Shakespeare was familiar with the fact.
+
+Amongst the doctors of our poet's time it was a common custom to throw up
+cases when they believed them hopeless. Shakespeare's Sempronius says,
+"His friends, like physicians, thrice gave him o'er," and Lord Bacon in
+his work on "The Advancement of Learning," says of Physicians, "In the
+enquiry of diseases, they do abandon the cures of many, some as in their
+nature incurable, and others as past the period of cure, so that Sylla
+triumvirs never prescribed so many men to die as they do by their ignorant
+edicts." We have spoken of the sword-salve cure for wounds. Of dealers in
+poison who visited fairs and market-places, and attracted crowds by the
+aid of a stage fool, we get a glimpse in "Hamlet," where Laertes says:--
+
+ "I bought an unction of a mountebank,
+ So mortal, that but dip a knife in it,
+ Where it draws blood, no cataplasm so rare
+ Collected from all simples that have virtue,
+ Under the moon can save the thing from death."
+
+There is a hit at doctors who gave others remedies they had not enough
+faith in to adopt for themselves:--
+
+ "Thou speak'st like a physician, Helicarnus:
+ Who minister'st a potion unto me
+ That thou would'st tremble to receive thyself."
+ --_Pericles._
+
+In the same play the true physician receives full appreciation. Cerimon
+says of himself:--
+
+ "'Tis known, I ever
+ Have studied physic, through which secret art,
+ By turning o'er authorities, I have
+ Together with my practice, made familiar
+ To me, and to my aid, the blest infusions
+ That dwell in vegitives, in metals, stones.
+ And I can speake of the disturbances
+ That nature works, and of her cures; which doth give me
+ A more content in course of true delight
+ Than to be thirsty after tottering honour,
+ Or tie my treasure up in silken bags,
+ To please the fool, and death."
+
+And one of the two listening gentlemen adds:--
+
+ "Your honour has through Ephesus pour'd forth
+ Your charity, and hundreds call themselves
+ Your creatures, who by you have been restored."
+
+And Pericles, with his supposed dead wife in his arms, turning to Cerimon,
+who has saved her from the grave, says:--
+
+ "Reverend Sir,
+ The gods can have no mortal officer
+ More like a god than you."
+
+And Gower, speaking the concluding lines of the play, adds:--
+
+ "In reverend Cerimon there well appears
+ The worth that learned charity aye wears."
+
+ "_Cerimon_: I hold it ever
+ Virtue and cunning (wisdom) were endowment greater
+ Than nobleness and riches...."
+
+There was, perhaps, when Shakespeare wrote the above lines, some thought
+of the Elizabethan nobleman, Edmund, Earl of Derby, who "was famous for
+chirurgerie, bone-setting, and hospitalite," as Ward says in his Diary; of
+the Marquis of Dorchester, who in his time was a Fellow of the College of
+Surgeons; or of the poet's son-in-law, Dr. Hall, a gentleman who resided
+in Stratford-on-Avon, in a fine old half timber house still standing, and
+known as Hall's Croft. To his wife, the poet's elder daughter, Shakespeare
+bequeathed his house and grounds, which Dr. Hall occupied when he died.
+His grave is near that of his glorious father-in-law, and on it is the
+following inscription:--
+
+ "HERE LYETH Y{E} BODY OF JOHN HALL,
+ GENT: HE MARR: SVSANNA Y{E} DAUGHTER
+ AND CO HEIRE OF WILL. SHAKESPEARE,
+ GENT. HEE DECEASED NOVE{R} 25 A{O} 1635
+ AGED 60.
+
+ Hallius hic situs est medica celeberrimus arte
+ Expectans regni gaudia lĉta Dei
+ Dignus erat meritis qui Nestora vinceret annis,
+ In terris omnes, sed rapit aequa dies;
+ Ne tumulo, quid desit adest fidissima conjux
+ Et vitĉ Comitem nunc quoque mortis habet."
+
+
+
+
+Dickens' Doctors.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+Dickens, it must be admitted by even the greatest admirers of his
+inimitable genius, among whom the writer of this paper must be counted,
+was not successful in his delineations of the medical profession. Though
+his most humorous as well as his most pathetic pictures of human life are
+drawn from the humbler walks in the pilgrimage of humanity, he has given
+us some good touches of his skill in his presentments of other
+professions, and notably of lawyers and lawyers' clerks. Nothing in
+fiction can excel his legal characters in, for instance, "Bleak
+House,"--his Mr. Tulkinghorn, Mr. Guppy, the clerk, and Mr. Snagsby, the
+law stationer. But a life-like doctor cannot be found in his works, and
+the nearest approaches to such a description are the merest sketches.
+
+The most strongly marked of these are Dr. Parker Peps and Mr. Pilkins, the
+two members of the faculty who officiate at the closing scene in the life
+of Mrs. Dombey, in which a sense of humour, with difficulty suppressed by
+the author, mingles with the touching sadness of the death. Dr. Parker
+Peps, "one of the Court physicians, and a man of immense reputation for
+assisting at the increase of great families," is introduced "walking up
+and down the drawing-room with his hands behind him, to the unspeakable
+admiration of the family surgeon, who had regularly puffed the case for
+the last six weeks among all his friends and acquaintances as one to which
+he was in hourly expectation, day and night, of being summoned in
+conjunction with Dr. Parker Peps." But in this little interlude, the two
+actors in which do not appear again, the obsequiousness of Mr. Pilkins to
+the Court physician, and the manner in which the latter, with assumed
+obliviousness, substitutes "her grace, the duchess" or "her ladyship" for
+Mrs. Dombey, verge on caricature, a tendency Dickens seems to have had at
+all times some difficulty in resisting.
+
+Of Dr. Slammer also we have only a sketch, and that of the slightest
+character. Though he is described as "one of the most popular personages
+in his own circle," we gather from the incidents in which he appears only
+that he was very irascible. As we read of his furious jealousy of Jingle,
+and the interrupted duel with Winkle, who had received his challenge to
+the former by mistake, we wonder at the circle in which this "little fat
+man, with a ring of upright black hair round his head, and an extensive
+bald plain on the top of it," was one of the most popular personages.
+Harold Skimpole, we are told, had been educated for the medical
+profession; but his training seems to have left no traces of it upon his
+character or his conversation. He prefers to dabble in literature and
+music for his own amusement, and look to his friends for the means of
+living, too prosaic an occupation for himself.
+
+One of the best, but not quite the best, of the medical characters in
+Dickens' novels, is Allan Woodcourt, who "had gone out a poor ship's
+surgeon, and had come home nothing better,"--the young man hastily called
+in when the death of Nemo is discovered, in conjunction with "a testy
+medical man, brought from his dinner, with a broad snuffy upper lip, and a
+broad Scotch tongue." Allan Woodcourt has the kindness of heart which
+characterises the profession, and exemplifies it very pleasingly in the
+scene with the brickmaker's wife, and with poor Jo, the forlorn waif who
+is kept continually moving on by the police. How tenderly, too, he deals
+with Richard Carstone, the weak-minded victim of the long-drawn Chancery
+suit. And his head is as sound as his heart is soft. "You," says Richard
+to him, "can pursue your art for its own sake, and can put your hand to
+the plough and never turn; and can strike a purpose out of anything." What
+a world of difference we see in this briefly sketched trait to the want of
+earnestness of purpose and steadfastness of pursuit in the character of
+young Carstone!
+
+Even stronger testimony to the good qualities of Allan Woodcourt is borne
+by Mr. Jarndyce. Allan, says that gentleman, is "a man whose hopes and
+aims may sometimes lie (as most men's sometimes do, I dare say) above the
+ordinary level, but to whom the ordinary level will be high enough after
+all, if it should prove to be a way of usefulness and good service leading
+to no other. All generous spirits are ambitious, I suppose; but the
+ambition that calmly trusts itself to such a road, instead of
+spasmodically trying to fly over it, is the kind I care for. It is
+Woodcourt's kind." The love passages of this estimable young man with the
+equally estimable Esther Summerson, one of Dickens' most charming
+presentments of English maidenhood, are very pleasing, and none of them
+more so than one which occurs towards the close of the story.
+
+There is another medical character in one of the Christmas stories which,
+good as it is, might have been made better but for the extent to which the
+exigencies of space limited the author in the development of character in
+that class of stories. I mean Dr. Jeddler, the genial but mistaken father
+of Grace and Marion, in "The Battle of Life." The doctor is "a great
+philosopher, and the heart and mystery of his philosophy was to look upon
+the world as a gigantic practical joke; as something too absurd to be
+considered seriously by any practical man. His system of belief had been
+in the beginning part and parcel of the battle ground on which he lived."
+He is not of the cynical school, but a modern Democritus, whose
+inclination to laugh at everything on the surface of the ocean of life was
+irresistible, while there was nothing in the conditions of his existence
+to suggest anything that was beneath. When he hears his daughters
+conversing about their lovers, "his reflections as he looked after them,
+and heard the purport of their discourse, were limited at first to certain
+merry meditations on the folly of all loves and likings, and the idle
+imposition practised on themselves by young people who believe for a
+moment that there could be anything serious in such bubbles, and were
+always deceived--always."
+
+Dr. Jeddler is a widower; we are not told what his experiences of married
+life had been. Had they been unhappy, one would suppose that he would have
+been more disposed to be cynical and pessimistic than to regard life's
+incidents as provocative of merriment, yet, if they had been happy, why
+should he have regarded the engagement of Grace as an idle folly, a bubble
+on life's surface, soon to burst? Dickens' explanation is, from this point
+of view, scarcely satisfactory. "He was sorry," says the novelist, "for
+her sake--sorry for them both--that life should be such a very ridiculous
+business as it was. The doctor never dreamed of inquiring whether his
+children, or either of them, helped in any way to make the scheme a
+serious one. But then he was a philosopher. A kind and generous man by
+nature, he had stumbled by chance over that common philosopher's stone
+(much more easily discovered than the object of the alchemist's
+researches) which sometimes trips up kind and generous men, and has the
+fatal property of turning gold to dross, and every precious thing to poor
+account."
+
+But when sorrow had humbled the doctor's heart, he felt that the world in
+which some love, deep-anchored, is the portion of every human creature,
+was more serious than he had thought it, and understood "how such a trifle
+as the absence of a little unit in the great absurd account had stricken
+him to the ground." Then, when he and his daughters are again together in
+the old home, and his arms are about them both, we find him acknowledging
+that "It's a world full of hearts, and a serious world with all its
+folly,--even with mine, which was enough to swamp the whole world."
+
+It is to be observed, however, that while we find all the traits and
+incidents of professional life in the lawyers of Dickens' creation, there
+is little or nothing of the kind in his doctors. Such traits are abundant
+in his presentments of Tulkinghorn, and Kenge, and Vholes in Wickfield,
+and many others that might be named; but they are so completely absent
+from his portrayals of Allan Woodcourt and Dr. Jeddler, that the two men
+might as well have been of any other profession, without any loss to the
+stories in which they appear. If we compare them with his lawyers, or with
+the clergymen of Mrs. Oliphant, we are struck at once with the difference.
+
+[Illustration: CHARLES DICKENS.]
+
+This is not the case, however, when from the full-blown medical
+practitioner, adding to his name the initials M.D. or M.R.C.S., we descend
+to the "sawbones in training," as the facetious Sam Weller designates the
+young men qualifying themselves for the exercise of the profession by
+"walking the hospitals." The medical students of the novelist's early
+days were--it would perhaps be fairer to say that a large proportion of
+them were--a turbulent and disorderly element in the social life of the
+metropolis. The newspapers of the day record their frequent appearances at
+the Bow Street and Marlborough Street police-courts on charges of rowdyism
+in the streets at or after midnight, when they came out from their
+favourite places of amusement, the Coal Hole, in the Strand, the Cider
+Cellars, in Maiden Lane, and the Judge and Jury Club, in Leicester Square,
+the latter presided over by Renton Nicholson, who edited a vile
+publication called _The Town_. Their after-amusements were found in
+strolling through the streets in threes and fours, singing at the top of
+their voices comic songs, that often outraged propriety, ringing door
+bells, and chaffing the police. Dickens must often in his reporting days
+have witnessed the next morning appearances of these young men at Bow
+Street police-court.
+
+The first appearance of two specimens of this variety of the immature
+medico in the humorous pages of the "Pickwick Papers" is described as
+follows in the low cockney vernacular of Sam Weller. "One on 'em," he
+tells Mr. Pickwick, "has got his legs on the table, and is a-drinkin'
+brandy neat, vile the tother one--him in the barnacles--has got a barrel
+of oysters atween his knees, vich he's a-openin' like steam, and as fast
+as he eats 'em he takes a aim with the shells at young Dropsy, who's
+a-sittin' down fast asleep in the chimbley corner." The latter gentleman
+is Mr. Benjamin Allen, who is described by the novelist as "a coarse,
+stout, thick-set young man, with black hair cut rather short, and a white
+face cut rather long. He was embellished with spectacles, and wore a white
+neckerchief. Below his single-breasted black surtout, which was buttoned
+up to his chin, appeared the usual number of pepper-and-salt coloured
+legs, terminating in a pair of imperfectly polished boots. Although his
+coat was short in the sleeves, it disclosed no vestige of a linen
+wristband, and although there was quite enough of his face to admit of the
+encroachment of a shirt-collar, it was not graced by the smallest approach
+to that appendage. He presented altogether rather a mildewy appearance,
+and emitted a fragrant odour of full-flavoured Cubas."
+
+This gentleman's companion is Mr. Bob Sawyer, "who was habited in a coarse
+blue coat which, without being either a great-coat or a surtout, partook
+of the nature and qualities of both," and "had about him that sort of
+slovenly smartness and swaggering gait which is peculiar to young
+gentlemen who smoke in the streets by day, shout and scream in the same by
+night, call waiters by their Christian names, and do various other acts
+and deeds of an equally facetious description. He wore a pair of plaid
+trousers and a large rough double-breasted waistcoat: out of doors he
+carried a thick stick with a big top. He eschewed gloves, and looked, upon
+the whole, something like a dissipated Robinson Crusoe." The conversation
+of these budding surgeons is perfectly in harmony with their outward
+aspect. Their discourse, when it assumes a serious character, is of the
+"cases" at the hospital and the "subjects" at the time being on the
+dissecting tables of the anatomical lecture-rooms. When relieved from
+attendance at the hospitals, they lounge at tavern bars, and flirt with
+barmaids and waitresses, to whom their attentions are not unfrequently of
+an objectionable character, and less agreeable than they imagine them to
+be.
+
+The contrast between the graphic power displayed by Dickens in his
+delineation of the characters of Bob Sawyer and Ben Allen, and the
+indistinctiveness, as to profession, of his presentments of Allan
+Woodcourt and Dr. Jeddler, may help us to understand the causes which
+render his doctors so much less effective than his lawyers. The legal
+profession presents more variety than the medical, and comes before us
+more prominently in conjunction with incidents of a striking character, as
+may be seen every day in the newspaper records of the courts of law and of
+police. The physician and the surgeon stand as much apart, in these
+respects, from the busy barrister or solicitor as the clergy do. Dickens
+has not given us a clerical portrait, and probably for a similar reason.
+Mrs. Oliphant, on the other hand, excels in her delineations of every
+grade of the Anglican hierarchy; but her genius as a writer of fiction
+runs in a groove essentially different from that of Dickens.
+
+
+
+
+Famous Literary Doctors.
+
+BY CUMING WALTERS.
+
+
+Medical men have not so commonly made literature an extra pursuit, or
+adopted it as a serious calling, as have the members of the other liberal
+professions. It is quite expected that a clergyman should write poems,
+philosophical essays, and perhaps even a novel with a purpose; and it is
+usual to recruit the ranks of critics extensively from the law, and to
+trust to briefless barristers for a continuous supply of romances. No
+detail is more frequently discovered in the biographies of eminent authors
+than that they were called to the Bar, and either never practised or
+forsook practising in order to engage in literary labours. Indeed, it
+might almost seem that failure in law was the most important step towards
+success in authorship. No such rule applies, however, to medical men, and
+no such comment would be justified in their case. Not only do we find the
+writing of books--otherwise than text-books and technical
+treatises--rarer with them, but it curiously happens that in most
+instances it has been the successful practitioner, not the man walking the
+hospitals or waiting for calls, who has turned author. And we shall find
+that these medico-literati (if I may coin the phrase) have often been
+among the most hard-working in their profession, and the wonder is that
+they were able to enter upon a second pursuit and to follow it with so
+much zeal. For, in most of the examples I shall advance, literature was
+more than a pastime with these men who indulged in it. It was chosen by
+some for its lucrativeness, and by the majority for its capacity to
+enhance their reputation or to bring them enduring fame. This much may be
+safely said, that the names of many excellent doctors would have faded
+from public remembrance ere this, and would have passed away with the
+generation to which they belonged, had not literature given them lasting
+luminance. In not a few instances the fact is already forgotten or wholly
+ignored that certain successful writers once wrote "M.D." after their
+names. Who cares that the author of that classic "Religio Medici" took his
+degrees at Leyden and at Oxford, and dispensed medicine to the end of his
+life? Who cares that the author of "The Borough," "Tales in Verse," and
+"The Parish Register," was apprenticed to a surgeon? Who cares that the
+writer of such dramas as "Virginius," "William Tell," and "The Hunchback,"
+was trained for a physician? Who cares that the author of "Roderick
+Random," "Peregrine Pickle," and "The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker" was
+a surgeon's assistant and acted as surgeon's mate in the unfortunate
+Carthagena expedition, before trying (unsuccessfully) to obtain a practice
+in London? And, above all, who cares that the author of "The Deserted
+Village" and "The Vicar of Wakefield" studied physic in Edinburgh and on
+the Continent, and, as Boswell was informed, "was enabled to pursue his
+travels on foot, partly by demanding at Universities to enter the lists as
+a disputant, by which, according to the custom of many of them, he was
+entitled to the premium of a crown, when luckily for him his challenge was
+not accepted?" Such are a few of the examples which immediately occur to
+the mind when the whole subject is contemplated.
+
+It would be impossible in the compass of a short article to deal
+systematically and comprehensively with doctors who became authors, or to
+make out a complete list of their names with an account of the works which
+entitled them to the designation. Any facts now adduced must be considered
+arbitrary and capricious, so far as the choice of them is concerned; and
+sequence is so little attempted that the reader will pardon, I trust, a
+possible leap from Galen to Goldsmith, from Sir Thomas Browne to Tobias
+Smollett, and from Sir John Blackmore to Conan Doyle. I put aside those
+members of the profession who have simply written on professional
+subjects. Their name is legion, but in the great majority of cases such
+work as this would not strictly justify their inclusion among the
+literati. And, on the other hand, we cannot find a place in the category
+for such men as Goethe or Sainte-Beuve, for though both studied
+medicine, it seems to have been purely with a view to the extension of
+their knowledge and not with any more practical or material object.
+Sainte-Beuve, it is true, for a short time in his youth entertained some
+thought of adopting the profession; but Goethe only dipped into the
+subject with the same spirit that he dipped into experimental chemistry
+and astrology.
+
+Let us, then, refer to a few types certain of instant recognition. The
+most notable of modern instances is Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, a
+specialist in his profession, a hard-working physician, and the author of
+valuable treatises on medical art, who nevertheless occupied the position
+of being among the four chief poets whom America has produced, and one of
+the most versatile of the littérateurs of the century. He went to the
+Paris Medical Schools shortly after he had graduated at Harvard; he
+practised as a physician at Boston; and for nearly forty years he was
+Professor of Physiology. Yet he had time to write the most delightful and
+original of philosophical essays, to publish novels of which at least
+one--"Elsie Venner: A Romance of Destiny"--will rank as a classic; to
+deliver orations and after-dinner speeches in sparkling verse, and to
+write exquisite poems in rich and felicitous language on a wonderful
+variety of themes, the complete collection of which makes a very
+substantial volume. In all his work Dr. Holmes showed himself to be the
+profound student of nature and of humanity with many varying interests;
+yet we can often trace the hand of the physician in the work of the
+essayist and poet. His novels were special studies which only the ardent
+physiologist and metaphysician would have cared to discuss, or, at all
+events, would have discussed so well. Both "Elsie Venner" and "The
+Guardian Angel" deal with the occult problems of heredity, and those
+problems are treated with the power of the specialist in certain branches
+of science. Still more strongly is the character of the medical man
+displayed in a number of the poems, some by reason of their subject, and
+some by the figures and imagery they contain. The well-known "Stethoscope
+Song" will immediately suggest itself in illustration. But, for purposes
+of quotation, I prefer a less popular poem of rare beauty, which more
+strikingly manifests the writer's power of transmuting the hard dry facts
+of science into light and gleaming poetry. I refer to what he called at
+first "The Anatomist's Hymn," but afterwards "The Living Temple." It is
+one of the interpolated poems in the "Autocrat" series of papers, and to
+my thinking invests the human body and its physical functions with
+unimagined charms.
+
+Take, for instance, this poetic exposition of our respiration, the
+scientific correctness and exactness of which need no explanation to
+readers of this volume:--
+
+ "The smooth, soft air with pulse-like waves
+ Flows murmuring through its hidden caves,
+ Whose streams of brightening purple rush
+ Fired with a new and livelier blush,
+ While all their burden of decay
+ The ebbing current steals away,
+ And red with Nature's flame they start
+ From the warm fountains of the heart.
+
+ No rest that throbbing slave may ask,
+ For ever quivering o'er his task,
+ While far and wide a crimson jet
+ Leaps forth to fill the woven net
+ Which in unnumbered crossing tides
+ The flood of burning life divides,
+ Then kindling each decaying part
+ Creeps back to find the throbbing heart.
+
+ But warmed with that unchanging flame
+ Behold the outward moving frame,
+ Its living marbles jointed strong
+ With glistening band and silvery thong,
+ And linked to reason's guiding reins
+ By myriad rings in trembling chains,
+ Each graven with the threaded zone
+ Which claims it as the master's own."
+
+There is an almost irresistible temptation to linger over Dr. Oliver
+Wendell Holmes' books, so intensely interesting is his personality and so
+fascinating is his work. But several other eminent poets of the
+profession demand attention. To Crabbe's connection with surgery I have
+already incidentally referred, and inasmuch as he early abandoned the
+calling for the ministry, little need be said except that his youthful
+experience may have aided him in writing a scathing denunciation of the
+Quack, who believed wholly in the potence of "oxymel of squills," and of
+the Parish Doctor, who "first insults the victim whom he kills." The poet
+was a severe castigator, and was never less forbearing with the lash than
+when these impostors of his day were under his hand for flagellation. In
+Mark Akenside we come to a better specimen of the class which we are
+considering. At the age of twenty he went to Leyden, and three years later
+became, (as Dr. Johnson writes) "a doctor of physick, having, according to
+the custom of the Dutch Universities, published a thesis." In the same
+year he published "The Pleasures of the Imagination," his greatest work.
+This was followed by a collection of odes, but he still sought a
+livelihood as a physician. Little success attended him, however, and Dr.
+Johnson records that Akenside was known as a poet better than as a doctor,
+and would have been reduced to great exigencies but for the generosity of
+an ardent friend. "Thus supported, he gradually advanced in medical
+reputation, but never attained any great extent of practice, or eminence
+of popularity. A physician in a great city," his biographer continues
+musingly, "seems to be the mere play-thing of Fortune; his degree of
+reputation is, for the most part, totally casual; they that employ him,
+know not his excellence; they that reject him, know not his deficiency."
+Yet it was otherwise with Sir Samuel Garth, doctor and poet, of whom
+Johnson himself records that "by his conversation and accomplishments he
+obtained a very extensive practice." His principal poem was "The
+Dispensary," relating to a controversy of the time between the College of
+Physicians, who desired to give gratuitous advice to the poor, and the
+Apothecaries, who wished to keep up the high price of medicine. Garth was
+"on the side of charity against the intrigues of interest, and of regular
+learning against licentious usurpation of medical authority," as Johnson
+put it; and he sprang into favour, was eventually knighted, and became
+physician-general to the army. His last literary work, and his worst, was
+a crude but ostentatious preface to a translation of Ovid. As a matter of
+fact his writing was invariably mediocre, and Pope, in calling attention
+to the fact that the "Dispensary" poem had been corrected in every
+edition, unkindly remarked that "every change was an improvement." John
+Phillips, who may be ranked among the physicians, though it is doubtful
+whether he practised, enjoyed a better fate as a man of letters than did
+either Akenside or Garth. He sprang into sudden popularity by the
+publication of a whimsical and clever medley called "The Silver Shilling,"
+and this he followed up by a sort of official commemoration of the victory
+of Blenheim. His greatest achievement was a poem in two books on "Cider,"
+and he was meditating an epic on "The Last Day" when he died, at the early
+age of thirty-three. One curious fact about his writings, small as it is,
+is worthy of mention. He sang the praises of tobacco in every poem he
+wrote, except that on Blenheim.
+
+Dr. Johnson did not rate Phillips very highly; he said that what study
+could confer he obtained, but that "natural deficience cannot be
+supplied." The sturdy doctor, however, did his utmost to rehabilitate the
+damaged reputation of Blackmore, whom we may regard as the most
+remarkable of all the compounds of physician-poets with whom we can become
+acquainted. Blackmore obtained an undeserved success, which was followed
+by unmerited ridicule, and Johnson, who hated every form of injustice,
+constituted himself his champion. For the truth about Blackmore we must
+seek the medium between the extremes of Johnson's praise and of the
+censure of his enemies--the "malignity of contemporary wits," as Boswell
+termed it. When all is said and done the fact remains that Blackmore was a
+man of uncommon character, and a prodigious worker. His first work, a
+heroic poem in ten books, on Prince Arthur, was written, he related, by
+"such catches and starts, and in such occasional uncertain hours as his
+profession afforded, and for the greatest part in coffee-houses, or in
+passing up and down the streets." This work passed through several
+editions with rapidity, and two extra books were added to it. The King
+knighted him and gave him other advances, but the critics furiously
+assailed him, and his name became a by-word for all that was heavy and
+ridiculous in poetry. Notwithstanding this he persevered, and published
+successively a "Paraphrase on the Book of Job," a "Satire on Wit,"
+"Elijah,"--an epic poem in ten books--"Creation, a Philosophical Poem,"
+"Advice to Poets how to celebrate the Duke of Marlborough," "The Nature of
+Man," "Redemption," "A New Version of the Psalms," "Alfred"--an epic in
+twelve books--"A History of the Conspiracy against King William," and a
+host of others which his perverted reason or fantastic fancy suggested.
+Never, perhaps, was known such a voluminous author, or one so erratic in
+his system. What with his long heroic poems, his treatises on smallpox and
+other diseases, his theological controversies, his "Advices" to painters,
+poets, and weavers, and his prose contributions to periodical
+publications, "England's Arch-Poet" (as Swift described him) could never
+have idled away an hour. Of all that he wrote, a few passages from his
+"Arthur" and "Creation" are alone remembered, and but for Johnson's
+good-natured attempt to save him from oblivion, his name would only have
+lived in the satires of his remorseless critics. One saying of Blackmore's
+only is worth noting here. He had laid himself open to the imputation of
+despising learning, and Dr. Johnson himself thought him a shallow ill-read
+man. But Blackmore said:--"I only undervalued false or superficial
+learning, that signifies nothing for the service of mankind; as to physic
+I expressly affirmed that learning must be joined with native genius to
+make a physician of the first rank; but if those talents are separated, I
+asserted, and do still insist, that a man of native sagacity and diligence
+will prove a more able and useful practiser than a heavy notional scholar
+encumbered with a heap of confused ideas."
+
+One or two other doctors who in their time enjoyed a reputation as
+writers, but whose fame was transient, or, at least, is insecure, call for
+very brief notice before we pass on to a few of greater importance. Sir
+John Hill, M.D., an eighteenth century physician, was a fairly extensive
+litterateur, and in addition to producing treatises on botany, medicine,
+natural history, and philosophy, wrote half a dozen novels, and several
+dramas. His _chef d'oeuvre_ was "The Vegetable System," a work of such
+magnitude that it ran to twenty-six volumes, a copy of which was presented
+to the King of Sweden, and procured for the author the distinction of
+being included in the Order of the Polar Star. Dr. William Fullarton
+Cumming, a son of Burns' "Bonnie Leslie," was compelled to travel in mild
+climates for his health, and as a result wrote "The Notes of a Wanderer,"
+a work abounding in poetic descriptions of the charming scenery of the
+East. He tells us that the real pleasure of travelling is not to boast of
+how many lions one may have slain in a single day, but to saunter about
+without an object, to inhale the moral atmosphere of places visited, to
+enter bazaars, not to buy, but to catch the hundred peculiarities of a new
+people, to stray hither and thither watching the work and the recreations
+of other races. John Chalmers, M.D. (not to be confused with the great
+divine, Dr. Thomas Chalmers), also deserves to be noted as a very graceful
+writer of romantic stories; and Sir Henry Thompson, under the name of "Pen
+Oliver," produced some years ago a strange little volume which enjoyed a
+season's success--"Charley Kingston's Aunt."
+
+That most diffident and most delightful of authors, Dr. John Brown, who
+gave us the memorable "Rab and his Friends," was in practice at Edinburgh.
+As long as lovers of the animal creation are to be found, the story of Rab
+and of Marjorie will be read; and these sketches of brutes whom he almost
+humanised will probably outlive the genial doctor's more ambitious "Horĉ
+Subsecivĉ" and "John Leech and other Papers." Of a very different nature
+was the author of "Ten Thousand a Year," Dr. Samuel Warren, physician,
+lawyer, politician, novelist, and office-seeker. Tittlebat Titmouse is not
+much studied now, for the type is out-of-date, and the society of which
+the novel treats, the abuses prevalent, the general corruption which
+prevailed in public life, were exposures intended for a past generation.
+Yet there are passages in the work which should save it from absolute
+neglect, and it has for over half a century kept its author's name alive.
+This is more than his "Passages from the Diary of a late Physician" could
+have done, or those dozen other works with the bare titles of which the
+present reading public is scarcely acquainted. John Abercrombie, the chief
+consulting physician in Scotland during the last century, sought and
+achieved literary fame with two volumes on "The Intellectual Powers," and
+"The Moral Feelings." They enjoyed a popularity scarcely commensurate with
+their actual merits.
+
+David Macbeth Moir, who faithfully performed the arduous duties of a
+medical practitioner in Edinburgh, and whose life was almost wholly
+devoted to the service of his fellows, was the famous "Delta" of
+_Blackwood's Magazine_. His poems, some four hundred of which he
+contributed to "Maga." alone, are out of fashion now, though their
+delightful vein of reflectiveness and their charm of expression should
+preserve them from absolute neglect. The heavy labours of his profession
+did not seem to check his literary productiveness. His poems fill two
+large volumes; his prose works are by no means meagre or unimportant, and
+his "Sketches of the Poetical Literature of the past Half-century," is a
+standard work on the poetry of his period. Medical treatises, too, came
+from his pen; and his "Life of Mansie Wauch, Tailor," is one of the most
+agreeable of genuine Scotch sketches. His biographer correctly summed up
+the merits of the worthy doctor as a literary worker in the words "Good
+sound sense, a simple healthy feeling, excited and exalted though these
+may be, never fail him. He draws from nature, and from himself direct."
+Quiet humour and simple pathos, a love of humanity, deep reverential
+feeling, and originality of thought--all these are found in "Delta's"
+writings, and serve, with his own admirable nature, to keep his memory
+green.
+
+Of Dr. Conan Doyle, the most conspicuous instance of the hour of the
+doctor turned author, no detailed notice is requisite, as the main facts
+of his career are sufficiently well known, and his literary work promises
+to bring him both fame and fortune. Undoubtedly he exemplifies the fact
+that the medical hand can scarcely be concealed when it takes to the pen,
+for his novels and stories abound in allusions which only his study,
+training, and experience as a doctor could suggest. His reading and
+observation largely provide the technique of his romances. Something of
+the same could be said of Smollett's work, though the medical knowledge of
+the author was often turned to less agreeable account. In fact, most of
+Smollet's references on this score were the reverse of delectable, and I
+refrain from a more precise examination of them. The unexpected use to
+which Mr. R. D. Blackmore has turned his knowledge of medicine--for he
+studied medicine as well as law seriously in his youth--in several of his
+novels, notably in the last, "Perlycross," has excited much interest and
+attention among the profession. So marked is this that I cannot refrain
+quoting from a singularly interesting criticism penned by a leading
+physician in the Midlands. "The medical incidents in 'Perlycross,'" he
+says, "are pourtrayed with an accuracy which shows an intimate knowledge
+of the profession and its members.... No doubt the opinions expressed by
+one learned doctor were those of the time represented in the story, though
+they could hardly be received with justice in the present day. Speaking of
+the illness of Sir Thomas Waldron, he says (p. 18):--'At present such a
+case could be dealt with best in Paris, although we have young men rising
+now who will make it otherwise before very long.' The key to this
+difficulty is found later on (p. 159) where the technical word
+'introsusception' is mentioned as the disease or condition from which the
+patient suffered. At the time spoken of Parisian surgeons, headed by the
+eminent Dupuytren, excelled in the art of surgery; at the present time
+such a case could be treated as well by any hospital surgeon in England as
+in the metropolis of France.... The book contains an admirably-described
+case of catalepsy, which is equally well explained. The cure of the
+attack is described with consummate skill and power. The keystone of the
+whole position of medical knowledge is contained in a few words towards
+its close. In these days of rapid transition from one excitement to
+another it would be well to take the lesson to heart, and to remember what
+the author speaks of as two fine things--'If you wish to be sure of
+anything see it with your own good eyes,' and the second, 'Never scamp
+your work.' How these sayings may be applied in the practice of the
+profession may with profit be learned from a perusal of the pages of
+'Perlycross.'" Perhaps I am going too far in claiming Mr. Blackmore as a
+medical man who has taken to literature, but the excuse of his early
+training, combined with this curious result of it manifested in his
+writing, proves irresistible.
+
+Not to stray, however, but to get our feet once more upon solid ground, we
+may refer to a classic example, with which this article, had it been aught
+else but discursive, should have begun. Galen, the Greek physician, must
+be counted among the first and most famous of his class who have written
+literary works. He was so voluminous a writer on philosophical subjects
+that scores of books on logic and ethics have been fathered upon him
+without much question arising as to the unlikelihood of his being the
+author of so many. As it is he is credited with eighty-three treatises,
+the genuineness of which is not disputed; there are nineteen suspected to
+bear his name unjustly, forty-five are proved to be spurious, and then
+there remain a further fifteen fragments and fifteen commentaries on
+Hippocrates, which may be accepted as his in part or whole. He made
+himself master of the medical, physiological, and scientific knowledge of
+his time. He was born in 130 A.D., and died in 201, and left a record of
+that period. In addition to preparing this massive work, he seems to have
+found time to devote himself to various branches of philosophy with such
+success that later writers were well pleased to trade with the talisman of
+his name. Were it worth while to go back to antiquity, and to the history
+of foreign nations for further examples of physicians whose writings were
+not confined to expositions of the medical system, Averrhoes, most famous
+of Arabian philosophers, and physician to the calif, a master of the
+twelfth century, would occupy a prominent position. But it is more to our
+purpose to draw attention to the remarkable career, and one that deserves
+to be held in remembrance, of Arthur Johnston, physician to King Charles
+the First. In the same year that he graduated at the university of Padua
+(1610) he was "laureated poet at Paris, and that most deservedly," as Sir
+Thomas Urquhart recorded. He was then only three-and-twenty years of age,
+and the prospect of many years being before him, he indulged in extensive
+travel, and visited in turn most of the principal foreign seats of
+learning. His journeying over, he settled in France and became equally
+well known as a physician and as a writer of excellent Latin verse. A
+courteous act, characteristic of the time, secured him the favour and
+patronage of the English royal family, for in 1645 he published an elegy
+on James I., and followed this up by dedicating a Latin rendering of the
+Song of Solomon to King Charles. Other specimens of his rare culture and
+his poetical powers were forthcoming, and he achieved a European
+reputation. His Latin translation of the Psalms is held to be unexcelled
+by any other, unless it be Buchanan's, and the fact that his translation
+is still in use sufficiently attests its excellence and value. He died
+suddenly in 1641, while on a visit to Oxford, and in the centuries which
+have succeeded he has not been displaced in the front rank of refined and
+deeply versed Latin scholars and poets.
+
+It would be a matter of considerable difficulty to make a complete list of
+literary doctors, but enough has perhaps been written to show that they
+are no small band so far as numbers go, and that their influence in the
+world of books has been very considerable and distinguished. We owe to
+them many great works of enduring repute, of value to the student, of
+perpetual entertainment to the general reader. When, too, we consider the
+willingness and the zeal with which the writing members of the medical
+profession have imparted their knowledge, we are led to believe that they
+accepted as their motto the noble utterance of Sir Thomas Browne, the
+chief of literary doctors:--"To be reserved and caitiff in goodness is the
+sordidest piece of covetousness, and more contemptible than pecuniary
+Avarice. To this (as calling myself a Scholar) I am obliged by the duty of
+my condition: I make not therefore my head a grave, but a treasure of
+knowledge; I intend no Monopoly, but a community, in learning; I study
+not for my own sake only, but for theirs that study not for themselves. I
+envy no man that knows more than myself, but pity them that know less. I
+instruct no man as an exercise of my knowledge, or with an intent rather
+to nourish and keep it alive in mine own head than beget and propagate it
+in his; and in the midst of all my endeavours there is but one thought
+that dejects me, that my acquired parts must perish with myself, nor can
+be Legacied among my honoured Friends."
+
+
+
+
+The "Doctor" in time of Pestilence.
+
+BY WILLIAM E. A. AXON, F.R.S.L.
+
+ "I do not feel in me those sordid and unchristian desires of my
+ profession; I do not secretly implore and wish for Plagues, rejoice at
+ Famines, revolve Ephemerides and Almanacks in expectation of malignant
+ Aspects, fatal Conjunctions, and Eclipses."--SIR THOMAS BROWNE'S
+ "Religio Medici," pt. ii., sec. ix.
+
+
+Of the great epidemics which have from time to time devastated Europe,
+Great Britain has had its full share. Between 664 and 1665 there were many
+visitations, resulting in heavy mortality, to which the general name of
+plague or pestilence has been given, although they were not always
+identical in form. Often the dread sisters Famine and Pestilence went hand
+in hand in the domains of merrie England in the good old times.
+
+The Statute of Labourers declares, no doubt with perfect truth, that "a
+great part of the people, principally of artisans and labourers," died in
+the pestilence known as the Black Death of 1349, which had important
+consequences, socially and politically. There were many subsequent
+outbreaks, though they fortunately did not attain to the enormous
+proportions of the great mortality. We have from the graphic hand of
+Chaucer a life-like portrait of a medical man of the fourteenth century
+who had gained his money in the time of pestilence.
+
+At the end of the fifteenth and middle of the sixteenth century, we have
+as alternating with bubo plague, the _Sudor Anglicanus_. Its appearance
+coincided with the invasion by which Richard III. lost his crown, and his
+rival became Henry VII. Dr. Thomas Forrester, who was in London during the
+outbreak of 1485, gives instances of suddenness with which the "sweat"
+became fatal. "We saw two prestys standing togeder and speaking togeder,
+and we saw both of them die suddenly." The symptoms were sweating, bad
+odour, redness, thirst, headache, "and some had black spots as it appeared
+in our frere Alban, a noble leech, on whose soul God have mercy."
+Forrester complains of the quacks who put letters on poles and on church
+doors, promising to help the people in their need. He lays stress upon
+astrological causes, but does not overlook the defective sanitation which
+gave the plague some of its firm hold. The _Sudor Anglicanus_ returned in
+1508, 1517, 1528, and 1551. The last visitation was the occasion of a
+treatise by the worthy Cambridge founder, to whom Gonville and Caius
+College owes so much.
+
+"The Boke of Jhon Caius aganst the sweatyng Sickness" is an interesting
+document. It opens with a long autobiographical passage as to his previous
+literary labours, which have ranged from medicine to theology. At first he
+wrote in English, but afterwards in Latin and Greek. The reason for this
+change is stated. "Sence y{t} that tyme diverse other thynges I have
+written, but with the entente never more to write in the Englishe tongue
+partly because the comodite of that which is so written, passeth not the
+compasse of Englande, but remaineth enclosed within the seas, and partly
+because I thought that labours so taken should be halfe lost among them
+which set not by learnyng. Thirdly, for that I thought it best to auoide
+the judgment of the multitude from whom in maters of lernyng a man shal be
+forced to dissente, in disprouyng that which they most approue, and
+approuyng that which they most disalowe. Fourthly for that the common
+settyng furthe and printig of every foolishe thyng in englishe, both of
+phisicke vnperfectly and other matters vndiscretly diminishe the grace of
+thynges learned set furth in thesame. But chiefely because I would geve
+none example or comfort to my countrie men (who I would to be now, as here
+tofore they have been, comparable in learnyng to men of other countries)
+to stande onely in the Englishe tongue, but to leaue the simplicitie of
+the same, and to procede further in many and diuerse knowledges both in
+tongues and sciences at home and in uniuersities, to the adornyng of the
+comon welthe, better service of their kyng, and great pleasure and
+commodite of their own selues, to what kind of life so euer they should
+applie them." But his resolution not to write again in the vulgar tongue
+was broken by considerations of utility, for he saw that it could not be
+very serviceable to ordinary English people to give them advice as to the
+treatment of the sweating sickness in a language which they did not
+understand. In his account of this dire malady, he lays stress upon errors
+and excess of diet as a strongly co-operating cause. "They which had thys
+sweat sore with perille or death, were either men of welthe, ease and
+welfare, or of the poorer sorte such as wer idls persones, good ale
+drinkers, and Tauerne haunters. For these, by ye great welfare of the one
+sorte, and large drinkyng of thother, heped up in their bodies moche evill
+matter: by their ease and idlenes, coulde not waste and consume it."
+Against the infection of bad air he recommends avoiding carrion "kepyng
+Canelles cleane" and other general sanitary precautions. He suggests that
+the midsummer bonfires were intended for purging the air, "and not onely
+for vigils." Rosewater and other perfumes are to be used, and he thinks it
+would be well to clear the house of its rushes and dust. It is to be
+feared that the rushes which served instead of carpets, even in great
+houses, were not renewed very frequently. The handkerchief was to be
+perfumed, and the patient was to have in his mouth "a pece either of
+setwel, or of the rote of _enula campana_ wel steped before in vinegre
+rosate, a mace, or berie of Juniper."
+
+Dr. Caius, like Dr. Forrester, did not omit to warn his readers that even
+with the aid of his book a medical man was still necessary, and in doing
+so he gives us a glimpse of the quack doctors of the sixteenth century.
+"Therefore seke you out a good Phisicien, and knowen to haue skille, and
+at the leaste be so good to your bodies, as you are to your hosen or shoes
+for the wel-making or mending wherof, I doubt not but you wil diligently
+searche out who is knowe to be the best hosier or shoemaker in the place
+where you dwelle: and flie the unlearned as a pestilence to the comune
+wealth. As simple women, carpenters, pewterers, brasiers, sope ball
+sellers, pulters, hostellers, painters, apotecaries (otherwise then for
+their drogges), auaunters theselves to come from Pole, Constantiple,
+Italie, Almaine, Spaine, Fraunce, Grece, and Turkie, Inde, Egipt or Jury:
+from y{e} seruice of Emperoures, kinges, and quienes, promisig helpe of al
+diseases, yea vncurable, with one or two drinckes, by waters sixe monethes
+in continualle distillinge, by _Aurum potabile_, or _quintessence_, by
+drynckes of great and hygh prices as though thei were made of the sune,
+moone, or sterres, by blessynges, and Blowinges, Hipocriticalle prayenges,
+and foolysh smokynges of shirts, smockes, and kerchieffes, wyth such other
+theire phantasies and mockeries, meaninge nothng els, but to abuse your
+light belieue, and scorne you behind your backes with their medicines, so
+filthie, that I am ashamed to name theim, for your single wit and simple
+belief, in trusting the most which you know not at al, and vnderstad
+least: like to them which thinke farre foules have faire fethers, although
+thei be never so euil fauoured & foule: as though there could not be so
+conning an Englishman, as a foolish running stranger (of others I speak
+not) or so perfect helth by honest learning, as by deceiptfull ignorance."
+
+Dr. Caius laid stress upon exercise as an aid to health, but some popular
+games he thought "rather a laming of legges than an exercise." We need not
+follow him in the details of the treatment he recommends if in spite of
+the adoption of his preventive _regime_, the sweating sickness should
+come.
+
+In 1561 there was issued "A newe booke conteyninge an exortacion to the
+sicke." The tract ends with the following parody on the nostrums current
+for the cure of the pestilence: "Take a pond of good hard penaunce, and
+washe it wel with the water of your eyes, and let it ly a good whyle at
+youre hert. Take also of the best fyne fayth, hope, charyte yt you can
+get, a like quantite of al mixed together, your soule even full, and use
+this confection every day in your lyfe, whiles the plages of God
+reigneth. Then, take both your handes ful of good workes commaunded of
+God, and kepe them close in a clene conscience from the duste of vayne
+glory, and ever as you are able and se necessite so to use them. This
+medicine was found wryten in an olde byble boke, and it hath been
+practised and proved true of mani, both men and women" (Collier's _Bib.
+Account_, i. 74).
+
+The wealthy, on an outbreak of the plague, fled from the infected city, as
+we may learn from Boccaccio, and from Miles Coverdale's translation of
+Osiander's sermon, "How and whether a Christian man ought to flye the
+horrible plage of the pestilence," which appeared in 1537.
+
+During the plague of London, in 1603, the physicians are asserted by
+Dekker to have "hid their synodical heads," but this is at all events not
+wholly true. Thomas Lodge, the poet, was also a graduate in medicine, and
+in his "Treatise on the Plague"--not the only one published in relation to
+this epidemic--we are told of his experiences of the plague-stricken city.
+He gives some good advice in relation to the sanitary measures to be taken
+for the prevention of the plague.
+
+The nature of the regulations devised in the Tudor times to ward off
+infection may be gathered from the rules laid down at Chester in November,
+1574, when
+
+ "the right Worshipful Sir John Sauage, Knight, maior of the City of
+ Chester had consideracion of the present state of the said cite
+ somewhat visited with what is called the plage, and divisinge the best
+ meanes and orderlie waies he can, with [the advice] of his Bretheren
+ the alderman, Justices of peace within the citie aforesaid (through
+ the goodness of God) to avoid the same hath with such advice, sett
+ forth ordained and appointed (amongst other) the points, articles,
+ clauses, and orders folowing, which he willeth and commandeth all
+ persons to observe and kepe, upon the severall pains theirin
+ contayned:
+
+ "Imprimis. That no person nor persons who are or shalbe visited with
+ the said sickness, or any other who shall be of there company, shall
+ go abrode out of there houses without license of the alderman of the
+ ward such persons inhabite, And that every person soe licensed to
+ beare openlie in their hands ... three quarters long ... ense ...
+ shall goe abrode out of the ... upon paine that eny person doynge the
+ contrary to be furthwith expulsed out of the said citie.
+
+ "2. Item if any person doe company with any persons visited, they
+ alsoe to beare ... upon like payne.
+
+ "3. Item that none of them soe visited doe goe abroad in any part or
+ place within the citie in the night season, upon like payne.
+
+ "4. Item that the accustomed due watche to be kepte every night,
+ within the said citie, by the inhabitants thereof.
+
+ "5. Item the same watchman to apprehend and take up all night walkers
+ and such suspect as shalbe founde within and to bring them to the
+ Justice of peace, of that ... the gaile of the Northgate, that further
+ order may be taken with them as shall appear....
+
+ "6. Item that no swine be kept, within the said citie nor any other
+ place, then ... side prively nor openlie after the xiii{th} daie of
+ this present moneth, upon paine of fyne and imprisonment of every
+ person doing the contrary.
+
+ "7. Item that no donge, muck or filth, at any tyme, hearafter be caste
+ within the walls of the said citie, upon paine of ffyne and
+ imprisonment at his worships direction.
+
+ "8. Item that no kind or sort of ... or any wares from other place be
+ brought in packs into the said citie of Chester, untill the same be
+ ffirste opened and eired without the libities of the said citie, upon
+ pain last recited.
+
+ "9. Item that papers or writing containing this sence Lord haue mercie
+ upon us, to be fixed upon euery house, dore post, or other open place,
+ to the street of the house so infected.
+
+ "10. Item that no person of the said citie doe suffer any their doggs
+ to goe abrode out of their houses or dwellings, upon paine that euery
+ such dogge so founde abrode shalbe presently killed. And the owners
+ thereof ponished at his worships pleasure."
+
+It has always been found easier to make laws than to have them enforced,
+and we find certain inhabitants complaining of the disobedience of
+infected persons in the following petition:--
+
+ "To the right worshipful Sir John Savage, knight, maior of the Citie
+ of Chester, the aldermen, sheriffs, and common counsaile of the same.
+
+ "In most humble wise complayninge sheweth unto your worships, your
+ Orators, the persons whose name are subscribed inhabiting in a certain
+ lane within the same citie called Pepper Street, That where yt haue
+ pleased God to infect divers persons of the same Street with the
+ plage, and where also for the avoidinge of further infection your
+ worships have taken order that all such so infected should observe
+ certaine good necessarye orders by your worships made and provided.
+ But so it is, right worships, that none of the said persons infected
+ do observe any of the orders by your worships in that case taken, to
+ the greate danger and perill, not only of your Orators and their
+ famelyes being in number twenty, but also of the reste of the said
+ citie, who by the sufferance of God and of his gracious goodness are
+ clere and safe from any infection of the said deceas: In consideration
+ whereof your Orators moste humbly beseche your worships for God's
+ sake, and as your worships intend it your Orators should, by the
+ sufferance of God, avoide the dangers of the said deceas with their
+ family, and also for the better safty of the citie to take such
+ directions with the said infected persons that they may clearly be
+ avoided from thens to some other convenient for the time untill God
+ shall restore them to their former health. And in this doing your
+ Orators shall daily pray, &c."[1]
+
+During the visitation of the plague at Manchester in 1645, when the place
+suffered severely, the authorities not only provided "cabins" at
+Collyhurst for the reception of those whom the disease attacked, but
+engaged the services of "Doctor Smith," who received £4 "for his charges
+to London and a free guift," and £39 "for part of his wages for his
+service in the time of the visitation." Thos. Minshull, the apothecary,
+was paid £6 2s. 6d. for "stuffe for ye town's service." Some "bottles and
+stuffe" were unused at the end of the plague, and these were sold to "Mr.
+Smith, Phissition," for £1.
+
+The story of English pestilence closes with the Great Plague of London in
+1665. It began about the west end of the city, Hampstead, Highgate, and
+Acton sharing the infection, and gradually worked eastward by way of
+Holborn. Out of an estimated population of 460,000 there died 97,306
+persons, of whom 68,596 perished of pestilence. One week witnessed 8,297
+deaths, and it has been seriously argued that the official figures very
+much underrate the truth, and that in this week of highest mortality the
+deaths really amounted to 12,000. "Almost all other diseases turned to the
+plague." Many of the clergy fled, and the places of some were occupied by
+the ejected Nonconformists. The complaint of absenteeism was also brought
+against the physicians, but there were certainly some who stayed in the
+infected and desolate city. "But Lord!" says Pepys, "what a sad time it is
+to all: no boats upon the river, and grass grown all up and down Whitehall
+Court, and nobody but poor wretches in the street." William Boghurst, who
+was an apothecary, and Nathaniel Hodges, who was a physician, each wrote
+full accounts of the plague.
+
+Hodges was the son of a vicar of Kensington, where he was born in 1629. He
+was a King's scholar at Westminster, and was educated both at Cambridge
+and Oxford, taking his M.D. degree at the latter university in 1659. When
+the great plague broke out he remained at his house in Walbrook, and gave
+advice to all who sought it. There was unfortunately no lack of patients.
+Hodges' writings give us a minute account of the "doctor in the time of
+pestilence." The first doubtful appearances of the plague were noticed by
+Dr. Hodges amongst some of those who sought his counsel at the Christmas
+of 1664-5, in May and June there were some that could not be mistaken, and
+in August and September he was overwhelmed with work. He was an early
+riser, and after taking a dose of anti-pestilential electuary, he attended
+to any private business that needed immediate decision, and then went to
+his consulting room, and for three hours received a succession of
+patients, some already ill of the plague, others only infected by fear.
+Having disposed of these anxious inquirers, the doctor breakfasted, and
+then began his round of visits to patients who were unable to see him at
+home. Disinfectants were burnt on hot coals as he entered their houses,
+and he also took a lozenge. Returning home, he dined off roast meat and
+pickles, prefaced and followed by sack and other wine. A second round of
+visits did not terminate until eight or nine in the evening. He was an
+enemy of tobacco, but his dislike of the Indian weed did not extend to
+sack, which he seems to have drunk plentifully, especially perhaps on the
+two occasions when he thought he had himself caught the plague. These
+proved to be false alarms. Amongst the drugs he tried and found useless
+were "unicorn's horn" and dried toads. The Corporation of London testified
+a due sense of Hodges' services by a stipend and the position of physician
+to the city. His "Loimologia" is an important contribution to the
+literature of epidemics.
+
+Hodges, who had thus been a witness of the Carnival of Death in the
+metropolis of England, may well have pondered on the words of one of his
+illustrious contemporaries, Sir Thomas Browne, who says:--"I have not
+those strait ligaments, or narrow obligations to the world as to dote on
+life, or be convulst and tremble at the name of Death. Not that I am
+insensible of the dread and horrour thereof; or by raking into the bowels
+of the deceased, continual sight of anatomies, skeletons, or cadaverous
+reliques, like vespilloes or grave makers, I am become stupid, or have
+forgot the apprehension of mortality: but that, marshalling all the
+horrors and contemplating the extremities thereof, I find not anything
+therein able to daunt the courage of a man, much less a well resolved
+Christian.... For a Pagan there may be some motive to be in love with
+life; but for a Christian to be amazed at Death, I see not how he can
+escape this dilemma, that he is too sensible of this life, or hopeless of
+the life to come."
+
+
+
+
+Mountebanks and Medicine.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+Mountebanks--a name derived from the Italian words _monta in banco_,
+mounting a bench--were, in company with their attendant zanies, or "Merry
+Andrews," a popular class of public entertainers down to the earlier years
+of the present century. Their chief object, however, was not to provide a
+free entertainment, but to dispose of their nostrums to the crowds which
+the entertainment brought together. Andrew Borde, a medical practitioner
+at Winchester, who obtained a more than local reputation, enjoying the
+distinction of being one of the physicians of Henry VIII., is said to have
+been the original "Merry Andrew." The story of his life is full of
+interest, and furnishes some curious information concerning the manners of
+his age and his class. Mr. George Roberts, who supplied Lord Macaulay with
+much material for his "History of England," relates that Borde was a man
+of great learning, and had travelled on the continent. He made many
+astronomical calculations, which may not unfairly be supposed to have
+been for the purposes of astrology. He was a celibitarian and an ascetic,
+drinking water three times a week, wearing a hair-shirt next his skin, and
+keeping the sheet intended for his burial at the foot of his bed. As a
+mountebank, he frequented fairs, markets, and other places of public
+resort, and addressed those assembled in recommendation of his medicines.
+He was a fluent speaker, and the witticisms with which he interspersed his
+lectures never failed to attract, obtaining for him the name of "Merry
+Andrew."
+
+Mountebanks flourished on the continent as well as in England, and the
+_Belphegor_ of the dramatist had many prototypes in Italy and France.
+Coryat, a little-known writer, who made the tour of Europe at the
+beginning of the seventeenth century, and published a narrative of his
+adventures and experiences, gives a good account of the mountebanks he saw
+at Venice. "Twice a day," he says, "that is, in the morning and afternoon,
+you may see five or six several stages erected for them.... These
+mountebanks at one end of their stage place their trunk, which is
+replenished with a world of new-fangled trumperies. After the whole rabble
+of them has gotten up to the stage,--whereof some wear vizards like fools
+in a play, some that are women are attired with habits according to that
+person they sustain,--the music begins; sometimes vocal, sometimes
+instrumental, sometimes both. While the music plays, the principal
+mountebank opens his trunk and sets abroad his wares. Then he maketh an
+oration to the audience of half-an-hour long, wherein he doth most
+hyperbolically extol the virtue of his drugs and confections--though many
+of them are very counterfeit and false. I often wondered at these natural
+orators, for they would tell their tales with such admirable volubility
+and plausible grace, _extempore_, and seasoned with that singular variety
+of elegant jests and witty conceits, that they did often strike great
+admiration into strangers.... He then delivereth his commodities by little
+and little, the jester still playing his part, and the musicians singing
+and playing upon their instruments. The principal things that they sell
+are oils, sovereign waters, amorous songs printed, apothecary drugs, and a
+commonweal of other trifles. The head mountebank, every time he delivereth
+out anything, maketh an extemporal speech, which he doth eftsoons
+intermingle with such savoury jests (but spiced now and then with
+singular scurrility), that they minister passing mirth and laughter to the
+whole company, which may perhaps consist of a thousand people." The
+entertainment extended over two hours, when, having sold as many of their
+wares as they could, their properties would be removed and the stage taken
+down.
+
+Jonson, in his comedy of "Volpone," presents a scene showing a
+mountebank's stage at Venice, and the discourse of the vendor of quack
+medicines has a remarkable resemblance to the oratory of the "Cheap Jacks"
+of the present day, of which old play-goers may remember hearing a very
+good imitation in the drama of "The Flowers of the Forest." Says Jonson's
+mountebank: "You all know, honourable gentlemen, I never valued this
+ampulla, or vial, at less than eight crowns; but for this time I am
+content to be deprived of it for six: six crowns is the price, and less in
+courtesy I know you cannot offer me. Take it or leave it, however, both it
+and I am at your service! Well! I am in a humour at this time to make a
+present of the small quantity my coffer contains: to the rich in courtesy,
+and to the poor for God's sake. Wherefore, now mark: I asked you six
+crowns, and six crowns at other times you have paid me; you shall not give
+me six crowns, nor five, nor four, nor three, nor two, nor one, nor half a
+ducat. Sixpence it will cost you (or six hundred pounds); expect no lower
+price, for I will not bate."
+
+Returning to the mountebanks of our own country, we find in the accounts
+of the Chamberlain of the Corporation of Worcester for the year 1631 the
+following item:--
+
+ "They yeald account of money by them received of mountebanks to the
+ use of the poor 58s. 9d."
+
+It is suggested by Mr. John Noake, however, that these mountebanks were
+riders or posturers, and that the amount was the charge made for the
+permission accorded them to perform in the city. Later in the century, the
+eccentric Earl of Rochester, on one occasion, played the mountebank on
+Tower Hill, and the example was followed by more than one comedian of the
+next century. Leveridge and Penkethman, actors well known at Bartholomew
+Fair for many years, appeared at country fairs as "Doctor Leverigo and his
+Jack-Pudding Pinkanello," as also did Haines as "Watho Van Claturbank,
+High German Doctor." The discourse of the latter was published as a
+broadside, headed with an engraving representing him addressing a crowd
+from a stage, with a bottle of medicine in his right hand. Beside him
+stands a Harlequin, and in the rear a man with a plumed hat blows a
+trumpet. A gouty patient occupies a high-backed arm-chair, and an array of
+boxes and bottles is seen at the back of the stage.
+
+"Having studied Galen, Hypocrates, Albumazar, and Paracelsus," says the
+discourse thus headed, "I am now become the Esculapius of the age; having
+been educated at twelve universities, and travelled through fifty-two
+kingdoms, and been counsellor to the counsellors of several monarchs. By
+the earnest prayers and entreaties of several lords, earls, dukes, and
+honourable personages, I have been at last prevailed upon to oblige the
+world with this notice, that all persons, young or old, blind or lame,
+deaf and dumb, curable or incurable, may know where to repair for cure, in
+all cephalalgias, paralytic paroxysms, palpitations of the pericardium,
+empyemas, syncopes, and nasieties; arising either from a plethory or a
+cachochymy, vertiginous vapours, hydrocephalus dysenteries, odontalgic or
+podagrical inflammations, and the entire legion of lethiferous
+distempers.... This is Nature's palladium, health's magazine; it works
+seven manner of ways, as Nature requires, for it scorns to be confined to
+any particular mode of operation; so that it affecteth the cure either
+hypnotically, hydrotically, cathartically, poppismatically, pneumatically,
+or synedochically; it mundifies the hypogastrium, extinguishes all
+supernatural fermentations and ebullitions, and, in fine, annihilates all
+nosotrophical morbific ideas of the whole corporeal compages. A drachm of
+it is worth a bushel of March dust; for, if a man chance to have his
+brains beat out, or his head dropped off, two drops--I say two drops!
+gentlemen--seasonably applied, will recall the fleeting spirit,
+re-enthrone the deposed archeus, cement the discontinuity of the parts,
+and in six minutes restore the lifeless trunk to all its pristine
+functions, vital, natural, and animal; so that this, believe me,
+gentlemen, is the only sovereign remedy in the world. _Venienti occurite
+morbo._--Down with your dust. _Principiis obsta._--No cure no money.
+_Quĉrendo pecunia primum._--Be not sick too late."
+
+The mountebanking quack flourished in great state in the first half of the
+last century. "A Tour through England," published in 1723, gives the
+following account of one whom the author saw at Winchester:--"As I was
+sitting at the George Inn, I saw a coach with six bay horses, a calash and
+four, a chaise and four, enter the inn, in a yellow livery, turned up with
+red; four gentlemen on horseback, in blue, trimmed with silver: and as
+yellow is the colour given by the dukes in England, I went out to see what
+duke it was; but there was no coronet on the coach, only a plain
+coat-of-arms on each, with this motto: ARGENTO LABORAT FABER. Upon
+enquiry, I found this great equipage belonged to a mountebank, and that
+his name being Smith, the motto was a pun upon his name. The footmen in
+yellow were his tumblers and trumpeters, and those in blue his
+merry-andrew, his apothecary, and his spokesman. He was dressed in black
+velvet, and had in his coach a woman that danced on the ropes. He cures
+all diseases, and sells his packets for sixpence a-piece. He erected
+stages in all the market towns twenty miles round; and it is a prodigy how
+so wise a people as the English are gulled by such pickpockets. But his
+amusements on the stage are worth the sixpence, without the pills. In the
+morning he is dressed up in a fine brocade night-gown, for his chamber
+practice, when he gives advice, and gets large fees."
+
+A passage in a letter written by the second Lord Lyttelton, about the year
+1774, shows that this style of travelling was then still kept up by
+mountebanks. He says:--"As a family party of us were crossing the road on
+the side of Hagley Park, a chaise passed along, followed by a couple of
+attendants with French horns. Who can that be, said my father? Some
+itinerant mountebank, replied I, if one may judge from his musical
+followers. I really spoke with all the indifference of an innocent mind:
+nor did it occur to me that the Right Reverend Father in God, my uncle,
+had sometimes been pleased to travel with servants similarly accoutred."
+Nearly twenty years later, the famous quack, Katerfelto, travelled through
+Durham in a carriage, with a pair of horses, and attended by two negro
+servants in green liveries, with red collars. In the towns he visited
+these men were sent round to announce his lectures on electricity and the
+microscope, blowing trumpets, and distributing hand-bills.
+
+There seems to be good ground for believing that among what may be called
+the amateur mountebanks, such as Rochester, we must count the author of
+"Tristram Shandy." Dr. Dibdin found in the possession of Mr. James
+Atkinson, a medical practitioner at York, a rather roughly executed
+picture, in oil colours, representing a mountebank and his zany on a
+stage, surrounded by a crowd. An inscription described the former as Mr.
+T. Brydges, and the latter as the Rev. Laurence Sterne. Mr. Atkinson, who
+was an octogenarian, told Dr. Dibdin that his father had been acquainted
+with Sterne, who was a good amateur draughtsman, and that he and Brydges
+each painted the other's portrait in the picture. The story is a strange
+one, but before it is dismissed as unworthy of belief, it must be
+remembered that the clerical story-writer was a droll and whimsical
+character, and at no time much influenced by his priestly vocation. It is
+quite conceivable, therefore, that he may have indulged in such a freak on
+some occasion during the period of his life in which he developed his
+worst moral deficiencies.
+
+In the early years of the present century, a German quack, named Bossy,
+used to mount a stage on Tower Hill and Covent Garden Market alternately,
+in order, as he said, that both ends of London might profit by his
+experience and skill. It is said that on one of these occasions, when he
+had induced an old woman to mount his stage in the latter place, and
+relate the wonderful cures the doctor had performed upon her, a parrot
+that had learned some coarse language from the porters and costermongers
+frequenting the market, and sometimes used it in a manner that seemed very
+apt to the occasion, exclaimed, "Lying old ----!" when the old woman
+concluded her narrative. The roar of laughter with which this criticism
+was received by the rough audience disconcerted Bossy for a moment; but
+quickly recovering his presence of mind, he stepped forward, with his hand
+on his heart, and gravely replied, "It is no lie, you wicked bird!--it is
+all true as is de Gospel!" Bossy attained considerable reputation, and
+ended his days with a fair competence.
+
+The mountebank has long fallen from his former high estate. The quack may
+still be found vending his pills in the open-air markets of Yorkshire and
+Lancashire; but he does not mount a stage, and resembles his predecessors
+of the last century only in the fluency and volubility of his discourse on
+the virtues of his potions, pills, and plasters. The author of the paper
+on mountebanks in the "Book of Days" (edited by Robert Chambers), states
+that he saw one at York about 1860, who "sold medicines on a stage in the
+old style, but without the Merry Andrew or the music," and adds that "he
+presented himself in shabby black clothes, with a dirty white neck-cloth."
+Even the name had long before that time ceased to be connected with the
+vending of medicines, and had come to be applied to those itinerant circus
+companies who gave gratuitous performances in the open air, making their
+gains by the sale of lottery tickets. The present writer remembers seeing
+the circus company of John Clarke performing on a piece of waste ground at
+Lower Norwood, when the clown of the show went among the spectators
+selling tickets at a shilling each, entitling the holder to participate in
+a drawing, the prizes in which were Britannia metal tea pots and milk
+ewers, papier maché tea trays, cotton gown pieces, etc. That must have
+been about 1835, or within a year or two of that time.
+
+Only a few years later, a lottery in sixpenny shares was similarly
+conducted at Alfreton, in Derbyshire, and probably in many other places,
+though contrary to the provisions of the Lottery Act.
+
+The mountebank doctor of former times, with his carriage, his zany, and
+his musicians, can now only be met with in the provincial towns of France
+and Italy, and even there but seldom. Thirty or forty years ago, there was
+a man who, in a carriage drawn up behind the Louvre, used to practise
+dentistry and advertise his father, who had a flourishing dentist's
+practice in one of the narrow streets near the cathedral of Notre Dame.
+Another of this fraternity was seen at Marseilles by an English tourist a
+few years later, and in this instance some musicians accompanied the
+mountebank's phaeton, and drowned the cries of the suffering patients with
+the crash of a march. But these survivals remind us rather of _Belphegor_,
+in the pathetic drama of that name, than of _Dulcamara_ in the opera of
+_L'Elisor d'Amore_, with his gorgeous equipage and his musical attendants,
+as old play-goers remember the personation of the character by the famous
+Lablache.
+
+
+
+
+The Strange Story of the Fight with the Small-Pox.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+When, at the present day, we hear of an epidemic of small-pox in some town
+where the practice of vaccine inoculation has been neglected, it is both
+instructive and consolatory to turn our thoughts back to the time, before
+the introduction of that practice, when that horrible disease caused ten
+per cent, of all the deaths in excess of those occurring in the ordinary
+course of nature. This statement, startling as it may seem to the present
+generation, may be verified by reference to the annual bills of mortality
+of the city of London. This fearful state of things had prevailed in
+England from the time of the Plantagenets, when, in the first quarter of
+the eighteenth century, a gleam of light was flashed upon the medical
+darkness of western Europe from the east. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu,
+writing from Adrianople to a lady friend in the spring of 1717, flashed
+that light in the concluding portion of her letter, as follows:--
+
+ "Apropos of distempers, I am going to tell you a thing that will make
+ you wish yourself here. The small-pox, so fatal and so general amongst
+ us, is here entirely harmless, by the invention of _ingrafting_, which
+ is the term they give it. There is a set of old women who make it
+ their business to perform the operation every autumn, in the month of
+ September, when the great heat is abated. People send to one another
+ to know if any of their family has a mind to have the small-pox; they
+ make parties for this purpose, and when they are met (commonly fifteen
+ or sixteen together), the old woman comes with a nut-shell full of the
+ matter of the best sort of small-pox, and asks what vein you please to
+ have opened. She immediately rips open that you offer to her with a
+ large needle (which gives you no more pain than a common scratch), and
+ puts into the vein as much matter as can lie upon the head of her
+ needle, and after that binds up the little wound with a hollow bit of
+ shell, and in this manner opens four or five veins.
+
+ ... Every year thousands undergo this operation; and the French
+ ambassador says pleasantly, that they take the small-pox here by way
+ of diversion, as they take the waters in other countries. There is no
+ example of any one that has died in it; and you may believe I am well
+ satisfied of the safety of this experiment, since I intend to try it
+ on my own little son."
+
+This intention she carried into practice, and on her return to England
+made great exertions to introduce inoculation into general use. The
+medical profession opposed it so strongly, however, that for many years
+the horrible distemper continued to rage unchecked. Such announcements as
+the following were, in consequence, not unfrequent in the newspapers:--
+
+ "WHEREAS the TOWN of BURY ST. EDMUND'S, where the GENERAL QUARTER
+ SESSIONS of the PEACE of that Division are usually held, is now
+ afflicted with the Small-Pox, for which reason it might be of
+ exceeding ill consequence to the Country in General to hold the
+ Sessions there; This is, therefore, to acquaint the PUBLIC that the
+ next GENERAL QUARTER SESSIONS of the Peace will be held at the sign of
+ the PICKEREL in IXWORTH, on Monday next.
+
+ "COCKSEDGE, Clerk of the Peace."
+
+Later on in the same year (1744) an advertisement appeared, signed by the
+clergy, churchwardens, and medical practitioners of the town, stating that
+"there were only twenty-one persons then lying ill of the small-pox."
+Scarcely a week passed, in those days, without advertisements appearing of
+the number of cases of the disease in certain towns. Careful study of a
+large number of these announcements shows, however, that it was only
+thought desirable to advertise when the epidemic was thought to be
+abating, or when it had abated. Take the following, for instance:--
+
+ "Nov. 4, 1755.
+
+ "Upon the strictest Inquiry made of the present state of the SMALL-POX
+ in BECCLES, it appears to be in eleven houses, and no more, and that
+ the truth may be constantly known, the same will be weekly advertised
+ alternately in the Ipswich and Norwich papers by us,
+
+ "THO. PAGE, Rector.
+ "OSM. CLARKE and IS. BLOWERS, Churchwardens."
+
+In the following year we find it announced that, "upon a strict inquiry
+made by the clerks through their respective parishes, delivered to us, and
+attested by them, there is but six persons now afflicted with the
+small-pox in this town,"--to wit, Colchester--and this statement is signed
+by three ministers and six medical practitioners. In the _Ipswich Journal_
+of Jan. 22nd, 1757, the following appeared:--"There will be no fair this
+year at Bildestone on Ash Wednesday, as usual, by reason of the small-pox
+being in several parishes not far off."
+
+The practice of inoculation, though still frowned upon by a large
+proportion of the medical profession, was growing at this time, as appears
+from the following advertisement:--
+
+ "COLCHESTER, May 12, 1762.
+
+ "The Practice of bringing people out of the country into this town to
+ be inoculated for the Small-pox being very prejudicial to the town in
+ many respects, but especially to the Trade thereof, and as by this
+ practice the distemper may be continued much longer in the town than
+ it otherwise would, in all probability, it is thought proper by some
+ of the principal inhabitants and traders in the town, that this public
+ notice should be given that they are determined to prosecute any
+ person or persons whomsoever, that shall hereafter bring into this
+ town, or who shall receive into their houses in the town as lodgers,
+ any person or persons for that purpose, with the utmost severity that
+ the law will permit.... But that they might not be thought
+ discouragers of a practice so salutary and beneficial to mankind, as
+ inoculation is found to be, which encourages great numbers to go into
+ the practice, the persons who have caused this public notice to be
+ given have no objection to surgeons carrying on the practice in houses
+ properly situated for the purpose."
+
+The "great numbers" of persons referred to in this notice as having "gone
+into the practice" of inoculation for the small-pox appear to have been
+chiefly old women, as in Turkey, and by some of these it was carried on
+until the passing of the Vaccination Act in 1840. Five guineas was the fee
+advertised in the _Ipswich Journal_ in 1761 for performing the operation
+by Robert Sutton, an operator in Kent, who announced that he had "only met
+with but one accident out of the many hundreds he has had under his cure."
+
+The prevalence of this hideous disease in the last century, and the dread
+which it inspired, is curiously attested by the frequency with which
+advertisements for servants, etc., appeared in the newspapers, in which
+there was an express stipulation that applicants must have had the
+small-pox. A housemaid or footman whose face bore the traces of this
+disease would not, at the present day, find their appearance much in their
+favour: but the following selection of advertisements, culled from the
+_Ipswich Journal_ and the _Salisbury and Winchester Journal_, show that in
+the last century the marks would increase their chances of obtaining
+employment very considerably. The dates range from 1755 to 1781, and such
+announcements might be increased to any extent.
+
+ "A Three Years' APPRENTICE is wanted to use the Sea between
+ Manningtree and London, whose age is between 18 and 25 years, and has
+ had the Small-pox. Such a one, inquiring of MR. WM. LEACH, at Mistley
+ Thorne, in Essex, will hear of good encouragement."
+
+ "WANTED, about Michaelmas, as Coachman, in a gentleman's family, who
+ can drive four horses, and ride postillion well. A Single Man, must
+ have had the Small-pox, and know how to drive in London. Such an one,
+ who can be well recommended, by giving a description of himself, his
+ age, and abilities, in a letter directed to A. B., at MR. J.
+ KENDALL'S, in COLCHESTER, may hear of a very good place."
+
+ "WANTED, a JOURNEYMAN BAKER, that is a good workman, and has had the
+ SMALL-POX. Such a person may hear of a good place by applying to MR.
+ JOHN STOW, at Sudbury, or to the Printer of this paper."
+
+ "Wanted an Apprentice to an eminent Surgeon in full practice in the
+ county of Suffolk. If he has not had the Small-Pox, it is expected he
+ will be inoculated for it, before he enters on business.--Enquire of
+ JOHN FOX, at Dedham, Essex."
+
+
+ "COLCHESTER, June 15th, 1762.
+
+ "Wanted immediately, a Stout Lad as an Apprentice to a Currier. If he
+ can write it will be the more agreeable. Inquire further of ELEANOR
+ ONYON. N.B.--If he has not had the Small-pox, he need not apply."
+
+ "WANTED for a gentleman that lives most part of the year in London, A
+ Genteel Person, between 28 and 40 years of age, that has had the
+ Small-pox, to be as Companion and Housekeeper. One that has been
+ brought up in a genteel, frugal and handsome manner, either a Maid or
+ Widow, so they have no incumbrances."
+
+ "WANTED, a NURSEMAID. None need apply who cannot bring a good
+ character from their last place; and has had the Small-pox."
+
+ "WANTS a place in a large or small family, in town or country, a YOUNG
+ MAN, who is well versed in the different branches of a Gardener, has
+ had the Small-pox, and can write a good hand."
+
+ "WANTED, in a large family, a STOUT WOMAN, about 30, single, or a
+ widow without children, who has had the Small-pox, to take care of a
+ lusty child, under a year old. Her character must be unexceptionable,
+ and by no means a fashionable dresser, and lived in families of
+ credit. Any person answering this description may enquire of MRS.
+ MERCER, at the Star and Garter, Andover, and be further informed."
+
+It was about the time when the last of these advertisements appeared that
+Jenner commenced his inquiries concerning the prophylactic virtues of
+cow-pox, though nearly twenty years elapsed before they were sufficiently
+advanced to enable him to make the results known. His idea of using
+vaccine inoculation to bring about the total extinction of small pox was
+scouted by those of his professional brethren to whom he mentioned it, and
+we learn from one of his biographers that, at the outset, "both his own
+observation and that of other medical men of his acquaintance proved to
+him that what was commonly called cow-pox was not a certain preventive of
+small-pox. But he ascertained by assiduous inquiry and personal
+investigation that cows were liable to various kinds of eruption on their
+teats, all capable of being communicated to the hands of the milkers; and
+that such sores when so communicated were all called cow-pox." But when he
+had traced out the nature of these various diseases, and ascertained which
+of them possessed the protective virtue against small-pox, he was again
+foiled by learning that in some cases when what he now called the true
+cow-pox broke out among the cattle on a dairy farm, and had been
+communicated to the milkers, they subsequently had small-pox. These
+repeated failures perplexed him, but at the same time stimulated, instead
+of discouraging him. He conceived the idea that the virus of cow-pox
+might undergo some change which deprived it of its protective power, while
+still enabling it to communicate a disease to human beings. Following up
+the inquiry from this point, he at length discovered that the virus was
+capable of imparting protection against small-pox only in a certain
+condition of the pustule.
+
+He was now prepared to submit his theory to the test of experiment, but it
+was not until 1796 that he had the opportunity. A dairymaid, who had
+contracted cow-pox from one of her employer's cows, afforded the matter,
+and Jenner introduced it into two incisions in the arms of a boy about
+eight years of age. The disease thus transferred ran its ordinary course
+without any ill effects, and the boy was afterwards inoculated with the
+virus of small pox, which produced no effect. The disappearance of the
+cow-pox from the dairies in the neighbourhood of his country practice in
+Gloucestershire prevented him from making further experiments; and when he
+visited London for that purpose, he had the mortification of finding that
+no one could be found who would consent to be operated upon. It was not
+until 1798 that this obstacle was overcome, and then, the results of the
+earlier experiments having been confirmed by a series of vaccinations,
+followed by inoculation for small-pox several months afterwards without
+effect, Jenner made his discovery public.
+
+In the following year, vaccine inoculation began to spread, the practice
+being taken up by many of Jenner's friends, including several who were not
+in the medical profession. But, like inoculation for the small-pox, when
+introduced by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu,--like all innovations on
+established practices, indeed,--vaccination received for many years after
+its introduction the most violent opposition. Just as inoculation for
+small-pox had been denounced from the pulpit and in medical treatises as a
+"diabolical operation" and a wicked interference with the designs of
+Providence, so did a certain Dr. Squirrel denounce vaccination as an
+attempt to change "the established laws of nature." The most absurd
+stories were circulated of the effects alleged to have followed
+vaccination. "A lady," it is stated by Mr. Bettany, "complained that since
+her daughter had been vaccinated she coughed like a cow, and had grown
+hairy all over her body; and in one country district it was stated that
+vaccination had been discontinued there, because those who had been
+inoculated in that manner bellowed like bulls." There were even doctors
+who pretended to detect resemblances to bovine visages in the countenances
+of children, produced, as they did not hesitate to declare, by
+vaccination! Self-interest may have had as much to do as prejudice in
+prompting the opposition of the profession. Many practitioners derived a
+considerable portion of their income from fees for inoculation for
+small-pox. Sutton, as we have seen, charged five guineas for the
+operation, and advertised himself in many provincial newspapers; and the
+income of Dr. Woodville, at one time physician to the Small-Pox Hospital,
+is said to have sunk in one year from a thousand pounds to a hundred on
+his adopting the practice of vaccination.
+
+Notwithstanding the prejudice and interested antagonism to which the new
+practice was exposed, it continued to make way. The Rev. Dr. Booker, of
+Dudley, gave the following striking testimony to its beneficial
+effects:--"I have, previous to the knowledge of vaccine inoculation,
+frequently buried, day after day, several (and once as many as eight)
+victims of the small-pox. But since the parish has been blessed with this
+invaluable boon of Divine Providence (cow pox), introduced among us nearly
+four years ago, only two victims have fallen a prey to the above ravaging
+disorder (small pox). In the surrounding villages, like an insatiable
+Moloch, it has lately been devouring vast numbers, where obstinacy and
+prejudice have precluded the Jennerian protective blessing."
+
+In 1803, the Royal Jennerian Institution was founded under royal
+patronage, and with Jenner as president, to promote vaccination in London
+and elsewhere; and its operations were continued for a few years with much
+success, ceasing, however, on the establishment of the National Vaccine
+Institution in 1808. Two years prior to this event, Lord Henry Petty, who
+then held the office of Chancellor of the Exchequer, carried a motion in
+the House of Commons, that the Royal College of Physicians should be
+requested to inquire and report on the progress of vaccination. The
+report, which appeared in the following year, set forth that, within eight
+years from the discovery of vaccination, some hundreds of thousands of
+persons had been vaccinated in the British Islands, and upwards of eight
+hundred thousand in our East Indian possessions, and that the practice
+had been generally adopted on the continent of Europe. Considering that
+small-pox destroyed one-sixth of those whom it attacked, and that nearly
+one-tenth, and in some years more than that proportion, of the entire
+mortality in London was caused by it, and also the number, respectability,
+and extensive experience of the advocates of vaccination, compared with
+the feeble and imperfect testimonies of its few opponents, the value of
+the practice seemed firmly established.
+
+This report did much to advance vaccination in public opinion. At the next
+quarter sessions held at Stafford, it was taken into consideration by the
+county magistrates, who, from its statements and the reports and
+testimonials sent to Jenner, considered themselves justified in placing it
+on record--"That vaccine inoculation, properly conducted, appeared never
+to have failed as a certain preservative against small-pox; that it was
+unattended by fever, and perfectly free from danger; that it required
+neither confinement, loss of time, nor previous preparation; that it was
+not infectious, nor productive of other diseases; that it might be
+performed with safety on persons of every age and sex, and at all times
+and seasons of the year." It was not, however, until 1840 that the results
+of the labours of Jenner, the report of the Royal College of Physicians,
+and the opinions of nearly the entire medical profession received
+legislative endorsement by the passing of the Vaccination Act, since which
+small-pox has become a thing of the past, except in cases where it has
+been conserved by prejudice and ignorance.
+
+
+
+
+Burkers and Body-Snatchers.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+How recollections will crowd upon the mind when a train of thought is set
+in motion by the association of ideas! When, many years ago, I visited Dr.
+Kahn's anatomical museum, then located in Tichborne Street, I there saw a
+human skeleton which was affirmed by the lecturer, Dr. Sexton, to be that
+of John Bishop, who was hanged in 1831, for the murder of an Italian boy
+named Carlo Ferrari, at a house in Nova Scotia Gardens, one of the slums
+then existing in the north-eastern quarter of London. Though nearly forty
+years had elapsed since the commission of the crime, and I was only ten
+years of age when I heard the horrible story which the sight of that
+ghastly relic of mortality recalled to my mind, all the incidents
+connected with it immediately passed before my mental vision like a
+hideous phantasmagoria. The vividness with which they came back to me may
+be accounted for by the deep impression which they made upon my mind at
+the time of their occurrence. Those whose memories will carry them back
+sixty years will readily understand this.
+
+At the time when the public mind was harrowed by the narration in the
+newspapers of the horrible circumstances connected with the murder, and
+for some time previously, a fearful excitement had been created in all
+parts of the country by stories of murders committed and graves robbed of
+their ghastly tenants for the purpose of supplying with "subjects" the
+dissecting tables of the London and Edinburgh schools of anatomy. In the
+latter city two miscreants named Burke and Hare had been convicted of
+murder for this purpose, and one of them hanged for their crimes; but the
+scare had not abated. Stories were told with appalling frequency of
+corpses missing from lonely graveyards and of narrow escapes from murder
+in little frequented places. Chloroform had not then been discovered, but
+the Scotch professors of the art of murder had introduced the practice,
+popularly named after one of them, of disabling their victims by means of
+a pitch plaster suddenly clapped on the mouth. Every person who was
+missing was thought to have been "burked," and the watching of graves to
+prevent the removal of newly-buried corpses became an established
+practice. As the dark nights of the late autumn came on, the fears of the
+timid and nervous were doubled, and persons who lived in lonely places, or
+in the ill-lighted parts of towns, became afraid to leave their houses
+after nightfall. I remember hearing such fears expressed by several
+persons at Croydon, with whom my parents were acquainted, and also of
+neighbours combining to assist in watching the graves of deceased members
+of each others' families.
+
+A few years ago, I was one day exchanging reminiscences of a long bygone
+generation with a brother journalist, when, on this gruesome subject being
+mentioned, he placed in my hands a report of the trial of the murderers of
+Carlo Ferrari, which appeared to have been detached from a volume of
+criminal trials. No feature of the horrible record impressed me so much as
+the cool, business-like manner in which the wretches concerned in the
+crime hawked the corpse of their victim from one school of anatomy to
+another, and the equally cool and business-like manner in which the matter
+was dealt with by those with whom their nefarious occupation brought them
+in contact. The procuring of corpses for anatomical purposes was, in fact,
+a regular trade, and the biographer of Sir Astley Cooper states that "the
+Resurrection-men were occasionally employed on expeditions into the
+country to obtain possession of the bodies of those who had been subjected
+to some important operation, and of which a _post mortem_ examination was
+of the greatest interest to science. Scarcely any distance from London was
+considered an insuperable difficulty in the attaining of this object, and
+as certainly as the Resurrectionist undertook the task, so certain was he
+of completing it. This was usually an expensive undertaking, but still it
+did not restrain the most zealous in their profession from occasionally
+engaging these men in this employment." The price of a subject ranged from
+seven to twelve guineas, but when the "body-snatchers" were specially
+employed to procure some particular corpse, the incidental expenses were
+often as much more.
+
+As an illustration of the times in which such horrors were possible, the
+story of the murder of Carlo Ferrari may, at this distance of time from
+the event, be worth telling. In the autumn of 1831, there lived in one of
+a row of small houses, known as Nova Scotia Gardens, in the
+poverty-stricken district of Bethnal Green, a man named John Bishop, with
+his wife and three children. He had formerly been a carrier at Highgate,
+but had long been suspected of "body-snatching," as the practice of
+robbing graves was termed, and had no visible means of honest living. He
+had the look of a man whose original rustic stolidity had been
+supercharged with cockney cunning. The house adjoining Bishop's was
+occupied by a man named Woodcock, who had succeeded in the tenancy a
+glass-blower named Thomas Williams, described as a little, simple-looking
+man, of mild and inoffensive demeanour. About two o'clock on the morning
+of the 4th of November, Woodcock was awakened by a noise, as of a scuffle,
+in Bishop's house, and afterwards heard two men leave it and return in a
+few minutes, when he recognised the voices as those of Bishop and
+Williams. At noon the same day these two men were in a neighbouring
+public-house, accompanied by two other men, one of whom was known as James
+May, who had formerly been a butcher, but for the last few years had been
+suspected of following the same ghastly and revolting occupation as
+Bishop. In the afternoon three men alighted from a cab at Nova Scotia
+Gardens, two of them being recognised as Bishop and Williams, and
+afterwards returned to the vehicle, when the former and the third man were
+carrying something in a sack, which they placed in the cab. The three men
+then entered, and it was driven off.
+
+About seven o'clock the same evening, Bishop and May presented themselves
+at Guy's Hospital, carrying something in a sack, and asked the porter if a
+"subject" was wanted. Receiving a negative reply, they asked him to allow
+"it" to remain there until the next morning, to which he consented.
+Half-an-hour later, the two traffickers in human flesh called at
+Grainger's anatomical theatre, in Webb Street, Southwark, and told the
+curator they had "a very fresh male subject, about fourteen years of age."
+The offer being declined, they went away, and later on they were,
+accompanied by Williams, in a public-house, where May was seen by a waiter
+to pour water on a handkerchief containing human teeth, and then rub the
+teeth together, remarking that they were worth two pounds to him.
+
+Next morning, May called upon a dentist named Mills, on Newington
+Causeway, and sold a dozen teeth to him for a guinea, observing that they
+were the teeth of a boy fourteen years of age. On examining them, Mills
+found that morsels of the gums and splinters of the jaw were adhering to
+them, as if much force had been used to wrench them out. Two hours later,
+Bishop and May called again at the anatomical theatre in Southwark, and
+repeated their offer of the preceding evening, which was again declined.
+Shortly afterwards, they went to Guy's Hospital, accompanied by Williams
+and a man named Shields, to remove the "subject" left there the evening
+before, and it was given to them in the sack, as they had left it, and
+placed in a large hamper, which Shields had brought for the purpose. There
+was a hole in the sack, through which the porter saw a small foot
+protruding, apparently that of a boy or a woman.
+
+About midnight, the bell of King's College was rung, and the porter, on
+going to the gate, found there Bishop and May, whom he had seen there
+before, it seems, and on similar business. May asked him if anything was
+wanted, and receiving an indifferent answer, added that they had a male
+"subject," a boy about fourteen years of age. The porter inquired the
+price, and was told they wanted twelve guineas for it. He then said he
+would ask Mr. Partridge, the demonstrator in anatomy, and they followed
+him to a room adjoining the dissecting room. Nine guineas were offered,
+which May, with an oath, refused, and went outside. Bishop then said to
+the porter, "Never mind May, he is drunk; it shall come in for nine in
+half-an-hour." They then went away, returning at the stipulated time,
+accompanied by Williams and Shields, the latter carrying on his head the
+hamper containing the corpse brought from Guy's Hospital. It was taken
+into a room, where it was opened, and the corpse turned out of the sack by
+May. The porter, observing a cut on the left temple, and that the left arm
+was bent and the fingers clenched, conceived suspicions of foul play, and
+communicated them at once to Mr. Partridge. That gentleman thereupon
+examined the corpse, and mentioned its condition to the secretary, who
+immediately gave information to the police.
+
+In order to detain the men until the arrival of the police, the
+demonstrator showed them a £50 note, observing that he must get it changed
+for gold before he could pay them. Several constables were soon on the
+spot, and the four men were arrested, and taken to the station-house in
+Vine Street, Covent Garden. On being charged on suspicion with having
+unlawful possession of a corpse, May said he had nothing to do with it,
+and had merely accompanied Bishop. A similar statement was made by
+Williams, and Bishop said he was only removing the corpse from St.
+Thomas's Hospital to King's College. Shields, who was known as a porter,
+said he was employed to carry the hamper, which he did in the exercise of
+his vocation. They were all then removed to the cells.
+
+The evidence given at the coroner's inquest by Partridge and two other
+surgeons left no doubt that the unfortunate lad, respecting whose identity
+there was no evidence, had been killed by a violent blow on the back of
+the neck, which had affected the spinal cord. The four accused men were
+present in custody during the inquiry, and Bishop, after reading a bill
+relating to the murder, which was displayed on the wall of the room, was
+heard by a constable to say, in a subdued tone, to May, "It was the blood
+that sold us." Volunteering to give evidence, he said he got the corpse
+from a grave, but declined to name the place whence he had got it,
+alleging that the information would get into trouble two watchmen, who
+had large families. May also made a voluntary statement, to the effect
+that he got two "subjects" from the country, which he took first to
+Grainger's theatre of anatomy, and afterwards to Guy's Hospital,
+subsequently meeting Bishop, who promised him all he could get for a
+"subject" above nine guineas if he would sell it for him. The inquest was
+adjourned, and the police proceeded with their investigation.
+
+The houses of Bishop and May had been promptly visited and searched by the
+police, who found at the former's a sack, a large hamper, and a brad-awl,
+the last showing recent bloodstains. At May's house in Dorset Street, New
+Kent Road, they found a pair of breeches, stained with blood at the back.
+On a second visit to Bishop's house the garden was dug over, and a jacket,
+trousers, and a shirt found in one spot, and in another a coat, trousers,
+a vest with blood on the collar and one shoulder, and a shirt with the
+front torn. When the brad-awl was produced at Bow Street police-court, May
+said, "That is the instrument I punched the teeth out with." Shields was
+eventually discharged from custody, but the other three prisoners were
+committed for trial on the capital charge.
+
+The identity of the victim remained a mystery until the 19th of November,
+a fortnight after the murder, when the corpse was recognised by a
+foreigner named Brun as that of a boy named Carlo Ferrari, whom he had
+brought from Italy two years before, but had not seen since July, 1830.
+The boy picked up the means of living by exhibiting a tortoise and a pair
+of white mice in the streets. He had been seen by several persons in or
+near Nova Scotia Gardens on the 3rd of November, but he had not been seen
+since, nor had he returned on that day to his miserable lodgings in
+Charles Street, Drury Lane. The clothes found in Bishop's garden
+corresponded with the description given of those worn by him when he was
+last seen, and a little boy who played with Bishop's children stated that
+they had, on the following day, shown him two white mice in a cage similar
+to the one carried by Ferrari.
+
+The incidents of the crime, as revealed from day to day, and the mystery
+in which the identity of the victim was for some time veiled, created so
+much excitement in the public mind, that when the prisoners were placed
+in the dock at the Old Bailey, early in December, the court was crowded,
+and a guinea each was paid for seats in the gallery, the occupants of
+which, all fashionably dressed, as might be expected of those who could
+afford to pay that price for the gratification of their love of the
+sensational, had taken their seats the day before. Though the evidence was
+but a recapitulation of the story told before in the police-court and the
+inquest-room, it was listened to with the utmost avidity. The witnesses
+for the defence were few, and their evidence valueless, except in the case
+of May, for whom an _alibi_ was established in respect of the time between
+the afternoon of the day preceding the murder and noon on the following
+day. The prisoners were sentenced to death, but in May's case the sentence
+was commuted into transportation for life. A sea-faring relative of mine,
+who was second officer of the vessel in which May was sent out to Sydney,
+described him as an athletic, wiry-looking man, with features expressive
+of sternness, and a determined will, quite a different-looking man,
+therefore, to his two companions in crime, who were duly hanged at
+Newgate.
+
+The crime of these men, and the deeds of Burke and Hare, created such a
+scare, and exposed so vividly the temptation to murder afforded by the
+prices paid by surgeons for "subjects," that the attention of parliament
+was directed to the matter, and a Select Committee of the House of Commons
+was appointed to inquire and report as to the facilities which might be
+given for obtaining bodies for anatomical purposes in a legitimate manner.
+
+Sir Astley Cooper, who was one of the eminent surgeons who gave evidence
+before this committee, was asked whether the state of the law prevented
+teachers of anatomy from obtaining the body of any person, which, in
+consequence of some peculiarity of structure, they might be desirous of
+procuring. He replied:--"The law does not prevent our obtaining the body
+of an individual if we think proper; for there is no person, let his
+situation in life be what it may, whom, if I were disposed to dissect, I
+could not obtain.... The law only enhances the price, and does not prevent
+the exhumation. Nobody is secured by the law; it only adds to the price of
+the subject." The result of this inquiry was the passing of the Anatomy
+Act, by which the bodies of persons dying in hospitals and workhouses, if
+unclaimed by the relatives, may be placed at the disposal of the schools
+of anatomy.
+
+
+
+
+Reminiscences of the Cholera.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+It is now more than sixty years since the strange and mysterious
+visitation, as it was then considered, known as the cholera morbus, for
+which fearsome name that of Asiatic cholera has since been substituted,
+made its first appearance in this country, or anywhere west of the Ural
+Mountains. Coming first from India, from the banks of the Ganges and the
+Indus, the dread pestilence moved steadily westward and north-westward
+until, creeping along the rivers of Russia, and desolating all the most
+considerable towns of that country, it reached St. Petersburg. There it
+raged with fearful severity, mowing down as with the scythe of Death more
+than a thousand persons daily. So dreadful were the features of the
+unknown malady, and so rapidly were its victims carried off, that the
+ignorant populace of the capital attributed it to poison administered by
+the doctors. A fearful tumult was excited by this belief, and it was with
+great difficulty that it was suppressed.
+
+From Russia the dire disease spread rapidly into almost every country in
+Europe, and wherever it appeared created the profoundest awe and the most
+bewildering terror. In Paris it broke out with extreme malignity in March,
+1832, and soon raged there with greater virulence than it had exhibited in
+any other city in Europe except St. Petersburg. The deaths soon reached
+from four to five hundred daily, and during April they rose to a total for
+the month of twelve thousand seven hundred. It was hinted that the ravages
+of this new and dreadful disease were caused by the poisoning of the meat
+sold in the markets and the water in the public fountains; and the
+dwellers in the slums became so infuriated by this horrible and absurd
+rumour that mobs perambulated the streets howling for vengeance on the
+poisoners. Many unfortunate persons were murdered in the streets on being
+denounced as the perpetrators of these imaginary crimes, and so paralysed
+was the arm of justice by the influence of terror that nothing was done to
+vindicate the majesty of the law. Everyone who could afford to leave Paris
+fled from it with precipitation, and the city was abandoned to desolation
+and anarchy. The legislative labours of the two Chambers were suspended,
+and the peers and deputies were the first to set the example of flight,
+though Louis Philippe and his family continued to reside at the Tuileries,
+with an occasional sojourn of a few days at Neuilly.
+
+I have a vivid recollection of the mingled awe and terror which this fell
+disease inspired when it was announced that it had crossed the sea and
+made its first victims in this country. It had made its way across the
+continent from town to town on the banks of the great rivers, but into
+England it was imported by sick sailors. Many generations had passed away
+since anything like a pestilence had been known in England, and the
+cholera therefore created a panic among all classes of the people, which
+served to augment its virulence and render those of a nervous temperament
+more liable to be attacked by it. Doctors were utterly unacquainted with
+its proper treatment, and indeed had no knowledge whatever of the disease.
+Hence it raged without check wherever it appeared, and the rapidity with
+which it carried off its victims added to the terror inspired by its
+approaches. The first death at Lower Norwood, where my parents then
+resided, was that of the pastor of the Independent Chapel, situated only
+two doors from my father's house. He died in a few hours from the time he
+experienced the premonitory symptoms, and such was the dread of infection
+that the corpse was buried the same night by torchlight, in the
+burial-ground of the chapel, wrapped in a sheet coated with pitch.
+
+Though a period of seventeen years separated the first cholera epidemic
+from the second, the lessons which the former should have taught had not
+been so well learned as they should have been, and the latter, with which
+these reminiscences are chiefly concerned, inspired a wild, unreasoning
+terror in only a little less degree than that of 1832.
+
+I remember a case at Mitcham, in which the women attending a patient were
+seized with a panic on the approach of death, and rushed out of the house,
+leaving the poor wretch, a woman, to die alone, the corpse being
+afterwards found rigid and distorted.
+
+The apparently erratic manner in which the disease spread, sometimes
+carrying off victims from one side of a street and sparing the other side,
+sometimes smiting every member of a family in one house, and passing over
+all the other houses in the same street, was a puzzle to persons who had
+given no attention to the causes of the disease, and were content to
+regard it as a sign of the wrath of God, reasoning about the matter as
+little as did the Israelites whose relatives were swept off at
+Kibroth-hattaavah. They had not given sufficient attention to the laws of
+health to understand that the disease found its victims where those laws
+were neglected, whether from carelessness or from ignorance.
+
+I remember two cases at Croydon in which all the inmates of the houses in
+which the disease manifested its dread presence were carried off by it.
+One occurred in a cottage in St. James's Road, one of a row which had
+originally been level with the road, but had become overshadowed by the
+approach to the railway bridge. There were three victims in that house,
+and no other case in the same row, or in the neighbourhood. The other case
+occurred in King Street, one of several narrow, closely-built streets in
+the centre of the town, and the victims were a widow and her only child,
+the latter dying not alone, for, like Byron's Haidee,--
+
+ "----she held within
+ A second principle of life, which might
+ Have dawned a fair and sinless child of sin;
+ But closed its little being without light,
+ And went down to the grave unborn, wherein
+ Blossom and bough lie withered with one blight."
+
+A remarkable incident occurred while the fell disease was in the full
+swing of its ravages. The wife of a working man living in the Old Town, a
+low-lying and densely populated quarter, was attacked by it, and at once
+removed to a temporary hospital that had been established on Duppas Hill,
+a tabular eminence overlooking the town, and in the thirteenth century the
+scene of the tournament in which the son of Earl Warrenne was by
+misadventure slain. There her husband went, on his return from labour, to
+ascertain her condition, and heard with a shock which the reader may
+imagine that she was dead. When the poor fellow had in some degree
+recovered from the blow, he expressed a wish to see the corpse and take it
+to his home. He seems to have been unable to realise that his wife was
+really dead, though the nurses and doctors assured him that she had passed
+away. The idea that life yet lingered in the form that was apparently
+lifeless grew upon him as he gazed and though he may never have read "The
+Giaour," he may have felt the force of the thought so finely expressed by
+Byron in the lines that introduce his picture of the Greece of his day:--
+
+ "He who hath bent him o'er the dead,
+ Ere the first day of death is fled,
+ The first dark day of nothingness,
+ The last of danger and distress
+ (Before Decay's effacing fingers
+ Have swept the lines where beauty lingers),
+ And marked the mild angelic air,
+ The rapture of repose that's there,
+ The fixed yet tender traits that streak
+ The languor of the pallid cheek,
+ And--but for that sad shrouded eye,
+ That fires not, wins not, weeps not, now,
+ And but for that chill, changeless brow,
+ Where cold Obstruction's apathy
+ Appals the gazing mourner's heart,
+ As if to him it could impart
+ The doom he dreads, yet dwells upon;
+ Yes, but for these, and these alone,
+ Some moments, aye, one treacherous hour,
+ He still might doubt the tyrant's power;
+ So fair, so calm, so softly sealed,
+ The first, last look by death revealed!"
+
+Whether it was feeling or reason that inspired the thought that life yet
+lingered in the apparently inanimate, but not yet rigid form, which the
+loving husband conveyed to his humble dwelling, it was undoubtedly to that
+inspiration that the woman owed her preservation from death. For she was
+not dead. Signs of returning animation were perceived when the supposed
+corpse was placed upon the bed, and the neighbour women who came in to
+perform the last sad offices for the dead were there to welcome her on her
+return to life. I will not attempt to describe the feelings with which the
+husband beheld the eyelids of his wife unclose, and the rose-tints return
+to the pallid cheeks. Like the Greek painter who, conscious of the
+inadequacy of his art to fully portray the grief of Agamemnon for the loss
+of his son, covered the countenance of the old king with a veil, I draw
+the curtain upon the scene, and leave it to the imagination of the reader.
+
+Among the remedies for the cholera which came into vogue during the
+prevalence of the epidemic of 1849, the rubbing of the stomach with brandy
+and salt obtained a considerable degree of repute; and the chemists vied
+with each other, as in the recent epidemics of influenza, in the
+concoction and advertising of various cholera mixtures, one of the most
+efficacious of which was a preparation of opium and chalk.
+
+The lessons of the cholera were not so entirely neglected on this occasion
+as they were after the epidemic of 1832; but it is a sad reflection on our
+legislation that we were indebted to the ravages of disease, or rather to
+the fear inspired by them, for sanitary reforms which ought to have
+resulted from foresight. There had been sanitary inquiries by Royal
+Commissions between 1842 and 1849, but little had been done towards
+carrying out the recommendations which resulted from them. The existence
+of cholera in India, and the causes which produced it, had long been
+known; but so long as its ravages were confined to the people of that
+country no one seemed to think that it concerned the people of England. It
+was known, too, that whatever might be the true causes of zymotic
+diseases, concerning which medical opinions differed, accumulations of
+filth, contaminated sources of water supply, and an impure condition of
+the atmosphere tended to produce their outbreaks, and to aggravate their
+virulence. But then we had been used to these evils since the days of the
+Plantagenets, and though they had become intensified with the increase of
+population and the growth of the large towns, had not Malthus taught us
+that epidemics of disease were one of the means used by divine providence
+to prevent the numbers of the human race from exceeding the means of
+subsistence?
+
+The cholera epidemic of 1849 roused the public mind from its lethargy, and
+prepared it to act upon the recommendations of the General Board of Health
+and to comply with the Sanitary Act of that year. The old wells of London
+were closed, and the like course was adopted in Croydon, where a constant
+supply of practically pure water was obtained by boring down to the chalk.
+Other towns followed the example, one of the foremost being Birmingham,
+which received a supply which enabled the inhabitants to dispense with the
+insalubrious rain-water butt. Sewerage works were undertaken where no
+efficient system of drainage had before existed. Attention was called to
+the important questions of sewage disposal and the pollution of rivers;
+and though much even now remains to be done in this direction, and in the
+improvement of the water supply of the large manufacturing towns of
+Yorkshire and Lancashire, sanitation has been cleared of most of its
+difficulties by better knowledge of the philosophy of cause and effect, so
+that we no longer regard the calamities resulting from our own ignorance
+and neglect of the laws of nature as the inflictions of Providence.
+
+
+
+
+Some Old Doctors.
+
+BY MRS. G. LINNĈUS BANKS.
+
+
+It is not my intention to go back to those Greek fathers of the healing
+art, Hippocrates and Galen, or to dwell on the days when every monastery
+held within its walls some learned brother accredited to administer to
+bodies as well as souls diseased, or when the mistress of every feudal
+castle, every baronial-hall, was trained and skilled in leechcraft,
+distilled herbs, concocted potions and unguents, and not only physicked
+her household, but was prepared to staunch and dress the gaping wounds
+received in siege or tournay. Nor yet have we ought to do with those
+pretenders to science who mingled astrology with pharmacy, ascribed to
+every plant its ruling planet, and held that the potency of all herbs
+depended on the conjunction of planets, or the phase of the moon under
+which they were gathered--a belief, indeed, under which old Nicholas
+Culpepper compiled his well-known "Herbal" early in the seventeenth
+century.
+
+Medicine and surgery have made rapid strides since the days, not a century
+agone, when in the naval cockpit, and on the open battlefield, the hatchet
+was the ready implement for amputation, the rough cautery that of a red
+hot iron applied to the fizzing flesh; and when the doctor cried, "Spit,
+man, spit" to the suffering soldier with a gunshot wound in his chest, and
+when the sputum came tinged with blood, simply plugged up the bullet-hole
+and left the poor fellow to his fate, while he passed on to cases less
+hopeless. And _en passant_ I may say that wooden legs and stumps for arms
+were so common in the writer's young days as scarcely to attract
+attention--so ready were army surgeons to amputate.
+
+These are not matters on which I have to dwell, but I think the present
+work would be incomplete without a record of those men of original mind,
+whose acute observation and unwearied investigations in the past have
+indissolubly linked their names with discoveries which have revolutionised
+the practice of both medicine and surgery.
+
+In the opinion of Solomon, "there is nothing new under the sun;" and if
+such was the case in his day, how much more of a verity must be the
+truism in ours.
+
+So the most startling and perfect revelation of any great fact in human
+physiology may have been dimly perceptible to earlier intelligences
+groping in the dark, faint adumbrations of which may fall on the sensorium
+of the final discoverer, until a ray of divine light dispels the mists of
+ages, and the man, developing his crude idea with infinite pains, realises
+a great truth, and cries out "Eureka" to an astonished--and too often--an
+unbelieving world.
+
+Thus it may have been with the renowned practitioner, WILLIAM HARVEY, who
+came into the world when all England was filled with alarms of an
+"Invincible Spanish Armada," then preparing to devastate our shores and
+spare neither man nor maid, babe nor mother. Yet the scare passed and
+peace came, and the boy grew, until his educational course at Cambridge
+ended, and his bias led him towards Padua, then the great seat of
+academical and medical lore, and there he took his doctor's degree in
+physic. With the prestige of Padua upon him, in 1607, when he was but
+twenty years of age, he was elected Fellow of the College of Physicians
+(founded by Dr. Linacre in the reign of Henry VII.), and in 1715, the man
+of twenty-eight became their Anatomical Reader.
+
+A noteworthy appointment this, since consequent study and investigation
+led to the grand discovery that the heart--to speak unscientifically--was
+a sort of muscular pumping-engine, sending the blood circulating along a
+series of blood-vessels to every part of the system, changing in character
+on its course until it returned to its centre, the seat of life, to be
+pumped out afresh to circulate as before and do its appointed work.
+
+In 1628, Harvey made his discovery known in a learned treatise "On the
+circulation of the blood," and as may be supposed, his daring assertions
+roused a violent spirit of opposition amongst his medical brethren, even
+among those who began to feel the pulses of their patients for the first
+time, and to comprehend _why_ there should be a fluttering or audible
+beating under the sick one's ribs, and wherefore the fatal hemorrhage
+following a sword-thrust or a gunshot wound.
+
+In spite of opposition his teaching created a revolution in medical
+practice. The discoverer was called before Charles I. and his Court to
+demonstrate the action of the heart and subsidiary organs, in support of
+his new doctrine.
+
+Fresh honours fell upon him even when too old to bear the burden. And when
+in the fulness of time, William Harvey, who had outlived three monarchs,
+made his own exit under Cromwellian rule, he bequeathed infinitely more to
+posterity in his invaluable discovery than can be summed up in the estate,
+library, and museum now in the proud possession of the College of
+Physicians. These are held by a mere body of men. The other has a
+world-wide significance.
+
+Yet, as in his life, even in his grave, detractors strove to dim the glory
+of his important revelation, ascribing to the theological physician
+Servetus, to Realdus Columbus, and to Andreas Cĉsalpinas, the credit of
+prior discovery.
+
+It remained for another learned physician, a century later, to deal with
+these counter-claims, and whilst admitting their vague individual
+conceptions of an elusive mystery, to establish once and for ever William
+Harvey's inalienable right as sole discoverer.
+
+This notable champion was JOHN FREIND, M.D., F.R.S., distinguished as the
+Medical Historian, and Harveian lecturer to the College of Physicians, at
+a time when he and his fellows shaved their heads and mounted Ramillies
+wigs as outward guarantees for the profundity of wisdom they enshrined.
+
+But apart from his flowing wig, or his defence of Harvey, or his learned
+medical history, written in part when he was a prisoner in the Tower for
+supposed complicity in the Atterbury Plot, or for skill in the treatment
+of disease, John Freind had a pioneer's claim to distinction.
+
+The doctor, strange to say, was a Member of Parliament, and on resuming
+his seat on his release from incarceration, he brought before the House of
+Commons, in 1725, a remarkable petition from the Royal College of
+Physicians, to restrain "the pernicious use of spirituous liquors." And
+though he might speak but as the mouthpiece of his brother Fellows, it
+needed no small degree of courage to broach such a subject in those days
+of general coarse indulgence among all classes; especially if his own
+language was as direct and forcible as that of the petitioners.
+
+Therefore, in his triple character as the historian of medicine, as the
+champion of William Harvey, and as the foremost M.P. to advocate the
+cause of temperance before our national legislative assembly, John Freind,
+M.D., claims a niche in our Walhalla of notable old doctors.
+
+In the nave of Westminster Abbey on a memorial of polished granite is this
+inscription--"Beneath are deposited the remains of JOHN HUNTER, born at
+Long Calderwood, Lanarkshire, N.B., on February 14th, 1728; died in London
+on October 10th, 1793. His remains were removed from the Church of St.
+Martins-in-the-Fields to this Abbey on March 28th, 1858. The Royal College
+of Surgeons of England have placed this table over the grave of Hunter to
+record their admiration of his genius as a gifted interpreter of the
+Divine power and wisdom that works in the laws of organic life, and their
+grateful veneration for his services to mankind as the Father of
+scientific surgery. 'O Lord, how manifold are Thy works; in wisdom hast
+Thou made them all.'"
+
+Such honours are not paid to the remains of men of common stamp. And of no
+common stamp was the sandy-headed youth who, having spent ten years of his
+life learning cabinet making, resolved on striking out a better career for
+himself; and in his twentieth year took horse and journeyed to London to
+place himself under his elder brother, WILLIAM HUNTER, then rising into
+note as a medical practitioner and a teacher of anatomy. In October, 1748,
+he entered his brother's dissecting room, and whether the fitting of
+joints in cabinetware had been of initiatory service, or he had had access
+to the books of his medical relations in Glasgow, or that as a boy upon
+his father's farm, observation of the domestic animals and of the wild
+inhabitants of wood and fell, had roused the desire to master the secrets
+of animated nature, sure it is that William speedily foretold a successful
+future for his new pupil as an anatomist.
+
+At all events he used his interest to place his promising brother under
+the eminent surgeon of Chelsea Hospital, and later under another at St.
+Bartholomew's. Then, shocked by the rough speech and manners of his
+countrified brother, and his need of education, the classical elder packed
+him off to college to pick up a little refinement along with Latin and
+Greek.
+
+In vain. Irrepressible and hot-tempered John could not sit down quietly to
+study dead languages. Back he came from Oxford in haste, to study dead
+bodies in his brother's dissecting room, and serve as demonstrator to his
+course of lectures, simultaneously with his study of living bodies at St.
+George's Hospital, where in a comparatively short time he became
+house-surgeon.
+
+His appointment as staff-surgeon to our troops on foreign service marked
+the six intervening years before he settled down to practise in London. He
+had laboured ten years on human anatomy, and had dissected a number of the
+lower animals, laying the foundation of his collection of comparative
+anatomy. Even while on foreign service he had amused himself with studying
+the digestive faculties of snakes and lizards when in a torpid state, and
+many were the contributions he sent home to his brother's museum.
+
+His return to London, as a teacher of surgery and anatomy, was a marked
+success, though private practice had to grow. In 1776, he was appointed
+surgeon extraordinary to His Majesty George III., but eleven years prior
+to this was admitted a Fellow of the Royal Society, slightly in advance of
+his elder brother. Then in 1768, the bachelor, William, shifted himself
+and his museum from Jermyn Street to Windmill Street, and resigned the
+lease to John, thus securing independent action to the latter, and
+facilities for creating a natural-history museum of his own.
+
+Hitherto, the brothers had worked together in unison, but now John
+committed the unpardonable offence of bringing home to Jermyn Street "a
+tocherless bride," fourteen years younger than himself, endowed only with
+beauty and accomplishments, and a faculty for filling the house with
+assemblies of wit and fashion, which blunt-spoken John designated
+"kick-ups," no doubt with an irreverent big D as a prefix, swearing being
+as characteristic as hard work.
+
+And work hard he did, early and late, not merely to maintain his extensive
+and lucrative practice, but to provide and prepare subjects for the museum
+in the rear of his town house, and for the valuable and original lectures
+he delivered in language forcible and clear, if neither refined nor
+academic.
+
+His chief workshop, so to speak, was at his country "Box" at Earl's Court,
+the grounds of which he had converted into a zoological garden, so many
+wild animals were there kept for study. There is a story told of his
+facing an escaped lion and flicking him back to his den with his pocket
+handkerchief, showing his fearlessness and his knowledge of leonine
+nature.
+
+Another tale is told of his intervention between fighting dogs and
+leopards, he dragging the infuriated leopards back to their cage by their
+collars--and _fainting_ when the feat was accomplished, for his was not a
+burly frame, and his heart was in a threatening condition.
+
+An element of humour mingles with the gruesome in Sir B. W. Richardson's
+account of the ruse employed to cheat watchful executors, and obtain the
+body of O'Brien the Irish Giant,[2] so as to convert it into the skeleton
+now in the Hunterian Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, Lincoln's
+Inn.
+
+Those were the days when surgeons were not particular where they obtained
+subjects for their scalpels, whether from the resurrection men or from the
+gallows, and John Hunter was not more dainty than his fellows. But also
+from travelling shows and menageries, and from animals that died in the
+Tower he was supplied. And so rapidly did his museum grow, absorbing the
+bulk of his income, that ere long he had to remove to what is now
+Leicester Square, and erect a building in the rear for his collection.
+
+Honours fell upon him thickly as they had fallen on his brother, alike
+British and foreign, of which he took little heed, absorbed as he was in
+the pursuit of knowledge, and its demonstration. His discoveries placed
+him far ahead of the science of his time, though his courtly brother,
+earlier in the field and first to leave it, ran him close. Indeed their
+final quarrel and alienation arose out of a disputed claim to a certain
+discovery in feminine physiology, brought before the Royal Society, a
+quarrel which transferred William's museum to the University of Glasgow,
+and excluded John from his will.
+
+The so-called "Lyceum Medicum" in Leicester Square, became the home of the
+"Society for the Improvement of Medical and Chirurgical Knowledge," and
+the "Philosophical Transactions" of the Society testify to the genius and
+untiring activity of its promoter. How he found time for his many written
+essays and discourses on topics wide apart as "Gunshot-wounds" and "Teeth"
+is a marvel. No wonder the frail human machine wore out so early. He had
+worked when he should have rested, worked regardless of premonitions and
+attacks John Hunter must have well understood, and died at last at
+sixty-two, a victim of one of those fits of passion no man with a diseased
+heart can indulge in safely.
+
+Setting out originally from the tablet in Westminster Abbey to describe
+what manner of man was the old doctor who lay beneath, it became
+imperatively necessary to bracket the two brothers, John and William
+Hunter, together, since, according to Sir B. W. Richardson, they were
+"twins in science," if not in birth. Had not William already come to the
+front when John sought him out, he could not have been his teacher, or
+given his younger brother his first start in life, his introduction, or
+his facilities for study. Then they worked together, became one in
+anatomical discovery, in their zeal for collecting all that illustrated
+their theories, all that was rare and curious, into unprecedented museums.
+Yet how widely the personalities of the brothers differed. They both stood
+out among contemporaries, yet William, with his slight form, mildly
+refined face, set off by an unpretentious wig, and delicate hands, under
+lace ruffles, and wide coat cuffs, a classical scholar, an antiquary, a
+numismatist, as well as a naturalist,--Queen Charlotte's medical referee,
+stepping out from his chariot, gold cane in hand, to visit his courtly
+patients, was the very _beau ideal_ of a fashionable physician of that
+day, one who shone in drawing-rooms as well as in the lecture-hall.
+Blue-eyed John, with high cheek bones, broad, slightly receding forehead,
+tangled red hair, and a shaggy mane of whisker that made his keen face a
+triangle, tender of heart, yet brusque and coarse of speech, rough in
+manner as in dress (with not a sign of frill or ruffle), despising
+dilettante coteries, not squeamish in seeking "subjects," passionate and
+determined, caring little for empty honours, for money only to swell his
+museum, and nothing for courtly circles, though created
+surgeon-extraordinary to George III., and owing his large practice solely
+to the force of his character, his science, and his skill. So far he was
+his brother's antithesis. John was a diamond in the rough; William the gem
+cut and polished. And such were the two old doctors to whom England's
+College of Surgeons owes its Hunterian Museum; the University of Glasgow
+the other. Had not the brothers quarrelled, the two would have formed one
+grand unrivalled collection.
+
+Space is limited, and so must be our notes of these other celebrated "old
+doctors," whom it would be invidious to overlook. Of these EDWARD JENNER
+stands prominently out, but he has been already dealt with by another
+hand.
+
+It is scarcely possible to pass by JOHN ABERNETHY, F.R.S., the eccentric
+physician, whose principle was that men should eat to live, not live to
+eat, who maintained that the stomach was the chief seat of health or
+disease, according as it was used or abused, and that water was the one
+natural and nutrient beverage. The practical way in which he illustrated
+his theories respecting overfeeding,--filling a pail with food from
+various dishes in correspondence with the heterogeneous mixture on his
+patients' plates--and his brusque replies to some other of his patients,
+have perpetuated his name through his oddities, rather than as a
+benefactor of his kind, who revolutionized the medical practice of his
+time, and of course excited envy and antagonism. His hair, kept together
+at the nape of the neck with a ribbon tie, was brushed back from his
+forehead, and added a degree of sharpness to his somewhat hatchet-shaped
+face, when he told the timorous lady who was "afraid she had swallowed a
+spider," "Then put a fly in your mouth, madam, and the spider will come up
+to catch him." Or when he threw the shilling from his fee back to a mother
+with a delicate daughter, "Take that, madam, and buy her a skipping-rope,"
+an intimation that exercise was needed. It was an age of coarse feeding
+and strong drinking, an age of drastic purges and much blood-letting, and
+Abernethy's temperance principles, so much in advance of his time,
+provoked considerable opposition from his medical brethren, whose
+satirical epigrams he was not slow to cap.
+
+But contemporary squibs and satires cannot affect the real good which has
+made Abernethy's name a household word. Indeed it has been stamped upon a
+biscuit. It is stamped also on a medical society he founded at St.
+Bartholomew's Hospital, where his centenary has recently been celebrated.
+
+Many have been the contributions to scientific medicine and surgery since
+the rough days of the old doctors I have endeavoured to chronicle, but
+these men of wigs and ties, gold-headed canes and pouncet-boxes, breeches
+and buckled shoes, were the pioneers of progress, they cleared the way
+for the men of this day and generation, and left their mark on their own
+age, not to be effaced by newer and more advanced successors, to whom they
+have served as stepping-stones.
+
+
+
+
+The Lee Penny.
+
+
+The story of the Lee Penny is full of historic interest, and the legends
+respecting it furnished Sir Walter Scott with some incidents for his novel
+the "Talisman."
+
+This amulet is a stone of a deep red colour and triangular shape, in size
+about half-an-inch on each side, and is set in a silver coin. The various
+accounts which have come under our notice are agreed that this curious
+relic of antiquity has been in the Lee family since a period immediately
+after the death of King Robert the Bruce.
+
+The monarch was nearing his end, and as he lay on his death-bed, he was
+much troubled for having failed to visit in person the Holy Land to assist
+in the Crusade. His long war with the English had rendered it impossible
+for him to leave his kingdom to fight in a foreign land, even in the cause
+of religion.
+
+Sir James Douglas, his tried and trusty friend, stood beside the bed of
+his king, and was in sore distress. As a last request the king implored
+that as soon as possible after his soul had left his body Douglas would
+take his heart to Jerusalem. On the honour of a knight, Sir James
+faithfully promised to discharge the trust.
+
+The king died in 1329, and his heart was enclosed in a silver case. Sir
+James suspended it from his neck with a chain, and without delay gathered
+round him a suitable retinue, and made his way towards the Holy Land. He
+was not destined to reach that country, for on his route the intelligence
+reached him that Alphonso, King of Leon and Castile, was waging war with
+the Moorish chief, Osmyn of Granada. To assist the Christians, he felt it
+was his duty, and in accordance with the dying charge of his king. With
+courage he engaged in the fray, but was soon surrounded by horsemen, and
+he who had fought so long and bravely, realised that he must meet his doom
+far from the country he loved so well. He made a desperate effort to
+escape. The precious casket he took from his neck and threw it before him,
+saying, "Onward, as thou were wont, thou noble heart! Douglas will follow
+thee." He followed it and was slain. After the battle was over the brave
+knight was found resting on the heart of Bruce. The mortal remains of the
+valiant knight were carried back to his home and buried in his church of
+St. Bride, at Douglas.
+
+The heart of Bruce was entrusted to Sir Simon Locard, and by him borne
+back to Scotland, and at last found a resting-place beneath the high altar
+of Melrose Abbey, and its site is still pointed out. Mrs. Hemans wrote a
+charming poem on Bruce's heart in Melrose Abbey, commencing:--
+
+ "Heart! that did'st press forward still,
+ Where the trumpet's note rang shrill;
+ Where the knightly swords are crossing,
+ And the plumes like sea-foam tossing,
+ Leader of the charging spear,
+ Fiery heart! and liest thou here?
+ May this narrow spot inurn
+ Aught that could so beat and burn?"
+
+We are told the family name of Locard was changed to Lockheart, or
+Lockhart, from the circumstance of Sir Simon having carried the key of the
+casket, and was granted as armorial insignia, heart with a fetter-lock,
+with the motto, "Corda serrata pando." According to a contributor to
+Chambers's "Book of Days," v., 2, p. 415, from the same incident, the
+Douglases bear a human heart, imperially crowned, and have in their
+possession an ancient sword, emblazoned with two hands holding a heart,
+and dated 1329, the year Bruce died.
+
+Lockhart was not daunted at the failure of the first attempt to reach
+Jerusalem, and, in company with such Scottish knights as escaped the fate
+of their leader, they once more proceeded, and arrived in the Holy Land,
+and for some time fought in the wars against the Saracens.
+
+[Illustration: THE LEE PENNY.]
+
+The following adventure is said to have befallen him. He made prisoner in
+battle an Emir of wealth and note. The aged mother of his captive came to
+the Christian camp to save her son from his captivity. Lockhart fixed the
+price at which his prisoner should ransom himself; and the lady, pulling
+out a large embroidered purse, proceeded to tell down the amount. In this
+operation, a pebble inserted in a coin, some say of the lower empire, fell
+out of the purse, and the Saracen matron testified so much haste to
+recover it as to give the Scottish knight a high idea of its value. "I
+will not consent," he said, "to grant your son's liberty unless the amulet
+be added to the ransom." The lady not only consented to this, but
+explained to Sir Simon the mode in which the talisman was to be used. The
+water in which it was dipped operated as a styptic, or a febrifuge, and
+the amulet possessed several other properties as a medical talisman.
+
+Sir Simon Lockhart, after much experience of the wonders which it wrought,
+brought it to his own country, and left it to his heirs, by whom, and by
+Clyde side in general, it was, and is still, distinguished by the name of
+the Lee Penny, from the name of his native seat of Lee.
+
+Its virtues were brought into operation by dropping the stone in water
+which was afterwards given to the diseased to drink, washing at the same
+time the part affected. No words were used in dipping the stone, or money
+permitted to be taken by the servants of Lee. People came from all parts
+of Scotland, and many places in England, to carry away the water to give
+to their cattle.
+
+Some interesting information respecting this amulet appears in an account
+of the Sack and Siege of Newcastle-on-Tyne in 1644. "As one of the natural
+sequences," says the writer, "of prolonged distress, caused by this brave
+but foolhardy defence against overwhelming odds, the plague broke out
+with fatal violence in Newcastle and Gateshead, as well as Tynemouth and
+Shields, during the following year. Great numbers of poor people were
+carried off by it; while tents were erected on Bensham Common, to which
+those infected were removed; and the famous Lee Penny was brought out of
+Scotland to be dipped in water for the diseased persons to drink, and the
+result said to be a perfect cure. The inhabitants (that is to say, the
+Corporation, we presume), gave a bond for a large sum in trust for the
+loan; and they thought the charm did so much good, that they offered to
+pay the money down, and keep the marvellous penny with a stone in which it
+is inserted; but the proprietor, Lockhart of Lee, would not part with it."
+
+We are told that many years ago a remarkable cure is alleged to have been
+performed on Lady Baird of Sauchton Hall, near Edinburgh, who, having been
+bitten by a mad dog, was seized with hydrophobia. The Lee Penny was sent
+for, and she used it for some weeks, drinking and bathing in the water it
+had been dipped in, and she quite recovered.
+
+"The most remarkable part of the history," as Sir Walter Scott says,
+"perhaps was, that it so especially escaped condemnation when the Church
+of Scotland chose to impeach many other cures which savoured of the
+miraculous, as occasioned by sorcery, and censured the appeal of them,
+'excepting only the amulet called the Lee Penny, to which it pleased God
+to annex certain healing virtues, which the Church did not presume to
+condemn.'"
+
+The Lee Penny is preserved at Lee House, in Lanarkshire, the residence of
+the present representative of the family.
+
+
+
+
+How Our Fathers were Physicked.
+
+BY J. A. LANGFORD, LL.D.
+
+
+Delightful old Fuller tells us "Necessary and ancient their Profession
+ever since man's body was subject to enmity and casualty." There is no
+doubt of the necessity and antiquity of the doctor's calling, but there
+is, without doubt, no profession in which such great and beneficent
+advance has been made in modern times as in the medical. The tortures
+which our fathers endured under the old treatment are terrible to think
+of. It was not enough that they were afflicted by disease; the pains which
+they had to suffer from the supposed remedies far exceeded those which
+nature imposed. Cupping, blistering, and especially bleeding, were the
+common applications in nearly all complaints, the Bleeding was also used
+as a preventive, which proverb truly tells us "is better than cure"; but
+in this case the supposed disease could scarcely have been worse than the
+supposed prevention. Five times in the year--"in September, before
+Advent, before Lent, after Easter, and at Pentecost"--were the periods at
+which men in health were accustomed to "breathe a vayne." Besides letting
+of blood, the physician's cane and the surgeon's club were vigorously used
+on the unfortunate sufferers. Mr. J. C. Jeaffreson, in his very
+interesting "Book about Doctors," says, "For many centuries fustigation
+was believed in as a sovereign remedy for bodily ailments as well as moral
+failings, and a beating was prescribed for an ague as frequently as for
+picking and stealing." So what with the lancet and the stick combined, our
+fathers must indeed have shuddered at the approach of any of the "natural
+shocks that flesh is heir to."
+
+The medicines of those good old times were of a very strange and
+objectionable kind. Some of the concoctions were composed of many
+ingredients, and were formed of abominable, not to say disgusting,
+materials. All nature was ransacked for out-of-the-way and horrible things
+which could be used as drugs and nostrums for suffering and gullible
+sufferers. In the reign of Charles II., Dr. Thomas Sherley "recommended a
+clumsy and inordinate administration of violent drugs" for gout. "Calomel
+he habitually administered in simple doses. Sugar of lead he mixed
+largely in his conserves; pulverized human bones he was very fond of
+prescribing; and the principal ingredient in his gout-powder was 'raspings
+of a human skull unburied.' But his sweetest compound was his 'Balsam of
+Bats,' strongly recommended as an unguent for hypochondriacal persons,
+into which entered adders, bats, sucking-whelps, earth worms, hogs'
+grease, the marrow of a stag, and the thigh-bone of an ox." A good idea of
+the things sold to a confiding public as cures for its ills may be
+gathered from two verses on Colonel Dalmahoy, a well-known--shall we say
+quack--of the past:--
+
+ "Dalmahoy sold infusions and lotions,
+ Decoctions, and gargles, and pills,
+ Electuaries, powders, and potions,
+ Spermaciti, salts, scammony, squills.
+
+ Horse aloes, burnt alum, agaric,
+ Balm, benzoine, blood-stone, and dill;
+ Castor, camphor, and acid tartaric,
+ With specifics for every ill."
+
+Metals and precious stones were extensively used in the prescriptions of
+bygone doctors. Every metal and every stone was credited with some special
+and peculiar virtue which it alone possessed, and it was applied as a cure
+for that ailment over which it had influence and power. Bacon tells us,
+"We know Diseases of Stoppings, and Suffocations, are the most dangerous
+in the body; And it is not much otherwise in the minde. You may take
+_Sarza_ to open the Liver; _Steele_ to open the Spleene; _Flowers of
+Sulphur_ for the Lungs; _Castoreum_ for the Braine," for each of which
+parts it was believed that the specifics named were most efficacious. The
+prescriptions of Dr. Bulleyn, in the reign of Elizabeth, are wonderful
+examples of how our fathers were physicked. Here are two of those quoted
+by Mr. Jeaffreson. The first is
+
+"_An Embrocation._--An embrocation is made after this manner:--Px. Of a
+decoction of mallowes, vyolets, barly, quince seed, lettice leaves, one
+pint; of barly meale, two ounces; of oyle of vyolets and roses, of each,
+an ounce and half; of butter, one ounce; and then seeth them all together
+till they be like a brouthe, puttyng thereto, at the ende, foure yolkes of
+eggs; and the maner of applying is with peeces of cloth, dipped in the
+aforesaid decoction, being actually hoate."
+
+Our second is "truly a medicine for kings and noblemen;" it is called an
+
+"_Electuarium de Gemmis._--Take two drachms of white perles; two little
+peeces of saphyre; jacinth, corneline, emerauldes, grannettes, of each an
+ounce; setwal, the sweete roote dorsnike, the rind of pomecitron, mase,
+basal seede, of each two drachms; of redde corrall, amber, shewing of
+ivory, of each two drachms; rootes both of white and red lichen, ginger,
+long peper, spicknard, folium indicum, saffron, cardamon, of each one
+drachm; of troch diarodon, lignum aloes, of each half a small handful;
+cinnamon, galinga, zurnbeth, which is a kind of setwal, of each one drachm
+and a half; thin pieces of gold and sylver, of each half a scruple; of
+musk, half a drachm. Make your electuary with honey emblici, which is the
+fourth kind of mirobulans with roses, strained in equall partes, as much
+as will suffice. This healeth cold diseases of ye braine, harte, stomack.
+It is a medicine proved against the tremblynge of the harte, faynting and
+swooning, the weakness of the stomacke, pensiveness, solitarines. Kings
+and noble men have used this for their comfort. It causeth them to be
+bold-spirited, the body to smell wel, and ingendreth to the face good
+colour."
+
+The most innocent articles used in the old medicines were fruits, and
+herbs, and vegetables. To some kinds special virtues are assigned, and Dr.
+Bulleyn's "Book of Simples," is very pleasant reading. "Pears, apples,
+peaches, quinces, cherries, grapes, raisins, prunes, raspberries, oranges,
+medlons, raspberries and strawberries, spinage, ginger, and lettuces are
+the good things thrown upon the board." We are told of a prune growing at
+Norwich, and known as the "black freere's prune," that it is "very
+delicious and pleasaunt, and no lesse profitable unto a hoate stomacke."
+"The red warden is of greate virtue, conserved, roasted or baken to quench
+choller." We are also informed that "Figges be good agaynst melancholy,
+and the falling evil, to be eaten. Figges, nuts, and herb grase do make a
+sufficient medicine against poison or the pestilence. Figges make a good
+gargarism to cleanse the throates."
+
+Some of the Doctor's prescriptions are very curious. He prescribes "a smal
+young mouse rosted," for a child afflicted with a nervous ailment. Nor did
+he disdain to use the snail in certain cases. He tells us that "Snayles
+broken from the shelles and sodden in whyte wyne with oyle and sugar are
+very holsome, because they be hoat and moist for the straightnes of the
+lungs and cold cough. Snails stamped with camphery, and leven will draw
+forth prycks in the flesh." Snail broth is not entirely unknown in some
+country places, even at the present time. Bezoar stone and unicorn's horn
+were also used in confections.
+
+Cancer has always been, and unfortunately still is, a terrible and an
+incurable disease, and has afforded a fine field for all kinds of nostrums
+and specifics which were to produce a "safe and certain cure." One of
+these, called a "precious water," was thus composed. "Take dove's foote, a
+herb so named, Arkangell ivy with the berries, young red bryer toppes, and
+leaves, whyte roses, theyre leaves and buds, red sage, celandyne and
+woodbynde, of each lyke quantity, cut or chopped and put into pure cleane
+whyte wyne, and clarified honey. Then breake into it alum glasse and put
+in a little of the pouder of aloes hepatica. Destill these together softly
+in a limbecke of glasse or pure tin; if not then in a limbecke wherein
+aqua vitĉ is made. Keep this water close. It will not onely kyll the
+canker (cancer), if it be duly washed therewyth; but also two droppes
+dayly put into the eye wyll sharp the syght, and breake the pearle and
+spottes, specially if it be dropped in wyth a little fenell water, and
+close the eyes after."
+
+In 1739, the British Parliament passed an Act which is unprecedented in
+the annals of folly. A female quack, named Joanna Stephens, was reported
+to have effected some most extraordinary cures by the use of a medicine of
+which she only possessed the secret. She proposed to make it public for
+the sum of £5,000, and a vain attempt was made to raise the sum by
+subscription, but only £1,356 3s. was thus raised. An appeal was made to
+Parliament, and a commission was appointed to enquire into the subject,
+and a certificate signed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Bishops, Peers,
+and Physicians, was presented to the House, declaring that they were
+"convinced by experiment of the utility, efficacy, and dissolving power,"
+of the tested medicine, and Joanna Stephens was rewarded with the desired
+£5,000. The prescriptions were published, and the following extracts will
+suffice to show how easily sufferers from diseases may be, and sometimes
+are, gulled. This lucky quack says:--
+
+ "My medicines are a Powder, a Decoction, and Pills."
+
+ "The Powder consists of egg-shells and snails, both calcined."
+
+ "The Decoction is made by boiling some herbs (together with a ball
+ which consists of soap, swine's-cresses burnt to a blackness, and
+ honey), in water."
+
+ "The Pills consist of snails calcined, wild carrot seeds, burdock
+ seeds, asken keys, hips and hawes, all burnt to a blackness--soap and
+ honey."
+
+Our readers will willingly dispense with the directions of how these
+dearly purchased medicines should be prepared. Surely
+
+ "The pleasure is as great,
+ In being cheated as to cheat!"
+
+In 1633, Stephen Brasnell, Physician, published a small volume entitled
+"Helps | for | Svddain | Accidents | Endangering Life. | By which | Those
+that live farre from Physitions or Chirurgions | may happily preserve the
+Life | of a true Friend or Neigh-| bour, till such a Man may be | had to
+perfect the Cure. | Collected out of the best authors | for the generall
+good." The following is his prescription for all kinds of poisons:--viz.
+"the Hoofe of an Oxe cut into parings and boyled with bruised mustard-seed
+in white wine and faire water. The Bloud of a Malard drunke fresh and
+warme: or els dryed to powder, and so drunke in a draught of white wine.
+The Bloud of a Stagge also in the same manner. The seeds of Rue and the
+leaves of Betony boyled together in white wine. Or take ij scruples (that
+is fortie graines) of Mithridate; of prepared Chrystall, one dram (that is
+three score grains), fresh Butter one ounce. Mix all well together.
+Swallow it down by such quantities as you can swallow at once; and drink
+presently upon it a quarter of a pint of the decoction of French Barley,
+or so much of six shillings Beere. Of this I have had happy proofe."
+
+There is a much more effective, though a somewhat revolting prescription
+for "those with abilitie." "Take," says our seventeenth century physician,
+"take a sound horse, open his belly alive, take out all his entrayles
+quickly, and put the poysoned partie naked into it all save his head,
+while the body of the horse retains his naturall heate, and there let him
+sweat well." Our author admits that "this may be held a strange course,
+but the same reason that teacheth to devide live pullets and pigeons for
+plague-sores approveth this way of sweating as most apt to draw to itselfe
+all poysons from the heart and principall parts of the patient's body.
+But during this time of sweating he must defend his braine by wearing on
+his head a quilt." The quilt is to be made by taking a number of dried
+herbs, which are to be made into a "grosse powder and quilt them up in
+sarsnet or calico, and let it be so big as to cover all the head like a
+cap, then binde it on fast with a kerchief." This is called "a Nightcap to
+preserve the Brain."
+
+There are also curious prescriptions for the stings of bees and wasps, the
+"bitings of spiders," of which he says "the garden ones are the worst." He
+tells us that the "flesh of the same beast that biteth, inwardly taken,
+helpeth much," and that "outwardly the best thing to be applied is the
+flesh of the same beast that did the hurt, pounded in a morter and applied
+in manner of a poultis." Here is one about that pretty little animal, the
+shrew-mouse: "Now the shrew-mouse is a little kind of a mouse with a long
+sharpe snout and a short tayle; it liveth commonly in old ruinous walls.
+It biteth also very venomously, and leaveth foure small perforations made
+by her foure foreteeth. To cure her biting, her flesh roasted and eaten is
+the best inward antidote if it may be had. And outwardly apply her warme
+liver and skin if it may be had. Otherwise _Rocket-reeds_ beaten into
+powder, and mixed with the bloud of a dog. Or els the teeth of a dead man
+made into a fine powder."
+
+The toad comes in for a good share of attention, and Mr. Bradwell gives a
+personal anecdote on this subject. He says:--"Myself, while I was a
+student at _Cambridge_, was so hurt by the spouting of a venomous humour
+from the body of a great toad into my face while I pashed him to death
+with a brickbat. Some of the moisture lighted on my right eye, which did
+not a little endanger it, and hath made it ever since apt to receive any
+flux of Rheume or Inflammation." Some of our readers may think that this
+was a fit punishment for having "pashed" the toad to "death with a
+brickbat."
+
+Among the strangest things ever used as medicine must be placed human
+skulls. In 1854, Mr. T. A. Trollope gave a short account in _Notes and
+Queries_ of a book by Dr. Cammillo Brunoni, published at Fabriano in 1726.
+It was entitled _Il Medico Poeta_ (the Physician a Poet), and gives an
+account "of the medical uses of human skulls." Dr. Brunoni informs us,
+says Mr. Trollope, that "all skulls are not of equal value. Indeed, those
+of persons who have died a natural death, are good for little or nothing.
+The _reason_ of this is, that the disease of which they died has consumed
+or dissipated the essential spirit! The skulls of murderers and bandits
+are particularly efficacious. And this is clearly because not only is the
+essential spirit of the cranium concentrated therein by the nature of
+their violent death, but also the force of it is increased by the long
+exposure to the atmosphere, occasioned by the heads of such persons being
+ordinarily placed on spikes over the gates of cities! Such skulls are used
+in various manners. Preparations of volatile salt, spirit, gelatine,
+essence, etc., are made from them, and are very useful in epilepsy and
+hoemorrhage. The notion soldiers have, that drinking out of a skull
+renders them invulnerable in battle, is a mere superstition, though
+respectable writers do maintain that such a practice is a proved
+preventive against scrofula."
+
+This very curious book consists of a "poem in twelve cantos, or
+'Capitoli,' as from the fifteenth century downwards it was the Italian
+fashion to call them, on the physical poet--a sort of medical _ars
+poetica_; and followed by a hundred and seventy-two sonnets on all
+diseases, drugs, parts of the body, functions of them, and curative
+means. Each sonnet is printed on one page, while that opposite is occupied
+by a compendious account in prose of the subject in hand. We have a sonnet
+on the stomach-ache, a sonnet on apoplexy, a sonnet on purges, another on
+blisters, and many others on far less mentionable subjects. The author's
+poetical view of the action of a black-dose compares it to that of a tidy
+and active housemaid, who, having swept together all the dirt in the room,
+throws it out of the window. Mystic virtues are attributed to a variety of
+substances, animal, vegetable, and mineral."
+
+That delightful work, The Memoirs of the Verney Family, by Lady Verney,
+affords some very striking examples of the medical treatment of poor
+suffering humanity in the 17th century. Our selections are from the third
+volume.
+
+One of the most extraordinary medicines of this, or of any age, was
+without doubt that known as Venice Treacle. In 1651, Sir Ralph Verney was
+in Venice, and the Memoirs furnish the following graphic account of this
+terrible drug, which was a concoction of the most disgusting materials.
+Sir Ralph sends it to Mrs. Isham, for her family medicine chest, and says
+"hee that is most famous for Treacle is called Sig{r} Antonio Sgobis, and
+keepes shopp at the Strazzo, or Ostridge, sopra il ponte de'Baretteri, on
+the right hand going towards St. Mark's. His price is 19 livres (Venize
+money) a pound, and hee gives leaden Potts with the Ostridge signe uppon
+them, and Papers both in Italian and Lattin to show its virtue." "This
+celebrated and incredibly nasty compound," adds Lady Verney,
+"traditionally composed by Nero's physician, was made of vipers, white
+wine, and opium, 'spices from both the Indies,' liquorice, red roses, tops
+of germander, juice of rough aloes, seeds of treacle mustard, tops of St.
+John's wort, and some twenty other herbs, to be mixed with honey 'triple
+the weight of all the dry species' into an electuary." The recipe is given
+as late as 1739, in Dr. Quincey's "English Dispensatory," published by
+Thomas Longman, at the Ship in Paternoster Row. "Vipers are essential, and
+to get the full benefit of them 'a dozen vipers should be put alive into
+white wine.' The English doctor, anxious for the credit of British vipers,
+proves that Venice treacle may be made as well in England, 'though their
+country is hotter, and so may the more rarify the viperime juices'; yet
+the bites of our vipers at the proper time of year, which is the hottest,
+are as efficacious and deadly as them. But he complains that the name of
+Venice goes so far, that English people 'please themselves much with
+buying a Tin Pot at a low price of a dirty sailor ... with directions in
+the Italian tongue, printed in London,' and that some base druggists 'make
+this wretched stuff of little else than the sweepings of their shops.' Sir
+Ralph could pride himself that his leaden pots contained the genuine
+horror. It was used as 'an opiate when some stimulus is required at the
+same time'; an overdose was confessedly dangerous, and even its advocates
+allowed that Venice treacle did not suit everyone, because, forsooth,
+'honey disagrees with some particular constitutions.'" For centuries this
+medical "horror" was taken by our drastically treated forefathers.
+
+The treatment was indeed drastic, and we might truly add cruel. Tom Verney
+had "a tertian ague and a feaver," and for this he had "only a vomit,
+glister, a cordiall, and breathed a vane"--that is, was bled. Another
+patient, Sir George Wheler, who had caught a chill after dancing, had all
+sorts of "Applications of Blisters and Laudanums," so that his Christmas
+dinner at Dr. Denton's cost him "the best part of 100 pounds." For an
+eruption in the leg, Sir Ralph Verney was advised to apply a lotion "so
+virulent, a drop would fech of the skin when it touched."
+
+Young Edmund Verney was ill in 1657, and writes to his father, "Truly I
+might compare my afflictions to Job's. I have taken purges and vomits,
+pills and potions, I have been blooded, and I doe not know what I have not
+had, I have had so many things." In 1657-58 the epidemic known as "The New
+Disease," proved very fatal, and created quite a panic. The treatment
+adopted by the doctors may be gathered from a prescription of Dr.
+Denton's, one of the most famous physicians of the time. He writes to Sir
+Ralph Verney, "I see noe danger of Wm. R., and if he had followed your
+advice by taking of a vomit, and if that had not done it, then to have
+beene blooded, I beleeved he had beene well ere this." Then he adds "It is
+the best thinge and the surest and the quickest he can yet doe, therefore
+I pray lett him have one yett. 3 full spoonfulls of the vomitage liquor in
+possitt drinke will doe well, and he may abide 4 the same night when he
+goes to rest; let him take the weight of vi{ds} of diascordium the next
+day or the next but one; he may be blooded in the arm about 20 ounces."
+
+Some of the ladies of the time did not, however, approve of this kind of
+treatment, and preferred their own remedies, or their own notions of
+remedies, to the doctor's prescriptions. We select two examples. Lady
+Fanshawe described the disease as "a very ill kind of fever, of which many
+died, and it ran generally through all families." While she suffered from
+it she ate "neither flesh, nor fish, nor bread, but sage possett drink, a
+pancake or eggs, or now and then a turnip or carrott." But Lady Hobart
+ventured to prescribe. She writes, "If you have a new dises in your town
+pray have a car of yourself, and goo to non of them; but drink good ale
+for the gretis cordall that is: I live by the strength of your malt." Few,
+we anticipate, would object to her ladyship's advice, and most would
+prefer her "good ale" to Dr. Denton's "vomitts," and the loss of 20 ounces
+of blood.
+
+Our illustrations might be indefinitely multiplied, but those given will
+amply suffice to show the way in which our fathers were physicked.
+
+
+
+
+Medical Folk-Lore.
+
+BY JOHN NICHOLSON.
+
+
+To ease pain and endeavour to effect a cure, man will try every suggested
+remedy, likely and unlikely, and when numberless things have been tried,
+each of which was alleged to be a certain cure, he reverts to some simple
+thing, taught him by his old grandmother, or the "wise woman" of his early
+days; and which, by reason of its simplicity, had been at first
+contemptuously rejected in favour of more complex but inefficacious
+compounds. There is scarcely a market but has a stall kept by a herb
+woman, who, in warm old-fashioned hood, with a little shawl round her
+shoulders, her ample waist encircled by broad tapes from which is
+suspended a pocket, capacious and indispensable, lays out with great care
+her stock of simples--roots, leaves, or flowers, studiously gathered at
+the proper time, when their virtue is strongest. Here may be seen poppy
+heads for fomentation, dandelion roots for liver complaint, ground ivy for
+rheumatism, celandine for weak eyes, and other herbs, all "for the
+service of man," to alleviate or cure some of the "ills that flesh is heir
+to." She can relate wondrous tales of marvellous cures wrought by her
+wares, of cases, long standing, and given up by the duly qualified medical
+fraternity, a brotherhood she holds in contempt because of their
+new-fangled remedies and methods.
+
+This chapter, however, deals chiefly with superstitious remedies, or at
+least those remedies which seem to have no scientific bearing on the case;
+thus, a person having a sty on the eye, will have it rubbed with a wedding
+ring, or the gold ring of a young maiden; or cause it to be well brushed
+seven times with a black cat's tail, if the cat were willing. Another cure
+is more efficacious if administered as a surprise. The patient is placed
+in front of the operator, who unexpectedly spits on the eye affected;
+which action often leads to angry remonstrance, met by derisive laughter,
+which causes, it may be, broken friendship and general unpleasantness for
+a time.
+
+It is a common belief, almost world-wide in its extent, that toothache is
+caused by a little worm which gnaws a hole in the tooth. Not long ago I
+was shewn a large molar, which when _in situ_ had caused its owner great
+pain, and he pointed to the nerve apertures, saying, "That's where the
+worm was!" Shakespeare, in "Much Ado About Nothing,"[3] speaks of this
+curious belief:--
+
+ "_D. Pedro._ What! sigh for the toothache?
+
+ _Leon._ Where is but a humour or a worm."
+
+"This superstition was common some years ago in Derbyshire, where there
+was an odd way of extracting, as it was thought, the worm. A small
+quantity of a mixture, consisting of dried and powdered herbs, was placed
+in a tea-cup or other small vessel, and a live coke from the fire was
+dropped in. The patient then held his or her open mouth over the cup, and
+inhaled the smoke as long as it could be borne. The cup was then taken
+away, and a fresh cup or glass, containing water, was then put before the
+patient. Into this cup the patient breathed hard for a few moments, and
+then, it was supposed, the grub or worm could be seen in the water."[4]
+
+The following was communicated to the _Folk Lore Journal_ by Wm. Pengelly,
+Esq., Torquay, February 1st, 1884:--
+
+ "Upwards of sixty years ago, a woman at Looe, in south-east Cornwall,
+ complained to a neighbouring woman that she was suffering from
+ toothache, on which the neighbour remarked that she could give a charm
+ of undoubted efficacy. It was to be in writing, and worn constantly
+ about the person; but, unfortunately, it would be valueless if the
+ giver and receiver were of the same sex. This difficulty was obviated
+ by calling in my services, and requesting me to write from dictation
+ the following words:--
+
+ 'Peter sat in the gate of Jerusalem. Jesus cometh unto him and saith,
+ "Peter, what aileth thee?" He saith, "Lord, I am grievously tormented
+ with the toothache." He saith, "Arise, Peter, and follow me." He did
+ so, and immediately the toothache left him; and he followed him in the
+ name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.'
+
+ The charm, being found to be correctly written, was held to have been
+ presented to me by the dictator. I at once gave it to the sufferer,
+ who placed it in a small bag and wore it round her neck."
+
+A Roumanian charm against toothache is to sit beside an anthill, masticate
+a crust of bread, spit it out over the anthill, and as the ants eat the
+bread the toothache will cease.
+
+Some believe that if you pick the aching tooth with the nail of an old
+coffin, or drink the water taken from the tops of three waves, the
+wearying pain may be relieved or cured. In Norfolk, the toothache is
+called the "love pain," and the sufferer does not receive much sympathy.
+
+Some time ago, a man wished to shew me some antiquity he had found, but
+his jacket pocket was so filled with odds and ends ("kelterment," he
+called it) that he turned all out in order to better prosecute his search.
+Among the miscellaneous collection I noticed a potato, withered, dry,
+hard, and black; and was informed it was kept as a preventive and cure for
+rheumatism. For the same distressing, disabling disease, some people
+spread treacle on brown paper, and apply hot to the part affected.
+
+The following curious passages have been transcribed by my friend, Mr.
+George Neilson, solicitor, Glasgow, from the Kirk Session Records of the
+parish of Gretna, and are here inserted by his consent, most freely
+given:--
+
+ "GRAITNEY KIRK, _Feb. 11, 1733_.
+
+ Session met after Sermon.
+
+ It was represented by some of the members that the Charms and Spells
+ used at Watshill for Francis Armstrong, Labouring under distemper of
+ mind, gave great offence, and 'twas worth while to enquire into the
+ affair and publickly admonish the people of the evil of such a course,
+ that a timely stop be put to such a practice.
+
+ Several of the members gave account that in Barbara Armstrang's they
+ burned Rowantree and Salt, they took three Locks of Francis's hair,
+ three pieces of his shirt, three roots of wormwood, three of mugwort,
+ three pieces of Rowantree, and boiled alltogether, anointed his Legs
+ with the water, and essayed to put three sups in his mouth, and
+ meantime kept the door close, being told by Isabel Pott, at Cross, in
+ Rockcliff commonly called the Wise Woman, that the person who had
+ wronged him would come to the door, but no access was to be given.
+ Francis, tho' distracted, told them they were using witch-craft and
+ the Devils Charms that would do no good. It is said they carried a
+ candle around the bed for one part of the inchantment. John Neilson,
+ in Sarkbridge, declared before the Session this was matter of fact
+ others then present. Mary Tate, Servant to John Neilson in Sarkbridge
+ is to be cited as having gone to the Wise Woman for Consultation."
+
+
+ "GRAITNEY KIRK, _Feb. 25, 1733_.
+
+ Session met after Sermon
+
+ Mary Tate having been summoned was called on, and compearing confessed
+ that she had gone to Isabel Pot, in the parish of Rockcliff, and
+ declared that the s{d} Isabell ordered South running water to be
+ lifted in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and to be boiled
+ at night in the house where Francis Armstrong was, with nettle roots,
+ wormwood, mugwort, southernwood and rowantree, and his hands, legs and
+ temples be stroaked therewith, and three sups to be put in his mouth,
+ and withal to keep the door close: She ordered also three locks of his
+ hair to be burnt in the fire with three pieces clipt out of his shirt,
+ and a Slut, _i.e._, a rag dipt in tallow to be lighted and carried
+ round his bed, and all to be kept secret except from near friends:
+ Mary Tate declared that the said Francis would allow none to touch him
+ but her, and at last Helen Armestrange, Spouse to Archibald Crighton,
+ Elder, assisted her, and after all the said Francis, tho' distracted,
+ told them they were using witchcrafts and the Devil's Charms that
+ would do no good: Mary Tate being admonished of the Evil of such a
+ course was removed: Notwithstanding her acknowledgments of her fault
+ she is to be suspended _a sacris_, and others her accomplices, and
+ that none hereafter pretend Ignorance the Congregation is to be
+ cautioned against such a practice from the Pulpit."
+
+Ague used to be much more prevalent than it now is. Drainage and
+sanitation have banished many evils, and with the evil, the exorcists'
+charm for the banishment of the evil. Charms, rather than medical
+remedies, for the cure of ague, are very prevalent. Rider's _British
+Merlin_ for 1715 lies before me. It is a thin 16mo. booklet of 48 printed
+pages and 42 blank pages, but some of the blank inter-leaves have been
+torn out. It is bound in parchment with gilt edges, and has had a clasp,
+which has disappeared. One of the interleaves bears this written
+charm:--"And Peter sat at the gate of Jerusalem and prayed, and Jesus
+called Peter, and Peter said, Lord, I am sick of an ague, and the evil
+ague being dismissed, Peter said, Lord, grant that whosoever weareth these
+lines in writing, the evil ague may depart from them, and from all evil
+ague good Lord deliver us." The following charm is taken from an old diary
+of 1751[5]:--"When Jesus came near Pilate, He trembled like a leaf, and
+the judge asked Him if He had the ague. He answered, He had neither the
+ague, nor was He afraid; and whosoever bears these words in mind shall
+never fear ague or anything else." A strange charm for this dreaded
+disease was to be spoken up the wide cavernous chimney by the eldest
+female of the family on St. Agnes' Eve. Thus spake she:--
+
+ "Tremble and go!
+ First day shiver and burn;
+ Tremble and quake!
+ Second day shiver and learn;
+ Tremble and die!
+ Third day never return."
+
+A curious anecdote is related of Lord Chief Justice Holt. When a young
+man, he, with companions who were law students like himself, ran up a
+score at an inn, which they were not able to pay. Mr. Holt observed that
+the landlord's daughter looked very ill, and, posing as a medical student,
+asked what ailed her. He was informed she suffered from ague. Mr. Holt,
+continuing to play the doctor, gathered sundry herbs, mixed them with
+great ceremony, rolled them up in parchment, scrawled some characters on
+the same, and to the great amusement of his companions, tied it round the
+neck of the young woman, who straightway was cured of her ague. After the
+cure, the pretending doctor offered to pay the bill, but the grateful
+landlord and father would not consent, and allowed the party to leave the
+house with hearts as light as their pockets.
+
+Many years after, when on the Bench, a woman was brought before him
+accused of witchcraft. She denied the charge, but said she had a wonderful
+ball, which never failed to cure the ague. The charm was handed to the
+judge, who recognised it as the very ball he had made for the young woman
+at the inn, to help himself and his companions out of a difficult
+position.[6]
+
+In the west of England a live snail is sewn up in a bag and worn round the
+neck as an antidote for ague; though others in the same district imprison
+a spider in a box, and, as it pines away, so will the disease depart.
+
+It is a common belief in the north of England that a person bitten by a
+dog is liable to madness, if the dog which bit them goes mad. In order to
+secure the bitten one from such a terrible fate, the owner of the dog is
+often compelled to destroy it. Should he refuse to do so, the friends of
+the injured party would probably poison it, The condition peculiar to the
+morning following a night of debauchery, is said to need "a hair of the
+dog that bit you," which doubtless refers to the means taken to prevent
+ill effects following a dog bite. A wise saw from the Edda tells us that
+"Dog's hair heals dog's bite." The following incident recorded in the
+_Pall Mall Gazette_, Oct. 12th, 1866, shews most gross superstition in
+this Victorian age. "At an inquest, held on the 5th of October, at
+Bradfield, (Bucks.), on the body of a child of five years of age, which
+had died of hydrophobia, evidence was given of a practice almost
+incredible in civilised England. Sarah Mackness stated that at the request
+of the mother of the deceased, she had fished out of the river the body of
+the dog by which the child had been bitten, and had extracted its liver, a
+slice of which she had frizzled before the fire, and had then given it to
+the child to be eaten with some bread. The dog had been drowned nine days
+before. The child ate the liver greedily, drank some tea afterwards, but
+died, in spite of this strange specific."
+
+Erysipelas in Donegal is known as the "rose." It is very common, but can
+be cured by a stroker. The following is said to have happened. A nurse of
+a Rector had the "rose," and the doctor was called in. After he was gone,
+the woman's friends brought in a stroker, who rubbed the nurse with bog
+moss, and then threw a bucket of bogwater over her in bed. This treatment
+cured the woman, and is said to be generally in vogue, but is not
+efficient except the right person does it.[7] In some parts of Yorkshire,
+sheep's dung is applied as a poultice for the cure of erysipelas.
+
+What is more distressing, both to patient and nurse, than whooping cough,
+or king-cough, as it is sometimes called? A change of air is deemed
+beneficial to the afflicted one, so the mothers of Hull take their
+suffering children across the Humber to New Holland and back again. Some
+call it "crossing strange water." Other people procure a "hairy worm," and
+suspend it in a flannel cover round the neck of the sufferer, in the
+belief that as the creature dies and wastes away, so will the cough
+depart. This custom seems to be the relic of an old belief that something
+of the nature of a hairy caterpillar was the cause of the cough, and Mr.
+Tylor, in his _Primitive Culture_,[8] speaks of the ancient
+homoeopathic doctrine that what hurts will also cure. In Gloucestershire
+roasted mouse is considered a specific for whooping cough; though in
+Yorkshire the same diet cure is adopted for croup, while rat pie is the
+one to be used for whooping cough. The Norfolk peasants tie up a common
+house spider in a piece of muslin, and when the luckless long-legged
+spinner dies, the cough will soon disappear. A correspondent of _Notes and
+Queries_ states that when staying in a village in Oxfordshire, he was
+informed by an old woman that she and her brothers were cured of whooping
+cough in the following way. They were required to go, the first thing in
+the morning, to a hovel at a little distance from their house, where a fox
+was kept. They carried with them a large can of milk, which was set down
+before the fox, and when he had taken as much as he cared to drink, the
+children shared among them what was left. The _Aberdeen Evening Gazette_
+of 24th August, 1882, tells of a curious superstition in Lochee:--
+
+ "Hooping-cough being rather prevalent in Lochee at the present time,
+ various cures are resorted to with the view of allaying the distress.
+ Amongst these the old 'fret' of passing a child beneath the belly of a
+ donkey has come in for a share of patronage. A few days ago, two
+ children living with their parents in Camperdown Street, were
+ infected with the malady. A hawker's cart, with a donkey yoked to it,
+ happening to pass, the mothers thought this an excellent opportunity
+ to have their little ones relieved of their hacking cough. The donkey
+ was accordingly stopped, the children were brought forth, and the
+ ceremony began. The mothers, stationed at either side of the donkey,
+ passed and repassed the little creatures underneath the animal's
+ belly, and with evident satisfaction appeared to think that a cure
+ would in all probability be effected. Nor was this all; a piece of
+ bread was next given to the donkey to eat, one of the women holding
+ her apron beneath its mouth to catch the crumbs which might fall.
+ These were given to the children to eat, so as to make the cure
+ effectual. Whether these strange proceedings have resulted in
+ banishing the dreaded cough or not, has not been ascertained, and
+ probably never will be. A few years ago, the custom was quite common
+ in this quarter, but with the spread of education the people generally
+ know better than to attempt to cure hooping-cough through the agency
+ of a donkey."
+
+The _North British Mail_ for 20th March 1883, among other superstitions in
+Tiree, says, "On the west side of the island there is a rock with a hole
+in it, through which children are passed when suffering from
+whooping-cough or other complaints."
+
+It is a common belief that if you wash your hands in water in which eggs
+have been boiled, warts will make their appearance; also, that the blood
+of a wart will cause other warts. Anyhow, if the warts be there, they can
+either be cured or charmed away. The writer once had a row of warts,
+thirteen in number, on his left arm. He was told by an aged dame, who sat
+on a three-legged stool before her cottage door, smoking a short black
+pipe, to take thirteen bad peas, throw them over his left shoulder, never
+heeding where they went, all the while repeating some incantation, which
+has been forgotten.
+
+Cures are effected by rubbing the warts with something, which is
+afterwards allowed to decay. Some rub the warts with a grey snail or slug,
+and then impale the poor creature on a thorn; others steal a bit of beef,
+not so much as Taffy made off with, rub the beef on the warts, and then
+bury the beef. Lord Bacon, in his _Natural History_, says:--"I had from my
+childhood a wart upon one of my fingers; afterwards, when I was about
+sixteen years old, being then at Paris, there grew upon both my hands a
+number of warts, at the least an hundred in a month's space. The English
+Ambassador's lady, who was a woman far from superstitious, told me one day
+she would help me away with my warts: whereupon she got a piece of lard
+with the skin on, and rubbed the warts all over with the fat side; and
+among the rest, the wart which I had from my childhood; then she nailed
+the piece of lard, with the fat towards the sun, upon a post of her
+chamber window, which was to the south. The success was, that within five
+weeks' space all the warts went quite away; and that wart which I had so
+long endured, for company.... They say the like is done by the rubbing of
+warts with a green elder stick, and then burying the stick to rot in
+muck."
+
+In Withal's _Dictionary_ (1608) there is the following couplet:--
+
+ "The bone of a haire's foot closed in a ring,
+ Will drive away the cramp whenas it doth wing,"
+
+but Pepys, who tells us the whole of his experience, with comments
+thereon, used a hare's foot as a charm for colic. He says:--(20 Jan.
+1664-5) "Homeward, in my way buying a hare and taking it home, which arose
+upon my discourse to-day with Mr. Batten in Westminster Hall, who showed
+me my mistake, that my hare's foot hath not the joynt in it, and assures
+me he never had the cholique since he carried it about him; and it is a
+strange thing how fancy works, for I no sooner handled his foot but I
+became very well, and so continue."
+
+(22nd.) "Now mighty well, and truly I can but impute it to my fresh hare's
+foot."
+
+(March 26) "Now I am at a loss to know whether it be my hare's foot which
+is my preservation; for I never had a fit of collique since I wore it, or
+whether it be my taking a pill of turpentine every morning."
+
+The following newspaper cutting from the _Boston Herald_, 7th February,
+1837, is worth preserving:--
+
+ "Nothing could be more absurd than the notions regarding some of these
+ supposed cures; a ring made of a hinge of a coffin had the power of
+ relieving cramps, which were also mitigated by having a rusty old
+ sword hanging up by the bedside. Nails driven in an oak tree prevented
+ the toothache. A halter that had served in hanging a criminal was an
+ infallible remedy for a head-ache when tied round the head; this
+ affection was equally cured by the moss growing upon the human skull
+ taken as cephalic snuff dried and pulverised. A dead man's hand could
+ dissipate tumours of the glands, by stroking the part nine times; but
+ the hand of a man who had been cut down from the gallows was the most
+ efficacious. The chips of a gallows on which several had been hanged,
+ when worn in a bag round the neck would cure the ague. A stone with a
+ hole in it, suspended at the head of a bed, would effectually stop the
+ night-mare, hence it was called a hag-stone, as it prevents the
+ troublesome witches from sitting upon the sleeper's stomach. The same
+ amulet, tied to the key of the stable door, deterred witches from
+ riding horses over the country."
+
+Our forefathers firmly believed in planetary influence on the minds and
+bodies of men, and no operation could be performed on any part of the body
+unless the planet, ruling that particular part, were propitious. Rider's
+_British Merlin_ for 1715, places the name of some part of the body--face,
+neck, arms, breast, etc., opposite the days of the month, indicating that
+the influence of the planets on that day is favourable to that particular
+part or organ. An old proverb says:--
+
+ "Friday hair, Sunday horn,
+ You'll go the devil afore Monday morn,"
+
+shewing that these days were unlucky for clipping hair and cutting nails.
+The _York Fabric Rolls_[9] tell us that Maundy Thursday, the day before
+Good Friday, was termed Shere Thursday, because "in olde faders dayes the
+people wold that day _sheer_ theyr heddes and clype theyr berdes and poll
+theyr heedes and so make them honest ayenst Easter Day." The same
+interesting volume[10] gives the following account of charming away
+fevers:--
+
+ "1528. Bishopwilton. Isabel Mure presented. She took fier, and ij yong
+ women w{t} hirr, and went to a rynnyng water, and light a wypse of
+ straw and sett it on the water, and said thus, 'Benedicite, se ye what
+ I see. I se the fier burne, and water rynne and the gryse grew, and
+ see flew and nyght fevers and all unkowth evils flee, and all other,
+ God will,' and after theis wordes said xv Pater Noster, xv Ave Maria
+ and thre credes."
+
+The following is a reproduction of a receipt for Yellow Jonus (Jaundice)
+copied from an old book in my possession. "A quart of whine (wine), a
+penoth of Barbary barck, a penoth of Tormorch (Turmerich), a haporth of
+flour of Brimstone for Jonous."
+
+
+
+
+Of Physicians and their Fees,
+
+WITH SOME PERSONAL REMINISCENCES.
+
+BY ANDREW JAMES SYMINGTON, F.R.S.N.A.
+
+
+In the whole range of professional life, or in any section of the
+community, there is no set of men so self-denying, sympathetic,
+philanthropic, liable to be called at any hour, day or night, and so
+hard-worked, as medical practitioners. To begin with, there is first, a
+long and expensive course of study, and, often, several years pass, before
+a practice becomes even self-sustaining. Those at the head of the
+profession attain to large incomes, and make their £20,000 a year. Noted
+specialists, in particular, such as the late Dr. Mackenzie, get large
+fees; but the majority of the profession conscientiously perform their
+laborious and kindly ministrations ungrudgingly and with moderate
+remuneration, which, in most cases, is certainly far short of their
+deserts.
+
+This state of matters has prevailed for many centuries, and, taking the
+different value of money into account, notwithstanding the advance of
+medical science, there is but little change in the scale of remuneration,
+whether as to large fees paid by Royal or titled personages, fees by the
+middle classes, or by the rural or working population.
+
+It has been well said, that "the theory and practice of medicine is the
+noblest and most difficult science in the world; and that there is no
+other art for the practice of which the most thorough education is so
+essential."
+
+Whittier observes:--"It is the special vocation of the doctor to grow
+familiar with suffering--to look upon humanity disrobed of its pride and
+glory--robbed of all its fictitious ornaments--weak, hopeless, naked--and
+undergoing the last fearful metempsychosis, from its erect and god-like
+image, the living temple of an enshrined divinity, to the loathsome clod
+and the inanimate dust! Of what ghastly secrets of moral and physical
+disease is he the depository!"
+
+Sir Thomas Browne, in his "Religio Medici," says:--"Men, that look no
+further than their outsides, think health an appurtenance unto life, and
+quarrel with their constitutions for being sick; but I, that have examined
+the parts of man, and know upon what tender filaments that fabrick hangs,
+do wonder that we are not always so; and, considering the thousand doors
+that lead to death, do thank my God that we can die but once."
+
+This model physician, who said, "I cannot go to cure the body of my
+patient, but I forget my profession and call unto God for his soul," in
+the same work, finely says of charity:--"Divinity hath wisely divided the
+act thereof into many branches, and hath taught us, in this narrow way,
+many paths unto goodness; as many ways as we may do good, so many ways we
+may be charitable. There are infirmities not only of the body, but of soul
+and fortunes, which do require the merciful hand of our abilities. I
+cannot contemn a man for ignorance, but behold him with as much pity as I
+do Lazarus. It is no greater charity to clothe his body than apparel the
+nakedness of his soul."
+
+His distinguished position, as a physician and an author, demands very
+special and reverential mention in these pages.
+
+Sir Thomas Browne was born in London on the 19th of October, 1605. He died
+at Norwich on the 19th of October, 1682, having reached exactly the age of
+seventy-seven. His father was a wealthy merchant, of a good Cheshire
+family, but died when his more illustrious son was a boy, and his mother
+shortly afterwards married Sir Thomas Dutton. After travelling on the
+Continent, he settled as a practising physician at Shipley Hall, near
+Halifax, for a time, and then moved to Norwich, where the remaining
+forty-two years of his life were spent. His library contained vast stores
+of learned works on antiquities, languages, and the curiosities of
+erudition. He corresponded with the best men of his day, and was often
+able to assist them in their various investigations. His friend Evelyn,
+alluding to Browne's home, at Norwich, tells us "His whole house and
+garden being a paradise and cabinet of rarities, and that of the best
+collections, especially medals, books, plants, and natural things." He was
+knighted by Charles II. in 1671.
+
+Throughout the troublous times of the Civil War, the Commonwealth, and the
+Restoration, he led a quiet studious life, issuing volume after volume
+full of profound, penetrating, and far-reaching thought, set forth in
+stately, sonorous, and musical language, the perfect form or style of
+which, at times, is only equalled but not excelled by the best cadenced
+prose of Milton or Jeremy Taylor.
+
+His "Religio Medici," "Hydrotaphia or Urn Burial," and "The Garden of
+Cyrus," have been my favourites for more than half a century. Of the
+latter work, John Addington Symonds has finely and truly said, that "the
+rarer qualities of Sir Thomas Browne's style (are) here displayed in rich
+maturity and heavy-scented blossom. The opening phrase of his dedication
+to Sir Thomas Le Gros--'When the funeral pyre was out, and the last
+valediction over, men took a lasting adieu of their interred friends,
+little expecting the curiosity of future ages should comment on their
+ashes;'--this phrase strikes a key-note to the sombre harmonies which
+follow, connecting the ossuaries of the dead, the tears quenched in the
+dust of countless generations, with the vivid sympathy and scrutinizing
+sagacity of the living writer.... I will only call attention to the unique
+feeling for verbal tone, for what may be called the musical colour of
+words, for crumbling cadences, and the reverberation of stationary sounds
+in cavernous recesses, which is discernable at large throughout the
+dissertation. How simple, for example, seems the collocation of vocables
+in this phrase--'Under the drums and tramplings of three conquests!' And
+yet with what impeccable instinct the vowels are arranged; how naturally,
+how artfully, the rhythm falls! Take another, and this time a complete
+sentence,--'But the iniquity of oblivion blindly scattereth her poppy, and
+deals with the memory of men, without distinction to merit of perpetuity.'
+Take yet another--'The brother of death daily haunts us with dying
+mementoes.'"
+
+I take leave of this, the most notable of English Physicians, by
+transcribing the following grand, suggestive, and characteristic passage
+from his "Fragment on Mummies":--"Yet in these huge structures and
+pyramidial immensities of the builders, whereof so little is known, they
+seemed not so much to raise sepulchres or temples to death, as to contemn
+and disdain it, astonishing heaven with their audacities, and looking
+forward with delight to their interment in those eternal piles. Of their
+living habitations they made little account, conceiving of them but as
+_hospitia_, or inns, while they adorned the sepulchres of the dead, and
+planting them on lasting basis, defied the crumbling touches of time and
+the misty vaporousness of oblivion. Yet all were but Babel vanities. Time
+sadly overcometh all things, and is now dominant, and sitteth upon a
+sphinx, and looketh unto Memphis and old Thebes, while his sister Oblivion
+reclineth semisomnous on a pyramid, gloriously triumphing, making puzzles
+of Titanian erections, and turning old glories into dreams. History
+sinketh beneath her cloud. The traveller, as he paceth amazedly through
+those deserts, asketh of her, who builded them? and she mumbleth
+something, but what it is he heareth not."
+
+The medical profession is a noble and pleasant one, though laborious and
+often full of anxiety, straining mind and body. The good physician is the
+sympathizing, confidential, and comforting _friend_ of the family. He
+values the humble gifts and testimonials of gratitude from the poor, even
+more than the costly presents of the rich.
+
+The virtuous poor are always grateful. It can truly be said of the
+physician's kind and often gratuitous services to them, in the language of
+scripture:--
+
+ "When the ear heard me, then it blessed me; and when the eye saw me it
+ gave witness to me; because I delivered the poor that cried, and the
+ fatherless, and him that had none to help him. The blessing of him
+ that was ready to perish came upon me; and I caused the widow's heart
+ to sing for joy."
+
+Among savages, sorcerers, and magicians, are the medicine men; these are
+still represented, in civilisation, by impostors and quacks. Members of
+the profession, as a rule, keep themselves posted up in the medical
+science of the day, honestly and unselfishly do everything that can be
+done for their patients, and rejoice in being the means of their recovery,
+far more than in their fee.
+
+Burton, in his "Anatomy of Melancholy," treating of "Physician, Patient,
+and Physick," when astrology, ignorance, and queer nostrums, were then
+more in vogue than practical science, says:--"I would require Honesty in
+every Physician, that he be not over careless or covetous, Harpylike to
+make a prey of his patient, or, as an hungry Chirurgeon, often produce and
+wire-draw his cure, so long as there is any hope of pay. Many of them, to
+get a fee, will give physic to every one that comes, when there is no
+cause, thus, as it often falleth out, stirring up a silent disease, and
+making a strong body weak." Burton then quotes the following sensible
+Aphorism from Arnoldus:--"A wise physician will not give physick, but
+upon necessity, and first try medicinal diet, before he proceedeth to
+medicinal cure."
+
+Latimer thus severely censured the mercenary physicians of his day:--"Ye
+see by the example of Hezekiah that it is lawful to use physick. But now
+in our days physick is a remedy prepared only for rich folks, and not for
+the poor, for the poor man is not able to wage the Physician. God indeed
+hath made physick for rich and poor, but Physicians in our time seek only
+their own profits, how to get money, not how they might do good unto their
+poor neighbour. Whereby it appeareth that they be for the most part
+without charity, and so consequently not the children of God; and no doubt
+but the heavy judgment of God hangeth over their heads, for they are
+commonly very wealthy, and ready to purchase lands, but to help their
+neighbour, that they cannot do. But God will find them out one day I doubt
+not."
+
+"Empirics and charlatans are the excrescences of the medical profession;
+they have obtained in all ages, yet the healing art is not necessarily the
+occasion for deception; nor the operations of witchcraft, charms, amulets,
+astrology, alchemy, necromancy, or magic; although it has its mysteries
+like other branches of occult science."
+
+Paracelsus, the prince of charlatans, styled himself "King of Physic,"
+but, though he professed to have discovered the _elixir of life_, he
+humbly died at the early age of forty-eight years.
+
+We are told of a patient who, instead of the medicine prescribed,
+swallowed the prescription! and _Punch_ records an extraordinary case of a
+voracious individual who bolted a door, and threw up a window!
+
+Sydney Smith, on being told by his doctor to take a walk on an empty
+stomach, asked--"Upon whose!" But a truce to stories suggested by the
+queer nostrums of quacks.
+
+Empirics, however, often believed in their nostrums, and were, sometimes,
+amiable and unselfish.
+
+In the year 1776, we are told, there lived a German doctor, who styled
+himself, or was called, "the Rain-water doctor;" all the diseases to which
+flesh is heir he professed to cure by this simple agent. Some wonderful
+cures were, it is said, achieved by means of his application of this
+fluid, and his reputation spread far and wide; crowds of maimed and
+sickly folk flocked to him, seeking relief at his hands. What is yet more
+remarkable still, he declined to accept any fee from his patients!
+
+Dr. Haygarth, of Bath, had a pair of wooden tractors made in precisely the
+same shape and appearance as Perkin's metallic ones; and the same results
+followed as when the others, which cost five guineas a pair, were used.
+
+The story is well known of the condemned criminal in Paris, who was laid
+on a dissecting table, strapped down, with his eyes bandaged, and slightly
+pricked, when streamlets of water set a-trickling made him think, as he
+had been told, that he was being bled to death. His strength gradually
+ebbed away, and he actually died, although he did not lose a drop of
+blood.
+
+I knew of a gentleman who, when pills to procure sleep were ordered to be
+discontinued, lay awake. The doctor made up a box of bread pills, which
+were administered as the others had been, and the patient slept, and
+recovered rapidly.
+
+A young medical man fell in love with a young lady patient, and, when he
+had no longer any pretext for continuing his visits, he sent her a present
+of a pair of spring ducks. Not reciprocating his attentions, she did not
+acknowledge the present, upon which he ventured to call, asking if the
+birds had reached her. Her reply was--"Quack, quack!"
+
+Dr. Lettsom, a quaker in the time of George III., near the close of the
+last century, had such an extensive practice that his receipts in some
+years were as much as £12,000; and this although half his services were
+entirely gratuitous, and rendered with unusual solicitude and care to
+necessitous clergymen and literary men. Generosity was the ruling feature
+of his life. On one occasion he attended an old American merchant whose
+affairs had gone wrong, and who grieved over leaving the trees he had
+planted. The kind hearted doctor purchased the place from the creditors,
+and presented it to his patient for life.
+
+Pope, a few days before his decease, bore the following cordial testimony
+to the urbanity and courtesy of his medical friends:--"There is no end of
+my kind treatment from the Faculty; they are in general the most amiable
+companions, and the best friends, as well as the most learned men I know."
+
+And Dryden, in the postscript to his translation of Virgil, speaks in the
+same way of the profession. "That I have recovered," says he, "in some
+measure the health which I had lost by too much application to this work,
+is owing, next to God's mercy, to the skill and care of Dr. Guibbons and
+Dr. Hobbs, the two ornaments of their profession, whom I can only pay by
+this acknowledgment."
+
+When Dr. Dimsdale, a Hertford physician and member of Parliament, went
+over to Russia to inoculate the Empress Catherine and her son, in the year
+1768, he received a fee of £12,000, a pension for life of £500 per annum,
+and the rank of Baron of the Empire.
+
+Dr. Henry Atkins was sent for to Scotland by James the Sixth to attend
+Charles the First (then an infant), ill of a dangerous fever. The King
+gave him a fee of £6000, with which he purchased the manor of Clapham.
+
+Louis XIV. after undergoing an operation, gave his physician and his
+surgeon 75,000 crowns each.
+
+Dr. Glynn once attended the only son of a poor peasant woman, ministering
+to his wants with port wine, bark, and delicacies. After the lad's
+recovery, his mother waited on the doctor, bringing a large wicker basket
+with an enormous magpie, which was her son's pet, as a fee to show their
+gratitude.
+
+A thousand pounds were ordered to be paid to Sir Edmund King for promptly
+bleeding Charles the Second, but he never received this fee.
+
+Dr. Mead, in the time of George the First, was generous to a degree, and
+like many of his brethren, would not accept fees from curates, half-pay
+officers, and men of letters. At home his fee was a guinea. When he
+visited patients of means, in consultation or otherwise, he expected two
+guineas or more. But to the apothecaries who waited on him at his coffee
+houses of call he charged only half a guinea for prescriptions, written
+without his having seen the patient. He had an income one year of £7,000,
+and for several years received between £5,000 and £6,000, which,
+considering the value of money at that time, is as much as that of any
+living physician.
+
+The physicians who attended Queen Caroline had five hundred guineas, and
+the surgeons three hundred guineas each; Dr. Willis was rewarded for his
+attendance on George III. by £1,500 per annum for twenty years, and £650
+per annum to his son for life. The other physicians, however, had only
+thirty guineas each visit to Windsor, and ten guineas each visit to Kew.
+
+Dr. Abernethy was annoyed by a lady needlessly consulting him about her
+tongue. One morning she came, as he was descending the steps from his door
+and putting on his gloves. She said:--"Doctor, I'm so glad I have caught
+you!" The doctor asked if it were the old trouble. On her saying "Yes," he
+told her to put out her tongue. She did so, and he said, "Stand there till
+I come," and left her so, in the street, setting out on his round of
+visits.
+
+Once when prescribing nutritious and expensive diet for a young man in
+consumption, he observed the look of despair on the young wife's face, and
+the evidence of straitened circumstances around; when the lady appealed to
+him, asking if there was really nothing else he could suggest for her
+husband. He replied:--"When I think of it, I'll send along a box of pills
+in the afternoon!" A messenger brought the box. On the lid was written
+"One every day," and, on being opened, it was found to contain twenty
+guineas!
+
+He once bluntly told a _bon-vivant_ gentleman to "Live on sixpence a day,
+and earn it!"
+
+Long ago, a friend told me of a lady in Devonshire, belonging to a family
+she knew, who read medical books, and at length imagined she had every
+disease under the sun. Whenever she discovered what she believed to be a
+new symptom, she at once went off to consult different medical men
+regarding it, spending several hundreds a year in this way, and all quite
+needlessly. At length she confided to her friends that since doctors
+differed so widely, and she could obtain no satisfaction as to what ailed
+her, she had resolved to go to town and consult one of the Queen's
+physicians.
+
+A consultation was held in the family, and her nephew was sent to explain
+matters to the physician, in the hope of his being able to cure her
+hypochondria. When she reached town, the street in which the physician
+lived was blocked with the carriages of patients. After waiting hours, her
+turn at last came. The physician examined her, asked a few questions, then
+enquired if she had any friends in town, as he would rather call to see
+her when under their roof, and there tell her what he had got to say. She
+protested that she was quite prepared to hear the worst--that she had for
+long years looked death in the face--that the notices of her death were
+lying in her desk, all written out and addressed, only requiring the date
+to be filled in, etc. The physician said he was busy--more than twenty
+patients were still waiting in the street--he was averse to scenes, and
+would much prefer to see her at her friend's house. She still persisted,
+and begged of him to tell her all, there and then, on which he
+said:--"Madam, it is my melancholy duty to inform you--that there is
+nothing whatever the matter with you!"
+
+This interview fortunately effected her cure, to the great delight of her
+friends, who paid the physician a handsome fee.
+
+Sir Astley Cooper one year received in fees £21,000. This sum was
+exceptional, but for many years his income was over £15,000. His great
+success was achieved very gradually. "His earnings for the first nine
+years of his professional career progressed thus:--In the first year he
+netted five guineas; in the second, twenty-six pounds; in the third,
+sixty-four pounds; in the fourth, ninety-six pounds; in the fifth, a
+hundred pounds; in the sixth, two hundred pounds; in the seventh, four
+hundred pounds; in the eighth, six hundred and ten pounds; and in the
+ninth--the year in which he secured his hospital appointment--eleven
+hundred pounds."
+
+On one occasion when he had performed a perilous surgical operation on a
+rich West Indian merchant, the two physicians who were present were paid
+three hundred guineas each; but the patient, addressing Sir Astley,
+said:--"But you, sir, shall have something better. There, sir, take
+_that_," upon which he flung his nightcap at the skilful operator. "Sir,"
+replied Sir Astley, picking up the cap, "I'll pocket the affront." On
+reaching home, he found in the cap a draft for a thousand guineas from the
+grateful but eccentric old man.
+
+A cynical lawyer once advised a young doctor to collect his fees as he
+went along, quoting the following verse to back his recommendation:--
+
+ "God and the doctor we alike adore,
+ But only when in danger, not before;
+ The danger o'er, both are alike requited--
+ God is forgotten, and the doctor slighted."
+
+The following story illustrates the too frequent weary waiting, when hope
+makes the heart sick, and also shows on what curious casual incidents the
+success of a career may sometimes turn. It has been told in different
+ways, and attributed to different men, such as to Dr. Freind, and others;
+but, quite possibly, the same or a similar incident may have repeatedly
+occurred. I simply give it as it was narrated to me. A young doctor having
+graduated with honours, took a house at a high rent in Harley Street,
+London. The brass plate attracted no patients; months passed idly and
+drearily, and the poor fellow took to drink. One night the door-bell
+rang--a servant man, from a lady of title round the corner, begged him to
+come at once, as his mistress was dangerously ill, lying on the floor; her
+own doctor was out, and he was sent to fetch the first doctor he could
+find. The young doctor regretfully thought what a fool he was, for here
+was his chance, when he could not avail himself of it; but he would go,
+and try hard to pull himself together.
+
+When he reached the room, he had enough conscience or sense left to know
+that he was not in a fit state to prescribe, and exclaiming, "Drunk, by
+George!" took his hat and bolted from the house. Next morning he received
+a scented note from the lady, entreating him not to expose her, inviting
+him to call, and offering to introduce him professionally to her circle!
+Before the season was ended, his practice was yielding him at the rate of
+some £1500 a year!
+
+Curiously enough, it is recorded of a British doctor that he once actually
+took a fee from a _dead_ patient. Entering the bedroom immediately after
+death had taken place, he observed the right hand tightly clenched.
+Opening the fingers, he found in them a guinea. "Ah, that was clearly for
+me," said the doctor, putting the gold into his pocket.
+
+It may be remembered here, that the Royal College of Physicians, London,
+was founded by Thomas Linacre, physician to Henry VIII., in 1518; and that
+the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh was incorporated by Charter
+of Charles II., November 20th, 1681.
+
+As to the fees paid to physicians, we find that Dr. Edward Browne, the son
+of Sir Thomas Browne, who became a distinguished physician in London, in
+his Journal, under the date of February 16th, 1664, records: "I went to
+visit Mr. Edward Ward, an old man in a feaver, when Mrs. Anne Ward gave me
+my first fee, 10 shillings."
+
+In a work entitled "Levamen Infirmi," published in the year 1700, we find
+that the scale of remuneration to surgeons and physicians was as
+follows:--"To a graduate in physic, his due is about ten shillings, though
+he commonly expects or demands twenty. Those that are only licenced
+physicians, their due is no more than six shillings and eightpence, though
+they commonly demand ten shillings. A surgeon's fee is twelvepence a mile,
+be his journey far or near; ten groats to set a bone broke or out of
+joint; and for letting blood one shilling; the cutting off or amputation
+of any limb is five pounds, but there is no settled price for the cure."
+
+Till recent times neither barristers nor physicians could recover their
+fees by legal proceedings against their clients or patients unless a
+special contract had been made. In the case of lawyers this custom can be
+traced back to the days of ancient Rome. Their services were regarded as
+being gratuitously rendered in the interests of friendship and justice,
+and of a value no money could buy. The acknowledgment given them by
+clients was regarded as an _honorarium_, and paid in advance, so that all
+pecuniary interest in the issue of the suit was removed, thus preserving
+the independence and respectability of the bar.
+
+Equity draftsmen, conveyancers, and such like, however, could recover
+reasonable charges for work done.
+
+So in the medical profession, surgeons, dentists, cuppers, and the like
+were always entitled to sue for their fees; but the valuable services of a
+consulting physician were of a different kind, not rendered for payment
+but acknowledged by the gratitude and honour of his patients.
+
+But this code of honour was modified when all medical practitioners were
+relieved by the Act of 21 and 22 Vict. 90, which applied to the United
+Kingdom, and enabled them to recover in any court of law their reasonable
+charges as well as costs of medicines and medical appliances used. This
+rule applies to physicians, surgeons, and apothecaries as defined by the
+statute.
+
+The following information is taken from "Everybody's Pocket Cyclopĉdia"
+(Saxon & Co.).
+
+
+LONDON MEDICAL FEES.
+
+"Patients are charged according to their supposed income, the income being
+indicated by the rental of the house in which they reside. The following
+are the charges usually made by medical practitioners:--
+
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ | Rentals.
+ |------------------------------------------------
+ | £10 to £25 | £25 to £50 | £50 to £100
+ ----------------------|----------------|----------------|--------------
+ Ordinary Visit | 2s 6d to 3s 6d | 3s 6d to 5s | 5s to 7s 6d
+ Night Visit | Double an | Ordinary | Visit
+ Mileage beyond two | | |
+ miles from home | 1s 6d | 2s | 2s 6d
+ Detention per hour | 2s 6d to 3s 6d | 3s 6d to 5s | 5s to 7s 6d
+ Letters of Advice | Same charge as | for an Or- | dinary Visit
+ Attendance on Servants| 2s 6d | 2s 6d to 3s 6d | 3s 6d to 5s
+ Midwifery | 21s | 21s to 30s | 42s to 105s
+ | | |
+ CONSULTANTS. | | |
+ | | |
+ Advice or visit alone | 21s | 21s | 21s
+ Advice or visit with | | |
+ another Practitioner| 21s | 21s to 42s | 21s to 42s
+ Mileage beyond two | | |
+ miles from home | 10s 6d | 10s 6d | 10s 6d
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+"Special visits, _i.e._, of which due notice has not been given before the
+practitioner starts on his daily round, are charged at the rate of a visit
+and a half. Patients calling on the doctor are charged at the same rate as
+if visited by him.
+
+"There are about 23,000 physicians and surgeons in the United Kingdom, or
+one to every 1,600 inhabitants."
+
+It has been my privilege to know several doctors intimately. Our family
+doctor when I was a boy in Paisley, was Dr. Kerr, a man far in advance of
+his day. He was the means of introducing a pure water supply to the town
+of Paisley, always strenuously urging the importance of sanitary matters
+and good drainage, when such things were then but little understood, and
+greatly neglected. Shortly after the water had been introduced to the
+houses, from Stanley, an old man--who had been accustomed to purchase
+water from a cart which went through the streets selling it from a
+barrel--on being asked how he liked the new water, replied indignantly,
+"Wha's going to pay good siller for water that has neither smell nor
+taste?"
+
+On one occasion, an elderly gentleman, who was slightly hypochondriac,
+consulted Dr. Kerr about his clothing, saying that he regulated the
+thickness of his flannels by the thermometer. Dr. Kerr, losing patience,
+said, "Can you not use the thermometer your Maker has put in your inside,
+and put on clothes when you are cold?"
+
+Dr. Kerr's son and assistant, whom we then called "the young doctor," died
+a few years ago in Canada, over eighty years of age. No man could
+possibly have been more considerately kind, gentle, and tender-hearted. On
+one occasion, in 1841, when, in typhus fever, I was struggling for my
+life, he sat up with me for three whole consecutive nights, and brought me
+through. He ever kept himself abreast of the science of the day, and
+devoted his abilities and energies, _con amore_, to the benefitting of
+men's souls as well as their bodies.
+
+Another model village and country doctor, also an intimate friend of my
+parents, Dr. Campbell of Largs, I knew very well. Good, genial, and
+accomplished, he was a perfect gentleman, and equally at home dining with
+Sir Thomas Brisbane, or drinking a cup of tea at some old woman's kitchen
+fireside. He read the _Lancet_, and tried all new medicines, and
+repeatedly, when going to London, at his request I procured the most
+recent instruments for him. He was intimate with Dr. Chalmers, Lord
+Jeffrey, Lord Moncrieff, Lord Cardwell, etc. In telling me of experiments
+with Perkin's metallic tractors, and that the same results were obtained
+with wooden ones, showing the power of imagination, he gave me a recent
+curious illustration. He had lately had the old fashioned little panes of
+glass taken out of the windows of his house, and plate glass inserted.
+His mother, who did not know of the change, calling one afternoon, sat on
+an easy chair, close by the gable window, knitting. On suddenly looking
+round she said, "Oh John, I've been sitting all this time by an _open_
+window," and forthwith she began to sneeze! She actually took cold, and
+even afterwards could scarcely be persuaded that it had _not_ been an open
+window, for she said she felt the cold! The doctor told me of an old
+maiden lady who consulted him, and who, when he prescribed in a general
+way, insisted on knowing exactly what ailed her. He said she was only
+slightly nervous, and would soon be all right. This did not at all please
+her, and she at once loudly protested--"Me nervous! There is not a nerve
+in my whole body!"
+
+A West India merchant, one of his patients whom I knew, he also told me,
+one day said to him, "Doctor, for forty years I never knew I had a
+stomach, and now I can think of nothing else!"
+
+At the cholera time Dr. Campbell was laid down by the disease. The fact
+spread like wildfire over the village, and, at once, prayer-meetings for
+his recovery were called by the public bellman, meetings of _all_ the
+different denominations, including the Roman Catholics (Dr. Campbell was a
+Free Church Elder), and there were truly heartfelt rejoicings in the whole
+district over his recovery.
+
+I once asked him how he managed to get in his fees, since he never refused
+to visit when sent for. He said that one year, from curiosity, he kept an
+account of his gratuitous visits, and it ran into three figures; but he
+never took the trouble to note them again, as it served no purpose.
+
+Many years ago he went to his rest, and, at his request, during his last
+illness, I paid him a farewell visit.
+
+There are few finer descriptions of the country doctor than that contained
+in Ian Maclaren's "Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush," a book which speaks
+directly home to every true Scottish heart.
+
+Dr. Campbell, in his large-hearted and genial Christian charity,
+scientific research, and philosophical acquirements, always reminded me of
+Sir Thomas Browne, "the beloved physician" of Norwich.
+
+The following pleasing incident, relating to a medical man, came under my
+own notice. I often visited a country minister, an intimate friend, a
+learned man, and a genius, the quaint originality of whose observations
+often reminded me of Fuller, the Church historian, or Charles Lamb.
+Although of limited means, the Rev. Robert Winning, of Eaglesham, was ever
+hospitable; if he knew of any poor student, he would invite him to the
+manse for a month, on the plea that he would help to prepare him for his
+examination in Hebrew and Greek. The old manse servant, also an original,
+was paid a sum of money as compensation for refusing tips from visitors.
+One day, seeing an advertisement of a new book in a magazine I was
+reading, Mr. Winning remarked to me, "Andrew, I wish you would buy that
+book, _cut the leaves_, and lend it to me to read!"
+
+One evening a message reached him from the village inn, saying that a
+doctor had come to an urgent case, which required him to stay over night,
+that there was no room in the inn, and asking if the minister could give
+him a bed. His wife, knowing the house was full, asked her husband what
+they should do. His reply was, "Be not forgetful to entertain strangers,
+for thereby some have entertained angels unawares. Give him a room,
+though we have to sleep on the floor." He was accordingly hospitably
+entertained.
+
+Some time after, the minister took ill. The medical guest heard of it,
+went to see the local doctor, and, with his consent, visited the minister
+twice a week, from a distance of nine miles, and for a period of some four
+months, till his death. When the widow afterwards sent for his account, he
+said there was none, for it had been more than discharged on the first
+evening he had spent at the manse.
+
+Dr. Stark, of Glasgow, who attended my family for years, was a skilful
+practitioner, but eccentric. He generally made light of trifling ailments,
+but was most energetic when aroused by any appearance of danger. I knew of
+his being suddenly called in to see an old lady who was far gone in an
+advanced stage of cholera. He at once asked to be shown over the house,
+looked at the different fireplaces, but as none of them suited his
+purpose, he went to the kitchen, threw off his coat, took out the range,
+made a fire in the recess that would have roasted an ox, had the old lady
+carried down in blankets and placed before it, worked energetically with
+her the whole night, and brought her through. In a similar way he once
+stayed over night and saved the life of one of my boys. One day I called
+at his house, and, finding him with a bad cold, eyes red and watery,
+throat husky, said, "Doctor, if you found me so, you would prescribe
+placing the feet in hot water and mustard, warm gruel, medicine, and going
+to bed! Physician, heal thyself!" The doctor's Shakespearian reply was,
+"Do you think I am such a fool as to take physic?"
+
+Once when accompanying me to the coast to visit one of my children, there
+was a heavy sea on, and the steamer, on approaching the pier, rolled
+alarmingly, and was close on a lee shore. A strange lady on board, in
+terror, laid hold of the doctor, a tall, stalwart man, saying, "Oh! sir,
+are we going to the bottom?" On which he said, dryly, "Behave yourself, if
+you are going there, you are going in good company!" which odd answer
+reassured and caused her to laugh.
+
+In speaking of a Greek gem representing Cupid and Pysche, one day, when
+driving in Wigtonshire with the late Dr. David Easton, a medical friend,
+he said I had not given the correct pronunciation of the names. Always
+willing to learn, I asked to be put right; whereupon, the doctor gravely
+informed me that I ought to have said--Cupped and Physic!
+
+I have spoken of the kindness of medical men, such as Dr. Garth Wilkinson,
+to clergymen, artists, and literary men. I add one more expression of
+gratitude, which is a good modern instance:--
+
+When at St. Helens, in Jersey, during his last illness, my friend Samuel
+Lover, the genial poet and artist, wrote the following lines to Dr. Dixon,
+his friend and physician. I first copied them some years ago from Lover's
+MS. note-book, kindly lent me by his widow when I was engaged in the
+preparation of his life. Such cordial tributes are a good physician's most
+highly-valued fees:--
+
+ "Whene'er your vitality
+ Is feeble in quality,
+ And you fear a fatality
+ May end the strife,
+ Then Dr. Joe Dickson
+ Is the man I would fix on
+ For putting new wicks on
+ The lamp of life."
+
+From the many varied facts and incidents adduced in these pages, it will
+be seen that, in anxiety or sorrow, the good family doctor is a true and
+sympathetic friend, whose services can never be paid by gold.
+
+Next to religion, nothing is more precious or comforting than the sympathy
+of those who know and fully understand our sufferings, for, as my old
+favourite, Sir Thomas Browne, to whom I ever revert with renewed pleasure,
+truly and beautifully says:--"It is not the tears of our own eyes only,
+but of our friends also, that do exhaust the current of our sorrows,
+which, falling into many streams, runs more peaceably, and is contented
+with a narrower channel."
+
+
+Ye Ende
+
+
+
+
+Index.
+
+
+ Abernethy, John, 206-208, 266
+
+ Advertisements, Curious, 155-159
+
+ Ague, Charms for, 240-241
+
+ Akenside, Mark, 109-111
+
+ Andrews, William, Barber-Surgeons, 1-7;
+ Touching for King's Evil, 8-23;
+ Assaying Meat and Drink, 24-31
+
+ Anne, Queen, 18-19
+
+ Assay Cups, 30-31
+
+ Assaying Meat and Drink, 24-31
+
+ Atkins, Dr. H., 264
+
+ Axon, W. E. A., The Doctor in the time of Pestilence, 125-139
+
+
+ Banks, Mrs. G. Linnĉus, Some Old Doctors, 192-208
+
+ Barber-Surgeons, 1-7
+
+ Barber's Pole, 6, 35
+
+ Bicycle, 23
+
+ Birmingham town's book, 15
+
+ Bisley, 15
+
+ Bishop, hanged, 167
+
+ Bishop and Williams, body-snatchers, 171-177
+
+ Blackmore, R. D., 118
+
+ Blackmore, Dr., 111-113
+
+ Black Art, 45
+
+ Bleeding, 7, 216
+
+ Blood, Circulation of the, 195
+
+ Blood in windows, 2
+
+ Boke of Jhon Caius, 127
+
+ Booker, Rev. Dr., on small-pox, 163-164
+
+ Bossy, a quack, 149
+
+ Brown, Dr. John, 115
+
+ Brown, Sir Thomas, 123, 124, 253-258, 278, 283
+
+ Bruce, King Robert the, 209
+
+ Buddhism, 67-68
+
+ Bulleyn, Dr., quoted, 219
+
+ Burke and Hare, 168
+
+ Burkers and Body-Snatchers, 167-180
+
+ Burning for disease, 46
+
+ Burton's "Anatomy of Melancholy," 259-260
+
+ Byron quoted, 187
+
+
+ Campbell, Dr., 276, 278
+
+ Cancer, Curious treatment for, 222
+
+ Carriages, 22-23
+
+ Celestials and medicine, 58-61
+
+ Chalmers, John, M.D., 115
+
+ Charms, 43-44, 52
+
+ Chaucer's Doctor of Physic, 70-75
+
+ Chester in plague time, 133-135;
+ Touching at, 17
+
+ Cholera, Reminiscences of, 181-191
+
+ Circulation of the blood, 195
+
+ Colic, Charm for, 248
+
+ Cooper, Sir Astley, 170, 179, 268
+
+ Coryat, 141
+
+ Cramp, Charm, 52;
+ Strange cure for, 249
+
+ Croydon, Cholera at, 185-186, 190
+
+ Crusade, 209
+
+ Cumming, Dr. W. F., 114-115
+
+ Cupping, 217
+
+ Curious prescriptions, 226
+
+
+ Dickens, Charles, Satires by, 65-66
+
+ Dickens' Doctors, 90-101
+
+ Dimsdale, Dr., 264
+
+ Disinfectants in sticks, 33
+
+ Disputes between surgeons and barbers, 5
+
+ Doctor in the time of Pestilence, 125-139
+
+ Doctors Shakespeare Knew, 76-89
+
+ Dog bites, 242
+
+ Douglas, Sir James, 209
+
+ Doyle, Dr. Conan, 118
+
+ "Drunk by George," 270
+
+
+ Ecclesfield, 16
+
+ Edward the Confessor, 8-9
+
+ Egyptians and Magic, 57-58
+
+ Elizabeth, Queen, at dinner, 28-29
+
+ Erysipelas, 243
+
+ Eskimo Medicine Men, 61-63
+
+
+ Faith Cures, 42
+
+ Famous Literary Doctors, 102-124
+
+ Fees, London, 273-274
+
+ Food taken in fear, 24
+
+ Freind, John, 196
+
+ Frost, Thomas, Dickens' Doctors, 90-101.
+ Mountebanks and Medicine, 140-152.
+ The Strange Fight with the Small-pox, 153-166.
+ Burkers and Body-Snatchers, 167-180.
+ Reminiscences of the Cholera, 181-191
+
+
+ Galen, 120
+
+ Gallows, superstitions respecting, 249
+
+ Gild, Barbers', 2
+
+ Gold-headed Cane, 32-41
+
+ Grave-mould, 45
+
+ Greatrake, Valentine, 82
+
+ Great Plague of London, 136-139
+
+
+ Hall, Dr., 88-89
+
+ Harvey, Wm., 194-196
+
+ Heart of Bruce, 210
+
+ Hentzner in England, 28
+
+ Hill, Sir John, 114
+
+ Hodges, Dr., 137
+
+ Holbein, Picture by, 3
+
+ Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 106-108
+
+ How our Fathers were Physicked, 216-233
+
+ Hunter, John, 198
+
+ Hunter, William, 199
+
+ Hunterian Museum, 205
+
+
+ Jaundice, 251
+
+ Jenner, 159-162
+
+ Johnston, Arthur, 122-123
+
+ Johnson, Dr., touched for the evil, 18-19
+
+
+ Kerr, Dr., 275
+
+
+ Langford, J. A., LL.D., How our Fathers were Physicked, 216
+
+ Latimer on Mercenary Physicians, 260
+
+ Lee Penny, 209-215
+
+ Lettsom, J. C., 35, 263
+
+ Liver, eating human, 51
+
+ Lockhart, Sir Simon, 211-213
+
+ Lotteries, 151
+
+ Lover, Samuel, 282
+
+
+ Macbeth, quoted, 9
+
+ Mashonaland, Credulity in, 63-65
+
+ Magic and Medicine, 42-69
+
+ Manchester in plague time, 135-136
+
+ Mead, Dr., 265
+
+ Medical Folk Lore, 234-251
+
+ Medical Students, 97-98
+
+ Merry Andrew, 141-151
+
+ Mercenary Physicians, 260
+
+ Metals and precious stones used, 218
+
+ Mountebanks and Medicine, 140-152
+
+ Mouse, roasted, prescribed, 221
+
+ Moir, D. M., 116-118
+
+ Montagu, Lady May, 153-154, 162
+
+ Monks as surgeons, 1;
+ forbidden to bleed, 2
+
+
+ Newcastle-on-Tyne, Siege of, 213
+
+ Nicholson, John, Medical Folk-Lore, 234-251
+
+ North American Indian medicine men, 52-56
+
+
+ O'Brien, Giant, 202
+
+ Of Physicians and their Fees, 252-283
+
+
+ Parliament, Folly of, 223
+
+ Phillips, John, 111
+
+ Pilgrim's Staff, 32
+
+ Planetary Influence, 250
+
+ Plantagenent kings touching for the evil, 10
+
+ Pontefract Castle, 27
+
+ Pole, Barber's, 6
+
+ Preston records, 17
+
+
+ Radcliffe's cane, 33
+
+ Rain-water doctor, 261
+
+ Reminiscences of the Cholera, 181-191
+
+ Revolting prescriptions, 225
+
+ Richardson, Sir B. W., 202, 204
+
+ Rings from hinges of coffins, 249
+
+ Robinson, Tom, M.D., The Gold-headed Cane, 32-41
+
+ Rochester, Earl of, 144
+
+ Rheumatism, 238
+
+
+ Sacrificing for disease, 47-49
+
+ Skull, Human, Medical uses, 227
+
+ Small-pox, Old receipt for, 72
+
+ Smith, Sydney, Witty remark, 261
+
+ Some Old Doctors, 192-208
+
+ St. Agnes' Eve, 241
+
+ Stark, Dr., 280-281
+
+ Statute of Labourers, 124-125
+
+ Strange Stories, 262
+
+ Strange Story of the Fight with the Small Pox, 153-166
+
+ Stuart kings touching for the evil, 12-14
+
+ Suicide's skull, Drinking from, 50
+
+ Symington, A. J., Of Physicians and their Fees, 252-283
+
+
+ Tooth-drawing, 5
+
+ Thompson, W. H., Chaucer's Doctor of Physic, 70-75
+
+ Thurlow, Lord, on Barbers and Surgeons, 6
+
+ Thompson, Sir Henry, 115
+
+ Tobacco, Poet's Praise of, 111
+
+ Tournament, 186
+
+ Toothache, Folk-lore of, 235-237, 249
+
+ Toad, 227
+
+ Touching for the King's Evil, 8-23
+
+ Touch-pieces, 11, 20-21
+
+ Terling, Essex, 15
+
+ Tudor Kings touching for the Evil, 11
+
+
+ Verney Family, 229-233
+
+ Visiting Patients, 22-23
+
+
+ Wall, A. H., Doctors Shakespeare Knew, 76-89
+
+ Walters, Cuming, Magic and Medicine, 42-69;
+ Famous Literary Doctors, 102-124
+
+ Warren, Samuel, 116
+
+ Warts, Charms for, 247
+
+ Whooping cough, 244-246
+
+ Wig, 35
+
+ William III. refuses to touch, 18
+
+ Winchester, Mountebank at, 147-148
+
+ Witchcraft, 49-50, 242
+
+
+ York records, 16-17
+
+
+ Zulu doctors, 65
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] "Chester in the Plantagenet and Tudor Periods," by Rupert H. Morris,
+1894, pp. 78-79.
+
+[2] The _Asclepiad_, Vol. viii.
+
+[3] Act ii., sc. 2.
+
+[4] Dyer's English Folk Lore, p. 156.
+
+[5] Dyer's English Folk Lore, p. 158.
+
+[6] _Records of York Castle_, p. 230.
+
+[7] Folk Lore Journal, v. 5.
+
+[8] Vol. i., p. 761.
+
+[9] P. 353.
+
+[10] P. 273.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Passages in italics are indicated by _italics_.
+
+Superscripted characters are indicated by {superscript}.
+
+The original text contains letters with diacritical marks that are not
+represented in this text version.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Doctor in History, Literature,
+Folk-Lore, Etc., ed. by William Andrews
+
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Doctor in History, Literature, Folk-Lore, Etc.&mdash;A Project Gutenberg eBook
+ </title>
+
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+ p {margin-top: .75em; text-align: justify; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+
+ body {margin-left: 12%; margin-right: 12%;}
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+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Doctor in History, Literature,
+Folk-Lore, Etc., ed. by William Andrews
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Doctor in History, Literature, Folk-Lore, Etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Andrews
+
+Release Date: April 23, 2012 [EBook #39514]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DOCTOR IN HISTORY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h1>THE DOCTOR.</h1>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/frontis.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">HENRY VIII. RECEIVING THE BARBER-SURGEONS.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="giant">THE DOCTOR</span><br />
+<small>IN</small><br />
+<span class="huge">HISTORY, LITERATURE, FOLK-LORE,</span><br />
+<small>ETC.</small></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><small>EDITED BY</small><br />
+<span class="large">WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.,</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Author of &#8220;Bygone England,&#8221;<br />&#8220;Old Church Lore,&#8221; etc.</span></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">HULL:<br />
+WILLIAM ANDREWS &amp; CO., THE HULL PRESS.<br />
+LONDON:<br />
+SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT, &amp; CO., LTD.<br />
+<br />
+1896.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/printer.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<h2>Preface.</h2>
+
+<div class="note">
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">In</span> the following pages I have attempted to bring together from the pens of
+several authors who have written expressly for this book, the more
+interesting phases of the history, literature, folk-lore, etc., of the
+medical profession.</p>
+
+<p>If the same welcome be given to this work as was accorded to those I have
+previously produced, my labours will not have been in vain.</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">William Andrews.</span></p>
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="smcap">The Hull Press</span>,</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">Hull</span>, <i>November 11th, 1895</i>.</p></div>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p class="title">Contents.</p>
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Barber-Surgeons.</span> By William Andrews, <span class="smcaplc">F.R.H.S.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Touching for the King&#8217;s Evil.</span> By William Andrews, <span class="smcaplc">F.R.H.S.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Visiting Patients</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_22">22</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Assaying Meat and Drink.</span> By William Andrews, <span class="smcaplc">F.R.H.S.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_24">24</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Gold-headed Cane.</span> By Tom Robinson, <span class="smcaplc">M.D.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Magic and Medicine.</span> By Cuming Walters</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_42">42</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Chaucer&#8217;s Doctor of Physic.</span> By W. H. Thompson</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_70">70</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Doctors Shakespeare Knew.</span> By A. H. Wall</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Dickens&#8217; Doctors.</span> By Thomas Frost</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_90">90</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Famous Literary Doctors.</span> By Cuming Walters</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The &#8220;Doctor&#8221; in Time of Pestilence.</span> By William E. A. Axon, <span class="smcaplc">F.R.S.L.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Mountebanks and Medicine.</span> By Thomas Frost</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Strange Story of the Fight with the Small-Pox.</span> By Thomas Frost</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Burkers and Body-Snatchers.</span> By Thomas Frost</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Reminiscences of the Cholera.</span> By Thomas Frost</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Some Old Doctors.</span> By Mrs. G. Linn&aelig;us Banks</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Lee Penny</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">How Our Fathers were Physicked.</span> By J. A. Langford, <span class="smcaplc">LL.D.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_216">216</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Medical Folk-Lore.</span> By John Nicholson</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_234">234</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Of Physicians and their Fees</span>, with some Personal Reminiscences.<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">By Andrew James Symington, <span class="smcaplc">F.R.S.N.A.</span></span></td>
+ <td valign="bottom" align="right"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class="smcap">Index</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_285">285</a></td></tr></table>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="huge">THE DOCTOR</span><br />
+IN HISTORY, LITERATURE, AND FOLK-LORE.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h2>Barber-Surgeons.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By William Andrews, f.r.h.s.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">The</span> calling of the barber is of great antiquity. We find in the Book of
+the Prophet Ezekiel (v. 1) allusions to the Jewish custom of the barber
+shaving the head as a sign of mourning.</p>
+
+<p>In the remote past the art of surgery and the trade of barber were
+combined. It is clear that in all parts of the civilized world, in bygone
+times, the barber acted as a kind of surgeon, or to state his position
+more precisely, he practised phlebotomy.</p>
+
+<p>Barbers appear to have gained their experience from the monks whom they
+assisted in surgical operations. The clergy up to about the twelfth
+century had the care of men&#8217;s bodies as well as of their souls, and
+practised surgery and medicine.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> The operations of surgery involved the
+shedding of blood, and it was felt that this was incompatible with the
+functions of the clergy. After much consideration and discussion, in 1163
+the council of Tours, under Pope Alexander III., forbade the clergy to act
+as surgeons, but they were permitted to dispense medicine.</p>
+
+<p>The edict of Tours must have given satisfaction to the barbers, and they
+were not slow to avail themselves of the opportunities the change afforded
+them. In London, and we presume in other places, the barbers advertised
+their blood-letting in a most objectionable manner. It was customary to
+put blood in their windows to attract the attention of the public. An
+ordinance was passed in 1307, directing the barbers to have the blood
+&#8220;privily carried into the Thames under pain of paying two shillings to the
+use of the Sheriffs.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At an early period in London the barbers were banded together, and a gild
+was formed. In the first instance it seems that the chief object was the
+bringing together of the members at religious observances. They attended
+the funerals and obits of deceased members and their wives. Eventually it
+was transformed into a semi-social<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> and religious gild, and subsequently
+became a trade gild.</p>
+
+<p>In 1308, Richard le Barber, the first master of the Barbers&#8217; Company, was
+sworn at the Guildhall, London. As time progressed, the London Company of
+Barbers increased in importance.</p>
+
+<p>In the first year of the reign of Edward IV. (1462) the barbers were
+incorporated by a royal charter, and it was confirmed by succeeding
+monarchs.</p>
+
+<p>A change of title occurred in 1540, and it was then named the Company of
+Barber-Surgeons. Holbein painted a picture of Henry VIII. and the
+Barber-Surgeons. The painting is still preserved, and may be seen at the
+Barber-Surgeons&#8217; Hall, Monkwell Street, London. We give a carefully
+executed wood engraving of the celebrated picture. Pepys calls this &#8220;not a
+pleasant though a good picture.&#8221; It is the largest and last painting of
+Holbein. In the <i>Leisure Hour</i> for September 1895, are some interesting
+details respecting it, that are well worth reproducing. &#8220;It is painted,&#8221;
+we are told, &#8220;on vertical oak boards, being 5ft. 11in. high by 10ft. 2in.
+long. It seems to have been begun about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> 1541, and finished after
+Holbein&#8217;s death in 1543, and it has evidently been altered since its first
+delivery. The tablet, for instance, was not always in the background, for
+the old engraving in the College of Surgeons has a window in its place,
+showing the old tower of St. Bride&#8217;s, and thus indicating Bridewell as the
+site of the ceremony. The outermost figure to the left, too, is omitted,
+and, according to some critics, the back row of heads are all
+post-Holbeinic. The names over the heads appear to have been added in
+Charles I.&#8217;s time, and it is significant that only two portraits in the
+back row are so distinguished.&#8221; The king is represented wearing his robes,
+and is seated on a chair of state, holding erect his sword of state, and
+about him are the leading members of the fraternity. &#8220;The men whose
+portraits appear in the picture,&#8221; says the <i>Leisure Hour</i>, &#8220;are not
+nonentities. The first figure to the king&#8217;s right, with his hands in his
+gown, is Dr. John Chambre, king&#8217;s physician, Fellow and Warden of Merton,
+and happy in his multitudinous appointments, both clerical and lay. Behind
+him is the Doctor Butts of Shakespeare&#8217;s &#8216;Henry VIII.&#8217;&mdash;the Sir William
+Butts who was the king&#8217;s and Princess Mary&#8217;s physician, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> whose wife is
+known by Holbein&#8217;s splendid portrait of her. Behind Butts is Alsop, the
+king&#8217;s apothecary. To the king&#8217;s left the first figure is Thomas Vicary,
+surgeon to Bartholomew&#8217;s Hospital, serjeant-surgeon to the king, and
+author of &#8216;The Anatomie of the Bodie of Man.&#8217; Next to him is Sir John
+Ayleff, an exceptionally good portrait. Then come in the undernamed:
+Nicholas Simpson, Edmund Harman (one of the witnesses to the king&#8217;s will),
+James Monforde (who gave the company the silver hammer still used by the
+Master in presiding at the courts), John Pen (another fine portrait),
+Nicholas Alcocke, and Richard Ferris (also serjeant-surgeon to the king).
+In the back row the only names given are those of Christopher Salmond and
+William Tilley.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In the reign of Henry VIII. an enactment as follows was in force:&mdash;&#8220;No
+person using any shaving or barbery in London shall occupy any surgery,
+letting of blood, or other matter, except of drawing teeth.&#8221; Laws were
+made, but they could not be, or at all events were not, enforced. Disputes
+were frequent. The barbers acted often as surgeons, and the surgeons
+increased their income by the use of the razor and shears. At<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> this period
+vigorous attempts were made to confine each to their legitimate work.</p>
+
+<p>The barber&#8217;s pole, it is said, owes its origin to the barber-surgeons.
+Much has been written on this topic, but we believe that the following are
+the facts of the matter. We know that in the days of old bleeding was a
+frequent occurrence, and during the operation the patient used to grasp a
+staff, stick, or pole which the barber-surgeon kept ready for use, and
+round it was bound a supply of bandages for tying the arm of the patient.
+The pole, when not in use, was hung at the door as a sign. In course of
+time a painted pole was displayed instead of that used in the operation.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Thurlow addressing the House of Lords, July 17th, 1797, stated, &#8220;by a
+statute, still in force, barbers and surgeons were each to use a pole [as
+a sign]. The barbers were to have theirs blue and white, striped, with no
+other appendage; but the surgeons&#8217;, which was to be the same in other
+respects, was likewise to have a gully-pot and a red rag, to denote the
+particular nature of their vocations.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. J. L. Saywell has a note on bleeding in his &#8220;History and Annals
+of Northallerton&#8221; (1885):&mdash;&#8220;Towards the early part of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> century,&#8221;
+observes Mr. Saywell, &#8220;a singular custom prevailed in the town and
+neighbourhood of Northallerton (Yorkshire). In the spring of the year
+nearly all the robust male adults, and occasionally females, repaired to a
+surgeon to be bled, a process which they considered essentially conduced
+to vigorous health.&#8221; The charge for the operation was one shilling.</p>
+
+<p>Parliament was petitioned, in 1542, praying that surgeons might be exempt
+from bearing arms and serving on juries, and thus be enabled without
+hindrance to attend to their professional duties. The request was granted,
+and to the present time medical men enjoy the privileges granted so long
+ago.</p>
+
+<p>In 1745, the surgeons and the barbers separated by Act of Parliament. The
+barber-surgeons lingered for a long time, the last in London, named
+Middleditch, of Great Suffolk Street, in the Borough, only dying in 1821.
+Mr. John Timbs, the popular writer, left on record that he had a vivid
+recollection of Middleditch&#8217;s dentistry.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Touching for the King&#8217;s Evil.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By William Andrews, f.r.h.s.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">The</span> practice of touching for the cure of scrofula&mdash;a disease more
+generally known as king&#8217;s evil&mdash;prevailed for a long period in England.
+Edward the Confessor who reigned from 1042 to 1066, appears to be the
+first monarch in this country who employed this singular mode of
+treatment.</p>
+
+<p>About a century after the death of Edward the Confessor, William of
+Malmesbury compiled his &#8220;Chronicle of the Kings of England,&#8221; and in this
+work is the earliest allusion to the subject. Holinshed has placed on
+record some interesting details respecting Edward the Confessor. &#8220;As it
+has been thought,&#8221; says Holinshed, in writing of the king, &#8220;he was
+inspired with the gift of prophecy, and also to have the gift of healing
+infirmities and disease commonly called the king&#8217;s evil, and left that
+virtue, as it were, a portion of inheritance to his successors, the kings
+of this realm.&#8221; The first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> edition of the &#8220;Chronicle&#8221; was published in
+1577, and from it Shakespeare drew much material for his historical
+dramas. There is an allusion to this singular superstition in <i>Macbeth</i>,
+which it will be interesting to reproduce.</p>
+
+<p>Malcolm and Macduff are in England, &#8220;in a room in the King&#8217;s palace&#8221; (the
+palace of King Edward the Confessor):&mdash;</p>
+
+<table style="margin-left: 15%;" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>&#8220;<i>Malcolm.</i></td>
+ <td>Comes the King forth I pray you?</td></tr>
+<tr><td><i>Doctor.</i></td>
+ <td>Aye, sir! There are a crew of wretched souls<br />
+That stay his cure: their malady convinces<br />
+The great assay of art; but at his touch&mdash;<br />
+Such sanctity hath heaven given his hand&mdash;<br />
+They presently amend.</td></tr>
+<tr><td><i>Malcolm.</i></td>
+ <td>I thank you, Doctor.</td></tr>
+<tr><td><i>Macduff.</i></td>
+ <td>What&#8217;s the disease he means?</td></tr>
+<tr><td><i>Malcolm.</i></td>
+ <td>&#8217;Tis called the evil:<br />
+A most miraculous work in this good King;<br />
+Which often, since my here-remain in England,<br />
+I&#8217;ve seen him do. How he solicits heaven,<br />
+Himself best knows: but strangely visited people<br />
+All swoln and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,<br />
+The mere despair of surgery, he cures,<br />
+Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,<br />
+Put on with holy prayers: and &#8217;tis spoken,<br />
+To the succeeding royalty he leaves<br />
+The healing benediction. With this strange virtue,<br />
+He hath a heavenly gift of prophecy,<br />
+And sundry blessings hang about his throne<br />
+That speak him full of grace.&#8221;</td></tr></table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>History does not furnish any facts respecting touching by the four kings
+of the House of Normandy. It is generally believed that the Norman
+monarchs did not practise the rite.</p>
+
+<p>Henry II., the first of the Plantagenet line, emulated the Confessor. We
+know this fact from a record made by Peter of Blois, the royal chaplain,
+in which it is clearly stated that the king performed certain cures by
+touch. John of Gaddesden, in the days of Edward II., wrote a treatise in
+which he gave instructions for several modes of treatment for the disease,
+and if they failed, recommended the sufferers to seek cure by royal touch.
+Bradwardine, Archbishop of Canterbury, lived in the reigns of Edward III.
+and Richard II., and from his statements we learn that both kings kept up
+the observance.</p>
+
+<p>Henry IV., the first king of the House of Lancaster, touched for the evil.
+This we learn from a &#8220;Defence to the title of House of Lancaster,&#8221; written
+by Sir John Fortesque, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of King&#8217;s Bench. He
+speaks of the practice as &#8220;belonging to the kings of England from time
+immemorial.&#8221; This pamphlet is preserved among the Cottonian manuscripts in
+the British Museum.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>The earliest king of the House of Tudor, Henry VII., was the first to give
+a small gold piece, known as a touch-piece, to those undergoing the
+ceremony.</p>
+
+<p>During the reign of the next monarch, Henry VIII., little attention
+appears to have been given to the subject. It was at this period largely
+practised in France. Cardinal Wolsey, when at the Court of Francis I., in
+1527, witnessed the king touch two hundred people. On Easter Sunday, 1686,
+Louis XIV. is recorded to have touched 1,600. He used these words:&mdash;&#8220;<i>Le
+Roy te touche, Dieu te gu&eacute;isse.</i>&#8221; (&#8220;The King touches thee. May God cure
+thee!&#8221;)</p>
+
+<p>Coming back to the history of our own country, and dealing with the more
+interesting passages bearing on this theme, we find that in the reign of
+Queen Elizabeth, William Clowes, the Court Surgeon, believed firmly in the
+efficacy of the royal touch. &#8220;The king&#8217;s queen&#8217;s evil,&#8221; he says, &#8220;is a
+disease repugnant to nature, which grievous malady is known to be
+miraculously cured and healed by the sacred hands of the Queen&#8217;s most
+Royal Majesty, even by Divine inspiration and wonderful work and power of
+God, above man&#8217;s will, act, and expectation.&#8221; In this reign, under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> the
+title of &#8220;<i>Charisma; sive Donum Sanationis</i>,&#8221; a book was published by
+William Fookes bearing testimony to the cures effected by royal touch on
+all sorts and conditions of people from various parts of the country.</p>
+
+<p>The Stuarts paid particular attention to the practice. No fewer than
+eleven proclamations published during the reign of Charles I. are
+preserved at the State Paper Office, and chiefly relate to the times the
+afflicted might attend the court to receive the royal touch. In course of
+time the king&#8217;s pecuniary means became limited, and he was unable to
+present gold touch-pieces, so silver was substituted, and many received
+the rite of touch only.</p>
+
+<p>During the Commonwealth we have not any trace of Cromwell touching for the
+malady. During the rising in the West of England, the Duke of Monmouth,
+who claimed to be the rightful heir to the throne, touched several persons
+for the evil, and, said a newspaper of the time, with success. One of the
+charges made against him on his trial at Edinburgh for high treason, was,
+that he had &#8220;touched children of the King&#8217;s Evil.&#8221; Two witnesses proved
+the charge, having witnessed the ceremony at Taunton.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>No sooner had another Stuart obtained the English crown than the ceremony
+was again performed. During the first year of the reign of Charles II.,
+six thousand seven hundred and twenty-five persons were brought to His
+Majesty to be healed. The ceremony was often performed on a Sunday. Evelyn
+and Pepys were witnesses of these proceedings, and in their Diaries have
+recorded interesting particulars. Under date of 6th July, 1660, &#8220;His
+Majesty,&#8221; writes Evelyn, &#8220;began first to touch for ye evil, according to
+custome thus: Sitting under his state in the Banqueting House, the
+chirurgeons cause the sick to be brought or led up to the throne, where,
+they kneeling, ye king strokes their faces and cheeks with both his hands
+at once, at which instant a chaplaine in his fermalities says:&mdash;&#8216;He put
+his hands upon them and healed them.&#8217; This he said to every one in
+particular. When they have been all totched, they come up again in the
+same order; and the other chaplaine kneeling, and having an angel of gold
+strung on white ribbon on his arme, delivers them one by one to His
+Majestie, who puts them about the necks of the touched as they passe,
+while the first chaplaine repeats &#8216;That is ye true light which came into
+ye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> world.&#8217; Then follows an epistle (as at first a gospel) with the
+liturgy, prayers for the sick, with some alteration, and then the Lord
+Chamberlain and the Comptroller of the Household bring a basin, ewer, and
+towel, for his Majesty to wash.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Pepys witnessed the ceremony on April 13th, 1661, and refers to it
+in his Diary. &#8220;Went to the Banquet House, and there saw the King heal, the
+first time I ever saw him do it, which he did with great gravity, and it
+seemed to me to be an ugly office and a simple one.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In Evelyn&#8217;s Diary on March 28th, 1684, there is a record of a serious
+accident, &#8220;There was,&#8221; he writes, &#8220;so great a concourse of people with
+their children to be touched for the evil, that six or seven were crushed
+to death by pressing at the chirurgeon&#8217;s door for tickets.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>According to Macaulay, Charles II. during his reign touched nearly a
+hundred thousand persons. In the year 1682 he performed the rite eight
+thousand five hundred times.</p>
+
+<p>No person was allowed to enter the King&#8217;s presence for the purpose of
+receiving the rite without first obtaining a certificate from the minister
+of his parish from whence he came, nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> unless he had not previously been
+touched. A proclamation of Charles II., dated January 9th, 1683, ordered a
+register of the certificates to be made. Here is a record drawn from the
+Old Town&#8217;s Book of Birmingham:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;March 14th, 1683, Elizabeth, daughter of John and Anne Dickens, of
+Birmingham, in the county of Warwick, was certified for in order to
+obtayne his Majesty&#8217;s touch for her cure.</p>
+
+<table style="margin-left: 0%;" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="smcap">Henry Grove</span>,</span></td>
+ <td>&nbsp;</td>
+ <td>Minister.</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="smcap">John Birch</span>,</span></td>
+ <td rowspan="2"><span class="large">}</span></td>
+ <td rowspan="2">Churchwardens.&#8221;</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="smcap">Henry Pater</span>,</span></td></tr></table>
+</div>
+
+<p>We cull from the churchwardens&#8217; accounts of Terling, Essex, the following
+item:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;1683 Dec<sup>r</sup>. Pd. for his Majestie&#8217;s order for touching 00.00.06.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>A page in the register book of Bisley, Surrey, is headed thus,
+&#8220;Certificates for the Evill commonly called the kings Evill.&#8221; Two entries
+occur as follow:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Elizabeth Collier and Thomas Collier the children of Thomas Collier,
+Senior, had a certificate from the minister and churchwardens of
+Bisley, August 7th 1686.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sarah Massey, the daughter of Richard Massey, had a certificate from
+the minister and churchwardens of Bisley, 1st April 1688.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Old parish accounts often contain entries<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> similar to the following, from
+Ecclesfield, Yorkshire:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table style="margin-left: 5%;" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td valign="top">&#8220;1641.</td>
+ <td>Given to John Parkin wife towards her<br />
+trauell to London to get cure of his Matie.<br />
+for the disease called Euill which her<br />
+soone Thom is visited withall</td>
+ <td valign="bottom">0. 6. 8.&#8221;</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>&#8220;The following extracts,&#8221; says a contributor to <i>The Reliquary</i> of
+January, 1894, &#8220;from the Minute Books of the Corporation of the city of
+York, show that general belief in the virtue of the touching by the King
+was unshaken at the end of the seventeenth century. It must be borne in
+mind that these Minutes do not record the acts of individuals, but were
+those of the Corporation of what was at that time one of the most
+important cities in the country, and that it was in administering Poor Law
+Relief that the grants were made.</p>
+
+<p>In Vol. 38 of the Corporation Records, fo. 74b, under the date of February
+28th, 1671, is the following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Ordered that Elizabeth Trevis haue x<sup>s</sup> given her for charges in
+carrying her daughter to London to be touched for the Evill.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>A few years later, on March 12th, 1678 (fo. 156b), occurs the
+following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>&#8220;Anne Thornton to haue x<sup>s</sup> for goeing to London to be touched for the
+euill.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>And again on March 3, 1687 (fo. 249b), ten shillings was granted for
+&#8220;carrying of Judith Gibbons &amp; her Child &amp; one Dorothy Browne to London to
+be touched by his Majestie in order to be healed of the Kings Evil.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Records of the Corporation of Preston, Lancashire, contain at least
+two references to this matter. In the year 1682 the bailiffs were
+instructed to &#8220;pay unto James Harrison, bricklayer, 10s. towards carrying
+his son to London, in order to the procuring of His Majesty&#8217;s touch.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Five years later, when James II. was at Chester, the council passed a vote
+that &#8220;the Bailiff pay unto the persons undermentioned each of them 5s.
+towards their charge in going to Chester to get his Majesty&#8217;s
+touch:&mdash;Anne, daughter of Abel Mope; &mdash;&mdash; daughter Richard Letmore.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It is recorded that James II. touched eight hundred persons in the choir
+of the Cathedral of Chester.</p>
+
+<p>The ceremony cost, we learn from Macaulay, about &pound;10,000 a year, and the
+amount would have been much greater but for the vigilance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> the royal
+surgeons, whose business it was to examine the applicants, and to
+distinguish those who came for the cure, and those who came for the gold.</p>
+
+<p>William III. declined to have anything to do with a ceremony he regarded
+as an imposture. &#8220;It is a silly superstition,&#8221; he said, when he heard that
+at the close of Lent his palace was besieged by a crowd of sick. &#8220;Give the
+poor creatures some money, and send them away.&#8221; On one occasion only was
+he induced to lay his hand on a sufferer. &#8220;God give you better health,&#8221; he
+said, &#8220;and more sense.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The next to wear the crown was Queen Anne, and she revived the rite. In
+the <i>London Gazette</i> of March 12th, 1712, appeared an official
+announcement that the queen intended to touch for the evil. In Lent of
+that year, Dr. Johnson, then a child, went up to London with his mother in
+the stage coach that he might have the benefit of the royal touch. He was
+then between two and three years of age. &#8220;His mother,&#8221; writes Boswell,
+&#8220;yielding to the superstitious notion which, it is wonderful to think,
+prevailed so long in this country as to the virtue of regal touch (a
+notion to which a man of such inquiry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> and such judgment as Carte, the
+historian, could give credit), carried him to London, where he was
+actually touched by Queen Anne. Mrs. Johnson, indeed, as Mr. Hector
+informed me, acted by the advice of the celebrated Sir John Floyer, then a
+physician in Lichfield. Johnson used to talk of this very frankly, and
+Mrs. Piozzi has preserved his very picturesque description of the scene as
+it remained upon his fancy. Being asked if he could remember Queen Anne,
+&#8216;He had,&#8217; he said, &#8216;a confused but somehow a sort of solemn recollection
+of a lady in diamonds and a long black hood.&#8217; This touch, however, was
+without any effect.&#8221; The malady remained with Dr. Johnson to his death.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img01.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">TOUCH-PIECE OF CHARLES II. (GOLD).</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>After the death of Queen Anne, no other English sovereign kept up the
+custom, although the service remained in the &#8220;Book of Common Prayer&#8221; as
+late as 1719.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>The latest instance we have found of the ceremony being performed was in
+October, 1745, when Charles Edward, at Holyrood House, touched a child.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img02.jpg" alt="" /><span class="spacer">&nbsp;</span><img src="images/img02b.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">(GOLD).<span class="spacer">&nbsp;</span><span class="spacer">&nbsp;</span>TOUCH-PIECES OF JAMES II.<span class="spacer">&nbsp;</span><span class="spacer">&nbsp;</span>(SILVER).</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>In the preceding pages we have referred to &#8220;touch pieces,&#8221; and it will not
+be without interest to direct attention to some of the more notable
+examples. A small sum of money was given by Edward I., and it has been
+suggested that it was probably presented in the form of alms. Henry VII.
+gave a small gold coin known as the angel noble. It was of about six
+shillings and eight pence in value, and was a current coin of the period,
+and the smallest gold coin issued. On one side of the coin was a figure of
+the angel Michael overcoming the dragon, and on the other a ship on the
+waves. During the residence of Charles II. on the continent, those who
+visited him to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> receive the royal rite had to give him gold, but after the
+Restoration, &#8220;touch-pieces&#8221; were made expressly for presentation at the
+healings. They were small gold medals resembling angels, but they were not
+equal in value to the angels previously given. However they met a want
+when gold was in great demand. James II. had two kinds of touch pieces,
+one of gold and the other of silver, but they were not half the size of
+those given by Charles II. Queen Anne gave a touch-piece a little larger
+than that of James II. The touch-piece presented by this Queen to Dr.
+
+Johnson may, with other specimens, be seen in the British Museum.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img03.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">TOUCH-PIECE OF ANNE (GOLD).</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>In a carefully-compiled article in the <i>Arch&aelig;ological Journal</i>, vol. x.,
+p. 187-211, will be found some interesting particulars of touch-pieces,
+and to it we are indebted for the few details we have given bearing on
+this part of our subject.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Visiting Patients.</h2>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">The</span> doctor made his daily rounds, before the reign of Charles II., on
+horseback, sitting sideways on foot-clothes. He must have cut an
+undignified figure as he rode through the streets of London and our chief
+towns.</p>
+
+<p>A change came after the Restoration, and we meet with the physicians
+making their visits in a carriage and pair. It seems that increased fees
+were expected with the introduction of the carriage. A curious note
+appears on this subject in <i>Lex Talionis</i>. &#8220;For there must now be a little
+coach and two horses,&#8221; says the author, &#8220;and, being thus attended,
+half-a-piece their usual fee is but ill taken, and popped into their left
+pocket, and possibly may cause the patient to send for his worship twice
+before he will come again in the hazard of another angel.&#8221; The carriage
+was popular, and physicians vied with each other in making the greatest
+display.</p>
+
+<p>In the days of Queen Anne, a doctor would even drive half-a-dozen horses
+attached to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> chariot, and not fewer than four was the general rule.</p>
+
+<p>In our own time the doctor&#8217;s carriage and pair is to be seen in all
+directions. It is now driven for use and not for display as in the days of
+Queen Anne.</p>
+
+<p>We have seen the bicycle used by doctors of good standing, and we predict
+the time is not far distant when it will be more generally ridden by
+members of the medical profession.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Assaying Meat and Drink.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By William Andrews, f.r.h.s.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">From</span> the time of our earliest Norman king down to the days of James I.,
+the chief people of the land partook of their food in fear. Treachery was
+a not infrequent occurrence, and poison was much used as a means of taking
+life. As a precaution against murder, assayers of food, drink, etc., were
+appointed. Doctors usually filled the office, and by their unremitting
+attention to their duties crime was to a great extent prevented. In a
+royal household the physician acted as assayer.</p>
+
+<p>Let us imagine ourselves in an old English home, the palace of a king, or
+the stronghold of a leading nobleman. The cloth is laid by subordinate
+servants, but not without considerable ceremony. Next a chief officer of
+the household sees that every article on the table is free from poison.
+The bread about to be consumed is cut, and, in the presence of the &#8220;taker
+of assay,&#8221; is tasted, and the salt is also tested. The knives,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> spoons,
+and table linen are kissed by a responsible person, so that assurance
+might be given that they were free from poison. Then the salt dish is
+covered with a lid, and the bread is wrapped in a napkin, and afterwards
+the whole table is covered with a fair white cloth. The coverlet remains
+until the head of the household comes to take his repast, and then his
+chief servant removes the covering of the table. If any person attempted
+to touch the covered bread or the covered salt after the spreading of the
+coverlet, they ran the risk of a severe flogging, and sometimes even death
+at the hands of a hangman.</p>
+
+<p>The time of bringing up the meats having arrived, the assayer proceeds to
+the kitchen, and tests the loyalty of the steward and cook by compelling
+them to partake of small quantities of the food prepared before it is
+taken to the table. Pieces of bread were cut and dipped into every mess,
+and were afterwards eaten by cook and steward. The crusts of closed pies
+were raised, and the contents tasted; small pieces of the more substantial
+viands were tasted, and not a single article of food was suffered to leave
+the kitchen without being assayed. After the ceremony had been completed,
+each dish was covered, no matter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> if hot or cold, and these were taken by
+servitors to the banqueting hall, a marshal with wand of office preceding
+the procession. The bearers on no account were permitted to linger on the
+way, no matter if their hands were burnt they must bear the pain, far
+better to suffer that than be suspected of tampering with the food. On no
+pretext were the covers to be removed until the proper time, and by the
+servants appointed for that purpose. If very hot, the bearers might
+perhaps protect their hands with bread, which was to be kept out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>We produce from the Rev. Charles Bullock&#8217;s interesting volume entitled
+&#8220;How they Lived in the Olden Time,&#8221; a picture of bringing in the dinner.
+It will be observed that the steward, bearing his staff of office, heads
+the procession.</p>
+
+<p>Each dish as it was brought to the table was again tasted in the presence
+of the personage who purposed partaking of it. This entailed considerable
+ceremony, and took up much time. To render the delay as little unpleasant
+as possible to the guests, music was usually performed.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img04.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">BRINGING IN THE DINNER.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>In the stately homes of old England, as a mark of respect to the
+distinguished visitor, it was customary to assign to him an assayer.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+History furnishes a notable instance of an omission of the official. When
+Richard II. was at Pontefract Castle, we gather from <i>Hall&#8217;s Chronicle</i>,
+edition 1548, folio 14, that Sir Piers Exton intended poisoning the King,
+and, to use the chronicler&#8217;s words, forbade the &#8220;esquire whiche was
+accustumed to serve and take the assaye beefore Kyng Richarde, to again
+use that manner of service.&#8221; According to Hall, the King &#8220;sat downe to
+dyner, and was served withoute curtesie or assaye; he much mervaylyng at
+the sodayne mutacion of the thynge, demanded of the esquire why he did not
+do his duty.&#8221; He replied that Sir Piers had forbidden him performing the
+duties pertaining to his position.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> The King immediately picked up a
+carving-knife, struck upon the head of the assayer, and exclaimed, &#8220;The
+devil take Henry of Lancaster and thee together.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Paul Hentzner, a German tutor, visited England in 1598, and wrote a
+graphic account of his travels in the country, which were translated into
+English by Horace Walpole. The work contains a curious account of the
+ceremonies of laying the cloth, etc., for Queen Elizabeth at Greenwich
+Palace. The notice is rather long, but is so entertaining and informing
+that it well merits reproduction. &#8220;A gentleman,&#8221; it is stated, &#8220;entered
+the room bearing a rod, and along with him another who had a table-cloth,
+which, after they had both kneeled three times, with the utmost
+veneration, he spread upon the table, and after kneeling again, they both
+retired. Then came two others, one with the rod again, and the other with
+a salt-cellar and a plate of bread: when they had kneeled, as the others
+had done, and placed what was brought upon the table, they, too, retired
+with the same ceremonies performed by the first. At last came an unmarried
+lady (we were told she was a Countess), and along with her a married one,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+bearing a tasting-knife; the former was dressed in white silk, who when
+she prostrated herself three times in the most graceful manner, approached
+the table, and rubbed the plates with bread and salt with as much care as
+if the Queen had been present; when they had waited there a little time,
+the Yeomen of the Guard entered bareheaded, clothed in scarlet, with a
+golden rose upon their backs, bringing in at each turn a course of
+twenty-four dishes, served in plate, most of it gilt; these dishes were
+received by a gentleman in the same order they were brought, and placed
+upon the table, while the lady-taster gave to each guard a mouthful to
+eat, for fear of poison. During the time that this guard, which consists
+of the tallest and stoutest men that can be found in all England, being
+carefully selected for this service, were bringing dinner, twelve trumpets
+and two kettle-drums made the hall ring for half-an-hour together. At the
+end of the ceremonial, a number of unmarried ladies appeared, who, with
+particular solemnity, lifted the meat off the table and conveyed it into
+the Queen&#8217;s inner and more private chamber, where, after she had chosen
+for herself, the rest goes to the ladies of the Court.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img05.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">ASSAYING WINE.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Drink as well as food had to be assayed twice, once in the buttery and
+again in the hall. The butler drank of the wine in the buttery, and then
+handed it to the cup-bearer in a covered vessel. When he arrived at the
+hall, he removed the lid of the cup, and poured into the inverted cover a
+little of the wine, and drank it under the eye of his master. We give an
+illustration, reproduced from an ancient manuscript, of an assayer tasting
+wine. The middle of the twelfth century is most probably the period
+represented.</p>
+
+<p>In the ancient assay cup, it is related on reliable authority, a charm was
+attached to a chain of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> gold, or embedded in the bottom of the vessel.
+This was generally a valuable carbuncle or a piece of tusk of a narwhal,
+usually regarded as the horn of the unicorn, and which was believed to
+have the power of neutralising or even detecting the presence of poison.</p>
+
+<p>Edward IV. presented to the ambassadors of Charles of Burgundy a costly
+assay cup of gold, ornamented with pearls and a great sapphire, and, to
+use the words of an old writer, &#8220;in the myddes of the cuppe ys a grete
+pece of a Vnicornes horne.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The water used for washing the hands of the great had to be tasted by the
+yeoman who placed it on the table, to prove that no poison was contained
+in the fluid. This ceremony had to be performed in the presence of an
+assayer.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+<h2>The Gold-headed Cane.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Tom Robinson, m.d.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">The</span> stick takes many forms. It is the sceptre of kings, the club of a
+police constable, the baton of a field marshal. The mace is but a stick of
+office, being ornamental and merely symbolical.</p>
+
+<p>In history we may go back to the pilgrim&#8217;s staff, which was four feet
+long, and hollow at the top to carry away relics from the Holy Land. It
+was also used to carry contraband goods, such as seeds, or silk-worms&#8217;
+eggs, which the Chinese, Turks, or Greeks forbade to be exported. It is
+occasionally used for eluding the customs now. Some people smuggle
+diamonds into the United States in that way.</p>
+
+<p>Prometheus&#8217; reed, or marthex, in which he conveyed fire to &#8220;wretched
+mortals,&#8221; as Aeschylus tells us, is a well-known fable.</p>
+
+<p>An enormous amount of interest centres around the walking stick, and there
+are few families in which we do not find an old stick handed down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+generation after generation. Such an inheritance was at one time a common
+possession of those who belonged to the medical profession.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img06.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">DR. RADCLIFFE&#8217;S CANE.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The College of Physicians possesses at the present time the gold cane
+which Radcliffe, Mead, Askew, Pitcairn, and Baillie successively carried
+about with them, and which Mrs. Baillie presented to that learned body.
+The drawing here given is a representation of this cane, and it will be
+seen that it has not a gold knob, but consists of an engraved handle or
+crook. It is, I think, quite clear that the custom which the doctors of
+the last century always followed in carrying their stick about with them,
+even to the bed-side, was due entirely to the fact that the handle of the
+cane could be, and was, filled with strong smelling disinfectants, such as
+rosemary and camphor.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> The doctor held this against his nose obviously for
+two reasons. One, to destroy any poison which might be floating about in
+the air but chiefly to prevent him smelling unpleasant odours. This stick
+was as long as a footman&#8217;s, smooth and varnished.</p>
+
+<p>A belief in the protective power of camphor and other pleasant-smelling
+herbs is still in existence, and we know quite a number of individuals who
+carry about with them bags of camphor during the prevalence of an
+epidemic.</p>
+
+<p>Before Howard exposed the deadly sanitary state of the prisons of this
+country, it was the custom to sprinkle aromatic herbs before the
+prisoners, so powerful was the noxious effluvium which exhaled from their
+filthy bodies. The bouquet which the chaplain always carried when
+accompanying a prisoner to Tyburn, was used for the same defensive
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>The stick of the physician&#8217;s cane was probably a relic of the legerdemain
+of the healer, who in superstitious times worked upon the ignorance of the
+credulous. The modern conjuror always uses a wand in his entertainment.
+These baubles die hard, because there is a strong conservative instinct in
+the race which clings with tremendous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> tenacity to anything which has the
+sanction of antiquity.</p>
+
+<p>The barber&#8217;s pole is still seen even in London, and is striped blue and
+white, emblems of the phlebotomist, and symbolical of the blue venous
+blood, which was so ungrudgingly given by the sufferers from almost all
+maladies. The white stripe represented the bandage used to bind up the
+wound on the arm.</p>
+
+<p>The practice of the bleeders continued in fashion in England until the
+beginning of this century. John Coutsley Lettsom, who possessed high
+literary attainments, and who was President of the Philosophical Society
+of London, and who entertained at his house at Grove Hill, Camberwell,
+many of the most distinguished men of his time, including Boswell and Dr.
+Johnson, and whose writings shew he was an enlightened physician, was bold
+in his treatment of disease, and a heroic bleeder. He used to say of
+himself:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;When patients sick to me apply,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I physics, bleeds, and sweats &#8217;em</span><br />
+Then if they choose to die,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">What&#8217;s that to me&mdash;I lets &#8217;em.&#8221;</span></p>
+
+<p>The wig also constituted an essential part of the dress of the older
+physicians. It was a three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> tailed one, and this with silk stockings,
+clothes well trimmed, velvet coat with stiff skirts, large cuffs and
+buckled shoes, made quite an imposing show, and when they rode in their
+gilt carriages with two running footmen, as was the custom, no one would
+be better recognised. It is interesting to contrast the dress and mode of
+practice of the modern physician with those who built up the honourable
+calling of medicine. It is so easy to laugh at those who practised the art
+of medicine before modern scientific investigation had laid naked so many
+of the secrets of physiology, pathology, and vital chemistry. Slowly but
+surely as the true nature and progress of disease has become known, so
+have all the adventitious and unnecessary surroundings of dress
+disappeared, and now we may meet the most eminent of our doctors, clad in
+the same garments as a man on Change. All this was inevitable, but running
+through the whole history of medicine is a magnificent desire on the part
+of those who have made a mark, and of all its humbler followers to &#8220;go
+about doing good.&#8221; The difficulties are enormous, the labour is colossal,
+but there could be no convictions were there no perplexities. Credulity is
+the disease of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> a feeble intellect. Accepting all things and understanding
+nothing, kills a man&#8217;s intellect and checks all scientific investigation.
+The physician has to knock at the temple of the human frame, and patiently
+pick up the knowledge which nature always gives to those who love her
+best. But the investigator must approach his subject with humility, and
+with the recognition that there is a limit to the human intellect, and
+that behind and above this big round world is a supreme being, that around
+the intellect is the atmosphere of spiritual convictions from which our
+highest and best impulses spring, that the universe not only embraces
+material phenomena, but it also includes the sublime and the moral
+attributes, which no man has, or ever will, weigh in the physical balance
+or distil from a retort.</p>
+
+<p>The union of Intellect and Piety will grow stronger as the world grows
+older. When men began to think, they began to doubt, but when men have
+thought more deeply they will cease to doubt.</p>
+
+<p>An idea is in the air that the study of science has a tendency to make men
+sceptical. This is an error. For surely the study of Nature in any of its
+manifold aspects has a direct tendency to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> lead us into the inscrutable.
+Amongst those who demonstrate the ennobling influence of science let us
+only name Boyle, Bacon, Kepler, and Newton. If we would select a few names
+from the number of medical celebrities of the past who have felt this
+elevating influence, the following will readily occur to us, Linacre,
+Sydenham, Brodie, Astley Cooper, Graves Watson, and Abernethy. The latter,
+who is chiefly remembered as a coiner of quaint sayings and personal
+originality, had, notwithstanding his biting wit, a deep sense of the
+nobility and the sacredness of his calling, as the following extract from
+a lecture which he delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons will prove.
+He says:&mdash;&#8220;When we examine our bodies we see an assemblance of organs
+formed of what we call matter, but when we examine our minds, we feel that
+there is something sensitive and intelligible which inhabits our bodies.
+We naturally believe in the existence of a first cause. We feel our own
+free agency. We distinguish right and wrong. We feel as if we were
+responsible for our conduct, and the belief in a future state seems
+indigenous to the mind of man.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The noiseless tread of time will cause many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> doctors whose names are now
+household words to be forgotten, but we may rest assured that the wreath
+of memory will cluster round the brows of these grand, noble workers in
+the field of medicine who have shown by their daily life that they never
+flinched from the arduous duties, aye and the dangers of their profession,
+but steadfastly plodded on. Originality, integrity, and honesty are
+attributes which grace the life of any man, and although the history of
+medicine claims no monopoly of these virtues, for they serve all men
+alike, yet they are the handmaids of greatness; without them no human
+being will ever win that true success which enables us to look back upon
+such lives and say, &#8220;Here are examples which show us the possibilities of
+the race.&#8221; Doctors ought to be great burden lifters. Their mission is to
+carry into the chamber of disease&mdash;and even of death itself&mdash;that calm
+courage, that buoyant hope, which has around it a halo of sympathy and of
+encouragement.</p>
+
+<p>The public are loyal to the profession of medicine, and seldom do we hear
+of any members of that calling who abuse their high privileges. Their work
+is an absorbing work; it says to a man:&mdash;&#8220;You have placed in your hands
+the lives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> of the human race. You are the true soldier whose business it
+is to give life and health and happiness to those with whom you come in
+contact. You must not lean upon the baubles of your calling, so as to
+inspire confidence, but you must night and day let the one abiding thought
+be concentrated upon the good of humanity,&#8221; and there is no field of
+professional experience which has given us so many men who have as nobly
+done their duty as the doctors of the past and of the present day. We seem
+to be on the threshold of a new era in the treatment of disease, and
+already do we find an increase in the average lives of the race. No one
+need despair of the future in that direction; indiscretion and ignorance
+kill more human beings than plague, pestilence, or famine. The public must
+help to tear away the veil which hides the <i>Truth</i>, by not worshipping at
+the foot of Quackery, Chicanery, or Superstition.</p>
+
+<p>The medical profession has so far escaped the pernicious tendency of
+modern thought, which tendency is to hamper every institution. This is a
+noteworthy fact; our hospitals, medical schools, College of Physicians,
+and College of Surgeons are not cramped and hindered by legislative<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+interference; but unostentatiously, silently, and with a never-failing
+sense of their responsibilities, do they educate and pass through their
+gates the doctors of the future&mdash;and no man dare point his finger at any
+one of these, and say he does not do his duty.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Magic and Medicine.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Cuming Walters.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">Coleridge</span> once said that in the treatment of nervous cases &#8220;he is the best
+physician who is the most ingenious inspirer of hope.&#8221; The great &#8220;faith
+cures&#8221; are worked by such physicians, and the dealers in magic at all
+times and in all parts achieved their successes by inspiring hope in their
+patients. The more credulous the invalid the more easy the cure, no matter
+what remedy is applied. Is it surprising, then, to find that among the
+more childlike races, or that among the infant civilizations, magic often
+supersedes medicine, or is combined with it? Ceremonies which impress the
+mind and act upon the imagination considerably aid the physician in his
+treatment of susceptible persons. Paracelsus himself combined astrology
+with alchemy and medicine, and his host of followers often went further
+than their master, and relied more upon magic than upon specific remedies.
+It was the crowd of charlatans, astrologers, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>wonder-workers, and their
+sort who substituted magic for medicine, and who had so great an influence
+in England three centuries ago, that Ben Jonson scourged with the lash of
+his satire in &#8220;The Alchemist,&#8221; the impostor described as</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span style="margin-left: 7em;">&#8220;A rare physician,</span><br />
+An excellent Paracelsian, and has done<br />
+Strange cures with mineral physic. He deals all<br />
+With spirits, he; he will not hear a word<br />
+Of Galen, or his tedious recipes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There has generally been sufficient superstition in all races to make
+amulets the popular means of averting calamity and preserving from
+sickness. The Greeks, the Romans, the Jews, the Turks, and the Arabs, to
+say nothing of less civilized races, have thoroughly believed that disease
+can be charmed away by the simple expedient of wearing a token, or
+carrying a talisman. The magical formula of Abracadabra, written in the
+form of a triangle, sufficed to cure agues and fevers; the Abraxas stones
+warded off epidemics; the coins of St. Helena served as talismans, and
+cured epilepsy. So strong was the belief in these magical protectors in
+the fourth century that the clergy were forbidden, under heavy penalties
+to make or to sell the charms, and in the eighth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> century the Christian
+Church forbade amulets to be longer worn. In this connection it may be
+mentioned that the custom of placing the wedding-ring upon the fourth
+finger of the left hand owes its origin to the ancients who resorted to
+magic for the cure of their ailments. The Greeks and the Romans believed
+that the finger in question contained a vein communicating directly with
+the heart, and that nothing could come in contact with it without giving
+instant warning to the seat of life. For this reason they were accustomed
+to stir up mixtures and potions with this &#8220;medicated finger,&#8221; as it was
+called, and when the ring became the symbol of marriage that finger was
+chosen of all others for the wearing of it. Thus do we unknowingly keep
+alive the superstitions of other times.</p>
+
+<p>The Hindoos, whose books on the healing art date back to 1500 <span class="smcaplc">B.C.</span>,
+regarded sickness as the result of the operation of malevolent deities who
+were either to be propitiated by prayers, offerings, charms, and
+sacrifices, or to be overcome with the aid of friendly gods. The early
+Greeks when suffering from disease were cured, not by means of medicine,
+but by religious observances, and particularly by the &#8220;temple-sleep,&#8221;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> in
+which they dreamt dreams which the priests interpreted, and in which were
+found the suggestions for remedy. It was Hippocrates, in 460 <span class="smcaplc">B.C.</span>, who
+first proclaimed that disease was not of supernatural origin, and that it
+could not be combated or cured by magic. But for many centuries later in
+Europe the Black Art had greater sway than rational treatment. In Sweden
+it is even now common for the lower classes to ascribe sickness to the
+visitation of spirits (Nisse), who must be mollified by pouring liquor
+into a goblet and mixing with it the filings of a bride-ring, or filings
+of silver, or of any metal that has been inherited. The mixture is taken
+to the place where the man is supposed to have caught his illness, and is
+poured over the left shoulder, not a syllable being uttered the while.
+After the performance of this ceremony the invalid may hope to recover.</p>
+
+<p>Consecrated grave-mould is supposed by many primitive races to have
+particular properties as a medicine. The Shetlander who has a &#8220;stitch in
+his side,&#8221; cures himself by applying to the affected part, some dry mould
+brought from a grave, and heated, care being taken to remove the mould and
+to return it before the setting of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> sun. In the neighbouring isles of
+Orkney, magic is also resorted to as a remedy for disease. Perhaps the
+least harmful of the rites is the washing of a cat in the water which had
+previously served for an invalid&#8217;s ablutions, the confident belief being
+that the disease would by this means be transferred to the animal. This
+custom of &#8220;substitution&#8221; is found in many races, and is one of the most
+interesting subjects introduced to the student of folk-lore.</p>
+
+<p>In Tibet, for example, when all ordinary remedies have failed, the Lamas
+make a dummy to represent the sick person, and they adorn the image with
+trinkets. By ceremonies and prayers the sickness of the patient is laid
+upon the dummy, after which it is taken out and burned, the Lamas
+appropriating the ornaments as a reward. Sir Walter Scott tells of a
+similar case which occurred in Scotland. Lady Katharine Fowlis made a
+model in clay of a person whom she wished to afflict, and shot at the
+image in the hope that the wound would be transferred to the real person.
+We have only to turn to Scott&#8217;s &#8220;Demonology and Witchcraft&#8221; to find
+hundreds of instances of the unshaken belief of the Highlanders in mystic
+potions, pills, drugs, and drops;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> and not even wholesale burnings of the
+dealers in white magic could induce the people to forsake their
+superstitions. Bessie Dunlop told the Court, before which she was
+arraigned, of the magic elixirs given to her by Thome Reid, who had been
+killed in battle centuries before, but had appeared to her as an
+apparition, and begged her to fly with him to Elf-land. By means of his
+medicines she cured the most stubborn diseases, obtained the reputation of
+a wise woman, and grew so rich that the eye of the law was drawn upon her,
+and, after her confession was made, she was ordered to be burnt. As Scott
+said, in one of his chapters, the Scottish law did not acquit those who
+accomplished even praiseworthy actions, and &#8220;the proprietor of a patent
+medicine who should in those days have attested his having wrought such
+miracles as we see sometimes advertised might have forfeited his life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The idea of sacrificing something, or someone, to appease the anger of the
+powers who bring affliction upon mankind, is extremely common, and by no
+means confined to savage nations or to very ancient times. At the time of
+the Black Plague in the fourteenth century the fanaticism of the French
+led them to sacrifice 12,000 Jews<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> by torture and burning, these
+Israelites being deemed the cause of the affliction. In the &#8220;Ingoldsby
+Legends&#8221; may be read a ghastly account of a similar sacrifice in Spain, in
+order to secure the good-will of the over-ruling powers on behalf of the
+Queen. Even in comparatively modern times the practice of sacrificing in
+order to cure or avert disease has not been unknown, and this in civilized
+lands, too. The sacrifices in these cases have, of course, been of animals
+only, but the germ of the old and worse ritual is found in the custom. In
+1767, the people of Mull, in consequence of a disease among the cattle,
+agreed to perform an incantation. They carried to the top of Carnmoor a
+wheel and nine spindles of oakwood. Every fire in the houses was
+extinguished; and the wheel was then turned from east to west over the
+nine spindles long enough to produce fire by friction. They then
+sacrificed a heifer, which they cut in pieces and burnt while yet alive.
+Finally they lighted their own hearths from the pile, while an old man
+repeated the words of incantation. This custom is prevalent in Ireland, in
+various parts of Scotland, and even in England and Wales it has been
+practised with variations and some modification. In Cornwall,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> in 1800, a
+calf was burnt alive to arrest the murrain. Mr. Laurence Gomme has traced
+the custom back to the sacrifice of animals for human sickness, for in
+1678 four men were actually prosecuted for &#8220;sacrificing a bull in a
+heathenish manner for the recovery of the health of Custane Mackenzie.&#8221; In
+Ireland a cure for small-pox consisted in sacrificing a sheep to a wooden
+image, wrapping the skin about the sick person, and then eating the sheep.</p>
+
+<p>In Scotland strange and weird customs linger, and Sir H. G. Reid in his
+entertaining volume, &#8220;&#8217;Tween Gloamin&#8217; and the Mirk,&#8221; has related how he
+himself, during infancy, underwent a mysterious cure for the &#8220;falling
+sickness.&#8221; He was carried secretly away to a lonely hut on the distant
+moor, and the party were admitted to a long, low-roofed apartment, dimly
+lighted from two small windows. In one corner sat an old woman, wrinkled
+and silent, busily knitting; a huge peat-fire blazed on the open hearth,
+shooting heavy sparks up through the hole in the roof, and filling the
+apartment with smoke. No word was spoken, and the scene must have been as
+eerie as the lover of mystery or the believer in witchcraft could have
+desired. &#8220;I was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> placed on a three-legged stool in the middle of the
+floor&#8221; (the writer continues); &#8220;the old woman rose, and with the aid of
+immense tongs, took deliberately from the fire seven large smooth round
+stones, they were planted one by one in an irregular circle about me; with
+her dull dark eyes closed, and open white palms outstretched, the
+enchantress muttered some mystic words; it was over&mdash;the tremulous patient
+was taken up as &#8216;cured!&#8217;&#8221; In Scotland the belief in witches who have power
+both to cure and to cause maladies is so deeply founded that it would be
+rash to deny its continued existence. These creatures are credited with
+opening graves for the purpose of taking out joints of the fingers and
+toes of dead bodies, with some of the winding-sheet, in order to prepare
+powders. In Kirkwall a small portion of the human skull was taken from the
+graveyard and grated to a powder in order to be used in a mixture for the
+cure of fits; while in Caithness the patient was made to drink from a
+suicide&#8217;s skull, and the beverage so taken was regarded as a sovereign
+specific for epilepsy. In 1643 one John Drugh was indicted for this
+despoiling of corpses for some such purpose. The Australian aborigines
+had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> a belief not altogether dissimilar to this. They rubbed weak persons
+with the fat of a corpse, and thought that the strength, courage, and
+valour of the dead man was communicated to the body subjected to the
+treatment. Analogies may be found among savage tribes all over the world,
+and the culmination is found in the devouring of enemies, not out of
+revenge, but because the widespread primitive idea prevails that by eating
+the flesh and by drinking the blood of the slain, a man absorbs the nature
+or the life of the deceased into his own body. In other words, cannibalism
+has a medical origin which the most depraved superstition suggested and
+fortified.</p>
+
+<p>The Lhoosai, a savage hill-tribe in India, teach their young warriors to
+eat a piece of the liver of the first man they kill in order to strengthen
+their hearts, and here we see the development of the magic power of the
+medicines which is not only efficacious for the body, but for the spirit.</p>
+
+<p>When Coleridge was a little boy at the Blue Coat School, he relates in his
+Table Talk, there was a &#8220;charm for one&#8217;s foot when asleep,&#8221; which he
+believed had been in the school since its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> foundation in the time of King
+Edward VI. Its potency lay in the words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Crosses three we make to ease us,<br />
+Two for the thieves, and one for Christ Jesus.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The same charm served for cramp in the leg, and Coleridge quaintly adds:
+&#8220;Really, upon getting out of bed, where the cramp most frequently
+occurred, pressing the sole of the foot on the cold floor, and then
+repeating this charm, I can safely affirm that I do not remember an
+instance in which the cramp did not go away in a few seconds.&#8221; Charms like
+this, by which a simple method of cure is invested with marvel, are common
+enough among primitive races, and not infrequently provide the key to the
+solution of the mystery of the magician&#8217;s triumph. The cunning leaders,
+priests, or medicine-men of ignorant nations maintain their ascendency by
+ascribing to miracle the simplest feats they perform.</p>
+
+<p>The superstitious red man is completely at the mercy of the medicine-man
+who claims to possess supernatural powers, and who assumes the ability to
+work marvellous cures by magic. Each North American Indian carries with
+him a medicine bag obtained under very curious <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>circumstances. When he is
+approaching manhood he sets forth in search of the patent drug which is to
+shield him from all danger, and act as an all-powerful talisman. He lies
+down alone in the woods upon a litter of twigs, eats and drinks nothing
+for several days, and at last falls asleep from sheer exhaustion. Then he
+dreams&mdash;or should do so&mdash;and whatever bird, or beast, or reptile, forms
+the subject of his dream, he must seek as his medicine. He goes forth upon
+the quest directly his strength has returned, and when he has discovered
+the animal of his vision, he turns its skin into a pouch, and wears it
+ever afterwards round his neck. In peace or war he will never part with
+this talisman; it is the treasure of his life, a sacred possession, a
+charm against all maladies, and a protection from foes. It is scarcely
+necessary to add, after this, that the medicine-man of the tribe is held
+in highest honour, and regarded as a worker of veritable miracles. All
+things are possible to him. By his prayers, his rites, and his
+incantations he causes the sun to shine, the rain to descend, the rivers
+to deepen, the plants to thrive. A traveller tells us that a drought had
+withered the maize fields, and the medicine-man was sent for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> to compel
+the rain to fall. On the first day one Wah-ku, or the Shield, came to the
+front, but failed; so did Om-pah, or the Elk. On succeeding days another
+was tried, but without success; but at last recourse was made to
+Wak-a-dah-ha-Ku, or the White Buffalo Hair, who possessed a shield
+coloured with red lightnings, and carried an arrow in his hand. Much was
+expected of him, and the people were not disappointed. &#8220;Taking his station
+by the medicine-lodge,&#8221; we are told, &#8220;he harangued the people, protesting
+that for the good of his tribe he was willing to sacrifice himself, and
+that if he did not bring the much desired rain he was content to live for
+the rest of his life with the old women and the dogs. He asserted that the
+first medicine-man had failed because his shield warded off the rain
+clouds; the second, who wore a head-dress made of a raven&#8217;s skin, because
+the raven was a bird that soared above the storm, and cared not whether
+the rain came or stayed; and the third who wore a beaver skin, because the
+beaver was always wet and required no rain. But as for him, the red
+lightnings on his shield would attract the rain-clouds, and his arrow
+would pierce them, and pour the water over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> thirsty fields. It chanced
+that as he ended his oration, a steamer fired a salute from a twelve
+pounder gun. To the Indians the roar of the cannon was like the voice of
+thunder, and their joy knew no bounds. The successful medicine-man was
+loaded with valuable gifts; mothers hastened to offer their daughters to
+him in marriage; and the elder medicine-men hastened from the lodge to
+enrol him in their order.... Just before sunset his quick eyes discovered
+a black cloud which, unobserved by the noisy multitude, swiftly came up
+from the horizon. At once he assumed his station on the roof of the lodge,
+strung his bow, and made ready his arrow; arrested the attention of his
+fellows by his loud and exultant speech; and as the cloud impended over
+the village, shot his arrow into the sky. Lo, the rain descended in
+torrents, wetting the rain-maker to the skin, but establishing in
+everybody&#8217;s mind a firm and deep conviction of his power.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The influence of the medicine-man in time of sickness is illustrated in
+the narrative of Mr. Kane, who wrote &#8220;The Wanderings of an Artist.&#8221; He
+heard a great noise in one of the villages, and found that a handsome
+Indian girl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> was extremely ill. The medicine-man sat in the middle of the
+room, crossed-legged and naked; a wooden dish filled with water was before
+him, and he had guaranteed to rid the girl of her disease which afflicted
+her side. He commenced by singing and gesticulating in a violent manner,
+the others who surrounded him beating drums with sticks. This lasted
+half-an-hour. Then the medicine-man determined on a radical cure of the
+patient, for he darted suddenly upon the girl, dug his teeth into her side
+(for she was undressed), and shook her for several minutes. This increased
+her agony, but the medicine-man declared he had &#8220;got it,&#8221; and held his
+hands to his mouth. After this he plunged his hands into a bowl of water,
+leaving the spectators to believe that he had torn out the disease with
+his teeth, and was now destroying it by drowning. Eventually he withdrew
+his hand from the bowl, and it was found that he held a piece of cartilage
+between the finger and thumb. This was cut in two, and half cast into the
+fire, half into the water. So ended the operation, and Mr. Kane records
+that though the doctor was perfectly satisfied, the patient seemed, if
+anything, to be worse for the treatment.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>The belief in magic was ingrained in the Egyptians, who, notwithstanding
+that the art of medicine was far advanced with them, preferred to trust in
+the workers of miracles and enchantments. In his recent collection of
+Egyptian Tales, Mr. Flinders-Petrie is able to supply a striking instance
+of this credulity. A man named Dedi was said to have such powers over life
+and death that he could restore the head that had been smitten from the
+body. He was brought before the King, who desired to put this marvellous
+power to the test, and the story thus proceeds:&mdash;&#8220;His Majesty said, &#8216;Let
+one bring me a prisoner who is in prison that his punishment may be
+fulfilled.&#8217; And Dedi said, &#8216;Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold
+we do not even thus to our cattle.&#8217; And a duck was brought unto him, and
+its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall,
+and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic
+speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came
+likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked.
+And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it.
+His Majesty caused an ox to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> brought, and its head cast on the ground.
+And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and
+followed him with his halter trailing on the ground.&#8221; This story prepares
+us in every way for the information that the Egyptians, despite their
+great knowledge of the curative powers of herbs and drugs, preferred to
+rely upon enchanters, soothsayers, and magicians in their time of illness
+and peril.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Douglas, in his &#8220;Society in China,&#8221; devotes a very interesting
+and entertaining chapter to medicine as regarded and practised by the
+Celestials. From this we learn that while there are plenty of doctors in
+the land, they are one and all the merest empirics, who prey on the folly,
+the ignorance, and the dread of the uneducated people. The failure to cure
+any disease brings no odium upon the quack, though when the late Emperor
+&#8220;ascended on a dragon to be a guest on high,&#8221; or, in other words, died of
+small-pox, his physicians who could not save him from that distinction
+were deprived of honours and rewards. The Chinese are centuries behind
+other nations in medicine, and they have not yet learnt that the blood
+circulates in the body, or that a limb may be removed with beneficial
+effects<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> in case of some diseases or accidents. They believe that arteries
+and veins are one and the same, and that the pulses communicate with the
+various organs of the body. The object of the physician is to &#8220;strengthen
+the breath, stimulate the gate of life, restore harmony.&#8221; &#8220;The heart is
+the husband, and the hinges are the wife,&#8221; and they must be brought into
+agreement, or evil arises. Good results may be obtained, it is believed,
+by such tonics as dog-flesh, dried red-spotted lizard-skins,
+tortoise-shell, fresh tops of stag-horns, bones and teeth of dragons (when
+obtainable), shavings of rhinoceros-horns, and such like. For dyspepsia
+the doctor has no nostrum, but he thrusts a needle into the patient&#8217;s
+liver and expects him to be immediately cured. When cholera or any other
+pestilence sweeps over the land, the Chinese feel the helplessness of
+their physicians, so they resort to charms, and to the offering of gifts
+to the gods by way of staying the plague. Hydrophobia is common among the
+half-starved curs which infest the streets, and the cure for it&mdash;quite
+unknown to Pasteur&mdash;is the curd of the black pea dried and pulverised,
+mixed with hemp oil, and formed into a large ball; this is to be rolled
+over the wound, then broken open,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> and kept on rolling until it has lost
+its hair-like appearance. To complete the cure the patient must abstain
+from eating &#8220;anything in a state of decomposition.&#8221; He might just as well
+be told not to poison himself. If, by the way, the prescription does not
+work, but hydrophobia continues, the patient is strongly commended to try
+the effect of &#8220;the skull, teeth, and toes of a tiger ground up, and given
+in wine in doses of one-fifth of an ounce.&#8221; While the tiger is being
+caught, however, a fatal result may occur, but of course the Chinese
+doctor is not to be blamed for that. He has done his best, and the fault
+is obviously the tiger&#8217;s. The Chinese believe in astrology, the
+philosopher&#8217;s stone, and the elixir of life. A plant known as ginseng is
+said to greatly prolong and sweeten existence, and sometimes as much as a
+thousand taels of silver are given for a pound&#8217;s weight of the precious
+root. It will be seen, therefore, from such facts as these that a Galen in
+China would have a vast revolution to undertake, and that a thousand
+Galens at least would be required to overcome the prejudices and uproot
+the superstitions of the race. The great value which the Chinese attach to
+the bones, horns, tusks, and eyes of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> animals may be judged from various
+tonics and remedies which are in great request among all classes. A dose
+of tigers&#8217; bones inspires courage; an elephant&#8217;s eye burnt to powder and
+mixed with human milk is a sovereign remedy for inflammation of the eye;
+pulverised elephants&#8217; bones cure indigestion; a preparation of elephants&#8217;
+ivory is the recognised cure for diabetes; and the same animal&#8217;s teeth may
+be used for epilepsy. But if the patient cannot eat rice his case is
+abandoned as hopeless, and not even the physician who deals most
+extensively in magic pills, ointments, and decoctions will attempt to save
+the obstinate person&#8217;s life.</p>
+
+<p>The medicine-men of the Eskimos were called angekoks, and enjoyed the
+unlimited confidence of the people. They were said to have equal power
+over heaven and earth, this world and the next. This made them useful as
+friends and dangerous as enemies. The Eskimo, therefore, set out upon no
+enterprise without consulting the angekoks, who granted blessings,
+exorcised demons, and gave charms against disease. These medicine-men have
+a profound belief in themselves, and though they resort to jugglery and
+ventriloquism to deceive their visitors, they appear to have no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> idea that
+they are perpetrating an imposture. Their particular powers, they think,
+are derived from more than human sources. Dr. Nansen, in his &#8220;Eskimo
+Life,&#8221; points out that it has always been to the interests of the
+medicine-men and the priests to sustain and mature superstitions or
+religious ideas. &#8220;They must therefore themselves appear to believe in
+them; they may even discover new precepts of divinity to their own
+advantage, and thereby increase both their power and their revenues.&#8221; The
+Greenlanders believe that the angekoks work with the help of ministering
+spirits, called <i>t&ocirc;rnat</i>, who are often none other than the souls of dead
+persons, especially of grandfathers; but not infrequently the <i>t&ocirc;rnat</i> are
+supposed to be the souls of departed animals, or of fairies. The angekok
+is assumed to have several of these councillors always at hand. They
+render help in the time of danger, and may even act as avengers or
+destroyers. In the latter case they show themselves as ghosts, and so
+frighten to death the persons against whom vengeance is directed.
+Therefore, as Dr. Nansen reports, the angekoks are the wisest and also the
+craftiest of all Eskimos. They assert that they have the power of
+conversing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> with spirits, of travelling in the under-world, of conjuring
+up powerful spirits, and of obtaining revelations. &#8220;They influence and
+work upon their countrymen principally through their mystic exorcisms and
+<i>seances</i>, which occur as a rule in the winter, when they are living in
+houses. The lamps are extinguished, and skins hung before the windows. The
+angekok himself sits upon the floor. By dint of making a horrible noise so
+that the whole house shakes, changing his voice, bellowing and shrieking,
+ventriloquising, groaning, moaning, and whining, beating on drums,
+bursting forth into diabolical shrieks of laughter and all sorts of other
+tricks, he persuades his companions that he is visited by the various
+spirits he personates, and that it is they who make the disturbance.&#8221; They
+cure diseases by reciting charms, and &#8220;give men a new soul.&#8221; He demands
+large fees, not for himself, he explains, but for the spirits whose agent
+he is. Apparently these spirits have similar ideas to the London
+consulting physician.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Theodore Bent, in his &#8220;Ruined Cities of Mashonaland,&#8221; gives a specimen
+of the credulity excited by the medicine-men. The explorer desired to
+interview a chief, Mtoko by name, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> permission was refused. The reason,
+he afterwards ascertained, was that the chief&#8217;s father had died shortly
+after another white man&#8217;s visit, and the common belief was that he had
+been bewitched. The chief thought that the &#8220;white lady&#8221; who ruled over the
+nation to which Mr. Bent belonged had sent him purposely to cast a glamour
+over him. It may be remembered that the ill-fated Lobengula refused to
+have his portrait taken because he believed that by means of the image of
+himself he could be magically infected with a dread disease. This idea of
+substitution, which has already been referred to, is akin to that of the
+belief in witchcraft during the middle ages&mdash;namely, that the witches
+could, by sticking pins into the wax image of a person, bring upon that
+person agonising maladies. The dreadful results of such beliefs among
+savage tribes is told by the two hospital nurses who a year or so ago
+produced a lively book, &#8220;Adventures in Mashonaland.&#8221; One morning a native
+entered their camp, bringing a tale of horror. A chief called Maronka,
+whose kraal was about forty miles away, had boiled his family alive. He
+had been convinced by the native doctors that after death the souls of the
+chiefs passed into the bodies of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> lions. His medicine-men had &#8220;smelt out&#8221;
+his own family as witches, and boiling alive was the requisite punishment.
+Mr. Rider Haggard has told many such stories as this in his books on South
+Africa. The Zulu doctors were in the habit, not only of &#8220;smelling out&#8221;
+witches and evil spirits, but of sprinkling the soldiers with medicine, in
+order to &#8220;put a great heart into them,&#8221; and ensure their victory in
+battle.</p>
+
+<p>Customs like these gave Charles Dickens his opportunity of writing two of
+his most scathing satires &#8220;The Noble Savage&#8221; and &#8220;The Medicine Man of
+Civilisation.&#8221; He refused to subscribe to the popular and amiable
+sentiment that the African barbarian was an interesting survival, or that
+the Ojibbeway Indian was picturesque. After a severe indictment of them,
+Dickens instanced their customs in medicine as a proof of their
+irremediable depravity. &#8220;When the noble savage finds himself a little
+unwell,&#8221; he wrote, &#8220;and mentions the circumstance to his friends, it is
+immediately perceived that he is under the influence of witchcraft. A
+learned personage, called an Imyanger, or Witch Doctor, is sent for to
+Nooker the Umtargartie, or smell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> out the witch. The male inhabitants of
+the kraal being seated on the ground, the learned doctor, got up like a
+grizzly bear, appears and administers a dance of the most terrific nature,
+during the exhibition of which remedy he incessantly gnashes his teeth,
+and howls,&mdash;&#8216;I am the original physician to Nooker the Umtargartie. Yow,
+yow, yow! No connection with any other establishment. Till, till, till!
+All other Umtargarties are feigned Umtargarties, Boroo, Boroo! but I
+perceive here a genuine and real Umtargartie, Hoosh, Hoosh, Hoosh! in
+whose blood, I, the original Imyanger and Nookerer, will wash these bear&#8217;s
+claws of mine!&#8217; All this time the learned physician is looking out among
+the attentive faces for some unfortunate man who owes him a cow, or who
+has given him any small offence, or against whom, without offence, he has
+conceived a spite. Him he never fails to Nooker as the Umtargartie, and he
+is instantly killed.&#8221; This is no burlesque, and I have given the record in
+Dickens&#8217;s inimitable language because it most vividly sets before us the
+custom of the medicine-men of barbarous races. But the medicine-men of
+Longfellow&#8217;s description, the men who came to appease and console
+Hiawatha, who</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+&#8220;Walked in silent, grave procession,<br />
+Bearing each a pouch of healing,<br />
+Skin of beaver, lynx, or otter,<br />
+Filled with magic roots and simples,<br />
+Filled with very potent medicines,&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;these may be accepted as the milder type of magicians who, among a
+primitive people, claimed not only to be able to heal the living, but to
+restore the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Austine Waddell, in his exhaustive work on the Buddhism of Tibet,
+tells us that a very popular form of Buddha is as &#8220;the supreme physician&#8221;
+or Buddhist &AElig;sculapius, the idea of whom is derived from an ancient legend
+of the &#8220;medicine-king&#8221; who dispensed spiritual medicine. The images of
+this Buddha are worshipped as fetishes, and they cure by sympathetic
+magic. The supplicant, after bowing and praying, rubs his finger over the
+eye, knee, or particular part of the image corresponding to the affected
+part on his own body, and then applies the finger carrying this hallowed
+touch to the afflicted spot. Mr. Waddell says that this constant friction
+is rather detrimental to the features of the god; whether it is beneficial
+to the man&#8217;s body is of course largely a matter of faith and
+circumstances. As might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> be expected, talismans to ward off evils from
+malignant planets and demons, whence come all diseases, are in great
+request. The eating of the paper on which a charm has been written is
+considered by the Tibetan to be the easiest and most certain method of
+curing a malady, and the spells which the Lamas use in this way are called
+&#8220;za-yig,&#8221; or edible letters. A still more mystical way of applying these
+remedies, according to Mr. Waddell, is by the washings of the reflection
+of the writing in a mirror, a habit common in other quarters of the globe.
+In Gambia, for instance, this treatment is relied upon by the natives. A
+doctor is called in, he examines the patient, and then sits down at the
+bedside and writes in Arabic characters on a slate some sentences from the
+Koran. The slate is then washed, and the dirty infusion is drunk by the
+patient. In Tibet, Chinese ink is smeared on wood, and every twenty-nine
+days the inscription reflected in a mirror. The face of the mirror during
+the reflection is washed with beer, and the drainings are collected in a
+cup for the patient&#8217;s use. This is a special cure for the evil eye. The
+medicine-men of Tibet can also supply charms against bullets and weapons,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+charms for the clawing of animals, charms to ward off cholera, and even
+charms to prevent domestic broils. This is surely evidence of high
+civilisation.</p>
+
+<p>It would be hopeless to endeavour to exhaust this subject. Only a few
+selected instances can be given to illustrate how large a part magic has
+played, and still plays, in the healing art. Medicine is by no means freed
+of its superstitions yet, and the success of quack advertisements of the
+day abundantly proves that the civilised public is still prone to believe
+that universal remedies are obtainable, and that miracles can be wrought.</p>
+
+<p>Modern medical science, as one of its great exponents has pointed out,
+plays a waiting game when miracles are spoken of, and when magic is
+claimed to supersede specific remedies. &#8220;When it is asked to believe in
+the violent and erratic violation of laws of matter and force, science
+stands on an impregnable rock, fenced round by bulwarks of logical fact,
+and flanked by the bastions of knowledge of nature and her constitution.&#8221;
+And as exact knowledge spreads, Prospero will have no alternative but to
+break his staff, and bury it fathoms deep.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Chaucer&#8217;s Doctor of Physic.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By W. H. Thompson.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">In</span> the &#8220;Canterbury Tales&#8221; we have an inimitable gallery of fourteenth
+century portraits, drawn from life, with all a great master&#8217;s delicacy of
+finish and touch. And in none of these pictures does Chaucer excel himself
+more than in that of his &#8220;Doctor of Physic.&#8221; We may take it for granted
+that the portrait is no mere fanciful one, with its pre-Raphaelite
+minuteness of detail, sketched with the poet&#8217;s own peculiar skill. With
+what mischievous and yet altogether playful and good-natured humour is the
+man of medicine presented to us!</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;With us there was a doctour of phisike<br />
+In all this world ne was there none like him<br />
+To speak of phisike and of surgerie.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>What manner of man was this paragon of medical knowledge? In personal
+appearance he was somewhat of an exquisite. &#8220;Clothes are unspeakably
+significant&#8221; saith the immortal Teufelsdrockh, and every practitioner who
+has his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> <i>clientele</i> largely yet to make knows the importance of being
+well dressed. Chaucer&#8217;s grave graduate was apparelled in a purple surcoat,
+and a blue and white furred hood.</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;In sanguine and in perse he clad was all<br />
+Lined with taffata and with sendall,&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>and yet no luxurious sybarite by any means was he,</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Of his diet measureable was he,<br />
+For it was no superfluity,<br />
+But of great nourishing and digestable.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A man of simple habits, even perhaps given to holding his purse strings
+somewhat tightly.</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;He was but easy of expense,<br />
+He kept that he won in pestilence.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For, as the poet adds with his characteristic merry sly humour,</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Gold in physic is a cordial,<br />
+Therefore he loved gold in special.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The science of medicine since Chaucer&#8217;s day has made extraordinary
+advances, and it is only fair to judge his doctor by contemporary
+standards. To-day, we fear, he would be largely regarded as little better
+than a charlatan and a quack. It is true, he was acquainted with all the
+authorities, ancient and modern, from &AElig;sculapius and Galen down to
+Gaddesden, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> author of the &#8220;Rosa Anglica,&#8221; the great English book of
+fourteenth century medicine. But this last named luminary of physic would
+aid him very little on the road to true knowledge. This medical &#8220;Rose,&#8221;
+which Leland calls a &#8220;large and learned work,&#8221; only serves to illustrate
+the impotence of the professors of the healing arts at that period. This
+is the recipe of Gaddesden for the small-pox. &#8220;After this (the appearance
+of the eruption) cause the whole body of your patient to be wrapped in red
+scarlet cloth, and command everything about the bed to be made red. This
+is an excellent cure. It was in this manner I treated the son of the noble
+king of England when he had the small-pox, and I cured him without leaving
+any marks.&#8221; To cure epilepsy, he orders the patient &#8220;and his parents&#8221; to
+fast three days, and then go to church. &#8220;The patient must first confess,
+and he must have mass on Friday and Saturday, and then on Sunday the
+priest must read over the patient&#8217;s head the gospel for September, in the
+time of vintage after the feast of the Holy Cross.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> After this the priest
+shall write out this portion of the gospel reverently, and bind it about
+the patient&#8217;s neck, and he shall be cured.&#8221; If epilepsy was to be
+exorcised by such a remedy as this, we venture to assert that it must have
+been largely a case of faith-healing.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img07.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">GEOFFREY CHAUCER.</p>
+<p class="center">(<i>From Harleian M.S.&mdash;4866 fol. 91.</i>)</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>Seeing then that such was the condition of the science of medicine in
+Chaucer&#8217;s days, we must take with a good deal of reservation his statement
+that his doctor</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Knew the cause of every malady<br />
+Were it of cold, or hot, or moist, or dry,<br />
+And where engendered, and of what humour.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Anyhow, some of the remedies prescribed for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> the &#8220;sick man,&#8221; and the
+&#8220;drugs,&#8221; which his friends the apothecaries were so ready to supply, would
+have seemed extraordinary enough to us.</p>
+
+<p>The poet tells us the doctor&#8217;s study was but &#8220;little in the Bible,&#8221; and
+that though a &#8220;perfect practitioner,&#8221; the ground of his scientific
+knowledge was astronomy, <i>i.e.</i>, astrology; the &#8220;better part of medicine,&#8221;
+as Roger Bacon calls it. In dealing with his patients he was guided by
+&#8220;natural magic.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>To this practice Chaucer alludes in another of his poems, the &#8220;House of
+Fame.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;And clerks eke, which con well,<br />
+All this magic naturell,<br />
+That craftily do her intents,<br />
+To make in certain ascendents,<br />
+Images&mdash;lo through which magic,<br />
+To make a man be whole or sick.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>So that in spite of what appears to us the charlatanry in his make up, the
+doctor was supposed to be a person of importance in the eyes of his fellow
+pilgrims, with quite the standing of an accredited medical man of to-day,
+is evidenced by the manner in which mine host Bailly addresses him. Master
+Bailly was no particular respecter of persons, indeed, on the contrary, he
+was somewhat of a Philistine; yet he was all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> respect to this man of
+medicine. It is as &#8220;Sir&#8221; Doctor of Physic, the host addresses him; also
+declaring him to be a &#8220;proper man,&#8221; and like a prelate. After the story of
+chicanery related by the Canon&#8217;s Yeoman, it is to the physician he looks
+to tell a tale of &#8220;honest matter.&#8221; Such is his bearing towards him
+throughout.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor&#8217;s contribution to the &#8220;Canterbury Tales,&#8221; too, is of a serious,
+sober kind, in keeping with his character; and concludes with some sound
+moral advice. Therefore, whatever foibles he may have, the &#8220;doctor of
+physic&#8221; is presented to us as a sterling gentleman, no unworthy
+predecessor of those who to-day, on more modern lines, still follow in his
+footsteps.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p>
+<h2>The Doctors Shakespeare Knew.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By A. H. Wall.</span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>&#8220;O, mickle is the powerful grace that lies<br />
+In herbs, plants, shrubs, and their true qualities.<br />
+For nought so vile that on the earth doth live<br />
+But to the earth some special good doth give;<br />
+Nor ought so good, but, strained from that fair use<br />
+Revolts from true birth, stumbling on abuse.&#8221;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">&mdash;<i>Romeo and Juliet.</i></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&#8220;By medicine life may be prolong&#8217;d.&#8221;&mdash;<i>Cymbeline V. 5.</i></td></tr></table>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">In</span> Walckenaer&#8217;s &#8220;Memoirs of Madame de S&eacute;vign&eacute;,&#8221; and in the amusing,
+interesting volume which Gaston Boissier devoted to her works and letters,
+we have glimpses of the medical profession in France, which show us it was
+in her time and country, just what it was in England in the same century
+when it was known to Shakespeare. For one more or less genuine physician
+there were thousands of charlatans and quacks, and the contempt which our
+great dramatic poet frequently expresses in his works for medical
+practitioners must, in fairness, be regarded as applicable to the latter,
+not to the former. In 1884, an American writer on this subject (Dr. Rush
+Field, in his &#8220;Medical Thoughts of Shakespeare&#8221;) strove to show that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> our
+great philosophic poet and playwright&#8217;s opinion of all the medical
+practitioners was a low one. &#8220;He uses them frequently,&#8221; he says, &#8220;as a
+tool by which deaths are produced through the means of poison, and
+generally treats them with contempt.&#8221; That he might fairly do this, and
+that in doing it he rather displayed respect and regard for the genuine,
+more or less scientific professors of the healing art, can be very readily
+demonstrated by anyone at all familiar with his plays. But to return to
+Madame de S&eacute;vign&eacute;. At a time when she was growing old, when her letters
+speak so sadly of the dying condition of Cardinal de Retz at Commercy, of
+Madame de la Fayette&#8217;s being consumed by slow fever, and La Roche confined
+to his armchair by gout, of Corbinelle&#8217;s threatened insanity, and of his
+taking &#8220;potable gold&#8221; as a remedy for headache, she writes also of
+small-pox and other fevers having permanently settled at Versailles and
+Saint-Germain, where the King and Queen were attacked, and ladies and
+gentlemen of the Court were decimated, and cases of apoplexy and
+rheumatism were rapidly increasing in every direction. &#8220;Fashionable folk,
+used up with pleasure-making, sick through disappointed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> ambition,
+fidgetting without motive, agitating without aim, tainted with morbid
+fancies and suspicion,&#8221; found themselves in the doctor&#8217;s hands, and were
+far more ready to select practitioners who promised magically swift and
+easy cures, than those who spoke of slow and gradual recovery by means
+which were neither painless nor pleasurable. &#8220;Everybody,&#8221; says Boissur,
+&#8220;women included, battled with one another to possess marvellous secrets
+whereby obstinate complaints should be immediately cured. Madame Fouquet
+applied a plaster to the dying Queen, which cured her, to the great
+scandal of the Faculty unable to save her; and the Princess de Tarente
+served out drugs to all her people at Vitre.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img08.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE.</p>
+<p class="center">(<i>The Stratford Portrait.</i>)</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>Madame S&eacute;vign&eacute; wrote of her as &#8220;the best doctor in the upper classes; she
+has rare and valuable compounds of which she gives us three pinches with
+prodigious effect.&#8221; When writing to her daughter, she begs her not to
+neglect taking such medicines as &#8220;cherry water,&#8221; &#8220;extract of periwinkles,&#8221;
+&#8220;viper-broth,&#8221; &#8220;uric acid,&#8221; and &#8220;powdered crab&#8217;s-eyes.&#8221; She says the
+extract of periwinkles &#8220;endowed Madame de Grignam with a second youth.&#8221;
+Writing to her daughter, &#8220;If you use it, when you re-appear so fair
+people will cry, &#8216;O&#8217;er what blessed flower can she have walked,&#8217; then I
+will answer &#8216;On the periwinkle.&#8217;&#8221; She tells, too, how the Capuchins, who
+still retained their ancient medical reputation, treated the rheumatism in
+her leg &#8220;with plants bruised and applied twice a day; taken off while wet
+twice a day, and buried in the earth, so that as they rotted away her
+pains might in like way decrease.&#8221; &#8220;It&#8217;s a pity you ran and told the
+surgeons this,&#8221; she says to her daughter,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> &#8220;for they roar with laughter at
+it, but I do not care a fig for them.&#8221; In like way Madame de Scudery tells
+Bassy, &#8220;There is an abb&eacute; here who is making a great bother by curing by
+sympathy. For fever of all kinds, so they say, he takes the patient&#8217;s
+spittle and mingles it with an egg, and gives it to a dog; the dog dies
+and the patient recovers.... They say he has cured a quantity of people.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Turning from these illustrations of medical practice in France to see how
+identical it is with that adopted in England when Shakespeare lived, we
+recall the advice of that eminent gentleman, Andrew Rourde, who recommends
+people to wash their faces once a week only, using a scarlet cloth to wipe
+them dry upon, as a sure remedy in certain cases. In other instances we
+find that certain pills made from the skulls of murderers taken down from
+gibbets, and ground to powder for that purpose, were popular as medicine,
+that a draught of water drunk from a murdered man&#8217;s skull had wonderful
+medicinal properties, and that the blood of a dragon was absolutely
+miraculous in the cures it effected. The touch of a dead man&#8217;s hand was
+another ghastly remedy in common use, and the powder of mummy was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+wonderful cure for certain grave complaints. Love-philtres were also
+regarded from a medicinal point of view, and the strange doings of quack
+<i>accoucheurs</i> are not less absurdly terrible. That the seventeenth century
+physician himself was not always proof against these products of ancient
+ignorance and superstition, is abundantly apparent. Van Helmont, the son
+of a nobleman, born in Brussels, and very carefully educated for his
+profession, practised both medicine and magic medicinally. He rejected
+Galen, inclined to that illiterate pretender Paracelsus, and determined
+that the only way by which he could defy disease, and utterly destroy it,
+was through what he called <i>Arch&aelig;us</i>. Speaking of digestion, for instance,
+he denied that it was either chemical or mechanical in its nature, but the
+result of this <i>Arch&aelig;us</i>, a spiritual activity, working in a very
+mysteriously complicated way, for both evil and good. It has been said
+that he was one of Lord Bacon&#8217;s disciples, but for that assertion there
+certainly is no sufficient foundation, for Bacon, if a mystic by
+inclination, was logical in reasoning. In England Van Helmont had an
+English follower in the person of another physician, Dr. Fludd, a disciple
+of the famous inventor of the camera<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> obscura, and conjecturally the first
+photographer. His grand quack remedy was &#8220;the powder of sympathy,&#8221; which
+was the &#8220;sword-salve&#8221; of Paracelsus (composed of moss taken from the skull
+of a gibbetted murderer, of warm human blood, human suet, linseed oil,
+turpentine, etc.). This was applied, not to the wound, but to the sword
+that inflicted it, kept &#8220;in a cool place!&#8221; Certain plants pulled up with
+the left hand were regarded as a sure remedy in fever cases, but the
+gatherer, while gathering, was not to look behind, for that deprived the
+plants of their medicinal value.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst other physicians of Shakespeare&#8217;s century was Mr. Valentine
+Greatrake, who came to London from Ireland, where his supposed magical
+cures had been awakening a great sensation. He hired a large house in
+Lincoln&#8217;s Inn Fields, to which vast crowds of patients of all kinds and
+conditions crowded daily, all clamouring to be cured. He received them in
+their order, says an eye-witness, with &#8220;a grave and simple countenence.&#8221;
+For, as Shakespeare wrote, &#8220;Thus credulous fools are caught.&#8221; (&#8220;Comedy of
+Errors,&#8221; 1, 2.) Greatrake (afterwards executed for high treason) asserted
+that every diseased<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> person was possessed by a devil, and that by his
+prayers and laying on of hands the devil could be cast out. Lord Conway
+sent for him to cure an incurable disease from which his wife was
+suffering, and even some of the most learned and eminent people of the
+time were amongst his patrons. St. Evremond wrote, &#8220;You can hardly imagine
+what a reputation he gained in a short time. Catholics and Protestants
+visited him from every part, all believing that power from heaven was in
+his hands.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In an Act of Parliament which was passed in the year 1511, we read, in its
+preamble, that &#8220;the science and cunning of Physic and Surgery&#8221; was
+exercised by &#8220;a great multitude of ignorant persons, of whom the greater
+part have no manner of insight in the same, nor in any other kind of
+learning&mdash;some also can read no letters in the book&mdash;so far forth that
+common artificers, as smiths, weavers, and women, boldly and accostumably
+took upon them great cures, and things of great difficulty, in which they
+partly used sorceries and witchcraft, and partly supplied such medicines
+unto the diseased as are very noisome, and nothing meet therefore; to the
+high displeasure of God,&#8221; etc.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>A large number of the pretended remedies thus used in medical practice are
+clearly traceable back to the ancient Magi, who were professors of
+medicine, as well as priests and astrologers.</p>
+
+<p>With these facts before you, turn to your Shakespeare, and see how he
+regarded the popular delusions thus created and fostered, with their</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Distinguished cheaters, prating mountebanks,<br />
+And many such libertines of sin.&#8221;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">&mdash;<i>Comedy of Errors.</i></span></p>
+
+<p>Do you remember the other lines from this source, in which the poet speaks
+of &#8220;This pernicious slave,&#8221; who &#8220;forsooth took on him as a conjurer, and,
+gazing in mine eyes, feeling my pulse, and with no face, as&#8217;t were,
+outfacing me, cried out I was possessed.&#8221; This is not the stern, grave
+doctor in &#8220;Macbeth,&#8221; who did not pretend to &#8220;raze out the written troubles
+of the brain,&#8221; but said, &#8220;Therein the patient must minister unto himself.&#8221;
+There is no depreciation of the healing art in Shakespeare&#8217;s painting of
+Lear&#8217;s physician, as there is of the &#8220;caitiff wretch&#8221; of an apothecary,
+who sold poison to Romeo in a very different way to that in which the
+physician in Cymbeline supplied a deadly drug to the Queen. &#8220;I beseech
+your grace,&#8221; says he,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> speaking in solemn earnestness, &#8220;without offence
+(my conscience bids me ask) wherefore you have commanded of me these most
+poisonous compounds.&#8221; In &#8220;All&#8217;s well that Ends Well,&#8221; you will recognize
+the foregoing descriptions of medicinal delusions in the interview between
+Helena and the King, who says, we &#8220;may not be so credulous of cure, when
+our most learned doctors leave us, and the congregated college have
+concluded that labouring art can never ransom Nature from her maid estate,
+I say we must not so stain our judgment, or corrupt our hope, to
+prostitute our past-cure malady to empirics.&#8221; In this play both &#8220;Galen and
+Paracelsus&#8221; are mentioned, and their names then represented rival schools
+of medicine.</p>
+
+<p>How smartly and merrily Shakespeare wrote of such cures as Greatrake
+professed to effect, we see in Henry VI., where Simpcox, supposed to be
+miraculously cured of blindness, is asked to and does describe what he
+sees, &#8220;If thou <i>hadst</i> been born blind, thou might&#8217;st as well have known
+all our names as thus to name the several colours we do wear.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In the &#8220;Merry Wives of Windsor&#8221; we have &#8220;Master Caius that calls himself
+doctor of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> physic,&#8221; and is called by Dame Quickly a &#8220;fool and physician.&#8221;
+The two were in Shakespeare&#8217;s time very commonly combined, and often, as
+we have shown, very strangely. Dr. Caius was a real name borne by a
+learned gentleman who was physician to Queen Elizabeth. In Cymbeline the
+name of the physician is Cornelius. This again was the name of a real
+physician, who, in the sixteenth century, gained great reputation in
+Europe chiefly by restoring Charles V. to health after a tediously long
+illness. We may presume that Shakespeare was familiar with the fact.</p>
+
+<p>Amongst the doctors of our poet&#8217;s time it was a common custom to throw up
+cases when they believed them hopeless. Shakespeare&#8217;s Sempronius says,
+&#8220;His friends, like physicians, thrice gave him o&#8217;er,&#8221; and Lord Bacon in
+his work on &#8220;The Advancement of Learning,&#8221; says of Physicians, &#8220;In the
+enquiry of diseases, they do abandon the cures of many, some as in their
+nature incurable, and others as past the period of cure, so that Sylla
+triumvirs never prescribed so many men to die as they do by their ignorant
+edicts.&#8221; We have spoken of the sword-salve cure for wounds. Of dealers in
+poison who visited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> fairs and market-places, and attracted crowds by the
+aid of a stage fool, we get a glimpse in &#8220;Hamlet,&#8221; where Laertes says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;I bought an unction of a mountebank,<br />
+So mortal, that but dip a knife in it,<br />
+Where it draws blood, no cataplasm so rare<br />
+Collected from all simples that have virtue,<br />
+Under the moon can save the thing from death.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There is a hit at doctors who gave others remedies they had not enough
+faith in to adopt for themselves:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Thou speak&#8217;st like a physician, Helicarnus:<br />
+Who minister&#8217;st a potion unto me<br />
+That thou would&#8217;st tremble to receive thyself.&#8221;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 15em;">&mdash;<i>Pericles.</i></span></p>
+
+<p>In the same play the true physician receives full appreciation. Cerimon
+says of himself:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span style="margin-left: 9em;">&#8220;&#8217;Tis known, I ever</span><br />
+Have studied physic, through which secret art,<br />
+By turning o&#8217;er authorities, I have<br />
+Together with my practice, made familiar<br />
+To me, and to my aid, the blest infusions<br />
+That dwell in vegitives, in metals, stones.<br />
+And I can speake of the disturbances<br />
+That nature works, and of her cures; which doth give me<br />
+A more content in course of true delight<br />
+Than to be thirsty after tottering honour,<br />
+Or tie my treasure up in silken bags,<br />
+To please the fool, and death.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>And one of the two listening gentlemen adds:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Your honour has through Ephesus pour&#8217;d forth<br />
+Your charity, and hundreds call themselves<br />
+Your creatures, who by you have been restored.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And Pericles, with his supposed dead wife in his arms, turning to Cerimon,
+who has saved her from the grave, says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span style="margin-left: 8em;">&#8220;Reverend Sir,</span><br />
+The gods can have no mortal officer<br />
+More like a god than you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And Gower, speaking the concluding lines of the play, adds:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;In reverend Cerimon there well appears<br />
+The worth that learned charity aye wears.&#8221;<br />
+<br />
+&#8220;<i>Cerimon</i>:<span class="spacer">&nbsp;</span><span class="spacer">&nbsp;</span>I hold it ever<br />
+Virtue and cunning (wisdom) were endowment greater<br />
+Than nobleness and riches....&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There was, perhaps, when Shakespeare wrote the above lines, some thought
+of the Elizabethan nobleman, Edmund, Earl of Derby, who &#8220;was famous for
+chirurgerie, bone-setting, and hospitalite,&#8221; as Ward says in his Diary; of
+the Marquis of Dorchester, who in his time was a Fellow of the College of
+Surgeons; or of the poet&#8217;s son-in-law, Dr. Hall, a gentleman who resided
+in Stratford-on-Avon, in a fine old half timber<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> house still standing, and
+known as Hall&#8217;s Croft. To his wife, the poet&#8217;s elder daughter, Shakespeare
+bequeathed his house and grounds, which Dr. Hall occupied when he died.
+His grave is near that of his glorious father-in-law, and on it is the
+following inscription:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span style="margin-left: 1em;"><span class="smcap">&#8220;Here Lyeth Y<sup>e</sup> Body of John Hall,</span></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><span class="smcap">Gent: He Marr: svsanna Y<sup>e</sup> daughter</span></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><span class="smcap">and co heire of Will. Shakespeare,</span></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><span class="smcap">Gent. Hee Deceased Nove<sup>r</sup> 25 a<sup>o</sup> 1635</span></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><span class="smcap">aged 60.</span></span><br />
+<br />
+Hallius hic situs est medica celeberrimus arte<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Expectans regni gaudia l&aelig;ta Dei</span><br />
+Dignus erat meritis qui Nestora vinceret annis,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In terris omnes, sed rapit aequa dies;</span><br />
+Ne tumulo, quid desit adest fidissima conjux<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Et vit&aelig; Comitem nunc quoque mortis habet.&#8221;</span></p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Dickens&#8217; Doctors.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Thomas Frost.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">Dickens,</span> it must be admitted by even the greatest admirers of his
+inimitable genius, among whom the writer of this paper must be counted,
+was not successful in his delineations of the medical profession. Though
+his most humorous as well as his most pathetic pictures of human life are
+drawn from the humbler walks in the pilgrimage of humanity, he has given
+us some good touches of his skill in his presentments of other
+professions, and notably of lawyers and lawyers&#8217; clerks. Nothing in
+fiction can excel his legal characters in, for instance, &#8220;Bleak
+House,&#8221;&mdash;his Mr. Tulkinghorn, Mr. Guppy, the clerk, and Mr. Snagsby, the
+law stationer. But a life-like doctor cannot be found in his works, and
+the nearest approaches to such a description are the merest sketches.</p>
+
+<p>The most strongly marked of these are Dr. Parker Peps and Mr. Pilkins, the
+two members of the faculty who officiate at the closing scene in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> the life
+of Mrs. Dombey, in which a sense of humour, with difficulty suppressed by
+the author, mingles with the touching sadness of the death. Dr. Parker
+Peps, &#8220;one of the Court physicians, and a man of immense reputation for
+assisting at the increase of great families,&#8221; is introduced &#8220;walking up
+and down the drawing-room with his hands behind him, to the unspeakable
+admiration of the family surgeon, who had regularly puffed the case for
+the last six weeks among all his friends and acquaintances as one to which
+he was in hourly expectation, day and night, of being summoned in
+conjunction with Dr. Parker Peps.&#8221; But in this little interlude, the two
+actors in which do not appear again, the obsequiousness of Mr. Pilkins to
+the Court physician, and the manner in which the latter, with assumed
+obliviousness, substitutes &#8220;her grace, the duchess&#8221; or &#8220;her ladyship&#8221; for
+Mrs. Dombey, verge on caricature, a tendency Dickens seems to have had at
+all times some difficulty in resisting.</p>
+
+<p>Of Dr. Slammer also we have only a sketch, and that of the slightest
+character. Though he is described as &#8220;one of the most popular personages
+in his own circle,&#8221; we gather from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> incidents in which he appears only
+that he was very irascible. As we read of his furious jealousy of Jingle,
+and the interrupted duel with Winkle, who had received his challenge to
+the former by mistake, we wonder at the circle in which this &#8220;little fat
+man, with a ring of upright black hair round his head, and an extensive
+bald plain on the top of it,&#8221; was one of the most popular personages.
+Harold Skimpole, we are told, had been educated for the medical
+profession; but his training seems to have left no traces of it upon his
+character or his conversation. He prefers to dabble in literature and
+music for his own amusement, and look to his friends for the means of
+living, too prosaic an occupation for himself.</p>
+
+<p>One of the best, but not quite the best, of the medical characters in
+Dickens&#8217; novels, is Allan Woodcourt, who &#8220;had gone out a poor ship&#8217;s
+surgeon, and had come home nothing better,&#8221;&mdash;the young man hastily called
+in when the death of Nemo is discovered, in conjunction with &#8220;a testy
+medical man, brought from his dinner, with a broad snuffy upper lip, and a
+broad Scotch tongue.&#8221; Allan Woodcourt has the kindness of heart which
+characterises the profession, and exemplifies it very pleasingly in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> the
+scene with the brickmaker&#8217;s wife, and with poor Jo, the forlorn waif who
+is kept continually moving on by the police. How tenderly, too, he deals
+with Richard Carstone, the weak-minded victim of the long-drawn Chancery
+suit. And his head is as sound as his heart is soft. &#8220;You,&#8221; says Richard
+to him, &#8220;can pursue your art for its own sake, and can put your hand to
+the plough and never turn; and can strike a purpose out of anything.&#8221; What
+a world of difference we see in this briefly sketched trait to the want of
+earnestness of purpose and steadfastness of pursuit in the character of
+young Carstone!</p>
+
+<p>Even stronger testimony to the good qualities of Allan Woodcourt is borne
+by Mr. Jarndyce. Allan, says that gentleman, is &#8220;a man whose hopes and
+aims may sometimes lie (as most men&#8217;s sometimes do, I dare say) above the
+ordinary level, but to whom the ordinary level will be high enough after
+all, if it should prove to be a way of usefulness and good service leading
+to no other. All generous spirits are ambitious, I suppose; but the
+ambition that calmly trusts itself to such a road, instead of
+spasmodically trying to fly over it, is the kind I care for. It is
+Woodcourt&#8217;s kind.&#8221; The love passages of this estimable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> young man with the
+equally estimable Esther Summerson, one of Dickens&#8217; most charming
+presentments of English maidenhood, are very pleasing, and none of them
+more so than one which occurs towards the close of the story.</p>
+
+<p>There is another medical character in one of the Christmas stories which,
+good as it is, might have been made better but for the extent to which the
+exigencies of space limited the author in the development of character in
+that class of stories. I mean Dr. Jeddler, the genial but mistaken father
+of Grace and Marion, in &#8220;The Battle of Life.&#8221; The doctor is &#8220;a great
+philosopher, and the heart and mystery of his philosophy was to look upon
+the world as a gigantic practical joke; as something too absurd to be
+considered seriously by any practical man. His system of belief had been
+in the beginning part and parcel of the battle ground on which he lived.&#8221;
+He is not of the cynical school, but a modern Democritus, whose
+inclination to laugh at everything on the surface of the ocean of life was
+irresistible, while there was nothing in the conditions of his existence
+to suggest anything that was beneath. When he hears his daughters
+conversing about their lovers, &#8220;his reflections as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> he looked after them,
+and heard the purport of their discourse, were limited at first to certain
+merry meditations on the folly of all loves and likings, and the idle
+imposition practised on themselves by young people who believe for a
+moment that there could be anything serious in such bubbles, and were
+always deceived&mdash;always.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Jeddler is a widower; we are not told what his experiences of married
+life had been. Had they been unhappy, one would suppose that he would have
+been more disposed to be cynical and pessimistic than to regard life&#8217;s
+incidents as provocative of merriment, yet, if they had been happy, why
+should he have regarded the engagement of Grace as an idle folly, a bubble
+on life&#8217;s surface, soon to burst? Dickens&#8217; explanation is, from this point
+of view, scarcely satisfactory. &#8220;He was sorry,&#8221; says the novelist, &#8220;for
+her sake&mdash;sorry for them both&mdash;that life should be such a very ridiculous
+business as it was. The doctor never dreamed of inquiring whether his
+children, or either of them, helped in any way to make the scheme a
+serious one. But then he was a philosopher. A kind and generous man by
+nature, he had stumbled by chance over that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> common philosopher&#8217;s stone
+(much more easily discovered than the object of the alchemist&#8217;s
+researches) which sometimes trips up kind and generous men, and has the
+fatal property of turning gold to dross, and every precious thing to poor
+account.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But when sorrow had humbled the doctor&#8217;s heart, he felt that the world in
+which some love, deep-anchored, is the portion of every human creature,
+was more serious than he had thought it, and understood &#8220;how such a trifle
+as the absence of a little unit in the great absurd account had stricken
+him to the ground.&#8221; Then, when he and his daughters are again together in
+the old home, and his arms are about them both, we find him acknowledging
+that &#8220;It&#8217;s a world full of hearts, and a serious world with all its
+folly,&mdash;even with mine, which was enough to swamp the whole world.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It is to be observed, however, that while we find all the traits and
+incidents of professional life in the lawyers of Dickens&#8217; creation, there
+is little or nothing of the kind in his doctors. Such traits are abundant
+in his presentments of Tulkinghorn, and Kenge, and Vholes in Wickfield,
+and many others that might be named; but they are so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> completely absent
+from his portrayals of Allan Woodcourt and Dr. Jeddler, that the two men
+might as well have been of any other profession, without any loss to the
+stories in which they appear. If we compare them with his lawyers, or with
+the clergymen of Mrs. Oliphant, we are struck at once with the difference.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img09.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">CHARLES DICKENS.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>This is not the case, however, when from the full-blown medical
+practitioner, adding to his name the initials <span class="smcaplc">M.D.</span> or <span class="smcaplc">M.R.C.S.</span>, we descend
+to the &#8220;sawbones in training,&#8221; as the facetious Sam Weller designates the
+young men qualifying themselves for the exercise of the profession by
+&#8220;walking the hospitals.&#8221; The medical students<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> of the novelist&#8217;s early
+days were&mdash;it would perhaps be fairer to say that a large proportion of
+them were&mdash;a turbulent and disorderly element in the social life of the
+metropolis. The newspapers of the day record their frequent appearances at
+the Bow Street and Marlborough Street police-courts on charges of rowdyism
+in the streets at or after midnight, when they came out from their
+favourite places of amusement, the Coal Hole, in the Strand, the Cider
+Cellars, in Maiden Lane, and the Judge and Jury Club, in Leicester Square,
+the latter presided over by Renton Nicholson, who edited a vile
+publication called <i>The Town</i>. Their after-amusements were found in
+strolling through the streets in threes and fours, singing at the top of
+their voices comic songs, that often outraged propriety, ringing door
+bells, and chaffing the police. Dickens must often in his reporting days
+have witnessed the next morning appearances of these young men at Bow
+Street police-court.</p>
+
+<p>The first appearance of two specimens of this variety of the immature
+medico in the humorous pages of the &#8220;Pickwick Papers&#8221; is described as
+follows in the low cockney vernacular of Sam Weller. &#8220;One on &#8217;em,&#8221; he
+tells Mr. Pickwick,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span> &#8220;has got his legs on the table, and is a-drinkin&#8217;
+brandy neat, vile the tother one&mdash;him in the barnacles&mdash;has got a barrel
+of oysters atween his knees, vich he&#8217;s a-openin&#8217; like steam, and as fast
+as he eats &#8217;em he takes a aim with the shells at young Dropsy, who&#8217;s
+a-sittin&#8217; down fast asleep in the chimbley corner.&#8221; The latter gentleman
+is Mr. Benjamin Allen, who is described by the novelist as &#8220;a coarse,
+stout, thick-set young man, with black hair cut rather short, and a white
+face cut rather long. He was embellished with spectacles, and wore a white
+neckerchief. Below his single-breasted black surtout, which was buttoned
+up to his chin, appeared the usual number of pepper-and-salt coloured
+legs, terminating in a pair of imperfectly polished boots. Although his
+coat was short in the sleeves, it disclosed no vestige of a linen
+wristband, and although there was quite enough of his face to admit of the
+encroachment of a shirt-collar, it was not graced by the smallest approach
+to that appendage. He presented altogether rather a mildewy appearance,
+and emitted a fragrant odour of full-flavoured Cubas.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This gentleman&#8217;s companion is Mr. Bob Sawyer, &#8220;who was habited in a coarse
+blue coat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span> which, without being either a great-coat or a surtout, partook
+of the nature and qualities of both,&#8221; and &#8220;had about him that sort of
+slovenly smartness and swaggering gait which is peculiar to young
+gentlemen who smoke in the streets by day, shout and scream in the same by
+night, call waiters by their Christian names, and do various other acts
+and deeds of an equally facetious description. He wore a pair of plaid
+trousers and a large rough double-breasted waistcoat: out of doors he
+carried a thick stick with a big top. He eschewed gloves, and looked, upon
+the whole, something like a dissipated Robinson Crusoe.&#8221; The conversation
+of these budding surgeons is perfectly in harmony with their outward
+aspect. Their discourse, when it assumes a serious character, is of the
+&#8220;cases&#8221; at the hospital and the &#8220;subjects&#8221; at the time being on the
+dissecting tables of the anatomical lecture-rooms. When relieved from
+attendance at the hospitals, they lounge at tavern bars, and flirt with
+barmaids and waitresses, to whom their attentions are not unfrequently of
+an objectionable character, and less agreeable than they imagine them to
+be.</p>
+
+<p>The contrast between the graphic power displayed by Dickens in his
+delineation of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> characters of Bob Sawyer and Ben Allen, and the
+indistinctiveness, as to profession, of his presentments of Allan
+Woodcourt and Dr. Jeddler, may help us to understand the causes which
+render his doctors so much less effective than his lawyers. The legal
+profession presents more variety than the medical, and comes before us
+more prominently in conjunction with incidents of a striking character, as
+may be seen every day in the newspaper records of the courts of law and of
+police. The physician and the surgeon stand as much apart, in these
+respects, from the busy barrister or solicitor as the clergy do. Dickens
+has not given us a clerical portrait, and probably for a similar reason.
+Mrs. Oliphant, on the other hand, excels in her delineations of every
+grade of the Anglican hierarchy; but her genius as a writer of fiction
+runs in a groove essentially different from that of Dickens.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Famous Literary Doctors.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Cuming Walters.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">Medical</span> men have not so commonly made literature an extra pursuit, or
+adopted it as a serious calling, as have the members of the other liberal
+professions. It is quite expected that a clergyman should write poems,
+philosophical essays, and perhaps even a novel with a purpose; and it is
+usual to recruit the ranks of critics extensively from the law, and to
+trust to briefless barristers for a continuous supply of romances. No
+detail is more frequently discovered in the biographies of eminent authors
+than that they were called to the Bar, and either never practised or
+forsook practising in order to engage in literary labours. Indeed, it
+might almost seem that failure in law was the most important step towards
+success in authorship. No such rule applies, however, to medical men, and
+no such comment would be justified in their case. Not only do we find the
+writing of books&mdash;otherwise than text-books and technical
+treatises&mdash;rarer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> with them, but it curiously happens that in most
+instances it has been the successful practitioner, not the man walking the
+hospitals or waiting for calls, who has turned author. And we shall find
+that these medico-literati (if I may coin the phrase) have often been
+among the most hard-working in their profession, and the wonder is that
+they were able to enter upon a second pursuit and to follow it with so
+much zeal. For, in most of the examples I shall advance, literature was
+more than a pastime with these men who indulged in it. It was chosen by
+some for its lucrativeness, and by the majority for its capacity to
+enhance their reputation or to bring them enduring fame. This much may be
+safely said, that the names of many excellent doctors would have faded
+from public remembrance ere this, and would have passed away with the
+generation to which they belonged, had not literature given them lasting
+luminance. In not a few instances the fact is already forgotten or wholly
+ignored that certain successful writers once wrote &#8220;M.D.&#8221; after their
+names. Who cares that the author of that classic &#8220;Religio Medici&#8221; took his
+degrees at Leyden and at Oxford, and dispensed medicine to the end of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+life? Who cares that the author of &#8220;The Borough,&#8221; &#8220;Tales in Verse,&#8221; and
+&#8220;The Parish Register,&#8221; was apprenticed to a surgeon? Who cares that the
+writer of such dramas as &#8220;Virginius,&#8221; &#8220;William Tell,&#8221; and &#8220;The Hunchback,&#8221;
+was trained for a physician? Who cares that the author of &#8220;Roderick
+Random,&#8221; &#8220;Peregrine Pickle,&#8221; and &#8220;The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker&#8221; was
+a surgeon&#8217;s assistant and acted as surgeon&#8217;s mate in the unfortunate
+Carthagena expedition, before trying (unsuccessfully) to obtain a practice
+in London? And, above all, who cares that the author of &#8220;The Deserted
+Village&#8221; and &#8220;The Vicar of Wakefield&#8221; studied physic in Edinburgh and on
+the Continent, and, as Boswell was informed, &#8220;was enabled to pursue his
+travels on foot, partly by demanding at Universities to enter the lists as
+a disputant, by which, according to the custom of many of them, he was
+entitled to the premium of a crown, when luckily for him his challenge was
+not accepted?&#8221; Such are a few of the examples which immediately occur to
+the mind when the whole subject is contemplated.</p>
+
+<p>It would be impossible in the compass of a short article to deal
+systematically and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>comprehensively with doctors who became authors, or to
+make out a complete list of their names with an account of the works which
+entitled them to the designation. Any facts now adduced must be considered
+arbitrary and capricious, so far as the choice of them is concerned; and
+sequence is so little attempted that the reader will pardon, I trust, a
+possible leap from Galen to Goldsmith, from Sir Thomas Browne to Tobias
+Smollett, and from Sir John Blackmore to Conan Doyle. I put aside those
+members of the profession who have simply written on professional
+subjects. Their name is legion, but in the great majority of cases such
+work as this would not strictly justify their inclusion among the
+literati. And, on the other hand, we cannot find a place in the category
+for such men as G&oelig;the or Sainte-Beuve, for though both studied
+medicine, it seems to have been purely with a view to the extension of
+their knowledge and not with any more practical or material object.
+Sainte-Beuve, it is true, for a short time in his youth entertained some
+thought of adopting the profession; but G&oelig;the only dipped into the
+subject with the same spirit that he dipped into experimental chemistry
+and astrology.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>Let us, then, refer to a few types certain of instant recognition. The
+most notable of modern instances is Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, a
+specialist in his profession, a hard-working physician, and the author of
+valuable treatises on medical art, who nevertheless occupied the position
+of being among the four chief poets whom America has produced, and one of
+the most versatile of the litt&eacute;rateurs of the century. He went to the
+Paris Medical Schools shortly after he had graduated at Harvard; he
+practised as a physician at Boston; and for nearly forty years he was
+Professor of Physiology. Yet he had time to write the most delightful and
+original of philosophical essays, to publish novels of which at least
+one&mdash;&#8220;Elsie Venner: A Romance of Destiny&#8221;&mdash;will rank as a classic; to
+deliver orations and after-dinner speeches in sparkling verse, and to
+write exquisite poems in rich and felicitous language on a wonderful
+variety of themes, the complete collection of which makes a very
+substantial volume. In all his work Dr. Holmes showed himself to be the
+profound student of nature and of humanity with many varying interests;
+yet we can often trace the hand of the physician in the work of the
+essayist and poet.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> His novels were special studies which only the ardent
+physiologist and metaphysician would have cared to discuss, or, at all
+events, would have discussed so well. Both &#8220;Elsie Venner&#8221; and &#8220;The
+Guardian Angel&#8221; deal with the occult problems of heredity, and those
+problems are treated with the power of the specialist in certain branches
+of science. Still more strongly is the character of the medical man
+displayed in a number of the poems, some by reason of their subject, and
+some by the figures and imagery they contain. The well-known &#8220;Stethoscope
+Song&#8221; will immediately suggest itself in illustration. But, for purposes
+of quotation, I prefer a less popular poem of rare beauty, which more
+strikingly manifests the writer&#8217;s power of transmuting the hard dry facts
+of science into light and gleaming poetry. I refer to what he called at
+first &#8220;The Anatomist&#8217;s Hymn,&#8221; but afterwards &#8220;The Living Temple.&#8221; It is
+one of the interpolated poems in the &#8220;Autocrat&#8221; series of papers, and to
+my thinking invests the human body and its physical functions with
+unimagined charms.</p>
+
+<p>Take, for instance, this poetic exposition of our respiration, the
+scientific correctness and exactness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> of which need no explanation to
+readers of this volume:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;The smooth, soft air with pulse-like waves<br />
+Flows murmuring through its hidden caves,<br />
+Whose streams of brightening purple rush<br />
+Fired with a new and livelier blush,<br />
+While all their burden of decay<br />
+The ebbing current steals away,<br />
+And red with Nature&#8217;s flame they start<br />
+From the warm fountains of the heart.<br />
+<br />
+No rest that throbbing slave may ask,<br />
+For ever quivering o&#8217;er his task,<br />
+While far and wide a crimson jet<br />
+Leaps forth to fill the woven net<br />
+Which in unnumbered crossing tides<br />
+The flood of burning life divides,<br />
+Then kindling each decaying part<br />
+Creeps back to find the throbbing heart.<br />
+<br />
+But warmed with that unchanging flame<br />
+Behold the outward moving frame,<br />
+Its living marbles jointed strong<br />
+With glistening band and silvery thong,<br />
+And linked to reason&#8217;s guiding reins<br />
+By myriad rings in trembling chains,<br />
+Each graven with the threaded zone<br />
+Which claims it as the master&#8217;s own.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There is an almost irresistible temptation to linger over Dr. Oliver
+Wendell Holmes&#8217; books, so intensely interesting is his personality and so
+fascinating is his work. But several other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> eminent poets of the
+profession demand attention. To Crabbe&#8217;s connection with surgery I have
+already incidentally referred, and inasmuch as he early abandoned the
+calling for the ministry, little need be said except that his youthful
+experience may have aided him in writing a scathing denunciation of the
+Quack, who believed wholly in the potence of &#8220;oxymel of squills,&#8221; and of
+the Parish Doctor, who &#8220;first insults the victim whom he kills.&#8221; The poet
+was a severe castigator, and was never less forbearing with the lash than
+when these impostors of his day were under his hand for flagellation. In
+Mark Akenside we come to a better specimen of the class which we are
+considering. At the age of twenty he went to Leyden, and three years later
+became, (as Dr. Johnson writes) &#8220;a doctor of physick, having, according to
+the custom of the Dutch Universities, published a thesis.&#8221; In the same
+year he published &#8220;The Pleasures of the Imagination,&#8221; his greatest work.
+This was followed by a collection of odes, but he still sought a
+livelihood as a physician. Little success attended him, however, and Dr.
+Johnson records that Akenside was known as a poet better than as a doctor,
+and would have been reduced to great exigencies but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> for the generosity of
+an ardent friend. &#8220;Thus supported, he gradually advanced in medical
+reputation, but never attained any great extent of practice, or eminence
+of popularity. A physician in a great city,&#8221; his biographer continues
+musingly, &#8220;seems to be the mere play-thing of Fortune; his degree of
+reputation is, for the most part, totally casual; they that employ him,
+know not his excellence; they that reject him, know not his deficiency.&#8221;
+Yet it was otherwise with Sir Samuel Garth, doctor and poet, of whom
+Johnson himself records that &#8220;by his conversation and accomplishments he
+obtained a very extensive practice.&#8221; His principal poem was &#8220;The
+Dispensary,&#8221; relating to a controversy of the time between the College of
+Physicians, who desired to give gratuitous advice to the poor, and the
+Apothecaries, who wished to keep up the high price of medicine. Garth was
+&#8220;on the side of charity against the intrigues of interest, and of regular
+learning against licentious usurpation of medical authority,&#8221; as Johnson
+put it; and he sprang into favour, was eventually knighted, and became
+physician-general to the army. His last literary work, and his worst, was
+a crude but ostentatious preface to a translation of Ovid. As<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> a matter of
+fact his writing was invariably mediocre, and Pope, in calling attention
+to the fact that the &#8220;Dispensary&#8221; poem had been corrected in every
+edition, unkindly remarked that &#8220;every change was an improvement.&#8221; John
+Phillips, who may be ranked among the physicians, though it is doubtful
+whether he practised, enjoyed a better fate as a man of letters than did
+either Akenside or Garth. He sprang into sudden popularity by the
+publication of a whimsical and clever medley called &#8220;The Silver Shilling,&#8221;
+and this he followed up by a sort of official commemoration of the victory
+of Blenheim. His greatest achievement was a poem in two books on &#8220;Cider,&#8221;
+and he was meditating an epic on &#8220;The Last Day&#8221; when he died, at the early
+age of thirty-three. One curious fact about his writings, small as it is,
+is worthy of mention. He sang the praises of tobacco in every poem he
+wrote, except that on Blenheim.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Johnson did not rate Phillips very highly; he said that what study
+could confer he obtained, but that &#8220;natural deficience cannot be
+supplied.&#8221; The sturdy doctor, however, did his utmost to rehabilitate the
+damaged reputation of Blackmore,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> whom we may regard as the most
+remarkable of all the compounds of physician-poets with whom we can become
+acquainted. Blackmore obtained an undeserved success, which was followed
+by unmerited ridicule, and Johnson, who hated every form of injustice,
+constituted himself his champion. For the truth about Blackmore we must
+seek the medium between the extremes of Johnson&#8217;s praise and of the
+censure of his enemies&mdash;the &#8220;malignity of contemporary wits,&#8221; as Boswell
+termed it. When all is said and done the fact remains that Blackmore was a
+man of uncommon character, and a prodigious worker. His first work, a
+heroic poem in ten books, on Prince Arthur, was written, he related, by
+&#8220;such catches and starts, and in such occasional uncertain hours as his
+profession afforded, and for the greatest part in coffee-houses, or in
+passing up and down the streets.&#8221; This work passed through several
+editions with rapidity, and two extra books were added to it. The King
+knighted him and gave him other advances, but the critics furiously
+assailed him, and his name became a by-word for all that was heavy and
+ridiculous in poetry. Notwithstanding this he persevered, and published
+successively a &#8220;Paraphrase on the Book<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> of Job,&#8221; a &#8220;Satire on Wit,&#8221;
+&#8220;Elijah,&#8221;&mdash;an epic poem in ten books&mdash;&#8220;Creation, a Philosophical Poem,&#8221;
+&#8220;Advice to Poets how to celebrate the Duke of Marlborough,&#8221; &#8220;The Nature of
+Man,&#8221; &#8220;Redemption,&#8221; &#8220;A New Version of the Psalms,&#8221; &#8220;Alfred&#8221;&mdash;an epic in
+twelve books&mdash;&#8220;A History of the Conspiracy against King William,&#8221; and a
+host of others which his perverted reason or fantastic fancy suggested.
+Never, perhaps, was known such a voluminous author, or one so erratic in
+his system. What with his long heroic poems, his treatises on smallpox and
+other diseases, his theological controversies, his &#8220;Advices&#8221; to painters,
+poets, and weavers, and his prose contributions to periodical
+publications, &#8220;England&#8217;s Arch-Poet&#8221; (as Swift described him) could never
+have idled away an hour. Of all that he wrote, a few passages from his
+&#8220;Arthur&#8221; and &#8220;Creation&#8221; are alone remembered, and but for Johnson&#8217;s
+good-natured attempt to save him from oblivion, his name would only have
+lived in the satires of his remorseless critics. One saying of Blackmore&#8217;s
+only is worth noting here. He had laid himself open to the imputation of
+despising learning, and Dr. Johnson himself thought him a shallow ill-read
+man. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> Blackmore said:&mdash;&#8220;I only undervalued false or superficial
+learning, that signifies nothing for the service of mankind; as to physic
+I expressly affirmed that learning must be joined with native genius to
+make a physician of the first rank; but if those talents are separated, I
+asserted, and do still insist, that a man of native sagacity and diligence
+will prove a more able and useful practiser than a heavy notional scholar
+encumbered with a heap of confused ideas.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>One or two other doctors who in their time enjoyed a reputation as
+writers, but whose fame was transient, or, at least, is insecure, call for
+very brief notice before we pass on to a few of greater importance. Sir
+John Hill, <span class="smcaplc">M.D.</span>, an eighteenth century physician, was a fairly extensive
+litterateur, and in addition to producing treatises on botany, medicine,
+natural history, and philosophy, wrote half a dozen novels, and several
+dramas. His <i>chef d&#8217;&oelig;uvre</i> was &#8220;The Vegetable System,&#8221; a work of such
+magnitude that it ran to twenty-six volumes, a copy of which was presented
+to the King of Sweden, and procured for the author the distinction of
+being included in the Order of the Polar Star. Dr. William Fullarton
+Cumming, a son of Burns&#8217;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> &#8220;Bonnie Leslie,&#8221; was compelled to travel in mild
+climates for his health, and as a result wrote &#8220;The Notes of a Wanderer,&#8221;
+a work abounding in poetic descriptions of the charming scenery of the
+East. He tells us that the real pleasure of travelling is not to boast of
+how many lions one may have slain in a single day, but to saunter about
+without an object, to inhale the moral atmosphere of places visited, to
+enter bazaars, not to buy, but to catch the hundred peculiarities of a new
+people, to stray hither and thither watching the work and the recreations
+of other races. John Chalmers, <span class="smcaplc">M.D.</span> (not to be confused with the great
+divine, Dr. Thomas Chalmers), also deserves to be noted as a very graceful
+writer of romantic stories; and Sir Henry Thompson, under the name of &#8220;Pen
+Oliver,&#8221; produced some years ago a strange little volume which enjoyed a
+season&#8217;s success&mdash;&#8220;Charley Kingston&#8217;s Aunt.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That most diffident and most delightful of authors, Dr. John Brown, who
+gave us the memorable &#8220;Rab and his Friends,&#8221; was in practice at Edinburgh.
+As long as lovers of the animal creation are to be found, the story of Rab
+and of Marjorie will be read; and these sketches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> of brutes whom he almost
+humanised will probably outlive the genial doctor&#8217;s more ambitious &#8220;Hor&aelig;
+Subseciv&aelig;&#8221; and &#8220;John Leech and other Papers.&#8221; Of a very different nature
+was the author of &#8220;Ten Thousand a Year,&#8221; Dr. Samuel Warren, physician,
+lawyer, politician, novelist, and office-seeker. Tittlebat Titmouse is not
+much studied now, for the type is out-of-date, and the society of which
+the novel treats, the abuses prevalent, the general corruption which
+prevailed in public life, were exposures intended for a past generation.
+Yet there are passages in the work which should save it from absolute
+neglect, and it has for over half a century kept its author&#8217;s name alive.
+This is more than his &#8220;Passages from the Diary of a late Physician&#8221; could
+have done, or those dozen other works with the bare titles of which the
+present reading public is scarcely acquainted. John Abercrombie, the chief
+consulting physician in Scotland during the last century, sought and
+achieved literary fame with two volumes on &#8220;The Intellectual Powers,&#8221; and
+&#8220;The Moral Feelings.&#8221; They enjoyed a popularity scarcely commensurate with
+their actual merits.</p>
+
+<p>David Macbeth Moir, who faithfully performed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> the arduous duties of a
+medical practitioner in Edinburgh, and whose life was almost wholly
+devoted to the service of his fellows, was the famous &#8220;Delta&#8221; of
+<i>Blackwood&#8217;s Magazine</i>. His poems, some four hundred of which he
+contributed to &#8220;Maga.&#8221; alone, are out of fashion now, though their
+delightful vein of reflectiveness and their charm of expression should
+preserve them from absolute neglect. The heavy labours of his profession
+did not seem to check his literary productiveness. His poems fill two
+large volumes; his prose works are by no means meagre or unimportant, and
+his &#8220;Sketches of the Poetical Literature of the past Half-century,&#8221; is a
+standard work on the poetry of his period. Medical treatises, too, came
+from his pen; and his &#8220;Life of Mansie Wauch, Tailor,&#8221; is one of the most
+agreeable of genuine Scotch sketches. His biographer correctly summed up
+the merits of the worthy doctor as a literary worker in the words &#8220;Good
+sound sense, a simple healthy feeling, excited and exalted though these
+may be, never fail him. He draws from nature, and from himself direct.&#8221;
+Quiet humour and simple pathos, a love of humanity, deep reverential
+feeling, and originality of thought&mdash;all these are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+found in &#8220;Delta&#8217;s&#8221; writings, and serve, with his own admirable nature, to keep his memory green.</p>
+
+<p>Of Dr. Conan Doyle, the most conspicuous instance of the hour of the
+doctor turned author, no detailed notice is requisite, as the main facts
+of his career are sufficiently well known, and his literary work promises
+to bring him both fame and fortune. Undoubtedly he exemplifies the fact
+that the medical hand can scarcely be concealed when it takes to the pen,
+for his novels and stories abound in allusions which only his study,
+training, and experience as a doctor could suggest. His reading and
+observation largely provide the technique of his romances. Something of
+the same could be said of Smollett&#8217;s work, though the medical knowledge of
+the author was often turned to less agreeable account. In fact, most of
+Smollet&#8217;s references on this score were the reverse of delectable, and I
+refrain from a more precise examination of them. The unexpected use to
+which Mr. R. D. Blackmore has turned his knowledge of medicine&mdash;for he
+studied medicine as well as law seriously in his youth&mdash;in several of his
+novels, notably in the last, &#8220;Perlycross,&#8221; has excited much interest and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+attention among the profession. So marked is this that I cannot refrain
+quoting from a singularly interesting criticism penned by a leading
+physician in the Midlands. &#8220;The medical incidents in &#8216;Perlycross,&#8217;&#8221; he
+says, &#8220;are pourtrayed with an accuracy which shows an intimate knowledge
+of the profession and its members.... No doubt the opinions expressed by
+one learned doctor were those of the time represented in the story, though
+they could hardly be received with justice in the present day. Speaking of
+the illness of Sir Thomas Waldron, he says (p. 18):&mdash;&#8216;At present such a
+case could be dealt with best in Paris, although we have young men rising
+now who will make it otherwise before very long.&#8217; The key to this
+difficulty is found later on (p. 159) where the technical word
+&#8216;introsusception&#8217; is mentioned as the disease or condition from which the
+patient suffered. At the time spoken of Parisian surgeons, headed by the
+eminent Dupuytren, excelled in the art of surgery; at the present time
+such a case could be treated as well by any hospital surgeon in England as
+in the metropolis of France.... The book contains an admirably-described
+case of catalepsy, which is equally well explained. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> cure of the
+attack is described with consummate skill and power. The keystone of the
+whole position of medical knowledge is contained in a few words towards
+its close. In these days of rapid transition from one excitement to
+another it would be well to take the lesson to heart, and to remember what
+the author speaks of as two fine things&mdash;&#8216;If you wish to be sure of
+anything see it with your own good eyes,&#8217; and the second, &#8216;Never scamp
+your work.&#8217; How these sayings may be applied in the practice of the
+profession may with profit be learned from a perusal of the pages of
+&#8216;Perlycross.&#8217;&#8221; Perhaps I am going too far in claiming Mr. Blackmore as a
+medical man who has taken to literature, but the excuse of his early
+training, combined with this curious result of it manifested in his
+writing, proves irresistible.</p>
+
+<p>Not to stray, however, but to get our feet once more upon solid ground, we
+may refer to a classic example, with which this article, had it been aught
+else but discursive, should have begun. Galen, the Greek physician, must
+be counted among the first and most famous of his class who have written
+literary works. He was so voluminous a writer on philosophical subjects
+that scores<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> of books on logic and ethics have been fathered upon him
+without much question arising as to the unlikelihood of his being the
+author of so many. As it is he is credited with eighty-three treatises,
+the genuineness of which is not disputed; there are nineteen suspected to
+bear his name unjustly, forty-five are proved to be spurious, and then
+there remain a further fifteen fragments and fifteen commentaries on
+Hippocrates, which may be accepted as his in part or whole. He made
+himself master of the medical, physiological, and scientific knowledge of
+his time. He was born in 130 <span class="smcaplc">A.D.</span>, and died in 201, and left a record of
+that period. In addition to preparing this massive work, he seems to have
+found time to devote himself to various branches of philosophy with such
+success that later writers were well pleased to trade with the talisman of
+his name. Were it worth while to go back to antiquity, and to the history
+of foreign nations for further examples of physicians whose writings were
+not confined to expositions of the medical system, Averrhoes, most famous
+of Arabian philosophers, and physician to the calif, a master of the
+twelfth century, would occupy a prominent position. But it is more to our
+purpose to draw attention<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> to the remarkable career, and one that deserves
+to be held in remembrance, of Arthur Johnston, physician to King Charles
+the First. In the same year that he graduated at the university of Padua
+(1610) he was &#8220;laureated poet at Paris, and that most deservedly,&#8221; as Sir
+Thomas Urquhart recorded. He was then only three-and-twenty years of age,
+and the prospect of many years being before him, he indulged in extensive
+travel, and visited in turn most of the principal foreign seats of
+learning. His journeying over, he settled in France and became equally
+well known as a physician and as a writer of excellent Latin verse. A
+courteous act, characteristic of the time, secured him the favour and
+patronage of the English royal family, for in 1645 he published an elegy
+on James I., and followed this up by dedicating a Latin rendering of the
+Song of Solomon to King Charles. Other specimens of his rare culture and
+his poetical powers were forthcoming, and he achieved a European
+reputation. His Latin translation of the Psalms is held to be unexcelled
+by any other, unless it be Buchanan&#8217;s, and the fact that his translation
+is still in use sufficiently attests its excellence and value. He died
+suddenly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> in 1641, while on a visit to Oxford, and in the centuries which
+have succeeded he has not been displaced in the front rank of refined and
+deeply versed Latin scholars and poets.</p>
+
+<p>It would be a matter of considerable difficulty to make a complete list of
+literary doctors, but enough has perhaps been written to show that they
+are no small band so far as numbers go, and that their influence in the
+world of books has been very considerable and distinguished. We owe to
+them many great works of enduring repute, of value to the student, of
+perpetual entertainment to the general reader. When, too, we consider the
+willingness and the zeal with which the writing members of the medical
+profession have imparted their knowledge, we are led to believe that they
+accepted as their motto the noble utterance of Sir Thomas Browne, the
+chief of literary doctors:&mdash;&#8220;To be reserved and caitiff in goodness is the
+sordidest piece of covetousness, and more contemptible than pecuniary
+Avarice. To this (as calling myself a Scholar) I am obliged by the duty of
+my condition: I make not therefore my head a grave, but a treasure of
+knowledge; I intend no Monopoly, but a community, in learning; I study<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+not for my own sake only, but for theirs that study not for themselves. I
+envy no man that knows more than myself, but pity them that know less. I
+instruct no man as an exercise of my knowledge, or with an intent rather
+to nourish and keep it alive in mine own head than beget and propagate it
+in his; and in the midst of all my endeavours there is but one thought
+that dejects me, that my acquired parts must perish with myself, nor can
+be Legacied among my honoured Friends.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
+<h2>The &#8220;Doctor&#8221; in time of Pestilence.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By William E. A. Axon, f.r.s.l.</span></p>
+
+<p class="note">&#8220;I do not feel in me those sordid and unchristian desires of my
+profession; I do not secretly implore and wish for Plagues, rejoice at
+Famines, revolve Ephemerides and Almanacks in expectation of malignant
+Aspects, fatal Conjunctions, and Eclipses.&#8221;&mdash;<span class="smcap">Sir Thomas Browne&#8217;s</span>
+&#8220;Religio Medici,&#8221; pt. ii., sec. ix.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">Of</span> the great epidemics which have from time to time devastated Europe,
+Great Britain has had its full share. Between 664 and 1665 there were many
+visitations, resulting in heavy mortality, to which the general name of
+plague or pestilence has been given, although they were not always
+identical in form. Often the dread sisters Famine and Pestilence went hand
+in hand in the domains of merrie England in the good old times.</p>
+
+<p>The Statute of Labourers declares, no doubt with perfect truth, that &#8220;a
+great part of the people, principally of artisans and labourers,&#8221; died in
+the pestilence known as the Black Death of 1349, which had important
+consequences, socially and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span> politically. There were many subsequent
+outbreaks, though they fortunately did not attain to the enormous
+proportions of the great mortality. We have from the graphic hand of
+Chaucer a life-like portrait of a medical man of the fourteenth century
+who had gained his money in the time of pestilence.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the fifteenth and middle of the sixteenth century, we have
+as alternating with bubo plague, the <i>Sudor Anglicanus</i>. Its appearance
+coincided with the invasion by which Richard III. lost his crown, and his
+rival became Henry VII. Dr. Thomas Forrester, who was in London during the
+outbreak of 1485, gives instances of suddenness with which the &#8220;sweat&#8221;
+became fatal. &#8220;We saw two prestys standing togeder and speaking togeder,
+and we saw both of them die suddenly.&#8221; The symptoms were sweating, bad
+odour, redness, thirst, headache, &#8220;and some had black spots as it appeared
+in our frere Alban, a noble leech, on whose soul God have mercy.&#8221;
+Forrester complains of the quacks who put letters on poles and on church
+doors, promising to help the people in their need. He lays stress upon
+astrological causes, but does not overlook the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span> defective sanitation which
+gave the plague some of its firm hold. The <i>Sudor Anglicanus</i> returned in
+1508, 1517, 1528, and 1551. The last visitation was the occasion of a
+treatise by the worthy Cambridge founder, to whom Gonville and Caius
+College owes so much.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Boke of Jhon Caius aganst the sweatyng Sickness&#8221; is an interesting
+document. It opens with a long autobiographical passage as to his previous
+literary labours, which have ranged from medicine to theology. At first he
+wrote in English, but afterwards in Latin and Greek. The reason for this
+change is stated. &#8220;Sence y<sup>t</sup> that tyme diverse other thynges I have
+written, but with the entente never more to write in the Englishe tongue
+partly because the c&#333;modite of that which is so written, passeth not
+the compasse of Englande, but remaineth enclosed within the seas, and
+partly because I thought that labours so taken should be halfe lost among
+them which set not by learnyng. Thirdly, for that I thought it best to
+auoide the judgment of the multitude from whom in maters of lernyng a man
+shal be forced to dissente, in disprouyng that which they most approue,
+and approuyng that which they most disalowe. Fourthly for that the common<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+settyng furthe and print&#299;g of every foolishe thyng in englishe, both of
+phisicke vnperfectly and other matters vndiscretly diminishe the grace of
+thynges learned set furth in thesame. But chiefely because I would geve
+none example or comfort to my countrie men (wh&#333; I would to be now, as
+here tofore they have been, comparable in learnyng to men of other
+countries) to stande onely in the Englishe tongue, but to leaue the
+simplicitie of the same, and to procede further in many and diuerse
+knowledges both in tongues and sciences at home and in uniuersities, to
+the adornyng of the c&#333;mon welthe, better service of their kyng, and
+great pleasure and commodite of their own selues, to what kind of life so
+euer they should applie them.&#8221; But his resolution not to write again in
+the vulgar tongue was broken by considerations of utility, for he saw that
+it could not be very serviceable to ordinary English people to give them
+advice as to the treatment of the sweating sickness in a language which
+they did not understand. In his account of this dire malady, he lays
+stress upon errors and excess of diet as a strongly co-operating cause.
+&#8220;They which had thys sweat sore with perille or death, were either men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> of
+welthe, ease and welfare, or of the poorer sorte such as wer idls
+persones, good ale drinkers, and Tauerne haunters. For these, by ye great
+welfare of the one sorte, and large drinkyng of thother, heped up in their
+bodies moche evill matter: by their ease and idlenes, coulde not waste and
+consume it.&#8221; Against the infection of bad air he recommends avoiding
+carrion &#8220;kepyng Canelles cleane&#8221; and other general sanitary precautions.
+He suggests that the midsummer bonfires were intended for purging the air,
+&#8220;and not onely for vigils.&#8221; Rosewater and other perfumes are to be used,
+and he thinks it would be well to clear the house of its rushes and dust.
+It is to be feared that the rushes which served instead of carpets, even
+in great houses, were not renewed very frequently. The handkerchief was to
+be perfumed, and the patient was to have in his mouth &#8220;a pece either of
+setwel, or of the rote of <i>enula campana</i> wel steped before in vinegre
+rosate, a mace, or berie of Juniper.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Caius, like Dr. Forrester, did not omit to warn his readers that even
+with the aid of his book a medical man was still necessary, and in doing
+so he gives us a glimpse of the quack doctors of the sixteenth century.
+&#8220;Therefore seke you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> out a good Phisicien, and knowen to haue skille, and
+at the leaste be so good to your bodies, as you are to your hosen or shoes
+for the wel-making or mending wherof, I doubt not but you wil diligently
+searche out who is know&#275; to be the best hosier or shoemaker in the
+place where you dwelle: and flie the unlearned as a pestilence to the
+comune wealth. As simple women, carpenters, pewterers, brasiers, sope ball
+sellers, pulters, hostellers, painters, apotecaries (otherwise then for
+their drogges), auaunters th&#275;selves to come from Pole, Constantiple,
+Italie, Almaine, Spaine, Fraunce, Grece, and Turkie, Inde, Egipt or Jury:
+from y<sup>e</sup> seruice of Emperoures, kinges, and quienes, promis&#299;g helpe of
+al diseases, yea vncurable, with one or two drinckes, by waters sixe
+monethes in continualle distillinge, by <i>Aurum potabile</i>, or
+<i>quintessence</i>, by drynckes of great and hygh prices as though thei were
+made of the s&#363;ne, moone, or sterres, by blessynges, and Blowinges,
+Hipocriticalle prayenges, and foolysh smokynges of shirts, smockes, and
+kerchieffes, wyth such other theire phantasies and mockeries, meaninge
+nothng els, but to abuse your light belieue, and scorne you behind your
+backes with their medicines, so filthie, that I am ashamed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> name theim,
+for your single wit and simple belief, in trusting th&#275; most which you
+know not at al, and vnderstad least: like to them which thinke farre
+foules have faire fethers, although thei be never so euil fauoured &amp;
+foule: as though there could not be so conning an Englishman, as a foolish
+running stranger (of others I speak not) or so perfect helth by honest
+learning, as by deceiptfull ignorance.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Caius laid stress upon exercise as an aid to health, but some popular
+games he thought &#8220;rather a laming of legges than an exercise.&#8221; We need not
+follow him in the details of the treatment he recommends if in spite of
+the adoption of his preventive <i>regime</i>, the sweating sickness should
+come.</p>
+
+<p>In 1561 there was issued &#8220;A newe booke conteyninge an exortacion to the
+sicke.&#8221; The tract ends with the following parody on the nostrums current
+for the cure of the pestilence: &#8220;Take a pond of good hard penaunce, and
+washe it wel with the water of your eyes, and let it ly a good whyle at
+youre hert. Take also of the best fyne fayth, hope, charyte yt you can
+get, a like quantite of al mixed together, your soule even full, and use
+this confection every day in your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> lyfe, whiles the plages of God
+reigneth. Then, take both your handes ful of good workes commaunded of
+God, and kepe them close in a clene conscience from the duste of vayne
+glory, and ever as you are able and se necessite so to use them. This
+medicine was found wryten in an olde byble boke, and it hath been
+practised and proved true of mani, both men and women&#8221; (Collier&#8217;s <i>Bib.
+Account</i>, i. 74).</p>
+
+<p>The wealthy, on an outbreak of the plague, fled from the infected city, as
+we may learn from Boccaccio, and from Miles Coverdale&#8217;s translation of
+Osiander&#8217;s sermon, &#8220;How and whether a Christian man ought to flye the
+horrible plage of the pestilence,&#8221; which appeared in 1537.</p>
+
+<p>During the plague of London, in 1603, the physicians are asserted by
+Dekker to have &#8220;hid their synodical heads,&#8221; but this is at all events not
+wholly true. Thomas Lodge, the poet, was also a graduate in medicine, and
+in his &#8220;Treatise on the Plague&#8221;&mdash;not the only one published in relation to
+this epidemic&mdash;we are told of his experiences of the plague-stricken city.
+He gives some good advice in relation to the sanitary measures to be taken
+for the prevention of the plague.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>The nature of the regulations devised in the Tudor times to ward off
+infection may be gathered from the rules laid down at Chester in November,
+1574, when</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;the right Worshipful Sir John Sauage, Knight, maior of the City of
+Chester had consideracion of the present state of the said cite
+somewhat visited with what is called the plage, and divisinge the best
+meanes and orderlie waies he can, with [the advice] of his Bretheren
+the alderman, Justices of peace within the citie aforesaid (through
+the goodness of God) to avoid the same hath with such advice, sett
+forth ordained and appointed (amongst other) the points, articles,
+clauses, and orders folowing, which he willeth and commandeth all
+persons to observe and kepe, upon the severall pains theirin
+contayned:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Imprimis. That no person nor persons who are or shalbe visited with
+the said sickness, or any other who shall be of there company, shall
+go abrode out of there houses without license of the alderman of the
+ward such persons inhabite, And that every person soe licensed to
+beare openlie in their hands ... three quarters long ... ense ...
+shall goe abrode out of the ... upon paine that eny person doynge the
+contrary to be furthwith expulsed out of the said citie.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;2. Item if any person doe company with any persons visited, they
+alsoe to beare ... upon like payne.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;3. Item that none of them soe visited doe goe abroad in any part or
+place within the citie in the night season, upon like payne.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;4. Item that the accustomed due watche to be kepte every night,
+within the said citie, by the inhabitants thereof.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;5. Item the same watchman to apprehend and take up all night walkers
+and such suspect as shalbe founde within and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>to bring them to the
+Justice of peace, of that ... the gaile of the Northgate, that further
+order may be taken with them as shall appear....</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;6. Item that no swine be kept, within the said citie nor any other
+place, then ... side prively nor openlie after the xiii<sup>th</sup> daie of
+this present moneth, upon paine of fyne and imprisonment of every
+person doing the contrary.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;7. Item that no donge, muck or filth, at any tyme, hearafter be caste
+within the walls of the said citie, upon paine of ffyne and
+imprisonment at his worships direction.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;8. Item that no kind or sort of ... or any wares from other place be
+brought in packs into the said citie of Chester, untill the same be
+ffirste opened and eired without the libities of the said citie, upon
+pain last recited.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;9. Item that papers or writing containing this sence Lord haue mercie
+upon us, to be fixed upon euery house, dore post, or other open place,
+to the street of the house so infected.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;10. Item that no person of the said citie doe suffer any their doggs
+to goe abrode out of their houses or dwellings, upon paine that euery
+such dogge so founde abrode shalbe presently killed. And the owners
+thereof ponished at his worships pleasure.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>It has always been found easier to make laws than to have them enforced,
+and we find certain inhabitants complaining of the disobedience of
+infected persons in the following petition:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;To the right worshipful Sir John Savage, knight, maior of the Citie of
+Chester, the aldermen, sheriffs, and common counsaile of the same.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In most humble wise complayninge sheweth unto your worships, your
+Orators, the persons whose name are subscribed inhabiting in a certain
+lane within the same citie called <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>Pepper Street, That where yt haue
+pleased God to infect divers persons of the same Street with the
+plage, and where also for the avoidinge of further infection your
+worships have taken order that all such so infected should observe
+certaine good necessarye orders by your worships made and provided.
+But so it is, right worships, that none of the said persons infected
+do observe any of the orders by your worships in that case taken, to
+the greate danger and perill, not only of your Orators and their
+famelyes being in number twenty, but also of the reste of the said
+citie, who by the sufferance of God and of his gracious goodness are
+clere and safe from any infection of the said deceas: In consideration
+whereof your Orators moste humbly beseche your worships for God&#8217;s
+sake, and as your worships intend it your Orators should, by the
+sufferance of God, avoide the dangers of the said deceas with their
+family, and also for the better safty of the citie to take such
+directions with the said infected persons that they may clearly be
+avoided from thens to some other convenient for the time untill God
+shall restore them to their former health. And in this doing your
+Orators shall daily pray, &amp;c.&#8221;<a name='fna_1' id='fna_1' href='#f_1'><small>[1]</small></a></p></div>
+
+<p>During the visitation of the plague at Manchester in 1645, when the place
+suffered severely, the authorities not only provided &#8220;cabins&#8221; at
+Collyhurst for the reception of those whom the disease attacked, but
+engaged the services of &#8220;Doctor Smith,&#8221; who received &pound;4 &#8220;for his charges
+to London and a free guift,&#8221; and &pound;39 &#8220;for part of his wages for his
+service in the time of the visitation.&#8221; Thos. Minshull, the apothecary,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+was paid &pound;6 2s. 6d. for &#8220;stuffe for ye town&#8217;s service.&#8221; Some &#8220;bottles and
+stuffe&#8221; were unused at the end of the plague, and these were sold to &#8220;Mr.
+Smith, Phissition,&#8221; for &pound;1.</p>
+
+<p>The story of English pestilence closes with the Great Plague of London in
+1665. It began about the west end of the city, Hampstead, Highgate, and
+Acton sharing the infection, and gradually worked eastward by way of
+Holborn. Out of an estimated population of 460,000 there died 97,306
+persons, of whom 68,596 perished of pestilence. One week witnessed 8,297
+deaths, and it has been seriously argued that the official figures very
+much underrate the truth, and that in this week of highest mortality the
+deaths really amounted to 12,000. &#8220;Almost all other diseases turned to the
+plague.&#8221; Many of the clergy fled, and the places of some were occupied by
+the ejected Nonconformists. The complaint of absenteeism was also brought
+against the physicians, but there were certainly some who stayed in the
+infected and desolate city. &#8220;But Lord!&#8221; says Pepys, &#8220;what a sad time it is
+to all: no boats upon the river, and grass grown all up and down Whitehall
+Court, and nobody but poor wretches in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> street.&#8221; William Boghurst, who
+was an apothecary, and Nathaniel Hodges, who was a physician, each wrote
+full accounts of the plague.</p>
+
+<p>Hodges was the son of a vicar of Kensington, where he was born in 1629. He
+was a King&#8217;s scholar at Westminster, and was educated both at Cambridge
+and Oxford, taking his <span class="smcaplc">M.D.</span> degree at the latter university in 1659. When
+the great plague broke out he remained at his house in Walbrook, and gave
+advice to all who sought it. There was unfortunately no lack of patients.
+Hodges&#8217; writings give us a minute account of the &#8220;doctor in the time of
+pestilence.&#8221; The first doubtful appearances of the plague were noticed by
+Dr. Hodges amongst some of those who sought his counsel at the Christmas
+of 1664-5, in May and June there were some that could not be mistaken, and
+in August and September he was overwhelmed with work. He was an early
+riser, and after taking a dose of anti-pestilential electuary, he attended
+to any private business that needed immediate decision, and then went to
+his consulting room, and for three hours received a succession of
+patients, some already ill of the plague, others only infected by fear.
+Having disposed of these anxious inquirers, the doctor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span> breakfasted, and
+then began his round of visits to patients who were unable to see him at
+home. Disinfectants were burnt on hot coals as he entered their houses,
+and he also took a lozenge. Returning home, he dined off roast meat and
+pickles, prefaced and followed by sack and other wine. A second round of
+visits did not terminate until eight or nine in the evening. He was an
+enemy of tobacco, but his dislike of the Indian weed did not extend to
+sack, which he seems to have drunk plentifully, especially perhaps on the
+two occasions when he thought he had himself caught the plague. These
+proved to be false alarms. Amongst the drugs he tried and found useless
+were &#8220;unicorn&#8217;s horn&#8221; and dried toads. The Corporation of London testified
+a due sense of Hodges&#8217; services by a stipend and the position of physician
+to the city. His &#8220;Loimologia&#8221; is an important contribution to the
+literature of epidemics.</p>
+
+<p>Hodges, who had thus been a witness of the Carnival of Death in the
+metropolis of England, may well have pondered on the words of one of his
+illustrious contemporaries, Sir Thomas Browne, who says:&mdash;&#8220;I have not
+those strait ligaments, or narrow obligations to the world as to dote on
+life,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> or be convulst and tremble at the name of Death. Not that I am
+insensible of the dread and horrour thereof; or by raking into the bowels
+of the deceased, continual sight of anatomies, skeletons, or cadaverous
+reliques, like vespilloes or grave makers, I am become stupid, or have
+forgot the apprehension of mortality: but that, marshalling all the
+horrors and contemplating the extremities thereof, I find not anything
+therein able to daunt the courage of a man, much less a well resolved
+Christian.... For a Pagan there may be some motive to be in love with
+life; but for a Christian to be amazed at Death, I see not how he can
+escape this dilemma, that he is too sensible of this life, or hopeless of
+the life to come.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Mountebanks and Medicine.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Thomas Frost.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">Mountebanks</span>&mdash;a name derived from the Italian words <i>monta in banco</i>,
+mounting a bench&mdash;were, in company with their attendant zanies, or &#8220;Merry
+Andrews,&#8221; a popular class of public entertainers down to the earlier years
+of the present century. Their chief object, however, was not to provide a
+free entertainment, but to dispose of their nostrums to the crowds which
+the entertainment brought together. Andrew Borde, a medical practitioner
+at Winchester, who obtained a more than local reputation, enjoying the
+distinction of being one of the physicians of Henry VIII., is said to have
+been the original &#8220;Merry Andrew.&#8221; The story of his life is full of
+interest, and furnishes some curious information concerning the manners of
+his age and his class. Mr. George Roberts, who supplied Lord Macaulay with
+much material for his &#8220;History of England,&#8221; relates that Borde was a man
+of great learning, and had travelled on the continent. He made many
+astronomical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> calculations, which may not unfairly be supposed to have
+been for the purposes of astrology. He was a celibitarian and an ascetic,
+drinking water three times a week, wearing a hair-shirt next his skin, and
+keeping the sheet intended for his burial at the foot of his bed. As a
+mountebank, he frequented fairs, markets, and other places of public
+resort, and addressed those assembled in recommendation of his medicines.
+He was a fluent speaker, and the witticisms with which he interspersed his
+lectures never failed to attract, obtaining for him the name of &#8220;Merry
+Andrew.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mountebanks flourished on the continent as well as in England, and the
+<i>Belphegor</i> of the dramatist had many prototypes in Italy and France.
+Coryat, a little-known writer, who made the tour of Europe at the
+beginning of the seventeenth century, and published a narrative of his
+adventures and experiences, gives a good account of the mountebanks he saw
+at Venice. &#8220;Twice a day,&#8221; he says, &#8220;that is, in the morning and afternoon,
+you may see five or six several stages erected for them.... These
+mountebanks at one end of their stage place their trunk, which is
+replenished with a world of new-fangled trumperies. After the whole rabble
+of them has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> gotten up to the stage,&mdash;whereof some wear vizards like fools
+in a play, some that are women are attired with habits according to that
+person they sustain,&mdash;the music begins; sometimes vocal, sometimes
+instrumental, sometimes both. While the music plays, the principal
+mountebank opens his trunk and sets abroad his wares. Then he maketh an
+oration to the audience of half-an-hour long, wherein he doth most
+hyperbolically extol the virtue of his drugs and confections&mdash;though many
+of them are very counterfeit and false. I often wondered at these natural
+orators, for they would tell their tales with such admirable volubility
+and plausible grace, <i>extempore</i>, and seasoned with that singular variety
+of elegant jests and witty conceits, that they did often strike great
+admiration into strangers.... He then delivereth his commodities by little
+and little, the jester still playing his part, and the musicians singing
+and playing upon their instruments. The principal things that they sell
+are oils, sovereign waters, amorous songs printed, apothecary drugs, and a
+commonweal of other trifles. The head mountebank, every time he delivereth
+out anything, maketh an extemporal speech, which he doth eftsoons
+intermingle with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> such savoury jests (but spiced now and then with
+singular scurrility), that they minister passing mirth and laughter to the
+whole company, which may perhaps consist of a thousand people.&#8221; The
+entertainment extended over two hours, when, having sold as many of their
+wares as they could, their properties would be removed and the stage taken
+down.</p>
+
+<p>Jonson, in his comedy of &#8220;Volpone,&#8221; presents a scene showing a
+mountebank&#8217;s stage at Venice, and the discourse of the vendor of quack
+medicines has a remarkable resemblance to the oratory of the &#8220;Cheap Jacks&#8221;
+of the present day, of which old play-goers may remember hearing a very
+good imitation in the drama of &#8220;The Flowers of the Forest.&#8221; Says Jonson&#8217;s
+mountebank: &#8220;You all know, honourable gentlemen, I never valued this
+ampulla, or vial, at less than eight crowns; but for this time I am
+content to be deprived of it for six: six crowns is the price, and less in
+courtesy I know you cannot offer me. Take it or leave it, however, both it
+and I am at your service! Well! I am in a humour at this time to make a
+present of the small quantity my coffer contains: to the rich in courtesy,
+and to the poor for God&#8217;s sake. Wherefore, now mark:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span> I asked you six
+crowns, and six crowns at other times you have paid me; you shall not give
+me six crowns, nor five, nor four, nor three, nor two, nor one, nor half a
+ducat. Sixpence it will cost you (or six hundred pounds); expect no lower
+price, for I will not bate.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Returning to the mountebanks of our own country, we find in the accounts
+of the Chamberlain of the Corporation of Worcester for the year 1631 the
+following item:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;They yeald account of money by them received of mountebanks to the
+use of the poor 58s. 9d.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>It is suggested by Mr. John Noake, however, that these mountebanks were
+riders or posturers, and that the amount was the charge made for the
+permission accorded them to perform in the city. Later in the century, the
+eccentric Earl of Rochester, on one occasion, played the mountebank on
+Tower Hill, and the example was followed by more than one comedian of the
+next century. Leveridge and Penkethman, actors well known at Bartholomew
+Fair for many years, appeared at country fairs as &#8220;Doctor Leverigo and his
+Jack-Pudding Pinkanello,&#8221; as also did Haines as &#8220;Watho Van Claturbank,
+High German Doctor.&#8221; The discourse of the latter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span> was published as a
+broadside, headed with an engraving representing him addressing a crowd
+from a stage, with a bottle of medicine in his right hand. Beside him
+stands a Harlequin, and in the rear a man with a plumed hat blows a
+trumpet. A gouty patient occupies a high-backed arm-chair, and an array of
+boxes and bottles is seen at the back of the stage.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Having studied Galen, Hypocrates, Albumazar, and Paracelsus,&#8221; says the
+discourse thus headed, &#8220;I am now become the Esculapius of the age; having
+been educated at twelve universities, and travelled through fifty-two
+kingdoms, and been counsellor to the counsellors of several monarchs. By
+the earnest prayers and entreaties of several lords, earls, dukes, and
+honourable personages, I have been at last prevailed upon to oblige the
+world with this notice, that all persons, young or old, blind or lame,
+deaf and dumb, curable or incurable, may know where to repair for cure, in
+all cephalalgias, paralytic paroxysms, palpitations of the pericardium,
+empyemas, syncopes, and nasieties; arising either from a plethory or a
+cachochymy, vertiginous vapours, hydrocephalus dysenteries, odontalgic or
+podagrical inflammations, and the entire legion of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> lethiferous
+distempers.... This is Nature&#8217;s palladium, health&#8217;s magazine; it works
+seven manner of ways, as Nature requires, for it scorns to be confined to
+any particular mode of operation; so that it affecteth the cure either
+hypnotically, hydrotically, cathartically, poppismatically, pneumatically,
+or synedochically; it mundifies the hypogastrium, extinguishes all
+supernatural fermentations and ebullitions, and, in fine, annihilates all
+nosotrophical morbific ideas of the whole corporeal compages. A drachm of
+it is worth a bushel of March dust; for, if a man chance to have his
+brains beat out, or his head dropped off, two drops&mdash;I say two drops!
+gentlemen&mdash;seasonably applied, will recall the fleeting spirit,
+re-enthrone the deposed archeus, cement the discontinuity of the parts,
+and in six minutes restore the lifeless trunk to all its pristine
+functions, vital, natural, and animal; so that this, believe me,
+gentlemen, is the only sovereign remedy in the world. <i>Venienti occurite
+morbo.</i>&mdash;Down with your dust. <i>Principiis obsta.</i>&mdash;No cure no money.
+<i>Qu&aelig;rendo pecunia primum.</i>&mdash;Be not sick too late.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The mountebanking quack flourished in great state in the first half of the
+last century. &#8220;A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> Tour through England,&#8221; published in 1723, gives the
+following account of one whom the author saw at Winchester:&mdash;&#8220;As I was
+sitting at the George Inn, I saw a coach with six bay horses, a calash and
+four, a chaise and four, enter the inn, in a yellow livery, turned up with
+red; four gentlemen on horseback, in blue, trimmed with silver: and as
+yellow is the colour given by the dukes in England, I went out to see what
+duke it was; but there was no coronet on the coach, only a plain
+coat-of-arms on each, with this motto: <span class="smcaplc">ARGENTO LABORAT FABER</span>. Upon
+enquiry, I found this great equipage belonged to a mountebank, and that
+his name being Smith, the motto was a pun upon his name. The footmen in
+yellow were his tumblers and trumpeters, and those in blue his
+merry-andrew, his apothecary, and his spokesman. He was dressed in black
+velvet, and had in his coach a woman that danced on the ropes. He cures
+all diseases, and sells his packets for sixpence a-piece. He erected
+stages in all the market towns twenty miles round; and it is a prodigy how
+so wise a people as the English are gulled by such pickpockets. But his
+amusements on the stage are worth the sixpence, without the pills. In the
+morning he is dressed up in a fine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> brocade night-gown, for his chamber
+practice, when he gives advice, and gets large fees.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A passage in a letter written by the second Lord Lyttelton, about the year
+1774, shows that this style of travelling was then still kept up by
+mountebanks. He says:&mdash;&#8220;As a family party of us were crossing the road on
+the side of Hagley Park, a chaise passed along, followed by a couple of
+attendants with French horns. Who can that be, said my father? Some
+itinerant mountebank, replied I, if one may judge from his musical
+followers. I really spoke with all the indifference of an innocent mind:
+nor did it occur to me that the Right Reverend Father in God, my uncle,
+had sometimes been pleased to travel with servants similarly accoutred.&#8221;
+Nearly twenty years later, the famous quack, Katerfelto, travelled through
+Durham in a carriage, with a pair of horses, and attended by two negro
+servants in green liveries, with red collars. In the towns he visited
+these men were sent round to announce his lectures on electricity and the
+microscope, blowing trumpets, and distributing hand-bills.</p>
+
+<p>There seems to be good ground for believing that among what may be called
+the amateur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span> mountebanks, such as Rochester, we must count the author of
+&#8220;Tristram Shandy.&#8221; Dr. Dibdin found in the possession of Mr. James
+Atkinson, a medical practitioner at York, a rather roughly executed
+picture, in oil colours, representing a mountebank and his zany on a
+stage, surrounded by a crowd. An inscription described the former as Mr.
+T. Brydges, and the latter as the Rev. Laurence Sterne. Mr. Atkinson, who
+was an octogenarian, told Dr. Dibdin that his father had been acquainted
+with Sterne, who was a good amateur draughtsman, and that he and Brydges
+each painted the other&#8217;s portrait in the picture. The story is a strange
+one, but before it is dismissed as unworthy of belief, it must be
+remembered that the clerical story-writer was a droll and whimsical
+character, and at no time much influenced by his priestly vocation. It is
+quite conceivable, therefore, that he may have indulged in such a freak on
+some occasion during the period of his life in which he developed his
+worst moral deficiencies.</p>
+
+<p>In the early years of the present century, a German quack, named Bossy,
+used to mount a stage on Tower Hill and Covent Garden Market alternately,
+in order, as he said, that both ends of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> London might profit by his
+experience and skill. It is said that on one of these occasions, when he
+had induced an old woman to mount his stage in the latter place, and
+relate the wonderful cures the doctor had performed upon her, a parrot
+that had learned some coarse language from the porters and costermongers
+frequenting the market, and sometimes used it in a manner that seemed very
+apt to the occasion, exclaimed, &#8220;Lying old &mdash;&mdash;!&#8221; when the old woman
+concluded her narrative. The roar of laughter with which this criticism
+was received by the rough audience disconcerted Bossy for a moment; but
+quickly recovering his presence of mind, he stepped forward, with his hand
+on his heart, and gravely replied, &#8220;It is no lie, you wicked bird!&mdash;it is
+all true as is de Gospel!&#8221; Bossy attained considerable reputation, and
+ended his days with a fair competence.</p>
+
+<p>The mountebank has long fallen from his former high estate. The quack may
+still be found vending his pills in the open-air markets of Yorkshire and
+Lancashire; but he does not mount a stage, and resembles his predecessors
+of the last century only in the fluency and volubility of his discourse on
+the virtues of his potions,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> pills, and plasters. The author of the paper
+on mountebanks in the &#8220;Book of Days&#8221; (edited by Robert Chambers), states
+that he saw one at York about 1860, who &#8220;sold medicines on a stage in the
+old style, but without the Merry Andrew or the music,&#8221; and adds that &#8220;he
+presented himself in shabby black clothes, with a dirty white neck-cloth.&#8221;
+Even the name had long before that time ceased to be connected with the
+vending of medicines, and had come to be applied to those itinerant circus
+companies who gave gratuitous performances in the open air, making their
+gains by the sale of lottery tickets. The present writer remembers seeing
+the circus company of John Clarke performing on a piece of waste ground at
+Lower Norwood, when the clown of the show went among the spectators
+selling tickets at a shilling each, entitling the holder to participate in
+a drawing, the prizes in which were Britannia metal tea pots and milk
+ewers, papier mach&eacute; tea trays, cotton gown pieces, etc. That must have
+been about 1835, or within a year or two of that time.</p>
+
+<p>Only a few years later, a lottery in sixpenny shares was similarly
+conducted at Alfreton, in Derbyshire, and probably in many other places,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+though contrary to the provisions of the Lottery Act.</p>
+
+<p>The mountebank doctor of former times, with his carriage, his zany, and
+his musicians, can now only be met with in the provincial towns of France
+and Italy, and even there but seldom. Thirty or forty years ago, there was
+a man who, in a carriage drawn up behind the Louvre, used to practise
+dentistry and advertise his father, who had a flourishing dentist&#8217;s
+practice in one of the narrow streets near the cathedral of Notre Dame.
+Another of this fraternity was seen at Marseilles by an English tourist a
+few years later, and in this instance some musicians accompanied the
+mountebank&#8217;s phaeton, and drowned the cries of the suffering patients with
+the crash of a march. But these survivals remind us rather of <i>Belphegor</i>,
+in the pathetic drama of that name, than of <i>Dulcamara</i> in the opera of
+<i>L&#8217;Elisor d&#8217;Amore</i>, with his gorgeous equipage and his musical attendants,
+as old play-goers remember the personation of the character by the famous
+Lablache.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span></p>
+<h2>The Strange Story of the Fight with the Small-Pox.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Thomas Frost.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">When,</span> at the present day, we hear of an epidemic of small-pox in some town
+where the practice of vaccine inoculation has been neglected, it is both
+instructive and consolatory to turn our thoughts back to the time, before
+the introduction of that practice, when that horrible disease caused ten
+per cent, of all the deaths in excess of those occurring in the ordinary
+course of nature. This statement, startling as it may seem to the present
+generation, may be verified by reference to the annual bills of mortality
+of the city of London. This fearful state of things had prevailed in
+England from the time of the Plantagenets, when, in the first quarter of
+the eighteenth century, a gleam of light was flashed upon the medical
+darkness of western Europe from the east. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu,
+writing from Adrianople to a lady friend in the spring of 1717, flashed
+that light in the concluding portion of her letter, as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>&#8220;Apropos of distempers,
+I am going to tell you a thing that will make you wish yourself here. The small-pox, so fatal and so general amongst
+us, is here entirely harmless, by the invention of <i>ingrafting</i>, which
+is the term they give it. There is a set of old women who make it
+their business to perform the operation every autumn, in the month of
+September, when the great heat is abated. People send to one another
+to know if any of their family has a mind to have the small-pox; they
+make parties for this purpose, and when they are met (commonly fifteen
+or sixteen together), the old woman comes with a nut-shell full of the
+matter of the best sort of small-pox, and asks what vein you please to
+have opened. She immediately rips open that you offer to her with a
+large needle (which gives you no more pain than a common scratch), and
+puts into the vein as much matter as can lie upon the head of her
+needle, and after that binds up the little wound with a hollow bit of
+shell, and in this manner opens four or five veins.</p>
+
+<p>... Every year thousands undergo this operation; and the French
+ambassador says pleasantly, that they take the small-pox here by way
+of diversion, as they take the waters in other countries. There is no
+example of any one that has died in it; and you may believe I am well
+satisfied of the safety of this experiment, since I intend to try it
+on my own little son.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>This intention she carried into practice, and on her return to England
+made great exertions to introduce inoculation into general use. The
+medical profession opposed it so strongly, however, that for many years
+the horrible distemper continued to rage unchecked. Such announcements<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span> as
+the following were, in consequence, not unfrequent in the newspapers:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;WHEREAS the <span class="smcap">Town</span> of <span class="smcap">Bury St. Edmund&#8217;s</span>,
+where the <span class="smcap">General Quarter Sessions</span> of the <span class="smcap">Peace</span> of that Division are usually
+held, is now afflicted with the Small-Pox, for which reason it might be of
+exceeding ill consequence to the Country in General to hold the
+Sessions there; This is, therefore, to acquaint the PUBLIC that the
+next <span class="smcap">General Quarter Sessions</span> of the Peace will be held at the sign of
+the <span class="smcap">Pickerel</span> in <span class="smcap">Ixworth</span>, on Monday next.</p>
+
+<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Cocksedge</span>, Clerk of the Peace.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Later on in the same year (1744) an advertisement appeared, signed by the
+clergy, churchwardens, and medical practitioners of the town, stating that
+&#8220;there were only twenty-one persons then lying ill of the small-pox.&#8221;
+Scarcely a week passed, in those days, without advertisements appearing of
+the number of cases of the disease in certain towns. Careful study of a
+large number of these announcements shows, however, that it was only
+thought desirable to advertise when the epidemic was thought to be
+abating, or when it had abated. Take the following, for instance:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">&#8220;Nov. 4, 1755.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Upon the strictest Inquiry made of the present state of the SMALL-POX
+in <span class="smcap">Beccles</span>, it appears to be in eleven houses, and no more, and that
+the truth may be constantly <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>known, the same will be weekly advertised
+alternately in the Ipswich and Norwich papers by us,</p>
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Tho. Page</span>, Rector.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Osm. Clarke</span> and <span class="smcap">Is. Blowers</span>, Churchwardens.&#8221;</span></p></div>
+
+<p>In the following year we find it announced that, &#8220;upon a strict inquiry
+made by the clerks through their respective parishes, delivered to us, and
+attested by them, there is but six persons now afflicted with the
+small-pox in this town,&#8221;&mdash;to wit, Colchester&mdash;and this statement is signed
+by three ministers and six medical practitioners. In the <i>Ipswich Journal</i>
+of Jan. 22nd, 1757, the following appeared:&mdash;&#8220;There will be no fair this
+year at Bildestone on Ash Wednesday, as usual, by reason of the small-pox
+being in several parishes not far off.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The practice of inoculation, though still frowned upon by a large
+proportion of the medical profession, was growing at this time, as appears
+from the following advertisement:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Colchester</span>, May 12, 1762.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Practice of bringing people out of the country into this town to
+be inoculated for the Small-pox being very prejudicial to the town in
+many respects, but especially to the Trade thereof, and as by this
+practice the distemper may be continued much longer in the town than
+it otherwise would, in all probability, it is thought proper by some
+of the principal inhabitants and traders in the town, that this public
+notice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span> should be given that they are determined to prosecute any
+person or persons whomsoever, that shall hereafter bring into this
+town, or who shall receive into their houses in the town as lodgers,
+any person or persons for that purpose, with the utmost severity that
+the law will permit.... But that they might not be thought
+discouragers of a practice so salutary and beneficial to mankind, as
+inoculation is found to be, which encourages great numbers to go into
+the practice, the persons who have caused this public notice to be
+given have no objection to surgeons carrying on the practice in houses
+properly situated for the purpose.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>The &#8220;great numbers&#8221; of persons referred to in this notice as having &#8220;gone
+into the practice&#8221; of inoculation for the small-pox appear to have been
+chiefly old women, as in Turkey, and by some of these it was carried on
+until the passing of the Vaccination Act in 1840. Five guineas was the fee
+advertised in the <i>Ipswich Journal</i> in 1761 for performing the operation
+by Robert Sutton, an operator in Kent, who announced that he had &#8220;only met
+with but one accident out of the many hundreds he has had under his cure.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The prevalence of this hideous disease in the last century, and the dread
+which it inspired, is curiously attested by the frequency with which
+advertisements for servants, etc., appeared in the newspapers, in which
+there was an express stipulation that applicants must have had the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+small-pox. A housemaid or footman whose face bore the traces of this
+disease would not, at the present day, find their appearance much in their
+favour: but the following selection of advertisements, culled from the
+<i>Ipswich Journal</i> and the <i>Salisbury and Winchester Journal</i>, show that in
+the last century the marks would increase their chances of obtaining
+employment very considerably. The dates range from 1755 to 1781, and such
+announcements might be increased to any extent.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;A Three Years&#8217; APPRENTICE is wanted to use the Sea between
+Manningtree and London, whose age is between 18 and 25 years, and has
+had the Small-pox. Such a one, inquiring of <span class="smcap">Mr. Wm. Leach</span>, at Mistley
+Thorne, in Essex, will hear of good encouragement.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;WANTED, about Michaelmas, as Coachman, in a gentleman&#8217;s family, who
+can drive four horses, and ride postillion well. A Single Man, must
+have had the Small-pox, and know how to drive in London. Such an one,
+who can be well recommended, by giving a description of himself, his
+age, and abilities, in a letter directed to A. B., at <span class="smcap">Mr. J. Kendall&#8217;s</span>,
+in <span class="smcap">Colchester</span>, may hear of a very good place.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;WANTED, a <span class="smcap">Journeyman Baker</span>, that is a good workman, and has had the
+<span class="smcap">Small-Pox</span>. Such a person may hear of a good place by applying to <span class="smcap">Mr.
+John Stow</span>, at Sudbury, or to the Printer of this paper.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wanted an Apprentice to an eminent Surgeon in full practice in the
+county of Suffolk. If he has not had the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span> Small-Pox, it is expected he
+will be inoculated for it, before he enters on business.&mdash;Enquire of
+<span class="smcap">John Fox</span>, at Dedham, Essex.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Colchester</span>, June 15th, 1762.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wanted immediately, a Stout Lad as an Apprentice to a Currier. If he
+can write it will be the more agreeable. Inquire further of <span class="smcap">Eleanor
+Onyon</span>. N.B.&mdash;If he has not had the Small-pox, he need not apply.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;WANTED for a gentleman that lives most part of the year in London, A
+Genteel Person, between 28 and 40 years of age, that has had the
+Small-pox, to be as Companion and Housekeeper. One that has been
+brought up in a genteel, frugal and handsome manner, either a Maid or
+Widow, so they have no incumbrances.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;WANTED, a NURSEMAID. None need apply who cannot bring a good
+character from their last place; and has had the Small-pox.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;WANTS a place in a large or small family, in town or country, a YOUNG
+MAN, who is well versed in the different branches of a Gardener, has
+had the Small-pox, and can write a good hand.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;WANTED, in a large family, a STOUT WOMAN, about 30, single, or a
+widow without children, who has had the Small-pox, to take care of a
+lusty child, under a year old. Her character must be unexceptionable,
+and by no means a fashionable dresser, and lived in families of
+credit. Any person answering this description may enquire of <span class="smcap">Mrs.
+Mercer</span>, at the Star and Garter, Andover, and be further informed.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>It was about the time when the last of these advertisements appeared that
+Jenner commenced his inquiries concerning the prophylactic virtues of
+cow-pox, though nearly twenty years elapsed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> before they were sufficiently
+advanced to enable him to make the results known. His idea of using
+vaccine inoculation to bring about the total extinction of small pox was
+scouted by those of his professional brethren to whom he mentioned it, and
+we learn from one of his biographers that, at the outset, &#8220;both his own
+observation and that of other medical men of his acquaintance proved to
+him that what was commonly called cow-pox was not a certain preventive of
+small-pox. But he ascertained by assiduous inquiry and personal
+investigation that cows were liable to various kinds of eruption on their
+teats, all capable of being communicated to the hands of the milkers; and
+that such sores when so communicated were all called cow-pox.&#8221; But when he
+had traced out the nature of these various diseases, and ascertained which
+of them possessed the protective virtue against small-pox, he was again
+foiled by learning that in some cases when what he now called the true
+cow-pox broke out among the cattle on a dairy farm, and had been
+communicated to the milkers, they subsequently had small-pox. These
+repeated failures perplexed him, but at the same time stimulated, instead
+of discouraging him. He conceived the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span> idea that the virus of cow-pox
+might undergo some change which deprived it of its protective power, while
+still enabling it to communicate a disease to human beings. Following up
+the inquiry from this point, he at length discovered that the virus was
+capable of imparting protection against small-pox only in a certain
+condition of the pustule.</p>
+
+<p>He was now prepared to submit his theory to the test of experiment, but it
+was not until 1796 that he had the opportunity. A dairymaid, who had
+contracted cow-pox from one of her employer&#8217;s cows, afforded the matter,
+and Jenner introduced it into two incisions in the arms of a boy about
+eight years of age. The disease thus transferred ran its ordinary course
+without any ill effects, and the boy was afterwards inoculated with the
+virus of small pox, which produced no effect. The disappearance of the
+cow-pox from the dairies in the neighbourhood of his country practice in
+Gloucestershire prevented him from making further experiments; and when he
+visited London for that purpose, he had the mortification of finding that
+no one could be found who would consent to be operated upon. It was not
+until 1798 that this obstacle was overcome, and then,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> the results of the
+earlier experiments having been confirmed by a series of vaccinations,
+followed by inoculation for small-pox several months afterwards without
+effect, Jenner made his discovery public.</p>
+
+<p>In the following year, vaccine inoculation began to spread, the practice
+being taken up by many of Jenner&#8217;s friends, including several who were not
+in the medical profession. But, like inoculation for the small-pox, when
+introduced by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu,&mdash;like all innovations on
+established practices, indeed,&mdash;vaccination received for many years after
+its introduction the most violent opposition. Just as inoculation for
+small-pox had been denounced from the pulpit and in medical treatises as a
+&#8220;diabolical operation&#8221; and a wicked interference with the designs of
+Providence, so did a certain Dr. Squirrel denounce vaccination as an
+attempt to change &#8220;the established laws of nature.&#8221; The most absurd
+stories were circulated of the effects alleged to have followed
+vaccination. &#8220;A lady,&#8221; it is stated by Mr. Bettany, &#8220;complained that since
+her daughter had been vaccinated she coughed like a cow, and had grown
+hairy all over her body; and in one country district it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> stated that
+vaccination had been discontinued there, because those who had been
+inoculated in that manner bellowed like bulls.&#8221; There were even doctors
+who pretended to detect resemblances to bovine visages in the countenances
+of children, produced, as they did not hesitate to declare, by
+vaccination! Self-interest may have had as much to do as prejudice in
+prompting the opposition of the profession. Many practitioners derived a
+considerable portion of their income from fees for inoculation for
+small-pox. Sutton, as we have seen, charged five guineas for the
+operation, and advertised himself in many provincial newspapers; and the
+income of Dr. Woodville, at one time physician to the Small-Pox Hospital,
+is said to have sunk in one year from a thousand pounds to a hundred on
+his adopting the practice of vaccination.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the prejudice and interested antagonism to which the new
+practice was exposed, it continued to make way. The Rev. Dr. Booker, of
+Dudley, gave the following striking testimony to its beneficial
+effects:&mdash;&#8220;I have, previous to the knowledge of vaccine inoculation,
+frequently buried, day after day, several (and once as many as eight)
+victims of the small-pox. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> since the parish has been blessed with this
+invaluable boon of Divine Providence (cow pox), introduced among us nearly
+four years ago, only two victims have fallen a prey to the above ravaging
+disorder (small pox). In the surrounding villages, like an insatiable
+Moloch, it has lately been devouring vast numbers, where obstinacy and
+prejudice have precluded the Jennerian protective blessing.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In 1803, the Royal Jennerian Institution was founded under royal
+patronage, and with Jenner as president, to promote vaccination in London
+and elsewhere; and its operations were continued for a few years with much
+success, ceasing, however, on the establishment of the National Vaccine
+Institution in 1808. Two years prior to this event, Lord Henry Petty, who
+then held the office of Chancellor of the Exchequer, carried a motion in
+the House of Commons, that the Royal College of Physicians should be
+requested to inquire and report on the progress of vaccination. The
+report, which appeared in the following year, set forth that, within eight
+years from the discovery of vaccination, some hundreds of thousands of
+persons had been vaccinated in the British Islands, and upwards of eight
+hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> thousand in our East Indian possessions, and that the practice
+had been generally adopted on the continent of Europe. Considering that
+small-pox destroyed one-sixth of those whom it attacked, and that nearly
+one-tenth, and in some years more than that proportion, of the entire
+mortality in London was caused by it, and also the number, respectability,
+and extensive experience of the advocates of vaccination, compared with
+the feeble and imperfect testimonies of its few opponents, the value of
+the practice seemed firmly established.</p>
+
+<p>This report did much to advance vaccination in public opinion. At the next
+quarter sessions held at Stafford, it was taken into consideration by the
+county magistrates, who, from its statements and the reports and
+testimonials sent to Jenner, considered themselves justified in placing it
+on record&mdash;&#8220;That vaccine inoculation, properly conducted, appeared never
+to have failed as a certain preservative against small-pox; that it was
+unattended by fever, and perfectly free from danger; that it required
+neither confinement, loss of time, nor previous preparation; that it was
+not infectious, nor productive of other diseases; that it might be
+performed with safety on persons of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> every age and sex, and at all times
+and seasons of the year.&#8221; It was not, however, until 1840 that the results
+of the labours of Jenner, the report of the Royal College of Physicians,
+and the opinions of nearly the entire medical profession received
+legislative endorsement by the passing of the Vaccination Act, since which
+small-pox has become a thing of the past, except in cases where it has
+been conserved by prejudice and ignorance.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Burkers and Body-Snatchers.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Thomas Frost.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">How</span> recollections will crowd upon the mind when a train of thought is set
+in motion by the association of ideas! When, many years ago, I visited Dr.
+Kahn&#8217;s anatomical museum, then located in Tichborne Street, I there saw a
+human skeleton which was affirmed by the lecturer, Dr. Sexton, to be that
+of John Bishop, who was hanged in 1831, for the murder of an Italian boy
+named Carlo Ferrari, at a house in Nova Scotia Gardens, one of the slums
+then existing in the north-eastern quarter of London. Though nearly forty
+years had elapsed since the commission of the crime, and I was only ten
+years of age when I heard the horrible story which the sight of that
+ghastly relic of mortality recalled to my mind, all the incidents
+connected with it immediately passed before my mental vision like a
+hideous phantasmagoria. The vividness with which they came back to me may
+be accounted for by the deep impression which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span> they made upon my mind at
+the time of their occurrence. Those whose memories will carry them back
+sixty years will readily understand this.</p>
+
+<p>At the time when the public mind was harrowed by the narration in the
+newspapers of the horrible circumstances connected with the murder, and
+for some time previously, a fearful excitement had been created in all
+parts of the country by stories of murders committed and graves robbed of
+their ghastly tenants for the purpose of supplying with &#8220;subjects&#8221; the
+dissecting tables of the London and Edinburgh schools of anatomy. In the
+latter city two miscreants named Burke and Hare had been convicted of
+murder for this purpose, and one of them hanged for their crimes; but the
+scare had not abated. Stories were told with appalling frequency of
+corpses missing from lonely graveyards and of narrow escapes from murder
+in little frequented places. Chloroform had not then been discovered, but
+the Scotch professors of the art of murder had introduced the practice,
+popularly named after one of them, of disabling their victims by means of
+a pitch plaster suddenly clapped on the mouth. Every person who was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+missing was thought to have been &#8220;burked,&#8221; and the watching of graves to
+prevent the removal of newly-buried corpses became an established
+practice. As the dark nights of the late autumn came on, the fears of the
+timid and nervous were doubled, and persons who lived in lonely places, or
+in the ill-lighted parts of towns, became afraid to leave their houses
+after nightfall. I remember hearing such fears expressed by several
+persons at Croydon, with whom my parents were acquainted, and also of
+neighbours combining to assist in watching the graves of deceased members
+of each others&#8217; families.</p>
+
+<p>A few years ago, I was one day exchanging reminiscences of a long bygone
+generation with a brother journalist, when, on this gruesome subject being
+mentioned, he placed in my hands a report of the trial of the murderers of
+Carlo Ferrari, which appeared to have been detached from a volume of
+criminal trials. No feature of the horrible record impressed me so much as
+the cool, business-like manner in which the wretches concerned in the
+crime hawked the corpse of their victim from one school of anatomy to
+another, and the equally cool and business-like manner in which the matter
+was dealt with by those with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> whom their nefarious occupation brought them
+in contact. The procuring of corpses for anatomical purposes was, in fact,
+a regular trade, and the biographer of Sir Astley Cooper states that &#8220;the
+Resurrection-men were occasionally employed on expeditions into the
+country to obtain possession of the bodies of those who had been subjected
+to some important operation, and of which a <i>post mortem</i> examination was
+of the greatest interest to science. Scarcely any distance from London was
+considered an insuperable difficulty in the attaining of this object, and
+as certainly as the Resurrectionist undertook the task, so certain was he
+of completing it. This was usually an expensive undertaking, but still it
+did not restrain the most zealous in their profession from occasionally
+engaging these men in this employment.&#8221; The price of a subject ranged from
+seven to twelve guineas, but when the &#8220;body-snatchers&#8221; were specially
+employed to procure some particular corpse, the incidental expenses were
+often as much more.</p>
+
+<p>As an illustration of the times in which such horrors were possible, the
+story of the murder of Carlo Ferrari may, at this distance of time from
+the event, be worth telling. In the autumn of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span> 1831, there lived in one of
+a row of small houses, known as Nova Scotia Gardens, in the
+poverty-stricken district of Bethnal Green, a man named John Bishop, with
+his wife and three children. He had formerly been a carrier at Highgate,
+but had long been suspected of &#8220;body-snatching,&#8221; as the practice of
+robbing graves was termed, and had no visible means of honest living. He
+had the look of a man whose original rustic stolidity had been
+supercharged with cockney cunning. The house adjoining Bishop&#8217;s was
+occupied by a man named Woodcock, who had succeeded in the tenancy a
+glass-blower named Thomas Williams, described as a little, simple-looking
+man, of mild and inoffensive demeanour. About two o&#8217;clock on the morning
+of the 4th of November, Woodcock was awakened by a noise, as of a scuffle,
+in Bishop&#8217;s house, and afterwards heard two men leave it and return in a
+few minutes, when he recognised the voices as those of Bishop and
+Williams. At noon the same day these two men were in a neighbouring
+public-house, accompanied by two other men, one of whom was known as James
+May, who had formerly been a butcher, but for the last few years had been
+suspected of following the same ghastly and revolting occupation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> as
+Bishop. In the afternoon three men alighted from a cab at Nova Scotia
+Gardens, two of them being recognised as Bishop and Williams, and
+afterwards returned to the vehicle, when the former and the third man were
+carrying something in a sack, which they placed in the cab. The three men
+then entered, and it was driven off.</p>
+
+<p>About seven o&#8217;clock the same evening, Bishop and May presented themselves
+at Guy&#8217;s Hospital, carrying something in a sack, and asked the porter if a
+&#8220;subject&#8221; was wanted. Receiving a negative reply, they asked him to allow
+&#8220;it&#8221; to remain there until the next morning, to which he consented.
+Half-an-hour later, the two traffickers in human flesh called at
+Grainger&#8217;s anatomical theatre, in Webb Street, Southwark, and told the
+curator they had &#8220;a very fresh male subject, about fourteen years of age.&#8221;
+The offer being declined, they went away, and later on they were,
+accompanied by Williams, in a public-house, where May was seen by a waiter
+to pour water on a handkerchief containing human teeth, and then rub the
+teeth together, remarking that they were worth two pounds to him.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning, May called upon a dentist named Mills, on Newington
+Causeway, and sold a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> dozen teeth to him for a guinea, observing that they
+were the teeth of a boy fourteen years of age. On examining them, Mills
+found that morsels of the gums and splinters of the jaw were adhering to
+them, as if much force had been used to wrench them out. Two hours later,
+Bishop and May called again at the anatomical theatre in Southwark, and
+repeated their offer of the preceding evening, which was again declined.
+Shortly afterwards, they went to Guy&#8217;s Hospital, accompanied by Williams
+and a man named Shields, to remove the &#8220;subject&#8221; left there the evening
+before, and it was given to them in the sack, as they had left it, and
+placed in a large hamper, which Shields had brought for the purpose. There
+was a hole in the sack, through which the porter saw a small foot
+protruding, apparently that of a boy or a woman.</p>
+
+<p>About midnight, the bell of King&#8217;s College was rung, and the porter, on
+going to the gate, found there Bishop and May, whom he had seen there
+before, it seems, and on similar business. May asked him if anything was
+wanted, and receiving an indifferent answer, added that they had a male
+&#8220;subject,&#8221; a boy about fourteen years of age. The porter inquired the
+price, and was told they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span> wanted twelve guineas for it. He then said he
+would ask Mr. Partridge, the demonstrator in anatomy, and they followed
+him to a room adjoining the dissecting room. Nine guineas were offered,
+which May, with an oath, refused, and went outside. Bishop then said to
+the porter, &#8220;Never mind May, he is drunk; it shall come in for nine in
+half-an-hour.&#8221; They then went away, returning at the stipulated time,
+accompanied by Williams and Shields, the latter carrying on his head the
+hamper containing the corpse brought from Guy&#8217;s Hospital. It was taken
+into a room, where it was opened, and the corpse turned out of the sack by
+May. The porter, observing a cut on the left temple, and that the left arm
+was bent and the fingers clenched, conceived suspicions of foul play, and
+communicated them at once to Mr. Partridge. That gentleman thereupon
+examined the corpse, and mentioned its condition to the secretary, who
+immediately gave information to the police.</p>
+
+<p>In order to detain the men until the arrival of the police, the
+demonstrator showed them a &pound;50 note, observing that he must get it changed
+for gold before he could pay them. Several constables were soon on the
+spot, and the four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span> men were arrested, and taken to the station-house in
+Vine Street, Covent Garden. On being charged on suspicion with having
+unlawful possession of a corpse, May said he had nothing to do with it,
+and had merely accompanied Bishop. A similar statement was made by
+Williams, and Bishop said he was only removing the corpse from St.
+Thomas&#8217;s Hospital to King&#8217;s College. Shields, who was known as a porter,
+said he was employed to carry the hamper, which he did in the exercise of
+his vocation. They were all then removed to the cells.</p>
+
+<p>The evidence given at the coroner&#8217;s inquest by Partridge and two other
+surgeons left no doubt that the unfortunate lad, respecting whose identity
+there was no evidence, had been killed by a violent blow on the back of
+the neck, which had affected the spinal cord. The four accused men were
+present in custody during the inquiry, and Bishop, after reading a bill
+relating to the murder, which was displayed on the wall of the room, was
+heard by a constable to say, in a subdued tone, to May, &#8220;It was the blood
+that sold us.&#8221; Volunteering to give evidence, he said he got the corpse
+from a grave, but declined to name the place whence he had got it,
+alleging<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> that the information would get into trouble two watchmen, who
+had large families. May also made a voluntary statement, to the effect
+that he got two &#8220;subjects&#8221; from the country, which he took first to
+Grainger&#8217;s theatre of anatomy, and afterwards to Guy&#8217;s Hospital,
+subsequently meeting Bishop, who promised him all he could get for a
+&#8220;subject&#8221; above nine guineas if he would sell it for him. The inquest was
+adjourned, and the police proceeded with their investigation.</p>
+
+<p>The houses of Bishop and May had been promptly visited and searched by the
+police, who found at the former&#8217;s a sack, a large hamper, and a brad-awl,
+the last showing recent bloodstains. At May&#8217;s house in Dorset Street, New
+Kent Road, they found a pair of breeches, stained with blood at the back.
+On a second visit to Bishop&#8217;s house the garden was dug over, and a jacket,
+trousers, and a shirt found in one spot, and in another a coat, trousers,
+a vest with blood on the collar and one shoulder, and a shirt with the
+front torn. When the brad-awl was produced at Bow Street police-court, May
+said, &#8220;That is the instrument I punched the teeth out with.&#8221; Shields was
+eventually discharged from custody,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span> but the other three prisoners were
+committed for trial on the capital charge.</p>
+
+<p>The identity of the victim remained a mystery until the 19th of November,
+a fortnight after the murder, when the corpse was recognised by a
+foreigner named Brun as that of a boy named Carlo Ferrari, whom he had
+brought from Italy two years before, but had not seen since July, 1830.
+The boy picked up the means of living by exhibiting a tortoise and a pair
+of white mice in the streets. He had been seen by several persons in or
+near Nova Scotia Gardens on the 3rd of November, but he had not been seen
+since, nor had he returned on that day to his miserable lodgings in
+Charles Street, Drury Lane. The clothes found in Bishop&#8217;s garden
+corresponded with the description given of those worn by him when he was
+last seen, and a little boy who played with Bishop&#8217;s children stated that
+they had, on the following day, shown him two white mice in a cage similar
+to the one carried by Ferrari.</p>
+
+<p>The incidents of the crime, as revealed from day to day, and the mystery
+in which the identity of the victim was for some time veiled, created so
+much excitement in the public mind,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span> that when the prisoners were placed
+in the dock at the Old Bailey, early in December, the court was crowded,
+and a guinea each was paid for seats in the gallery, the occupants of
+which, all fashionably dressed, as might be expected of those who could
+afford to pay that price for the gratification of their love of the
+sensational, had taken their seats the day before. Though the evidence was
+but a recapitulation of the story told before in the police-court and the
+inquest-room, it was listened to with the utmost avidity. The witnesses
+for the defence were few, and their evidence valueless, except in the case
+of May, for whom an <i>alibi</i> was established in respect of the time between
+the afternoon of the day preceding the murder and noon on the following
+day. The prisoners were sentenced to death, but in May&#8217;s case the sentence
+was commuted into transportation for life. A sea-faring relative of mine,
+who was second officer of the vessel in which May was sent out to Sydney,
+described him as an athletic, wiry-looking man, with features expressive
+of sternness, and a determined will, quite a different-looking man,
+therefore, to his two companions in crime, who were duly hanged at
+Newgate.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>The crime of these men, and the deeds of Burke and Hare, created such a
+scare, and exposed so vividly the temptation to murder afforded by the
+prices paid by surgeons for &#8220;subjects,&#8221; that the attention of parliament
+was directed to the matter, and a Select Committee of the House of Commons
+was appointed to inquire and report as to the facilities which might be
+given for obtaining bodies for anatomical purposes in a legitimate manner.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Astley Cooper, who was one of the eminent surgeons who gave evidence
+before this committee, was asked whether the state of the law prevented
+teachers of anatomy from obtaining the body of any person, which, in
+consequence of some peculiarity of structure, they might be desirous of
+procuring. He replied:&mdash;&#8220;The law does not prevent our obtaining the body
+of an individual if we think proper; for there is no person, let his
+situation in life be what it may, whom, if I were disposed to dissect, I
+could not obtain.... The law only enhances the price, and does not prevent
+the exhumation. Nobody is secured by the law; it only adds to the price of
+the subject.&#8221; The result of this inquiry was the passing of the Anatomy
+Act, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span> which the bodies of persons dying in hospitals and workhouses, if
+unclaimed by the relatives, may be placed at the disposal of the schools
+of anatomy.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Reminiscences of the Cholera.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Thomas Frost.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">It</span> is now more than sixty years since the strange and mysterious
+visitation, as it was then considered, known as the cholera morbus, for
+which fearsome name that of Asiatic cholera has since been substituted,
+made its first appearance in this country, or anywhere west of the Ural
+Mountains. Coming first from India, from the banks of the Ganges and the
+Indus, the dread pestilence moved steadily westward and north-westward
+until, creeping along the rivers of Russia, and desolating all the most
+considerable towns of that country, it reached St. Petersburg. There it
+raged with fearful severity, mowing down as with the scythe of Death more
+than a thousand persons daily. So dreadful were the features of the
+unknown malady, and so rapidly were its victims carried off, that the
+ignorant populace of the capital attributed it to poison administered by
+the doctors. A fearful tumult was excited by this belief, and it was with
+great difficulty that it was suppressed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>From Russia the dire disease spread rapidly into almost every country in
+Europe, and wherever it appeared created the profoundest awe and the most
+bewildering terror. In Paris it broke out with extreme malignity in March,
+1832, and soon raged there with greater virulence than it had exhibited in
+any other city in Europe except St. Petersburg. The deaths soon reached
+from four to five hundred daily, and during April they rose to a total for
+the month of twelve thousand seven hundred. It was hinted that the ravages
+of this new and dreadful disease were caused by the poisoning of the meat
+sold in the markets and the water in the public fountains; and the
+dwellers in the slums became so infuriated by this horrible and absurd
+rumour that mobs perambulated the streets howling for vengeance on the
+poisoners. Many unfortunate persons were murdered in the streets on being
+denounced as the perpetrators of these imaginary crimes, and so paralysed
+was the arm of justice by the influence of terror that nothing was done to
+vindicate the majesty of the law. Everyone who could afford to leave Paris
+fled from it with precipitation, and the city was abandoned to desolation
+and anarchy. The legislative labours<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span> of the two Chambers were suspended,
+and the peers and deputies were the first to set the example of flight,
+though Louis Philippe and his family continued to reside at the Tuileries,
+with an occasional sojourn of a few days at Neuilly.</p>
+
+<p>I have a vivid recollection of the mingled awe and terror which this fell
+disease inspired when it was announced that it had crossed the sea and
+made its first victims in this country. It had made its way across the
+continent from town to town on the banks of the great rivers, but into
+England it was imported by sick sailors. Many generations had passed away
+since anything like a pestilence had been known in England, and the
+cholera therefore created a panic among all classes of the people, which
+served to augment its virulence and render those of a nervous temperament
+more liable to be attacked by it. Doctors were utterly unacquainted with
+its proper treatment, and indeed had no knowledge whatever of the disease.
+Hence it raged without check wherever it appeared, and the rapidity with
+which it carried off its victims added to the terror inspired by its
+approaches. The first death at Lower Norwood, where my parents then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+resided, was that of the pastor of the Independent Chapel, situated only
+two doors from my father&#8217;s house. He died in a few hours from the time he
+experienced the premonitory symptoms, and such was the dread of infection
+that the corpse was buried the same night by torchlight, in the
+burial-ground of the chapel, wrapped in a sheet coated with pitch.</p>
+
+<p>Though a period of seventeen years separated the first cholera epidemic
+from the second, the lessons which the former should have taught had not
+been so well learned as they should have been, and the latter, with which
+these reminiscences are chiefly concerned, inspired a wild, unreasoning
+terror in only a little less degree than that of 1832.</p>
+
+<p>I remember a case at Mitcham, in which the women attending a patient were
+seized with a panic on the approach of death, and rushed out of the house,
+leaving the poor wretch, a woman, to die alone, the corpse being
+afterwards found rigid and distorted.</p>
+
+<p>The apparently erratic manner in which the disease spread, sometimes
+carrying off victims from one side of a street and sparing the other side,
+sometimes smiting every member of a family<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span> in one house, and passing over
+all the other houses in the same street, was a puzzle to persons who had
+given no attention to the causes of the disease, and were content to
+regard it as a sign of the wrath of God, reasoning about the matter as
+little as did the Israelites whose relatives were swept off at
+Kibroth-hattaavah. They had not given sufficient attention to the laws of
+health to understand that the disease found its victims where those laws
+were neglected, whether from carelessness or from ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>I remember two cases at Croydon in which all the inmates of the houses in
+which the disease manifested its dread presence were carried off by it.
+One occurred in a cottage in St. James&#8217;s Road, one of a row which had
+originally been level with the road, but had become overshadowed by the
+approach to the railway bridge. There were three victims in that house,
+and no other case in the same row, or in the neighbourhood. The other case
+occurred in King Street, one of several narrow, closely-built streets in
+the centre of the town, and the victims were a widow and her only child,
+the latter dying not alone, for, like Byron&#8217;s Haidee,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+<span style="margin-left: 9em;">&#8220;&mdash;&mdash;she held within</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A second principle of life, which might</span><br />
+Have dawned a fair and sinless child of sin;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">But closed its little being without light,</span><br />
+And went down to the grave unborn, wherein<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Blossom and bough lie withered with one blight.&#8221;</span></p>
+
+<p>A remarkable incident occurred while the fell disease was in the full
+swing of its ravages. The wife of a working man living in the Old Town, a
+low-lying and densely populated quarter, was attacked by it, and at once
+removed to a temporary hospital that had been established on Duppas Hill,
+a tabular eminence overlooking the town, and in the thirteenth century the
+scene of the tournament in which the son of Earl Warrenne was by
+misadventure slain. There her husband went, on his return from labour, to
+ascertain her condition, and heard with a shock which the reader may
+imagine that she was dead. When the poor fellow had in some degree
+recovered from the blow, he expressed a wish to see the corpse and take it
+to his home. He seems to have been unable to realise that his wife was
+really dead, though the nurses and doctors assured him that she had passed
+away. The idea that life yet lingered in the form that was apparently
+lifeless grew upon him as he gazed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span> and though he may never have read &#8220;The
+Giaour,&#8221; he may have felt the force of the thought so finely expressed by
+Byron in the lines that introduce his picture of the Greece of his day:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span style="margin-left: 3em;">&#8220;He who hath bent him o&#8217;er the dead,</span><br />
+Ere the first day of death is fled,<br />
+The first dark day of nothingness,<br />
+The last of danger and distress<br />
+(Before Decay&#8217;s effacing fingers<br />
+Have swept the lines where beauty lingers),<br />
+And marked the mild angelic air,<br />
+The rapture of repose that&#8217;s there,<br />
+The fixed yet tender traits that streak<br />
+The languor of the pallid cheek,<br />
+And&mdash;but for that sad shrouded eye,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">That fires not, wins not, weeps not, now,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">And but for that chill, changeless brow,</span><br />
+Where cold Obstruction&#8217;s apathy<br />
+Appals the gazing mourner&#8217;s heart,<br />
+As if to him it could impart<br />
+The doom he dreads, yet dwells upon;<br />
+Yes, but for these, and these alone,<br />
+Some moments, aye, one treacherous hour,<br />
+He still might doubt the tyrant&#8217;s power;<br />
+So fair, so calm, so softly sealed,<br />
+The first, last look by death revealed!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Whether it was feeling or reason that inspired the thought that life yet
+lingered in the apparently inanimate, but not yet rigid form,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span> which the
+loving husband conveyed to his humble dwelling, it was undoubtedly to that
+inspiration that the woman owed her preservation from death. For she was
+not dead. Signs of returning animation were perceived when the supposed
+corpse was placed upon the bed, and the neighbour women who came in to
+perform the last sad offices for the dead were there to welcome her on her
+return to life. I will not attempt to describe the feelings with which the
+husband beheld the eyelids of his wife unclose, and the rose-tints return
+to the pallid cheeks. Like the Greek painter who, conscious of the
+inadequacy of his art to fully portray the grief of Agamemnon for the loss
+of his son, covered the countenance of the old king with a veil, I draw
+the curtain upon the scene, and leave it to the imagination of the reader.</p>
+
+<p>Among the remedies for the cholera which came into vogue during the
+prevalence of the epidemic of 1849, the rubbing of the stomach with brandy
+and salt obtained a considerable degree of repute; and the chemists vied
+with each other, as in the recent epidemics of influenza, in the
+concoction and advertising of various cholera mixtures, one of the most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+efficacious of which was a preparation of opium and chalk.</p>
+
+<p>The lessons of the cholera were not so entirely neglected on this occasion
+as they were after the epidemic of 1832; but it is a sad reflection on our
+legislation that we were indebted to the ravages of disease, or rather to
+the fear inspired by them, for sanitary reforms which ought to have
+resulted from foresight. There had been sanitary inquiries by Royal
+Commissions between 1842 and 1849, but little had been done towards
+carrying out the recommendations which resulted from them. The existence
+of cholera in India, and the causes which produced it, had long been
+known; but so long as its ravages were confined to the people of that
+country no one seemed to think that it concerned the people of England. It
+was known, too, that whatever might be the true causes of zymotic
+diseases, concerning which medical opinions differed, accumulations of
+filth, contaminated sources of water supply, and an impure condition of
+the atmosphere tended to produce their outbreaks, and to aggravate their
+virulence. But then we had been used to these evils since the days of the
+Plantagenets, and though they had become intensified with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span> increase of
+population and the growth of the large towns, had not Malthus taught us
+that epidemics of disease were one of the means used by divine providence
+to prevent the numbers of the human race from exceeding the means of
+subsistence?</p>
+
+<p>The cholera epidemic of 1849 roused the public mind from its lethargy, and
+prepared it to act upon the recommendations of the General Board of Health
+and to comply with the Sanitary Act of that year. The old wells of London
+were closed, and the like course was adopted in Croydon, where a constant
+supply of practically pure water was obtained by boring down to the chalk.
+Other towns followed the example, one of the foremost being Birmingham,
+which received a supply which enabled the inhabitants to dispense with the
+insalubrious rain-water butt. Sewerage works were undertaken where no
+efficient system of drainage had before existed. Attention was called to
+the important questions of sewage disposal and the pollution of rivers;
+and though much even now remains to be done in this direction, and in the
+improvement of the water supply of the large manufacturing towns of
+Yorkshire and Lancashire, sanitation has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span> cleared of most of its
+difficulties by better knowledge of the philosophy of cause and effect, so
+that we no longer regard the calamities resulting from our own ignorance
+and neglect of the laws of nature as the inflictions of Providence.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Some Old Doctors.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Mrs. G. Linn&aelig;us Banks.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">It</span> is not my intention to go back to those Greek fathers of the healing
+art, Hippocrates and Galen, or to dwell on the days when every monastery
+held within its walls some learned brother accredited to administer to
+bodies as well as souls diseased, or when the mistress of every feudal
+castle, every baronial-hall, was trained and skilled in leechcraft,
+distilled herbs, concocted potions and unguents, and not only physicked
+her household, but was prepared to staunch and dress the gaping wounds
+received in siege or tournay. Nor yet have we ought to do with those
+pretenders to science who mingled astrology with pharmacy, ascribed to
+every plant its ruling planet, and held that the potency of all herbs
+depended on the conjunction of planets, or the phase of the moon under
+which they were gathered&mdash;a belief, indeed, under which old Nicholas
+Culpepper compiled his well-known &#8220;Herbal&#8221; early in the seventeenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>Medicine and surgery have made rapid strides since the days, not a century
+agone, when in the naval cockpit, and on the open battlefield, the hatchet
+was the ready implement for amputation, the rough cautery that of a red
+hot iron applied to the fizzing flesh; and when the doctor cried, &#8220;Spit,
+man, spit&#8221; to the suffering soldier with a gunshot wound in his chest, and
+when the sputum came tinged with blood, simply plugged up the bullet-hole
+and left the poor fellow to his fate, while he passed on to cases less
+hopeless. And <i>en passant</i> I may say that wooden legs and stumps for arms
+were so common in the writer&#8217;s young days as scarcely to attract
+attention&mdash;so ready were army surgeons to amputate.</p>
+
+<p>These are not matters on which I have to dwell, but I think the present
+work would be incomplete without a record of those men of original mind,
+whose acute observation and unwearied investigations in the past have
+indissolubly linked their names with discoveries which have revolutionised
+the practice of both medicine and surgery.</p>
+
+<p>In the opinion of Solomon, &#8220;there is nothing new under the sun;&#8221; and if
+such was the case in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span> his day, how much more of a verity must be the
+truism in ours.</p>
+
+<p>So the most startling and perfect revelation of any great fact in human
+physiology may have been dimly perceptible to earlier intelligences
+groping in the dark, faint adumbrations of which may fall on the sensorium
+of the final discoverer, until a ray of divine light dispels the mists of
+ages, and the man, developing his crude idea with infinite pains, realises
+a great truth, and cries out &#8220;Eureka&#8221; to an astonished&mdash;and too often&mdash;an
+unbelieving world.</p>
+
+<p>Thus it may have been with the renowned practitioner, <span class="smcap">William Harvey</span>, who
+came into the world when all England was filled with alarms of an
+&#8220;Invincible Spanish Armada,&#8221; then preparing to devastate our shores and
+spare neither man nor maid, babe nor mother. Yet the scare passed and
+peace came, and the boy grew, until his educational course at Cambridge
+ended, and his bias led him towards Padua, then the great seat of
+academical and medical lore, and there he took his doctor&#8217;s degree in
+physic. With the prestige of Padua upon him, in 1607, when he was but
+twenty years of age, he was elected Fellow of the College of Physicians
+(founded by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span> Dr. Linacre in the reign of Henry VII.), and in 1715, the man
+of twenty-eight became their Anatomical Reader.</p>
+
+<p>A noteworthy appointment this, since consequent study and investigation
+led to the grand discovery that the heart&mdash;to speak unscientifically&mdash;was
+a sort of muscular pumping-engine, sending the blood circulating along a
+series of blood-vessels to every part of the system, changing in character
+on its course until it returned to its centre, the seat of life, to be
+pumped out afresh to circulate as before and do its appointed work.</p>
+
+<p>In 1628, Harvey made his discovery known in a learned treatise &#8220;On the
+circulation of the blood,&#8221; and as may be supposed, his daring assertions
+roused a violent spirit of opposition amongst his medical brethren, even
+among those who began to feel the pulses of their patients for the first
+time, and to comprehend <i>why</i> there should be a fluttering or audible
+beating under the sick one&#8217;s ribs, and wherefore the fatal hemorrhage
+following a sword-thrust or a gunshot wound.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of opposition his teaching created a revolution in medical
+practice. The discoverer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span> was called before Charles I. and his Court to
+demonstrate the action of the heart and subsidiary organs, in support of
+his new doctrine.</p>
+
+<p>Fresh honours fell upon him even when too old to bear the burden. And when
+in the fulness of time, William Harvey, who had outlived three monarchs,
+made his own exit under Cromwellian rule, he bequeathed infinitely more to
+posterity in his invaluable discovery than can be summed up in the estate,
+library, and museum now in the proud possession of the College of
+Physicians. These are held by a mere body of men. The other has a
+world-wide significance.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, as in his life, even in his grave, detractors strove to dim the glory
+of his important revelation, ascribing to the theological physician
+Servetus, to Realdus Columbus, and to Andreas C&aelig;salpinas, the credit of
+prior discovery.</p>
+
+<p>It remained for another learned physician, a century later, to deal with
+these counter-claims, and whilst admitting their vague individual
+conceptions of an elusive mystery, to establish once and for ever William
+Harvey&#8217;s inalienable right as sole discoverer.</p>
+
+<p>This notable champion was <span class="smcap">John Freind, m.d., f.r.s.</span>, distinguished as the
+Medical Historian, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span> Harveian lecturer to the College of Physicians, at
+a time when he and his fellows shaved their heads and mounted Ramillies
+wigs as outward guarantees for the profundity of wisdom they enshrined.</p>
+
+<p>But apart from his flowing wig, or his defence of Harvey, or his learned
+medical history, written in part when he was a prisoner in the Tower for
+supposed complicity in the Atterbury Plot, or for skill in the treatment
+of disease, John Freind had a pioneer&#8217;s claim to distinction.</p>
+
+<p>The doctor, strange to say, was a Member of Parliament, and on resuming
+his seat on his release from incarceration, he brought before the House of
+Commons, in 1725, a remarkable petition from the Royal College of
+Physicians, to restrain &#8220;the pernicious use of spirituous liquors.&#8221; And
+though he might speak but as the mouthpiece of his brother Fellows, it
+needed no small degree of courage to broach such a subject in those days
+of general coarse indulgence among all classes; especially if his own
+language was as direct and forcible as that of the petitioners.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, in his triple character as the historian of medicine, as the
+champion of William Harvey, and as the foremost <span class="smcaplc">M.P.</span> to
+advocate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span> the
+cause of temperance before our national legislative assembly, John Freind,
+<span class="smcaplc">M.D.</span>, claims a niche in our Walhalla of notable old doctors.</p>
+
+<p>In the nave of Westminster Abbey on a memorial of polished granite is this
+inscription&mdash;&#8220;Beneath are deposited the remains of <span class="smcap">John Hunter</span>, born at
+Long Calderwood, Lanarkshire, N.B., on February 14th, 1728; died in London
+on October 10th, 1793. His remains were removed from the Church of St.
+Martins-in-the-Fields to this Abbey on March 28th, 1858. The Royal College
+of Surgeons of England have placed this table over the grave of Hunter to
+record their admiration of his genius as a gifted interpreter of the
+Divine power and wisdom that works in the laws of organic life, and their
+grateful veneration for his services to mankind as the Father of
+scientific surgery. &#8216;O Lord, how manifold are Thy works; in wisdom hast
+Thou made them all.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Such honours are not paid to the remains of men of common stamp. And of no
+common stamp was the sandy-headed youth who, having spent ten years of his
+life learning cabinet making, resolved on striking out a better career for
+himself; and in his twentieth year took horse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> and journeyed to London to
+place himself under his elder brother, <span class="smcap">William Hunter</span>, then rising into
+note as a medical practitioner and a teacher of anatomy. In October, 1748,
+he entered his brother&#8217;s dissecting room, and whether the fitting of
+joints in cabinetware had been of initiatory service, or he had had access
+to the books of his medical relations in Glasgow, or that as a boy upon
+his father&#8217;s farm, observation of the domestic animals and of the wild
+inhabitants of wood and fell, had roused the desire to master the secrets
+of animated nature, sure it is that William speedily foretold a successful
+future for his new pupil as an anatomist.</p>
+
+<p>At all events he used his interest to place his promising brother under
+the eminent surgeon of Chelsea Hospital, and later under another at St.
+Bartholomew&#8217;s. Then, shocked by the rough speech and manners of his
+countrified brother, and his need of education, the classical elder packed
+him off to college to pick up a little refinement along with Latin and
+Greek.</p>
+
+<p>In vain. Irrepressible and hot-tempered John could not sit down quietly to
+study dead languages. Back he came from Oxford in haste, to study dead
+bodies in his brother&#8217;s dissecting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span> room, and serve as demonstrator to his
+course of lectures, simultaneously with his study of living bodies at St.
+George&#8217;s Hospital, where in a comparatively short time he became
+house-surgeon.</p>
+
+<p>His appointment as staff-surgeon to our troops on foreign service marked
+the six intervening years before he settled down to practise in London. He
+had laboured ten years on human anatomy, and had dissected a number of the
+lower animals, laying the foundation of his collection of comparative
+anatomy. Even while on foreign service he had amused himself with studying
+the digestive faculties of snakes and lizards when in a torpid state, and
+many were the contributions he sent home to his brother&#8217;s museum.</p>
+
+<p>His return to London, as a teacher of surgery and anatomy, was a marked
+success, though private practice had to grow. In 1776, he was appointed
+surgeon extraordinary to His Majesty George III., but eleven years prior
+to this was admitted a Fellow of the Royal Society, slightly in advance of
+his elder brother. Then in 1768, the bachelor, William, shifted himself
+and his museum from Jermyn Street to Windmill Street, and resigned the
+lease to John, thus securing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span> independent action to the latter, and
+facilities for creating a natural-history museum of his own.</p>
+
+<p>Hitherto, the brothers had worked together in unison, but now John
+committed the unpardonable offence of bringing home to Jermyn Street &#8220;a
+tocherless bride,&#8221; fourteen years younger than himself, endowed only with
+beauty and accomplishments, and a faculty for filling the house with
+assemblies of wit and fashion, which blunt-spoken John designated
+&#8220;kick-ups,&#8221; no doubt with an irreverent big D as a prefix, swearing being
+as characteristic as hard work.</p>
+
+<p>And work hard he did, early and late, not merely to maintain his extensive
+and lucrative practice, but to provide and prepare subjects for the museum
+in the rear of his town house, and for the valuable and original lectures
+he delivered in language forcible and clear, if neither refined nor
+academic.</p>
+
+<p>His chief workshop, so to speak, was at his country &#8220;Box&#8221; at Earl&#8217;s Court,
+the grounds of which he had converted into a zoological garden, so many
+wild animals were there kept for study. There is a story told of his
+facing an escaped lion and flicking him back to his den with his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> pocket
+handkerchief, showing his fearlessness and his knowledge of leonine
+nature.</p>
+
+<p>Another tale is told of his intervention between fighting dogs and
+leopards, he dragging the infuriated leopards back to their cage by their
+collars&mdash;and <i>fainting</i> when the feat was accomplished, for his was not a
+burly frame, and his heart was in a threatening condition.</p>
+
+<p>An element of humour mingles with the gruesome in Sir B. W. Richardson&#8217;s
+account of the ruse employed to cheat watchful executors, and obtain the
+body of O&#8217;Brien the Irish Giant,<a name='fna_2' id='fna_2' href='#f_2'><small>[2]</small></a> so as to convert it into the skeleton
+now in the Hunterian Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, Lincoln&#8217;s
+Inn.</p>
+
+<p>Those were the days when surgeons were not particular where they obtained
+subjects for their scalpels, whether from the resurrection men or from the
+gallows, and John Hunter was not more dainty than his fellows. But also
+from travelling shows and menageries, and from animals that died in the
+Tower he was supplied. And so rapidly did his museum grow, absorbing the
+bulk of his income, that ere long he had to remove<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span> to what is now
+Leicester Square, and erect a building in the rear for his collection.</p>
+
+<p>Honours fell upon him thickly as they had fallen on his brother, alike
+British and foreign, of which he took little heed, absorbed as he was in
+the pursuit of knowledge, and its demonstration. His discoveries placed
+him far ahead of the science of his time, though his courtly brother,
+earlier in the field and first to leave it, ran him close. Indeed their
+final quarrel and alienation arose out of a disputed claim to a certain
+discovery in feminine physiology, brought before the Royal Society, a
+quarrel which transferred William&#8217;s museum to the University of Glasgow,
+and excluded John from his will.</p>
+
+<p>The so-called &#8220;Lyceum Medicum&#8221; in Leicester Square, became the home of the
+&#8220;Society for the Improvement of Medical and Chirurgical Knowledge,&#8221; and
+the &#8220;Philosophical Transactions&#8221; of the Society testify to the genius and
+untiring activity of its promoter. How he found time for his many written
+essays and discourses on topics wide apart as &#8220;Gunshot-wounds&#8221; and &#8220;Teeth&#8221;
+is a marvel. No wonder the frail human machine wore out so early. He had
+worked when he should have rested, worked regardless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span> of premonitions and
+attacks John Hunter must have well understood, and died at last at
+sixty-two, a victim of one of those fits of passion no man with a diseased
+heart can indulge in safely.</p>
+
+<p>Setting out originally from the tablet in Westminster Abbey to describe
+what manner of man was the old doctor who lay beneath, it became
+imperatively necessary to bracket the two brothers, John and William
+Hunter, together, since, according to Sir B. W. Richardson, they were
+&#8220;twins in science,&#8221; if not in birth. Had not William already come to the
+front when John sought him out, he could not have been his teacher, or
+given his younger brother his first start in life, his introduction, or
+his facilities for study. Then they worked together, became one in
+anatomical discovery, in their zeal for collecting all that illustrated
+their theories, all that was rare and curious, into unprecedented museums.
+Yet how widely the personalities of the brothers differed. They both stood
+out among contemporaries, yet William, with his slight form, mildly
+refined face, set off by an unpretentious wig, and delicate hands, under
+lace ruffles, and wide coat cuffs, a classical scholar, an antiquary, a
+numismatist, as well as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span> naturalist,&mdash;Queen Charlotte&#8217;s medical referee,
+stepping out from his chariot, gold cane in hand, to visit his courtly
+patients, was the very <i>beau ideal</i> of a fashionable physician of that
+day, one who shone in drawing-rooms as well as in the lecture-hall.
+Blue-eyed John, with high cheek bones, broad, slightly receding forehead,
+tangled red hair, and a shaggy mane of whisker that made his keen face a
+triangle, tender of heart, yet brusque and coarse of speech, rough in
+manner as in dress (with not a sign of frill or ruffle), despising
+dilettante coteries, not squeamish in seeking &#8220;subjects,&#8221; passionate and
+determined, caring little for empty honours, for money only to swell his
+museum, and nothing for courtly circles, though created
+surgeon-extraordinary to George III., and owing his large practice solely
+to the force of his character, his science, and his skill. So far he was
+his brother&#8217;s antithesis. John was a diamond in the rough; William the gem
+cut and polished. And such were the two old doctors to whom England&#8217;s
+College of Surgeons owes its Hunterian Museum; the University of Glasgow
+the other. Had not the brothers quarrelled, the two would have formed one
+grand unrivalled collection.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>Space is limited, and so must be our notes of these other celebrated &#8220;old
+doctors,&#8221; whom it would be invidious to overlook. Of these <span class="smcap">Edward Jenner</span>
+stands prominently out, but he has been already dealt with by another hand.</p>
+
+<p>It is scarcely possible to pass by <span class="smcap">John Abernethy, f.r.s.</span>, the eccentric
+physician, whose principle was that men should eat to live, not live to
+eat, who maintained that the stomach was the chief seat of health or
+disease, according as it was used or abused, and that water was the one
+natural and nutrient beverage. The practical way in which he illustrated
+his theories respecting overfeeding,&mdash;filling a pail with food from
+various dishes in correspondence with the heterogeneous mixture on his
+patients&#8217; plates&mdash;and his brusque replies to some other of his patients,
+have perpetuated his name through his oddities, rather than as a
+benefactor of his kind, who revolutionized the medical practice of his
+time, and of course excited envy and antagonism. His hair, kept together
+at the nape of the neck with a ribbon tie, was brushed back from his
+forehead, and added a degree of sharpness to his somewhat hatchet-shaped
+face, when he told the timorous lady who was &#8220;afraid she had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> swallowed a
+spider,&#8221; &#8220;Then put a fly in your mouth, madam, and the spider will come up
+to catch him.&#8221; Or when he threw the shilling from his fee back to a mother
+with a delicate daughter, &#8220;Take that, madam, and buy her a skipping-rope,&#8221;
+an intimation that exercise was needed. It was an age of coarse feeding
+and strong drinking, an age of drastic purges and much blood-letting, and
+Abernethy&#8217;s temperance principles, so much in advance of his time,
+provoked considerable opposition from his medical brethren, whose
+satirical epigrams he was not slow to cap.</p>
+
+<p>But contemporary squibs and satires cannot affect the real good which has
+made Abernethy&#8217;s name a household word. Indeed it has been stamped upon a
+biscuit. It is stamped also on a medical society he founded at St.
+Bartholomew&#8217;s Hospital, where his centenary has recently been celebrated.</p>
+
+<p>Many have been the contributions to scientific medicine and surgery since
+the rough days of the old doctors I have endeavoured to chronicle, but
+these men of wigs and ties, gold-headed canes and pouncet-boxes, breeches
+and buckled shoes, were the pioneers of progress, they cleared the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span> way
+for the men of this day and generation, and left their mark on their own
+age, not to be effaced by newer and more advanced successors, to whom they
+have served as stepping-stones.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p>
+<h2>The Lee Penny.</h2>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">The</span> story of the Lee Penny is full of historic interest, and the legends
+respecting it furnished Sir Walter Scott with some incidents for his novel
+the &#8220;Talisman.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This amulet is a stone of a deep red colour and triangular shape, in size
+about half-an-inch on each side, and is set in a silver coin. The various
+accounts which have come under our notice are agreed that this curious
+relic of antiquity has been in the Lee family since a period immediately
+after the death of King Robert the Bruce.</p>
+
+<p>The monarch was nearing his end, and as he lay on his death-bed, he was
+much troubled for having failed to visit in person the Holy Land to assist
+in the Crusade. His long war with the English had rendered it impossible
+for him to leave his kingdom to fight in a foreign land, even in the cause
+of religion.</p>
+
+<p>Sir James Douglas, his tried and trusty friend, stood beside the bed of
+his king, and was in sore distress. As a last request the king implored
+that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span> as soon as possible after his soul had left his body Douglas would
+take his heart to Jerusalem. On the honour of a knight, Sir James
+faithfully promised to discharge the trust.</p>
+
+<p>The king died in 1329, and his heart was enclosed in a silver case. Sir
+James suspended it from his neck with a chain, and without delay gathered
+round him a suitable retinue, and made his way towards the Holy Land. He
+was not destined to reach that country, for on his route the intelligence
+reached him that Alphonso, King of Leon and Castile, was waging war with
+the Moorish chief, Osmyn of Granada. To assist the Christians, he felt it
+was his duty, and in accordance with the dying charge of his king. With
+courage he engaged in the fray, but was soon surrounded by horsemen, and
+he who had fought so long and bravely, realised that he must meet his doom
+far from the country he loved so well. He made a desperate effort to
+escape. The precious casket he took from his neck and threw it before him,
+saying, &#8220;Onward, as thou were wont, thou noble heart! Douglas will follow
+thee.&#8221; He followed it and was slain. After the battle was over the brave
+knight was found resting on the heart of Bruce. The mortal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span> remains of the
+valiant knight were carried back to his home and buried in his church of
+St. Bride, at Douglas.</p>
+
+<p>The heart of Bruce was entrusted to Sir Simon Locard, and by him borne
+back to Scotland, and at last found a resting-place beneath the high altar
+of Melrose Abbey, and its site is still pointed out. Mrs. Hemans wrote a
+charming poem on Bruce&#8217;s heart in Melrose Abbey, commencing:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Heart! that did&#8217;st press forward still,<br />
+Where the trumpet&#8217;s note rang shrill;<br />
+Where the knightly swords are crossing,<br />
+And the plumes like sea-foam tossing,<br />
+Leader of the charging spear,<br />
+Fiery heart! and liest thou here?<br />
+May this narrow spot inurn<br />
+Aught that could so beat and burn?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We are told the family name of Locard was changed to Lockheart, or
+Lockhart, from the circumstance of Sir Simon having carried the key of the
+casket, and was granted as armorial insignia, heart with a fetter-lock,
+with the motto, &#8220;Corda serrata pando.&#8221; According to a contributor to
+Chambers&#8217;s &#8220;Book of Days,&#8221; v., 2, p. 415, from the same incident, the
+Douglases bear a human heart, imperially crowned, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span> have in their
+possession an ancient sword, emblazoned with two hands holding a heart,
+and dated 1329, the year Bruce died.</p>
+
+<p>Lockhart was not daunted at the failure of the first attempt to reach
+Jerusalem, and, in company with such Scottish knights as escaped the fate
+of their leader, they once more proceeded, and arrived in the Holy Land,
+and for some time fought in the wars against the Saracens.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img10.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="caption">THE LEE PENNY.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p>The following adventure is said to have befallen him. He made prisoner in
+battle an Emir of wealth and note. The aged mother of his captive came to
+the Christian camp to save her son from his captivity. Lockhart fixed the
+price at which his prisoner should ransom himself; and the lady, pulling
+out a large embroidered purse, proceeded to tell down the amount. In this
+operation, a pebble inserted in a coin, some say of the lower empire, fell
+out of the purse, and the Saracen matron testified so much haste to
+recover it as to give the Scottish knight a high idea of its value. &#8220;I
+will not consent,&#8221; he said, &#8220;to grant your son&#8217;s liberty unless the amulet
+be added to the ransom.&#8221; The lady not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span> only consented to this, but
+explained to Sir Simon the mode in which the talisman was to be used. The
+water in which it was dipped operated as a styptic, or a febrifuge, and
+the amulet possessed several other properties as a medical talisman.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Simon Lockhart, after much experience of the wonders which it wrought,
+brought it to his own country, and left it to his heirs, by whom, and by
+Clyde side in general, it was, and is still, distinguished by the name of
+the Lee Penny, from the name of his native seat of Lee.</p>
+
+<p>Its virtues were brought into operation by dropping the stone in water
+which was afterwards given to the diseased to drink, washing at the same
+time the part affected. No words were used in dipping the stone, or money
+permitted to be taken by the servants of Lee. People came from all parts
+of Scotland, and many places in England, to carry away the water to give
+to their cattle.</p>
+
+<p>Some interesting information respecting this amulet appears in an account
+of the Sack and Siege of Newcastle-on-Tyne in 1644. &#8220;As one of the natural
+sequences,&#8221; says the writer, &#8220;of prolonged distress, caused by this brave
+but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span> foolhardy defence against overwhelming odds, the plague broke out
+with fatal violence in Newcastle and Gateshead, as well as Tynemouth and
+Shields, during the following year. Great numbers of poor people were
+carried off by it; while tents were erected on Bensham Common, to which
+those infected were removed; and the famous Lee Penny was brought out of
+Scotland to be dipped in water for the diseased persons to drink, and the
+result said to be a perfect cure. The inhabitants (that is to say, the
+Corporation, we presume), gave a bond for a large sum in trust for the
+loan; and they thought the charm did so much good, that they offered to
+pay the money down, and keep the marvellous penny with a stone in which it
+is inserted; but the proprietor, Lockhart of Lee, would not part with it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>We are told that many years ago a remarkable cure is alleged to have been
+performed on Lady Baird of Sauchton Hall, near Edinburgh, who, having been
+bitten by a mad dog, was seized with hydrophobia. The Lee Penny was sent
+for, and she used it for some weeks, drinking and bathing in the water it
+had been dipped in, and she quite recovered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The most remarkable part of the history,&#8221;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span> as Sir Walter Scott says,
+&#8220;perhaps was, that it so especially escaped condemnation when the Church
+of Scotland chose to impeach many other cures which savoured of the
+miraculous, as occasioned by sorcery, and censured the appeal of them,
+&#8216;excepting only the amulet called the Lee Penny, to which it pleased God
+to annex certain healing virtues, which the Church did not presume to
+condemn.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Lee Penny is preserved at Lee House, in Lanarkshire, the residence of
+the present representative of the family.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p>
+<h2>How Our Fathers were Physicked.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By J. A. Langford, ll.d.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">Delightful</span> old Fuller tells us &#8220;Necessary and ancient their Profession
+ever since man&#8217;s body was subject to enmity and casualty.&#8221; There is no
+doubt of the necessity and antiquity of the doctor&#8217;s calling, but there
+is, without doubt, no profession in which such great and beneficent
+advance has been made in modern times as in the medical. The tortures
+which our fathers endured under the old treatment are terrible to think
+of. It was not enough that they were afflicted by disease; the pains which
+they had to suffer from the supposed remedies far exceeded those which
+nature imposed. Cupping, blistering, and especially bleeding, were the
+common applications in nearly all complaints, the Bleeding was also used
+as a preventive, which proverb truly tells us &#8220;is better than cure&#8221;; but
+in this case the supposed disease could scarcely have been worse than the
+supposed prevention. Five times in the year&mdash;&#8220;in September, before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+Advent, before Lent, after Easter, and at Pentecost&#8221;&mdash;were the periods at
+which men in health were accustomed to &#8220;breathe a vayne.&#8221; Besides letting
+of blood, the physician&#8217;s cane and the surgeon&#8217;s club were vigorously used
+on the unfortunate sufferers. Mr. J. C. Jeaffreson, in his very
+interesting &#8220;Book about Doctors,&#8221; says, &#8220;For many centuries fustigation
+was believed in as a sovereign remedy for bodily ailments as well as moral
+failings, and a beating was prescribed for an ague as frequently as for
+picking and stealing.&#8221; So what with the lancet and the stick combined, our
+fathers must indeed have shuddered at the approach of any of the &#8220;natural
+shocks that flesh is heir to.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The medicines of those good old times were of a very strange and
+objectionable kind. Some of the concoctions were composed of many
+ingredients, and were formed of abominable, not to say disgusting,
+materials. All nature was ransacked for out-of-the-way and horrible things
+which could be used as drugs and nostrums for suffering and gullible
+sufferers. In the reign of Charles II., Dr. Thomas Sherley &#8220;recommended a
+clumsy and inordinate administration of violent drugs&#8221; for gout. &#8220;Calomel
+he habitually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span> administered in simple doses. Sugar of lead he mixed
+largely in his conserves; pulverized human bones he was very fond of
+prescribing; and the principal ingredient in his gout-powder was &#8216;raspings
+of a human skull unburied.&#8217; But his sweetest compound was his &#8216;Balsam of
+Bats,&#8217; strongly recommended as an unguent for hypochondriacal persons,
+into which entered adders, bats, sucking-whelps, earth worms, hogs&#8217;
+grease, the marrow of a stag, and the thigh-bone of an ox.&#8221; A good idea of
+the things sold to a confiding public as cures for its ills may be
+gathered from two verses on Colonel Dalmahoy, a well-known&mdash;shall we say
+quack&mdash;of the past:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Dalmahoy sold infusions and lotions,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Decoctions, and gargles, and pills,</span><br />
+Electuaries, powders, and potions,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spermaciti, salts, scammony, squills.</span><br />
+<br />
+Horse aloes, burnt alum, agaric,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Balm, benzoine, blood-stone, and dill;</span><br />
+Castor, camphor, and acid tartaric,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">With specifics for every ill.&#8221;</span></p>
+
+<p>Metals and precious stones were extensively used in the prescriptions of
+bygone doctors. Every metal and every stone was credited with some special
+and peculiar virtue which it alone possessed, and it was applied as a cure
+for that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span> ailment over which it had influence and power. Bacon tells us,
+&#8220;We know Diseases of Stoppings, and Suffocations, are the most dangerous
+in the body; And it is not much otherwise in the minde. You may take
+<i>Sarza</i> to open the Liver; <i>Steele</i> to open the Spleene; <i>Flowers of
+Sulphur</i> for the Lungs; <i>Castoreum</i> for the Braine,&#8221; for each of which
+parts it was believed that the specifics named were most efficacious. The
+prescriptions of Dr. Bulleyn, in the reign of Elizabeth, are wonderful
+examples of how our fathers were physicked. Here are two of those quoted
+by Mr. Jeaffreson. The first is</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;<i>An Embrocation.</i>&mdash;An embrocation is made after this manner:&mdash;Px. Of a
+decoction of mallowes, vyolets, barly, quince seed, lettice leaves, one
+pint; of barly meale, two ounces; of oyle of vyolets and roses, of each,
+an ounce and half; of butter, one ounce; and then seeth them all together
+till they be like a brouthe, puttyng thereto, at the ende, foure yolkes of
+eggs; and the maner of applying is with peeces of cloth, dipped in the
+aforesaid decoction, being actually hoate.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Our second is &#8220;truly a medicine for kings and noblemen;&#8221; it is called an</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>&#8220;<i>Electuarium de Gemmis.</i>&mdash;Take two drachms of white perles; two little
+peeces of saphyre; jacinth, corneline, emerauldes, grannettes, of each an
+ounce; setwal, the sweete roote dorsnike, the rind of pomecitron, mase,
+basal seede, of each two drachms; of redde corrall, amber, shewing of
+ivory, of each two drachms; rootes both of white and red lichen, ginger,
+long peper, spicknard, folium indicum, saffron, cardamon, of each one
+drachm; of troch diarodon, lignum aloes, of each half a small handful;
+cinnamon, galinga, zurnbeth, which is a kind of setwal, of each one drachm
+and a half; thin pieces of gold and sylver, of each half a scruple; of
+musk, half a drachm. Make your electuary with honey emblici, which is the
+fourth kind of mirobulans with roses, strained in equall partes, as much
+as will suffice. This healeth cold diseases of ye braine, harte, stomack.
+It is a medicine proved against the tremblynge of the harte, faynting and
+swooning, the weakness of the stomacke, pensiveness, solitarines. Kings
+and noble men have used this for their comfort. It causeth them to be
+bold-spirited, the body to smell wel, and ingendreth to the face good
+colour.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The most innocent articles used in the old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span> medicines were fruits, and
+herbs, and vegetables. To some kinds special virtues are assigned, and Dr.
+Bulleyn&#8217;s &#8220;Book of Simples,&#8221; is very pleasant reading. &#8220;Pears, apples,
+peaches, quinces, cherries, grapes, raisins, prunes, raspberries, oranges,
+medlons, raspberries and strawberries, spinage, ginger, and lettuces are
+the good things thrown upon the board.&#8221; We are told of a prune growing at
+Norwich, and known as the &#8220;black freere&#8217;s prune,&#8221; that it is &#8220;very
+delicious and pleasaunt, and no lesse profitable unto a hoate stomacke.&#8221;
+&#8220;The red warden is of greate virtue, conserved, roasted or baken to quench
+choller.&#8221; We are also informed that &#8220;Figges be good agaynst melancholy,
+and the falling evil, to be eaten. Figges, nuts, and herb grase do make a
+sufficient medicine against poison or the pestilence. Figges make a good
+gargarism to cleanse the throates.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Some of the Doctor&#8217;s prescriptions are very curious. He prescribes &#8220;a smal
+young mouse rosted,&#8221; for a child afflicted with a nervous ailment. Nor did
+he disdain to use the snail in certain cases. He tells us that &#8220;Snayles
+broken from the shelles and sodden in whyte wyne with oyle and sugar are
+very holsome, because they be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> hoat and moist for the straightnes of the
+lungs and cold cough. Snails stamped with camphery, and leven will draw
+forth prycks in the flesh.&#8221; Snail broth is not entirely unknown in some
+country places, even at the present time. Bezoar stone and unicorn&#8217;s horn
+were also used in confections.</p>
+
+<p>Cancer has always been, and unfortunately still is, a terrible and an
+incurable disease, and has afforded a fine field for all kinds of nostrums
+and specifics which were to produce a &#8220;safe and certain cure.&#8221; One of
+these, called a &#8220;precious water,&#8221; was thus composed. &#8220;Take dove&#8217;s foote, a
+herb so named, Arkangell ivy with the berries, young red bryer toppes, and
+leaves, whyte roses, theyre leaves and buds, red sage, celandyne and
+woodbynde, of each lyke quantity, cut or chopped and put into pure cleane
+whyte wyne, and clarified honey. Then breake into it alum glasse and put
+in a little of the pouder of aloes hepatica. Destill these together softly
+in a limbecke of glasse or pure tin; if not then in a limbecke wherein
+aqua vit&aelig; is made. Keep this water close. It will not onely kyll the
+canker (cancer), if it be duly washed therewyth; but also two droppes
+dayly put into the eye wyll sharp the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span> syght, and breake the pearle and
+spottes, specially if it be dropped in wyth a little fenell water, and
+close the eyes after.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In 1739, the British Parliament passed an Act which is unprecedented in
+the annals of folly. A female quack, named Joanna Stephens, was reported
+to have effected some most extraordinary cures by the use of a medicine of
+
+which she only possessed the secret. She proposed to make it public for
+the sum of &pound;5,000, and a vain attempt was made to raise the sum by
+subscription, but only &pound;1,356 3s. was thus raised. An appeal was made to
+Parliament, and a commission was appointed to enquire into the subject,
+and a certificate signed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Bishops, Peers,
+and Physicians, was presented to the House, declaring that they were
+&#8220;convinced by experiment of the utility, efficacy, and dissolving power,&#8221;
+of the tested medicine, and Joanna Stephens was rewarded with the desired
+&pound;5,000. The prescriptions were published, and the following extracts will
+suffice to show how easily sufferers from diseases may be, and sometimes
+are, gulled. This lucky quack says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>&#8220;My medicines are a Powder, a Decoction, and Pills.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Powder consists of egg-shells and snails, both calcined.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Decoction is made by boiling some herbs (together with a ball
+which consists of soap, swine&#8217;s-cresses burnt to a blackness, and
+honey), in water.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Pills consist of snails calcined, wild carrot seeds, burdock
+seeds, asken keys, hips and hawes, all burnt to a blackness&mdash;soap and
+honey.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Our readers will willingly dispense with the directions of how these
+dearly purchased medicines should be prepared. Surely</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;The pleasure is as great,<br />
+In being cheated as to cheat!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In 1633, Stephen Brasnell, Physician, published a small volume entitled
+&#8220;Helps | for | Svddain | Accidents | Endangering Life. | By which | Those
+that live farre from Physitions or Chirurgions | may happily preserve the
+Life | of a true Friend or Neigh-| bour, till such a Man may be | had to
+perfect the Cure. | Collected out of the best authors | for the generall
+good.&#8221; The following is his prescription for all kinds of poisons:&mdash;viz.
+&#8220;the Hoofe of an Oxe cut into parings and boyled with bruised mustard-seed
+in white wine and faire water. The Bloud of a Malard drunke fresh and
+warme: or els dryed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span> powder, and so drunke in a draught of white wine.
+The Bloud of a Stagge also in the same manner. The seeds of Rue and the
+leaves of Betony boyled together in white wine. Or take ij scruples (that
+is fortie graines) of Mithridate; of prepared Chrystall, one dram (that is
+three score grains), fresh Butter one ounce. Mix all well together.
+Swallow it down by such quantities as you can swallow at once; and drink
+presently upon it a quarter of a pint of the decoction of French Barley,
+or so much of six shillings Beere. Of this I have had happy proofe.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There is a much more effective, though a somewhat revolting prescription
+for &#8220;those with abilitie.&#8221; &#8220;Take,&#8221; says our seventeenth century physician,
+&#8220;take a sound horse, open his belly alive, take out all his entrayles
+quickly, and put the poysoned partie naked into it all save his head,
+while the body of the horse retains his naturall heate, and there let him
+sweat well.&#8221; Our author admits that &#8220;this may be held a strange course,
+but the same reason that teacheth to devide live pullets and pigeons for
+plague-sores approveth this way of sweating as most apt to draw to itselfe
+all poysons from the heart and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span> principall parts of the patient&#8217;s body.
+But during this time of sweating he must defend his braine by wearing on
+his head a quilt.&#8221; The quilt is to be made by taking a number of dried
+herbs, which are to be made into a &#8220;grosse powder and quilt them up in
+sarsnet or calico, and let it be so big as to cover all the head like a
+cap, then binde it on fast with a kerchief.&#8221; This is called &#8220;a Nightcap to
+preserve the Brain.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There are also curious prescriptions for the stings of bees and wasps, the
+&#8220;bitings of spiders,&#8221; of which he says &#8220;the garden ones are the worst.&#8221; He
+tells us that the &#8220;flesh of the same beast that biteth, inwardly taken,
+helpeth much,&#8221; and that &#8220;outwardly the best thing to be applied is the
+flesh of the same beast that did the hurt, pounded in a morter and applied
+in manner of a poultis.&#8221; Here is one about that pretty little animal, the
+shrew-mouse: &#8220;Now the shrew-mouse is a little kind of a mouse with a long
+sharpe snout and a short tayle; it liveth commonly in old ruinous walls.
+It biteth also very venomously, and leaveth foure small perforations made
+by her foure foreteeth. To cure her biting, her flesh roasted and eaten is
+the best inward antidote if it may be had. And outwardly apply her warme<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+liver and skin if it may be had. Otherwise <i>Rocket-reeds</i> beaten into
+powder, and mixed with the bloud of a dog. Or els the teeth of a dead man
+made into a fine powder.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The toad comes in for a good share of attention, and Mr. Bradwell gives a
+personal anecdote on this subject. He says:&mdash;&#8220;Myself, while I was a
+student at <i>Cambridge</i>, was so hurt by the spouting of a venomous humour
+from the body of a great toad into my face while I pashed him to death
+with a brickbat. Some of the moisture lighted on my right eye, which did
+not a little endanger it, and hath made it ever since apt to receive any
+flux of Rheume or Inflammation.&#8221; Some of our readers may think that this
+was a fit punishment for having &#8220;pashed&#8221; the toad to &#8220;death with a
+brickbat.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Among the strangest things ever used as medicine must be placed human
+skulls. In 1854, Mr. T. A. Trollope gave a short account in <i>Notes and
+Queries</i> of a book by Dr. Cammillo Brunoni, published at Fabriano in 1726.
+It was entitled <i>Il Medico Poeta</i> (the Physician a Poet), and gives an
+account &#8220;of the medical uses of human skulls.&#8221; Dr. Brunoni informs us,
+says Mr. Trollope, that &#8220;all skulls are not of equal value.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> Indeed, those
+of persons who have died a natural death, are good for little or nothing.
+The <i>reason</i> of this is, that the disease of which they died has consumed
+or dissipated the essential spirit! The skulls of murderers and bandits
+are particularly efficacious. And this is clearly because not only is the
+essential spirit of the cranium concentrated therein by the nature of
+their violent death, but also the force of it is increased by the long
+exposure to the atmosphere, occasioned by the heads of such persons being
+ordinarily placed on spikes over the gates of cities! Such skulls are used
+in various manners. Preparations of volatile salt, spirit, gelatine,
+essence, etc., are made from them, and are very useful in epilepsy and
+h&oelig;morrhage. The notion soldiers have, that drinking out of a skull
+renders them invulnerable in battle, is a mere superstition, though
+respectable writers do maintain that such a practice is a proved
+preventive against scrofula.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This very curious book consists of a &#8220;poem in twelve cantos, or
+&#8216;Capitoli,&#8217; as from the fifteenth century downwards it was the Italian
+fashion to call them, on the physical poet&mdash;a sort of medical <i>ars
+poetica</i>; and followed by a hundred and seventy-two sonnets on all
+diseases, drugs, parts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span> of the body, functions of them, and curative
+means. Each sonnet is printed on one page, while that opposite is occupied
+by a compendious account in prose of the subject in hand. We have a sonnet
+on the stomach-ache, a sonnet on apoplexy, a sonnet on purges, another on
+blisters, and many others on far less mentionable subjects. The author&#8217;s
+poetical view of the action of a black-dose compares it to that of a tidy
+and active housemaid, who, having swept together all the dirt in the room,
+throws it out of the window. Mystic virtues are attributed to a variety of
+substances, animal, vegetable, and mineral.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That delightful work, The Memoirs of the Verney Family, by Lady Verney,
+affords some very striking examples of the medical treatment of poor
+suffering humanity in the 17th century. Our selections are from the third
+volume.</p>
+
+<p>One of the most extraordinary medicines of this, or of any age, was
+without doubt that known as Venice Treacle. In 1651, Sir Ralph Verney was
+in Venice, and the Memoirs furnish the following graphic account of this
+terrible drug, which was a concoction of the most disgusting materials.
+Sir Ralph sends it to Mrs. Isham, for her family medicine chest, and says<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+&#8220;hee that is most famous for Treacle is called Sig<sup>r</sup> Antonio Sgobis, and
+keepes shopp at the Strazzo, or Ostridge, sopra il ponte de&#8217;Baretteri, on
+the right hand going towards St. Mark&#8217;s. His price is 19 livres (Venize
+money) a pound, and hee gives leaden Potts with the Ostridge signe uppon
+them, and Papers both in Italian and Lattin to show its virtue.&#8221; &#8220;This
+celebrated and incredibly nasty compound,&#8221; adds Lady Verney,
+&#8220;traditionally composed by Nero&#8217;s physician, was made of vipers, white
+wine, and opium, &#8216;spices from both the Indies,&#8217; liquorice, red roses, tops
+of germander, juice of rough aloes, seeds of treacle mustard, tops of St.
+John&#8217;s wort, and some twenty other herbs, to be mixed with honey &#8216;triple
+the weight of all the dry species&#8217; into an electuary.&#8221; The recipe is given
+as late as 1739, in Dr. Quincey&#8217;s &#8220;English Dispensatory,&#8221; published by
+Thomas Longman, at the Ship in Paternoster Row. &#8220;Vipers are essential, and
+to get the full benefit of them &#8216;a dozen vipers should be put alive into
+white wine.&#8217; The English doctor, anxious for the credit of British vipers,
+proves that Venice treacle may be made as well in England, &#8216;though their
+country is hotter, and so may the more rarify the viperime<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span> juices&#8217;; yet
+the bites of our vipers at the proper time of year, which is the hottest,
+are as efficacious and deadly as them. But he complains that the name of
+Venice goes so far, that English people &#8216;please themselves much with
+buying a Tin Pot at a low price of a dirty sailor ... with directions in
+the Italian tongue, printed in London,&#8217; and that some base druggists &#8216;make
+this wretched stuff of little else than the sweepings of their shops.&#8217; Sir
+Ralph could pride himself that his leaden pots contained the genuine
+horror. It was used as &#8216;an opiate when some stimulus is required at the
+same time&#8217;; an overdose was confessedly dangerous, and even its advocates
+allowed that Venice treacle did not suit everyone, because, forsooth,
+&#8216;honey disagrees with some particular constitutions.&#8217;&#8221; For centuries this
+medical &#8220;horror&#8221; was taken by our drastically treated forefathers.</p>
+
+<p>The treatment was indeed drastic, and we might truly add cruel. Tom Verney
+had &#8220;a tertian ague and a feaver,&#8221; and for this he had &#8220;only a vomit,
+glister, a cordiall, and breathed a vane&#8221;&mdash;that is, was bled. Another
+patient, Sir George Wheler, who had caught a chill after dancing, had all
+sorts of &#8220;Applications of Blisters and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span> Laudanums,&#8221; so that his Christmas
+dinner at Dr. Denton&#8217;s cost him &#8220;the best part of 100 pounds.&#8221; For an
+eruption in the leg, Sir Ralph Verney was advised to apply a lotion &#8220;so
+virulent, a drop would fech of the skin when it touched.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Young Edmund Verney was ill in 1657, and writes to his father, &#8220;Truly I
+might compare my afflictions to Job&#8217;s. I have taken purges and vomits,
+pills and potions, I have been blooded, and I doe not know what I have not
+had, I have had so many things.&#8221; In 1657-58 the epidemic known as &#8220;The New
+Disease,&#8221; proved very fatal, and created quite a panic. The treatment
+adopted by the doctors may be gathered from a prescription of Dr.
+Denton&#8217;s, one of the most famous physicians of the time. He writes to Sir
+Ralph Verney, &#8220;I see noe danger of Wm. R., and if he had followed your
+advice by taking of a vomit, and if that had not done it, then to have
+beene blooded, I beleeved he had beene well ere this.&#8221; Then he adds &#8220;It is
+the best thinge and the surest and the quickest he can yet doe, therefore
+I pray lett him have one yett. 3 full spoonfulls of the vomitage liquor in
+possitt drinke will doe well, and he may abide 4 the same night when he
+goes to rest; let him take the weight of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span> vi<sup>ds</sup> of diascordium the next
+day or the next but one; he may be blooded in the arm about 20 ounces.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Some of the ladies of the time did not, however, approve of this kind of
+treatment, and preferred their own remedies, or their own notions of
+remedies, to the doctor&#8217;s prescriptions. We select two examples. Lady
+Fanshawe described the disease as &#8220;a very ill kind of fever, of which many
+died, and it ran generally through all families.&#8221; While she suffered from
+it she ate &#8220;neither flesh, nor fish, nor bread, but sage possett drink, a
+pancake or eggs, or now and then a turnip or carrott.&#8221; But Lady Hobart
+ventured to prescribe. She writes, &#8220;If you have a new dises in your town
+pray have a car of yourself, and goo to non of them; but drink good ale
+for the gretis cordall that is: I live by the strength of your malt.&#8221; Few,
+we anticipate, would object to her ladyship&#8217;s advice, and most would
+prefer her &#8220;good ale&#8221; to Dr. Denton&#8217;s &#8220;vomitts,&#8221; and the loss of 20 ounces
+of blood.</p>
+
+<p>Our illustrations might be indefinitely multiplied, but those given will
+amply suffice to show the way in which our fathers were physicked.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Medical Folk-Lore.</h2>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By John Nicholson.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">To</span> ease pain and endeavour to effect a cure, man will try every suggested
+remedy, likely and unlikely, and when numberless things have been tried,
+each of which was alleged to be a certain cure, he reverts to some simple
+thing, taught him by his old grandmother, or the &#8220;wise woman&#8221; of his early
+days; and which, by reason of its simplicity, had been at first
+contemptuously rejected in favour of more complex but inefficacious
+compounds. There is scarcely a market but has a stall kept by a herb
+woman, who, in warm old-fashioned hood, with a little shawl round her
+shoulders, her ample waist encircled by broad tapes from which is
+suspended a pocket, capacious and indispensable, lays out with great care
+her stock of simples&mdash;roots, leaves, or flowers, studiously gathered at
+the proper time, when their virtue is strongest. Here may be seen poppy
+heads for fomentation, dandelion roots for liver complaint, ground ivy for
+rheumatism,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span> celandine for weak eyes, and other herbs, all &#8220;for the
+service of man,&#8221; to alleviate or cure some of the &#8220;ills that flesh is heir
+to.&#8221; She can relate wondrous tales of marvellous cures wrought by her
+wares, of cases, long standing, and given up by the duly qualified medical
+fraternity, a brotherhood she holds in contempt because of their
+new-fangled remedies and methods.</p>
+
+<p>This chapter, however, deals chiefly with superstitious remedies, or at
+least those remedies which seem to have no scientific bearing on the case;
+thus, a person having a sty on the eye, will have it rubbed with a wedding
+ring, or the gold ring of a young maiden; or cause it to be well brushed
+seven times with a black cat&#8217;s tail, if the cat were willing. Another cure
+is more efficacious if administered as a surprise. The patient is placed
+in front of the operator, who unexpectedly spits on the eye affected;
+which action often leads to angry remonstrance, met by derisive laughter,
+which causes, it may be, broken friendship and general unpleasantness for
+a time.</p>
+
+<p>It is a common belief, almost world-wide in its extent, that toothache is
+caused by a little worm which gnaws a hole in the tooth. Not long ago I
+was shewn a large molar, which when <i>in situ</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> had caused its owner great
+pain, and he pointed to the nerve apertures, saying, &#8220;That&#8217;s where the
+worm was!&#8221; Shakespeare, in &#8220;Much Ado About Nothing,&#8221;<a name='fna_3' id='fna_3' href='#f_3'><small>[3]</small></a> speaks of this
+curious belief:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;<i>D. Pedro.</i> What! sigh for the toothache?<br />
+<br />
+<i>Leon.</i> Where is but a humour or a worm.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This superstition was common some years ago in Derbyshire, where there
+was an odd way of extracting, as it was thought, the worm. A small
+quantity of a mixture, consisting of dried and powdered herbs, was placed
+in a tea-cup or other small vessel, and a live coke from the fire was
+dropped in. The patient then held his or her open mouth over the cup, and
+inhaled the smoke as long as it could be borne. The cup was then taken
+away, and a fresh cup or glass, containing water, was then put before the
+patient. Into this cup the patient breathed hard for a few moments, and
+then, it was supposed, the grub or worm could be seen in the water.&#8221;<a name='fna_4' id='fna_4' href='#f_4'><small>[4]</small></a></p>
+
+<p>The following was communicated to the <i>Folk Lore Journal</i> by Wm. Pengelly,
+Esq., Torquay, February 1st, 1884:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>&#8220;Upwards of sixty years ago,
+a woman at Looe, in south-east Cornwall, complained to a neighbouring woman that she was suffering from
+toothache, on which the neighbour remarked that she could give a charm
+of undoubted efficacy. It was to be in writing, and worn constantly
+about the person; but, unfortunately, it would be valueless if the
+giver and receiver were of the same sex. This difficulty was obviated
+by calling in my services, and requesting me to write from dictation
+the following words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&#8216;Peter sat in the gate of Jerusalem. Jesus cometh unto him and saith,
+&#8220;Peter, what aileth thee?&#8221; He saith, &#8220;Lord, I am grievously tormented
+with the toothache.&#8221; He saith, &#8220;Arise, Peter, and follow me.&#8221; He did
+so, and immediately the toothache left him; and he followed him in the
+name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>The charm, being found to be correctly written, was held to have been
+presented to me by the dictator. I at once gave it to the sufferer,
+who placed it in a small bag and wore it round her neck.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>A Roumanian charm against toothache is to sit beside an anthill, masticate
+a crust of bread, spit it out over the anthill, and as the ants eat the
+bread the toothache will cease.</p>
+
+<p>Some believe that if you pick the aching tooth with the nail of an old
+coffin, or drink the water taken from the tops of three waves, the
+wearying pain may be relieved or cured. In Norfolk, the toothache is
+called the &#8220;love pain,&#8221; and the sufferer does not receive much sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>Some time ago, a man wished to shew me some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> antiquity he had found, but
+his jacket pocket was so filled with odds and ends (&#8220;kelterment,&#8221; he
+called it) that he turned all out in order to better prosecute his search.
+Among the miscellaneous collection I noticed a potato, withered, dry,
+hard, and black; and was informed it was kept as a preventive and cure for
+rheumatism. For the same distressing, disabling disease, some people
+spread treacle on brown paper, and apply hot to the part affected.</p>
+
+<p>The following curious passages have been transcribed by my friend, Mr.
+George Neilson, solicitor, Glasgow, from the Kirk Session Records of the
+parish of Gretna, and are here inserted by his consent, most freely
+given:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Graitney Kirk</span>, <i>Feb. 11, 1733</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Session met after Sermon.</p>
+
+<p>It was represented by some of the members that the Charms and Spells
+used at Watshill for Francis Armstrong, Labouring under distemper of
+mind, gave great offence, and &#8217;twas worth while to enquire into the
+affair and publickly admonish the people of the evil of such a course,
+that a timely stop be put to such a practice.</p>
+
+<p>Several of the members gave account that in Barbara Armstrang&#8217;s they
+burned Rowantree and Salt, they took three Locks of Francis&#8217;s hair,
+three pieces of his shirt, three roots of wormwood, three of mugwort,
+three pieces of Rowantree, and boiled alltogether, anointed his Legs
+with the water, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> essayed to put three sups in his mouth, and
+meantime kept the door close, being told by Isabel Pott, at Cross, in
+Rockcliff commonly called the Wise Woman, that the person who had
+wronged him would come to the door, but no access was to be given.
+Francis, tho&#8217; distracted, told them they were using witch-craft and
+the Devils Charms that would do no good. It is said they carried a
+candle around the bed for one part of the inchantment. John Neilson,
+in Sarkbridge, declared before the Session this was matter of fact
+others then present. Mary Tate, Servant to John Neilson in Sarkbridge
+is to be cited as having gone to the Wise Woman for Consultation.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Graitney Kirk</span>, <i>Feb. 25, 1733</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Session met after Sermon</p>
+
+<p>Mary Tate having been summoned was called on, and compearing confessed
+that she had gone to Isabel Pot, in the parish of Rockcliff, and
+declared that the s<sup>d</sup> Isabell ordered South running water to be
+lifted in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and to be boiled
+at night in the house where Francis Armstrong was, with nettle roots,
+wormwood, mugwort, southernwood and rowantree, and his hands, legs and
+temples be stroaked therewith, and three sups to be put in his mouth,
+and withal to keep the door close: She ordered also three locks of his
+hair to be burnt in the fire with three pieces clipt out of his shirt,
+and a Slut, <i>i.e.</i>, a rag dipt in tallow to be lighted and carried
+round his bed, and all to be kept secret except from near friends:
+Mary Tate declared that the said Francis would allow none to touch him
+but her, and at last Helen Armestrange, Spouse to Archibald Crighton,
+Elder, assisted her, and after all the said Francis, tho&#8217; distracted,
+told them they were using witchcrafts and the Devil&#8217;s Charms that
+would do no good: Mary Tate being admonished of the Evil of such a
+course was removed: <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>Notwithstanding her acknowledgments of her fault
+she is to be suspended <i>a sacris</i>, and others her accomplices, and
+that none hereafter pretend Ignorance the Congregation is to be
+cautioned against such a practice from the Pulpit.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Ague used to be much more prevalent than it now is. Drainage and
+sanitation have banished many evils, and with the evil, the exorcists&#8217;
+charm for the banishment of the evil. Charms, rather than medical
+remedies, for the cure of ague, are very prevalent. Rider&#8217;s <i>British
+Merlin</i> for 1715 lies before me. It is a thin 16mo. booklet of 48 printed
+pages and 42 blank pages, but some of the blank inter-leaves have been
+torn out. It is bound in parchment with gilt edges, and has had a clasp,
+which has disappeared. One of the interleaves bears this written
+charm:&mdash;&#8220;And Peter sat at the gate of Jerusalem and prayed, and Jesus
+called Peter, and Peter said, Lord, I am sick of an ague, and the evil
+ague being dismissed, Peter said, Lord, grant that whosoever weareth these
+lines in writing, the evil ague may depart from them, and from all evil
+ague good Lord deliver us.&#8221; The following charm is taken from an old diary
+of 1751<a name='fna_5' id='fna_5' href='#f_5'><small>[5]</small></a>:&mdash;&#8220;When Jesus came near Pilate, He trembled like a leaf, and
+the judge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> asked Him if He had the ague. He answered, He had neither the
+ague, nor was He afraid; and whosoever bears these words in mind shall
+never fear ague or anything else.&#8221; A strange charm for this dreaded
+disease was to be spoken up the wide cavernous chimney by the eldest
+female of the family on St. Agnes&#8217; Eve. Thus spake she:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Tremble and go!<br />
+First day shiver and burn;<br />
+Tremble and quake!<br />
+Second day shiver and learn;<br />
+Tremble and die!<br />
+Third day never return.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A curious anecdote is related of Lord Chief Justice Holt. When a young
+man, he, with companions who were law students like himself, ran up a
+score at an inn, which they were not able to pay. Mr. Holt observed that
+the landlord&#8217;s daughter looked very ill, and, posing as a medical student,
+asked what ailed her. He was informed she suffered from ague. Mr. Holt,
+continuing to play the doctor, gathered sundry herbs, mixed them with
+great ceremony, rolled them up in parchment, scrawled some characters on
+the same, and to the great amusement of his companions, tied it round the
+neck of the young woman, who straightway was cured of her ague.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> After the
+cure, the pretending doctor offered to pay the bill, but the grateful
+landlord and father would not consent, and allowed the party to leave the
+house with hearts as light as their pockets.</p>
+
+<p>Many years after, when on the Bench, a woman was brought before him
+accused of witchcraft. She denied the charge, but said she had a wonderful
+ball, which never failed to cure the ague. The charm was handed to the
+judge, who recognised it as the very ball he had made for the young woman
+at the inn, to help himself and his companions out of a difficult
+position.<a name='fna_6' id='fna_6' href='#f_6'><small>[6]</small></a></p>
+
+<p>In the west of England a live snail is sewn up in a bag and worn round the
+neck as an antidote for ague; though others in the same district imprison
+a spider in a box, and, as it pines away, so will the disease depart.</p>
+
+<p>It is a common belief in the north of England that a person bitten by a
+dog is liable to madness, if the dog which bit them goes mad. In order to
+secure the bitten one from such a terrible fate, the owner of the dog is
+often compelled to destroy it. Should he refuse to do so, the friends of
+the injured party would probably poison it, The condition peculiar to the
+morning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> following a night of debauchery, is said to need &#8220;a hair of the
+dog that bit you,&#8221; which doubtless refers to the means taken to prevent
+ill effects following a dog bite. A wise saw from the Edda tells us that
+&#8220;Dog&#8217;s hair heals dog&#8217;s bite.&#8221; The following incident recorded in the
+<i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>, Oct. 12th, 1866, shews most gross superstition in
+this Victorian age. &#8220;At an inquest, held on the 5th of October, at
+Bradfield, (Bucks.), on the body of a child of five years of age, which
+had died of hydrophobia, evidence was given of a practice almost
+incredible in civilised England. Sarah Mackness stated that at the request
+of the mother of the deceased, she had fished out of the river the body of
+the dog by which the child had been bitten, and had extracted its liver, a
+slice of which she had frizzled before the fire, and had then given it to
+the child to be eaten with some bread. The dog had been drowned nine days
+before. The child ate the liver greedily, drank some tea afterwards, but
+died, in spite of this strange specific.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Erysipelas in Donegal is known as the &#8220;rose.&#8221; It is very common, but can
+be cured by a stroker. The following is said to have happened. A nurse of
+a Rector had the &#8220;rose,&#8221; and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span> doctor was called in. After he was gone,
+the woman&#8217;s friends brought in a stroker, who rubbed the nurse with bog
+moss, and then threw a bucket of bogwater over her in bed. This treatment
+cured the woman, and is said to be generally in vogue, but is not
+efficient except the right person does it.<a name='fna_7' id='fna_7' href='#f_7'><small>[7]</small></a> In some parts of Yorkshire,
+sheep&#8217;s dung is applied as a poultice for the cure of erysipelas.</p>
+
+<p>What is more distressing, both to patient and nurse, than whooping cough,
+or king-cough, as it is sometimes called? A change of air is deemed
+beneficial to the afflicted one, so the mothers of Hull take their
+suffering children across the Humber to New Holland and back again. Some
+call it &#8220;crossing strange water.&#8221; Other people procure a &#8220;hairy worm,&#8221; and
+suspend it in a flannel cover round the neck of the sufferer, in the
+belief that as the creature dies and wastes away, so will the cough
+depart. This custom seems to be the relic of an old belief that something
+of the nature of a hairy caterpillar was the cause of the cough, and Mr.
+Tylor, in his <i>Primitive Culture</i>,<a name='fna_8' id='fna_8' href='#f_8'><small>[8]</small></a> speaks of the ancient<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+hom&oelig;opathic doctrine that what hurts will also cure. In Gloucestershire
+roasted mouse is considered a specific for whooping cough; though in
+Yorkshire the same diet cure is adopted for croup, while rat pie is the
+one to be used for whooping cough. The Norfolk peasants tie up a common
+house spider in a piece of muslin, and when the luckless long-legged
+spinner dies, the cough will soon disappear. A correspondent of <i>Notes and
+Queries</i> states that when staying in a village in Oxfordshire, he was
+informed by an old woman that she and her brothers were cured of whooping
+cough in the following way. They were required to go, the first thing in
+the morning, to a hovel at a little distance from their house, where a fox
+was kept. They carried with them a large can of milk, which was set down
+before the fox, and when he had taken as much as he cared to drink, the
+children shared among them what was left. The <i>Aberdeen Evening Gazette</i>
+of 24th August, 1882, tells of a curious superstition in Lochee:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Hooping-cough being rather prevalent in Lochee at the present time,
+various cures are resorted to with the view of allaying the distress.
+Amongst these the old &#8216;fret&#8217; of passing a child beneath the belly of a
+donkey has come in for a share of patronage. A few days ago, two
+children living with their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> parents in Camperdown Street, were
+infected with the malady. A hawker&#8217;s cart, with a donkey yoked to it,
+happening to pass, the mothers thought this an excellent opportunity
+to have their little ones relieved of their hacking cough. The donkey
+was accordingly stopped, the children were brought forth, and the
+ceremony began. The mothers, stationed at either side of the donkey,
+passed and repassed the little creatures underneath the animal&#8217;s
+belly, and with evident satisfaction appeared to think that a cure
+would in all probability be effected. Nor was this all; a piece of
+bread was next given to the donkey to eat, one of the women holding
+her apron beneath its mouth to catch the crumbs which might fall.
+These were given to the children to eat, so as to make the cure
+effectual. Whether these strange proceedings have resulted in
+banishing the dreaded cough or not, has not been ascertained, and
+probably never will be. A few years ago, the custom was quite common
+in this quarter, but with the spread of education the people generally
+know better than to attempt to cure hooping-cough through the agency
+of a donkey.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>The <i>North British Mail</i> for 20th March 1883, among other superstitions in
+Tiree, says, &#8220;On the west side of the island there is a rock with a hole
+in it, through which children are passed when suffering from
+whooping-cough or other complaints.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It is a common belief that if you wash your hands in water in which eggs
+have been boiled, warts will make their appearance; also, that the blood
+of a wart will cause other warts. Anyhow, if the warts be there, they can
+either<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span> be cured or charmed away. The writer once had a row of warts,
+thirteen in number, on his left arm. He was told by an aged dame, who sat
+on a three-legged stool before her cottage door, smoking a short black
+pipe, to take thirteen bad peas, throw them over his left shoulder, never
+heeding where they went, all the while repeating some incantation, which
+has been forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Cures are effected by rubbing the warts with something, which is
+afterwards allowed to decay. Some rub the warts with a grey snail or slug,
+and then impale the poor creature on a thorn; others steal a bit of beef,
+not so much as Taffy made off with, rub the beef on the warts, and then
+bury the beef. Lord Bacon, in his <i>Natural History</i>, says:&mdash;&#8220;I had from my
+childhood a wart upon one of my fingers; afterwards, when I was about
+sixteen years old, being then at Paris, there grew upon both my hands a
+number of warts, at the least an hundred in a month&#8217;s space. The English
+Ambassador&#8217;s lady, who was a woman far from superstitious, told me one day
+she would help me away with my warts: whereupon she got a piece of lard
+with the skin on, and rubbed the warts all over with the fat side;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> and
+among the rest, the wart which I had from my childhood; then she nailed
+the piece of lard, with the fat towards the sun, upon a post of her
+chamber window, which was to the south. The success was, that within five
+weeks&#8217; space all the warts went quite away; and that wart which I had so
+long endured, for company.... They say the like is done by the rubbing of
+warts with a green elder stick, and then burying the stick to rot in
+muck.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In Withal&#8217;s <i>Dictionary</i> (1608) there is the following couplet:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;The bone of a haire&#8217;s foot closed in a ring,<br />
+Will drive away the cramp whenas it doth wing,&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>but Pepys, who tells us the whole of his experience, with comments
+thereon, used a hare&#8217;s foot as a charm for colic. He says:&mdash;(20 Jan.
+1664-5) &#8220;Homeward, in my way buying a hare and taking it home, which arose
+upon my discourse to-day with Mr. Batten in Westminster Hall, who showed
+me my mistake, that my hare&#8217;s foot hath not the joynt in it, and assures
+me he never had the cholique since he carried it about him; and it is a
+strange thing how fancy works, for I no sooner handled his foot but I
+became very well, and so continue.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>(22nd.) &#8220;Now mighty well,
+and truly I can but impute it to my fresh hare&#8217;s foot.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>(March 26) &#8220;Now I am at a loss to know whether it be my hare&#8217;s foot which
+is my preservation; for I never had a fit of collique since I wore it, or
+whether it be my taking a pill of turpentine every morning.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The following newspaper cutting from the <i>Boston Herald</i>, 7th February,
+1837, is worth preserving:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Nothing could be more absurd than the notions regarding some of these
+supposed cures; a ring made of a hinge of a coffin had the power of
+relieving cramps, which were also mitigated by having a rusty old
+sword hanging up by the bedside. Nails driven in an oak tree prevented
+the toothache. A halter that had served in hanging a criminal was an
+infallible remedy for a head-ache when tied round the head; this
+affection was equally cured by the moss growing upon the human skull
+taken as cephalic snuff dried and pulverised. A dead man&#8217;s hand could
+dissipate tumours of the glands, by stroking the part nine times; but
+the hand of a man who had been cut down from the gallows was the most
+efficacious. The chips of a gallows on which several had been hanged,
+when worn in a bag round the neck would cure the ague. A stone with a
+hole in it, suspended at the head of a bed, would effectually stop the
+night-mare, hence it was called a hag-stone, as it prevents the
+troublesome witches from sitting upon the sleeper&#8217;s stomach. The same
+amulet, tied to the key of the stable door, deterred witches from
+riding horses over the country.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>Our forefathers firmly believed in planetary influence on the minds and
+bodies of men, and no operation could be performed on any part of the body
+unless the planet, ruling that particular part, were propitious. Rider&#8217;s
+<i>British Merlin</i> for 1715, places the name of some part of the body&mdash;face,
+neck, arms, breast, etc., opposite the days of the month, indicating that
+the influence of the planets on that day is favourable to that particular
+part or organ. An old proverb says:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Friday hair, Sunday horn,<br />
+You&#8217;ll go the devil afore Monday morn,&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>shewing that these days were unlucky for clipping hair and cutting nails.
+The <i>York Fabric Rolls</i><a name='fna_9' id='fna_9' href='#f_9'><small>[9]</small></a> tell us that Maundy Thursday, the day before
+Good Friday, was termed Shere Thursday, because &#8220;in olde faders dayes the
+people wold that day <i>sheer</i> theyr heddes and clype theyr berdes and poll
+theyr heedes and so make them honest ayenst Easter Day.&#8221; The same
+interesting volume<a name='fna_10' id='fna_10' href='#f_10'><small>[10]</small></a> gives the following account of charming away
+fevers:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>&#8220;1528. Bishopwilton.
+Isabel Mure presented. She took fier, and ij yong women w<sup>t</sup> hirr, and went to a rynnyng water, and light a wypse of
+straw and sett it on the water, and said thus, &#8216;Benedicite, se ye what
+I see. I se the fier burne, and water rynne and the gryse grew, and
+see flew and nyght fevers and all unkowth evils flee, and all other,
+God will,&#8217; and after theis wordes said xv Pater Noster, xv Ave Maria
+and thre credes.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>The following is a reproduction of a receipt for Yellow Jonus (Jaundice)
+copied from an old book in my possession. &#8220;A quart of whine (wine), a
+penoth of Barbary barck, a penoth of Tormorch (Turmerich), a haporth of
+flour of Brimstone for Jonous.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span></p>
+<h2>Of Physicians and their Fees,</h2>
+<p class="center">WITH SOME PERSONAL REMINISCENCES.</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By Andrew James Symington, f.r.s.n.a.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="dropcap"><span class="caps">In</span> the whole range of professional life, or in any section of the
+community, there is no set of men so self-denying, sympathetic,
+philanthropic, liable to be called at any hour, day or night, and so
+hard-worked, as medical practitioners. To begin with, there is first, a
+long and expensive course of study, and, often, several years pass, before
+a practice becomes even self-sustaining. Those at the head of the
+profession attain to large incomes, and make their &pound;20,000 a year. Noted
+specialists, in particular, such as the late Dr. Mackenzie, get large
+fees; but the majority of the profession conscientiously perform their
+laborious and kindly ministrations ungrudgingly and with moderate
+remuneration, which, in most cases, is certainly far short of their
+deserts.</p>
+
+<p>This state of matters has prevailed for many centuries, and, taking the
+different value of money into account, notwithstanding the advance of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
+medical science, there is but little change in the scale of remuneration,
+whether as to large fees paid by Royal or titled personages, fees by the
+middle classes, or by the rural or working population.</p>
+
+<p>It has been well said, that &#8220;the theory and practice of medicine is the
+noblest and most difficult science in the world; and that there is no
+other art for the practice of which the most thorough education is so
+essential.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Whittier observes:&mdash;&#8220;It is the special vocation of the doctor to grow
+familiar with suffering&mdash;to look upon humanity disrobed of its pride and
+glory&mdash;robbed of all its fictitious ornaments&mdash;weak, hopeless, naked&mdash;and
+undergoing the last fearful metempsychosis, from its erect and god-like
+image, the living temple of an enshrined divinity, to the loathsome clod
+and the inanimate dust! Of what ghastly secrets of moral and physical
+disease is he the depository!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Sir Thomas Browne, in his &#8220;Religio Medici,&#8221; says:&mdash;&#8220;Men, that look no
+further than their outsides, think health an appurtenance unto life, and
+quarrel with their constitutions for being sick; but I, that have examined
+the parts of man, and know upon what tender filaments that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span> fabrick hangs,
+do wonder that we are not always so; and, considering the thousand doors
+that lead to death, do thank my God that we can die but once.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This model physician, who said, &#8220;I cannot go to cure the body of my
+patient, but I forget my profession and call unto God for his soul,&#8221; in
+the same work, finely says of charity:&mdash;&#8220;Divinity hath wisely divided the
+act thereof into many branches, and hath taught us, in this narrow way,
+many paths unto goodness; as many ways as we may do good, so many ways we
+may be charitable. There are infirmities not only of the body, but of soul
+and fortunes, which do require the merciful hand of our abilities. I
+cannot contemn a man for ignorance, but behold him with as much pity as I
+do Lazarus. It is no greater charity to clothe his body than apparel the
+nakedness of his soul.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His distinguished position, as a physician and an author, demands very
+special and reverential mention in these pages.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Thomas Browne was born in London on the 19th of October, 1605. He died
+at Norwich on the 19th of October, 1682, having reached exactly the age of
+seventy-seven. His father<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span> was a wealthy merchant, of a good Cheshire
+family, but died when his more illustrious son was a boy, and his mother
+shortly afterwards married Sir Thomas Dutton. After travelling on the
+Continent, he settled as a practising physician at Shipley Hall, near
+Halifax, for a time, and then moved to Norwich, where the remaining
+forty-two years of his life were spent. His library contained vast stores
+of learned works on antiquities, languages, and the curiosities of
+erudition. He corresponded with the best men of his day, and was often
+able to assist them in their various investigations. His friend Evelyn,
+alluding to Browne&#8217;s home, at Norwich, tells us &#8220;His whole house and
+garden being a paradise and cabinet of rarities, and that of the best
+collections, especially medals, books, plants, and natural things.&#8221; He was
+knighted by Charles II. in 1671.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the troublous times of the Civil War, the Commonwealth, and the
+Restoration, he led a quiet studious life, issuing volume after volume
+full of profound, penetrating, and far-reaching thought, set forth in
+stately, sonorous, and musical language, the perfect form or style of
+which, at times, is only equalled but not excelled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span> by the best cadenced
+prose of Milton or Jeremy Taylor.</p>
+
+<p>His &#8220;Religio Medici,&#8221; &#8220;Hydrotaphia or Urn Burial,&#8221; and &#8220;The Garden of
+Cyrus,&#8221; have been my favourites for more than half a century. Of the
+latter work, John Addington Symonds has finely and truly said, that &#8220;the
+rarer qualities of Sir Thomas Browne&#8217;s style (are) here displayed in rich
+maturity and heavy-scented blossom. The opening phrase of his dedication
+to Sir Thomas Le Gros&mdash;&#8216;When the funeral pyre was out, and the last
+valediction over, men took a lasting adieu of their interred friends,
+little expecting the curiosity of future ages should comment on their
+ashes;&#8217;&mdash;this phrase strikes a key-note to the sombre harmonies which
+follow, connecting the ossuaries of the dead, the tears quenched in the
+dust of countless generations, with the vivid sympathy and scrutinizing
+sagacity of the living writer.... I will only call attention to the unique
+feeling for verbal tone, for what may be called the musical colour of
+words, for crumbling cadences, and the reverberation of stationary sounds
+in cavernous recesses, which is discernable at large throughout the
+dissertation. How simple, for example, seems the collocation of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span> vocables
+in this phrase&mdash;&#8216;Under the drums and tramplings of three conquests!&#8217; And
+yet with what impeccable instinct the vowels are arranged; how naturally,
+how artfully, the rhythm falls! Take another, and this time a complete
+sentence,&mdash;&#8216;But the iniquity of oblivion blindly scattereth her poppy, and
+deals with the memory of men, without distinction to merit of perpetuity.&#8217;
+Take yet another&mdash;&#8216;The brother of death daily haunts us with dying
+mementoes.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>I take leave of this, the most notable of English Physicians, by
+transcribing the following grand, suggestive, and characteristic passage
+from his &#8220;Fragment on Mummies&#8221;:&mdash;&#8220;Yet in these huge structures and
+pyramidial immensities of the builders, whereof so little is known, they
+seemed not so much to raise sepulchres or temples to death, as to contemn
+and disdain it, astonishing heaven with their audacities, and looking
+forward with delight to their interment in those eternal piles. Of their
+living habitations they made little account, conceiving of them but as
+<i>hospitia</i>, or inns, while they adorned the sepulchres of the dead, and
+planting them on lasting basis, defied the crumbling touches of time and
+the misty vaporousness of oblivion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span> Yet all were but Babel vanities. Time
+sadly overcometh all things, and is now dominant, and sitteth upon a
+sphinx, and looketh unto Memphis and old Thebes, while his sister Oblivion
+reclineth semisomnous on a pyramid, gloriously triumphing, making puzzles
+of Titanian erections, and turning old glories into dreams. History
+sinketh beneath her cloud. The traveller, as he paceth amazedly through
+those deserts, asketh of her, who builded them? and she mumbleth
+something, but what it is he heareth not.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The medical profession is a noble and pleasant one, though laborious and
+often full of anxiety, straining mind and body. The good physician is the
+sympathizing, confidential, and comforting <i>friend</i> of the family. He
+values the humble gifts and testimonials of gratitude from the poor, even
+more than the costly presents of the rich.</p>
+
+<p>The virtuous poor are always grateful. It can truly be said of the
+physician&#8217;s kind and often gratuitous services to them, in the language of
+scripture:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;When the ear heard me, then it blessed me; and when the eye saw me it
+gave witness to me; because I delivered the poor that cried, and the
+fatherless, and him that had none to help him. The blessing of him
+that was ready to perish <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>came upon me; and I caused the widow&#8217;s heart
+to sing for joy.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Among savages, sorcerers, and magicians, are the medicine men; these are
+still represented, in civilisation, by impostors and quacks. Members of
+the profession, as a rule, keep themselves posted up in the medical
+science of the day, honestly and unselfishly do everything that can be
+done for their patients, and rejoice in being the means of their recovery,
+far more than in their fee.</p>
+
+<p>Burton, in his &#8220;Anatomy of Melancholy,&#8221; treating of &#8220;Physician, Patient,
+and Physick,&#8221; when astrology, ignorance, and queer nostrums, were then
+more in vogue than practical science, says:&mdash;&#8220;I would require Honesty in
+every Physician, that he be not over careless or covetous, Harpylike to
+make a prey of his patient, or, as an hungry Chirurgeon, often produce and
+wire-draw his cure, so long as there is any hope of pay. Many of them, to
+get a fee, will give physic to every one that comes, when there is no
+cause, thus, as it often falleth out, stirring up a silent disease, and
+making a strong body weak.&#8221; Burton then quotes the following sensible
+Aphorism from Arnoldus:&mdash;&#8220;A wise<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span> physician will not give physick, but
+upon necessity, and first try medicinal diet, before he proceedeth to
+medicinal cure.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Latimer thus severely censured the mercenary physicians of his day:&mdash;&#8220;Ye
+see by the example of Hezekiah that it is lawful to use physick. But now
+in our days physick is a remedy prepared only for rich folks, and not for
+the poor, for the poor man is not able to wage the Physician. God indeed
+hath made physick for rich and poor, but Physicians in our time seek only
+their own profits, how to get money, not how they might do good unto their
+poor neighbour. Whereby it appeareth that they be for the most part
+without charity, and so consequently not the children of God; and no doubt
+but the heavy judgment of God hangeth over their heads, for they are
+commonly very wealthy, and ready to purchase lands, but to help their
+neighbour, that they cannot do. But God will find them out one day I doubt
+not.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Empirics and charlatans are the excrescences of the medical profession;
+they have obtained in all ages, yet the healing art is not necessarily the
+occasion for deception; nor the operations of witchcraft, charms, amulets,
+astrology, alchemy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span> necromancy, or magic; although it has its mysteries
+like other branches of occult science.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Paracelsus, the prince of charlatans, styled himself &#8220;King of Physic,&#8221;
+but, though he professed to have discovered the <i>elixir of life</i>, he
+humbly died at the early age of forty-eight years.</p>
+
+<p>We are told of a patient who, instead of the medicine prescribed,
+swallowed the prescription! and <i>Punch</i> records an extraordinary case of a
+voracious individual who bolted a door, and threw up a window!</p>
+
+<p>Sydney Smith, on being told by his doctor to take a walk on an empty
+stomach, asked&mdash;&#8220;Upon whose!&#8221; But a truce to stories suggested by the
+queer nostrums of quacks.</p>
+
+<p>Empirics, however, often believed in their nostrums, and were, sometimes,
+amiable and unselfish.</p>
+
+<p>In the year 1776, we are told, there lived a German doctor, who styled
+himself, or was called, &#8220;the Rain-water doctor;&#8221; all the diseases to which
+flesh is heir he professed to cure by this simple agent. Some wonderful
+cures were, it is said, achieved by means of his application of this
+fluid, and his reputation spread far and wide;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span> crowds of maimed and
+sickly folk flocked to him, seeking relief at his hands. What is yet more
+remarkable still, he declined to accept any fee from his patients!</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Haygarth, of Bath, had a pair of wooden tractors made in precisely the
+same shape and appearance as Perkin&#8217;s metallic ones; and the same results
+followed as when the others, which cost five guineas a pair, were used.</p>
+
+<p>The story is well known of the condemned criminal in Paris, who was laid
+on a dissecting table, strapped down, with his eyes bandaged, and slightly
+pricked, when streamlets of water set a-trickling made him think, as he
+had been told, that he was being bled to death. His strength gradually
+ebbed away, and he actually died, although he did not lose a drop of
+blood.</p>
+
+<p>I knew of a gentleman who, when pills to procure sleep were ordered to be
+discontinued, lay awake. The doctor made up a box of bread pills, which
+were administered as the others had been, and the patient slept, and
+recovered rapidly.</p>
+
+<p>A young medical man fell in love with a young lady patient, and, when he
+had no longer any pretext for continuing his visits, he sent her a present
+of a pair of spring ducks. Not reciprocating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> his attentions, she did not
+acknowledge the present, upon which he ventured to call, asking if the
+birds had reached her. Her reply was&mdash;&#8220;Quack, quack!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Lettsom, a quaker in the time of George III., near the close of the
+last century, had such an extensive practice that his receipts in some
+years were as much as &pound;12,000; and this although half his services were
+entirely gratuitous, and rendered with unusual solicitude and care to
+necessitous clergymen and literary men. Generosity was the ruling feature
+of his life. On one occasion he attended an old American merchant whose
+affairs had gone wrong, and who grieved over leaving the trees he had
+planted. The kind hearted doctor purchased the place from the creditors,
+and presented it to his patient for life.</p>
+
+<p>Pope, a few days before his decease, bore the following cordial testimony
+to the urbanity and courtesy of his medical friends:&mdash;&#8220;There is no end of
+my kind treatment from the Faculty; they are in general the most amiable
+companions, and the best friends, as well as the most learned men I know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And Dryden, in the postscript to his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span> translation of Virgil, speaks in the
+same way of the profession. &#8220;That I have recovered,&#8221; says he, &#8220;in some
+measure the health which I had lost by too much application to this work,
+is owing, next to God&#8217;s mercy, to the skill and care of Dr. Guibbons and
+Dr. Hobbs, the two ornaments of their profession, whom I can only pay by
+this acknowledgment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>When Dr. Dimsdale, a Hertford physician and member of Parliament, went
+over to Russia to inoculate the Empress Catherine and her son, in the year
+1768, he received a fee of &pound;12,000, a pension for life of &pound;500 per annum,
+and the rank of Baron of the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Henry Atkins was sent for to Scotland by James the Sixth to attend
+Charles the First (then an infant), ill of a dangerous fever. The King
+gave him a fee of &pound;6000, with which he purchased the manor of Clapham.</p>
+
+<p>Louis XIV. after undergoing an operation, gave his physician and his
+surgeon 75,000 crowns each.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Glynn once attended the only son of a poor peasant woman, ministering
+to his wants with port wine, bark, and delicacies. After the lad&#8217;s
+recovery, his mother waited on the doctor,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span> bringing a large wicker basket
+with an enormous magpie, which was her son&#8217;s pet, as a fee to show their
+gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>A thousand pounds were ordered to be paid to Sir Edmund King for promptly
+bleeding Charles the Second, but he never received this fee.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Mead, in the time of George the First, was generous to a degree, and
+like many of his brethren, would not accept fees from curates, half-pay
+officers, and men of letters. At home his fee was a guinea. When he
+visited patients of means, in consultation or otherwise, he expected two
+guineas or more. But to the apothecaries who waited on him at his coffee
+houses of call he charged only half a guinea for prescriptions, written
+without his having seen the patient. He had an income one year of &pound;7,000,
+and for several years received between &pound;5,000 and &pound;6,000, which,
+considering the value of money at that time, is as much as that of any
+living physician.</p>
+
+<p>The physicians who attended Queen Caroline had five hundred guineas, and
+the surgeons three hundred guineas each; Dr. Willis was rewarded for his
+attendance on George III. by &pound;1,500 per annum for twenty years, and &pound;650
+per annum to his son for life. The other physicians, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span> had only
+thirty guineas each visit to Windsor, and ten guineas each visit to Kew.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Abernethy was annoyed by a lady needlessly consulting him about her
+tongue. One morning she came, as he was descending the steps from his door
+and putting on his gloves. She said:&mdash;&#8220;Doctor, I&#8217;m so glad I have caught
+you!&#8221; The doctor asked if it were the old trouble. On her saying &#8220;Yes,&#8221; he
+told her to put out her tongue. She did so, and he said, &#8220;Stand there till
+I come,&#8221; and left her so, in the street, setting out on his round of
+visits.</p>
+
+<p>Once when prescribing nutritious and expensive diet for a young man in
+consumption, he observed the look of despair on the young wife&#8217;s face, and
+the evidence of straitened circumstances around; when the lady appealed to
+him, asking if there was really nothing else he could suggest for her
+husband. He replied:&mdash;&#8220;When I think of it, I&#8217;ll send along a box of pills
+in the afternoon!&#8221; A messenger brought the box. On the lid was written
+&#8220;One every day,&#8221; and, on being opened, it was found to contain twenty
+guineas!</p>
+
+<p>He once bluntly told a <i>bon-vivant</i> gentleman to &#8220;Live on sixpence a day,
+and earn it!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Long ago, a friend told me of a lady in <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>Devonshire, belonging to a family
+she knew, who read medical books, and at length imagined she had every
+disease under the sun. Whenever she discovered what she believed to be a
+new symptom, she at once went off to consult different medical men
+regarding it, spending several hundreds a year in this way, and all quite
+needlessly. At length she confided to her friends that since doctors
+differed so widely, and she could obtain no satisfaction as to what ailed
+her, she had resolved to go to town and consult one of the Queen&#8217;s
+physicians.</p>
+
+<p>A consultation was held in the family, and her nephew was sent to explain
+matters to the physician, in the hope of his being able to cure her
+hypochondria. When she reached town, the street in which the physician
+lived was blocked with the carriages of patients. After waiting hours, her
+turn at last came. The physician examined her, asked a few questions, then
+enquired if she had any friends in town, as he would rather call to see
+her when under their roof, and there tell her what he had got to say. She
+protested that she was quite prepared to hear the worst&mdash;that she had for
+long years looked death in the face&mdash;that the notices of her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span> death were
+lying in her desk, all written out and addressed, only requiring the date
+to be filled in, etc. The physician said he was busy&mdash;more than twenty
+patients were still waiting in the street&mdash;he was averse to scenes, and
+would much prefer to see her at her friend&#8217;s house. She still persisted,
+and begged of him to tell her all, there and then, on which he
+said:&mdash;&#8220;Madam, it is my melancholy duty to inform you&mdash;that there is
+nothing whatever the matter with you!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This interview fortunately effected her cure, to the great delight of her
+friends, who paid the physician a handsome fee.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Astley Cooper one year received in fees &pound;21,000. This sum was
+exceptional, but for many years his income was over &pound;15,000. His great
+success was achieved very gradually. &#8220;His earnings for the first nine
+years of his professional career progressed thus:&mdash;In the first year he
+netted five guineas; in the second, twenty-six pounds; in the third,
+sixty-four pounds; in the fourth, ninety-six pounds; in the fifth, a
+hundred pounds; in the sixth, two hundred pounds; in the seventh, four
+hundred pounds; in the eighth, six hundred and ten pounds; and in the
+ninth&mdash;the year in which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span> he secured his hospital appointment&mdash;eleven
+hundred pounds.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>On one occasion when he had performed a perilous surgical operation on a
+rich West Indian merchant, the two physicians who were present were paid
+three hundred guineas each; but the patient, addressing Sir Astley,
+said:&mdash;&#8220;But you, sir, shall have something better. There, sir, take
+<i>that</i>,&#8221; upon which he flung his nightcap at the skilful operator. &#8220;Sir,&#8221;
+replied Sir Astley, picking up the cap, &#8220;I&#8217;ll pocket the affront.&#8221; On
+reaching home, he found in the cap a draft for a thousand guineas from the
+grateful but eccentric old man.</p>
+
+<p>A cynical lawyer once advised a young doctor to collect his fees as he
+went along, quoting the following verse to back his recommendation:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;God and the doctor we alike adore,<br />
+But only when in danger, not before;<br />
+The danger o&#8217;er, both are alike requited&mdash;<br />
+God is forgotten, and the doctor slighted.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The following story illustrates the too frequent weary waiting, when hope
+makes the heart sick, and also shows on what curious casual incidents the
+success of a career may sometimes turn. It has been told in different
+ways, and attributed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span> different men, such as to Dr. Freind, and others;
+but, quite possibly, the same or a similar incident may have repeatedly
+occurred. I simply give it as it was narrated to me. A young doctor having
+graduated with honours, took a house at a high rent in Harley Street,
+London. The brass plate attracted no patients; months passed idly and
+drearily, and the poor fellow took to drink. One night the door-bell
+rang&mdash;a servant man, from a lady of title round the corner, begged him to
+come at once, as his mistress was dangerously ill, lying on the floor; her
+own doctor was out, and he was sent to fetch the first doctor he could
+find. The young doctor regretfully thought what a fool he was, for here
+was his chance, when he could not avail himself of it; but he would go,
+and try hard to pull himself together.</p>
+
+<p>When he reached the room, he had enough conscience or sense left to know
+that he was not in a fit state to prescribe, and exclaiming, &#8220;Drunk, by
+George!&#8221; took his hat and bolted from the house. Next morning he received
+a scented note from the lady, entreating him not to expose her, inviting
+him to call, and offering to introduce him professionally to her circle!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
+Before the season was ended, his practice was yielding him at the rate of
+some &pound;1500 a year!</p>
+
+<p>Curiously enough, it is recorded of a British doctor that he once actually
+took a fee from a <i>dead</i> patient. Entering the bedroom immediately after
+death had taken place, he observed the right hand tightly clenched.
+Opening the fingers, he found in them a guinea. &#8220;Ah, that was clearly for
+me,&#8221; said the doctor, putting the gold into his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>It may be remembered here, that the Royal College of Physicians, London,
+was founded by Thomas Linacre, physician to Henry VIII., in 1518; and that
+the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh was incorporated by Charter
+of Charles II., November 20th, 1681.</p>
+
+<p>As to the fees paid to physicians, we find that Dr. Edward Browne, the son
+of Sir Thomas Browne, who became a distinguished physician in London, in
+his Journal, under the date of February 16th, 1664, records: &#8220;I went to
+visit Mr. Edward Ward, an old man in a feaver, when Mrs. Anne Ward gave me
+my first fee, 10 shillings.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In a work entitled &#8220;Levamen Infirmi,&#8221; <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>published in the year 1700, we find
+that the scale of remuneration to surgeons and physicians was as
+follows:&mdash;&#8220;To a graduate in physic, his due is about ten shillings, though
+he commonly expects or demands twenty. Those that are only licenced
+physicians, their due is no more than six shillings and eightpence, though
+they commonly demand ten shillings. A surgeon&#8217;s fee is twelvepence a mile,
+be his journey far or near; ten groats to set a bone broke or out of
+joint; and for letting blood one shilling; the cutting off or amputation
+of any limb is five pounds, but there is no settled price for the cure.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Till recent times neither barristers nor physicians could recover their
+fees by legal proceedings against their clients or patients unless a
+special contract had been made. In the case of lawyers this custom can be
+traced back to the days of ancient Rome. Their services were regarded as
+being gratuitously rendered in the interests of friendship and justice,
+and of a value no money could buy. The acknowledgment given them by
+clients was regarded as an <i>honorarium</i>, and paid in advance, so that all
+pecuniary interest in the issue of the suit was removed, thus preserving
+the independence and respectability of the bar.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>Equity draftsmen, conveyancers, and such like, however, could recover
+reasonable charges for work done.</p>
+
+<p>So in the medical profession, surgeons, dentists, cuppers, and the like
+were always entitled to sue for their fees; but the valuable services of a
+consulting physician were of a different kind, not rendered for payment
+but acknowledged by the gratitude and honour of his patients.</p>
+
+<p>But this code of honour was modified when all medical practitioners were
+relieved by the Act of 21 and 22 Vict. 90, which applied to the United
+Kingdom, and enabled them to recover in any court of law their reasonable
+charges as well as costs of medicines and medical appliances used. This
+rule applies to physicians, surgeons, and apothecaries as defined by the
+statute.</p>
+
+<p>The following information is taken from &#8220;Everybody&#8217;s Pocket Cyclop&aelig;dia&#8221;
+(Saxon &amp; Co.).</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">London Medical Fees.</span></p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Patients are charged according to their supposed income, the income being
+indicated by the rental of the house in which they reside. The following
+are the charges usually made by medical practitioners:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span></p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
+<tr><td rowspan="2" class="btr">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="bt" colspan="3" align="center">Rentals.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="btr" align="center">&pound;10 to &pound;25</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">&pound;25 to &pound;50</td>
+ <td class="bt" align="center">&pound;50 to &pound;100</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="btr">Ordinary Visit</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">2s 6d to 3s 6d</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">3s 6d to 5s</td>
+ <td class="bt" align="center">5s to 7s 6d</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">Night Visit</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">Double an</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">Ordinary</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">Visit</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">Mileage beyond two miles from home</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">1s 6d</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">2s</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">2s 6d</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">Detention per hour</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">2s 6d to 3s 6d</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">3s 6d to 5s</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">5s to 7s 6d</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">Letters of Advice</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">Same charge</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">as for an Or-</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">dinary Visit</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">Attendance on Servants</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">2s 6d</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">2s 6d to 3s 6d</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">3s 6d to 5s</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">Midwifery</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">21s</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">21s to 30s</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">42s to 105s</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="br">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br"><span style="margin-left: 2em;"><span class="smcap">Consultants.</span></span></td>
+ <td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
+ <td class="br">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">Advice or visit alone</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">21s</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">21s</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">21s</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">Advice or visit with another Practitioner</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">21s</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">21s to 42s</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">21s to 42s</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bbr">Mileage beyond two miles from home</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">10s 6d</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">10s 6d</td>
+ <td class="bb" align="center">10s 6d</td></tr></table>
+
+<p>&#8220;Special visits, <i>i.e.</i>, of which due notice has not been given before the
+practitioner starts on his daily round, are charged at the rate of a visit
+and a half. Patients calling on the doctor are charged at the same rate as
+if visited by him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There are about 23,000 physicians and surgeons in the United Kingdom, or
+one to every 1,600 inhabitants.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>It has been my privilege to know several doctors intimately. Our family
+doctor when I was a boy in Paisley, was Dr. Kerr, a man far in advance of
+his day. He was the means of introducing a pure water supply to the town
+of Paisley, always strenuously urging the importance of sanitary matters
+and good drainage, when such things were then but little understood, and
+greatly neglected. Shortly after the water had been introduced to the
+houses, from Stanley, an old man&mdash;who had been accustomed to purchase
+water from a cart which went through the streets selling it from a
+barrel&mdash;on being asked how he liked the new water, replied indignantly,
+&#8220;Wha&#8217;s going to pay good siller for water that has neither smell nor
+taste?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>On one occasion, an elderly gentleman, who was slightly hypochondriac,
+consulted Dr. Kerr about his clothing, saying that he regulated the
+thickness of his flannels by the thermometer. Dr. Kerr, losing patience,
+said, &#8220;Can you not use the thermometer your Maker has put in your inside,
+and put on clothes when you are cold?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kerr&#8217;s son and assistant, whom we then called &#8220;the young doctor,&#8221; died
+a few years ago in Canada, over eighty years of age. No man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span> could
+possibly have been more considerately kind, gentle, and tender-hearted. On
+one occasion, in 1841, when, in typhus fever, I was struggling for my
+life, he sat up with me for three whole consecutive nights, and brought me
+through. He ever kept himself abreast of the science of the day, and
+devoted his abilities and energies, <i>con amore</i>, to the benefitting of
+men&#8217;s souls as well as their bodies.</p>
+
+<p>Another model village and country doctor, also an intimate friend of my
+parents, Dr. Campbell of Largs, I knew very well. Good, genial, and
+accomplished, he was a perfect gentleman, and equally at home dining with
+Sir Thomas Brisbane, or drinking a cup of tea at some old woman&#8217;s kitchen
+fireside. He read the <i>Lancet</i>, and tried all new medicines, and
+repeatedly, when going to London, at his request I procured the most
+recent instruments for him. He was intimate with Dr. Chalmers, Lord
+Jeffrey, Lord Moncrieff, Lord Cardwell, etc. In telling me of experiments
+with Perkin&#8217;s metallic tractors, and that the same results were obtained
+with wooden ones, showing the power of imagination, he gave me a recent
+curious illustration. He had lately had the old fashioned little panes of
+glass<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span> taken out of the windows of his house, and plate glass inserted.
+His mother, who did not know of the change, calling one afternoon, sat on
+an easy chair, close by the gable window, knitting. On suddenly looking
+round she said, &#8220;Oh John, I&#8217;ve been sitting all this time by an <i>open</i>
+window,&#8221; and forthwith she began to sneeze! She actually took cold, and
+even afterwards could scarcely be persuaded that it had <i>not</i> been an open
+window, for she said she felt the cold! The doctor told me of an old
+maiden lady who consulted him, and who, when he prescribed in a general
+way, insisted on knowing exactly what ailed her. He said she was only
+slightly nervous, and would soon be all right. This did not at all please
+her, and she at once loudly protested&mdash;&#8220;Me nervous! There is not a nerve
+in my whole body!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A West India merchant, one of his patients whom I knew, he also told me,
+one day said to him, &#8220;Doctor, for forty years I never knew I had a
+stomach, and now I can think of nothing else!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At the cholera time Dr. Campbell was laid down by the disease. The fact
+spread like wildfire over the village, and, at once, prayer-meetings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span> for
+his recovery were called by the public bellman, meetings of <i>all</i> the
+different denominations, including the Roman Catholics (Dr. Campbell was a
+Free Church Elder), and there were truly heartfelt rejoicings in the whole
+district over his recovery.</p>
+
+<p>I once asked him how he managed to get in his fees, since he never refused
+to visit when sent for. He said that one year, from curiosity, he kept an
+account of his gratuitous visits, and it ran into three figures; but he
+never took the trouble to note them again, as it served no purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Many years ago he went to his rest, and, at his request, during his last
+illness, I paid him a farewell visit.</p>
+
+<p>There are few finer descriptions of the country doctor than that contained
+in Ian Maclaren&#8217;s &#8220;Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush,&#8221; a book which speaks
+directly home to every true Scottish heart.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Campbell, in his large-hearted and genial Christian charity,
+scientific research, and philosophical acquirements, always reminded me of
+Sir Thomas Browne, &#8220;the beloved physician&#8221; of Norwich.</p>
+
+<p>The following pleasing incident, relating to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span> medical man, came under my
+own notice. I often visited a country minister, an intimate friend, a
+learned man, and a genius, the quaint originality of whose observations
+often reminded me of Fuller, the Church historian, or Charles Lamb.
+Although of limited means, the Rev. Robert Winning, of Eaglesham, was ever
+hospitable; if he knew of any poor student, he would invite him to the
+manse for a month, on the plea that he would help to prepare him for his
+examination in Hebrew and Greek. The old manse servant, also an original,
+was paid a sum of money as compensation for refusing tips from visitors.
+One day, seeing an advertisement of a new book in a magazine I was
+reading, Mr. Winning remarked to me, &#8220;Andrew, I wish you would buy that
+book, <i>cut the leaves</i>, and lend it to me to read!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>One evening a message reached him from the village inn, saying that a
+doctor had come to an urgent case, which required him to stay over night,
+that there was no room in the inn, and asking if the minister could give
+him a bed. His wife, knowing the house was full, asked her husband what
+they should do. His reply was, &#8220;Be not forgetful to entertain strangers,
+for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span> thereby some have entertained angels unawares. Give him a room,
+though we have to sleep on the floor.&#8221; He was accordingly hospitably
+entertained.</p>
+
+<p>Some time after, the minister took ill. The medical guest heard of it,
+went to see the local doctor, and, with his consent, visited the minister
+twice a week, from a distance of nine miles, and for a period of some four
+months, till his death. When the widow afterwards sent for his account, he
+said there was none, for it had been more than discharged on the first
+evening he had spent at the manse.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Stark, of Glasgow, who attended my family for years, was a skilful
+practitioner, but eccentric. He generally made light of trifling ailments,
+but was most energetic when aroused by any appearance of danger. I knew of
+his being suddenly called in to see an old lady who was far gone in an
+advanced stage of cholera. He at once asked to be shown over the house,
+looked at the different fireplaces, but as none of them suited his
+purpose, he went to the kitchen, threw off his coat, took out the range,
+made a fire in the recess that would have roasted an ox, had the old lady
+carried down in blankets and placed before it, worked energetically with
+her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span> the whole night, and brought her through. In a similar way he once
+stayed over night and saved the life of one of my boys. One day I called
+at his house, and, finding him with a bad cold, eyes red and watery,
+throat husky, said, &#8220;Doctor, if you found me so, you would prescribe
+placing the feet in hot water and mustard, warm gruel, medicine, and going
+to bed! Physician, heal thyself!&#8221; The doctor&#8217;s Shakespearian reply was,
+&#8220;Do you think I am such a fool as to take physic?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Once when accompanying me to the coast to visit one of my children, there
+was a heavy sea on, and the steamer, on approaching the pier, rolled
+alarmingly, and was close on a lee shore. A strange lady on board, in
+terror, laid hold of the doctor, a tall, stalwart man, saying, &#8220;Oh! sir,
+are we going to the bottom?&#8221; On which he said, dryly, &#8220;Behave yourself, if
+you are going there, you are going in good company!&#8221; which odd answer
+reassured and caused her to laugh.</p>
+
+<p>In speaking of a Greek gem representing Cupid and Pysche, one day, when
+driving in Wigtonshire with the late Dr. David Easton, a medical friend,
+he said I had not given the correct pronunciation of the names. Always
+willing to learn, I asked to be put right; whereupon, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span> doctor gravely
+informed me that I ought to have said&mdash;Cupped and Physic!</p>
+
+<p>I have spoken of the kindness of medical men, such as Dr. Garth Wilkinson,
+to clergymen, artists, and literary men. I add one more expression of
+gratitude, which is a good modern instance:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>When at St. Helens, in Jersey, during his last illness, my friend Samuel
+Lover, the genial poet and artist, wrote the following lines to Dr. Dixon,
+his friend and physician. I first copied them some years ago from Lover&#8217;s
+MS. note-book, kindly lent me by his widow when I was engaged in the
+preparation of his life. Such cordial tributes are a good physician&#8217;s most
+highly-valued fees:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">&#8220;Whene&#8217;er your vitality<br />
+Is feeble in quality,<br />
+And you fear a fatality<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">May end the strife,</span><br />
+Then Dr. Joe Dickson<br />
+Is the man I would fix on<br />
+For putting new wicks on<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">The lamp of life.&#8221;</span></p>
+
+<p>From the many varied facts and incidents adduced in these pages, it will
+be seen that, in anxiety or sorrow, the good family doctor is a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span> true and
+sympathetic friend, whose services can never be paid by gold.</p>
+
+<p>Next to religion, nothing is more precious or comforting than the sympathy
+of those who know and fully understand our sufferings, for, as my old
+favourite, Sir Thomas Browne, to whom I ever revert with renewed pleasure,
+truly and beautifully says:&mdash;&#8220;It is not the tears of our own eyes only,
+but of our friends also, that do exhaust the current of our sorrows,
+which, falling into many streams, runs more peaceably, and is contented
+with a narrower channel.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/img11.jpg" alt="Ye Ende" /></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span></p>
+<p class="title">Index.</p>
+
+
+<p class="index">
+Abernethy, John, <a href="#Page_206">206-208</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a><br />
+<br />
+Advertisements, Curious, <a href="#Page_155">155-159</a><br />
+<br />
+Ague, Charms for, <a href="#Page_240">240-241</a><br />
+<br />
+Akenside, Mark, <a href="#Page_109">109-111</a><br />
+<br />
+Andrews, William, Barber-Surgeons, <a href="#Page_1">1-7</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Touching for King&#8217;s Evil, <a href="#Page_8">8-23</a>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Assaying Meat and Drink, <a href="#Page_24">24-31</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Anne, Queen, <a href="#Page_18">18-19</a><br />
+<br />
+Assay Cups, <a href="#Page_30">30-31</a><br />
+<br />
+Assaying Meat and Drink, <a href="#Page_24">24-31</a><br />
+<br />
+Atkins, Dr. H., <a href="#Page_264">264</a><br />
+<br />
+Axon, W. E. A., The Doctor in the time of Pestilence, <a href="#Page_125">125-139</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Banks, Mrs. G. Linn&aelig;us, Some Old Doctors, <a href="#Page_192">192-208</a><br />
+<br />
+Barber-Surgeons, <a href="#Page_1">1-7</a><br />
+<br />
+Barber&#8217;s Pole, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+Bicycle, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br />
+<br />
+Birmingham town&#8217;s book, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+<br />
+Bisley, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+<br />
+Bishop, hanged, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
+<br />
+Bishop and Williams, body-snatchers, <a href="#Page_171">171-177</a><br />
+<br />
+Blackmore, R. D., <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+Blackmore, Dr., <a href="#Page_111">111-113</a><br />
+<br />
+Black Art, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<br />
+Bleeding, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Blood, Circulation of the, <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Blood in windows, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Boke of Jhon Caius, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
+<br />
+Booker, Rev. Dr., on small-pox, <a href="#Page_163">163-164</a><br />
+<br />
+Bossy, a quack, <a href="#Page_149">149</a><br />
+<br />
+Brown, Dr. John, <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br />
+<br />
+Brown, Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253-258</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a><br />
+<br />
+Bruce, King Robert the, <a href="#Page_209">209</a><br />
+<br />
+Buddhism, <a href="#Page_67">67-68</a><br />
+<br />
+Bulleyn, Dr., quoted, <a href="#Page_219">219</a><br />
+<br />
+Burke and Hare, <a href="#Page_168">168</a><br />
+<br />
+Burkers and Body-Snatchers, <a href="#Page_167">167-180</a><br />
+<br />
+Burning for disease, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
+<br />
+Burton&#8217;s &#8220;Anatomy of Melancholy,&#8221; <a href="#Page_259">259-260</a><br />
+<br />
+Byron quoted, <a href="#Page_187">187</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Campbell, Dr., <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a><br />
+<br />
+Cancer, Curious treatment for, <a href="#Page_222">222</a><br />
+<br />
+Carriages, <a href="#Page_22">22-23</a><br />
+<br />
+Celestials and medicine, <a href="#Page_58">58-61</a><br />
+<br />
+Chalmers, John, M.D., <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br />
+<br />
+Charms, <a href="#Page_43">43-44</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
+<br />
+Chaucer&#8217;s Doctor of Physic, <a href="#Page_70">70-75</a><br />
+<br />
+Chester in plague time, <a href="#Page_133">133-135</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Touching at, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Cholera, Reminiscences of, <a href="#Page_181">181-191</a><br />
+<br />
+Circulation of the blood, <a href="#Page_195">195</a><br />
+<br />
+Colic, Charm for, <a href="#Page_248">248</a><br />
+<br />
+Cooper, Sir Astley, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a><br />
+<br />
+Coryat, <a href="#Page_141">141</a><br />
+<br />
+Cramp, Charm, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Strange cure for, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Croydon, Cholera at, <a href="#Page_185">185-186</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a><br />
+<br />
+Crusade, <a href="#Page_209">209</a><br />
+<br />
+Cumming, Dr. W. F., <a href="#Page_114">114-115</a><br />
+<br />
+Cupping, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
+<br />
+Curious prescriptions, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Dickens, Charles, Satires by, <a href="#Page_65">65-66</a><br />
+<br />
+Dickens&#8217; Doctors, <a href="#Page_90">90-101</a><br />
+<br />
+Dimsdale, Dr., <a href="#Page_264">264</a><br />
+<br />
+Disinfectants in sticks, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+<br />
+Disputes between surgeons and barbers, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+<br />
+Doctor in the time of Pestilence, <a href="#Page_125">125-139</a><br />
+<br />
+Doctors Shakespeare Knew, <a href="#Page_76">76-89</a><br />
+<br />
+Dog bites, <a href="#Page_242">242</a><br />
+<br />
+Douglas, Sir James, <a href="#Page_209">209</a><br />
+<br />
+Doyle, Dr. Conan, <a href="#Page_118">118</a><br />
+<br />
+&#8220;Drunk by George,&#8221; <a href="#Page_270">270</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Ecclesfield, <a href="#Page_16">16</a><br />
+<br />
+Edward the Confessor, <a href="#Page_8">8-9</a><br />
+<br />
+Egyptians and Magic, <a href="#Page_57">57-58</a><br />
+<br />
+Elizabeth, Queen, at dinner, <a href="#Page_28">28-29</a><br />
+<br />
+Erysipelas, <a href="#Page_243">243</a><br />
+<br />
+Eskimo Medicine Men, <a href="#Page_61">61-63</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Faith Cures, <a href="#Page_42">42</a><br />
+<br />
+Famous Literary Doctors, <a href="#Page_102">102-124</a><br />
+<br />
+Fees, London, <a href="#Page_273">273-274</a><br />
+<br />
+Food taken in fear, <a href="#Page_24">24</a><br />
+<br />
+Freind, John, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
+<br />
+Frost, Thomas, Dickens&#8217; Doctors, <a href="#Page_90">90-101</a>.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mountebanks and Medicine, <a href="#Page_140">140-152</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The Strange Fight with the Small-pox, <a href="#Page_153">153-166</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Burkers and Body-Snatchers, <a href="#Page_167">167-180</a>.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reminiscences of the Cholera, <a href="#Page_181">181-191</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Galen, <a href="#Page_120">120</a><br />
+<br />
+Gallows, superstitions respecting, <a href="#Page_249">249</a><br />
+<br />
+Gild, Barbers&#8217;, <a href="#Page_2">2</a><br />
+<br />
+Gold-headed Cane, <a href="#Page_32">32-41</a><br />
+<br />
+Grave-mould, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
+<br />
+Greatrake, Valentine, <a href="#Page_82">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Great Plague of London, <a href="#Page_136">136-139</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Hall, Dr., <a href="#Page_88">88-89</a><br />
+<br />
+Harvey, Wm., <a href="#Page_194">194-196</a><br />
+<br />
+Heart of Bruce, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
+<br />
+Hentzner in England, <a href="#Page_28">28</a><br />
+<br />
+Hill, Sir John, <a href="#Page_114">114</a><br />
+<br />
+Hodges, Dr., <a href="#Page_137">137</a><br />
+<br />
+Holbein, Picture by, <a href="#Page_3">3</a><br />
+<br />
+Holmes, Oliver Wendell, <a href="#Page_106">106-108</a><br />
+<br />
+How our Fathers were Physicked, <a href="#Page_216">216-233</a><br />
+<br />
+Hunter, John, <a href="#Page_198">198</a><br />
+<br />
+Hunter, William, <a href="#Page_199">199</a><br />
+<br />
+Hunterian Museum, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Jaundice, <a href="#Page_251">251</a><br />
+<br />
+Jenner, <a href="#Page_159">159-162</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnston, Arthur, <a href="#Page_122">122-123</a><br />
+<br />
+Johnson, Dr., touched for the evil, <a href="#Page_18">18-19</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Kerr, Dr., <a href="#Page_275">275</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Langford, J. A., <span class="smcaplc">LL.D.</span>, How our Fathers were Physicked, <a href="#Page_216">216</a><br />
+<br />
+Latimer on Mercenary Physicians, <a href="#Page_260">260</a><br />
+<br />
+Lee Penny, <a href="#Page_209">209-215</a><br />
+<br />
+Lettsom, J. C., <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a><br />
+<br />
+Liver, eating human, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
+<br />
+Lockhart, Sir Simon, <a href="#Page_211">211-213</a><br />
+<br />
+Lotteries, <a href="#Page_151">151</a><br />
+<br />
+Lover, Samuel, <a href="#Page_282">282</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Macbeth, quoted, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
+<br />
+Mashonaland, Credulity in, <a href="#Page_63">63-65</a><br />
+<br />
+Magic and Medicine, <a href="#Page_42">42-69</a><br />
+<br />
+Manchester in plague time, <a href="#Page_135">135-136</a><br />
+<br />
+Mead, Dr., <a href="#Page_265">265</a><br />
+<br />
+Medical Folk Lore, <a href="#Page_234">234-251</a><br />
+<br />
+Medical Students, <a href="#Page_97">97-98</a><br />
+<br />
+Merry Andrew, <a href="#Page_141">141-151</a><br />
+<br />
+Mercenary Physicians, <a href="#Page_260">260</a><br />
+<br />
+Metals and precious stones used, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
+<br />
+Mountebanks and Medicine, <a href="#Page_140">140-152</a><br />
+<br />
+Mouse, roasted, prescribed, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br />
+<br />
+Moir, D. M., <a href="#Page_116">116-118</a><br />
+<br />
+Montagu, Lady May, <a href="#Page_153">153-154</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a><br />
+<br />
+Monks as surgeons, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">forbidden to bleed, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Newcastle-on-Tyne, Siege of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a><br />
+<br />
+Nicholson, John, Medical Folk-Lore, <a href="#Page_234">234-251</a><br />
+<br />
+North American Indian medicine men, <a href="#Page_52">52-56</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+O&#8217;Brien, Giant, <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
+<br />
+Of Physicians and their Fees, <a href="#Page_252">252-283</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Parliament, Folly of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
+<br />
+Phillips, John, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br />
+<br />
+Pilgrim&#8217;s Staff, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
+<br />
+Planetary Influence, <a href="#Page_250">250</a><br />
+<br />
+Plantagenent kings touching for the evil, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
+<br />
+Pontefract Castle, <a href="#Page_27">27</a><br />
+<br />
+Pole, Barber&#8217;s, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Preston records, <a href="#Page_17">17</a><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Radcliffe&#8217;s cane, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
+<br />
+Rain-water doctor, <a href="#Page_261">261</a><br />
+<br />
+Reminiscences of the Cholera, <a href="#Page_181">181-191</a><br />
+<br />
+Revolting prescriptions, <a href="#Page_225">225</a><br />
+<br />
+Richardson, Sir B. W., <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a><br />
+<br />
+Rings from hinges of coffins, <a href="#Page_249">249</a><br />
+<br />
+Robinson, Tom, M.D., The Gold-headed Cane, <a href="#Page_32">32-41</a><br />
+<br />
+Rochester, Earl of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a><br />
+<br />
+Rheumatism, <a href="#Page_238">238</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Sacrificing for disease, <a href="#Page_47">47-49</a><br />
+<br />
+Skull, Human, Medical uses, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Small-pox, Old receipt for, <a href="#Page_72">72</a><br />
+<br />
+Smith, Sydney, Witty remark, <a href="#Page_261">261</a><br />
+<br />
+Some Old Doctors, <a href="#Page_192">192-208</a><br />
+<br />
+St. Agnes&#8217; Eve, <a href="#Page_241">241</a><br />
+<br />
+Stark, Dr., <a href="#Page_280">280-281</a><br />
+<br />
+Statute of Labourers, <a href="#Page_124">124-125</a><br />
+<br />
+Strange Stories, <a href="#Page_262">262</a><br />
+<br />
+Strange Story of the Fight with the Small Pox, <a href="#Page_153">153-166</a><br />
+<br />
+Stuart kings touching for the evil, <a href="#Page_12">12-14</a><br />
+<br />
+Suicide&#8217;s skull, Drinking from, <a href="#Page_50">50</a><br />
+<br />
+Symington, A. J., Of Physicians and their Fees, <a href="#Page_252">252-283</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Tooth-drawing, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
+<br />
+Thompson, W. H., Chaucer&#8217;s Doctor of Physic, <a href="#Page_70">70-75</a><br />
+<br />
+Thurlow, Lord, on Barbers and Surgeons, <a href="#Page_6">6</a><br />
+<br />
+Thompson, Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br />
+<br />
+Tobacco, Poet&#8217;s Praise of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br />
+<br />
+Tournament, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
+<br />
+Toothache, Folk-lore of, <a href="#Page_235">235-237</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a><br />
+<br />
+Toad, <a href="#Page_227">227</a><br />
+<br />
+Touching for the King&#8217;s Evil, <a href="#Page_8">8-23</a><br />
+<br />
+Touch-pieces, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20-21</a><br />
+<br />
+Terling, Essex, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
+<br />
+Tudor Kings touching for the Evil, <a href="#Page_11">11</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Verney Family, <a href="#Page_229">229-233</a><br />
+<br />
+Visiting Patients, <a href="#Page_22">22-23</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Wall, A. H., Doctors Shakespeare Knew, <a href="#Page_76">76-89</a><br />
+<br />
+Walters, Cuming, Magic and Medicine, <a href="#Page_42">42-69</a>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Famous Literary Doctors, <a href="#Page_102">102-124</a></span><br />
+<br />
+Warren, Samuel, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br />
+<br />
+Warts, Charms for, <a href="#Page_247">247</a><br />
+<br />
+Whooping cough, <a href="#Page_244">244-246</a><br />
+<br />
+Wig, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
+<br />
+William III. refuses to touch, <a href="#Page_18">18</a><br />
+<br />
+Winchester, Mountebank at, <a href="#Page_147">147-148</a><br />
+<br />
+Witchcraft, <a href="#Page_49">49-50</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+York records, <a href="#Page_16">16-17</a><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Zulu doctors, <a href="#Page_65">65</a><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><strong>Footnotes:</strong></p>
+
+<p><a name='f_1' id='f_1' href='#fna_1'>[1]</a> &#8220;Chester in the Plantagenet and Tudor Periods,&#8221; by Rupert H. Morris,
+1894, pp. 78-79.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_2' id='f_2' href='#fna_2'>[2]</a> The <i>Asclepiad</i>, Vol. viii.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_3' id='f_3' href='#fna_3'>[3]</a> Act ii., sc. 2.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_4' id='f_4' href='#fna_4'>[4]</a> Dyer&#8217;s English Folk Lore, p. 156.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_5' id='f_5' href='#fna_5'>[5]</a> Dyer&#8217;s English Folk Lore, p. 158.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_6' id='f_6' href='#fna_6'>[6]</a> <i>Records of York Castle</i>, p. 230.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_7' id='f_7' href='#fna_7'>[7]</a> Folk Lore Journal, v. 5.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_8' id='f_8' href='#fna_8'>[8]</a> Vol. i., p. 761.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_9' id='f_9' href='#fna_9'>[9]</a> P. 353.</p>
+
+<p><a name='f_10' id='f_10' href='#fna_10'>[10]</a> P. 273.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Doctor in History, Literature,
+Folk-Lore, Etc., ed. by William Andrews
+
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Doctor in History, Literature,
+Folk-Lore, Etc., ed. by William Andrews
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Doctor in History, Literature, Folk-Lore, Etc.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: William Andrews
+
+Release Date: April 23, 2012 [EBook #39514]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DOCTOR IN HISTORY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DOCTOR.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY VIII. RECEIVING THE BARBER-SURGEONS.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE DOCTOR IN HISTORY,
+ LITERATURE, FOLK-LORE, ETC.
+
+
+ EDITED BY
+ WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.,
+ AUTHOR OF "BYGONE ENGLAND,"
+ "OLD CHURCH LORE," ETC.
+
+
+ HULL:
+ WILLIAM ANDREWS & CO., THE HULL PRESS.
+ LONDON:
+ SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT, & CO., LTD.
+
+ 1896.
+
+
+
+
+Preface.
+
+
+In the following pages I have attempted to bring together from the pens of
+several authors who have written expressly for this book, the more
+interesting phases of the history, literature, folk-lore, etc., of the
+medical profession.
+
+If the same welcome be given to this work as was accorded to those I have
+previously produced, my labours will not have been in vain.
+
+WILLIAM ANDREWS.
+
+ THE HULL PRESS,
+ HULL, _November 11th, 1895_.
+
+
+
+
+Contents.
+
+
+ BARBER-SURGEONS. By William Andrews, F.R.H.S. 1
+
+ TOUCHING FOR THE KING'S EVIL. By William Andrews, F.R.H.S. 8
+
+ VISITING PATIENTS 22
+
+ ASSAYING MEAT AND DRINK. By William Andrews, F.R.H.S. 24
+
+ THE GOLD-HEADED CANE. By Tom Robinson, M.D. 32
+
+ MAGIC AND MEDICINE. By Cuming Walters 42
+
+ CHAUCER'S DOCTOR OF PHYSIC. By W. H. Thompson 70
+
+ THE DOCTORS SHAKESPEARE KNEW. By A. H. Wall 76
+
+ DICKENS' DOCTORS. By Thomas Frost 90
+
+ FAMOUS LITERARY DOCTORS. By Cuming Walters 102
+
+ THE "DOCTOR" IN TIME OF PESTILENCE. By William E. A.
+ Axon, F.R.S.L. 125
+
+ MOUNTEBANKS AND MEDICINE. By Thomas Frost 140
+
+ THE STRANGE STORY OF THE FIGHT WITH THE SMALL-POX.
+ By Thomas Frost 153
+
+ BURKERS AND BODY-SNATCHERS. By Thomas Frost 167
+
+ REMINISCENCES OF THE CHOLERA. By Thomas Frost 181
+
+ SOME OLD DOCTORS. By Mrs. G. Linnaeus Banks 192
+
+ THE LEE PENNY 209
+
+ HOW OUR FATHERS WERE PHYSICKED. By J. A. Langford, LL.D. 216
+
+ MEDICAL FOLK-LORE. By John Nicholson 234
+
+ OF PHYSICIANS AND THEIR FEES, with some Personal
+ Reminiscences. By Andrew James Symington, F.R.S.N.A. 252
+
+ INDEX 285
+
+
+
+
+THE DOCTOR IN HISTORY, LITERATURE, AND FOLK-LORE.
+
+
+
+
+Barber-Surgeons.
+
+BY WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.
+
+
+The calling of the barber is of great antiquity. We find in the Book of
+the Prophet Ezekiel (v. 1) allusions to the Jewish custom of the barber
+shaving the head as a sign of mourning.
+
+In the remote past the art of surgery and the trade of barber were
+combined. It is clear that in all parts of the civilized world, in bygone
+times, the barber acted as a kind of surgeon, or to state his position
+more precisely, he practised phlebotomy.
+
+Barbers appear to have gained their experience from the monks whom they
+assisted in surgical operations. The clergy up to about the twelfth
+century had the care of men's bodies as well as of their souls, and
+practised surgery and medicine. The operations of surgery involved the
+shedding of blood, and it was felt that this was incompatible with the
+functions of the clergy. After much consideration and discussion, in 1163
+the council of Tours, under Pope Alexander III., forbade the clergy to act
+as surgeons, but they were permitted to dispense medicine.
+
+The edict of Tours must have given satisfaction to the barbers, and they
+were not slow to avail themselves of the opportunities the change afforded
+them. In London, and we presume in other places, the barbers advertised
+their blood-letting in a most objectionable manner. It was customary to
+put blood in their windows to attract the attention of the public. An
+ordinance was passed in 1307, directing the barbers to have the blood
+"privily carried into the Thames under pain of paying two shillings to the
+use of the Sheriffs."
+
+At an early period in London the barbers were banded together, and a gild
+was formed. In the first instance it seems that the chief object was the
+bringing together of the members at religious observances. They attended
+the funerals and obits of deceased members and their wives. Eventually it
+was transformed into a semi-social and religious gild, and subsequently
+became a trade gild.
+
+In 1308, Richard le Barber, the first master of the Barbers' Company, was
+sworn at the Guildhall, London. As time progressed, the London Company of
+Barbers increased in importance.
+
+In the first year of the reign of Edward IV. (1462) the barbers were
+incorporated by a royal charter, and it was confirmed by succeeding
+monarchs.
+
+A change of title occurred in 1540, and it was then named the Company of
+Barber-Surgeons. Holbein painted a picture of Henry VIII. and the
+Barber-Surgeons. The painting is still preserved, and may be seen at the
+Barber-Surgeons' Hall, Monkwell Street, London. We give a carefully
+executed wood engraving of the celebrated picture. Pepys calls this "not a
+pleasant though a good picture." It is the largest and last painting of
+Holbein. In the _Leisure Hour_ for September 1895, are some interesting
+details respecting it, that are well worth reproducing. "It is painted,"
+we are told, "on vertical oak boards, being 5ft. 11in. high by 10ft. 2in.
+long. It seems to have been begun about 1541, and finished after
+Holbein's death in 1543, and it has evidently been altered since its first
+delivery. The tablet, for instance, was not always in the background, for
+the old engraving in the College of Surgeons has a window in its place,
+showing the old tower of St. Bride's, and thus indicating Bridewell as the
+site of the ceremony. The outermost figure to the left, too, is omitted,
+and, according to some critics, the back row of heads are all
+post-Holbeinic. The names over the heads appear to have been added in
+Charles I.'s time, and it is significant that only two portraits in the
+back row are so distinguished." The king is represented wearing his robes,
+and is seated on a chair of state, holding erect his sword of state, and
+about him are the leading members of the fraternity. "The men whose
+portraits appear in the picture," says the _Leisure Hour_, "are not
+nonentities. The first figure to the king's right, with his hands in his
+gown, is Dr. John Chambre, king's physician, Fellow and Warden of Merton,
+and happy in his multitudinous appointments, both clerical and lay. Behind
+him is the Doctor Butts of Shakespeare's 'Henry VIII.'--the Sir William
+Butts who was the king's and Princess Mary's physician, and whose wife is
+known by Holbein's splendid portrait of her. Behind Butts is Alsop, the
+king's apothecary. To the king's left the first figure is Thomas Vicary,
+surgeon to Bartholomew's Hospital, serjeant-surgeon to the king, and
+author of 'The Anatomie of the Bodie of Man.' Next to him is Sir John
+Ayleff, an exceptionally good portrait. Then come in the undernamed:
+Nicholas Simpson, Edmund Harman (one of the witnesses to the king's will),
+James Monforde (who gave the company the silver hammer still used by the
+Master in presiding at the courts), John Pen (another fine portrait),
+Nicholas Alcocke, and Richard Ferris (also serjeant-surgeon to the king).
+In the back row the only names given are those of Christopher Salmond and
+William Tilley."
+
+In the reign of Henry VIII. an enactment as follows was in force:--"No
+person using any shaving or barbery in London shall occupy any surgery,
+letting of blood, or other matter, except of drawing teeth." Laws were
+made, but they could not be, or at all events were not, enforced. Disputes
+were frequent. The barbers acted often as surgeons, and the surgeons
+increased their income by the use of the razor and shears. At this period
+vigorous attempts were made to confine each to their legitimate work.
+
+The barber's pole, it is said, owes its origin to the barber-surgeons.
+Much has been written on this topic, but we believe that the following are
+the facts of the matter. We know that in the days of old bleeding was a
+frequent occurrence, and during the operation the patient used to grasp a
+staff, stick, or pole which the barber-surgeon kept ready for use, and
+round it was bound a supply of bandages for tying the arm of the patient.
+The pole, when not in use, was hung at the door as a sign. In course of
+time a painted pole was displayed instead of that used in the operation.
+
+Lord Thurlow addressing the House of Lords, July 17th, 1797, stated, "by a
+statute, still in force, barbers and surgeons were each to use a pole [as
+a sign]. The barbers were to have theirs blue and white, striped, with no
+other appendage; but the surgeons', which was to be the same in other
+respects, was likewise to have a gully-pot and a red rag, to denote the
+particular nature of their vocations."
+
+The Rev. J. L. Saywell has a note on bleeding in his "History and Annals
+of Northallerton" (1885):--"Towards the early part of this century,"
+observes Mr. Saywell, "a singular custom prevailed in the town and
+neighbourhood of Northallerton (Yorkshire). In the spring of the year
+nearly all the robust male adults, and occasionally females, repaired to a
+surgeon to be bled, a process which they considered essentially conduced
+to vigorous health." The charge for the operation was one shilling.
+
+Parliament was petitioned, in 1542, praying that surgeons might be exempt
+from bearing arms and serving on juries, and thus be enabled without
+hindrance to attend to their professional duties. The request was granted,
+and to the present time medical men enjoy the privileges granted so long
+ago.
+
+In 1745, the surgeons and the barbers separated by Act of Parliament. The
+barber-surgeons lingered for a long time, the last in London, named
+Middleditch, of Great Suffolk Street, in the Borough, only dying in 1821.
+Mr. John Timbs, the popular writer, left on record that he had a vivid
+recollection of Middleditch's dentistry.
+
+
+
+
+Touching for the King's Evil.
+
+BY WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.
+
+
+The practice of touching for the cure of scrofula--a disease more
+generally known as king's evil--prevailed for a long period in England.
+Edward the Confessor who reigned from 1042 to 1066, appears to be the
+first monarch in this country who employed this singular mode of
+treatment.
+
+About a century after the death of Edward the Confessor, William of
+Malmesbury compiled his "Chronicle of the Kings of England," and in this
+work is the earliest allusion to the subject. Holinshed has placed on
+record some interesting details respecting Edward the Confessor. "As it
+has been thought," says Holinshed, in writing of the king, "he was
+inspired with the gift of prophecy, and also to have the gift of healing
+infirmities and disease commonly called the king's evil, and left that
+virtue, as it were, a portion of inheritance to his successors, the kings
+of this realm." The first edition of the "Chronicle" was published in
+1577, and from it Shakespeare drew much material for his historical
+dramas. There is an allusion to this singular superstition in _Macbeth_,
+which it will be interesting to reproduce.
+
+Malcolm and Macduff are in England, "in a room in the King's palace" (the
+palace of King Edward the Confessor):--
+
+ "_Malcolm._ Comes the King forth I pray you?
+
+ _Doctor._ Aye, sir! There are a crew of wretched souls
+ That stay his cure: their malady convinces
+ The great assay of art; but at his touch--
+ Such sanctity hath heaven given his hand--
+ They presently amend.
+
+ _Malcolm._ I thank you, Doctor.
+
+ _Macduff._ What's the disease he means?
+
+ _Malcolm._ 'Tis called the evil:
+ A most miraculous work in this good King;
+ Which often, since my here-remain in England,
+ I've seen him do. How he solicits heaven,
+ Himself best knows: but strangely visited people
+ All swoln and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,
+ The mere despair of surgery, he cures,
+ Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,
+ Put on with holy prayers: and 'tis spoken,
+ To the succeeding royalty he leaves
+ The healing benediction. With this strange virtue,
+ He hath a heavenly gift of prophecy,
+ And sundry blessings hang about his throne
+ That speak him full of grace."
+
+History does not furnish any facts respecting touching by the four kings
+of the House of Normandy. It is generally believed that the Norman
+monarchs did not practise the rite.
+
+Henry II., the first of the Plantagenet line, emulated the Confessor. We
+know this fact from a record made by Peter of Blois, the royal chaplain,
+in which it is clearly stated that the king performed certain cures by
+touch. John of Gaddesden, in the days of Edward II., wrote a treatise in
+which he gave instructions for several modes of treatment for the disease,
+and if they failed, recommended the sufferers to seek cure by royal touch.
+Bradwardine, Archbishop of Canterbury, lived in the reigns of Edward III.
+and Richard II., and from his statements we learn that both kings kept up
+the observance.
+
+Henry IV., the first king of the House of Lancaster, touched for the evil.
+This we learn from a "Defence to the title of House of Lancaster," written
+by Sir John Fortesque, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench. He
+speaks of the practice as "belonging to the kings of England from time
+immemorial." This pamphlet is preserved among the Cottonian manuscripts in
+the British Museum.
+
+The earliest king of the House of Tudor, Henry VII., was the first to give
+a small gold piece, known as a touch-piece, to those undergoing the
+ceremony.
+
+During the reign of the next monarch, Henry VIII., little attention
+appears to have been given to the subject. It was at this period largely
+practised in France. Cardinal Wolsey, when at the Court of Francis I., in
+1527, witnessed the king touch two hundred people. On Easter Sunday, 1686,
+Louis XIV. is recorded to have touched 1,600. He used these words:--"_Le
+Roy te touche, Dieu te gueisse._" ("The King touches thee. May God cure
+thee!")
+
+Coming back to the history of our own country, and dealing with the more
+interesting passages bearing on this theme, we find that in the reign of
+Queen Elizabeth, William Clowes, the Court Surgeon, believed firmly in the
+efficacy of the royal touch. "The king's queen's evil," he says, "is a
+disease repugnant to nature, which grievous malady is known to be
+miraculously cured and healed by the sacred hands of the Queen's most
+Royal Majesty, even by Divine inspiration and wonderful work and power of
+God, above man's will, act, and expectation." In this reign, under the
+title of "_Charisma; sive Donum Sanationis_," a book was published by
+William Fookes bearing testimony to the cures effected by royal touch on
+all sorts and conditions of people from various parts of the country.
+
+The Stuarts paid particular attention to the practice. No fewer than
+eleven proclamations published during the reign of Charles I. are
+preserved at the State Paper Office, and chiefly relate to the times the
+afflicted might attend the court to receive the royal touch. In course of
+time the king's pecuniary means became limited, and he was unable to
+present gold touch-pieces, so silver was substituted, and many received
+the rite of touch only.
+
+During the Commonwealth we have not any trace of Cromwell touching for the
+malady. During the rising in the West of England, the Duke of Monmouth,
+who claimed to be the rightful heir to the throne, touched several persons
+for the evil, and, said a newspaper of the time, with success. One of the
+charges made against him on his trial at Edinburgh for high treason, was,
+that he had "touched children of the King's Evil." Two witnesses proved
+the charge, having witnessed the ceremony at Taunton.
+
+No sooner had another Stuart obtained the English crown than the ceremony
+was again performed. During the first year of the reign of Charles II.,
+six thousand seven hundred and twenty-five persons were brought to His
+Majesty to be healed. The ceremony was often performed on a Sunday. Evelyn
+and Pepys were witnesses of these proceedings, and in their Diaries have
+recorded interesting particulars. Under date of 6th July, 1660, "His
+Majesty," writes Evelyn, "began first to touch for ye evil, according to
+custome thus: Sitting under his state in the Banqueting House, the
+chirurgeons cause the sick to be brought or led up to the throne, where,
+they kneeling, ye king strokes their faces and cheeks with both his hands
+at once, at which instant a chaplaine in his fermalities says:--'He put
+his hands upon them and healed them.' This he said to every one in
+particular. When they have been all totched, they come up again in the
+same order; and the other chaplaine kneeling, and having an angel of gold
+strung on white ribbon on his arme, delivers them one by one to His
+Majestie, who puts them about the necks of the touched as they passe,
+while the first chaplaine repeats 'That is ye true light which came into
+ye world.' Then follows an epistle (as at first a gospel) with the
+liturgy, prayers for the sick, with some alteration, and then the Lord
+Chamberlain and the Comptroller of the Household bring a basin, ewer, and
+towel, for his Majesty to wash."
+
+Samuel Pepys witnessed the ceremony on April 13th, 1661, and refers to it
+in his Diary. "Went to the Banquet House, and there saw the King heal, the
+first time I ever saw him do it, which he did with great gravity, and it
+seemed to me to be an ugly office and a simple one."
+
+In Evelyn's Diary on March 28th, 1684, there is a record of a serious
+accident, "There was," he writes, "so great a concourse of people with
+their children to be touched for the evil, that six or seven were crushed
+to death by pressing at the chirurgeon's door for tickets."
+
+According to Macaulay, Charles II. during his reign touched nearly a
+hundred thousand persons. In the year 1682 he performed the rite eight
+thousand five hundred times.
+
+No person was allowed to enter the King's presence for the purpose of
+receiving the rite without first obtaining a certificate from the minister
+of his parish from whence he came, nor unless he had not previously been
+touched. A proclamation of Charles II., dated January 9th, 1683, ordered a
+register of the certificates to be made. Here is a record drawn from the
+Old Town's Book of Birmingham:--
+
+ "March 14th, 1683, Elizabeth, daughter of John and Anne Dickens, of
+ Birmingham, in the county of Warwick, was certified for in order to
+ obtayne his Majesty's touch for her cure.
+
+ HENRY GROVE, Minister.
+ JOHN BIRCH, }
+ HENRY PATER, } Churchwardens."
+
+We cull from the churchwardens' accounts of Terling, Essex, the following
+item:--
+
+ "1683 Dec{r}. Pd. for his Majestie's order for touching 00.00.06."
+
+A page in the register book of Bisley, Surrey, is headed thus,
+"Certificates for the Evill commonly called the kings Evill." Two entries
+occur as follow:--
+
+ "Elizabeth Collier and Thomas Collier the children of Thomas Collier,
+ Senior, had a certificate from the minister and churchwardens of
+ Bisley, August 7th 1686."
+
+ "Sarah Massey, the daughter of Richard Massey, had a certificate from
+ the minister and churchwardens of Bisley, 1st April 1688."
+
+Old parish accounts often contain entries similar to the following, from
+Ecclesfield, Yorkshire:--
+
+ "1641. Given to John Parkin wife towards her
+ trauell to London to get cure of his Matie.
+ for the disease called Euill which her
+ soone Thom is visited withall 0. 6. 8."
+
+"The following extracts," says a contributor to _The Reliquary_ of
+January, 1894, "from the Minute Books of the Corporation of the city of
+York, show that general belief in the virtue of the touching by the King
+was unshaken at the end of the seventeenth century. It must be borne in
+mind that these Minutes do not record the acts of individuals, but were
+those of the Corporation of what was at that time one of the most
+important cities in the country, and that it was in administering Poor Law
+Relief that the grants were made.
+
+In Vol. 38 of the Corporation Records, fo. 74b, under the date of February
+28th, 1671, is the following:--
+
+ "Ordered that Elizabeth Trevis haue x{s} given her for charges in
+ carrying her daughter to London to be touched for the Evill."
+
+A few years later, on March 12th, 1678 (fo. 156b), occurs the
+following:--
+
+ "Anne Thornton to haue x{s} for goeing to London to be touched for the
+ euill."
+
+And again on March 3, 1687 (fo. 249b), ten shillings was granted for
+"carrying of Judith Gibbons & her Child & one Dorothy Browne to London to
+be touched by his Majestie in order to be healed of the Kings Evil."
+
+The Records of the Corporation of Preston, Lancashire, contain at least
+two references to this matter. In the year 1682 the bailiffs were
+instructed to "pay unto James Harrison, bricklayer, 10s. towards carrying
+his son to London, in order to the procuring of His Majesty's touch."
+
+Five years later, when James II. was at Chester, the council passed a vote
+that "the Bailiff pay unto the persons undermentioned each of them 5s.
+towards their charge in going to Chester to get his Majesty's
+touch:--Anne, daughter of Abel Mope; ---- daughter Richard Letmore."
+
+It is recorded that James II. touched eight hundred persons in the choir
+of the Cathedral of Chester.
+
+The ceremony cost, we learn from Macaulay, about L10,000 a year, and the
+amount would have been much greater but for the vigilance of the royal
+surgeons, whose business it was to examine the applicants, and to
+distinguish those who came for the cure, and those who came for the gold.
+
+William III. declined to have anything to do with a ceremony he regarded
+as an imposture. "It is a silly superstition," he said, when he heard that
+at the close of Lent his palace was besieged by a crowd of sick. "Give the
+poor creatures some money, and send them away." On one occasion only was
+he induced to lay his hand on a sufferer. "God give you better health," he
+said, "and more sense."
+
+The next to wear the crown was Queen Anne, and she revived the rite. In
+the _London Gazette_ of March 12th, 1712, appeared an official
+announcement that the queen intended to touch for the evil. In Lent of
+that year, Dr. Johnson, then a child, went up to London with his mother in
+the stage coach that he might have the benefit of the royal touch. He was
+then between two and three years of age. "His mother," writes Boswell,
+"yielding to the superstitious notion which, it is wonderful to think,
+prevailed so long in this country as to the virtue of regal touch (a
+notion to which a man of such inquiry and such judgment as Carte, the
+historian, could give credit), carried him to London, where he was
+actually touched by Queen Anne. Mrs. Johnson, indeed, as Mr. Hector
+informed me, acted by the advice of the celebrated Sir John Floyer, then a
+physician in Lichfield. Johnson used to talk of this very frankly, and
+Mrs. Piozzi has preserved his very picturesque description of the scene as
+it remained upon his fancy. Being asked if he could remember Queen Anne,
+'He had,' he said, 'a confused but somehow a sort of solemn recollection
+of a lady in diamonds and a long black hood.' This touch, however, was
+without any effect." The malady remained with Dr. Johnson to his death.
+
+[Illustration: TOUCH-PIECE OF CHARLES II. (GOLD).]
+
+After the death of Queen Anne, no other English sovereign kept up the
+custom, although the service remained in the "Book of Common Prayer" as
+late as 1719.
+
+The latest instance we have found of the ceremony being performed was in
+October, 1745, when Charles Edward, at Holyrood House, touched a child.
+
+[Illustration: (GOLD). TOUCH-PIECES OF JAMES II. (SILVER).]
+
+In the preceding pages we have referred to "touch pieces," and it will not
+be without interest to direct attention to some of the more notable
+examples. A small sum of money was given by Edward I., and it has been
+suggested that it was probably presented in the form of alms. Henry VII.
+gave a small gold coin known as the angel noble. It was of about six
+shillings and eight pence in value, and was a current coin of the period,
+and the smallest gold coin issued. On one side of the coin was a figure of
+the angel Michael overcoming the dragon, and on the other a ship on the
+waves. During the residence of Charles II. on the continent, those who
+visited him to receive the royal rite had to give him gold, but after the
+Restoration, "touch-pieces" were made expressly for presentation at the
+healings. They were small gold medals resembling angels, but they were not
+equal in value to the angels previously given. However they met a want
+when gold was in great demand. James II. had two kinds of touch pieces,
+one of gold and the other of silver, but they were not half the size of
+those given by Charles II. Queen Anne gave a touch-piece a little larger
+than that of James II. The touch-piece presented by this Queen to Dr.
+Johnson may, with other specimens, be seen in the British Museum.
+
+[Illustration: TOUCH-PIECE OF ANNE (GOLD).]
+
+In a carefully-compiled article in the _Archaeological Journal_, vol. x.,
+p. 187-211, will be found some interesting particulars of touch-pieces,
+and to it we are indebted for the few details we have given bearing on
+this part of our subject.
+
+
+
+
+Visiting Patients.
+
+
+The doctor made his daily rounds, before the reign of Charles II., on
+horseback, sitting sideways on foot-clothes. He must have cut an
+undignified figure as he rode through the streets of London and our chief
+towns.
+
+A change came after the Restoration, and we meet with the physicians
+making their visits in a carriage and pair. It seems that increased fees
+were expected with the introduction of the carriage. A curious note
+appears on this subject in _Lex Talionis_. "For there must now be a little
+coach and two horses," says the author, "and, being thus attended,
+half-a-piece their usual fee is but ill taken, and popped into their left
+pocket, and possibly may cause the patient to send for his worship twice
+before he will come again in the hazard of another angel." The carriage
+was popular, and physicians vied with each other in making the greatest
+display.
+
+In the days of Queen Anne, a doctor would even drive half-a-dozen horses
+attached to his chariot, and not fewer than four was the general rule.
+
+In our own time the doctor's carriage and pair is to be seen in all
+directions. It is now driven for use and not for display as in the days of
+Queen Anne.
+
+We have seen the bicycle used by doctors of good standing, and we predict
+the time is not far distant when it will be more generally ridden by
+members of the medical profession.
+
+
+
+
+Assaying Meat and Drink.
+
+BY WILLIAM ANDREWS, F.R.H.S.
+
+
+From the time of our earliest Norman king down to the days of James I.,
+the chief people of the land partook of their food in fear. Treachery was
+a not infrequent occurrence, and poison was much used as a means of taking
+life. As a precaution against murder, assayers of food, drink, etc., were
+appointed. Doctors usually filled the office, and by their unremitting
+attention to their duties crime was to a great extent prevented. In a
+royal household the physician acted as assayer.
+
+Let us imagine ourselves in an old English home, the palace of a king, or
+the stronghold of a leading nobleman. The cloth is laid by subordinate
+servants, but not without considerable ceremony. Next a chief officer of
+the household sees that every article on the table is free from poison.
+The bread about to be consumed is cut, and, in the presence of the "taker
+of assay," is tasted, and the salt is also tested. The knives, spoons,
+and table linen are kissed by a responsible person, so that assurance
+might be given that they were free from poison. Then the salt dish is
+covered with a lid, and the bread is wrapped in a napkin, and afterwards
+the whole table is covered with a fair white cloth. The coverlet remains
+until the head of the household comes to take his repast, and then his
+chief servant removes the covering of the table. If any person attempted
+to touch the covered bread or the covered salt after the spreading of the
+coverlet, they ran the risk of a severe flogging, and sometimes even death
+at the hands of a hangman.
+
+The time of bringing up the meats having arrived, the assayer proceeds to
+the kitchen, and tests the loyalty of the steward and cook by compelling
+them to partake of small quantities of the food prepared before it is
+taken to the table. Pieces of bread were cut and dipped into every mess,
+and were afterwards eaten by cook and steward. The crusts of closed pies
+were raised, and the contents tasted; small pieces of the more substantial
+viands were tasted, and not a single article of food was suffered to leave
+the kitchen without being assayed. After the ceremony had been completed,
+each dish was covered, no matter if hot or cold, and these were taken by
+servitors to the banqueting hall, a marshal with wand of office preceding
+the procession. The bearers on no account were permitted to linger on the
+way, no matter if their hands were burnt they must bear the pain, far
+better to suffer that than be suspected of tampering with the food. On no
+pretext were the covers to be removed until the proper time, and by the
+servants appointed for that purpose. If very hot, the bearers might
+perhaps protect their hands with bread, which was to be kept out of sight.
+
+We produce from the Rev. Charles Bullock's interesting volume entitled
+"How they Lived in the Olden Time," a picture of bringing in the dinner.
+It will be observed that the steward, bearing his staff of office, heads
+the procession.
+
+Each dish as it was brought to the table was again tasted in the presence
+of the personage who purposed partaking of it. This entailed considerable
+ceremony, and took up much time. To render the delay as little unpleasant
+as possible to the guests, music was usually performed.
+
+[Illustration: BRINGING IN THE DINNER.]
+
+In the stately homes of old England, as a mark of respect to the
+distinguished visitor, it was customary to assign to him an assayer.
+History furnishes a notable instance of an omission of the official. When
+Richard II. was at Pontefract Castle, we gather from _Hall's Chronicle_,
+edition 1548, folio 14, that Sir Piers Exton intended poisoning the King,
+and, to use the chronicler's words, forbade the "esquire whiche was
+accustumed to serve and take the assaye beefore Kyng Richarde, to again
+use that manner of service." According to Hall, the King "sat downe to
+dyner, and was served withoute curtesie or assaye; he much mervaylyng at
+the sodayne mutacion of the thynge, demanded of the esquire why he did not
+do his duty." He replied that Sir Piers had forbidden him performing the
+duties pertaining to his position. The King immediately picked up a
+carving-knife, struck upon the head of the assayer, and exclaimed, "The
+devil take Henry of Lancaster and thee together."
+
+Paul Hentzner, a German tutor, visited England in 1598, and wrote a
+graphic account of his travels in the country, which were translated into
+English by Horace Walpole. The work contains a curious account of the
+ceremonies of laying the cloth, etc., for Queen Elizabeth at Greenwich
+Palace. The notice is rather long, but is so entertaining and informing
+that it well merits reproduction. "A gentleman," it is stated, "entered
+the room bearing a rod, and along with him another who had a table-cloth,
+which, after they had both kneeled three times, with the utmost
+veneration, he spread upon the table, and after kneeling again, they both
+retired. Then came two others, one with the rod again, and the other with
+a salt-cellar and a plate of bread: when they had kneeled, as the others
+had done, and placed what was brought upon the table, they, too, retired
+with the same ceremonies performed by the first. At last came an unmarried
+lady (we were told she was a Countess), and along with her a married one,
+bearing a tasting-knife; the former was dressed in white silk, who when
+she prostrated herself three times in the most graceful manner, approached
+the table, and rubbed the plates with bread and salt with as much care as
+if the Queen had been present; when they had waited there a little time,
+the Yeomen of the Guard entered bareheaded, clothed in scarlet, with a
+golden rose upon their backs, bringing in at each turn a course of
+twenty-four dishes, served in plate, most of it gilt; these dishes were
+received by a gentleman in the same order they were brought, and placed
+upon the table, while the lady-taster gave to each guard a mouthful to
+eat, for fear of poison. During the time that this guard, which consists
+of the tallest and stoutest men that can be found in all England, being
+carefully selected for this service, were bringing dinner, twelve trumpets
+and two kettle-drums made the hall ring for half-an-hour together. At the
+end of the ceremonial, a number of unmarried ladies appeared, who, with
+particular solemnity, lifted the meat off the table and conveyed it into
+the Queen's inner and more private chamber, where, after she had chosen
+for herself, the rest goes to the ladies of the Court."
+
+[Illustration: ASSAYING WINE.]
+
+Drink as well as food had to be assayed twice, once in the buttery and
+again in the hall. The butler drank of the wine in the buttery, and then
+handed it to the cup-bearer in a covered vessel. When he arrived at the
+hall, he removed the lid of the cup, and poured into the inverted cover a
+little of the wine, and drank it under the eye of his master. We give an
+illustration, reproduced from an ancient manuscript, of an assayer tasting
+wine. The middle of the twelfth century is most probably the period
+represented.
+
+In the ancient assay cup, it is related on reliable authority, a charm was
+attached to a chain of gold, or embedded in the bottom of the vessel.
+This was generally a valuable carbuncle or a piece of tusk of a narwhal,
+usually regarded as the horn of the unicorn, and which was believed to
+have the power of neutralising or even detecting the presence of poison.
+
+Edward IV. presented to the ambassadors of Charles of Burgundy a costly
+assay cup of gold, ornamented with pearls and a great sapphire, and, to
+use the words of an old writer, "in the myddes of the cuppe ys a grete
+pece of a Vnicornes horne."
+
+The water used for washing the hands of the great had to be tasted by the
+yeoman who placed it on the table, to prove that no poison was contained
+in the fluid. This ceremony had to be performed in the presence of an
+assayer.
+
+
+
+
+The Gold-headed Cane.
+
+BY TOM ROBINSON, M.D.
+
+
+The stick takes many forms. It is the sceptre of kings, the club of a
+police constable, the baton of a field marshal. The mace is but a stick of
+office, being ornamental and merely symbolical.
+
+In history we may go back to the pilgrim's staff, which was four feet
+long, and hollow at the top to carry away relics from the Holy Land. It
+was also used to carry contraband goods, such as seeds, or silk-worms'
+eggs, which the Chinese, Turks, or Greeks forbade to be exported. It is
+occasionally used for eluding the customs now. Some people smuggle
+diamonds into the United States in that way.
+
+Prometheus' reed, or marthex, in which he conveyed fire to "wretched
+mortals," as Aeschylus tells us, is a well-known fable.
+
+An enormous amount of interest centres around the walking stick, and there
+are few families in which we do not find an old stick handed down
+generation after generation. Such an inheritance was at one time a common
+possession of those who belonged to the medical profession.
+
+[Illustration: DR. RADCLIFFE'S CANE.]
+
+The College of Physicians possesses at the present time the gold cane
+which Radcliffe, Mead, Askew, Pitcairn, and Baillie successively carried
+about with them, and which Mrs. Baillie presented to that learned body.
+The drawing here given is a representation of this cane, and it will be
+seen that it has not a gold knob, but consists of an engraved handle or
+crook. It is, I think, quite clear that the custom which the doctors of
+the last century always followed in carrying their stick about with them,
+even to the bed-side, was due entirely to the fact that the handle of the
+cane could be, and was, filled with strong smelling disinfectants, such as
+rosemary and camphor. The doctor held this against his nose obviously for
+two reasons. One, to destroy any poison which might be floating about in
+the air but chiefly to prevent him smelling unpleasant odours. This stick
+was as long as a footman's, smooth and varnished.
+
+A belief in the protective power of camphor and other pleasant-smelling
+herbs is still in existence, and we know quite a number of individuals who
+carry about with them bags of camphor during the prevalence of an
+epidemic.
+
+Before Howard exposed the deadly sanitary state of the prisons of this
+country, it was the custom to sprinkle aromatic herbs before the
+prisoners, so powerful was the noxious effluvium which exhaled from their
+filthy bodies. The bouquet which the chaplain always carried when
+accompanying a prisoner to Tyburn, was used for the same defensive
+purpose.
+
+The stick of the physician's cane was probably a relic of the legerdemain
+of the healer, who in superstitious times worked upon the ignorance of the
+credulous. The modern conjuror always uses a wand in his entertainment.
+These baubles die hard, because there is a strong conservative instinct in
+the race which clings with tremendous tenacity to anything which has the
+sanction of antiquity.
+
+The barber's pole is still seen even in London, and is striped blue and
+white, emblems of the phlebotomist, and symbolical of the blue venous
+blood, which was so ungrudgingly given by the sufferers from almost all
+maladies. The white stripe represented the bandage used to bind up the
+wound on the arm.
+
+The practice of the bleeders continued in fashion in England until the
+beginning of this century. John Coutsley Lettsom, who possessed high
+literary attainments, and who was President of the Philosophical Society
+of London, and who entertained at his house at Grove Hill, Camberwell,
+many of the most distinguished men of his time, including Boswell and Dr.
+Johnson, and whose writings shew he was an enlightened physician, was bold
+in his treatment of disease, and a heroic bleeder. He used to say of
+himself:--
+
+ "When patients sick to me apply,
+ I physics, bleeds, and sweats 'em
+ Then if they choose to die,
+ What's that to me--I lets 'em."
+
+The wig also constituted an essential part of the dress of the older
+physicians. It was a three tailed one, and this with silk stockings,
+clothes well trimmed, velvet coat with stiff skirts, large cuffs and
+buckled shoes, made quite an imposing show, and when they rode in their
+gilt carriages with two running footmen, as was the custom, no one would
+be better recognised. It is interesting to contrast the dress and mode of
+practice of the modern physician with those who built up the honourable
+calling of medicine. It is so easy to laugh at those who practised the art
+of medicine before modern scientific investigation had laid naked so many
+of the secrets of physiology, pathology, and vital chemistry. Slowly but
+surely as the true nature and progress of disease has become known, so
+have all the adventitious and unnecessary surroundings of dress
+disappeared, and now we may meet the most eminent of our doctors, clad in
+the same garments as a man on Change. All this was inevitable, but running
+through the whole history of medicine is a magnificent desire on the part
+of those who have made a mark, and of all its humbler followers to "go
+about doing good." The difficulties are enormous, the labour is colossal,
+but there could be no convictions were there no perplexities. Credulity is
+the disease of a feeble intellect. Accepting all things and understanding
+nothing, kills a man's intellect and checks all scientific investigation.
+The physician has to knock at the temple of the human frame, and patiently
+pick up the knowledge which nature always gives to those who love her
+best. But the investigator must approach his subject with humility, and
+with the recognition that there is a limit to the human intellect, and
+that behind and above this big round world is a supreme being, that around
+the intellect is the atmosphere of spiritual convictions from which our
+highest and best impulses spring, that the universe not only embraces
+material phenomena, but it also includes the sublime and the moral
+attributes, which no man has, or ever will, weigh in the physical balance
+or distil from a retort.
+
+The union of Intellect and Piety will grow stronger as the world grows
+older. When men began to think, they began to doubt, but when men have
+thought more deeply they will cease to doubt.
+
+An idea is in the air that the study of science has a tendency to make men
+sceptical. This is an error. For surely the study of Nature in any of its
+manifold aspects has a direct tendency to lead us into the inscrutable.
+Amongst those who demonstrate the ennobling influence of science let us
+only name Boyle, Bacon, Kepler, and Newton. If we would select a few names
+from the number of medical celebrities of the past who have felt this
+elevating influence, the following will readily occur to us, Linacre,
+Sydenham, Brodie, Astley Cooper, Graves Watson, and Abernethy. The latter,
+who is chiefly remembered as a coiner of quaint sayings and personal
+originality, had, notwithstanding his biting wit, a deep sense of the
+nobility and the sacredness of his calling, as the following extract from
+a lecture which he delivered at the Royal College of Surgeons will prove.
+He says:--"When we examine our bodies we see an assemblance of organs
+formed of what we call matter, but when we examine our minds, we feel that
+there is something sensitive and intelligible which inhabits our bodies.
+We naturally believe in the existence of a first cause. We feel our own
+free agency. We distinguish right and wrong. We feel as if we were
+responsible for our conduct, and the belief in a future state seems
+indigenous to the mind of man."
+
+The noiseless tread of time will cause many doctors whose names are now
+household words to be forgotten, but we may rest assured that the wreath
+of memory will cluster round the brows of these grand, noble workers in
+the field of medicine who have shown by their daily life that they never
+flinched from the arduous duties, aye and the dangers of their profession,
+but steadfastly plodded on. Originality, integrity, and honesty are
+attributes which grace the life of any man, and although the history of
+medicine claims no monopoly of these virtues, for they serve all men
+alike, yet they are the handmaids of greatness; without them no human
+being will ever win that true success which enables us to look back upon
+such lives and say, "Here are examples which show us the possibilities of
+the race." Doctors ought to be great burden lifters. Their mission is to
+carry into the chamber of disease--and even of death itself--that calm
+courage, that buoyant hope, which has around it a halo of sympathy and of
+encouragement.
+
+The public are loyal to the profession of medicine, and seldom do we hear
+of any members of that calling who abuse their high privileges. Their work
+is an absorbing work; it says to a man:--"You have placed in your hands
+the lives of the human race. You are the true soldier whose business it
+is to give life and health and happiness to those with whom you come in
+contact. You must not lean upon the baubles of your calling, so as to
+inspire confidence, but you must night and day let the one abiding thought
+be concentrated upon the good of humanity," and there is no field of
+professional experience which has given us so many men who have as nobly
+done their duty as the doctors of the past and of the present day. We seem
+to be on the threshold of a new era in the treatment of disease, and
+already do we find an increase in the average lives of the race. No one
+need despair of the future in that direction; indiscretion and ignorance
+kill more human beings than plague, pestilence, or famine. The public must
+help to tear away the veil which hides the _Truth_, by not worshipping at
+the foot of Quackery, Chicanery, or Superstition.
+
+The medical profession has so far escaped the pernicious tendency of
+modern thought, which tendency is to hamper every institution. This is a
+noteworthy fact; our hospitals, medical schools, College of Physicians,
+and College of Surgeons are not cramped and hindered by legislative
+interference; but unostentatiously, silently, and with a never-failing
+sense of their responsibilities, do they educate and pass through their
+gates the doctors of the future--and no man dare point his finger at any
+one of these, and say he does not do his duty.
+
+
+
+
+Magic and Medicine.
+
+BY CUMING WALTERS.
+
+
+Coleridge once said that in the treatment of nervous cases "he is the best
+physician who is the most ingenious inspirer of hope." The great "faith
+cures" are worked by such physicians, and the dealers in magic at all
+times and in all parts achieved their successes by inspiring hope in their
+patients. The more credulous the invalid the more easy the cure, no matter
+what remedy is applied. Is it surprising, then, to find that among the
+more childlike races, or that among the infant civilizations, magic often
+supersedes medicine, or is combined with it? Ceremonies which impress the
+mind and act upon the imagination considerably aid the physician in his
+treatment of susceptible persons. Paracelsus himself combined astrology
+with alchemy and medicine, and his host of followers often went further
+than their master, and relied more upon magic than upon specific remedies.
+It was the crowd of charlatans, astrologers, wonder-workers, and their
+sort who substituted magic for medicine, and who had so great an influence
+in England three centuries ago, that Ben Jonson scourged with the lash of
+his satire in "The Alchemist," the impostor described as
+
+ "A rare physician,
+ An excellent Paracelsian, and has done
+ Strange cures with mineral physic. He deals all
+ With spirits, he; he will not hear a word
+ Of Galen, or his tedious recipes."
+
+There has generally been sufficient superstition in all races to make
+amulets the popular means of averting calamity and preserving from
+sickness. The Greeks, the Romans, the Jews, the Turks, and the Arabs, to
+say nothing of less civilized races, have thoroughly believed that disease
+can be charmed away by the simple expedient of wearing a token, or
+carrying a talisman. The magical formula of Abracadabra, written in the
+form of a triangle, sufficed to cure agues and fevers; the Abraxas stones
+warded off epidemics; the coins of St. Helena served as talismans, and
+cured epilepsy. So strong was the belief in these magical protectors in
+the fourth century that the clergy were forbidden, under heavy penalties
+to make or to sell the charms, and in the eighth century the Christian
+Church forbade amulets to be longer worn. In this connection it may be
+mentioned that the custom of placing the wedding-ring upon the fourth
+finger of the left hand owes its origin to the ancients who resorted to
+magic for the cure of their ailments. The Greeks and the Romans believed
+that the finger in question contained a vein communicating directly with
+the heart, and that nothing could come in contact with it without giving
+instant warning to the seat of life. For this reason they were accustomed
+to stir up mixtures and potions with this "medicated finger," as it was
+called, and when the ring became the symbol of marriage that finger was
+chosen of all others for the wearing of it. Thus do we unknowingly keep
+alive the superstitions of other times.
+
+The Hindoos, whose books on the healing art date back to 1500 B.C.,
+regarded sickness as the result of the operation of malevolent deities who
+were either to be propitiated by prayers, offerings, charms, and
+sacrifices, or to be overcome with the aid of friendly gods. The early
+Greeks when suffering from disease were cured, not by means of medicine,
+but by religious observances, and particularly by the "temple-sleep," in
+which they dreamt dreams which the priests interpreted, and in which were
+found the suggestions for remedy. It was Hippocrates, in 460 B.C., who
+first proclaimed that disease was not of supernatural origin, and that it
+could not be combated or cured by magic. But for many centuries later in
+Europe the Black Art had greater sway than rational treatment. In Sweden
+it is even now common for the lower classes to ascribe sickness to the
+visitation of spirits (Nisse), who must be mollified by pouring liquor
+into a goblet and mixing with it the filings of a bride-ring, or filings
+of silver, or of any metal that has been inherited. The mixture is taken
+to the place where the man is supposed to have caught his illness, and is
+poured over the left shoulder, not a syllable being uttered the while.
+After the performance of this ceremony the invalid may hope to recover.
+
+Consecrated grave-mould is supposed by many primitive races to have
+particular properties as a medicine. The Shetlander who has a "stitch in
+his side," cures himself by applying to the affected part, some dry mould
+brought from a grave, and heated, care being taken to remove the mould and
+to return it before the setting of the sun. In the neighbouring isles of
+Orkney, magic is also resorted to as a remedy for disease. Perhaps the
+least harmful of the rites is the washing of a cat in the water which had
+previously served for an invalid's ablutions, the confident belief being
+that the disease would by this means be transferred to the animal. This
+custom of "substitution" is found in many races, and is one of the most
+interesting subjects introduced to the student of folk-lore.
+
+In Tibet, for example, when all ordinary remedies have failed, the Lamas
+make a dummy to represent the sick person, and they adorn the image with
+trinkets. By ceremonies and prayers the sickness of the patient is laid
+upon the dummy, after which it is taken out and burned, the Lamas
+appropriating the ornaments as a reward. Sir Walter Scott tells of a
+similar case which occurred in Scotland. Lady Katharine Fowlis made a
+model in clay of a person whom she wished to afflict, and shot at the
+image in the hope that the wound would be transferred to the real person.
+We have only to turn to Scott's "Demonology and Witchcraft" to find
+hundreds of instances of the unshaken belief of the Highlanders in mystic
+potions, pills, drugs, and drops; and not even wholesale burnings of the
+dealers in white magic could induce the people to forsake their
+superstitions. Bessie Dunlop told the Court, before which she was
+arraigned, of the magic elixirs given to her by Thome Reid, who had been
+killed in battle centuries before, but had appeared to her as an
+apparition, and begged her to fly with him to Elf-land. By means of his
+medicines she cured the most stubborn diseases, obtained the reputation of
+a wise woman, and grew so rich that the eye of the law was drawn upon her,
+and, after her confession was made, she was ordered to be burnt. As Scott
+said, in one of his chapters, the Scottish law did not acquit those who
+accomplished even praiseworthy actions, and "the proprietor of a patent
+medicine who should in those days have attested his having wrought such
+miracles as we see sometimes advertised might have forfeited his life."
+
+The idea of sacrificing something, or someone, to appease the anger of the
+powers who bring affliction upon mankind, is extremely common, and by no
+means confined to savage nations or to very ancient times. At the time of
+the Black Plague in the fourteenth century the fanaticism of the French
+led them to sacrifice 12,000 Jews by torture and burning, these
+Israelites being deemed the cause of the affliction. In the "Ingoldsby
+Legends" may be read a ghastly account of a similar sacrifice in Spain, in
+order to secure the good-will of the over-ruling powers on behalf of the
+Queen. Even in comparatively modern times the practice of sacrificing in
+order to cure or avert disease has not been unknown, and this in civilized
+lands, too. The sacrifices in these cases have, of course, been of animals
+only, but the germ of the old and worse ritual is found in the custom. In
+1767, the people of Mull, in consequence of a disease among the cattle,
+agreed to perform an incantation. They carried to the top of Carnmoor a
+wheel and nine spindles of oakwood. Every fire in the houses was
+extinguished; and the wheel was then turned from east to west over the
+nine spindles long enough to produce fire by friction. They then
+sacrificed a heifer, which they cut in pieces and burnt while yet alive.
+Finally they lighted their own hearths from the pile, while an old man
+repeated the words of incantation. This custom is prevalent in Ireland, in
+various parts of Scotland, and even in England and Wales it has been
+practised with variations and some modification. In Cornwall, in 1800, a
+calf was burnt alive to arrest the murrain. Mr. Laurence Gomme has traced
+the custom back to the sacrifice of animals for human sickness, for in
+1678 four men were actually prosecuted for "sacrificing a bull in a
+heathenish manner for the recovery of the health of Custane Mackenzie." In
+Ireland a cure for small-pox consisted in sacrificing a sheep to a wooden
+image, wrapping the skin about the sick person, and then eating the sheep.
+
+In Scotland strange and weird customs linger, and Sir H. G. Reid in his
+entertaining volume, "'Tween Gloamin' and the Mirk," has related how he
+himself, during infancy, underwent a mysterious cure for the "falling
+sickness." He was carried secretly away to a lonely hut on the distant
+moor, and the party were admitted to a long, low-roofed apartment, dimly
+lighted from two small windows. In one corner sat an old woman, wrinkled
+and silent, busily knitting; a huge peat-fire blazed on the open hearth,
+shooting heavy sparks up through the hole in the roof, and filling the
+apartment with smoke. No word was spoken, and the scene must have been as
+eerie as the lover of mystery or the believer in witchcraft could have
+desired. "I was placed on a three-legged stool in the middle of the
+floor" (the writer continues); "the old woman rose, and with the aid of
+immense tongs, took deliberately from the fire seven large smooth round
+stones, they were planted one by one in an irregular circle about me; with
+her dull dark eyes closed, and open white palms outstretched, the
+enchantress muttered some mystic words; it was over--the tremulous patient
+was taken up as 'cured!'" In Scotland the belief in witches who have power
+both to cure and to cause maladies is so deeply founded that it would be
+rash to deny its continued existence. These creatures are credited with
+opening graves for the purpose of taking out joints of the fingers and
+toes of dead bodies, with some of the winding-sheet, in order to prepare
+powders. In Kirkwall a small portion of the human skull was taken from the
+graveyard and grated to a powder in order to be used in a mixture for the
+cure of fits; while in Caithness the patient was made to drink from a
+suicide's skull, and the beverage so taken was regarded as a sovereign
+specific for epilepsy. In 1643 one John Drugh was indicted for this
+despoiling of corpses for some such purpose. The Australian aborigines
+had a belief not altogether dissimilar to this. They rubbed weak persons
+with the fat of a corpse, and thought that the strength, courage, and
+valour of the dead man was communicated to the body subjected to the
+treatment. Analogies may be found among savage tribes all over the world,
+and the culmination is found in the devouring of enemies, not out of
+revenge, but because the widespread primitive idea prevails that by eating
+the flesh and by drinking the blood of the slain, a man absorbs the nature
+or the life of the deceased into his own body. In other words, cannibalism
+has a medical origin which the most depraved superstition suggested and
+fortified.
+
+The Lhoosai, a savage hill-tribe in India, teach their young warriors to
+eat a piece of the liver of the first man they kill in order to strengthen
+their hearts, and here we see the development of the magic power of the
+medicines which is not only efficacious for the body, but for the spirit.
+
+When Coleridge was a little boy at the Blue Coat School, he relates in his
+Table Talk, there was a "charm for one's foot when asleep," which he
+believed had been in the school since its foundation in the time of King
+Edward VI. Its potency lay in the words--
+
+ "Crosses three we make to ease us,
+ Two for the thieves, and one for Christ Jesus."
+
+The same charm served for cramp in the leg, and Coleridge quaintly adds:
+"Really, upon getting out of bed, where the cramp most frequently
+occurred, pressing the sole of the foot on the cold floor, and then
+repeating this charm, I can safely affirm that I do not remember an
+instance in which the cramp did not go away in a few seconds." Charms like
+this, by which a simple method of cure is invested with marvel, are common
+enough among primitive races, and not infrequently provide the key to the
+solution of the mystery of the magician's triumph. The cunning leaders,
+priests, or medicine-men of ignorant nations maintain their ascendency by
+ascribing to miracle the simplest feats they perform.
+
+The superstitious red man is completely at the mercy of the medicine-man
+who claims to possess supernatural powers, and who assumes the ability to
+work marvellous cures by magic. Each North American Indian carries with
+him a medicine bag obtained under very curious circumstances. When he is
+approaching manhood he sets forth in search of the patent drug which is to
+shield him from all danger, and act as an all-powerful talisman. He lies
+down alone in the woods upon a litter of twigs, eats and drinks nothing
+for several days, and at last falls asleep from sheer exhaustion. Then he
+dreams--or should do so--and whatever bird, or beast, or reptile, forms
+the subject of his dream, he must seek as his medicine. He goes forth upon
+the quest directly his strength has returned, and when he has discovered
+the animal of his vision, he turns its skin into a pouch, and wears it
+ever afterwards round his neck. In peace or war he will never part with
+this talisman; it is the treasure of his life, a sacred possession, a
+charm against all maladies, and a protection from foes. It is scarcely
+necessary to add, after this, that the medicine-man of the tribe is held
+in highest honour, and regarded as a worker of veritable miracles. All
+things are possible to him. By his prayers, his rites, and his
+incantations he causes the sun to shine, the rain to descend, the rivers
+to deepen, the plants to thrive. A traveller tells us that a drought had
+withered the maize fields, and the medicine-man was sent for to compel
+the rain to fall. On the first day one Wah-ku, or the Shield, came to the
+front, but failed; so did Om-pah, or the Elk. On succeeding days another
+was tried, but without success; but at last recourse was made to
+Wak-a-dah-ha-Ku, or the White Buffalo Hair, who possessed a shield
+coloured with red lightnings, and carried an arrow in his hand. Much was
+expected of him, and the people were not disappointed. "Taking his station
+by the medicine-lodge," we are told, "he harangued the people, protesting
+that for the good of his tribe he was willing to sacrifice himself, and
+that if he did not bring the much desired rain he was content to live for
+the rest of his life with the old women and the dogs. He asserted that the
+first medicine-man had failed because his shield warded off the rain
+clouds; the second, who wore a head-dress made of a raven's skin, because
+the raven was a bird that soared above the storm, and cared not whether
+the rain came or stayed; and the third who wore a beaver skin, because the
+beaver was always wet and required no rain. But as for him, the red
+lightnings on his shield would attract the rain-clouds, and his arrow
+would pierce them, and pour the water over the thirsty fields. It chanced
+that as he ended his oration, a steamer fired a salute from a twelve
+pounder gun. To the Indians the roar of the cannon was like the voice of
+thunder, and their joy knew no bounds. The successful medicine-man was
+loaded with valuable gifts; mothers hastened to offer their daughters to
+him in marriage; and the elder medicine-men hastened from the lodge to
+enrol him in their order.... Just before sunset his quick eyes discovered
+a black cloud which, unobserved by the noisy multitude, swiftly came up
+from the horizon. At once he assumed his station on the roof of the lodge,
+strung his bow, and made ready his arrow; arrested the attention of his
+fellows by his loud and exultant speech; and as the cloud impended over
+the village, shot his arrow into the sky. Lo, the rain descended in
+torrents, wetting the rain-maker to the skin, but establishing in
+everybody's mind a firm and deep conviction of his power."
+
+The influence of the medicine-man in time of sickness is illustrated in
+the narrative of Mr. Kane, who wrote "The Wanderings of an Artist." He
+heard a great noise in one of the villages, and found that a handsome
+Indian girl was extremely ill. The medicine-man sat in the middle of the
+room, crossed-legged and naked; a wooden dish filled with water was before
+him, and he had guaranteed to rid the girl of her disease which afflicted
+her side. He commenced by singing and gesticulating in a violent manner,
+the others who surrounded him beating drums with sticks. This lasted
+half-an-hour. Then the medicine-man determined on a radical cure of the
+patient, for he darted suddenly upon the girl, dug his teeth into her side
+(for she was undressed), and shook her for several minutes. This increased
+her agony, but the medicine-man declared he had "got it," and held his
+hands to his mouth. After this he plunged his hands into a bowl of water,
+leaving the spectators to believe that he had torn out the disease with
+his teeth, and was now destroying it by drowning. Eventually he withdrew
+his hand from the bowl, and it was found that he held a piece of cartilage
+between the finger and thumb. This was cut in two, and half cast into the
+fire, half into the water. So ended the operation, and Mr. Kane records
+that though the doctor was perfectly satisfied, the patient seemed, if
+anything, to be worse for the treatment.
+
+The belief in magic was ingrained in the Egyptians, who, notwithstanding
+that the art of medicine was far advanced with them, preferred to trust in
+the workers of miracles and enchantments. In his recent collection of
+Egyptian Tales, Mr. Flinders-Petrie is able to supply a striking instance
+of this credulity. A man named Dedi was said to have such powers over life
+and death that he could restore the head that had been smitten from the
+body. He was brought before the King, who desired to put this marvellous
+power to the test, and the story thus proceeds:--"His Majesty said, 'Let
+one bring me a prisoner who is in prison that his punishment may be
+fulfilled.' And Dedi said, 'Let it not be a man, O King, my lord; behold
+we do not even thus to our cattle.' And a duck was brought unto him, and
+its head was cut off. And the duck was laid on the west side of the hall,
+and its head on the east side of the hall. And Dedi spake his magic
+speech. And the duck fluttered along the ground, and its head came
+likewise; and when it had come part to part the duck stood and quacked.
+And they brought likewise a goose before him, and he did even so unto it.
+His Majesty caused an ox to be brought, and its head cast on the ground.
+And Dedi spake his magic speech. And the ox stood upright behind him, and
+followed him with his halter trailing on the ground." This story prepares
+us in every way for the information that the Egyptians, despite their
+great knowledge of the curative powers of herbs and drugs, preferred to
+rely upon enchanters, soothsayers, and magicians in their time of illness
+and peril.
+
+Professor Douglas, in his "Society in China," devotes a very interesting
+and entertaining chapter to medicine as regarded and practised by the
+Celestials. From this we learn that while there are plenty of doctors in
+the land, they are one and all the merest empirics, who prey on the folly,
+the ignorance, and the dread of the uneducated people. The failure to cure
+any disease brings no odium upon the quack, though when the late Emperor
+"ascended on a dragon to be a guest on high," or, in other words, died of
+small-pox, his physicians who could not save him from that distinction
+were deprived of honours and rewards. The Chinese are centuries behind
+other nations in medicine, and they have not yet learnt that the blood
+circulates in the body, or that a limb may be removed with beneficial
+effects in case of some diseases or accidents. They believe that arteries
+and veins are one and the same, and that the pulses communicate with the
+various organs of the body. The object of the physician is to "strengthen
+the breath, stimulate the gate of life, restore harmony." "The heart is
+the husband, and the hinges are the wife," and they must be brought into
+agreement, or evil arises. Good results may be obtained, it is believed,
+by such tonics as dog-flesh, dried red-spotted lizard-skins,
+tortoise-shell, fresh tops of stag-horns, bones and teeth of dragons (when
+obtainable), shavings of rhinoceros-horns, and such like. For dyspepsia
+the doctor has no nostrum, but he thrusts a needle into the patient's
+liver and expects him to be immediately cured. When cholera or any other
+pestilence sweeps over the land, the Chinese feel the helplessness of
+their physicians, so they resort to charms, and to the offering of gifts
+to the gods by way of staying the plague. Hydrophobia is common among the
+half-starved curs which infest the streets, and the cure for it--quite
+unknown to Pasteur--is the curd of the black pea dried and pulverised,
+mixed with hemp oil, and formed into a large ball; this is to be rolled
+over the wound, then broken open, and kept on rolling until it has lost
+its hair-like appearance. To complete the cure the patient must abstain
+from eating "anything in a state of decomposition." He might just as well
+be told not to poison himself. If, by the way, the prescription does not
+work, but hydrophobia continues, the patient is strongly commended to try
+the effect of "the skull, teeth, and toes of a tiger ground up, and given
+in wine in doses of one-fifth of an ounce." While the tiger is being
+caught, however, a fatal result may occur, but of course the Chinese
+doctor is not to be blamed for that. He has done his best, and the fault
+is obviously the tiger's. The Chinese believe in astrology, the
+philosopher's stone, and the elixir of life. A plant known as ginseng is
+said to greatly prolong and sweeten existence, and sometimes as much as a
+thousand taels of silver are given for a pound's weight of the precious
+root. It will be seen, therefore, from such facts as these that a Galen in
+China would have a vast revolution to undertake, and that a thousand
+Galens at least would be required to overcome the prejudices and uproot
+the superstitions of the race. The great value which the Chinese attach to
+the bones, horns, tusks, and eyes of animals may be judged from various
+tonics and remedies which are in great request among all classes. A dose
+of tigers' bones inspires courage; an elephant's eye burnt to powder and
+mixed with human milk is a sovereign remedy for inflammation of the eye;
+pulverised elephants' bones cure indigestion; a preparation of elephants'
+ivory is the recognised cure for diabetes; and the same animal's teeth may
+be used for epilepsy. But if the patient cannot eat rice his case is
+abandoned as hopeless, and not even the physician who deals most
+extensively in magic pills, ointments, and decoctions will attempt to save
+the obstinate person's life.
+
+The medicine-men of the Eskimos were called angekoks, and enjoyed the
+unlimited confidence of the people. They were said to have equal power
+over heaven and earth, this world and the next. This made them useful as
+friends and dangerous as enemies. The Eskimo, therefore, set out upon no
+enterprise without consulting the angekoks, who granted blessings,
+exorcised demons, and gave charms against disease. These medicine-men have
+a profound belief in themselves, and though they resort to jugglery and
+ventriloquism to deceive their visitors, they appear to have no idea that
+they are perpetrating an imposture. Their particular powers, they think,
+are derived from more than human sources. Dr. Nansen, in his "Eskimo
+Life," points out that it has always been to the interests of the
+medicine-men and the priests to sustain and mature superstitions or
+religious ideas. "They must therefore themselves appear to believe in
+them; they may even discover new precepts of divinity to their own
+advantage, and thereby increase both their power and their revenues." The
+Greenlanders believe that the angekoks work with the help of ministering
+spirits, called _tornat_, who are often none other than the souls of dead
+persons, especially of grandfathers; but not infrequently the _tornat_ are
+supposed to be the souls of departed animals, or of fairies. The angekok
+is assumed to have several of these councillors always at hand. They
+render help in the time of danger, and may even act as avengers or
+destroyers. In the latter case they show themselves as ghosts, and so
+frighten to death the persons against whom vengeance is directed.
+Therefore, as Dr. Nansen reports, the angekoks are the wisest and also the
+craftiest of all Eskimos. They assert that they have the power of
+conversing with spirits, of travelling in the under-world, of conjuring
+up powerful spirits, and of obtaining revelations. "They influence and
+work upon their countrymen principally through their mystic exorcisms and
+_seances_, which occur as a rule in the winter, when they are living in
+houses. The lamps are extinguished, and skins hung before the windows. The
+angekok himself sits upon the floor. By dint of making a horrible noise so
+that the whole house shakes, changing his voice, bellowing and shrieking,
+ventriloquising, groaning, moaning, and whining, beating on drums,
+bursting forth into diabolical shrieks of laughter and all sorts of other
+tricks, he persuades his companions that he is visited by the various
+spirits he personates, and that it is they who make the disturbance." They
+cure diseases by reciting charms, and "give men a new soul." He demands
+large fees, not for himself, he explains, but for the spirits whose agent
+he is. Apparently these spirits have similar ideas to the London
+consulting physician.
+
+Mr. Theodore Bent, in his "Ruined Cities of Mashonaland," gives a specimen
+of the credulity excited by the medicine-men. The explorer desired to
+interview a chief, Mtoko by name, but permission was refused. The reason,
+he afterwards ascertained, was that the chief's father had died shortly
+after another white man's visit, and the common belief was that he had
+been bewitched. The chief thought that the "white lady" who ruled over the
+nation to which Mr. Bent belonged had sent him purposely to cast a glamour
+over him. It may be remembered that the ill-fated Lobengula refused to
+have his portrait taken because he believed that by means of the image of
+himself he could be magically infected with a dread disease. This idea of
+substitution, which has already been referred to, is akin to that of the
+belief in witchcraft during the middle ages--namely, that the witches
+could, by sticking pins into the wax image of a person, bring upon that
+person agonising maladies. The dreadful results of such beliefs among
+savage tribes is told by the two hospital nurses who a year or so ago
+produced a lively book, "Adventures in Mashonaland." One morning a native
+entered their camp, bringing a tale of horror. A chief called Maronka,
+whose kraal was about forty miles away, had boiled his family alive. He
+had been convinced by the native doctors that after death the souls of the
+chiefs passed into the bodies of lions. His medicine-men had "smelt out"
+his own family as witches, and boiling alive was the requisite punishment.
+Mr. Rider Haggard has told many such stories as this in his books on South
+Africa. The Zulu doctors were in the habit, not only of "smelling out"
+witches and evil spirits, but of sprinkling the soldiers with medicine, in
+order to "put a great heart into them," and ensure their victory in
+battle.
+
+Customs like these gave Charles Dickens his opportunity of writing two of
+his most scathing satires "The Noble Savage" and "The Medicine Man of
+Civilisation." He refused to subscribe to the popular and amiable
+sentiment that the African barbarian was an interesting survival, or that
+the Ojibbeway Indian was picturesque. After a severe indictment of them,
+Dickens instanced their customs in medicine as a proof of their
+irremediable depravity. "When the noble savage finds himself a little
+unwell," he wrote, "and mentions the circumstance to his friends, it is
+immediately perceived that he is under the influence of witchcraft. A
+learned personage, called an Imyanger, or Witch Doctor, is sent for to
+Nooker the Umtargartie, or smell out the witch. The male inhabitants of
+the kraal being seated on the ground, the learned doctor, got up like a
+grizzly bear, appears and administers a dance of the most terrific nature,
+during the exhibition of which remedy he incessantly gnashes his teeth,
+and howls,--'I am the original physician to Nooker the Umtargartie. Yow,
+yow, yow! No connection with any other establishment. Till, till, till!
+All other Umtargarties are feigned Umtargarties, Boroo, Boroo! but I
+perceive here a genuine and real Umtargartie, Hoosh, Hoosh, Hoosh! in
+whose blood, I, the original Imyanger and Nookerer, will wash these bear's
+claws of mine!' All this time the learned physician is looking out among
+the attentive faces for some unfortunate man who owes him a cow, or who
+has given him any small offence, or against whom, without offence, he has
+conceived a spite. Him he never fails to Nooker as the Umtargartie, and he
+is instantly killed." This is no burlesque, and I have given the record in
+Dickens's inimitable language because it most vividly sets before us the
+custom of the medicine-men of barbarous races. But the medicine-men of
+Longfellow's description, the men who came to appease and console
+Hiawatha, who
+
+ "Walked in silent, grave procession,
+ Bearing each a pouch of healing,
+ Skin of beaver, lynx, or otter,
+ Filled with magic roots and simples,
+ Filled with very potent medicines,"
+
+--these may be accepted as the milder type of magicians who, among a
+primitive people, claimed not only to be able to heal the living, but to
+restore the dead.
+
+Mr. Austine Waddell, in his exhaustive work on the Buddhism of Tibet,
+tells us that a very popular form of Buddha is as "the supreme physician"
+or Buddhist AEsculapius, the idea of whom is derived from an ancient legend
+of the "medicine-king" who dispensed spiritual medicine. The images of
+this Buddha are worshipped as fetishes, and they cure by sympathetic
+magic. The supplicant, after bowing and praying, rubs his finger over the
+eye, knee, or particular part of the image corresponding to the affected
+part on his own body, and then applies the finger carrying this hallowed
+touch to the afflicted spot. Mr. Waddell says that this constant friction
+is rather detrimental to the features of the god; whether it is beneficial
+to the man's body is of course largely a matter of faith and
+circumstances. As might be expected, talismans to ward off evils from
+malignant planets and demons, whence come all diseases, are in great
+request. The eating of the paper on which a charm has been written is
+considered by the Tibetan to be the easiest and most certain method of
+curing a malady, and the spells which the Lamas use in this way are called
+"za-yig," or edible letters. A still more mystical way of applying these
+remedies, according to Mr. Waddell, is by the washings of the reflection
+of the writing in a mirror, a habit common in other quarters of the globe.
+In Gambia, for instance, this treatment is relied upon by the natives. A
+doctor is called in, he examines the patient, and then sits down at the
+bedside and writes in Arabic characters on a slate some sentences from the
+Koran. The slate is then washed, and the dirty infusion is drunk by the
+patient. In Tibet, Chinese ink is smeared on wood, and every twenty-nine
+days the inscription reflected in a mirror. The face of the mirror during
+the reflection is washed with beer, and the drainings are collected in a
+cup for the patient's use. This is a special cure for the evil eye. The
+medicine-men of Tibet can also supply charms against bullets and weapons,
+charms for the clawing of animals, charms to ward off cholera, and even
+charms to prevent domestic broils. This is surely evidence of high
+civilisation.
+
+It would be hopeless to endeavour to exhaust this subject. Only a few
+selected instances can be given to illustrate how large a part magic has
+played, and still plays, in the healing art. Medicine is by no means freed
+of its superstitions yet, and the success of quack advertisements of the
+day abundantly proves that the civilised public is still prone to believe
+that universal remedies are obtainable, and that miracles can be wrought.
+
+Modern medical science, as one of its great exponents has pointed out,
+plays a waiting game when miracles are spoken of, and when magic is
+claimed to supersede specific remedies. "When it is asked to believe in
+the violent and erratic violation of laws of matter and force, science
+stands on an impregnable rock, fenced round by bulwarks of logical fact,
+and flanked by the bastions of knowledge of nature and her constitution."
+And as exact knowledge spreads, Prospero will have no alternative but to
+break his staff, and bury it fathoms deep.
+
+
+
+
+Chaucer's Doctor of Physic.
+
+BY W. H. THOMPSON.
+
+
+In the "Canterbury Tales" we have an inimitable gallery of fourteenth
+century portraits, drawn from life, with all a great master's delicacy of
+finish and touch. And in none of these pictures does Chaucer excel himself
+more than in that of his "Doctor of Physic." We may take it for granted
+that the portrait is no mere fanciful one, with its pre-Raphaelite
+minuteness of detail, sketched with the poet's own peculiar skill. With
+what mischievous and yet altogether playful and good-natured humour is the
+man of medicine presented to us!
+
+ "With us there was a doctour of phisike
+ In all this world ne was there none like him
+ To speak of phisike and of surgerie."
+
+What manner of man was this paragon of medical knowledge? In personal
+appearance he was somewhat of an exquisite. "Clothes are unspeakably
+significant" saith the immortal Teufelsdrockh, and every practitioner who
+has his _clientele_ largely yet to make knows the importance of being
+well dressed. Chaucer's grave graduate was apparelled in a purple surcoat,
+and a blue and white furred hood.
+
+ "In sanguine and in perse he clad was all
+ Lined with taffata and with sendall,"
+
+and yet no luxurious sybarite by any means was he,
+
+ "Of his diet measureable was he,
+ For it was no superfluity,
+ But of great nourishing and digestable."
+
+A man of simple habits, even perhaps given to holding his purse strings
+somewhat tightly.
+
+ "He was but easy of expense,
+ He kept that he won in pestilence."
+
+For, as the poet adds with his characteristic merry sly humour,
+
+ "Gold in physic is a cordial,
+ Therefore he loved gold in special."
+
+The science of medicine since Chaucer's day has made extraordinary
+advances, and it is only fair to judge his doctor by contemporary
+standards. To-day, we fear, he would be largely regarded as little better
+than a charlatan and a quack. It is true, he was acquainted with all the
+authorities, ancient and modern, from AEsculapius and Galen down to
+Gaddesden, the author of the "Rosa Anglica," the great English book of
+fourteenth century medicine. But this last named luminary of physic would
+aid him very little on the road to true knowledge. This medical "Rose,"
+which Leland calls a "large and learned work," only serves to illustrate
+the impotence of the professors of the healing arts at that period. This
+is the recipe of Gaddesden for the small-pox. "After this (the appearance
+of the eruption) cause the whole body of your patient to be wrapped in red
+scarlet cloth, and command everything about the bed to be made red. This
+is an excellent cure. It was in this manner I treated the son of the noble
+king of England when he had the small-pox, and I cured him without leaving
+any marks." To cure epilepsy, he orders the patient "and his parents" to
+fast three days, and then go to church. "The patient must first confess,
+and he must have mass on Friday and Saturday, and then on Sunday the
+priest must read over the patient's head the gospel for September, in the
+time of vintage after the feast of the Holy Cross. After this the priest
+shall write out this portion of the gospel reverently, and bind it about
+the patient's neck, and he shall be cured." If epilepsy was to be
+exorcised by such a remedy as this, we venture to assert that it must have
+been largely a case of faith-healing.
+
+[Illustration: GEOFFREY CHAUCER.
+
+(_From Harleian M.S.--4866 fol. 91._)]
+
+Seeing then that such was the condition of the science of medicine in
+Chaucer's days, we must take with a good deal of reservation his statement
+that his doctor
+
+ "Knew the cause of every malady
+ Were it of cold, or hot, or moist, or dry,
+ And where engendered, and of what humour."
+
+Anyhow, some of the remedies prescribed for the "sick man," and the
+"drugs," which his friends the apothecaries were so ready to supply, would
+have seemed extraordinary enough to us.
+
+The poet tells us the doctor's study was but "little in the Bible," and
+that though a "perfect practitioner," the ground of his scientific
+knowledge was astronomy, _i.e._, astrology; the "better part of medicine,"
+as Roger Bacon calls it. In dealing with his patients he was guided by
+"natural magic."
+
+To this practice Chaucer alludes in another of his poems, the "House of
+Fame."
+
+ "And clerks eke, which con well,
+ All this magic naturell,
+ That craftily do her intents,
+ To make in certain ascendents,
+ Images--lo through which magic,
+ To make a man be whole or sick."
+
+So that in spite of what appears to us the charlatanry in his make up, the
+doctor was supposed to be a person of importance in the eyes of his fellow
+pilgrims, with quite the standing of an accredited medical man of to-day,
+is evidenced by the manner in which mine host Bailly addresses him. Master
+Bailly was no particular respecter of persons, indeed, on the contrary, he
+was somewhat of a Philistine; yet he was all respect to this man of
+medicine. It is as "Sir" Doctor of Physic, the host addresses him; also
+declaring him to be a "proper man," and like a prelate. After the story of
+chicanery related by the Canon's Yeoman, it is to the physician he looks
+to tell a tale of "honest matter." Such is his bearing towards him
+throughout.
+
+The doctor's contribution to the "Canterbury Tales," too, is of a serious,
+sober kind, in keeping with his character; and concludes with some sound
+moral advice. Therefore, whatever foibles he may have, the "doctor of
+physic" is presented to us as a sterling gentleman, no unworthy
+predecessor of those who to-day, on more modern lines, still follow in his
+footsteps.
+
+
+
+
+The Doctors Shakespeare Knew.
+
+BY A. H. WALL.
+
+ "O, mickle is the powerful grace that lies
+ In herbs, plants, shrubs, and their true qualities.
+ For nought so vile that on the earth doth live
+ But to the earth some special good doth give;
+ Nor ought so good, but, strained from that fair use
+ Revolts from true birth, stumbling on abuse."
+ --_Romeo and Juliet._
+
+ "By medicine life may be prolong'd."--_Cymbeline V. 5._
+
+
+In Walckenaer's "Memoirs of Madame de Sevigne," and in the amusing,
+interesting volume which Gaston Boissier devoted to her works and letters,
+we have glimpses of the medical profession in France, which show us it was
+in her time and country, just what it was in England in the same century
+when it was known to Shakespeare. For one more or less genuine physician
+there were thousands of charlatans and quacks, and the contempt which our
+great dramatic poet frequently expresses in his works for medical
+practitioners must, in fairness, be regarded as applicable to the latter,
+not to the former. In 1884, an American writer on this subject (Dr. Rush
+Field, in his "Medical Thoughts of Shakespeare") strove to show that our
+great philosophic poet and playwright's opinion of all the medical
+practitioners was a low one. "He uses them frequently," he says, "as a
+tool by which deaths are produced through the means of poison, and
+generally treats them with contempt." That he might fairly do this, and
+that in doing it he rather displayed respect and regard for the genuine,
+more or less scientific professors of the healing art, can be very readily
+demonstrated by anyone at all familiar with his plays. But to return to
+Madame de Sevigne. At a time when she was growing old, when her letters
+speak so sadly of the dying condition of Cardinal de Retz at Commercy, of
+Madame de la Fayette's being consumed by slow fever, and La Roche confined
+to his armchair by gout, of Corbinelle's threatened insanity, and of his
+taking "potable gold" as a remedy for headache, she writes also of
+small-pox and other fevers having permanently settled at Versailles and
+Saint-Germain, where the King and Queen were attacked, and ladies and
+gentlemen of the Court were decimated, and cases of apoplexy and
+rheumatism were rapidly increasing in every direction. "Fashionable folk,
+used up with pleasure-making, sick through disappointed ambition,
+fidgetting without motive, agitating without aim, tainted with morbid
+fancies and suspicion," found themselves in the doctor's hands, and were
+far more ready to select practitioners who promised magically swift and
+easy cures, than those who spoke of slow and gradual recovery by means
+which were neither painless nor pleasurable. "Everybody," says Boissur,
+"women included, battled with one another to possess marvellous secrets
+whereby obstinate complaints should be immediately cured. Madame Fouquet
+applied a plaster to the dying Queen, which cured her, to the great
+scandal of the Faculty unable to save her; and the Princess de Tarente
+served out drugs to all her people at Vitre.
+
+[Illustration: WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE.
+
+(_The Stratford Portrait._)]
+
+Madame Sevigne wrote of her as "the best doctor in the upper classes; she
+has rare and valuable compounds of which she gives us three pinches with
+prodigious effect." When writing to her daughter, she begs her not to
+neglect taking such medicines as "cherry water," "extract of periwinkles,"
+"viper-broth," "uric acid," and "powdered crab's-eyes." She says the
+extract of periwinkles "endowed Madame de Grignam with a second youth."
+Writing to her daughter, "If you use it, when you re-appear so fair
+people will cry, 'O'er what blessed flower can she have walked,' then I
+will answer 'On the periwinkle.'" She tells, too, how the Capuchins, who
+still retained their ancient medical reputation, treated the rheumatism in
+her leg "with plants bruised and applied twice a day; taken off while wet
+twice a day, and buried in the earth, so that as they rotted away her
+pains might in like way decrease." "It's a pity you ran and told the
+surgeons this," she says to her daughter, "for they roar with laughter at
+it, but I do not care a fig for them." In like way Madame de Scudery tells
+Bassy, "There is an abbe here who is making a great bother by curing by
+sympathy. For fever of all kinds, so they say, he takes the patient's
+spittle and mingles it with an egg, and gives it to a dog; the dog dies
+and the patient recovers.... They say he has cured a quantity of people."
+
+Turning from these illustrations of medical practice in France to see how
+identical it is with that adopted in England when Shakespeare lived, we
+recall the advice of that eminent gentleman, Andrew Rourde, who recommends
+people to wash their faces once a week only, using a scarlet cloth to wipe
+them dry upon, as a sure remedy in certain cases. In other instances we
+find that certain pills made from the skulls of murderers taken down from
+gibbets, and ground to powder for that purpose, were popular as medicine,
+that a draught of water drunk from a murdered man's skull had wonderful
+medicinal properties, and that the blood of a dragon was absolutely
+miraculous in the cures it effected. The touch of a dead man's hand was
+another ghastly remedy in common use, and the powder of mummy was a
+wonderful cure for certain grave complaints. Love-philtres were also
+regarded from a medicinal point of view, and the strange doings of quack
+_accoucheurs_ are not less absurdly terrible. That the seventeenth century
+physician himself was not always proof against these products of ancient
+ignorance and superstition, is abundantly apparent. Van Helmont, the son
+of a nobleman, born in Brussels, and very carefully educated for his
+profession, practised both medicine and magic medicinally. He rejected
+Galen, inclined to that illiterate pretender Paracelsus, and determined
+that the only way by which he could defy disease, and utterly destroy it,
+was through what he called _Archaeus_. Speaking of digestion, for instance,
+he denied that it was either chemical or mechanical in its nature, but the
+result of this _Archaeus_, a spiritual activity, working in a very
+mysteriously complicated way, for both evil and good. It has been said
+that he was one of Lord Bacon's disciples, but for that assertion there
+certainly is no sufficient foundation, for Bacon, if a mystic by
+inclination, was logical in reasoning. In England Van Helmont had an
+English follower in the person of another physician, Dr. Fludd, a disciple
+of the famous inventor of the camera obscura, and conjecturally the first
+photographer. His grand quack remedy was "the powder of sympathy," which
+was the "sword-salve" of Paracelsus (composed of moss taken from the skull
+of a gibbetted murderer, of warm human blood, human suet, linseed oil,
+turpentine, etc.). This was applied, not to the wound, but to the sword
+that inflicted it, kept "in a cool place!" Certain plants pulled up with
+the left hand were regarded as a sure remedy in fever cases, but the
+gatherer, while gathering, was not to look behind, for that deprived the
+plants of their medicinal value.
+
+Amongst other physicians of Shakespeare's century was Mr. Valentine
+Greatrake, who came to London from Ireland, where his supposed magical
+cures had been awakening a great sensation. He hired a large house in
+Lincoln's Inn Fields, to which vast crowds of patients of all kinds and
+conditions crowded daily, all clamouring to be cured. He received them in
+their order, says an eye-witness, with "a grave and simple countenence."
+For, as Shakespeare wrote, "Thus credulous fools are caught." ("Comedy of
+Errors," 1, 2.) Greatrake (afterwards executed for high treason) asserted
+that every diseased person was possessed by a devil, and that by his
+prayers and laying on of hands the devil could be cast out. Lord Conway
+sent for him to cure an incurable disease from which his wife was
+suffering, and even some of the most learned and eminent people of the
+time were amongst his patrons. St. Evremond wrote, "You can hardly imagine
+what a reputation he gained in a short time. Catholics and Protestants
+visited him from every part, all believing that power from heaven was in
+his hands."
+
+In an Act of Parliament which was passed in the year 1511, we read, in its
+preamble, that "the science and cunning of Physic and Surgery" was
+exercised by "a great multitude of ignorant persons, of whom the greater
+part have no manner of insight in the same, nor in any other kind of
+learning--some also can read no letters in the book--so far forth that
+common artificers, as smiths, weavers, and women, boldly and accostumably
+took upon them great cures, and things of great difficulty, in which they
+partly used sorceries and witchcraft, and partly supplied such medicines
+unto the diseased as are very noisome, and nothing meet therefore; to the
+high displeasure of God," etc.
+
+A large number of the pretended remedies thus used in medical practice are
+clearly traceable back to the ancient Magi, who were professors of
+medicine, as well as priests and astrologers.
+
+With these facts before you, turn to your Shakespeare, and see how he
+regarded the popular delusions thus created and fostered, with their
+
+ "Distinguished cheaters, prating mountebanks,
+ And many such libertines of sin."
+ --_Comedy of Errors._
+
+Do you remember the other lines from this source, in which the poet speaks
+of "This pernicious slave," who "forsooth took on him as a conjurer, and,
+gazing in mine eyes, feeling my pulse, and with no face, as't were,
+outfacing me, cried out I was possessed." This is not the stern, grave
+doctor in "Macbeth," who did not pretend to "raze out the written troubles
+of the brain," but said, "Therein the patient must minister unto himself."
+There is no depreciation of the healing art in Shakespeare's painting of
+Lear's physician, as there is of the "caitiff wretch" of an apothecary,
+who sold poison to Romeo in a very different way to that in which the
+physician in Cymbeline supplied a deadly drug to the Queen. "I beseech
+your grace," says he, speaking in solemn earnestness, "without offence
+(my conscience bids me ask) wherefore you have commanded of me these most
+poisonous compounds." In "All's well that Ends Well," you will recognize
+the foregoing descriptions of medicinal delusions in the interview between
+Helena and the King, who says, we "may not be so credulous of cure, when
+our most learned doctors leave us, and the congregated college have
+concluded that labouring art can never ransom Nature from her maid estate,
+I say we must not so stain our judgment, or corrupt our hope, to
+prostitute our past-cure malady to empirics." In this play both "Galen and
+Paracelsus" are mentioned, and their names then represented rival schools
+of medicine.
+
+How smartly and merrily Shakespeare wrote of such cures as Greatrake
+professed to effect, we see in Henry VI., where Simpcox, supposed to be
+miraculously cured of blindness, is asked to and does describe what he
+sees, "If thou _hadst_ been born blind, thou might'st as well have known
+all our names as thus to name the several colours we do wear."
+
+In the "Merry Wives of Windsor" we have "Master Caius that calls himself
+doctor of physic," and is called by Dame Quickly a "fool and physician."
+The two were in Shakespeare's time very commonly combined, and often, as
+we have shown, very strangely. Dr. Caius was a real name borne by a
+learned gentleman who was physician to Queen Elizabeth. In Cymbeline the
+name of the physician is Cornelius. This again was the name of a real
+physician, who, in the sixteenth century, gained great reputation in
+Europe chiefly by restoring Charles V. to health after a tediously long
+illness. We may presume that Shakespeare was familiar with the fact.
+
+Amongst the doctors of our poet's time it was a common custom to throw up
+cases when they believed them hopeless. Shakespeare's Sempronius says,
+"His friends, like physicians, thrice gave him o'er," and Lord Bacon in
+his work on "The Advancement of Learning," says of Physicians, "In the
+enquiry of diseases, they do abandon the cures of many, some as in their
+nature incurable, and others as past the period of cure, so that Sylla
+triumvirs never prescribed so many men to die as they do by their ignorant
+edicts." We have spoken of the sword-salve cure for wounds. Of dealers in
+poison who visited fairs and market-places, and attracted crowds by the
+aid of a stage fool, we get a glimpse in "Hamlet," where Laertes says:--
+
+ "I bought an unction of a mountebank,
+ So mortal, that but dip a knife in it,
+ Where it draws blood, no cataplasm so rare
+ Collected from all simples that have virtue,
+ Under the moon can save the thing from death."
+
+There is a hit at doctors who gave others remedies they had not enough
+faith in to adopt for themselves:--
+
+ "Thou speak'st like a physician, Helicarnus:
+ Who minister'st a potion unto me
+ That thou would'st tremble to receive thyself."
+ --_Pericles._
+
+In the same play the true physician receives full appreciation. Cerimon
+says of himself:--
+
+ "'Tis known, I ever
+ Have studied physic, through which secret art,
+ By turning o'er authorities, I have
+ Together with my practice, made familiar
+ To me, and to my aid, the blest infusions
+ That dwell in vegitives, in metals, stones.
+ And I can speake of the disturbances
+ That nature works, and of her cures; which doth give me
+ A more content in course of true delight
+ Than to be thirsty after tottering honour,
+ Or tie my treasure up in silken bags,
+ To please the fool, and death."
+
+And one of the two listening gentlemen adds:--
+
+ "Your honour has through Ephesus pour'd forth
+ Your charity, and hundreds call themselves
+ Your creatures, who by you have been restored."
+
+And Pericles, with his supposed dead wife in his arms, turning to Cerimon,
+who has saved her from the grave, says:--
+
+ "Reverend Sir,
+ The gods can have no mortal officer
+ More like a god than you."
+
+And Gower, speaking the concluding lines of the play, adds:--
+
+ "In reverend Cerimon there well appears
+ The worth that learned charity aye wears."
+
+ "_Cerimon_: I hold it ever
+ Virtue and cunning (wisdom) were endowment greater
+ Than nobleness and riches...."
+
+There was, perhaps, when Shakespeare wrote the above lines, some thought
+of the Elizabethan nobleman, Edmund, Earl of Derby, who "was famous for
+chirurgerie, bone-setting, and hospitalite," as Ward says in his Diary; of
+the Marquis of Dorchester, who in his time was a Fellow of the College of
+Surgeons; or of the poet's son-in-law, Dr. Hall, a gentleman who resided
+in Stratford-on-Avon, in a fine old half timber house still standing, and
+known as Hall's Croft. To his wife, the poet's elder daughter, Shakespeare
+bequeathed his house and grounds, which Dr. Hall occupied when he died.
+His grave is near that of his glorious father-in-law, and on it is the
+following inscription:--
+
+ "HERE LYETH Y{E} BODY OF JOHN HALL,
+ GENT: HE MARR: SVSANNA Y{E} DAUGHTER
+ AND CO HEIRE OF WILL. SHAKESPEARE,
+ GENT. HEE DECEASED NOVE{R} 25 A{O} 1635
+ AGED 60.
+
+ Hallius hic situs est medica celeberrimus arte
+ Expectans regni gaudia laeta Dei
+ Dignus erat meritis qui Nestora vinceret annis,
+ In terris omnes, sed rapit aequa dies;
+ Ne tumulo, quid desit adest fidissima conjux
+ Et vitae Comitem nunc quoque mortis habet."
+
+
+
+
+Dickens' Doctors.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+Dickens, it must be admitted by even the greatest admirers of his
+inimitable genius, among whom the writer of this paper must be counted,
+was not successful in his delineations of the medical profession. Though
+his most humorous as well as his most pathetic pictures of human life are
+drawn from the humbler walks in the pilgrimage of humanity, he has given
+us some good touches of his skill in his presentments of other
+professions, and notably of lawyers and lawyers' clerks. Nothing in
+fiction can excel his legal characters in, for instance, "Bleak
+House,"--his Mr. Tulkinghorn, Mr. Guppy, the clerk, and Mr. Snagsby, the
+law stationer. But a life-like doctor cannot be found in his works, and
+the nearest approaches to such a description are the merest sketches.
+
+The most strongly marked of these are Dr. Parker Peps and Mr. Pilkins, the
+two members of the faculty who officiate at the closing scene in the life
+of Mrs. Dombey, in which a sense of humour, with difficulty suppressed by
+the author, mingles with the touching sadness of the death. Dr. Parker
+Peps, "one of the Court physicians, and a man of immense reputation for
+assisting at the increase of great families," is introduced "walking up
+and down the drawing-room with his hands behind him, to the unspeakable
+admiration of the family surgeon, who had regularly puffed the case for
+the last six weeks among all his friends and acquaintances as one to which
+he was in hourly expectation, day and night, of being summoned in
+conjunction with Dr. Parker Peps." But in this little interlude, the two
+actors in which do not appear again, the obsequiousness of Mr. Pilkins to
+the Court physician, and the manner in which the latter, with assumed
+obliviousness, substitutes "her grace, the duchess" or "her ladyship" for
+Mrs. Dombey, verge on caricature, a tendency Dickens seems to have had at
+all times some difficulty in resisting.
+
+Of Dr. Slammer also we have only a sketch, and that of the slightest
+character. Though he is described as "one of the most popular personages
+in his own circle," we gather from the incidents in which he appears only
+that he was very irascible. As we read of his furious jealousy of Jingle,
+and the interrupted duel with Winkle, who had received his challenge to
+the former by mistake, we wonder at the circle in which this "little fat
+man, with a ring of upright black hair round his head, and an extensive
+bald plain on the top of it," was one of the most popular personages.
+Harold Skimpole, we are told, had been educated for the medical
+profession; but his training seems to have left no traces of it upon his
+character or his conversation. He prefers to dabble in literature and
+music for his own amusement, and look to his friends for the means of
+living, too prosaic an occupation for himself.
+
+One of the best, but not quite the best, of the medical characters in
+Dickens' novels, is Allan Woodcourt, who "had gone out a poor ship's
+surgeon, and had come home nothing better,"--the young man hastily called
+in when the death of Nemo is discovered, in conjunction with "a testy
+medical man, brought from his dinner, with a broad snuffy upper lip, and a
+broad Scotch tongue." Allan Woodcourt has the kindness of heart which
+characterises the profession, and exemplifies it very pleasingly in the
+scene with the brickmaker's wife, and with poor Jo, the forlorn waif who
+is kept continually moving on by the police. How tenderly, too, he deals
+with Richard Carstone, the weak-minded victim of the long-drawn Chancery
+suit. And his head is as sound as his heart is soft. "You," says Richard
+to him, "can pursue your art for its own sake, and can put your hand to
+the plough and never turn; and can strike a purpose out of anything." What
+a world of difference we see in this briefly sketched trait to the want of
+earnestness of purpose and steadfastness of pursuit in the character of
+young Carstone!
+
+Even stronger testimony to the good qualities of Allan Woodcourt is borne
+by Mr. Jarndyce. Allan, says that gentleman, is "a man whose hopes and
+aims may sometimes lie (as most men's sometimes do, I dare say) above the
+ordinary level, but to whom the ordinary level will be high enough after
+all, if it should prove to be a way of usefulness and good service leading
+to no other. All generous spirits are ambitious, I suppose; but the
+ambition that calmly trusts itself to such a road, instead of
+spasmodically trying to fly over it, is the kind I care for. It is
+Woodcourt's kind." The love passages of this estimable young man with the
+equally estimable Esther Summerson, one of Dickens' most charming
+presentments of English maidenhood, are very pleasing, and none of them
+more so than one which occurs towards the close of the story.
+
+There is another medical character in one of the Christmas stories which,
+good as it is, might have been made better but for the extent to which the
+exigencies of space limited the author in the development of character in
+that class of stories. I mean Dr. Jeddler, the genial but mistaken father
+of Grace and Marion, in "The Battle of Life." The doctor is "a great
+philosopher, and the heart and mystery of his philosophy was to look upon
+the world as a gigantic practical joke; as something too absurd to be
+considered seriously by any practical man. His system of belief had been
+in the beginning part and parcel of the battle ground on which he lived."
+He is not of the cynical school, but a modern Democritus, whose
+inclination to laugh at everything on the surface of the ocean of life was
+irresistible, while there was nothing in the conditions of his existence
+to suggest anything that was beneath. When he hears his daughters
+conversing about their lovers, "his reflections as he looked after them,
+and heard the purport of their discourse, were limited at first to certain
+merry meditations on the folly of all loves and likings, and the idle
+imposition practised on themselves by young people who believe for a
+moment that there could be anything serious in such bubbles, and were
+always deceived--always."
+
+Dr. Jeddler is a widower; we are not told what his experiences of married
+life had been. Had they been unhappy, one would suppose that he would have
+been more disposed to be cynical and pessimistic than to regard life's
+incidents as provocative of merriment, yet, if they had been happy, why
+should he have regarded the engagement of Grace as an idle folly, a bubble
+on life's surface, soon to burst? Dickens' explanation is, from this point
+of view, scarcely satisfactory. "He was sorry," says the novelist, "for
+her sake--sorry for them both--that life should be such a very ridiculous
+business as it was. The doctor never dreamed of inquiring whether his
+children, or either of them, helped in any way to make the scheme a
+serious one. But then he was a philosopher. A kind and generous man by
+nature, he had stumbled by chance over that common philosopher's stone
+(much more easily discovered than the object of the alchemist's
+researches) which sometimes trips up kind and generous men, and has the
+fatal property of turning gold to dross, and every precious thing to poor
+account."
+
+But when sorrow had humbled the doctor's heart, he felt that the world in
+which some love, deep-anchored, is the portion of every human creature,
+was more serious than he had thought it, and understood "how such a trifle
+as the absence of a little unit in the great absurd account had stricken
+him to the ground." Then, when he and his daughters are again together in
+the old home, and his arms are about them both, we find him acknowledging
+that "It's a world full of hearts, and a serious world with all its
+folly,--even with mine, which was enough to swamp the whole world."
+
+It is to be observed, however, that while we find all the traits and
+incidents of professional life in the lawyers of Dickens' creation, there
+is little or nothing of the kind in his doctors. Such traits are abundant
+in his presentments of Tulkinghorn, and Kenge, and Vholes in Wickfield,
+and many others that might be named; but they are so completely absent
+from his portrayals of Allan Woodcourt and Dr. Jeddler, that the two men
+might as well have been of any other profession, without any loss to the
+stories in which they appear. If we compare them with his lawyers, or with
+the clergymen of Mrs. Oliphant, we are struck at once with the difference.
+
+[Illustration: CHARLES DICKENS.]
+
+This is not the case, however, when from the full-blown medical
+practitioner, adding to his name the initials M.D. or M.R.C.S., we descend
+to the "sawbones in training," as the facetious Sam Weller designates the
+young men qualifying themselves for the exercise of the profession by
+"walking the hospitals." The medical students of the novelist's early
+days were--it would perhaps be fairer to say that a large proportion of
+them were--a turbulent and disorderly element in the social life of the
+metropolis. The newspapers of the day record their frequent appearances at
+the Bow Street and Marlborough Street police-courts on charges of rowdyism
+in the streets at or after midnight, when they came out from their
+favourite places of amusement, the Coal Hole, in the Strand, the Cider
+Cellars, in Maiden Lane, and the Judge and Jury Club, in Leicester Square,
+the latter presided over by Renton Nicholson, who edited a vile
+publication called _The Town_. Their after-amusements were found in
+strolling through the streets in threes and fours, singing at the top of
+their voices comic songs, that often outraged propriety, ringing door
+bells, and chaffing the police. Dickens must often in his reporting days
+have witnessed the next morning appearances of these young men at Bow
+Street police-court.
+
+The first appearance of two specimens of this variety of the immature
+medico in the humorous pages of the "Pickwick Papers" is described as
+follows in the low cockney vernacular of Sam Weller. "One on 'em," he
+tells Mr. Pickwick, "has got his legs on the table, and is a-drinkin'
+brandy neat, vile the tother one--him in the barnacles--has got a barrel
+of oysters atween his knees, vich he's a-openin' like steam, and as fast
+as he eats 'em he takes a aim with the shells at young Dropsy, who's
+a-sittin' down fast asleep in the chimbley corner." The latter gentleman
+is Mr. Benjamin Allen, who is described by the novelist as "a coarse,
+stout, thick-set young man, with black hair cut rather short, and a white
+face cut rather long. He was embellished with spectacles, and wore a white
+neckerchief. Below his single-breasted black surtout, which was buttoned
+up to his chin, appeared the usual number of pepper-and-salt coloured
+legs, terminating in a pair of imperfectly polished boots. Although his
+coat was short in the sleeves, it disclosed no vestige of a linen
+wristband, and although there was quite enough of his face to admit of the
+encroachment of a shirt-collar, it was not graced by the smallest approach
+to that appendage. He presented altogether rather a mildewy appearance,
+and emitted a fragrant odour of full-flavoured Cubas."
+
+This gentleman's companion is Mr. Bob Sawyer, "who was habited in a coarse
+blue coat which, without being either a great-coat or a surtout, partook
+of the nature and qualities of both," and "had about him that sort of
+slovenly smartness and swaggering gait which is peculiar to young
+gentlemen who smoke in the streets by day, shout and scream in the same by
+night, call waiters by their Christian names, and do various other acts
+and deeds of an equally facetious description. He wore a pair of plaid
+trousers and a large rough double-breasted waistcoat: out of doors he
+carried a thick stick with a big top. He eschewed gloves, and looked, upon
+the whole, something like a dissipated Robinson Crusoe." The conversation
+of these budding surgeons is perfectly in harmony with their outward
+aspect. Their discourse, when it assumes a serious character, is of the
+"cases" at the hospital and the "subjects" at the time being on the
+dissecting tables of the anatomical lecture-rooms. When relieved from
+attendance at the hospitals, they lounge at tavern bars, and flirt with
+barmaids and waitresses, to whom their attentions are not unfrequently of
+an objectionable character, and less agreeable than they imagine them to
+be.
+
+The contrast between the graphic power displayed by Dickens in his
+delineation of the characters of Bob Sawyer and Ben Allen, and the
+indistinctiveness, as to profession, of his presentments of Allan
+Woodcourt and Dr. Jeddler, may help us to understand the causes which
+render his doctors so much less effective than his lawyers. The legal
+profession presents more variety than the medical, and comes before us
+more prominently in conjunction with incidents of a striking character, as
+may be seen every day in the newspaper records of the courts of law and of
+police. The physician and the surgeon stand as much apart, in these
+respects, from the busy barrister or solicitor as the clergy do. Dickens
+has not given us a clerical portrait, and probably for a similar reason.
+Mrs. Oliphant, on the other hand, excels in her delineations of every
+grade of the Anglican hierarchy; but her genius as a writer of fiction
+runs in a groove essentially different from that of Dickens.
+
+
+
+
+Famous Literary Doctors.
+
+BY CUMING WALTERS.
+
+
+Medical men have not so commonly made literature an extra pursuit, or
+adopted it as a serious calling, as have the members of the other liberal
+professions. It is quite expected that a clergyman should write poems,
+philosophical essays, and perhaps even a novel with a purpose; and it is
+usual to recruit the ranks of critics extensively from the law, and to
+trust to briefless barristers for a continuous supply of romances. No
+detail is more frequently discovered in the biographies of eminent authors
+than that they were called to the Bar, and either never practised or
+forsook practising in order to engage in literary labours. Indeed, it
+might almost seem that failure in law was the most important step towards
+success in authorship. No such rule applies, however, to medical men, and
+no such comment would be justified in their case. Not only do we find the
+writing of books--otherwise than text-books and technical
+treatises--rarer with them, but it curiously happens that in most
+instances it has been the successful practitioner, not the man walking the
+hospitals or waiting for calls, who has turned author. And we shall find
+that these medico-literati (if I may coin the phrase) have often been
+among the most hard-working in their profession, and the wonder is that
+they were able to enter upon a second pursuit and to follow it with so
+much zeal. For, in most of the examples I shall advance, literature was
+more than a pastime with these men who indulged in it. It was chosen by
+some for its lucrativeness, and by the majority for its capacity to
+enhance their reputation or to bring them enduring fame. This much may be
+safely said, that the names of many excellent doctors would have faded
+from public remembrance ere this, and would have passed away with the
+generation to which they belonged, had not literature given them lasting
+luminance. In not a few instances the fact is already forgotten or wholly
+ignored that certain successful writers once wrote "M.D." after their
+names. Who cares that the author of that classic "Religio Medici" took his
+degrees at Leyden and at Oxford, and dispensed medicine to the end of his
+life? Who cares that the author of "The Borough," "Tales in Verse," and
+"The Parish Register," was apprenticed to a surgeon? Who cares that the
+writer of such dramas as "Virginius," "William Tell," and "The Hunchback,"
+was trained for a physician? Who cares that the author of "Roderick
+Random," "Peregrine Pickle," and "The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker" was
+a surgeon's assistant and acted as surgeon's mate in the unfortunate
+Carthagena expedition, before trying (unsuccessfully) to obtain a practice
+in London? And, above all, who cares that the author of "The Deserted
+Village" and "The Vicar of Wakefield" studied physic in Edinburgh and on
+the Continent, and, as Boswell was informed, "was enabled to pursue his
+travels on foot, partly by demanding at Universities to enter the lists as
+a disputant, by which, according to the custom of many of them, he was
+entitled to the premium of a crown, when luckily for him his challenge was
+not accepted?" Such are a few of the examples which immediately occur to
+the mind when the whole subject is contemplated.
+
+It would be impossible in the compass of a short article to deal
+systematically and comprehensively with doctors who became authors, or to
+make out a complete list of their names with an account of the works which
+entitled them to the designation. Any facts now adduced must be considered
+arbitrary and capricious, so far as the choice of them is concerned; and
+sequence is so little attempted that the reader will pardon, I trust, a
+possible leap from Galen to Goldsmith, from Sir Thomas Browne to Tobias
+Smollett, and from Sir John Blackmore to Conan Doyle. I put aside those
+members of the profession who have simply written on professional
+subjects. Their name is legion, but in the great majority of cases such
+work as this would not strictly justify their inclusion among the
+literati. And, on the other hand, we cannot find a place in the category
+for such men as Goethe or Sainte-Beuve, for though both studied
+medicine, it seems to have been purely with a view to the extension of
+their knowledge and not with any more practical or material object.
+Sainte-Beuve, it is true, for a short time in his youth entertained some
+thought of adopting the profession; but Goethe only dipped into the
+subject with the same spirit that he dipped into experimental chemistry
+and astrology.
+
+Let us, then, refer to a few types certain of instant recognition. The
+most notable of modern instances is Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, a
+specialist in his profession, a hard-working physician, and the author of
+valuable treatises on medical art, who nevertheless occupied the position
+of being among the four chief poets whom America has produced, and one of
+the most versatile of the litterateurs of the century. He went to the
+Paris Medical Schools shortly after he had graduated at Harvard; he
+practised as a physician at Boston; and for nearly forty years he was
+Professor of Physiology. Yet he had time to write the most delightful and
+original of philosophical essays, to publish novels of which at least
+one--"Elsie Venner: A Romance of Destiny"--will rank as a classic; to
+deliver orations and after-dinner speeches in sparkling verse, and to
+write exquisite poems in rich and felicitous language on a wonderful
+variety of themes, the complete collection of which makes a very
+substantial volume. In all his work Dr. Holmes showed himself to be the
+profound student of nature and of humanity with many varying interests;
+yet we can often trace the hand of the physician in the work of the
+essayist and poet. His novels were special studies which only the ardent
+physiologist and metaphysician would have cared to discuss, or, at all
+events, would have discussed so well. Both "Elsie Venner" and "The
+Guardian Angel" deal with the occult problems of heredity, and those
+problems are treated with the power of the specialist in certain branches
+of science. Still more strongly is the character of the medical man
+displayed in a number of the poems, some by reason of their subject, and
+some by the figures and imagery they contain. The well-known "Stethoscope
+Song" will immediately suggest itself in illustration. But, for purposes
+of quotation, I prefer a less popular poem of rare beauty, which more
+strikingly manifests the writer's power of transmuting the hard dry facts
+of science into light and gleaming poetry. I refer to what he called at
+first "The Anatomist's Hymn," but afterwards "The Living Temple." It is
+one of the interpolated poems in the "Autocrat" series of papers, and to
+my thinking invests the human body and its physical functions with
+unimagined charms.
+
+Take, for instance, this poetic exposition of our respiration, the
+scientific correctness and exactness of which need no explanation to
+readers of this volume:--
+
+ "The smooth, soft air with pulse-like waves
+ Flows murmuring through its hidden caves,
+ Whose streams of brightening purple rush
+ Fired with a new and livelier blush,
+ While all their burden of decay
+ The ebbing current steals away,
+ And red with Nature's flame they start
+ From the warm fountains of the heart.
+
+ No rest that throbbing slave may ask,
+ For ever quivering o'er his task,
+ While far and wide a crimson jet
+ Leaps forth to fill the woven net
+ Which in unnumbered crossing tides
+ The flood of burning life divides,
+ Then kindling each decaying part
+ Creeps back to find the throbbing heart.
+
+ But warmed with that unchanging flame
+ Behold the outward moving frame,
+ Its living marbles jointed strong
+ With glistening band and silvery thong,
+ And linked to reason's guiding reins
+ By myriad rings in trembling chains,
+ Each graven with the threaded zone
+ Which claims it as the master's own."
+
+There is an almost irresistible temptation to linger over Dr. Oliver
+Wendell Holmes' books, so intensely interesting is his personality and so
+fascinating is his work. But several other eminent poets of the
+profession demand attention. To Crabbe's connection with surgery I have
+already incidentally referred, and inasmuch as he early abandoned the
+calling for the ministry, little need be said except that his youthful
+experience may have aided him in writing a scathing denunciation of the
+Quack, who believed wholly in the potence of "oxymel of squills," and of
+the Parish Doctor, who "first insults the victim whom he kills." The poet
+was a severe castigator, and was never less forbearing with the lash than
+when these impostors of his day were under his hand for flagellation. In
+Mark Akenside we come to a better specimen of the class which we are
+considering. At the age of twenty he went to Leyden, and three years later
+became, (as Dr. Johnson writes) "a doctor of physick, having, according to
+the custom of the Dutch Universities, published a thesis." In the same
+year he published "The Pleasures of the Imagination," his greatest work.
+This was followed by a collection of odes, but he still sought a
+livelihood as a physician. Little success attended him, however, and Dr.
+Johnson records that Akenside was known as a poet better than as a doctor,
+and would have been reduced to great exigencies but for the generosity of
+an ardent friend. "Thus supported, he gradually advanced in medical
+reputation, but never attained any great extent of practice, or eminence
+of popularity. A physician in a great city," his biographer continues
+musingly, "seems to be the mere play-thing of Fortune; his degree of
+reputation is, for the most part, totally casual; they that employ him,
+know not his excellence; they that reject him, know not his deficiency."
+Yet it was otherwise with Sir Samuel Garth, doctor and poet, of whom
+Johnson himself records that "by his conversation and accomplishments he
+obtained a very extensive practice." His principal poem was "The
+Dispensary," relating to a controversy of the time between the College of
+Physicians, who desired to give gratuitous advice to the poor, and the
+Apothecaries, who wished to keep up the high price of medicine. Garth was
+"on the side of charity against the intrigues of interest, and of regular
+learning against licentious usurpation of medical authority," as Johnson
+put it; and he sprang into favour, was eventually knighted, and became
+physician-general to the army. His last literary work, and his worst, was
+a crude but ostentatious preface to a translation of Ovid. As a matter of
+fact his writing was invariably mediocre, and Pope, in calling attention
+to the fact that the "Dispensary" poem had been corrected in every
+edition, unkindly remarked that "every change was an improvement." John
+Phillips, who may be ranked among the physicians, though it is doubtful
+whether he practised, enjoyed a better fate as a man of letters than did
+either Akenside or Garth. He sprang into sudden popularity by the
+publication of a whimsical and clever medley called "The Silver Shilling,"
+and this he followed up by a sort of official commemoration of the victory
+of Blenheim. His greatest achievement was a poem in two books on "Cider,"
+and he was meditating an epic on "The Last Day" when he died, at the early
+age of thirty-three. One curious fact about his writings, small as it is,
+is worthy of mention. He sang the praises of tobacco in every poem he
+wrote, except that on Blenheim.
+
+Dr. Johnson did not rate Phillips very highly; he said that what study
+could confer he obtained, but that "natural deficience cannot be
+supplied." The sturdy doctor, however, did his utmost to rehabilitate the
+damaged reputation of Blackmore, whom we may regard as the most
+remarkable of all the compounds of physician-poets with whom we can become
+acquainted. Blackmore obtained an undeserved success, which was followed
+by unmerited ridicule, and Johnson, who hated every form of injustice,
+constituted himself his champion. For the truth about Blackmore we must
+seek the medium between the extremes of Johnson's praise and of the
+censure of his enemies--the "malignity of contemporary wits," as Boswell
+termed it. When all is said and done the fact remains that Blackmore was a
+man of uncommon character, and a prodigious worker. His first work, a
+heroic poem in ten books, on Prince Arthur, was written, he related, by
+"such catches and starts, and in such occasional uncertain hours as his
+profession afforded, and for the greatest part in coffee-houses, or in
+passing up and down the streets." This work passed through several
+editions with rapidity, and two extra books were added to it. The King
+knighted him and gave him other advances, but the critics furiously
+assailed him, and his name became a by-word for all that was heavy and
+ridiculous in poetry. Notwithstanding this he persevered, and published
+successively a "Paraphrase on the Book of Job," a "Satire on Wit,"
+"Elijah,"--an epic poem in ten books--"Creation, a Philosophical Poem,"
+"Advice to Poets how to celebrate the Duke of Marlborough," "The Nature of
+Man," "Redemption," "A New Version of the Psalms," "Alfred"--an epic in
+twelve books--"A History of the Conspiracy against King William," and a
+host of others which his perverted reason or fantastic fancy suggested.
+Never, perhaps, was known such a voluminous author, or one so erratic in
+his system. What with his long heroic poems, his treatises on smallpox and
+other diseases, his theological controversies, his "Advices" to painters,
+poets, and weavers, and his prose contributions to periodical
+publications, "England's Arch-Poet" (as Swift described him) could never
+have idled away an hour. Of all that he wrote, a few passages from his
+"Arthur" and "Creation" are alone remembered, and but for Johnson's
+good-natured attempt to save him from oblivion, his name would only have
+lived in the satires of his remorseless critics. One saying of Blackmore's
+only is worth noting here. He had laid himself open to the imputation of
+despising learning, and Dr. Johnson himself thought him a shallow ill-read
+man. But Blackmore said:--"I only undervalued false or superficial
+learning, that signifies nothing for the service of mankind; as to physic
+I expressly affirmed that learning must be joined with native genius to
+make a physician of the first rank; but if those talents are separated, I
+asserted, and do still insist, that a man of native sagacity and diligence
+will prove a more able and useful practiser than a heavy notional scholar
+encumbered with a heap of confused ideas."
+
+One or two other doctors who in their time enjoyed a reputation as
+writers, but whose fame was transient, or, at least, is insecure, call for
+very brief notice before we pass on to a few of greater importance. Sir
+John Hill, M.D., an eighteenth century physician, was a fairly extensive
+litterateur, and in addition to producing treatises on botany, medicine,
+natural history, and philosophy, wrote half a dozen novels, and several
+dramas. His _chef d'oeuvre_ was "The Vegetable System," a work of such
+magnitude that it ran to twenty-six volumes, a copy of which was presented
+to the King of Sweden, and procured for the author the distinction of
+being included in the Order of the Polar Star. Dr. William Fullarton
+Cumming, a son of Burns' "Bonnie Leslie," was compelled to travel in mild
+climates for his health, and as a result wrote "The Notes of a Wanderer,"
+a work abounding in poetic descriptions of the charming scenery of the
+East. He tells us that the real pleasure of travelling is not to boast of
+how many lions one may have slain in a single day, but to saunter about
+without an object, to inhale the moral atmosphere of places visited, to
+enter bazaars, not to buy, but to catch the hundred peculiarities of a new
+people, to stray hither and thither watching the work and the recreations
+of other races. John Chalmers, M.D. (not to be confused with the great
+divine, Dr. Thomas Chalmers), also deserves to be noted as a very graceful
+writer of romantic stories; and Sir Henry Thompson, under the name of "Pen
+Oliver," produced some years ago a strange little volume which enjoyed a
+season's success--"Charley Kingston's Aunt."
+
+That most diffident and most delightful of authors, Dr. John Brown, who
+gave us the memorable "Rab and his Friends," was in practice at Edinburgh.
+As long as lovers of the animal creation are to be found, the story of Rab
+and of Marjorie will be read; and these sketches of brutes whom he almost
+humanised will probably outlive the genial doctor's more ambitious "Horae
+Subsecivae" and "John Leech and other Papers." Of a very different nature
+was the author of "Ten Thousand a Year," Dr. Samuel Warren, physician,
+lawyer, politician, novelist, and office-seeker. Tittlebat Titmouse is not
+much studied now, for the type is out-of-date, and the society of which
+the novel treats, the abuses prevalent, the general corruption which
+prevailed in public life, were exposures intended for a past generation.
+Yet there are passages in the work which should save it from absolute
+neglect, and it has for over half a century kept its author's name alive.
+This is more than his "Passages from the Diary of a late Physician" could
+have done, or those dozen other works with the bare titles of which the
+present reading public is scarcely acquainted. John Abercrombie, the chief
+consulting physician in Scotland during the last century, sought and
+achieved literary fame with two volumes on "The Intellectual Powers," and
+"The Moral Feelings." They enjoyed a popularity scarcely commensurate with
+their actual merits.
+
+David Macbeth Moir, who faithfully performed the arduous duties of a
+medical practitioner in Edinburgh, and whose life was almost wholly
+devoted to the service of his fellows, was the famous "Delta" of
+_Blackwood's Magazine_. His poems, some four hundred of which he
+contributed to "Maga." alone, are out of fashion now, though their
+delightful vein of reflectiveness and their charm of expression should
+preserve them from absolute neglect. The heavy labours of his profession
+did not seem to check his literary productiveness. His poems fill two
+large volumes; his prose works are by no means meagre or unimportant, and
+his "Sketches of the Poetical Literature of the past Half-century," is a
+standard work on the poetry of his period. Medical treatises, too, came
+from his pen; and his "Life of Mansie Wauch, Tailor," is one of the most
+agreeable of genuine Scotch sketches. His biographer correctly summed up
+the merits of the worthy doctor as a literary worker in the words "Good
+sound sense, a simple healthy feeling, excited and exalted though these
+may be, never fail him. He draws from nature, and from himself direct."
+Quiet humour and simple pathos, a love of humanity, deep reverential
+feeling, and originality of thought--all these are found in "Delta's"
+writings, and serve, with his own admirable nature, to keep his memory
+green.
+
+Of Dr. Conan Doyle, the most conspicuous instance of the hour of the
+doctor turned author, no detailed notice is requisite, as the main facts
+of his career are sufficiently well known, and his literary work promises
+to bring him both fame and fortune. Undoubtedly he exemplifies the fact
+that the medical hand can scarcely be concealed when it takes to the pen,
+for his novels and stories abound in allusions which only his study,
+training, and experience as a doctor could suggest. His reading and
+observation largely provide the technique of his romances. Something of
+the same could be said of Smollett's work, though the medical knowledge of
+the author was often turned to less agreeable account. In fact, most of
+Smollet's references on this score were the reverse of delectable, and I
+refrain from a more precise examination of them. The unexpected use to
+which Mr. R. D. Blackmore has turned his knowledge of medicine--for he
+studied medicine as well as law seriously in his youth--in several of his
+novels, notably in the last, "Perlycross," has excited much interest and
+attention among the profession. So marked is this that I cannot refrain
+quoting from a singularly interesting criticism penned by a leading
+physician in the Midlands. "The medical incidents in 'Perlycross,'" he
+says, "are pourtrayed with an accuracy which shows an intimate knowledge
+of the profession and its members.... No doubt the opinions expressed by
+one learned doctor were those of the time represented in the story, though
+they could hardly be received with justice in the present day. Speaking of
+the illness of Sir Thomas Waldron, he says (p. 18):--'At present such a
+case could be dealt with best in Paris, although we have young men rising
+now who will make it otherwise before very long.' The key to this
+difficulty is found later on (p. 159) where the technical word
+'introsusception' is mentioned as the disease or condition from which the
+patient suffered. At the time spoken of Parisian surgeons, headed by the
+eminent Dupuytren, excelled in the art of surgery; at the present time
+such a case could be treated as well by any hospital surgeon in England as
+in the metropolis of France.... The book contains an admirably-described
+case of catalepsy, which is equally well explained. The cure of the
+attack is described with consummate skill and power. The keystone of the
+whole position of medical knowledge is contained in a few words towards
+its close. In these days of rapid transition from one excitement to
+another it would be well to take the lesson to heart, and to remember what
+the author speaks of as two fine things--'If you wish to be sure of
+anything see it with your own good eyes,' and the second, 'Never scamp
+your work.' How these sayings may be applied in the practice of the
+profession may with profit be learned from a perusal of the pages of
+'Perlycross.'" Perhaps I am going too far in claiming Mr. Blackmore as a
+medical man who has taken to literature, but the excuse of his early
+training, combined with this curious result of it manifested in his
+writing, proves irresistible.
+
+Not to stray, however, but to get our feet once more upon solid ground, we
+may refer to a classic example, with which this article, had it been aught
+else but discursive, should have begun. Galen, the Greek physician, must
+be counted among the first and most famous of his class who have written
+literary works. He was so voluminous a writer on philosophical subjects
+that scores of books on logic and ethics have been fathered upon him
+without much question arising as to the unlikelihood of his being the
+author of so many. As it is he is credited with eighty-three treatises,
+the genuineness of which is not disputed; there are nineteen suspected to
+bear his name unjustly, forty-five are proved to be spurious, and then
+there remain a further fifteen fragments and fifteen commentaries on
+Hippocrates, which may be accepted as his in part or whole. He made
+himself master of the medical, physiological, and scientific knowledge of
+his time. He was born in 130 A.D., and died in 201, and left a record of
+that period. In addition to preparing this massive work, he seems to have
+found time to devote himself to various branches of philosophy with such
+success that later writers were well pleased to trade with the talisman of
+his name. Were it worth while to go back to antiquity, and to the history
+of foreign nations for further examples of physicians whose writings were
+not confined to expositions of the medical system, Averrhoes, most famous
+of Arabian philosophers, and physician to the calif, a master of the
+twelfth century, would occupy a prominent position. But it is more to our
+purpose to draw attention to the remarkable career, and one that deserves
+to be held in remembrance, of Arthur Johnston, physician to King Charles
+the First. In the same year that he graduated at the university of Padua
+(1610) he was "laureated poet at Paris, and that most deservedly," as Sir
+Thomas Urquhart recorded. He was then only three-and-twenty years of age,
+and the prospect of many years being before him, he indulged in extensive
+travel, and visited in turn most of the principal foreign seats of
+learning. His journeying over, he settled in France and became equally
+well known as a physician and as a writer of excellent Latin verse. A
+courteous act, characteristic of the time, secured him the favour and
+patronage of the English royal family, for in 1645 he published an elegy
+on James I., and followed this up by dedicating a Latin rendering of the
+Song of Solomon to King Charles. Other specimens of his rare culture and
+his poetical powers were forthcoming, and he achieved a European
+reputation. His Latin translation of the Psalms is held to be unexcelled
+by any other, unless it be Buchanan's, and the fact that his translation
+is still in use sufficiently attests its excellence and value. He died
+suddenly in 1641, while on a visit to Oxford, and in the centuries which
+have succeeded he has not been displaced in the front rank of refined and
+deeply versed Latin scholars and poets.
+
+It would be a matter of considerable difficulty to make a complete list of
+literary doctors, but enough has perhaps been written to show that they
+are no small band so far as numbers go, and that their influence in the
+world of books has been very considerable and distinguished. We owe to
+them many great works of enduring repute, of value to the student, of
+perpetual entertainment to the general reader. When, too, we consider the
+willingness and the zeal with which the writing members of the medical
+profession have imparted their knowledge, we are led to believe that they
+accepted as their motto the noble utterance of Sir Thomas Browne, the
+chief of literary doctors:--"To be reserved and caitiff in goodness is the
+sordidest piece of covetousness, and more contemptible than pecuniary
+Avarice. To this (as calling myself a Scholar) I am obliged by the duty of
+my condition: I make not therefore my head a grave, but a treasure of
+knowledge; I intend no Monopoly, but a community, in learning; I study
+not for my own sake only, but for theirs that study not for themselves. I
+envy no man that knows more than myself, but pity them that know less. I
+instruct no man as an exercise of my knowledge, or with an intent rather
+to nourish and keep it alive in mine own head than beget and propagate it
+in his; and in the midst of all my endeavours there is but one thought
+that dejects me, that my acquired parts must perish with myself, nor can
+be Legacied among my honoured Friends."
+
+
+
+
+The "Doctor" in time of Pestilence.
+
+BY WILLIAM E. A. AXON, F.R.S.L.
+
+ "I do not feel in me those sordid and unchristian desires of my
+ profession; I do not secretly implore and wish for Plagues, rejoice at
+ Famines, revolve Ephemerides and Almanacks in expectation of malignant
+ Aspects, fatal Conjunctions, and Eclipses."--SIR THOMAS BROWNE'S
+ "Religio Medici," pt. ii., sec. ix.
+
+
+Of the great epidemics which have from time to time devastated Europe,
+Great Britain has had its full share. Between 664 and 1665 there were many
+visitations, resulting in heavy mortality, to which the general name of
+plague or pestilence has been given, although they were not always
+identical in form. Often the dread sisters Famine and Pestilence went hand
+in hand in the domains of merrie England in the good old times.
+
+The Statute of Labourers declares, no doubt with perfect truth, that "a
+great part of the people, principally of artisans and labourers," died in
+the pestilence known as the Black Death of 1349, which had important
+consequences, socially and politically. There were many subsequent
+outbreaks, though they fortunately did not attain to the enormous
+proportions of the great mortality. We have from the graphic hand of
+Chaucer a life-like portrait of a medical man of the fourteenth century
+who had gained his money in the time of pestilence.
+
+At the end of the fifteenth and middle of the sixteenth century, we have
+as alternating with bubo plague, the _Sudor Anglicanus_. Its appearance
+coincided with the invasion by which Richard III. lost his crown, and his
+rival became Henry VII. Dr. Thomas Forrester, who was in London during the
+outbreak of 1485, gives instances of suddenness with which the "sweat"
+became fatal. "We saw two prestys standing togeder and speaking togeder,
+and we saw both of them die suddenly." The symptoms were sweating, bad
+odour, redness, thirst, headache, "and some had black spots as it appeared
+in our frere Alban, a noble leech, on whose soul God have mercy."
+Forrester complains of the quacks who put letters on poles and on church
+doors, promising to help the people in their need. He lays stress upon
+astrological causes, but does not overlook the defective sanitation which
+gave the plague some of its firm hold. The _Sudor Anglicanus_ returned in
+1508, 1517, 1528, and 1551. The last visitation was the occasion of a
+treatise by the worthy Cambridge founder, to whom Gonville and Caius
+College owes so much.
+
+"The Boke of Jhon Caius aganst the sweatyng Sickness" is an interesting
+document. It opens with a long autobiographical passage as to his previous
+literary labours, which have ranged from medicine to theology. At first he
+wrote in English, but afterwards in Latin and Greek. The reason for this
+change is stated. "Sence y{t} that tyme diverse other thynges I have
+written, but with the entente never more to write in the Englishe tongue
+partly because the comodite of that which is so written, passeth not the
+compasse of Englande, but remaineth enclosed within the seas, and partly
+because I thought that labours so taken should be halfe lost among them
+which set not by learnyng. Thirdly, for that I thought it best to auoide
+the judgment of the multitude from whom in maters of lernyng a man shal be
+forced to dissente, in disprouyng that which they most approue, and
+approuyng that which they most disalowe. Fourthly for that the common
+settyng furthe and printig of every foolishe thyng in englishe, both of
+phisicke vnperfectly and other matters vndiscretly diminishe the grace of
+thynges learned set furth in thesame. But chiefely because I would geve
+none example or comfort to my countrie men (who I would to be now, as here
+tofore they have been, comparable in learnyng to men of other countries)
+to stande onely in the Englishe tongue, but to leaue the simplicitie of
+the same, and to procede further in many and diuerse knowledges both in
+tongues and sciences at home and in uniuersities, to the adornyng of the
+comon welthe, better service of their kyng, and great pleasure and
+commodite of their own selues, to what kind of life so euer they should
+applie them." But his resolution not to write again in the vulgar tongue
+was broken by considerations of utility, for he saw that it could not be
+very serviceable to ordinary English people to give them advice as to the
+treatment of the sweating sickness in a language which they did not
+understand. In his account of this dire malady, he lays stress upon errors
+and excess of diet as a strongly co-operating cause. "They which had thys
+sweat sore with perille or death, were either men of welthe, ease and
+welfare, or of the poorer sorte such as wer idls persones, good ale
+drinkers, and Tauerne haunters. For these, by ye great welfare of the one
+sorte, and large drinkyng of thother, heped up in their bodies moche evill
+matter: by their ease and idlenes, coulde not waste and consume it."
+Against the infection of bad air he recommends avoiding carrion "kepyng
+Canelles cleane" and other general sanitary precautions. He suggests that
+the midsummer bonfires were intended for purging the air, "and not onely
+for vigils." Rosewater and other perfumes are to be used, and he thinks it
+would be well to clear the house of its rushes and dust. It is to be
+feared that the rushes which served instead of carpets, even in great
+houses, were not renewed very frequently. The handkerchief was to be
+perfumed, and the patient was to have in his mouth "a pece either of
+setwel, or of the rote of _enula campana_ wel steped before in vinegre
+rosate, a mace, or berie of Juniper."
+
+Dr. Caius, like Dr. Forrester, did not omit to warn his readers that even
+with the aid of his book a medical man was still necessary, and in doing
+so he gives us a glimpse of the quack doctors of the sixteenth century.
+"Therefore seke you out a good Phisicien, and knowen to haue skille, and
+at the leaste be so good to your bodies, as you are to your hosen or shoes
+for the wel-making or mending wherof, I doubt not but you wil diligently
+searche out who is knowe to be the best hosier or shoemaker in the place
+where you dwelle: and flie the unlearned as a pestilence to the comune
+wealth. As simple women, carpenters, pewterers, brasiers, sope ball
+sellers, pulters, hostellers, painters, apotecaries (otherwise then for
+their drogges), auaunters theselves to come from Pole, Constantiple,
+Italie, Almaine, Spaine, Fraunce, Grece, and Turkie, Inde, Egipt or Jury:
+from y{e} seruice of Emperoures, kinges, and quienes, promisig helpe of al
+diseases, yea vncurable, with one or two drinckes, by waters sixe monethes
+in continualle distillinge, by _Aurum potabile_, or _quintessence_, by
+drynckes of great and hygh prices as though thei were made of the sune,
+moone, or sterres, by blessynges, and Blowinges, Hipocriticalle prayenges,
+and foolysh smokynges of shirts, smockes, and kerchieffes, wyth such other
+theire phantasies and mockeries, meaninge nothng els, but to abuse your
+light belieue, and scorne you behind your backes with their medicines, so
+filthie, that I am ashamed to name theim, for your single wit and simple
+belief, in trusting the most which you know not at al, and vnderstad
+least: like to them which thinke farre foules have faire fethers, although
+thei be never so euil fauoured & foule: as though there could not be so
+conning an Englishman, as a foolish running stranger (of others I speak
+not) or so perfect helth by honest learning, as by deceiptfull ignorance."
+
+Dr. Caius laid stress upon exercise as an aid to health, but some popular
+games he thought "rather a laming of legges than an exercise." We need not
+follow him in the details of the treatment he recommends if in spite of
+the adoption of his preventive _regime_, the sweating sickness should
+come.
+
+In 1561 there was issued "A newe booke conteyninge an exortacion to the
+sicke." The tract ends with the following parody on the nostrums current
+for the cure of the pestilence: "Take a pond of good hard penaunce, and
+washe it wel with the water of your eyes, and let it ly a good whyle at
+youre hert. Take also of the best fyne fayth, hope, charyte yt you can
+get, a like quantite of al mixed together, your soule even full, and use
+this confection every day in your lyfe, whiles the plages of God
+reigneth. Then, take both your handes ful of good workes commaunded of
+God, and kepe them close in a clene conscience from the duste of vayne
+glory, and ever as you are able and se necessite so to use them. This
+medicine was found wryten in an olde byble boke, and it hath been
+practised and proved true of mani, both men and women" (Collier's _Bib.
+Account_, i. 74).
+
+The wealthy, on an outbreak of the plague, fled from the infected city, as
+we may learn from Boccaccio, and from Miles Coverdale's translation of
+Osiander's sermon, "How and whether a Christian man ought to flye the
+horrible plage of the pestilence," which appeared in 1537.
+
+During the plague of London, in 1603, the physicians are asserted by
+Dekker to have "hid their synodical heads," but this is at all events not
+wholly true. Thomas Lodge, the poet, was also a graduate in medicine, and
+in his "Treatise on the Plague"--not the only one published in relation to
+this epidemic--we are told of his experiences of the plague-stricken city.
+He gives some good advice in relation to the sanitary measures to be taken
+for the prevention of the plague.
+
+The nature of the regulations devised in the Tudor times to ward off
+infection may be gathered from the rules laid down at Chester in November,
+1574, when
+
+ "the right Worshipful Sir John Sauage, Knight, maior of the City of
+ Chester had consideracion of the present state of the said cite
+ somewhat visited with what is called the plage, and divisinge the best
+ meanes and orderlie waies he can, with [the advice] of his Bretheren
+ the alderman, Justices of peace within the citie aforesaid (through
+ the goodness of God) to avoid the same hath with such advice, sett
+ forth ordained and appointed (amongst other) the points, articles,
+ clauses, and orders folowing, which he willeth and commandeth all
+ persons to observe and kepe, upon the severall pains theirin
+ contayned:
+
+ "Imprimis. That no person nor persons who are or shalbe visited with
+ the said sickness, or any other who shall be of there company, shall
+ go abrode out of there houses without license of the alderman of the
+ ward such persons inhabite, And that every person soe licensed to
+ beare openlie in their hands ... three quarters long ... ense ...
+ shall goe abrode out of the ... upon paine that eny person doynge the
+ contrary to be furthwith expulsed out of the said citie.
+
+ "2. Item if any person doe company with any persons visited, they
+ alsoe to beare ... upon like payne.
+
+ "3. Item that none of them soe visited doe goe abroad in any part or
+ place within the citie in the night season, upon like payne.
+
+ "4. Item that the accustomed due watche to be kepte every night,
+ within the said citie, by the inhabitants thereof.
+
+ "5. Item the same watchman to apprehend and take up all night walkers
+ and such suspect as shalbe founde within and to bring them to the
+ Justice of peace, of that ... the gaile of the Northgate, that further
+ order may be taken with them as shall appear....
+
+ "6. Item that no swine be kept, within the said citie nor any other
+ place, then ... side prively nor openlie after the xiii{th} daie of
+ this present moneth, upon paine of fyne and imprisonment of every
+ person doing the contrary.
+
+ "7. Item that no donge, muck or filth, at any tyme, hearafter be caste
+ within the walls of the said citie, upon paine of ffyne and
+ imprisonment at his worships direction.
+
+ "8. Item that no kind or sort of ... or any wares from other place be
+ brought in packs into the said citie of Chester, untill the same be
+ ffirste opened and eired without the libities of the said citie, upon
+ pain last recited.
+
+ "9. Item that papers or writing containing this sence Lord haue mercie
+ upon us, to be fixed upon euery house, dore post, or other open place,
+ to the street of the house so infected.
+
+ "10. Item that no person of the said citie doe suffer any their doggs
+ to goe abrode out of their houses or dwellings, upon paine that euery
+ such dogge so founde abrode shalbe presently killed. And the owners
+ thereof ponished at his worships pleasure."
+
+It has always been found easier to make laws than to have them enforced,
+and we find certain inhabitants complaining of the disobedience of
+infected persons in the following petition:--
+
+ "To the right worshipful Sir John Savage, knight, maior of the Citie
+ of Chester, the aldermen, sheriffs, and common counsaile of the same.
+
+ "In most humble wise complayninge sheweth unto your worships, your
+ Orators, the persons whose name are subscribed inhabiting in a certain
+ lane within the same citie called Pepper Street, That where yt haue
+ pleased God to infect divers persons of the same Street with the
+ plage, and where also for the avoidinge of further infection your
+ worships have taken order that all such so infected should observe
+ certaine good necessarye orders by your worships made and provided.
+ But so it is, right worships, that none of the said persons infected
+ do observe any of the orders by your worships in that case taken, to
+ the greate danger and perill, not only of your Orators and their
+ famelyes being in number twenty, but also of the reste of the said
+ citie, who by the sufferance of God and of his gracious goodness are
+ clere and safe from any infection of the said deceas: In consideration
+ whereof your Orators moste humbly beseche your worships for God's
+ sake, and as your worships intend it your Orators should, by the
+ sufferance of God, avoide the dangers of the said deceas with their
+ family, and also for the better safty of the citie to take such
+ directions with the said infected persons that they may clearly be
+ avoided from thens to some other convenient for the time untill God
+ shall restore them to their former health. And in this doing your
+ Orators shall daily pray, &c."[1]
+
+During the visitation of the plague at Manchester in 1645, when the place
+suffered severely, the authorities not only provided "cabins" at
+Collyhurst for the reception of those whom the disease attacked, but
+engaged the services of "Doctor Smith," who received L4 "for his charges
+to London and a free guift," and L39 "for part of his wages for his
+service in the time of the visitation." Thos. Minshull, the apothecary,
+was paid L6 2s. 6d. for "stuffe for ye town's service." Some "bottles and
+stuffe" were unused at the end of the plague, and these were sold to "Mr.
+Smith, Phissition," for L1.
+
+The story of English pestilence closes with the Great Plague of London in
+1665. It began about the west end of the city, Hampstead, Highgate, and
+Acton sharing the infection, and gradually worked eastward by way of
+Holborn. Out of an estimated population of 460,000 there died 97,306
+persons, of whom 68,596 perished of pestilence. One week witnessed 8,297
+deaths, and it has been seriously argued that the official figures very
+much underrate the truth, and that in this week of highest mortality the
+deaths really amounted to 12,000. "Almost all other diseases turned to the
+plague." Many of the clergy fled, and the places of some were occupied by
+the ejected Nonconformists. The complaint of absenteeism was also brought
+against the physicians, but there were certainly some who stayed in the
+infected and desolate city. "But Lord!" says Pepys, "what a sad time it is
+to all: no boats upon the river, and grass grown all up and down Whitehall
+Court, and nobody but poor wretches in the street." William Boghurst, who
+was an apothecary, and Nathaniel Hodges, who was a physician, each wrote
+full accounts of the plague.
+
+Hodges was the son of a vicar of Kensington, where he was born in 1629. He
+was a King's scholar at Westminster, and was educated both at Cambridge
+and Oxford, taking his M.D. degree at the latter university in 1659. When
+the great plague broke out he remained at his house in Walbrook, and gave
+advice to all who sought it. There was unfortunately no lack of patients.
+Hodges' writings give us a minute account of the "doctor in the time of
+pestilence." The first doubtful appearances of the plague were noticed by
+Dr. Hodges amongst some of those who sought his counsel at the Christmas
+of 1664-5, in May and June there were some that could not be mistaken, and
+in August and September he was overwhelmed with work. He was an early
+riser, and after taking a dose of anti-pestilential electuary, he attended
+to any private business that needed immediate decision, and then went to
+his consulting room, and for three hours received a succession of
+patients, some already ill of the plague, others only infected by fear.
+Having disposed of these anxious inquirers, the doctor breakfasted, and
+then began his round of visits to patients who were unable to see him at
+home. Disinfectants were burnt on hot coals as he entered their houses,
+and he also took a lozenge. Returning home, he dined off roast meat and
+pickles, prefaced and followed by sack and other wine. A second round of
+visits did not terminate until eight or nine in the evening. He was an
+enemy of tobacco, but his dislike of the Indian weed did not extend to
+sack, which he seems to have drunk plentifully, especially perhaps on the
+two occasions when he thought he had himself caught the plague. These
+proved to be false alarms. Amongst the drugs he tried and found useless
+were "unicorn's horn" and dried toads. The Corporation of London testified
+a due sense of Hodges' services by a stipend and the position of physician
+to the city. His "Loimologia" is an important contribution to the
+literature of epidemics.
+
+Hodges, who had thus been a witness of the Carnival of Death in the
+metropolis of England, may well have pondered on the words of one of his
+illustrious contemporaries, Sir Thomas Browne, who says:--"I have not
+those strait ligaments, or narrow obligations to the world as to dote on
+life, or be convulst and tremble at the name of Death. Not that I am
+insensible of the dread and horrour thereof; or by raking into the bowels
+of the deceased, continual sight of anatomies, skeletons, or cadaverous
+reliques, like vespilloes or grave makers, I am become stupid, or have
+forgot the apprehension of mortality: but that, marshalling all the
+horrors and contemplating the extremities thereof, I find not anything
+therein able to daunt the courage of a man, much less a well resolved
+Christian.... For a Pagan there may be some motive to be in love with
+life; but for a Christian to be amazed at Death, I see not how he can
+escape this dilemma, that he is too sensible of this life, or hopeless of
+the life to come."
+
+
+
+
+Mountebanks and Medicine.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+Mountebanks--a name derived from the Italian words _monta in banco_,
+mounting a bench--were, in company with their attendant zanies, or "Merry
+Andrews," a popular class of public entertainers down to the earlier years
+of the present century. Their chief object, however, was not to provide a
+free entertainment, but to dispose of their nostrums to the crowds which
+the entertainment brought together. Andrew Borde, a medical practitioner
+at Winchester, who obtained a more than local reputation, enjoying the
+distinction of being one of the physicians of Henry VIII., is said to have
+been the original "Merry Andrew." The story of his life is full of
+interest, and furnishes some curious information concerning the manners of
+his age and his class. Mr. George Roberts, who supplied Lord Macaulay with
+much material for his "History of England," relates that Borde was a man
+of great learning, and had travelled on the continent. He made many
+astronomical calculations, which may not unfairly be supposed to have
+been for the purposes of astrology. He was a celibitarian and an ascetic,
+drinking water three times a week, wearing a hair-shirt next his skin, and
+keeping the sheet intended for his burial at the foot of his bed. As a
+mountebank, he frequented fairs, markets, and other places of public
+resort, and addressed those assembled in recommendation of his medicines.
+He was a fluent speaker, and the witticisms with which he interspersed his
+lectures never failed to attract, obtaining for him the name of "Merry
+Andrew."
+
+Mountebanks flourished on the continent as well as in England, and the
+_Belphegor_ of the dramatist had many prototypes in Italy and France.
+Coryat, a little-known writer, who made the tour of Europe at the
+beginning of the seventeenth century, and published a narrative of his
+adventures and experiences, gives a good account of the mountebanks he saw
+at Venice. "Twice a day," he says, "that is, in the morning and afternoon,
+you may see five or six several stages erected for them.... These
+mountebanks at one end of their stage place their trunk, which is
+replenished with a world of new-fangled trumperies. After the whole rabble
+of them has gotten up to the stage,--whereof some wear vizards like fools
+in a play, some that are women are attired with habits according to that
+person they sustain,--the music begins; sometimes vocal, sometimes
+instrumental, sometimes both. While the music plays, the principal
+mountebank opens his trunk and sets abroad his wares. Then he maketh an
+oration to the audience of half-an-hour long, wherein he doth most
+hyperbolically extol the virtue of his drugs and confections--though many
+of them are very counterfeit and false. I often wondered at these natural
+orators, for they would tell their tales with such admirable volubility
+and plausible grace, _extempore_, and seasoned with that singular variety
+of elegant jests and witty conceits, that they did often strike great
+admiration into strangers.... He then delivereth his commodities by little
+and little, the jester still playing his part, and the musicians singing
+and playing upon their instruments. The principal things that they sell
+are oils, sovereign waters, amorous songs printed, apothecary drugs, and a
+commonweal of other trifles. The head mountebank, every time he delivereth
+out anything, maketh an extemporal speech, which he doth eftsoons
+intermingle with such savoury jests (but spiced now and then with
+singular scurrility), that they minister passing mirth and laughter to the
+whole company, which may perhaps consist of a thousand people." The
+entertainment extended over two hours, when, having sold as many of their
+wares as they could, their properties would be removed and the stage taken
+down.
+
+Jonson, in his comedy of "Volpone," presents a scene showing a
+mountebank's stage at Venice, and the discourse of the vendor of quack
+medicines has a remarkable resemblance to the oratory of the "Cheap Jacks"
+of the present day, of which old play-goers may remember hearing a very
+good imitation in the drama of "The Flowers of the Forest." Says Jonson's
+mountebank: "You all know, honourable gentlemen, I never valued this
+ampulla, or vial, at less than eight crowns; but for this time I am
+content to be deprived of it for six: six crowns is the price, and less in
+courtesy I know you cannot offer me. Take it or leave it, however, both it
+and I am at your service! Well! I am in a humour at this time to make a
+present of the small quantity my coffer contains: to the rich in courtesy,
+and to the poor for God's sake. Wherefore, now mark: I asked you six
+crowns, and six crowns at other times you have paid me; you shall not give
+me six crowns, nor five, nor four, nor three, nor two, nor one, nor half a
+ducat. Sixpence it will cost you (or six hundred pounds); expect no lower
+price, for I will not bate."
+
+Returning to the mountebanks of our own country, we find in the accounts
+of the Chamberlain of the Corporation of Worcester for the year 1631 the
+following item:--
+
+ "They yeald account of money by them received of mountebanks to the
+ use of the poor 58s. 9d."
+
+It is suggested by Mr. John Noake, however, that these mountebanks were
+riders or posturers, and that the amount was the charge made for the
+permission accorded them to perform in the city. Later in the century, the
+eccentric Earl of Rochester, on one occasion, played the mountebank on
+Tower Hill, and the example was followed by more than one comedian of the
+next century. Leveridge and Penkethman, actors well known at Bartholomew
+Fair for many years, appeared at country fairs as "Doctor Leverigo and his
+Jack-Pudding Pinkanello," as also did Haines as "Watho Van Claturbank,
+High German Doctor." The discourse of the latter was published as a
+broadside, headed with an engraving representing him addressing a crowd
+from a stage, with a bottle of medicine in his right hand. Beside him
+stands a Harlequin, and in the rear a man with a plumed hat blows a
+trumpet. A gouty patient occupies a high-backed arm-chair, and an array of
+boxes and bottles is seen at the back of the stage.
+
+"Having studied Galen, Hypocrates, Albumazar, and Paracelsus," says the
+discourse thus headed, "I am now become the Esculapius of the age; having
+been educated at twelve universities, and travelled through fifty-two
+kingdoms, and been counsellor to the counsellors of several monarchs. By
+the earnest prayers and entreaties of several lords, earls, dukes, and
+honourable personages, I have been at last prevailed upon to oblige the
+world with this notice, that all persons, young or old, blind or lame,
+deaf and dumb, curable or incurable, may know where to repair for cure, in
+all cephalalgias, paralytic paroxysms, palpitations of the pericardium,
+empyemas, syncopes, and nasieties; arising either from a plethory or a
+cachochymy, vertiginous vapours, hydrocephalus dysenteries, odontalgic or
+podagrical inflammations, and the entire legion of lethiferous
+distempers.... This is Nature's palladium, health's magazine; it works
+seven manner of ways, as Nature requires, for it scorns to be confined to
+any particular mode of operation; so that it affecteth the cure either
+hypnotically, hydrotically, cathartically, poppismatically, pneumatically,
+or synedochically; it mundifies the hypogastrium, extinguishes all
+supernatural fermentations and ebullitions, and, in fine, annihilates all
+nosotrophical morbific ideas of the whole corporeal compages. A drachm of
+it is worth a bushel of March dust; for, if a man chance to have his
+brains beat out, or his head dropped off, two drops--I say two drops!
+gentlemen--seasonably applied, will recall the fleeting spirit,
+re-enthrone the deposed archeus, cement the discontinuity of the parts,
+and in six minutes restore the lifeless trunk to all its pristine
+functions, vital, natural, and animal; so that this, believe me,
+gentlemen, is the only sovereign remedy in the world. _Venienti occurite
+morbo._--Down with your dust. _Principiis obsta._--No cure no money.
+_Quaerendo pecunia primum._--Be not sick too late."
+
+The mountebanking quack flourished in great state in the first half of the
+last century. "A Tour through England," published in 1723, gives the
+following account of one whom the author saw at Winchester:--"As I was
+sitting at the George Inn, I saw a coach with six bay horses, a calash and
+four, a chaise and four, enter the inn, in a yellow livery, turned up with
+red; four gentlemen on horseback, in blue, trimmed with silver: and as
+yellow is the colour given by the dukes in England, I went out to see what
+duke it was; but there was no coronet on the coach, only a plain
+coat-of-arms on each, with this motto: ARGENTO LABORAT FABER. Upon
+enquiry, I found this great equipage belonged to a mountebank, and that
+his name being Smith, the motto was a pun upon his name. The footmen in
+yellow were his tumblers and trumpeters, and those in blue his
+merry-andrew, his apothecary, and his spokesman. He was dressed in black
+velvet, and had in his coach a woman that danced on the ropes. He cures
+all diseases, and sells his packets for sixpence a-piece. He erected
+stages in all the market towns twenty miles round; and it is a prodigy how
+so wise a people as the English are gulled by such pickpockets. But his
+amusements on the stage are worth the sixpence, without the pills. In the
+morning he is dressed up in a fine brocade night-gown, for his chamber
+practice, when he gives advice, and gets large fees."
+
+A passage in a letter written by the second Lord Lyttelton, about the year
+1774, shows that this style of travelling was then still kept up by
+mountebanks. He says:--"As a family party of us were crossing the road on
+the side of Hagley Park, a chaise passed along, followed by a couple of
+attendants with French horns. Who can that be, said my father? Some
+itinerant mountebank, replied I, if one may judge from his musical
+followers. I really spoke with all the indifference of an innocent mind:
+nor did it occur to me that the Right Reverend Father in God, my uncle,
+had sometimes been pleased to travel with servants similarly accoutred."
+Nearly twenty years later, the famous quack, Katerfelto, travelled through
+Durham in a carriage, with a pair of horses, and attended by two negro
+servants in green liveries, with red collars. In the towns he visited
+these men were sent round to announce his lectures on electricity and the
+microscope, blowing trumpets, and distributing hand-bills.
+
+There seems to be good ground for believing that among what may be called
+the amateur mountebanks, such as Rochester, we must count the author of
+"Tristram Shandy." Dr. Dibdin found in the possession of Mr. James
+Atkinson, a medical practitioner at York, a rather roughly executed
+picture, in oil colours, representing a mountebank and his zany on a
+stage, surrounded by a crowd. An inscription described the former as Mr.
+T. Brydges, and the latter as the Rev. Laurence Sterne. Mr. Atkinson, who
+was an octogenarian, told Dr. Dibdin that his father had been acquainted
+with Sterne, who was a good amateur draughtsman, and that he and Brydges
+each painted the other's portrait in the picture. The story is a strange
+one, but before it is dismissed as unworthy of belief, it must be
+remembered that the clerical story-writer was a droll and whimsical
+character, and at no time much influenced by his priestly vocation. It is
+quite conceivable, therefore, that he may have indulged in such a freak on
+some occasion during the period of his life in which he developed his
+worst moral deficiencies.
+
+In the early years of the present century, a German quack, named Bossy,
+used to mount a stage on Tower Hill and Covent Garden Market alternately,
+in order, as he said, that both ends of London might profit by his
+experience and skill. It is said that on one of these occasions, when he
+had induced an old woman to mount his stage in the latter place, and
+relate the wonderful cures the doctor had performed upon her, a parrot
+that had learned some coarse language from the porters and costermongers
+frequenting the market, and sometimes used it in a manner that seemed very
+apt to the occasion, exclaimed, "Lying old ----!" when the old woman
+concluded her narrative. The roar of laughter with which this criticism
+was received by the rough audience disconcerted Bossy for a moment; but
+quickly recovering his presence of mind, he stepped forward, with his hand
+on his heart, and gravely replied, "It is no lie, you wicked bird!--it is
+all true as is de Gospel!" Bossy attained considerable reputation, and
+ended his days with a fair competence.
+
+The mountebank has long fallen from his former high estate. The quack may
+still be found vending his pills in the open-air markets of Yorkshire and
+Lancashire; but he does not mount a stage, and resembles his predecessors
+of the last century only in the fluency and volubility of his discourse on
+the virtues of his potions, pills, and plasters. The author of the paper
+on mountebanks in the "Book of Days" (edited by Robert Chambers), states
+that he saw one at York about 1860, who "sold medicines on a stage in the
+old style, but without the Merry Andrew or the music," and adds that "he
+presented himself in shabby black clothes, with a dirty white neck-cloth."
+Even the name had long before that time ceased to be connected with the
+vending of medicines, and had come to be applied to those itinerant circus
+companies who gave gratuitous performances in the open air, making their
+gains by the sale of lottery tickets. The present writer remembers seeing
+the circus company of John Clarke performing on a piece of waste ground at
+Lower Norwood, when the clown of the show went among the spectators
+selling tickets at a shilling each, entitling the holder to participate in
+a drawing, the prizes in which were Britannia metal tea pots and milk
+ewers, papier mache tea trays, cotton gown pieces, etc. That must have
+been about 1835, or within a year or two of that time.
+
+Only a few years later, a lottery in sixpenny shares was similarly
+conducted at Alfreton, in Derbyshire, and probably in many other places,
+though contrary to the provisions of the Lottery Act.
+
+The mountebank doctor of former times, with his carriage, his zany, and
+his musicians, can now only be met with in the provincial towns of France
+and Italy, and even there but seldom. Thirty or forty years ago, there was
+a man who, in a carriage drawn up behind the Louvre, used to practise
+dentistry and advertise his father, who had a flourishing dentist's
+practice in one of the narrow streets near the cathedral of Notre Dame.
+Another of this fraternity was seen at Marseilles by an English tourist a
+few years later, and in this instance some musicians accompanied the
+mountebank's phaeton, and drowned the cries of the suffering patients with
+the crash of a march. But these survivals remind us rather of _Belphegor_,
+in the pathetic drama of that name, than of _Dulcamara_ in the opera of
+_L'Elisor d'Amore_, with his gorgeous equipage and his musical attendants,
+as old play-goers remember the personation of the character by the famous
+Lablache.
+
+
+
+
+The Strange Story of the Fight with the Small-Pox.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+When, at the present day, we hear of an epidemic of small-pox in some town
+where the practice of vaccine inoculation has been neglected, it is both
+instructive and consolatory to turn our thoughts back to the time, before
+the introduction of that practice, when that horrible disease caused ten
+per cent, of all the deaths in excess of those occurring in the ordinary
+course of nature. This statement, startling as it may seem to the present
+generation, may be verified by reference to the annual bills of mortality
+of the city of London. This fearful state of things had prevailed in
+England from the time of the Plantagenets, when, in the first quarter of
+the eighteenth century, a gleam of light was flashed upon the medical
+darkness of western Europe from the east. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu,
+writing from Adrianople to a lady friend in the spring of 1717, flashed
+that light in the concluding portion of her letter, as follows:--
+
+ "Apropos of distempers, I am going to tell you a thing that will make
+ you wish yourself here. The small-pox, so fatal and so general amongst
+ us, is here entirely harmless, by the invention of _ingrafting_, which
+ is the term they give it. There is a set of old women who make it
+ their business to perform the operation every autumn, in the month of
+ September, when the great heat is abated. People send to one another
+ to know if any of their family has a mind to have the small-pox; they
+ make parties for this purpose, and when they are met (commonly fifteen
+ or sixteen together), the old woman comes with a nut-shell full of the
+ matter of the best sort of small-pox, and asks what vein you please to
+ have opened. She immediately rips open that you offer to her with a
+ large needle (which gives you no more pain than a common scratch), and
+ puts into the vein as much matter as can lie upon the head of her
+ needle, and after that binds up the little wound with a hollow bit of
+ shell, and in this manner opens four or five veins.
+
+ ... Every year thousands undergo this operation; and the French
+ ambassador says pleasantly, that they take the small-pox here by way
+ of diversion, as they take the waters in other countries. There is no
+ example of any one that has died in it; and you may believe I am well
+ satisfied of the safety of this experiment, since I intend to try it
+ on my own little son."
+
+This intention she carried into practice, and on her return to England
+made great exertions to introduce inoculation into general use. The
+medical profession opposed it so strongly, however, that for many years
+the horrible distemper continued to rage unchecked. Such announcements as
+the following were, in consequence, not unfrequent in the newspapers:--
+
+ "WHEREAS the TOWN of BURY ST. EDMUND'S, where the GENERAL QUARTER
+ SESSIONS of the PEACE of that Division are usually held, is now
+ afflicted with the Small-Pox, for which reason it might be of
+ exceeding ill consequence to the Country in General to hold the
+ Sessions there; This is, therefore, to acquaint the PUBLIC that the
+ next GENERAL QUARTER SESSIONS of the Peace will be held at the sign of
+ the PICKEREL in IXWORTH, on Monday next.
+
+ "COCKSEDGE, Clerk of the Peace."
+
+Later on in the same year (1744) an advertisement appeared, signed by the
+clergy, churchwardens, and medical practitioners of the town, stating that
+"there were only twenty-one persons then lying ill of the small-pox."
+Scarcely a week passed, in those days, without advertisements appearing of
+the number of cases of the disease in certain towns. Careful study of a
+large number of these announcements shows, however, that it was only
+thought desirable to advertise when the epidemic was thought to be
+abating, or when it had abated. Take the following, for instance:--
+
+ "Nov. 4, 1755.
+
+ "Upon the strictest Inquiry made of the present state of the SMALL-POX
+ in BECCLES, it appears to be in eleven houses, and no more, and that
+ the truth may be constantly known, the same will be weekly advertised
+ alternately in the Ipswich and Norwich papers by us,
+
+ "THO. PAGE, Rector.
+ "OSM. CLARKE and IS. BLOWERS, Churchwardens."
+
+In the following year we find it announced that, "upon a strict inquiry
+made by the clerks through their respective parishes, delivered to us, and
+attested by them, there is but six persons now afflicted with the
+small-pox in this town,"--to wit, Colchester--and this statement is signed
+by three ministers and six medical practitioners. In the _Ipswich Journal_
+of Jan. 22nd, 1757, the following appeared:--"There will be no fair this
+year at Bildestone on Ash Wednesday, as usual, by reason of the small-pox
+being in several parishes not far off."
+
+The practice of inoculation, though still frowned upon by a large
+proportion of the medical profession, was growing at this time, as appears
+from the following advertisement:--
+
+ "COLCHESTER, May 12, 1762.
+
+ "The Practice of bringing people out of the country into this town to
+ be inoculated for the Small-pox being very prejudicial to the town in
+ many respects, but especially to the Trade thereof, and as by this
+ practice the distemper may be continued much longer in the town than
+ it otherwise would, in all probability, it is thought proper by some
+ of the principal inhabitants and traders in the town, that this public
+ notice should be given that they are determined to prosecute any
+ person or persons whomsoever, that shall hereafter bring into this
+ town, or who shall receive into their houses in the town as lodgers,
+ any person or persons for that purpose, with the utmost severity that
+ the law will permit.... But that they might not be thought
+ discouragers of a practice so salutary and beneficial to mankind, as
+ inoculation is found to be, which encourages great numbers to go into
+ the practice, the persons who have caused this public notice to be
+ given have no objection to surgeons carrying on the practice in houses
+ properly situated for the purpose."
+
+The "great numbers" of persons referred to in this notice as having "gone
+into the practice" of inoculation for the small-pox appear to have been
+chiefly old women, as in Turkey, and by some of these it was carried on
+until the passing of the Vaccination Act in 1840. Five guineas was the fee
+advertised in the _Ipswich Journal_ in 1761 for performing the operation
+by Robert Sutton, an operator in Kent, who announced that he had "only met
+with but one accident out of the many hundreds he has had under his cure."
+
+The prevalence of this hideous disease in the last century, and the dread
+which it inspired, is curiously attested by the frequency with which
+advertisements for servants, etc., appeared in the newspapers, in which
+there was an express stipulation that applicants must have had the
+small-pox. A housemaid or footman whose face bore the traces of this
+disease would not, at the present day, find their appearance much in their
+favour: but the following selection of advertisements, culled from the
+_Ipswich Journal_ and the _Salisbury and Winchester Journal_, show that in
+the last century the marks would increase their chances of obtaining
+employment very considerably. The dates range from 1755 to 1781, and such
+announcements might be increased to any extent.
+
+ "A Three Years' APPRENTICE is wanted to use the Sea between
+ Manningtree and London, whose age is between 18 and 25 years, and has
+ had the Small-pox. Such a one, inquiring of MR. WM. LEACH, at Mistley
+ Thorne, in Essex, will hear of good encouragement."
+
+ "WANTED, about Michaelmas, as Coachman, in a gentleman's family, who
+ can drive four horses, and ride postillion well. A Single Man, must
+ have had the Small-pox, and know how to drive in London. Such an one,
+ who can be well recommended, by giving a description of himself, his
+ age, and abilities, in a letter directed to A. B., at MR. J.
+ KENDALL'S, in COLCHESTER, may hear of a very good place."
+
+ "WANTED, a JOURNEYMAN BAKER, that is a good workman, and has had the
+ SMALL-POX. Such a person may hear of a good place by applying to MR.
+ JOHN STOW, at Sudbury, or to the Printer of this paper."
+
+ "Wanted an Apprentice to an eminent Surgeon in full practice in the
+ county of Suffolk. If he has not had the Small-Pox, it is expected he
+ will be inoculated for it, before he enters on business.--Enquire of
+ JOHN FOX, at Dedham, Essex."
+
+
+ "COLCHESTER, June 15th, 1762.
+
+ "Wanted immediately, a Stout Lad as an Apprentice to a Currier. If he
+ can write it will be the more agreeable. Inquire further of ELEANOR
+ ONYON. N.B.--If he has not had the Small-pox, he need not apply."
+
+ "WANTED for a gentleman that lives most part of the year in London, A
+ Genteel Person, between 28 and 40 years of age, that has had the
+ Small-pox, to be as Companion and Housekeeper. One that has been
+ brought up in a genteel, frugal and handsome manner, either a Maid or
+ Widow, so they have no incumbrances."
+
+ "WANTED, a NURSEMAID. None need apply who cannot bring a good
+ character from their last place; and has had the Small-pox."
+
+ "WANTS a place in a large or small family, in town or country, a YOUNG
+ MAN, who is well versed in the different branches of a Gardener, has
+ had the Small-pox, and can write a good hand."
+
+ "WANTED, in a large family, a STOUT WOMAN, about 30, single, or a
+ widow without children, who has had the Small-pox, to take care of a
+ lusty child, under a year old. Her character must be unexceptionable,
+ and by no means a fashionable dresser, and lived in families of
+ credit. Any person answering this description may enquire of MRS.
+ MERCER, at the Star and Garter, Andover, and be further informed."
+
+It was about the time when the last of these advertisements appeared that
+Jenner commenced his inquiries concerning the prophylactic virtues of
+cow-pox, though nearly twenty years elapsed before they were sufficiently
+advanced to enable him to make the results known. His idea of using
+vaccine inoculation to bring about the total extinction of small pox was
+scouted by those of his professional brethren to whom he mentioned it, and
+we learn from one of his biographers that, at the outset, "both his own
+observation and that of other medical men of his acquaintance proved to
+him that what was commonly called cow-pox was not a certain preventive of
+small-pox. But he ascertained by assiduous inquiry and personal
+investigation that cows were liable to various kinds of eruption on their
+teats, all capable of being communicated to the hands of the milkers; and
+that such sores when so communicated were all called cow-pox." But when he
+had traced out the nature of these various diseases, and ascertained which
+of them possessed the protective virtue against small-pox, he was again
+foiled by learning that in some cases when what he now called the true
+cow-pox broke out among the cattle on a dairy farm, and had been
+communicated to the milkers, they subsequently had small-pox. These
+repeated failures perplexed him, but at the same time stimulated, instead
+of discouraging him. He conceived the idea that the virus of cow-pox
+might undergo some change which deprived it of its protective power, while
+still enabling it to communicate a disease to human beings. Following up
+the inquiry from this point, he at length discovered that the virus was
+capable of imparting protection against small-pox only in a certain
+condition of the pustule.
+
+He was now prepared to submit his theory to the test of experiment, but it
+was not until 1796 that he had the opportunity. A dairymaid, who had
+contracted cow-pox from one of her employer's cows, afforded the matter,
+and Jenner introduced it into two incisions in the arms of a boy about
+eight years of age. The disease thus transferred ran its ordinary course
+without any ill effects, and the boy was afterwards inoculated with the
+virus of small pox, which produced no effect. The disappearance of the
+cow-pox from the dairies in the neighbourhood of his country practice in
+Gloucestershire prevented him from making further experiments; and when he
+visited London for that purpose, he had the mortification of finding that
+no one could be found who would consent to be operated upon. It was not
+until 1798 that this obstacle was overcome, and then, the results of the
+earlier experiments having been confirmed by a series of vaccinations,
+followed by inoculation for small-pox several months afterwards without
+effect, Jenner made his discovery public.
+
+In the following year, vaccine inoculation began to spread, the practice
+being taken up by many of Jenner's friends, including several who were not
+in the medical profession. But, like inoculation for the small-pox, when
+introduced by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu,--like all innovations on
+established practices, indeed,--vaccination received for many years after
+its introduction the most violent opposition. Just as inoculation for
+small-pox had been denounced from the pulpit and in medical treatises as a
+"diabolical operation" and a wicked interference with the designs of
+Providence, so did a certain Dr. Squirrel denounce vaccination as an
+attempt to change "the established laws of nature." The most absurd
+stories were circulated of the effects alleged to have followed
+vaccination. "A lady," it is stated by Mr. Bettany, "complained that since
+her daughter had been vaccinated she coughed like a cow, and had grown
+hairy all over her body; and in one country district it was stated that
+vaccination had been discontinued there, because those who had been
+inoculated in that manner bellowed like bulls." There were even doctors
+who pretended to detect resemblances to bovine visages in the countenances
+of children, produced, as they did not hesitate to declare, by
+vaccination! Self-interest may have had as much to do as prejudice in
+prompting the opposition of the profession. Many practitioners derived a
+considerable portion of their income from fees for inoculation for
+small-pox. Sutton, as we have seen, charged five guineas for the
+operation, and advertised himself in many provincial newspapers; and the
+income of Dr. Woodville, at one time physician to the Small-Pox Hospital,
+is said to have sunk in one year from a thousand pounds to a hundred on
+his adopting the practice of vaccination.
+
+Notwithstanding the prejudice and interested antagonism to which the new
+practice was exposed, it continued to make way. The Rev. Dr. Booker, of
+Dudley, gave the following striking testimony to its beneficial
+effects:--"I have, previous to the knowledge of vaccine inoculation,
+frequently buried, day after day, several (and once as many as eight)
+victims of the small-pox. But since the parish has been blessed with this
+invaluable boon of Divine Providence (cow pox), introduced among us nearly
+four years ago, only two victims have fallen a prey to the above ravaging
+disorder (small pox). In the surrounding villages, like an insatiable
+Moloch, it has lately been devouring vast numbers, where obstinacy and
+prejudice have precluded the Jennerian protective blessing."
+
+In 1803, the Royal Jennerian Institution was founded under royal
+patronage, and with Jenner as president, to promote vaccination in London
+and elsewhere; and its operations were continued for a few years with much
+success, ceasing, however, on the establishment of the National Vaccine
+Institution in 1808. Two years prior to this event, Lord Henry Petty, who
+then held the office of Chancellor of the Exchequer, carried a motion in
+the House of Commons, that the Royal College of Physicians should be
+requested to inquire and report on the progress of vaccination. The
+report, which appeared in the following year, set forth that, within eight
+years from the discovery of vaccination, some hundreds of thousands of
+persons had been vaccinated in the British Islands, and upwards of eight
+hundred thousand in our East Indian possessions, and that the practice
+had been generally adopted on the continent of Europe. Considering that
+small-pox destroyed one-sixth of those whom it attacked, and that nearly
+one-tenth, and in some years more than that proportion, of the entire
+mortality in London was caused by it, and also the number, respectability,
+and extensive experience of the advocates of vaccination, compared with
+the feeble and imperfect testimonies of its few opponents, the value of
+the practice seemed firmly established.
+
+This report did much to advance vaccination in public opinion. At the next
+quarter sessions held at Stafford, it was taken into consideration by the
+county magistrates, who, from its statements and the reports and
+testimonials sent to Jenner, considered themselves justified in placing it
+on record--"That vaccine inoculation, properly conducted, appeared never
+to have failed as a certain preservative against small-pox; that it was
+unattended by fever, and perfectly free from danger; that it required
+neither confinement, loss of time, nor previous preparation; that it was
+not infectious, nor productive of other diseases; that it might be
+performed with safety on persons of every age and sex, and at all times
+and seasons of the year." It was not, however, until 1840 that the results
+of the labours of Jenner, the report of the Royal College of Physicians,
+and the opinions of nearly the entire medical profession received
+legislative endorsement by the passing of the Vaccination Act, since which
+small-pox has become a thing of the past, except in cases where it has
+been conserved by prejudice and ignorance.
+
+
+
+
+Burkers and Body-Snatchers.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+How recollections will crowd upon the mind when a train of thought is set
+in motion by the association of ideas! When, many years ago, I visited Dr.
+Kahn's anatomical museum, then located in Tichborne Street, I there saw a
+human skeleton which was affirmed by the lecturer, Dr. Sexton, to be that
+of John Bishop, who was hanged in 1831, for the murder of an Italian boy
+named Carlo Ferrari, at a house in Nova Scotia Gardens, one of the slums
+then existing in the north-eastern quarter of London. Though nearly forty
+years had elapsed since the commission of the crime, and I was only ten
+years of age when I heard the horrible story which the sight of that
+ghastly relic of mortality recalled to my mind, all the incidents
+connected with it immediately passed before my mental vision like a
+hideous phantasmagoria. The vividness with which they came back to me may
+be accounted for by the deep impression which they made upon my mind at
+the time of their occurrence. Those whose memories will carry them back
+sixty years will readily understand this.
+
+At the time when the public mind was harrowed by the narration in the
+newspapers of the horrible circumstances connected with the murder, and
+for some time previously, a fearful excitement had been created in all
+parts of the country by stories of murders committed and graves robbed of
+their ghastly tenants for the purpose of supplying with "subjects" the
+dissecting tables of the London and Edinburgh schools of anatomy. In the
+latter city two miscreants named Burke and Hare had been convicted of
+murder for this purpose, and one of them hanged for their crimes; but the
+scare had not abated. Stories were told with appalling frequency of
+corpses missing from lonely graveyards and of narrow escapes from murder
+in little frequented places. Chloroform had not then been discovered, but
+the Scotch professors of the art of murder had introduced the practice,
+popularly named after one of them, of disabling their victims by means of
+a pitch plaster suddenly clapped on the mouth. Every person who was
+missing was thought to have been "burked," and the watching of graves to
+prevent the removal of newly-buried corpses became an established
+practice. As the dark nights of the late autumn came on, the fears of the
+timid and nervous were doubled, and persons who lived in lonely places, or
+in the ill-lighted parts of towns, became afraid to leave their houses
+after nightfall. I remember hearing such fears expressed by several
+persons at Croydon, with whom my parents were acquainted, and also of
+neighbours combining to assist in watching the graves of deceased members
+of each others' families.
+
+A few years ago, I was one day exchanging reminiscences of a long bygone
+generation with a brother journalist, when, on this gruesome subject being
+mentioned, he placed in my hands a report of the trial of the murderers of
+Carlo Ferrari, which appeared to have been detached from a volume of
+criminal trials. No feature of the horrible record impressed me so much as
+the cool, business-like manner in which the wretches concerned in the
+crime hawked the corpse of their victim from one school of anatomy to
+another, and the equally cool and business-like manner in which the matter
+was dealt with by those with whom their nefarious occupation brought them
+in contact. The procuring of corpses for anatomical purposes was, in fact,
+a regular trade, and the biographer of Sir Astley Cooper states that "the
+Resurrection-men were occasionally employed on expeditions into the
+country to obtain possession of the bodies of those who had been subjected
+to some important operation, and of which a _post mortem_ examination was
+of the greatest interest to science. Scarcely any distance from London was
+considered an insuperable difficulty in the attaining of this object, and
+as certainly as the Resurrectionist undertook the task, so certain was he
+of completing it. This was usually an expensive undertaking, but still it
+did not restrain the most zealous in their profession from occasionally
+engaging these men in this employment." The price of a subject ranged from
+seven to twelve guineas, but when the "body-snatchers" were specially
+employed to procure some particular corpse, the incidental expenses were
+often as much more.
+
+As an illustration of the times in which such horrors were possible, the
+story of the murder of Carlo Ferrari may, at this distance of time from
+the event, be worth telling. In the autumn of 1831, there lived in one of
+a row of small houses, known as Nova Scotia Gardens, in the
+poverty-stricken district of Bethnal Green, a man named John Bishop, with
+his wife and three children. He had formerly been a carrier at Highgate,
+but had long been suspected of "body-snatching," as the practice of
+robbing graves was termed, and had no visible means of honest living. He
+had the look of a man whose original rustic stolidity had been
+supercharged with cockney cunning. The house adjoining Bishop's was
+occupied by a man named Woodcock, who had succeeded in the tenancy a
+glass-blower named Thomas Williams, described as a little, simple-looking
+man, of mild and inoffensive demeanour. About two o'clock on the morning
+of the 4th of November, Woodcock was awakened by a noise, as of a scuffle,
+in Bishop's house, and afterwards heard two men leave it and return in a
+few minutes, when he recognised the voices as those of Bishop and
+Williams. At noon the same day these two men were in a neighbouring
+public-house, accompanied by two other men, one of whom was known as James
+May, who had formerly been a butcher, but for the last few years had been
+suspected of following the same ghastly and revolting occupation as
+Bishop. In the afternoon three men alighted from a cab at Nova Scotia
+Gardens, two of them being recognised as Bishop and Williams, and
+afterwards returned to the vehicle, when the former and the third man were
+carrying something in a sack, which they placed in the cab. The three men
+then entered, and it was driven off.
+
+About seven o'clock the same evening, Bishop and May presented themselves
+at Guy's Hospital, carrying something in a sack, and asked the porter if a
+"subject" was wanted. Receiving a negative reply, they asked him to allow
+"it" to remain there until the next morning, to which he consented.
+Half-an-hour later, the two traffickers in human flesh called at
+Grainger's anatomical theatre, in Webb Street, Southwark, and told the
+curator they had "a very fresh male subject, about fourteen years of age."
+The offer being declined, they went away, and later on they were,
+accompanied by Williams, in a public-house, where May was seen by a waiter
+to pour water on a handkerchief containing human teeth, and then rub the
+teeth together, remarking that they were worth two pounds to him.
+
+Next morning, May called upon a dentist named Mills, on Newington
+Causeway, and sold a dozen teeth to him for a guinea, observing that they
+were the teeth of a boy fourteen years of age. On examining them, Mills
+found that morsels of the gums and splinters of the jaw were adhering to
+them, as if much force had been used to wrench them out. Two hours later,
+Bishop and May called again at the anatomical theatre in Southwark, and
+repeated their offer of the preceding evening, which was again declined.
+Shortly afterwards, they went to Guy's Hospital, accompanied by Williams
+and a man named Shields, to remove the "subject" left there the evening
+before, and it was given to them in the sack, as they had left it, and
+placed in a large hamper, which Shields had brought for the purpose. There
+was a hole in the sack, through which the porter saw a small foot
+protruding, apparently that of a boy or a woman.
+
+About midnight, the bell of King's College was rung, and the porter, on
+going to the gate, found there Bishop and May, whom he had seen there
+before, it seems, and on similar business. May asked him if anything was
+wanted, and receiving an indifferent answer, added that they had a male
+"subject," a boy about fourteen years of age. The porter inquired the
+price, and was told they wanted twelve guineas for it. He then said he
+would ask Mr. Partridge, the demonstrator in anatomy, and they followed
+him to a room adjoining the dissecting room. Nine guineas were offered,
+which May, with an oath, refused, and went outside. Bishop then said to
+the porter, "Never mind May, he is drunk; it shall come in for nine in
+half-an-hour." They then went away, returning at the stipulated time,
+accompanied by Williams and Shields, the latter carrying on his head the
+hamper containing the corpse brought from Guy's Hospital. It was taken
+into a room, where it was opened, and the corpse turned out of the sack by
+May. The porter, observing a cut on the left temple, and that the left arm
+was bent and the fingers clenched, conceived suspicions of foul play, and
+communicated them at once to Mr. Partridge. That gentleman thereupon
+examined the corpse, and mentioned its condition to the secretary, who
+immediately gave information to the police.
+
+In order to detain the men until the arrival of the police, the
+demonstrator showed them a L50 note, observing that he must get it changed
+for gold before he could pay them. Several constables were soon on the
+spot, and the four men were arrested, and taken to the station-house in
+Vine Street, Covent Garden. On being charged on suspicion with having
+unlawful possession of a corpse, May said he had nothing to do with it,
+and had merely accompanied Bishop. A similar statement was made by
+Williams, and Bishop said he was only removing the corpse from St.
+Thomas's Hospital to King's College. Shields, who was known as a porter,
+said he was employed to carry the hamper, which he did in the exercise of
+his vocation. They were all then removed to the cells.
+
+The evidence given at the coroner's inquest by Partridge and two other
+surgeons left no doubt that the unfortunate lad, respecting whose identity
+there was no evidence, had been killed by a violent blow on the back of
+the neck, which had affected the spinal cord. The four accused men were
+present in custody during the inquiry, and Bishop, after reading a bill
+relating to the murder, which was displayed on the wall of the room, was
+heard by a constable to say, in a subdued tone, to May, "It was the blood
+that sold us." Volunteering to give evidence, he said he got the corpse
+from a grave, but declined to name the place whence he had got it,
+alleging that the information would get into trouble two watchmen, who
+had large families. May also made a voluntary statement, to the effect
+that he got two "subjects" from the country, which he took first to
+Grainger's theatre of anatomy, and afterwards to Guy's Hospital,
+subsequently meeting Bishop, who promised him all he could get for a
+"subject" above nine guineas if he would sell it for him. The inquest was
+adjourned, and the police proceeded with their investigation.
+
+The houses of Bishop and May had been promptly visited and searched by the
+police, who found at the former's a sack, a large hamper, and a brad-awl,
+the last showing recent bloodstains. At May's house in Dorset Street, New
+Kent Road, they found a pair of breeches, stained with blood at the back.
+On a second visit to Bishop's house the garden was dug over, and a jacket,
+trousers, and a shirt found in one spot, and in another a coat, trousers,
+a vest with blood on the collar and one shoulder, and a shirt with the
+front torn. When the brad-awl was produced at Bow Street police-court, May
+said, "That is the instrument I punched the teeth out with." Shields was
+eventually discharged from custody, but the other three prisoners were
+committed for trial on the capital charge.
+
+The identity of the victim remained a mystery until the 19th of November,
+a fortnight after the murder, when the corpse was recognised by a
+foreigner named Brun as that of a boy named Carlo Ferrari, whom he had
+brought from Italy two years before, but had not seen since July, 1830.
+The boy picked up the means of living by exhibiting a tortoise and a pair
+of white mice in the streets. He had been seen by several persons in or
+near Nova Scotia Gardens on the 3rd of November, but he had not been seen
+since, nor had he returned on that day to his miserable lodgings in
+Charles Street, Drury Lane. The clothes found in Bishop's garden
+corresponded with the description given of those worn by him when he was
+last seen, and a little boy who played with Bishop's children stated that
+they had, on the following day, shown him two white mice in a cage similar
+to the one carried by Ferrari.
+
+The incidents of the crime, as revealed from day to day, and the mystery
+in which the identity of the victim was for some time veiled, created so
+much excitement in the public mind, that when the prisoners were placed
+in the dock at the Old Bailey, early in December, the court was crowded,
+and a guinea each was paid for seats in the gallery, the occupants of
+which, all fashionably dressed, as might be expected of those who could
+afford to pay that price for the gratification of their love of the
+sensational, had taken their seats the day before. Though the evidence was
+but a recapitulation of the story told before in the police-court and the
+inquest-room, it was listened to with the utmost avidity. The witnesses
+for the defence were few, and their evidence valueless, except in the case
+of May, for whom an _alibi_ was established in respect of the time between
+the afternoon of the day preceding the murder and noon on the following
+day. The prisoners were sentenced to death, but in May's case the sentence
+was commuted into transportation for life. A sea-faring relative of mine,
+who was second officer of the vessel in which May was sent out to Sydney,
+described him as an athletic, wiry-looking man, with features expressive
+of sternness, and a determined will, quite a different-looking man,
+therefore, to his two companions in crime, who were duly hanged at
+Newgate.
+
+The crime of these men, and the deeds of Burke and Hare, created such a
+scare, and exposed so vividly the temptation to murder afforded by the
+prices paid by surgeons for "subjects," that the attention of parliament
+was directed to the matter, and a Select Committee of the House of Commons
+was appointed to inquire and report as to the facilities which might be
+given for obtaining bodies for anatomical purposes in a legitimate manner.
+
+Sir Astley Cooper, who was one of the eminent surgeons who gave evidence
+before this committee, was asked whether the state of the law prevented
+teachers of anatomy from obtaining the body of any person, which, in
+consequence of some peculiarity of structure, they might be desirous of
+procuring. He replied:--"The law does not prevent our obtaining the body
+of an individual if we think proper; for there is no person, let his
+situation in life be what it may, whom, if I were disposed to dissect, I
+could not obtain.... The law only enhances the price, and does not prevent
+the exhumation. Nobody is secured by the law; it only adds to the price of
+the subject." The result of this inquiry was the passing of the Anatomy
+Act, by which the bodies of persons dying in hospitals and workhouses, if
+unclaimed by the relatives, may be placed at the disposal of the schools
+of anatomy.
+
+
+
+
+Reminiscences of the Cholera.
+
+BY THOMAS FROST.
+
+
+It is now more than sixty years since the strange and mysterious
+visitation, as it was then considered, known as the cholera morbus, for
+which fearsome name that of Asiatic cholera has since been substituted,
+made its first appearance in this country, or anywhere west of the Ural
+Mountains. Coming first from India, from the banks of the Ganges and the
+Indus, the dread pestilence moved steadily westward and north-westward
+until, creeping along the rivers of Russia, and desolating all the most
+considerable towns of that country, it reached St. Petersburg. There it
+raged with fearful severity, mowing down as with the scythe of Death more
+than a thousand persons daily. So dreadful were the features of the
+unknown malady, and so rapidly were its victims carried off, that the
+ignorant populace of the capital attributed it to poison administered by
+the doctors. A fearful tumult was excited by this belief, and it was with
+great difficulty that it was suppressed.
+
+From Russia the dire disease spread rapidly into almost every country in
+Europe, and wherever it appeared created the profoundest awe and the most
+bewildering terror. In Paris it broke out with extreme malignity in March,
+1832, and soon raged there with greater virulence than it had exhibited in
+any other city in Europe except St. Petersburg. The deaths soon reached
+from four to five hundred daily, and during April they rose to a total for
+the month of twelve thousand seven hundred. It was hinted that the ravages
+of this new and dreadful disease were caused by the poisoning of the meat
+sold in the markets and the water in the public fountains; and the
+dwellers in the slums became so infuriated by this horrible and absurd
+rumour that mobs perambulated the streets howling for vengeance on the
+poisoners. Many unfortunate persons were murdered in the streets on being
+denounced as the perpetrators of these imaginary crimes, and so paralysed
+was the arm of justice by the influence of terror that nothing was done to
+vindicate the majesty of the law. Everyone who could afford to leave Paris
+fled from it with precipitation, and the city was abandoned to desolation
+and anarchy. The legislative labours of the two Chambers were suspended,
+and the peers and deputies were the first to set the example of flight,
+though Louis Philippe and his family continued to reside at the Tuileries,
+with an occasional sojourn of a few days at Neuilly.
+
+I have a vivid recollection of the mingled awe and terror which this fell
+disease inspired when it was announced that it had crossed the sea and
+made its first victims in this country. It had made its way across the
+continent from town to town on the banks of the great rivers, but into
+England it was imported by sick sailors. Many generations had passed away
+since anything like a pestilence had been known in England, and the
+cholera therefore created a panic among all classes of the people, which
+served to augment its virulence and render those of a nervous temperament
+more liable to be attacked by it. Doctors were utterly unacquainted with
+its proper treatment, and indeed had no knowledge whatever of the disease.
+Hence it raged without check wherever it appeared, and the rapidity with
+which it carried off its victims added to the terror inspired by its
+approaches. The first death at Lower Norwood, where my parents then
+resided, was that of the pastor of the Independent Chapel, situated only
+two doors from my father's house. He died in a few hours from the time he
+experienced the premonitory symptoms, and such was the dread of infection
+that the corpse was buried the same night by torchlight, in the
+burial-ground of the chapel, wrapped in a sheet coated with pitch.
+
+Though a period of seventeen years separated the first cholera epidemic
+from the second, the lessons which the former should have taught had not
+been so well learned as they should have been, and the latter, with which
+these reminiscences are chiefly concerned, inspired a wild, unreasoning
+terror in only a little less degree than that of 1832.
+
+I remember a case at Mitcham, in which the women attending a patient were
+seized with a panic on the approach of death, and rushed out of the house,
+leaving the poor wretch, a woman, to die alone, the corpse being
+afterwards found rigid and distorted.
+
+The apparently erratic manner in which the disease spread, sometimes
+carrying off victims from one side of a street and sparing the other side,
+sometimes smiting every member of a family in one house, and passing over
+all the other houses in the same street, was a puzzle to persons who had
+given no attention to the causes of the disease, and were content to
+regard it as a sign of the wrath of God, reasoning about the matter as
+little as did the Israelites whose relatives were swept off at
+Kibroth-hattaavah. They had not given sufficient attention to the laws of
+health to understand that the disease found its victims where those laws
+were neglected, whether from carelessness or from ignorance.
+
+I remember two cases at Croydon in which all the inmates of the houses in
+which the disease manifested its dread presence were carried off by it.
+One occurred in a cottage in St. James's Road, one of a row which had
+originally been level with the road, but had become overshadowed by the
+approach to the railway bridge. There were three victims in that house,
+and no other case in the same row, or in the neighbourhood. The other case
+occurred in King Street, one of several narrow, closely-built streets in
+the centre of the town, and the victims were a widow and her only child,
+the latter dying not alone, for, like Byron's Haidee,--
+
+ "----she held within
+ A second principle of life, which might
+ Have dawned a fair and sinless child of sin;
+ But closed its little being without light,
+ And went down to the grave unborn, wherein
+ Blossom and bough lie withered with one blight."
+
+A remarkable incident occurred while the fell disease was in the full
+swing of its ravages. The wife of a working man living in the Old Town, a
+low-lying and densely populated quarter, was attacked by it, and at once
+removed to a temporary hospital that had been established on Duppas Hill,
+a tabular eminence overlooking the town, and in the thirteenth century the
+scene of the tournament in which the son of Earl Warrenne was by
+misadventure slain. There her husband went, on his return from labour, to
+ascertain her condition, and heard with a shock which the reader may
+imagine that she was dead. When the poor fellow had in some degree
+recovered from the blow, he expressed a wish to see the corpse and take it
+to his home. He seems to have been unable to realise that his wife was
+really dead, though the nurses and doctors assured him that she had passed
+away. The idea that life yet lingered in the form that was apparently
+lifeless grew upon him as he gazed and though he may never have read "The
+Giaour," he may have felt the force of the thought so finely expressed by
+Byron in the lines that introduce his picture of the Greece of his day:--
+
+ "He who hath bent him o'er the dead,
+ Ere the first day of death is fled,
+ The first dark day of nothingness,
+ The last of danger and distress
+ (Before Decay's effacing fingers
+ Have swept the lines where beauty lingers),
+ And marked the mild angelic air,
+ The rapture of repose that's there,
+ The fixed yet tender traits that streak
+ The languor of the pallid cheek,
+ And--but for that sad shrouded eye,
+ That fires not, wins not, weeps not, now,
+ And but for that chill, changeless brow,
+ Where cold Obstruction's apathy
+ Appals the gazing mourner's heart,
+ As if to him it could impart
+ The doom he dreads, yet dwells upon;
+ Yes, but for these, and these alone,
+ Some moments, aye, one treacherous hour,
+ He still might doubt the tyrant's power;
+ So fair, so calm, so softly sealed,
+ The first, last look by death revealed!"
+
+Whether it was feeling or reason that inspired the thought that life yet
+lingered in the apparently inanimate, but not yet rigid form, which the
+loving husband conveyed to his humble dwelling, it was undoubtedly to that
+inspiration that the woman owed her preservation from death. For she was
+not dead. Signs of returning animation were perceived when the supposed
+corpse was placed upon the bed, and the neighbour women who came in to
+perform the last sad offices for the dead were there to welcome her on her
+return to life. I will not attempt to describe the feelings with which the
+husband beheld the eyelids of his wife unclose, and the rose-tints return
+to the pallid cheeks. Like the Greek painter who, conscious of the
+inadequacy of his art to fully portray the grief of Agamemnon for the loss
+of his son, covered the countenance of the old king with a veil, I draw
+the curtain upon the scene, and leave it to the imagination of the reader.
+
+Among the remedies for the cholera which came into vogue during the
+prevalence of the epidemic of 1849, the rubbing of the stomach with brandy
+and salt obtained a considerable degree of repute; and the chemists vied
+with each other, as in the recent epidemics of influenza, in the
+concoction and advertising of various cholera mixtures, one of the most
+efficacious of which was a preparation of opium and chalk.
+
+The lessons of the cholera were not so entirely neglected on this occasion
+as they were after the epidemic of 1832; but it is a sad reflection on our
+legislation that we were indebted to the ravages of disease, or rather to
+the fear inspired by them, for sanitary reforms which ought to have
+resulted from foresight. There had been sanitary inquiries by Royal
+Commissions between 1842 and 1849, but little had been done towards
+carrying out the recommendations which resulted from them. The existence
+of cholera in India, and the causes which produced it, had long been
+known; but so long as its ravages were confined to the people of that
+country no one seemed to think that it concerned the people of England. It
+was known, too, that whatever might be the true causes of zymotic
+diseases, concerning which medical opinions differed, accumulations of
+filth, contaminated sources of water supply, and an impure condition of
+the atmosphere tended to produce their outbreaks, and to aggravate their
+virulence. But then we had been used to these evils since the days of the
+Plantagenets, and though they had become intensified with the increase of
+population and the growth of the large towns, had not Malthus taught us
+that epidemics of disease were one of the means used by divine providence
+to prevent the numbers of the human race from exceeding the means of
+subsistence?
+
+The cholera epidemic of 1849 roused the public mind from its lethargy, and
+prepared it to act upon the recommendations of the General Board of Health
+and to comply with the Sanitary Act of that year. The old wells of London
+were closed, and the like course was adopted in Croydon, where a constant
+supply of practically pure water was obtained by boring down to the chalk.
+Other towns followed the example, one of the foremost being Birmingham,
+which received a supply which enabled the inhabitants to dispense with the
+insalubrious rain-water butt. Sewerage works were undertaken where no
+efficient system of drainage had before existed. Attention was called to
+the important questions of sewage disposal and the pollution of rivers;
+and though much even now remains to be done in this direction, and in the
+improvement of the water supply of the large manufacturing towns of
+Yorkshire and Lancashire, sanitation has been cleared of most of its
+difficulties by better knowledge of the philosophy of cause and effect, so
+that we no longer regard the calamities resulting from our own ignorance
+and neglect of the laws of nature as the inflictions of Providence.
+
+
+
+
+Some Old Doctors.
+
+BY MRS. G. LINNAEUS BANKS.
+
+
+It is not my intention to go back to those Greek fathers of the healing
+art, Hippocrates and Galen, or to dwell on the days when every monastery
+held within its walls some learned brother accredited to administer to
+bodies as well as souls diseased, or when the mistress of every feudal
+castle, every baronial-hall, was trained and skilled in leechcraft,
+distilled herbs, concocted potions and unguents, and not only physicked
+her household, but was prepared to staunch and dress the gaping wounds
+received in siege or tournay. Nor yet have we ought to do with those
+pretenders to science who mingled astrology with pharmacy, ascribed to
+every plant its ruling planet, and held that the potency of all herbs
+depended on the conjunction of planets, or the phase of the moon under
+which they were gathered--a belief, indeed, under which old Nicholas
+Culpepper compiled his well-known "Herbal" early in the seventeenth
+century.
+
+Medicine and surgery have made rapid strides since the days, not a century
+agone, when in the naval cockpit, and on the open battlefield, the hatchet
+was the ready implement for amputation, the rough cautery that of a red
+hot iron applied to the fizzing flesh; and when the doctor cried, "Spit,
+man, spit" to the suffering soldier with a gunshot wound in his chest, and
+when the sputum came tinged with blood, simply plugged up the bullet-hole
+and left the poor fellow to his fate, while he passed on to cases less
+hopeless. And _en passant_ I may say that wooden legs and stumps for arms
+were so common in the writer's young days as scarcely to attract
+attention--so ready were army surgeons to amputate.
+
+These are not matters on which I have to dwell, but I think the present
+work would be incomplete without a record of those men of original mind,
+whose acute observation and unwearied investigations in the past have
+indissolubly linked their names with discoveries which have revolutionised
+the practice of both medicine and surgery.
+
+In the opinion of Solomon, "there is nothing new under the sun;" and if
+such was the case in his day, how much more of a verity must be the
+truism in ours.
+
+So the most startling and perfect revelation of any great fact in human
+physiology may have been dimly perceptible to earlier intelligences
+groping in the dark, faint adumbrations of which may fall on the sensorium
+of the final discoverer, until a ray of divine light dispels the mists of
+ages, and the man, developing his crude idea with infinite pains, realises
+a great truth, and cries out "Eureka" to an astonished--and too often--an
+unbelieving world.
+
+Thus it may have been with the renowned practitioner, WILLIAM HARVEY, who
+came into the world when all England was filled with alarms of an
+"Invincible Spanish Armada," then preparing to devastate our shores and
+spare neither man nor maid, babe nor mother. Yet the scare passed and
+peace came, and the boy grew, until his educational course at Cambridge
+ended, and his bias led him towards Padua, then the great seat of
+academical and medical lore, and there he took his doctor's degree in
+physic. With the prestige of Padua upon him, in 1607, when he was but
+twenty years of age, he was elected Fellow of the College of Physicians
+(founded by Dr. Linacre in the reign of Henry VII.), and in 1715, the man
+of twenty-eight became their Anatomical Reader.
+
+A noteworthy appointment this, since consequent study and investigation
+led to the grand discovery that the heart--to speak unscientifically--was
+a sort of muscular pumping-engine, sending the blood circulating along a
+series of blood-vessels to every part of the system, changing in character
+on its course until it returned to its centre, the seat of life, to be
+pumped out afresh to circulate as before and do its appointed work.
+
+In 1628, Harvey made his discovery known in a learned treatise "On the
+circulation of the blood," and as may be supposed, his daring assertions
+roused a violent spirit of opposition amongst his medical brethren, even
+among those who began to feel the pulses of their patients for the first
+time, and to comprehend _why_ there should be a fluttering or audible
+beating under the sick one's ribs, and wherefore the fatal hemorrhage
+following a sword-thrust or a gunshot wound.
+
+In spite of opposition his teaching created a revolution in medical
+practice. The discoverer was called before Charles I. and his Court to
+demonstrate the action of the heart and subsidiary organs, in support of
+his new doctrine.
+
+Fresh honours fell upon him even when too old to bear the burden. And when
+in the fulness of time, William Harvey, who had outlived three monarchs,
+made his own exit under Cromwellian rule, he bequeathed infinitely more to
+posterity in his invaluable discovery than can be summed up in the estate,
+library, and museum now in the proud possession of the College of
+Physicians. These are held by a mere body of men. The other has a
+world-wide significance.
+
+Yet, as in his life, even in his grave, detractors strove to dim the glory
+of his important revelation, ascribing to the theological physician
+Servetus, to Realdus Columbus, and to Andreas Caesalpinas, the credit of
+prior discovery.
+
+It remained for another learned physician, a century later, to deal with
+these counter-claims, and whilst admitting their vague individual
+conceptions of an elusive mystery, to establish once and for ever William
+Harvey's inalienable right as sole discoverer.
+
+This notable champion was JOHN FREIND, M.D., F.R.S., distinguished as the
+Medical Historian, and Harveian lecturer to the College of Physicians, at
+a time when he and his fellows shaved their heads and mounted Ramillies
+wigs as outward guarantees for the profundity of wisdom they enshrined.
+
+But apart from his flowing wig, or his defence of Harvey, or his learned
+medical history, written in part when he was a prisoner in the Tower for
+supposed complicity in the Atterbury Plot, or for skill in the treatment
+of disease, John Freind had a pioneer's claim to distinction.
+
+The doctor, strange to say, was a Member of Parliament, and on resuming
+his seat on his release from incarceration, he brought before the House of
+Commons, in 1725, a remarkable petition from the Royal College of
+Physicians, to restrain "the pernicious use of spirituous liquors." And
+though he might speak but as the mouthpiece of his brother Fellows, it
+needed no small degree of courage to broach such a subject in those days
+of general coarse indulgence among all classes; especially if his own
+language was as direct and forcible as that of the petitioners.
+
+Therefore, in his triple character as the historian of medicine, as the
+champion of William Harvey, and as the foremost M.P. to advocate the
+cause of temperance before our national legislative assembly, John Freind,
+M.D., claims a niche in our Walhalla of notable old doctors.
+
+In the nave of Westminster Abbey on a memorial of polished granite is this
+inscription--"Beneath are deposited the remains of JOHN HUNTER, born at
+Long Calderwood, Lanarkshire, N.B., on February 14th, 1728; died in London
+on October 10th, 1793. His remains were removed from the Church of St.
+Martins-in-the-Fields to this Abbey on March 28th, 1858. The Royal College
+of Surgeons of England have placed this table over the grave of Hunter to
+record their admiration of his genius as a gifted interpreter of the
+Divine power and wisdom that works in the laws of organic life, and their
+grateful veneration for his services to mankind as the Father of
+scientific surgery. 'O Lord, how manifold are Thy works; in wisdom hast
+Thou made them all.'"
+
+Such honours are not paid to the remains of men of common stamp. And of no
+common stamp was the sandy-headed youth who, having spent ten years of his
+life learning cabinet making, resolved on striking out a better career for
+himself; and in his twentieth year took horse and journeyed to London to
+place himself under his elder brother, WILLIAM HUNTER, then rising into
+note as a medical practitioner and a teacher of anatomy. In October, 1748,
+he entered his brother's dissecting room, and whether the fitting of
+joints in cabinetware had been of initiatory service, or he had had access
+to the books of his medical relations in Glasgow, or that as a boy upon
+his father's farm, observation of the domestic animals and of the wild
+inhabitants of wood and fell, had roused the desire to master the secrets
+of animated nature, sure it is that William speedily foretold a successful
+future for his new pupil as an anatomist.
+
+At all events he used his interest to place his promising brother under
+the eminent surgeon of Chelsea Hospital, and later under another at St.
+Bartholomew's. Then, shocked by the rough speech and manners of his
+countrified brother, and his need of education, the classical elder packed
+him off to college to pick up a little refinement along with Latin and
+Greek.
+
+In vain. Irrepressible and hot-tempered John could not sit down quietly to
+study dead languages. Back he came from Oxford in haste, to study dead
+bodies in his brother's dissecting room, and serve as demonstrator to his
+course of lectures, simultaneously with his study of living bodies at St.
+George's Hospital, where in a comparatively short time he became
+house-surgeon.
+
+His appointment as staff-surgeon to our troops on foreign service marked
+the six intervening years before he settled down to practise in London. He
+had laboured ten years on human anatomy, and had dissected a number of the
+lower animals, laying the foundation of his collection of comparative
+anatomy. Even while on foreign service he had amused himself with studying
+the digestive faculties of snakes and lizards when in a torpid state, and
+many were the contributions he sent home to his brother's museum.
+
+His return to London, as a teacher of surgery and anatomy, was a marked
+success, though private practice had to grow. In 1776, he was appointed
+surgeon extraordinary to His Majesty George III., but eleven years prior
+to this was admitted a Fellow of the Royal Society, slightly in advance of
+his elder brother. Then in 1768, the bachelor, William, shifted himself
+and his museum from Jermyn Street to Windmill Street, and resigned the
+lease to John, thus securing independent action to the latter, and
+facilities for creating a natural-history museum of his own.
+
+Hitherto, the brothers had worked together in unison, but now John
+committed the unpardonable offence of bringing home to Jermyn Street "a
+tocherless bride," fourteen years younger than himself, endowed only with
+beauty and accomplishments, and a faculty for filling the house with
+assemblies of wit and fashion, which blunt-spoken John designated
+"kick-ups," no doubt with an irreverent big D as a prefix, swearing being
+as characteristic as hard work.
+
+And work hard he did, early and late, not merely to maintain his extensive
+and lucrative practice, but to provide and prepare subjects for the museum
+in the rear of his town house, and for the valuable and original lectures
+he delivered in language forcible and clear, if neither refined nor
+academic.
+
+His chief workshop, so to speak, was at his country "Box" at Earl's Court,
+the grounds of which he had converted into a zoological garden, so many
+wild animals were there kept for study. There is a story told of his
+facing an escaped lion and flicking him back to his den with his pocket
+handkerchief, showing his fearlessness and his knowledge of leonine
+nature.
+
+Another tale is told of his intervention between fighting dogs and
+leopards, he dragging the infuriated leopards back to their cage by their
+collars--and _fainting_ when the feat was accomplished, for his was not a
+burly frame, and his heart was in a threatening condition.
+
+An element of humour mingles with the gruesome in Sir B. W. Richardson's
+account of the ruse employed to cheat watchful executors, and obtain the
+body of O'Brien the Irish Giant,[2] so as to convert it into the skeleton
+now in the Hunterian Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons, Lincoln's
+Inn.
+
+Those were the days when surgeons were not particular where they obtained
+subjects for their scalpels, whether from the resurrection men or from the
+gallows, and John Hunter was not more dainty than his fellows. But also
+from travelling shows and menageries, and from animals that died in the
+Tower he was supplied. And so rapidly did his museum grow, absorbing the
+bulk of his income, that ere long he had to remove to what is now
+Leicester Square, and erect a building in the rear for his collection.
+
+Honours fell upon him thickly as they had fallen on his brother, alike
+British and foreign, of which he took little heed, absorbed as he was in
+the pursuit of knowledge, and its demonstration. His discoveries placed
+him far ahead of the science of his time, though his courtly brother,
+earlier in the field and first to leave it, ran him close. Indeed their
+final quarrel and alienation arose out of a disputed claim to a certain
+discovery in feminine physiology, brought before the Royal Society, a
+quarrel which transferred William's museum to the University of Glasgow,
+and excluded John from his will.
+
+The so-called "Lyceum Medicum" in Leicester Square, became the home of the
+"Society for the Improvement of Medical and Chirurgical Knowledge," and
+the "Philosophical Transactions" of the Society testify to the genius and
+untiring activity of its promoter. How he found time for his many written
+essays and discourses on topics wide apart as "Gunshot-wounds" and "Teeth"
+is a marvel. No wonder the frail human machine wore out so early. He had
+worked when he should have rested, worked regardless of premonitions and
+attacks John Hunter must have well understood, and died at last at
+sixty-two, a victim of one of those fits of passion no man with a diseased
+heart can indulge in safely.
+
+Setting out originally from the tablet in Westminster Abbey to describe
+what manner of man was the old doctor who lay beneath, it became
+imperatively necessary to bracket the two brothers, John and William
+Hunter, together, since, according to Sir B. W. Richardson, they were
+"twins in science," if not in birth. Had not William already come to the
+front when John sought him out, he could not have been his teacher, or
+given his younger brother his first start in life, his introduction, or
+his facilities for study. Then they worked together, became one in
+anatomical discovery, in their zeal for collecting all that illustrated
+their theories, all that was rare and curious, into unprecedented museums.
+Yet how widely the personalities of the brothers differed. They both stood
+out among contemporaries, yet William, with his slight form, mildly
+refined face, set off by an unpretentious wig, and delicate hands, under
+lace ruffles, and wide coat cuffs, a classical scholar, an antiquary, a
+numismatist, as well as a naturalist,--Queen Charlotte's medical referee,
+stepping out from his chariot, gold cane in hand, to visit his courtly
+patients, was the very _beau ideal_ of a fashionable physician of that
+day, one who shone in drawing-rooms as well as in the lecture-hall.
+Blue-eyed John, with high cheek bones, broad, slightly receding forehead,
+tangled red hair, and a shaggy mane of whisker that made his keen face a
+triangle, tender of heart, yet brusque and coarse of speech, rough in
+manner as in dress (with not a sign of frill or ruffle), despising
+dilettante coteries, not squeamish in seeking "subjects," passionate and
+determined, caring little for empty honours, for money only to swell his
+museum, and nothing for courtly circles, though created
+surgeon-extraordinary to George III., and owing his large practice solely
+to the force of his character, his science, and his skill. So far he was
+his brother's antithesis. John was a diamond in the rough; William the gem
+cut and polished. And such were the two old doctors to whom England's
+College of Surgeons owes its Hunterian Museum; the University of Glasgow
+the other. Had not the brothers quarrelled, the two would have formed one
+grand unrivalled collection.
+
+Space is limited, and so must be our notes of these other celebrated "old
+doctors," whom it would be invidious to overlook. Of these EDWARD JENNER
+stands prominently out, but he has been already dealt with by another
+hand.
+
+It is scarcely possible to pass by JOHN ABERNETHY, F.R.S., the eccentric
+physician, whose principle was that men should eat to live, not live to
+eat, who maintained that the stomach was the chief seat of health or
+disease, according as it was used or abused, and that water was the one
+natural and nutrient beverage. The practical way in which he illustrated
+his theories respecting overfeeding,--filling a pail with food from
+various dishes in correspondence with the heterogeneous mixture on his
+patients' plates--and his brusque replies to some other of his patients,
+have perpetuated his name through his oddities, rather than as a
+benefactor of his kind, who revolutionized the medical practice of his
+time, and of course excited envy and antagonism. His hair, kept together
+at the nape of the neck with a ribbon tie, was brushed back from his
+forehead, and added a degree of sharpness to his somewhat hatchet-shaped
+face, when he told the timorous lady who was "afraid she had swallowed a
+spider," "Then put a fly in your mouth, madam, and the spider will come up
+to catch him." Or when he threw the shilling from his fee back to a mother
+with a delicate daughter, "Take that, madam, and buy her a skipping-rope,"
+an intimation that exercise was needed. It was an age of coarse feeding
+and strong drinking, an age of drastic purges and much blood-letting, and
+Abernethy's temperance principles, so much in advance of his time,
+provoked considerable opposition from his medical brethren, whose
+satirical epigrams he was not slow to cap.
+
+But contemporary squibs and satires cannot affect the real good which has
+made Abernethy's name a household word. Indeed it has been stamped upon a
+biscuit. It is stamped also on a medical society he founded at St.
+Bartholomew's Hospital, where his centenary has recently been celebrated.
+
+Many have been the contributions to scientific medicine and surgery since
+the rough days of the old doctors I have endeavoured to chronicle, but
+these men of wigs and ties, gold-headed canes and pouncet-boxes, breeches
+and buckled shoes, were the pioneers of progress, they cleared the way
+for the men of this day and generation, and left their mark on their own
+age, not to be effaced by newer and more advanced successors, to whom they
+have served as stepping-stones.
+
+
+
+
+The Lee Penny.
+
+
+The story of the Lee Penny is full of historic interest, and the legends
+respecting it furnished Sir Walter Scott with some incidents for his novel
+the "Talisman."
+
+This amulet is a stone of a deep red colour and triangular shape, in size
+about half-an-inch on each side, and is set in a silver coin. The various
+accounts which have come under our notice are agreed that this curious
+relic of antiquity has been in the Lee family since a period immediately
+after the death of King Robert the Bruce.
+
+The monarch was nearing his end, and as he lay on his death-bed, he was
+much troubled for having failed to visit in person the Holy Land to assist
+in the Crusade. His long war with the English had rendered it impossible
+for him to leave his kingdom to fight in a foreign land, even in the cause
+of religion.
+
+Sir James Douglas, his tried and trusty friend, stood beside the bed of
+his king, and was in sore distress. As a last request the king implored
+that as soon as possible after his soul had left his body Douglas would
+take his heart to Jerusalem. On the honour of a knight, Sir James
+faithfully promised to discharge the trust.
+
+The king died in 1329, and his heart was enclosed in a silver case. Sir
+James suspended it from his neck with a chain, and without delay gathered
+round him a suitable retinue, and made his way towards the Holy Land. He
+was not destined to reach that country, for on his route the intelligence
+reached him that Alphonso, King of Leon and Castile, was waging war with
+the Moorish chief, Osmyn of Granada. To assist the Christians, he felt it
+was his duty, and in accordance with the dying charge of his king. With
+courage he engaged in the fray, but was soon surrounded by horsemen, and
+he who had fought so long and bravely, realised that he must meet his doom
+far from the country he loved so well. He made a desperate effort to
+escape. The precious casket he took from his neck and threw it before him,
+saying, "Onward, as thou were wont, thou noble heart! Douglas will follow
+thee." He followed it and was slain. After the battle was over the brave
+knight was found resting on the heart of Bruce. The mortal remains of the
+valiant knight were carried back to his home and buried in his church of
+St. Bride, at Douglas.
+
+The heart of Bruce was entrusted to Sir Simon Locard, and by him borne
+back to Scotland, and at last found a resting-place beneath the high altar
+of Melrose Abbey, and its site is still pointed out. Mrs. Hemans wrote a
+charming poem on Bruce's heart in Melrose Abbey, commencing:--
+
+ "Heart! that did'st press forward still,
+ Where the trumpet's note rang shrill;
+ Where the knightly swords are crossing,
+ And the plumes like sea-foam tossing,
+ Leader of the charging spear,
+ Fiery heart! and liest thou here?
+ May this narrow spot inurn
+ Aught that could so beat and burn?"
+
+We are told the family name of Locard was changed to Lockheart, or
+Lockhart, from the circumstance of Sir Simon having carried the key of the
+casket, and was granted as armorial insignia, heart with a fetter-lock,
+with the motto, "Corda serrata pando." According to a contributor to
+Chambers's "Book of Days," v., 2, p. 415, from the same incident, the
+Douglases bear a human heart, imperially crowned, and have in their
+possession an ancient sword, emblazoned with two hands holding a heart,
+and dated 1329, the year Bruce died.
+
+Lockhart was not daunted at the failure of the first attempt to reach
+Jerusalem, and, in company with such Scottish knights as escaped the fate
+of their leader, they once more proceeded, and arrived in the Holy Land,
+and for some time fought in the wars against the Saracens.
+
+[Illustration: THE LEE PENNY.]
+
+The following adventure is said to have befallen him. He made prisoner in
+battle an Emir of wealth and note. The aged mother of his captive came to
+the Christian camp to save her son from his captivity. Lockhart fixed the
+price at which his prisoner should ransom himself; and the lady, pulling
+out a large embroidered purse, proceeded to tell down the amount. In this
+operation, a pebble inserted in a coin, some say of the lower empire, fell
+out of the purse, and the Saracen matron testified so much haste to
+recover it as to give the Scottish knight a high idea of its value. "I
+will not consent," he said, "to grant your son's liberty unless the amulet
+be added to the ransom." The lady not only consented to this, but
+explained to Sir Simon the mode in which the talisman was to be used. The
+water in which it was dipped operated as a styptic, or a febrifuge, and
+the amulet possessed several other properties as a medical talisman.
+
+Sir Simon Lockhart, after much experience of the wonders which it wrought,
+brought it to his own country, and left it to his heirs, by whom, and by
+Clyde side in general, it was, and is still, distinguished by the name of
+the Lee Penny, from the name of his native seat of Lee.
+
+Its virtues were brought into operation by dropping the stone in water
+which was afterwards given to the diseased to drink, washing at the same
+time the part affected. No words were used in dipping the stone, or money
+permitted to be taken by the servants of Lee. People came from all parts
+of Scotland, and many places in England, to carry away the water to give
+to their cattle.
+
+Some interesting information respecting this amulet appears in an account
+of the Sack and Siege of Newcastle-on-Tyne in 1644. "As one of the natural
+sequences," says the writer, "of prolonged distress, caused by this brave
+but foolhardy defence against overwhelming odds, the plague broke out
+with fatal violence in Newcastle and Gateshead, as well as Tynemouth and
+Shields, during the following year. Great numbers of poor people were
+carried off by it; while tents were erected on Bensham Common, to which
+those infected were removed; and the famous Lee Penny was brought out of
+Scotland to be dipped in water for the diseased persons to drink, and the
+result said to be a perfect cure. The inhabitants (that is to say, the
+Corporation, we presume), gave a bond for a large sum in trust for the
+loan; and they thought the charm did so much good, that they offered to
+pay the money down, and keep the marvellous penny with a stone in which it
+is inserted; but the proprietor, Lockhart of Lee, would not part with it."
+
+We are told that many years ago a remarkable cure is alleged to have been
+performed on Lady Baird of Sauchton Hall, near Edinburgh, who, having been
+bitten by a mad dog, was seized with hydrophobia. The Lee Penny was sent
+for, and she used it for some weeks, drinking and bathing in the water it
+had been dipped in, and she quite recovered.
+
+"The most remarkable part of the history," as Sir Walter Scott says,
+"perhaps was, that it so especially escaped condemnation when the Church
+of Scotland chose to impeach many other cures which savoured of the
+miraculous, as occasioned by sorcery, and censured the appeal of them,
+'excepting only the amulet called the Lee Penny, to which it pleased God
+to annex certain healing virtues, which the Church did not presume to
+condemn.'"
+
+The Lee Penny is preserved at Lee House, in Lanarkshire, the residence of
+the present representative of the family.
+
+
+
+
+How Our Fathers were Physicked.
+
+BY J. A. LANGFORD, LL.D.
+
+
+Delightful old Fuller tells us "Necessary and ancient their Profession
+ever since man's body was subject to enmity and casualty." There is no
+doubt of the necessity and antiquity of the doctor's calling, but there
+is, without doubt, no profession in which such great and beneficent
+advance has been made in modern times as in the medical. The tortures
+which our fathers endured under the old treatment are terrible to think
+of. It was not enough that they were afflicted by disease; the pains which
+they had to suffer from the supposed remedies far exceeded those which
+nature imposed. Cupping, blistering, and especially bleeding, were the
+common applications in nearly all complaints, the Bleeding was also used
+as a preventive, which proverb truly tells us "is better than cure"; but
+in this case the supposed disease could scarcely have been worse than the
+supposed prevention. Five times in the year--"in September, before
+Advent, before Lent, after Easter, and at Pentecost"--were the periods at
+which men in health were accustomed to "breathe a vayne." Besides letting
+of blood, the physician's cane and the surgeon's club were vigorously used
+on the unfortunate sufferers. Mr. J. C. Jeaffreson, in his very
+interesting "Book about Doctors," says, "For many centuries fustigation
+was believed in as a sovereign remedy for bodily ailments as well as moral
+failings, and a beating was prescribed for an ague as frequently as for
+picking and stealing." So what with the lancet and the stick combined, our
+fathers must indeed have shuddered at the approach of any of the "natural
+shocks that flesh is heir to."
+
+The medicines of those good old times were of a very strange and
+objectionable kind. Some of the concoctions were composed of many
+ingredients, and were formed of abominable, not to say disgusting,
+materials. All nature was ransacked for out-of-the-way and horrible things
+which could be used as drugs and nostrums for suffering and gullible
+sufferers. In the reign of Charles II., Dr. Thomas Sherley "recommended a
+clumsy and inordinate administration of violent drugs" for gout. "Calomel
+he habitually administered in simple doses. Sugar of lead he mixed
+largely in his conserves; pulverized human bones he was very fond of
+prescribing; and the principal ingredient in his gout-powder was 'raspings
+of a human skull unburied.' But his sweetest compound was his 'Balsam of
+Bats,' strongly recommended as an unguent for hypochondriacal persons,
+into which entered adders, bats, sucking-whelps, earth worms, hogs'
+grease, the marrow of a stag, and the thigh-bone of an ox." A good idea of
+the things sold to a confiding public as cures for its ills may be
+gathered from two verses on Colonel Dalmahoy, a well-known--shall we say
+quack--of the past:--
+
+ "Dalmahoy sold infusions and lotions,
+ Decoctions, and gargles, and pills,
+ Electuaries, powders, and potions,
+ Spermaciti, salts, scammony, squills.
+
+ Horse aloes, burnt alum, agaric,
+ Balm, benzoine, blood-stone, and dill;
+ Castor, camphor, and acid tartaric,
+ With specifics for every ill."
+
+Metals and precious stones were extensively used in the prescriptions of
+bygone doctors. Every metal and every stone was credited with some special
+and peculiar virtue which it alone possessed, and it was applied as a cure
+for that ailment over which it had influence and power. Bacon tells us,
+"We know Diseases of Stoppings, and Suffocations, are the most dangerous
+in the body; And it is not much otherwise in the minde. You may take
+_Sarza_ to open the Liver; _Steele_ to open the Spleene; _Flowers of
+Sulphur_ for the Lungs; _Castoreum_ for the Braine," for each of which
+parts it was believed that the specifics named were most efficacious. The
+prescriptions of Dr. Bulleyn, in the reign of Elizabeth, are wonderful
+examples of how our fathers were physicked. Here are two of those quoted
+by Mr. Jeaffreson. The first is
+
+"_An Embrocation._--An embrocation is made after this manner:--Px. Of a
+decoction of mallowes, vyolets, barly, quince seed, lettice leaves, one
+pint; of barly meale, two ounces; of oyle of vyolets and roses, of each,
+an ounce and half; of butter, one ounce; and then seeth them all together
+till they be like a brouthe, puttyng thereto, at the ende, foure yolkes of
+eggs; and the maner of applying is with peeces of cloth, dipped in the
+aforesaid decoction, being actually hoate."
+
+Our second is "truly a medicine for kings and noblemen;" it is called an
+
+"_Electuarium de Gemmis._--Take two drachms of white perles; two little
+peeces of saphyre; jacinth, corneline, emerauldes, grannettes, of each an
+ounce; setwal, the sweete roote dorsnike, the rind of pomecitron, mase,
+basal seede, of each two drachms; of redde corrall, amber, shewing of
+ivory, of each two drachms; rootes both of white and red lichen, ginger,
+long peper, spicknard, folium indicum, saffron, cardamon, of each one
+drachm; of troch diarodon, lignum aloes, of each half a small handful;
+cinnamon, galinga, zurnbeth, which is a kind of setwal, of each one drachm
+and a half; thin pieces of gold and sylver, of each half a scruple; of
+musk, half a drachm. Make your electuary with honey emblici, which is the
+fourth kind of mirobulans with roses, strained in equall partes, as much
+as will suffice. This healeth cold diseases of ye braine, harte, stomack.
+It is a medicine proved against the tremblynge of the harte, faynting and
+swooning, the weakness of the stomacke, pensiveness, solitarines. Kings
+and noble men have used this for their comfort. It causeth them to be
+bold-spirited, the body to smell wel, and ingendreth to the face good
+colour."
+
+The most innocent articles used in the old medicines were fruits, and
+herbs, and vegetables. To some kinds special virtues are assigned, and Dr.
+Bulleyn's "Book of Simples," is very pleasant reading. "Pears, apples,
+peaches, quinces, cherries, grapes, raisins, prunes, raspberries, oranges,
+medlons, raspberries and strawberries, spinage, ginger, and lettuces are
+the good things thrown upon the board." We are told of a prune growing at
+Norwich, and known as the "black freere's prune," that it is "very
+delicious and pleasaunt, and no lesse profitable unto a hoate stomacke."
+"The red warden is of greate virtue, conserved, roasted or baken to quench
+choller." We are also informed that "Figges be good agaynst melancholy,
+and the falling evil, to be eaten. Figges, nuts, and herb grase do make a
+sufficient medicine against poison or the pestilence. Figges make a good
+gargarism to cleanse the throates."
+
+Some of the Doctor's prescriptions are very curious. He prescribes "a smal
+young mouse rosted," for a child afflicted with a nervous ailment. Nor did
+he disdain to use the snail in certain cases. He tells us that "Snayles
+broken from the shelles and sodden in whyte wyne with oyle and sugar are
+very holsome, because they be hoat and moist for the straightnes of the
+lungs and cold cough. Snails stamped with camphery, and leven will draw
+forth prycks in the flesh." Snail broth is not entirely unknown in some
+country places, even at the present time. Bezoar stone and unicorn's horn
+were also used in confections.
+
+Cancer has always been, and unfortunately still is, a terrible and an
+incurable disease, and has afforded a fine field for all kinds of nostrums
+and specifics which were to produce a "safe and certain cure." One of
+these, called a "precious water," was thus composed. "Take dove's foote, a
+herb so named, Arkangell ivy with the berries, young red bryer toppes, and
+leaves, whyte roses, theyre leaves and buds, red sage, celandyne and
+woodbynde, of each lyke quantity, cut or chopped and put into pure cleane
+whyte wyne, and clarified honey. Then breake into it alum glasse and put
+in a little of the pouder of aloes hepatica. Destill these together softly
+in a limbecke of glasse or pure tin; if not then in a limbecke wherein
+aqua vitae is made. Keep this water close. It will not onely kyll the
+canker (cancer), if it be duly washed therewyth; but also two droppes
+dayly put into the eye wyll sharp the syght, and breake the pearle and
+spottes, specially if it be dropped in wyth a little fenell water, and
+close the eyes after."
+
+In 1739, the British Parliament passed an Act which is unprecedented in
+the annals of folly. A female quack, named Joanna Stephens, was reported
+to have effected some most extraordinary cures by the use of a medicine of
+which she only possessed the secret. She proposed to make it public for
+the sum of L5,000, and a vain attempt was made to raise the sum by
+subscription, but only L1,356 3s. was thus raised. An appeal was made to
+Parliament, and a commission was appointed to enquire into the subject,
+and a certificate signed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Bishops, Peers,
+and Physicians, was presented to the House, declaring that they were
+"convinced by experiment of the utility, efficacy, and dissolving power,"
+of the tested medicine, and Joanna Stephens was rewarded with the desired
+L5,000. The prescriptions were published, and the following extracts will
+suffice to show how easily sufferers from diseases may be, and sometimes
+are, gulled. This lucky quack says:--
+
+ "My medicines are a Powder, a Decoction, and Pills."
+
+ "The Powder consists of egg-shells and snails, both calcined."
+
+ "The Decoction is made by boiling some herbs (together with a ball
+ which consists of soap, swine's-cresses burnt to a blackness, and
+ honey), in water."
+
+ "The Pills consist of snails calcined, wild carrot seeds, burdock
+ seeds, asken keys, hips and hawes, all burnt to a blackness--soap and
+ honey."
+
+Our readers will willingly dispense with the directions of how these
+dearly purchased medicines should be prepared. Surely
+
+ "The pleasure is as great,
+ In being cheated as to cheat!"
+
+In 1633, Stephen Brasnell, Physician, published a small volume entitled
+"Helps | for | Svddain | Accidents | Endangering Life. | By which | Those
+that live farre from Physitions or Chirurgions | may happily preserve the
+Life | of a true Friend or Neigh-| bour, till such a Man may be | had to
+perfect the Cure. | Collected out of the best authors | for the generall
+good." The following is his prescription for all kinds of poisons:--viz.
+"the Hoofe of an Oxe cut into parings and boyled with bruised mustard-seed
+in white wine and faire water. The Bloud of a Malard drunke fresh and
+warme: or els dryed to powder, and so drunke in a draught of white wine.
+The Bloud of a Stagge also in the same manner. The seeds of Rue and the
+leaves of Betony boyled together in white wine. Or take ij scruples (that
+is fortie graines) of Mithridate; of prepared Chrystall, one dram (that is
+three score grains), fresh Butter one ounce. Mix all well together.
+Swallow it down by such quantities as you can swallow at once; and drink
+presently upon it a quarter of a pint of the decoction of French Barley,
+or so much of six shillings Beere. Of this I have had happy proofe."
+
+There is a much more effective, though a somewhat revolting prescription
+for "those with abilitie." "Take," says our seventeenth century physician,
+"take a sound horse, open his belly alive, take out all his entrayles
+quickly, and put the poysoned partie naked into it all save his head,
+while the body of the horse retains his naturall heate, and there let him
+sweat well." Our author admits that "this may be held a strange course,
+but the same reason that teacheth to devide live pullets and pigeons for
+plague-sores approveth this way of sweating as most apt to draw to itselfe
+all poysons from the heart and principall parts of the patient's body.
+But during this time of sweating he must defend his braine by wearing on
+his head a quilt." The quilt is to be made by taking a number of dried
+herbs, which are to be made into a "grosse powder and quilt them up in
+sarsnet or calico, and let it be so big as to cover all the head like a
+cap, then binde it on fast with a kerchief." This is called "a Nightcap to
+preserve the Brain."
+
+There are also curious prescriptions for the stings of bees and wasps, the
+"bitings of spiders," of which he says "the garden ones are the worst." He
+tells us that the "flesh of the same beast that biteth, inwardly taken,
+helpeth much," and that "outwardly the best thing to be applied is the
+flesh of the same beast that did the hurt, pounded in a morter and applied
+in manner of a poultis." Here is one about that pretty little animal, the
+shrew-mouse: "Now the shrew-mouse is a little kind of a mouse with a long
+sharpe snout and a short tayle; it liveth commonly in old ruinous walls.
+It biteth also very venomously, and leaveth foure small perforations made
+by her foure foreteeth. To cure her biting, her flesh roasted and eaten is
+the best inward antidote if it may be had. And outwardly apply her warme
+liver and skin if it may be had. Otherwise _Rocket-reeds_ beaten into
+powder, and mixed with the bloud of a dog. Or els the teeth of a dead man
+made into a fine powder."
+
+The toad comes in for a good share of attention, and Mr. Bradwell gives a
+personal anecdote on this subject. He says:--"Myself, while I was a
+student at _Cambridge_, was so hurt by the spouting of a venomous humour
+from the body of a great toad into my face while I pashed him to death
+with a brickbat. Some of the moisture lighted on my right eye, which did
+not a little endanger it, and hath made it ever since apt to receive any
+flux of Rheume or Inflammation." Some of our readers may think that this
+was a fit punishment for having "pashed" the toad to "death with a
+brickbat."
+
+Among the strangest things ever used as medicine must be placed human
+skulls. In 1854, Mr. T. A. Trollope gave a short account in _Notes and
+Queries_ of a book by Dr. Cammillo Brunoni, published at Fabriano in 1726.
+It was entitled _Il Medico Poeta_ (the Physician a Poet), and gives an
+account "of the medical uses of human skulls." Dr. Brunoni informs us,
+says Mr. Trollope, that "all skulls are not of equal value. Indeed, those
+of persons who have died a natural death, are good for little or nothing.
+The _reason_ of this is, that the disease of which they died has consumed
+or dissipated the essential spirit! The skulls of murderers and bandits
+are particularly efficacious. And this is clearly because not only is the
+essential spirit of the cranium concentrated therein by the nature of
+their violent death, but also the force of it is increased by the long
+exposure to the atmosphere, occasioned by the heads of such persons being
+ordinarily placed on spikes over the gates of cities! Such skulls are used
+in various manners. Preparations of volatile salt, spirit, gelatine,
+essence, etc., are made from them, and are very useful in epilepsy and
+hoemorrhage. The notion soldiers have, that drinking out of a skull
+renders them invulnerable in battle, is a mere superstition, though
+respectable writers do maintain that such a practice is a proved
+preventive against scrofula."
+
+This very curious book consists of a "poem in twelve cantos, or
+'Capitoli,' as from the fifteenth century downwards it was the Italian
+fashion to call them, on the physical poet--a sort of medical _ars
+poetica_; and followed by a hundred and seventy-two sonnets on all
+diseases, drugs, parts of the body, functions of them, and curative
+means. Each sonnet is printed on one page, while that opposite is occupied
+by a compendious account in prose of the subject in hand. We have a sonnet
+on the stomach-ache, a sonnet on apoplexy, a sonnet on purges, another on
+blisters, and many others on far less mentionable subjects. The author's
+poetical view of the action of a black-dose compares it to that of a tidy
+and active housemaid, who, having swept together all the dirt in the room,
+throws it out of the window. Mystic virtues are attributed to a variety of
+substances, animal, vegetable, and mineral."
+
+That delightful work, The Memoirs of the Verney Family, by Lady Verney,
+affords some very striking examples of the medical treatment of poor
+suffering humanity in the 17th century. Our selections are from the third
+volume.
+
+One of the most extraordinary medicines of this, or of any age, was
+without doubt that known as Venice Treacle. In 1651, Sir Ralph Verney was
+in Venice, and the Memoirs furnish the following graphic account of this
+terrible drug, which was a concoction of the most disgusting materials.
+Sir Ralph sends it to Mrs. Isham, for her family medicine chest, and says
+"hee that is most famous for Treacle is called Sig{r} Antonio Sgobis, and
+keepes shopp at the Strazzo, or Ostridge, sopra il ponte de'Baretteri, on
+the right hand going towards St. Mark's. His price is 19 livres (Venize
+money) a pound, and hee gives leaden Potts with the Ostridge signe uppon
+them, and Papers both in Italian and Lattin to show its virtue." "This
+celebrated and incredibly nasty compound," adds Lady Verney,
+"traditionally composed by Nero's physician, was made of vipers, white
+wine, and opium, 'spices from both the Indies,' liquorice, red roses, tops
+of germander, juice of rough aloes, seeds of treacle mustard, tops of St.
+John's wort, and some twenty other herbs, to be mixed with honey 'triple
+the weight of all the dry species' into an electuary." The recipe is given
+as late as 1739, in Dr. Quincey's "English Dispensatory," published by
+Thomas Longman, at the Ship in Paternoster Row. "Vipers are essential, and
+to get the full benefit of them 'a dozen vipers should be put alive into
+white wine.' The English doctor, anxious for the credit of British vipers,
+proves that Venice treacle may be made as well in England, 'though their
+country is hotter, and so may the more rarify the viperime juices'; yet
+the bites of our vipers at the proper time of year, which is the hottest,
+are as efficacious and deadly as them. But he complains that the name of
+Venice goes so far, that English people 'please themselves much with
+buying a Tin Pot at a low price of a dirty sailor ... with directions in
+the Italian tongue, printed in London,' and that some base druggists 'make
+this wretched stuff of little else than the sweepings of their shops.' Sir
+Ralph could pride himself that his leaden pots contained the genuine
+horror. It was used as 'an opiate when some stimulus is required at the
+same time'; an overdose was confessedly dangerous, and even its advocates
+allowed that Venice treacle did not suit everyone, because, forsooth,
+'honey disagrees with some particular constitutions.'" For centuries this
+medical "horror" was taken by our drastically treated forefathers.
+
+The treatment was indeed drastic, and we might truly add cruel. Tom Verney
+had "a tertian ague and a feaver," and for this he had "only a vomit,
+glister, a cordiall, and breathed a vane"--that is, was bled. Another
+patient, Sir George Wheler, who had caught a chill after dancing, had all
+sorts of "Applications of Blisters and Laudanums," so that his Christmas
+dinner at Dr. Denton's cost him "the best part of 100 pounds." For an
+eruption in the leg, Sir Ralph Verney was advised to apply a lotion "so
+virulent, a drop would fech of the skin when it touched."
+
+Young Edmund Verney was ill in 1657, and writes to his father, "Truly I
+might compare my afflictions to Job's. I have taken purges and vomits,
+pills and potions, I have been blooded, and I doe not know what I have not
+had, I have had so many things." In 1657-58 the epidemic known as "The New
+Disease," proved very fatal, and created quite a panic. The treatment
+adopted by the doctors may be gathered from a prescription of Dr.
+Denton's, one of the most famous physicians of the time. He writes to Sir
+Ralph Verney, "I see noe danger of Wm. R., and if he had followed your
+advice by taking of a vomit, and if that had not done it, then to have
+beene blooded, I beleeved he had beene well ere this." Then he adds "It is
+the best thinge and the surest and the quickest he can yet doe, therefore
+I pray lett him have one yett. 3 full spoonfulls of the vomitage liquor in
+possitt drinke will doe well, and he may abide 4 the same night when he
+goes to rest; let him take the weight of vi{ds} of diascordium the next
+day or the next but one; he may be blooded in the arm about 20 ounces."
+
+Some of the ladies of the time did not, however, approve of this kind of
+treatment, and preferred their own remedies, or their own notions of
+remedies, to the doctor's prescriptions. We select two examples. Lady
+Fanshawe described the disease as "a very ill kind of fever, of which many
+died, and it ran generally through all families." While she suffered from
+it she ate "neither flesh, nor fish, nor bread, but sage possett drink, a
+pancake or eggs, or now and then a turnip or carrott." But Lady Hobart
+ventured to prescribe. She writes, "If you have a new dises in your town
+pray have a car of yourself, and goo to non of them; but drink good ale
+for the gretis cordall that is: I live by the strength of your malt." Few,
+we anticipate, would object to her ladyship's advice, and most would
+prefer her "good ale" to Dr. Denton's "vomitts," and the loss of 20 ounces
+of blood.
+
+Our illustrations might be indefinitely multiplied, but those given will
+amply suffice to show the way in which our fathers were physicked.
+
+
+
+
+Medical Folk-Lore.
+
+BY JOHN NICHOLSON.
+
+
+To ease pain and endeavour to effect a cure, man will try every suggested
+remedy, likely and unlikely, and when numberless things have been tried,
+each of which was alleged to be a certain cure, he reverts to some simple
+thing, taught him by his old grandmother, or the "wise woman" of his early
+days; and which, by reason of its simplicity, had been at first
+contemptuously rejected in favour of more complex but inefficacious
+compounds. There is scarcely a market but has a stall kept by a herb
+woman, who, in warm old-fashioned hood, with a little shawl round her
+shoulders, her ample waist encircled by broad tapes from which is
+suspended a pocket, capacious and indispensable, lays out with great care
+her stock of simples--roots, leaves, or flowers, studiously gathered at
+the proper time, when their virtue is strongest. Here may be seen poppy
+heads for fomentation, dandelion roots for liver complaint, ground ivy for
+rheumatism, celandine for weak eyes, and other herbs, all "for the
+service of man," to alleviate or cure some of the "ills that flesh is heir
+to." She can relate wondrous tales of marvellous cures wrought by her
+wares, of cases, long standing, and given up by the duly qualified medical
+fraternity, a brotherhood she holds in contempt because of their
+new-fangled remedies and methods.
+
+This chapter, however, deals chiefly with superstitious remedies, or at
+least those remedies which seem to have no scientific bearing on the case;
+thus, a person having a sty on the eye, will have it rubbed with a wedding
+ring, or the gold ring of a young maiden; or cause it to be well brushed
+seven times with a black cat's tail, if the cat were willing. Another cure
+is more efficacious if administered as a surprise. The patient is placed
+in front of the operator, who unexpectedly spits on the eye affected;
+which action often leads to angry remonstrance, met by derisive laughter,
+which causes, it may be, broken friendship and general unpleasantness for
+a time.
+
+It is a common belief, almost world-wide in its extent, that toothache is
+caused by a little worm which gnaws a hole in the tooth. Not long ago I
+was shewn a large molar, which when _in situ_ had caused its owner great
+pain, and he pointed to the nerve apertures, saying, "That's where the
+worm was!" Shakespeare, in "Much Ado About Nothing,"[3] speaks of this
+curious belief:--
+
+ "_D. Pedro._ What! sigh for the toothache?
+
+ _Leon._ Where is but a humour or a worm."
+
+"This superstition was common some years ago in Derbyshire, where there
+was an odd way of extracting, as it was thought, the worm. A small
+quantity of a mixture, consisting of dried and powdered herbs, was placed
+in a tea-cup or other small vessel, and a live coke from the fire was
+dropped in. The patient then held his or her open mouth over the cup, and
+inhaled the smoke as long as it could be borne. The cup was then taken
+away, and a fresh cup or glass, containing water, was then put before the
+patient. Into this cup the patient breathed hard for a few moments, and
+then, it was supposed, the grub or worm could be seen in the water."[4]
+
+The following was communicated to the _Folk Lore Journal_ by Wm. Pengelly,
+Esq., Torquay, February 1st, 1884:--
+
+ "Upwards of sixty years ago, a woman at Looe, in south-east Cornwall,
+ complained to a neighbouring woman that she was suffering from
+ toothache, on which the neighbour remarked that she could give a charm
+ of undoubted efficacy. It was to be in writing, and worn constantly
+ about the person; but, unfortunately, it would be valueless if the
+ giver and receiver were of the same sex. This difficulty was obviated
+ by calling in my services, and requesting me to write from dictation
+ the following words:--
+
+ 'Peter sat in the gate of Jerusalem. Jesus cometh unto him and saith,
+ "Peter, what aileth thee?" He saith, "Lord, I am grievously tormented
+ with the toothache." He saith, "Arise, Peter, and follow me." He did
+ so, and immediately the toothache left him; and he followed him in the
+ name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.'
+
+ The charm, being found to be correctly written, was held to have been
+ presented to me by the dictator. I at once gave it to the sufferer,
+ who placed it in a small bag and wore it round her neck."
+
+A Roumanian charm against toothache is to sit beside an anthill, masticate
+a crust of bread, spit it out over the anthill, and as the ants eat the
+bread the toothache will cease.
+
+Some believe that if you pick the aching tooth with the nail of an old
+coffin, or drink the water taken from the tops of three waves, the
+wearying pain may be relieved or cured. In Norfolk, the toothache is
+called the "love pain," and the sufferer does not receive much sympathy.
+
+Some time ago, a man wished to shew me some antiquity he had found, but
+his jacket pocket was so filled with odds and ends ("kelterment," he
+called it) that he turned all out in order to better prosecute his search.
+Among the miscellaneous collection I noticed a potato, withered, dry,
+hard, and black; and was informed it was kept as a preventive and cure for
+rheumatism. For the same distressing, disabling disease, some people
+spread treacle on brown paper, and apply hot to the part affected.
+
+The following curious passages have been transcribed by my friend, Mr.
+George Neilson, solicitor, Glasgow, from the Kirk Session Records of the
+parish of Gretna, and are here inserted by his consent, most freely
+given:--
+
+ "GRAITNEY KIRK, _Feb. 11, 1733_.
+
+ Session met after Sermon.
+
+ It was represented by some of the members that the Charms and Spells
+ used at Watshill for Francis Armstrong, Labouring under distemper of
+ mind, gave great offence, and 'twas worth while to enquire into the
+ affair and publickly admonish the people of the evil of such a course,
+ that a timely stop be put to such a practice.
+
+ Several of the members gave account that in Barbara Armstrang's they
+ burned Rowantree and Salt, they took three Locks of Francis's hair,
+ three pieces of his shirt, three roots of wormwood, three of mugwort,
+ three pieces of Rowantree, and boiled alltogether, anointed his Legs
+ with the water, and essayed to put three sups in his mouth, and
+ meantime kept the door close, being told by Isabel Pott, at Cross, in
+ Rockcliff commonly called the Wise Woman, that the person who had
+ wronged him would come to the door, but no access was to be given.
+ Francis, tho' distracted, told them they were using witch-craft and
+ the Devils Charms that would do no good. It is said they carried a
+ candle around the bed for one part of the inchantment. John Neilson,
+ in Sarkbridge, declared before the Session this was matter of fact
+ others then present. Mary Tate, Servant to John Neilson in Sarkbridge
+ is to be cited as having gone to the Wise Woman for Consultation."
+
+
+ "GRAITNEY KIRK, _Feb. 25, 1733_.
+
+ Session met after Sermon
+
+ Mary Tate having been summoned was called on, and compearing confessed
+ that she had gone to Isabel Pot, in the parish of Rockcliff, and
+ declared that the s{d} Isabell ordered South running water to be
+ lifted in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, and to be boiled
+ at night in the house where Francis Armstrong was, with nettle roots,
+ wormwood, mugwort, southernwood and rowantree, and his hands, legs and
+ temples be stroaked therewith, and three sups to be put in his mouth,
+ and withal to keep the door close: She ordered also three locks of his
+ hair to be burnt in the fire with three pieces clipt out of his shirt,
+ and a Slut, _i.e._, a rag dipt in tallow to be lighted and carried
+ round his bed, and all to be kept secret except from near friends:
+ Mary Tate declared that the said Francis would allow none to touch him
+ but her, and at last Helen Armestrange, Spouse to Archibald Crighton,
+ Elder, assisted her, and after all the said Francis, tho' distracted,
+ told them they were using witchcrafts and the Devil's Charms that
+ would do no good: Mary Tate being admonished of the Evil of such a
+ course was removed: Notwithstanding her acknowledgments of her fault
+ she is to be suspended _a sacris_, and others her accomplices, and
+ that none hereafter pretend Ignorance the Congregation is to be
+ cautioned against such a practice from the Pulpit."
+
+Ague used to be much more prevalent than it now is. Drainage and
+sanitation have banished many evils, and with the evil, the exorcists'
+charm for the banishment of the evil. Charms, rather than medical
+remedies, for the cure of ague, are very prevalent. Rider's _British
+Merlin_ for 1715 lies before me. It is a thin 16mo. booklet of 48 printed
+pages and 42 blank pages, but some of the blank inter-leaves have been
+torn out. It is bound in parchment with gilt edges, and has had a clasp,
+which has disappeared. One of the interleaves bears this written
+charm:--"And Peter sat at the gate of Jerusalem and prayed, and Jesus
+called Peter, and Peter said, Lord, I am sick of an ague, and the evil
+ague being dismissed, Peter said, Lord, grant that whosoever weareth these
+lines in writing, the evil ague may depart from them, and from all evil
+ague good Lord deliver us." The following charm is taken from an old diary
+of 1751[5]:--"When Jesus came near Pilate, He trembled like a leaf, and
+the judge asked Him if He had the ague. He answered, He had neither the
+ague, nor was He afraid; and whosoever bears these words in mind shall
+never fear ague or anything else." A strange charm for this dreaded
+disease was to be spoken up the wide cavernous chimney by the eldest
+female of the family on St. Agnes' Eve. Thus spake she:--
+
+ "Tremble and go!
+ First day shiver and burn;
+ Tremble and quake!
+ Second day shiver and learn;
+ Tremble and die!
+ Third day never return."
+
+A curious anecdote is related of Lord Chief Justice Holt. When a young
+man, he, with companions who were law students like himself, ran up a
+score at an inn, which they were not able to pay. Mr. Holt observed that
+the landlord's daughter looked very ill, and, posing as a medical student,
+asked what ailed her. He was informed she suffered from ague. Mr. Holt,
+continuing to play the doctor, gathered sundry herbs, mixed them with
+great ceremony, rolled them up in parchment, scrawled some characters on
+the same, and to the great amusement of his companions, tied it round the
+neck of the young woman, who straightway was cured of her ague. After the
+cure, the pretending doctor offered to pay the bill, but the grateful
+landlord and father would not consent, and allowed the party to leave the
+house with hearts as light as their pockets.
+
+Many years after, when on the Bench, a woman was brought before him
+accused of witchcraft. She denied the charge, but said she had a wonderful
+ball, which never failed to cure the ague. The charm was handed to the
+judge, who recognised it as the very ball he had made for the young woman
+at the inn, to help himself and his companions out of a difficult
+position.[6]
+
+In the west of England a live snail is sewn up in a bag and worn round the
+neck as an antidote for ague; though others in the same district imprison
+a spider in a box, and, as it pines away, so will the disease depart.
+
+It is a common belief in the north of England that a person bitten by a
+dog is liable to madness, if the dog which bit them goes mad. In order to
+secure the bitten one from such a terrible fate, the owner of the dog is
+often compelled to destroy it. Should he refuse to do so, the friends of
+the injured party would probably poison it, The condition peculiar to the
+morning following a night of debauchery, is said to need "a hair of the
+dog that bit you," which doubtless refers to the means taken to prevent
+ill effects following a dog bite. A wise saw from the Edda tells us that
+"Dog's hair heals dog's bite." The following incident recorded in the
+_Pall Mall Gazette_, Oct. 12th, 1866, shews most gross superstition in
+this Victorian age. "At an inquest, held on the 5th of October, at
+Bradfield, (Bucks.), on the body of a child of five years of age, which
+had died of hydrophobia, evidence was given of a practice almost
+incredible in civilised England. Sarah Mackness stated that at the request
+of the mother of the deceased, she had fished out of the river the body of
+the dog by which the child had been bitten, and had extracted its liver, a
+slice of which she had frizzled before the fire, and had then given it to
+the child to be eaten with some bread. The dog had been drowned nine days
+before. The child ate the liver greedily, drank some tea afterwards, but
+died, in spite of this strange specific."
+
+Erysipelas in Donegal is known as the "rose." It is very common, but can
+be cured by a stroker. The following is said to have happened. A nurse of
+a Rector had the "rose," and the doctor was called in. After he was gone,
+the woman's friends brought in a stroker, who rubbed the nurse with bog
+moss, and then threw a bucket of bogwater over her in bed. This treatment
+cured the woman, and is said to be generally in vogue, but is not
+efficient except the right person does it.[7] In some parts of Yorkshire,
+sheep's dung is applied as a poultice for the cure of erysipelas.
+
+What is more distressing, both to patient and nurse, than whooping cough,
+or king-cough, as it is sometimes called? A change of air is deemed
+beneficial to the afflicted one, so the mothers of Hull take their
+suffering children across the Humber to New Holland and back again. Some
+call it "crossing strange water." Other people procure a "hairy worm," and
+suspend it in a flannel cover round the neck of the sufferer, in the
+belief that as the creature dies and wastes away, so will the cough
+depart. This custom seems to be the relic of an old belief that something
+of the nature of a hairy caterpillar was the cause of the cough, and Mr.
+Tylor, in his _Primitive Culture_,[8] speaks of the ancient
+homoeopathic doctrine that what hurts will also cure. In Gloucestershire
+roasted mouse is considered a specific for whooping cough; though in
+Yorkshire the same diet cure is adopted for croup, while rat pie is the
+one to be used for whooping cough. The Norfolk peasants tie up a common
+house spider in a piece of muslin, and when the luckless long-legged
+spinner dies, the cough will soon disappear. A correspondent of _Notes and
+Queries_ states that when staying in a village in Oxfordshire, he was
+informed by an old woman that she and her brothers were cured of whooping
+cough in the following way. They were required to go, the first thing in
+the morning, to a hovel at a little distance from their house, where a fox
+was kept. They carried with them a large can of milk, which was set down
+before the fox, and when he had taken as much as he cared to drink, the
+children shared among them what was left. The _Aberdeen Evening Gazette_
+of 24th August, 1882, tells of a curious superstition in Lochee:--
+
+ "Hooping-cough being rather prevalent in Lochee at the present time,
+ various cures are resorted to with the view of allaying the distress.
+ Amongst these the old 'fret' of passing a child beneath the belly of a
+ donkey has come in for a share of patronage. A few days ago, two
+ children living with their parents in Camperdown Street, were
+ infected with the malady. A hawker's cart, with a donkey yoked to it,
+ happening to pass, the mothers thought this an excellent opportunity
+ to have their little ones relieved of their hacking cough. The donkey
+ was accordingly stopped, the children were brought forth, and the
+ ceremony began. The mothers, stationed at either side of the donkey,
+ passed and repassed the little creatures underneath the animal's
+ belly, and with evident satisfaction appeared to think that a cure
+ would in all probability be effected. Nor was this all; a piece of
+ bread was next given to the donkey to eat, one of the women holding
+ her apron beneath its mouth to catch the crumbs which might fall.
+ These were given to the children to eat, so as to make the cure
+ effectual. Whether these strange proceedings have resulted in
+ banishing the dreaded cough or not, has not been ascertained, and
+ probably never will be. A few years ago, the custom was quite common
+ in this quarter, but with the spread of education the people generally
+ know better than to attempt to cure hooping-cough through the agency
+ of a donkey."
+
+The _North British Mail_ for 20th March 1883, among other superstitions in
+Tiree, says, "On the west side of the island there is a rock with a hole
+in it, through which children are passed when suffering from
+whooping-cough or other complaints."
+
+It is a common belief that if you wash your hands in water in which eggs
+have been boiled, warts will make their appearance; also, that the blood
+of a wart will cause other warts. Anyhow, if the warts be there, they can
+either be cured or charmed away. The writer once had a row of warts,
+thirteen in number, on his left arm. He was told by an aged dame, who sat
+on a three-legged stool before her cottage door, smoking a short black
+pipe, to take thirteen bad peas, throw them over his left shoulder, never
+heeding where they went, all the while repeating some incantation, which
+has been forgotten.
+
+Cures are effected by rubbing the warts with something, which is
+afterwards allowed to decay. Some rub the warts with a grey snail or slug,
+and then impale the poor creature on a thorn; others steal a bit of beef,
+not so much as Taffy made off with, rub the beef on the warts, and then
+bury the beef. Lord Bacon, in his _Natural History_, says:--"I had from my
+childhood a wart upon one of my fingers; afterwards, when I was about
+sixteen years old, being then at Paris, there grew upon both my hands a
+number of warts, at the least an hundred in a month's space. The English
+Ambassador's lady, who was a woman far from superstitious, told me one day
+she would help me away with my warts: whereupon she got a piece of lard
+with the skin on, and rubbed the warts all over with the fat side; and
+among the rest, the wart which I had from my childhood; then she nailed
+the piece of lard, with the fat towards the sun, upon a post of her
+chamber window, which was to the south. The success was, that within five
+weeks' space all the warts went quite away; and that wart which I had so
+long endured, for company.... They say the like is done by the rubbing of
+warts with a green elder stick, and then burying the stick to rot in
+muck."
+
+In Withal's _Dictionary_ (1608) there is the following couplet:--
+
+ "The bone of a haire's foot closed in a ring,
+ Will drive away the cramp whenas it doth wing,"
+
+but Pepys, who tells us the whole of his experience, with comments
+thereon, used a hare's foot as a charm for colic. He says:--(20 Jan.
+1664-5) "Homeward, in my way buying a hare and taking it home, which arose
+upon my discourse to-day with Mr. Batten in Westminster Hall, who showed
+me my mistake, that my hare's foot hath not the joynt in it, and assures
+me he never had the cholique since he carried it about him; and it is a
+strange thing how fancy works, for I no sooner handled his foot but I
+became very well, and so continue."
+
+(22nd.) "Now mighty well, and truly I can but impute it to my fresh hare's
+foot."
+
+(March 26) "Now I am at a loss to know whether it be my hare's foot which
+is my preservation; for I never had a fit of collique since I wore it, or
+whether it be my taking a pill of turpentine every morning."
+
+The following newspaper cutting from the _Boston Herald_, 7th February,
+1837, is worth preserving:--
+
+ "Nothing could be more absurd than the notions regarding some of these
+ supposed cures; a ring made of a hinge of a coffin had the power of
+ relieving cramps, which were also mitigated by having a rusty old
+ sword hanging up by the bedside. Nails driven in an oak tree prevented
+ the toothache. A halter that had served in hanging a criminal was an
+ infallible remedy for a head-ache when tied round the head; this
+ affection was equally cured by the moss growing upon the human skull
+ taken as cephalic snuff dried and pulverised. A dead man's hand could
+ dissipate tumours of the glands, by stroking the part nine times; but
+ the hand of a man who had been cut down from the gallows was the most
+ efficacious. The chips of a gallows on which several had been hanged,
+ when worn in a bag round the neck would cure the ague. A stone with a
+ hole in it, suspended at the head of a bed, would effectually stop the
+ night-mare, hence it was called a hag-stone, as it prevents the
+ troublesome witches from sitting upon the sleeper's stomach. The same
+ amulet, tied to the key of the stable door, deterred witches from
+ riding horses over the country."
+
+Our forefathers firmly believed in planetary influence on the minds and
+bodies of men, and no operation could be performed on any part of the body
+unless the planet, ruling that particular part, were propitious. Rider's
+_British Merlin_ for 1715, places the name of some part of the body--face,
+neck, arms, breast, etc., opposite the days of the month, indicating that
+the influence of the planets on that day is favourable to that particular
+part or organ. An old proverb says:--
+
+ "Friday hair, Sunday horn,
+ You'll go the devil afore Monday morn,"
+
+shewing that these days were unlucky for clipping hair and cutting nails.
+The _York Fabric Rolls_[9] tell us that Maundy Thursday, the day before
+Good Friday, was termed Shere Thursday, because "in olde faders dayes the
+people wold that day _sheer_ theyr heddes and clype theyr berdes and poll
+theyr heedes and so make them honest ayenst Easter Day." The same
+interesting volume[10] gives the following account of charming away
+fevers:--
+
+ "1528. Bishopwilton. Isabel Mure presented. She took fier, and ij yong
+ women w{t} hirr, and went to a rynnyng water, and light a wypse of
+ straw and sett it on the water, and said thus, 'Benedicite, se ye what
+ I see. I se the fier burne, and water rynne and the gryse grew, and
+ see flew and nyght fevers and all unkowth evils flee, and all other,
+ God will,' and after theis wordes said xv Pater Noster, xv Ave Maria
+ and thre credes."
+
+The following is a reproduction of a receipt for Yellow Jonus (Jaundice)
+copied from an old book in my possession. "A quart of whine (wine), a
+penoth of Barbary barck, a penoth of Tormorch (Turmerich), a haporth of
+flour of Brimstone for Jonous."
+
+
+
+
+Of Physicians and their Fees,
+
+WITH SOME PERSONAL REMINISCENCES.
+
+BY ANDREW JAMES SYMINGTON, F.R.S.N.A.
+
+
+In the whole range of professional life, or in any section of the
+community, there is no set of men so self-denying, sympathetic,
+philanthropic, liable to be called at any hour, day or night, and so
+hard-worked, as medical practitioners. To begin with, there is first, a
+long and expensive course of study, and, often, several years pass, before
+a practice becomes even self-sustaining. Those at the head of the
+profession attain to large incomes, and make their L20,000 a year. Noted
+specialists, in particular, such as the late Dr. Mackenzie, get large
+fees; but the majority of the profession conscientiously perform their
+laborious and kindly ministrations ungrudgingly and with moderate
+remuneration, which, in most cases, is certainly far short of their
+deserts.
+
+This state of matters has prevailed for many centuries, and, taking the
+different value of money into account, notwithstanding the advance of
+medical science, there is but little change in the scale of remuneration,
+whether as to large fees paid by Royal or titled personages, fees by the
+middle classes, or by the rural or working population.
+
+It has been well said, that "the theory and practice of medicine is the
+noblest and most difficult science in the world; and that there is no
+other art for the practice of which the most thorough education is so
+essential."
+
+Whittier observes:--"It is the special vocation of the doctor to grow
+familiar with suffering--to look upon humanity disrobed of its pride and
+glory--robbed of all its fictitious ornaments--weak, hopeless, naked--and
+undergoing the last fearful metempsychosis, from its erect and god-like
+image, the living temple of an enshrined divinity, to the loathsome clod
+and the inanimate dust! Of what ghastly secrets of moral and physical
+disease is he the depository!"
+
+Sir Thomas Browne, in his "Religio Medici," says:--"Men, that look no
+further than their outsides, think health an appurtenance unto life, and
+quarrel with their constitutions for being sick; but I, that have examined
+the parts of man, and know upon what tender filaments that fabrick hangs,
+do wonder that we are not always so; and, considering the thousand doors
+that lead to death, do thank my God that we can die but once."
+
+This model physician, who said, "I cannot go to cure the body of my
+patient, but I forget my profession and call unto God for his soul," in
+the same work, finely says of charity:--"Divinity hath wisely divided the
+act thereof into many branches, and hath taught us, in this narrow way,
+many paths unto goodness; as many ways as we may do good, so many ways we
+may be charitable. There are infirmities not only of the body, but of soul
+and fortunes, which do require the merciful hand of our abilities. I
+cannot contemn a man for ignorance, but behold him with as much pity as I
+do Lazarus. It is no greater charity to clothe his body than apparel the
+nakedness of his soul."
+
+His distinguished position, as a physician and an author, demands very
+special and reverential mention in these pages.
+
+Sir Thomas Browne was born in London on the 19th of October, 1605. He died
+at Norwich on the 19th of October, 1682, having reached exactly the age of
+seventy-seven. His father was a wealthy merchant, of a good Cheshire
+family, but died when his more illustrious son was a boy, and his mother
+shortly afterwards married Sir Thomas Dutton. After travelling on the
+Continent, he settled as a practising physician at Shipley Hall, near
+Halifax, for a time, and then moved to Norwich, where the remaining
+forty-two years of his life were spent. His library contained vast stores
+of learned works on antiquities, languages, and the curiosities of
+erudition. He corresponded with the best men of his day, and was often
+able to assist them in their various investigations. His friend Evelyn,
+alluding to Browne's home, at Norwich, tells us "His whole house and
+garden being a paradise and cabinet of rarities, and that of the best
+collections, especially medals, books, plants, and natural things." He was
+knighted by Charles II. in 1671.
+
+Throughout the troublous times of the Civil War, the Commonwealth, and the
+Restoration, he led a quiet studious life, issuing volume after volume
+full of profound, penetrating, and far-reaching thought, set forth in
+stately, sonorous, and musical language, the perfect form or style of
+which, at times, is only equalled but not excelled by the best cadenced
+prose of Milton or Jeremy Taylor.
+
+His "Religio Medici," "Hydrotaphia or Urn Burial," and "The Garden of
+Cyrus," have been my favourites for more than half a century. Of the
+latter work, John Addington Symonds has finely and truly said, that "the
+rarer qualities of Sir Thomas Browne's style (are) here displayed in rich
+maturity and heavy-scented blossom. The opening phrase of his dedication
+to Sir Thomas Le Gros--'When the funeral pyre was out, and the last
+valediction over, men took a lasting adieu of their interred friends,
+little expecting the curiosity of future ages should comment on their
+ashes;'--this phrase strikes a key-note to the sombre harmonies which
+follow, connecting the ossuaries of the dead, the tears quenched in the
+dust of countless generations, with the vivid sympathy and scrutinizing
+sagacity of the living writer.... I will only call attention to the unique
+feeling for verbal tone, for what may be called the musical colour of
+words, for crumbling cadences, and the reverberation of stationary sounds
+in cavernous recesses, which is discernable at large throughout the
+dissertation. How simple, for example, seems the collocation of vocables
+in this phrase--'Under the drums and tramplings of three conquests!' And
+yet with what impeccable instinct the vowels are arranged; how naturally,
+how artfully, the rhythm falls! Take another, and this time a complete
+sentence,--'But the iniquity of oblivion blindly scattereth her poppy, and
+deals with the memory of men, without distinction to merit of perpetuity.'
+Take yet another--'The brother of death daily haunts us with dying
+mementoes.'"
+
+I take leave of this, the most notable of English Physicians, by
+transcribing the following grand, suggestive, and characteristic passage
+from his "Fragment on Mummies":--"Yet in these huge structures and
+pyramidial immensities of the builders, whereof so little is known, they
+seemed not so much to raise sepulchres or temples to death, as to contemn
+and disdain it, astonishing heaven with their audacities, and looking
+forward with delight to their interment in those eternal piles. Of their
+living habitations they made little account, conceiving of them but as
+_hospitia_, or inns, while they adorned the sepulchres of the dead, and
+planting them on lasting basis, defied the crumbling touches of time and
+the misty vaporousness of oblivion. Yet all were but Babel vanities. Time
+sadly overcometh all things, and is now dominant, and sitteth upon a
+sphinx, and looketh unto Memphis and old Thebes, while his sister Oblivion
+reclineth semisomnous on a pyramid, gloriously triumphing, making puzzles
+of Titanian erections, and turning old glories into dreams. History
+sinketh beneath her cloud. The traveller, as he paceth amazedly through
+those deserts, asketh of her, who builded them? and she mumbleth
+something, but what it is he heareth not."
+
+The medical profession is a noble and pleasant one, though laborious and
+often full of anxiety, straining mind and body. The good physician is the
+sympathizing, confidential, and comforting _friend_ of the family. He
+values the humble gifts and testimonials of gratitude from the poor, even
+more than the costly presents of the rich.
+
+The virtuous poor are always grateful. It can truly be said of the
+physician's kind and often gratuitous services to them, in the language of
+scripture:--
+
+ "When the ear heard me, then it blessed me; and when the eye saw me it
+ gave witness to me; because I delivered the poor that cried, and the
+ fatherless, and him that had none to help him. The blessing of him
+ that was ready to perish came upon me; and I caused the widow's heart
+ to sing for joy."
+
+Among savages, sorcerers, and magicians, are the medicine men; these are
+still represented, in civilisation, by impostors and quacks. Members of
+the profession, as a rule, keep themselves posted up in the medical
+science of the day, honestly and unselfishly do everything that can be
+done for their patients, and rejoice in being the means of their recovery,
+far more than in their fee.
+
+Burton, in his "Anatomy of Melancholy," treating of "Physician, Patient,
+and Physick," when astrology, ignorance, and queer nostrums, were then
+more in vogue than practical science, says:--"I would require Honesty in
+every Physician, that he be not over careless or covetous, Harpylike to
+make a prey of his patient, or, as an hungry Chirurgeon, often produce and
+wire-draw his cure, so long as there is any hope of pay. Many of them, to
+get a fee, will give physic to every one that comes, when there is no
+cause, thus, as it often falleth out, stirring up a silent disease, and
+making a strong body weak." Burton then quotes the following sensible
+Aphorism from Arnoldus:--"A wise physician will not give physick, but
+upon necessity, and first try medicinal diet, before he proceedeth to
+medicinal cure."
+
+Latimer thus severely censured the mercenary physicians of his day:--"Ye
+see by the example of Hezekiah that it is lawful to use physick. But now
+in our days physick is a remedy prepared only for rich folks, and not for
+the poor, for the poor man is not able to wage the Physician. God indeed
+hath made physick for rich and poor, but Physicians in our time seek only
+their own profits, how to get money, not how they might do good unto their
+poor neighbour. Whereby it appeareth that they be for the most part
+without charity, and so consequently not the children of God; and no doubt
+but the heavy judgment of God hangeth over their heads, for they are
+commonly very wealthy, and ready to purchase lands, but to help their
+neighbour, that they cannot do. But God will find them out one day I doubt
+not."
+
+"Empirics and charlatans are the excrescences of the medical profession;
+they have obtained in all ages, yet the healing art is not necessarily the
+occasion for deception; nor the operations of witchcraft, charms, amulets,
+astrology, alchemy, necromancy, or magic; although it has its mysteries
+like other branches of occult science."
+
+Paracelsus, the prince of charlatans, styled himself "King of Physic,"
+but, though he professed to have discovered the _elixir of life_, he
+humbly died at the early age of forty-eight years.
+
+We are told of a patient who, instead of the medicine prescribed,
+swallowed the prescription! and _Punch_ records an extraordinary case of a
+voracious individual who bolted a door, and threw up a window!
+
+Sydney Smith, on being told by his doctor to take a walk on an empty
+stomach, asked--"Upon whose!" But a truce to stories suggested by the
+queer nostrums of quacks.
+
+Empirics, however, often believed in their nostrums, and were, sometimes,
+amiable and unselfish.
+
+In the year 1776, we are told, there lived a German doctor, who styled
+himself, or was called, "the Rain-water doctor;" all the diseases to which
+flesh is heir he professed to cure by this simple agent. Some wonderful
+cures were, it is said, achieved by means of his application of this
+fluid, and his reputation spread far and wide; crowds of maimed and
+sickly folk flocked to him, seeking relief at his hands. What is yet more
+remarkable still, he declined to accept any fee from his patients!
+
+Dr. Haygarth, of Bath, had a pair of wooden tractors made in precisely the
+same shape and appearance as Perkin's metallic ones; and the same results
+followed as when the others, which cost five guineas a pair, were used.
+
+The story is well known of the condemned criminal in Paris, who was laid
+on a dissecting table, strapped down, with his eyes bandaged, and slightly
+pricked, when streamlets of water set a-trickling made him think, as he
+had been told, that he was being bled to death. His strength gradually
+ebbed away, and he actually died, although he did not lose a drop of
+blood.
+
+I knew of a gentleman who, when pills to procure sleep were ordered to be
+discontinued, lay awake. The doctor made up a box of bread pills, which
+were administered as the others had been, and the patient slept, and
+recovered rapidly.
+
+A young medical man fell in love with a young lady patient, and, when he
+had no longer any pretext for continuing his visits, he sent her a present
+of a pair of spring ducks. Not reciprocating his attentions, she did not
+acknowledge the present, upon which he ventured to call, asking if the
+birds had reached her. Her reply was--"Quack, quack!"
+
+Dr. Lettsom, a quaker in the time of George III., near the close of the
+last century, had such an extensive practice that his receipts in some
+years were as much as L12,000; and this although half his services were
+entirely gratuitous, and rendered with unusual solicitude and care to
+necessitous clergymen and literary men. Generosity was the ruling feature
+of his life. On one occasion he attended an old American merchant whose
+affairs had gone wrong, and who grieved over leaving the trees he had
+planted. The kind hearted doctor purchased the place from the creditors,
+and presented it to his patient for life.
+
+Pope, a few days before his decease, bore the following cordial testimony
+to the urbanity and courtesy of his medical friends:--"There is no end of
+my kind treatment from the Faculty; they are in general the most amiable
+companions, and the best friends, as well as the most learned men I know."
+
+And Dryden, in the postscript to his translation of Virgil, speaks in the
+same way of the profession. "That I have recovered," says he, "in some
+measure the health which I had lost by too much application to this work,
+is owing, next to God's mercy, to the skill and care of Dr. Guibbons and
+Dr. Hobbs, the two ornaments of their profession, whom I can only pay by
+this acknowledgment."
+
+When Dr. Dimsdale, a Hertford physician and member of Parliament, went
+over to Russia to inoculate the Empress Catherine and her son, in the year
+1768, he received a fee of L12,000, a pension for life of L500 per annum,
+and the rank of Baron of the Empire.
+
+Dr. Henry Atkins was sent for to Scotland by James the Sixth to attend
+Charles the First (then an infant), ill of a dangerous fever. The King
+gave him a fee of L6000, with which he purchased the manor of Clapham.
+
+Louis XIV. after undergoing an operation, gave his physician and his
+surgeon 75,000 crowns each.
+
+Dr. Glynn once attended the only son of a poor peasant woman, ministering
+to his wants with port wine, bark, and delicacies. After the lad's
+recovery, his mother waited on the doctor, bringing a large wicker basket
+with an enormous magpie, which was her son's pet, as a fee to show their
+gratitude.
+
+A thousand pounds were ordered to be paid to Sir Edmund King for promptly
+bleeding Charles the Second, but he never received this fee.
+
+Dr. Mead, in the time of George the First, was generous to a degree, and
+like many of his brethren, would not accept fees from curates, half-pay
+officers, and men of letters. At home his fee was a guinea. When he
+visited patients of means, in consultation or otherwise, he expected two
+guineas or more. But to the apothecaries who waited on him at his coffee
+houses of call he charged only half a guinea for prescriptions, written
+without his having seen the patient. He had an income one year of L7,000,
+and for several years received between L5,000 and L6,000, which,
+considering the value of money at that time, is as much as that of any
+living physician.
+
+The physicians who attended Queen Caroline had five hundred guineas, and
+the surgeons three hundred guineas each; Dr. Willis was rewarded for his
+attendance on George III. by L1,500 per annum for twenty years, and L650
+per annum to his son for life. The other physicians, however, had only
+thirty guineas each visit to Windsor, and ten guineas each visit to Kew.
+
+Dr. Abernethy was annoyed by a lady needlessly consulting him about her
+tongue. One morning she came, as he was descending the steps from his door
+and putting on his gloves. She said:--"Doctor, I'm so glad I have caught
+you!" The doctor asked if it were the old trouble. On her saying "Yes," he
+told her to put out her tongue. She did so, and he said, "Stand there till
+I come," and left her so, in the street, setting out on his round of
+visits.
+
+Once when prescribing nutritious and expensive diet for a young man in
+consumption, he observed the look of despair on the young wife's face, and
+the evidence of straitened circumstances around; when the lady appealed to
+him, asking if there was really nothing else he could suggest for her
+husband. He replied:--"When I think of it, I'll send along a box of pills
+in the afternoon!" A messenger brought the box. On the lid was written
+"One every day," and, on being opened, it was found to contain twenty
+guineas!
+
+He once bluntly told a _bon-vivant_ gentleman to "Live on sixpence a day,
+and earn it!"
+
+Long ago, a friend told me of a lady in Devonshire, belonging to a family
+she knew, who read medical books, and at length imagined she had every
+disease under the sun. Whenever she discovered what she believed to be a
+new symptom, she at once went off to consult different medical men
+regarding it, spending several hundreds a year in this way, and all quite
+needlessly. At length she confided to her friends that since doctors
+differed so widely, and she could obtain no satisfaction as to what ailed
+her, she had resolved to go to town and consult one of the Queen's
+physicians.
+
+A consultation was held in the family, and her nephew was sent to explain
+matters to the physician, in the hope of his being able to cure her
+hypochondria. When she reached town, the street in which the physician
+lived was blocked with the carriages of patients. After waiting hours, her
+turn at last came. The physician examined her, asked a few questions, then
+enquired if she had any friends in town, as he would rather call to see
+her when under their roof, and there tell her what he had got to say. She
+protested that she was quite prepared to hear the worst--that she had for
+long years looked death in the face--that the notices of her death were
+lying in her desk, all written out and addressed, only requiring the date
+to be filled in, etc. The physician said he was busy--more than twenty
+patients were still waiting in the street--he was averse to scenes, and
+would much prefer to see her at her friend's house. She still persisted,
+and begged of him to tell her all, there and then, on which he
+said:--"Madam, it is my melancholy duty to inform you--that there is
+nothing whatever the matter with you!"
+
+This interview fortunately effected her cure, to the great delight of her
+friends, who paid the physician a handsome fee.
+
+Sir Astley Cooper one year received in fees L21,000. This sum was
+exceptional, but for many years his income was over L15,000. His great
+success was achieved very gradually. "His earnings for the first nine
+years of his professional career progressed thus:--In the first year he
+netted five guineas; in the second, twenty-six pounds; in the third,
+sixty-four pounds; in the fourth, ninety-six pounds; in the fifth, a
+hundred pounds; in the sixth, two hundred pounds; in the seventh, four
+hundred pounds; in the eighth, six hundred and ten pounds; and in the
+ninth--the year in which he secured his hospital appointment--eleven
+hundred pounds."
+
+On one occasion when he had performed a perilous surgical operation on a
+rich West Indian merchant, the two physicians who were present were paid
+three hundred guineas each; but the patient, addressing Sir Astley,
+said:--"But you, sir, shall have something better. There, sir, take
+_that_," upon which he flung his nightcap at the skilful operator. "Sir,"
+replied Sir Astley, picking up the cap, "I'll pocket the affront." On
+reaching home, he found in the cap a draft for a thousand guineas from the
+grateful but eccentric old man.
+
+A cynical lawyer once advised a young doctor to collect his fees as he
+went along, quoting the following verse to back his recommendation:--
+
+ "God and the doctor we alike adore,
+ But only when in danger, not before;
+ The danger o'er, both are alike requited--
+ God is forgotten, and the doctor slighted."
+
+The following story illustrates the too frequent weary waiting, when hope
+makes the heart sick, and also shows on what curious casual incidents the
+success of a career may sometimes turn. It has been told in different
+ways, and attributed to different men, such as to Dr. Freind, and others;
+but, quite possibly, the same or a similar incident may have repeatedly
+occurred. I simply give it as it was narrated to me. A young doctor having
+graduated with honours, took a house at a high rent in Harley Street,
+London. The brass plate attracted no patients; months passed idly and
+drearily, and the poor fellow took to drink. One night the door-bell
+rang--a servant man, from a lady of title round the corner, begged him to
+come at once, as his mistress was dangerously ill, lying on the floor; her
+own doctor was out, and he was sent to fetch the first doctor he could
+find. The young doctor regretfully thought what a fool he was, for here
+was his chance, when he could not avail himself of it; but he would go,
+and try hard to pull himself together.
+
+When he reached the room, he had enough conscience or sense left to know
+that he was not in a fit state to prescribe, and exclaiming, "Drunk, by
+George!" took his hat and bolted from the house. Next morning he received
+a scented note from the lady, entreating him not to expose her, inviting
+him to call, and offering to introduce him professionally to her circle!
+Before the season was ended, his practice was yielding him at the rate of
+some L1500 a year!
+
+Curiously enough, it is recorded of a British doctor that he once actually
+took a fee from a _dead_ patient. Entering the bedroom immediately after
+death had taken place, he observed the right hand tightly clenched.
+Opening the fingers, he found in them a guinea. "Ah, that was clearly for
+me," said the doctor, putting the gold into his pocket.
+
+It may be remembered here, that the Royal College of Physicians, London,
+was founded by Thomas Linacre, physician to Henry VIII., in 1518; and that
+the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh was incorporated by Charter
+of Charles II., November 20th, 1681.
+
+As to the fees paid to physicians, we find that Dr. Edward Browne, the son
+of Sir Thomas Browne, who became a distinguished physician in London, in
+his Journal, under the date of February 16th, 1664, records: "I went to
+visit Mr. Edward Ward, an old man in a feaver, when Mrs. Anne Ward gave me
+my first fee, 10 shillings."
+
+In a work entitled "Levamen Infirmi," published in the year 1700, we find
+that the scale of remuneration to surgeons and physicians was as
+follows:--"To a graduate in physic, his due is about ten shillings, though
+he commonly expects or demands twenty. Those that are only licenced
+physicians, their due is no more than six shillings and eightpence, though
+they commonly demand ten shillings. A surgeon's fee is twelvepence a mile,
+be his journey far or near; ten groats to set a bone broke or out of
+joint; and for letting blood one shilling; the cutting off or amputation
+of any limb is five pounds, but there is no settled price for the cure."
+
+Till recent times neither barristers nor physicians could recover their
+fees by legal proceedings against their clients or patients unless a
+special contract had been made. In the case of lawyers this custom can be
+traced back to the days of ancient Rome. Their services were regarded as
+being gratuitously rendered in the interests of friendship and justice,
+and of a value no money could buy. The acknowledgment given them by
+clients was regarded as an _honorarium_, and paid in advance, so that all
+pecuniary interest in the issue of the suit was removed, thus preserving
+the independence and respectability of the bar.
+
+Equity draftsmen, conveyancers, and such like, however, could recover
+reasonable charges for work done.
+
+So in the medical profession, surgeons, dentists, cuppers, and the like
+were always entitled to sue for their fees; but the valuable services of a
+consulting physician were of a different kind, not rendered for payment
+but acknowledged by the gratitude and honour of his patients.
+
+But this code of honour was modified when all medical practitioners were
+relieved by the Act of 21 and 22 Vict. 90, which applied to the United
+Kingdom, and enabled them to recover in any court of law their reasonable
+charges as well as costs of medicines and medical appliances used. This
+rule applies to physicians, surgeons, and apothecaries as defined by the
+statute.
+
+The following information is taken from "Everybody's Pocket Cyclopaedia"
+(Saxon & Co.).
+
+
+LONDON MEDICAL FEES.
+
+"Patients are charged according to their supposed income, the income being
+indicated by the rental of the house in which they reside. The following
+are the charges usually made by medical practitioners:--
+
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+ | Rentals.
+ |------------------------------------------------
+ | L10 to L25 | L25 to L50 | L50 to L100
+ ----------------------|----------------|----------------|--------------
+ Ordinary Visit | 2s 6d to 3s 6d | 3s 6d to 5s | 5s to 7s 6d
+ Night Visit | Double an | Ordinary | Visit
+ Mileage beyond two | | |
+ miles from home | 1s 6d | 2s | 2s 6d
+ Detention per hour | 2s 6d to 3s 6d | 3s 6d to 5s | 5s to 7s 6d
+ Letters of Advice | Same charge as | for an Or- | dinary Visit
+ Attendance on Servants| 2s 6d | 2s 6d to 3s 6d | 3s 6d to 5s
+ Midwifery | 21s | 21s to 30s | 42s to 105s
+ | | |
+ CONSULTANTS. | | |
+ | | |
+ Advice or visit alone | 21s | 21s | 21s
+ Advice or visit with | | |
+ another Practitioner| 21s | 21s to 42s | 21s to 42s
+ Mileage beyond two | | |
+ miles from home | 10s 6d | 10s 6d | 10s 6d
+ -----------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+"Special visits, _i.e._, of which due notice has not been given before the
+practitioner starts on his daily round, are charged at the rate of a visit
+and a half. Patients calling on the doctor are charged at the same rate as
+if visited by him.
+
+"There are about 23,000 physicians and surgeons in the United Kingdom, or
+one to every 1,600 inhabitants."
+
+It has been my privilege to know several doctors intimately. Our family
+doctor when I was a boy in Paisley, was Dr. Kerr, a man far in advance of
+his day. He was the means of introducing a pure water supply to the town
+of Paisley, always strenuously urging the importance of sanitary matters
+and good drainage, when such things were then but little understood, and
+greatly neglected. Shortly after the water had been introduced to the
+houses, from Stanley, an old man--who had been accustomed to purchase
+water from a cart which went through the streets selling it from a
+barrel--on being asked how he liked the new water, replied indignantly,
+"Wha's going to pay good siller for water that has neither smell nor
+taste?"
+
+On one occasion, an elderly gentleman, who was slightly hypochondriac,
+consulted Dr. Kerr about his clothing, saying that he regulated the
+thickness of his flannels by the thermometer. Dr. Kerr, losing patience,
+said, "Can you not use the thermometer your Maker has put in your inside,
+and put on clothes when you are cold?"
+
+Dr. Kerr's son and assistant, whom we then called "the young doctor," died
+a few years ago in Canada, over eighty years of age. No man could
+possibly have been more considerately kind, gentle, and tender-hearted. On
+one occasion, in 1841, when, in typhus fever, I was struggling for my
+life, he sat up with me for three whole consecutive nights, and brought me
+through. He ever kept himself abreast of the science of the day, and
+devoted his abilities and energies, _con amore_, to the benefitting of
+men's souls as well as their bodies.
+
+Another model village and country doctor, also an intimate friend of my
+parents, Dr. Campbell of Largs, I knew very well. Good, genial, and
+accomplished, he was a perfect gentleman, and equally at home dining with
+Sir Thomas Brisbane, or drinking a cup of tea at some old woman's kitchen
+fireside. He read the _Lancet_, and tried all new medicines, and
+repeatedly, when going to London, at his request I procured the most
+recent instruments for him. He was intimate with Dr. Chalmers, Lord
+Jeffrey, Lord Moncrieff, Lord Cardwell, etc. In telling me of experiments
+with Perkin's metallic tractors, and that the same results were obtained
+with wooden ones, showing the power of imagination, he gave me a recent
+curious illustration. He had lately had the old fashioned little panes of
+glass taken out of the windows of his house, and plate glass inserted.
+His mother, who did not know of the change, calling one afternoon, sat on
+an easy chair, close by the gable window, knitting. On suddenly looking
+round she said, "Oh John, I've been sitting all this time by an _open_
+window," and forthwith she began to sneeze! She actually took cold, and
+even afterwards could scarcely be persuaded that it had _not_ been an open
+window, for she said she felt the cold! The doctor told me of an old
+maiden lady who consulted him, and who, when he prescribed in a general
+way, insisted on knowing exactly what ailed her. He said she was only
+slightly nervous, and would soon be all right. This did not at all please
+her, and she at once loudly protested--"Me nervous! There is not a nerve
+in my whole body!"
+
+A West India merchant, one of his patients whom I knew, he also told me,
+one day said to him, "Doctor, for forty years I never knew I had a
+stomach, and now I can think of nothing else!"
+
+At the cholera time Dr. Campbell was laid down by the disease. The fact
+spread like wildfire over the village, and, at once, prayer-meetings for
+his recovery were called by the public bellman, meetings of _all_ the
+different denominations, including the Roman Catholics (Dr. Campbell was a
+Free Church Elder), and there were truly heartfelt rejoicings in the whole
+district over his recovery.
+
+I once asked him how he managed to get in his fees, since he never refused
+to visit when sent for. He said that one year, from curiosity, he kept an
+account of his gratuitous visits, and it ran into three figures; but he
+never took the trouble to note them again, as it served no purpose.
+
+Many years ago he went to his rest, and, at his request, during his last
+illness, I paid him a farewell visit.
+
+There are few finer descriptions of the country doctor than that contained
+in Ian Maclaren's "Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush," a book which speaks
+directly home to every true Scottish heart.
+
+Dr. Campbell, in his large-hearted and genial Christian charity,
+scientific research, and philosophical acquirements, always reminded me of
+Sir Thomas Browne, "the beloved physician" of Norwich.
+
+The following pleasing incident, relating to a medical man, came under my
+own notice. I often visited a country minister, an intimate friend, a
+learned man, and a genius, the quaint originality of whose observations
+often reminded me of Fuller, the Church historian, or Charles Lamb.
+Although of limited means, the Rev. Robert Winning, of Eaglesham, was ever
+hospitable; if he knew of any poor student, he would invite him to the
+manse for a month, on the plea that he would help to prepare him for his
+examination in Hebrew and Greek. The old manse servant, also an original,
+was paid a sum of money as compensation for refusing tips from visitors.
+One day, seeing an advertisement of a new book in a magazine I was
+reading, Mr. Winning remarked to me, "Andrew, I wish you would buy that
+book, _cut the leaves_, and lend it to me to read!"
+
+One evening a message reached him from the village inn, saying that a
+doctor had come to an urgent case, which required him to stay over night,
+that there was no room in the inn, and asking if the minister could give
+him a bed. His wife, knowing the house was full, asked her husband what
+they should do. His reply was, "Be not forgetful to entertain strangers,
+for thereby some have entertained angels unawares. Give him a room,
+though we have to sleep on the floor." He was accordingly hospitably
+entertained.
+
+Some time after, the minister took ill. The medical guest heard of it,
+went to see the local doctor, and, with his consent, visited the minister
+twice a week, from a distance of nine miles, and for a period of some four
+months, till his death. When the widow afterwards sent for his account, he
+said there was none, for it had been more than discharged on the first
+evening he had spent at the manse.
+
+Dr. Stark, of Glasgow, who attended my family for years, was a skilful
+practitioner, but eccentric. He generally made light of trifling ailments,
+but was most energetic when aroused by any appearance of danger. I knew of
+his being suddenly called in to see an old lady who was far gone in an
+advanced stage of cholera. He at once asked to be shown over the house,
+looked at the different fireplaces, but as none of them suited his
+purpose, he went to the kitchen, threw off his coat, took out the range,
+made a fire in the recess that would have roasted an ox, had the old lady
+carried down in blankets and placed before it, worked energetically with
+her the whole night, and brought her through. In a similar way he once
+stayed over night and saved the life of one of my boys. One day I called
+at his house, and, finding him with a bad cold, eyes red and watery,
+throat husky, said, "Doctor, if you found me so, you would prescribe
+placing the feet in hot water and mustard, warm gruel, medicine, and going
+to bed! Physician, heal thyself!" The doctor's Shakespearian reply was,
+"Do you think I am such a fool as to take physic?"
+
+Once when accompanying me to the coast to visit one of my children, there
+was a heavy sea on, and the steamer, on approaching the pier, rolled
+alarmingly, and was close on a lee shore. A strange lady on board, in
+terror, laid hold of the doctor, a tall, stalwart man, saying, "Oh! sir,
+are we going to the bottom?" On which he said, dryly, "Behave yourself, if
+you are going there, you are going in good company!" which odd answer
+reassured and caused her to laugh.
+
+In speaking of a Greek gem representing Cupid and Pysche, one day, when
+driving in Wigtonshire with the late Dr. David Easton, a medical friend,
+he said I had not given the correct pronunciation of the names. Always
+willing to learn, I asked to be put right; whereupon, the doctor gravely
+informed me that I ought to have said--Cupped and Physic!
+
+I have spoken of the kindness of medical men, such as Dr. Garth Wilkinson,
+to clergymen, artists, and literary men. I add one more expression of
+gratitude, which is a good modern instance:--
+
+When at St. Helens, in Jersey, during his last illness, my friend Samuel
+Lover, the genial poet and artist, wrote the following lines to Dr. Dixon,
+his friend and physician. I first copied them some years ago from Lover's
+MS. note-book, kindly lent me by his widow when I was engaged in the
+preparation of his life. Such cordial tributes are a good physician's most
+highly-valued fees:--
+
+ "Whene'er your vitality
+ Is feeble in quality,
+ And you fear a fatality
+ May end the strife,
+ Then Dr. Joe Dickson
+ Is the man I would fix on
+ For putting new wicks on
+ The lamp of life."
+
+From the many varied facts and incidents adduced in these pages, it will
+be seen that, in anxiety or sorrow, the good family doctor is a true and
+sympathetic friend, whose services can never be paid by gold.
+
+Next to religion, nothing is more precious or comforting than the sympathy
+of those who know and fully understand our sufferings, for, as my old
+favourite, Sir Thomas Browne, to whom I ever revert with renewed pleasure,
+truly and beautifully says:--"It is not the tears of our own eyes only,
+but of our friends also, that do exhaust the current of our sorrows,
+which, falling into many streams, runs more peaceably, and is contented
+with a narrower channel."
+
+
+Ye Ende
+
+
+
+
+Index.
+
+
+ Abernethy, John, 206-208, 266
+
+ Advertisements, Curious, 155-159
+
+ Ague, Charms for, 240-241
+
+ Akenside, Mark, 109-111
+
+ Andrews, William, Barber-Surgeons, 1-7;
+ Touching for King's Evil, 8-23;
+ Assaying Meat and Drink, 24-31
+
+ Anne, Queen, 18-19
+
+ Assay Cups, 30-31
+
+ Assaying Meat and Drink, 24-31
+
+ Atkins, Dr. H., 264
+
+ Axon, W. E. A., The Doctor in the time of Pestilence, 125-139
+
+
+ Banks, Mrs. G. Linnaeus, Some Old Doctors, 192-208
+
+ Barber-Surgeons, 1-7
+
+ Barber's Pole, 6, 35
+
+ Bicycle, 23
+
+ Birmingham town's book, 15
+
+ Bisley, 15
+
+ Bishop, hanged, 167
+
+ Bishop and Williams, body-snatchers, 171-177
+
+ Blackmore, R. D., 118
+
+ Blackmore, Dr., 111-113
+
+ Black Art, 45
+
+ Bleeding, 7, 216
+
+ Blood, Circulation of the, 195
+
+ Blood in windows, 2
+
+ Boke of Jhon Caius, 127
+
+ Booker, Rev. Dr., on small-pox, 163-164
+
+ Bossy, a quack, 149
+
+ Brown, Dr. John, 115
+
+ Brown, Sir Thomas, 123, 124, 253-258, 278, 283
+
+ Bruce, King Robert the, 209
+
+ Buddhism, 67-68
+
+ Bulleyn, Dr., quoted, 219
+
+ Burke and Hare, 168
+
+ Burkers and Body-Snatchers, 167-180
+
+ Burning for disease, 46
+
+ Burton's "Anatomy of Melancholy," 259-260
+
+ Byron quoted, 187
+
+
+ Campbell, Dr., 276, 278
+
+ Cancer, Curious treatment for, 222
+
+ Carriages, 22-23
+
+ Celestials and medicine, 58-61
+
+ Chalmers, John, M.D., 115
+
+ Charms, 43-44, 52
+
+ Chaucer's Doctor of Physic, 70-75
+
+ Chester in plague time, 133-135;
+ Touching at, 17
+
+ Cholera, Reminiscences of, 181-191
+
+ Circulation of the blood, 195
+
+ Colic, Charm for, 248
+
+ Cooper, Sir Astley, 170, 179, 268
+
+ Coryat, 141
+
+ Cramp, Charm, 52;
+ Strange cure for, 249
+
+ Croydon, Cholera at, 185-186, 190
+
+ Crusade, 209
+
+ Cumming, Dr. W. F., 114-115
+
+ Cupping, 217
+
+ Curious prescriptions, 226
+
+
+ Dickens, Charles, Satires by, 65-66
+
+ Dickens' Doctors, 90-101
+
+ Dimsdale, Dr., 264
+
+ Disinfectants in sticks, 33
+
+ Disputes between surgeons and barbers, 5
+
+ Doctor in the time of Pestilence, 125-139
+
+ Doctors Shakespeare Knew, 76-89
+
+ Dog bites, 242
+
+ Douglas, Sir James, 209
+
+ Doyle, Dr. Conan, 118
+
+ "Drunk by George," 270
+
+
+ Ecclesfield, 16
+
+ Edward the Confessor, 8-9
+
+ Egyptians and Magic, 57-58
+
+ Elizabeth, Queen, at dinner, 28-29
+
+ Erysipelas, 243
+
+ Eskimo Medicine Men, 61-63
+
+
+ Faith Cures, 42
+
+ Famous Literary Doctors, 102-124
+
+ Fees, London, 273-274
+
+ Food taken in fear, 24
+
+ Freind, John, 196
+
+ Frost, Thomas, Dickens' Doctors, 90-101.
+ Mountebanks and Medicine, 140-152.
+ The Strange Fight with the Small-pox, 153-166.
+ Burkers and Body-Snatchers, 167-180.
+ Reminiscences of the Cholera, 181-191
+
+
+ Galen, 120
+
+ Gallows, superstitions respecting, 249
+
+ Gild, Barbers', 2
+
+ Gold-headed Cane, 32-41
+
+ Grave-mould, 45
+
+ Greatrake, Valentine, 82
+
+ Great Plague of London, 136-139
+
+
+ Hall, Dr., 88-89
+
+ Harvey, Wm., 194-196
+
+ Heart of Bruce, 210
+
+ Hentzner in England, 28
+
+ Hill, Sir John, 114
+
+ Hodges, Dr., 137
+
+ Holbein, Picture by, 3
+
+ Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 106-108
+
+ How our Fathers were Physicked, 216-233
+
+ Hunter, John, 198
+
+ Hunter, William, 199
+
+ Hunterian Museum, 205
+
+
+ Jaundice, 251
+
+ Jenner, 159-162
+
+ Johnston, Arthur, 122-123
+
+ Johnson, Dr., touched for the evil, 18-19
+
+
+ Kerr, Dr., 275
+
+
+ Langford, J. A., LL.D., How our Fathers were Physicked, 216
+
+ Latimer on Mercenary Physicians, 260
+
+ Lee Penny, 209-215
+
+ Lettsom, J. C., 35, 263
+
+ Liver, eating human, 51
+
+ Lockhart, Sir Simon, 211-213
+
+ Lotteries, 151
+
+ Lover, Samuel, 282
+
+
+ Macbeth, quoted, 9
+
+ Mashonaland, Credulity in, 63-65
+
+ Magic and Medicine, 42-69
+
+ Manchester in plague time, 135-136
+
+ Mead, Dr., 265
+
+ Medical Folk Lore, 234-251
+
+ Medical Students, 97-98
+
+ Merry Andrew, 141-151
+
+ Mercenary Physicians, 260
+
+ Metals and precious stones used, 218
+
+ Mountebanks and Medicine, 140-152
+
+ Mouse, roasted, prescribed, 221
+
+ Moir, D. M., 116-118
+
+ Montagu, Lady May, 153-154, 162
+
+ Monks as surgeons, 1;
+ forbidden to bleed, 2
+
+
+ Newcastle-on-Tyne, Siege of, 213
+
+ Nicholson, John, Medical Folk-Lore, 234-251
+
+ North American Indian medicine men, 52-56
+
+
+ O'Brien, Giant, 202
+
+ Of Physicians and their Fees, 252-283
+
+
+ Parliament, Folly of, 223
+
+ Phillips, John, 111
+
+ Pilgrim's Staff, 32
+
+ Planetary Influence, 250
+
+ Plantagenent kings touching for the evil, 10
+
+ Pontefract Castle, 27
+
+ Pole, Barber's, 6
+
+ Preston records, 17
+
+
+ Radcliffe's cane, 33
+
+ Rain-water doctor, 261
+
+ Reminiscences of the Cholera, 181-191
+
+ Revolting prescriptions, 225
+
+ Richardson, Sir B. W., 202, 204
+
+ Rings from hinges of coffins, 249
+
+ Robinson, Tom, M.D., The Gold-headed Cane, 32-41
+
+ Rochester, Earl of, 144
+
+ Rheumatism, 238
+
+
+ Sacrificing for disease, 47-49
+
+ Skull, Human, Medical uses, 227
+
+ Small-pox, Old receipt for, 72
+
+ Smith, Sydney, Witty remark, 261
+
+ Some Old Doctors, 192-208
+
+ St. Agnes' Eve, 241
+
+ Stark, Dr., 280-281
+
+ Statute of Labourers, 124-125
+
+ Strange Stories, 262
+
+ Strange Story of the Fight with the Small Pox, 153-166
+
+ Stuart kings touching for the evil, 12-14
+
+ Suicide's skull, Drinking from, 50
+
+ Symington, A. J., Of Physicians and their Fees, 252-283
+
+
+ Tooth-drawing, 5
+
+ Thompson, W. H., Chaucer's Doctor of Physic, 70-75
+
+ Thurlow, Lord, on Barbers and Surgeons, 6
+
+ Thompson, Sir Henry, 115
+
+ Tobacco, Poet's Praise of, 111
+
+ Tournament, 186
+
+ Toothache, Folk-lore of, 235-237, 249
+
+ Toad, 227
+
+ Touching for the King's Evil, 8-23
+
+ Touch-pieces, 11, 20-21
+
+ Terling, Essex, 15
+
+ Tudor Kings touching for the Evil, 11
+
+
+ Verney Family, 229-233
+
+ Visiting Patients, 22-23
+
+
+ Wall, A. H., Doctors Shakespeare Knew, 76-89
+
+ Walters, Cuming, Magic and Medicine, 42-69;
+ Famous Literary Doctors, 102-124
+
+ Warren, Samuel, 116
+
+ Warts, Charms for, 247
+
+ Whooping cough, 244-246
+
+ Wig, 35
+
+ William III. refuses to touch, 18
+
+ Winchester, Mountebank at, 147-148
+
+ Witchcraft, 49-50, 242
+
+
+ York records, 16-17
+
+
+ Zulu doctors, 65
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] "Chester in the Plantagenet and Tudor Periods," by Rupert H. Morris,
+1894, pp. 78-79.
+
+[2] The _Asclepiad_, Vol. viii.
+
+[3] Act ii., sc. 2.
+
+[4] Dyer's English Folk Lore, p. 156.
+
+[5] Dyer's English Folk Lore, p. 158.
+
+[6] _Records of York Castle_, p. 230.
+
+[7] Folk Lore Journal, v. 5.
+
+[8] Vol. i., p. 761.
+
+[9] P. 353.
+
+[10] P. 273.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Passages in italics are indicated by _italics_.
+
+Superscripted characters are indicated by {superscript}.
+
+The original text contains letters with diacritical marks that are not
+represented in this text version.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Doctor in History, Literature,
+Folk-Lore, Etc., ed. by William Andrews
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DOCTOR IN HISTORY ***
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