The shutting up infected houses as it is practised in England soberly debated By way of address from the poor souls that are visited, to their brethren that are free. With observations on the wayes whereby the present infection hath spread. As also a certain method of diet, attendance, lodging and physick, experimented in the recovery of many sick persons.

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The shutting up infected houses as it is practised in England soberly debated By way of address from the poor souls that are visited, to their brethren that are free. With observations on the wayes whereby the present infection hath spread. As also a certain method of diet, attendance, lodging and physick, experimented in the recovery of many sick persons.
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[London :: s.n.],
Printed in the year MDCLXV. [1665]
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Subject terms
Plague -- England -- Early works to 1800.
Medicine -- Formulae, receipts, prescriptions -- Early works to 1800.
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A60176.0001.001
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"The shutting up infected houses as it is practised in England soberly debated By way of address from the poor souls that are visited, to their brethren that are free. With observations on the wayes whereby the present infection hath spread. As also a certain method of diet, attendance, lodging and physick, experimented in the recovery of many sick persons." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A60176.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed October 6, 2024.

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THE SHUTTING UP Infected Houses As it is practised in ENGLAND SOBERLY DEBATED.

Brethren,

WEE may yet call you so, for our Sickness hath onely altered our condition and not our Nature; although our usages bespeakes us worse Crea∣tures, we are yet men moulded of the same earth, quickned by the same Spirit, subject to the same Law, lying under the same sins and infirmities; loved with the same Everlasting Love, redeemed by the same Blood, entred in∣to the same Covenant, Members of the same Church, partakers of the same Privileges and Ordinances, Professors of the same Faith, expectants of the same Hope and common Salvation with you. Turn not your eyes from your own Flesh; there is no∣thing happened unto us that is not common to Mankind; what is our case to day may be yours to morrow. Have pitty upon us for the hand of God is upon us, and add not sorrow to affliction; and when we are afflicted of God, O let us not withal be for∣saken of men! and if our Neighbours will stand so far aloof from us as not to look upon us, yet let them hear us; if our persons are loathsome, our reason is not so, there may be danger in visiting us; there is none in having compassion upon us, our breath may be infectious, our words are innocent; hear us and then forsake us.

Page 4

First Reason against shutting Men up for the Plague, From the Communion of Saints, and the practise of the Primitive Christians.

1. WEre Men (those sociable Creatures) made thus, every Man to live by himself? and if the Principle of self-preservation may alter the course of Nature, is this the Com∣munion of Saints we believed? is this the mutual care we ought to have one of another? We can endure to read in Eusebius of Heathens, who as soon as the Pestilence was among them diver∣ted themselves, and fled from their most loving and dear friends, throw∣ing them half dead in the Streets: how they left the dead unburied to be devoured of Dogs, to the end they might avoid death, which yet they could not escape.

While we observe withal how Grace above Nature enabled the Primitive Christians by reason of their great love and brotherly Charity (they are Eusebius his own Words) not sparing themselves to cleave one to another, to visit the sick of the Plague, to attend them diligently, to Cure them in Christ though it cost them their Lives; and being full of other mens maladies took the Infection off their Neigh∣bours, and tronslated off their own accord the sorrows of their Neigh∣bours upon themselves; fulfilling indeed the common saying, that friendship is alwayes to be retained. In this sort, the best of our Bre∣thren departed this life, whereof some were Ministers, some were Deacons, in great reverence among the Common People: So that this kind of death for their great Piety and strength of Faith may seem to differ nothing from Martyrdom; for they took the dead Bodies of the Saints, whose breasts, faces, and hands lay upwards, and closed their eyes, shut their mouths, and joyntly with one accord, being like af∣fectioned, embraced them, and prepared their Funerals, their own be∣ing a little while afterward in all likelyhood prepared by others, for the Living continually traced the steps of the Dead.

Then as the Body was one, and had many Members, all those Members being one body, so was Christ; for by one Spirit were all Men Baptized into one Body, the eye said not to the hand I

Page 5

have no need of thee; nor the head to the foot I have no need of thee; yea, the weaker the Members of the Church were, the more care they had of them; and there was no Schism in the Bo∣dy, each Member having an equal care one of another; and so if one Member suffered, all the Members suffered with it: they all looking on themselves as the Body of Christ, and Members in particular: Then they did not Excommunicate whole Families when it pleased God to visit them; no, then the Elders of the Church carefully attended them, prayed with them, and the effectual fervent prayer of those righteous Men availed much.

Second Reason against the shutting up of Houses infected with the Plague, From the spreading of the Infection by it.

BUt alas! a discourse of publick mindedness to private Spi∣rits looks like a fit of Melancholly; we urge not then your duty, but your Interest, not so much what concerneth us as your selves: alas! while you by this severe course would secure, you destroy your selves, and that shutting up of infected Houses, which you think would stop the Infection, spreads it: For,

1. We are acted by a Principle of self preservation, as well as you, and therefore assoon as we find our selves or any member of our Families infected, so dreadful it is to us to be shut up from all comfort and society, from free and wholsome air, from the care of the Physician, and the Divine, from the oversight of Friends and Relations, and sometimes even from the very necessi∣ties, and conveniences of Nature, that we run as far in City and Country as our feet can carry us, leaving Wives and Children to the Parishes, empty walls, and shops to Creditors, scattering the infection along the Streets as we go, and shifting it from Lodging to Lodging with our selves, till at last we drop in some Alley, Field, or neighbour Village, calling the people round a∣bout by the suddenness of our fall to stand awhile astonished at our deaths, and then take their own; each fearful man of us frighted from his own house, killing his whole Town by surpri∣zing them unprepared; whereas were we permitted to enjoy the

Page 6

content and freedom of our own Habitations, we might by Anti∣dotes cure others, and be cured our selves.

See, see, we infect not our next Neighbours, and this sickness spreads not much in any one place, but we carry it from place to place, running from our home as from our places of torment, and thus the Roads are visited, and men travel the same way to the Country, and to their long home: Thus the Contagion hath reached most places round the Citty, which is now as it were be∣sieged with the judgment, and encompassed with the Visitation and desolation: We have not yet learned how to manage a sick∣ness, in all likelihood did persons prepare themselves (upon the first breaking out of the Plague) with Antidotes to visit the sick, who would be very well contented to keep within doors and converse onely with their nearest Friends, their Physicians and their ghostly fathers) and administer to them such preservatives, and other necessaries the Plague might go no further. For,

Third Reason against shutting up Houses visited with the Plague from the experience of former times, when Plagues did not cease till there was freedom of Converse allowed.

IN the years 1346. 1348. 1350. there was a great Plague all over the World, especially in Asia, such as was never remem∣bred to be in any place before, sweeping away Priests and Physi∣cians first; when Men were troubled with no other disease, when the Living were not able to bury their Dead, all lay in common, there was no distinction between Sacred and profane; the very Birds of the air were poysoned, and Men were all over sore, loo∣sing some Limb or other if they escaped with their Lives.

Assoon as the people discerned by Observation, by sight or feel∣ing whether they had this sickness or not, they hasted away, left the other helpless: Whereupon (saith the Historian) many pe∣rished for want of sucour, who might otherwise have been pre∣served. This inhumane forsaking took its rise from the Turks, and Infidels; where the Parents forsook their Children, and the Children their Parents; Brothers and Sisters forsook one ano∣ther;

Page 7

nay, the Wife left the Husband, and the Husband the Wife. Nor was this monstrous cruelty wanting among Christians also, some of whom retired themselves to solitary places, others kept themselves close in their Houses or Castles to secure themselves as they thought from the outrage of the general Visitation; but all this could not any way prevail or prevent Gods Divine judg∣ment, against whom the strongest Fortification never defended: Whereupon, mark it, many became more resolute and Christian∣like; referring themselves to Gods mercy, and with a holy reso∣lution to welcome death; they became kind and serviceable to the visited, ministring to them all things necessary, and thus many recovered health, and became secure, and then yielded the like help to others: In which Christian course God so blessed their endeavours, that very many of them were healed by visit∣ing and assisting one another.

Nay, within many Mens memory now alive, when the effect of Cooping Men up was no other, than that the Sick were so many that they could not be watched or kept in by those that were well, in the year of our Lord 1625. and thereupon it being found convenient that the Sick should have their Liberty to visit and be visited, and all Men should meet and pray heartily to God to appease his wrath: What with the freedome of the Ayre, what with the accomodations Men had for necessaries, it pleased God that the Sickness which had by shutting up,

Increased thus.
   Pl.
February.Week12
  23
March.Week14
  28
  311
  49
AprilWeek110
  224
  325
  426
MayWeek130

Page 8

 245
  371
  478
JuneWeek169
  294
  3165
  4239
  5390
JulyWeek1593
  21004
  31819
  42471
Aug.Week13659
  24115
  34461
  44218

Page 7

Upon the opening of the hou∣ses it decreased thus;
      Pl.
Septemb. Week 1 3344
    2 2550
    3 1672
    4 1561
    5 852
Octob. Week 1 538
    2 511
    3 331
    4 134
Novemb. Week 1 89

Page 8

 292
  348
  427
Decemb.Week115
  215
  36
  41

A Decrease never before known and never hereafter to be ex∣pected, but by the use of this remedy.

Fourth Reason against shutting up of houses infected with the Plague, from the condition of those houses and the inhabitants thereof.

BUt if we will not be wise by other mens experience, let us be so by our own most sad and most deplorable, whereby we have known the healthiest men shut up, and with the very thought of a sad and dismal restraint, contracting first a Melan∣choly, and then a feaver, and at last (as all diseases turn to that which is most epidemical) a Plague. Little is it considered that some spirits are so averse to the very least restraint, that the lock∣ing of their pew door puts them to a swound, and a dayes impri∣sonment to them is mortal. Neither is it a fourth part of the inconvenience of this mewing up of men, that a whole & healthy familie to day, for want of preservatives, antidotes, attendance, and (it may be) necessaries of meat and drink, is to morrow none at all. If they want meat, then the infection seizeth their empty veins, if they eat ill-dressed, or unwholsome meat, that turns to crudities, and that to distempers, and these to the prevailing one, the Plague. This shutting up would breed a Plague if there were none: Infection may have killed its thousands, but shutting

Page 9

up hath killed its ten thousands. Little is it considered how careless most Nurses are in attending the Visited, and how care∣ful (being possessed with rooking avarice) they are to watch their opportunity to ransack their houses; the assured absence of friends making the sick desperate on the one hand, and them on the other unfaithful: their estates are the Plague most dye on, if they have any thing to lose, to be sure those sad creatures (for the Nurses in such cases are the off-scouring of the City) have a dose to give them; besides that, it is something beyond a Plague to an ingenious spirit to be in the hands of those dirty, ugly, and unwholsome Haggs; even a hell it self, on the one hand to hear nothing but screetches, cryes, groans, and on the other hand to see nothing but ugliness and deformity, black as night, and dark as Melancholy: Ah! to lye at the mercy of a strange woman is sad: to leave wife, children, plate, jewels, to the In∣genuity of poverty, is worse; but who can express the misery of being exposed to their rapine that have nothing of the woman left but shape?

With what art do they neglect the rich? and with what seve∣rity the poor? A world, cry they, for drink, for physick, for sweat, for cordials: by and by answereth the cunning Suecuba, till the poor patient breaths out his soul in his vain wishes, glad now to escape into a rest and quietness much happier than his fretful state wherein his disease tormented him much, but his oversees more, adding her fury from without, to the diseases rage from within, and proving the more Intollerable Plague. And now the Husbands gone, if Sorrow doth not, a Close Room, and Posset drink, shall break the good womans heart, equally divided be∣tween her grief for the husband that is gone, and her fear for the children that are left behind: a needless fear, they shall not long survive, heirs rather of the parents misfortune, than their estates; and if the blessing of God and the poor upon the devout and charitable family (according to the promise made to them and their seed) keeps up a child or two against the infection of the disease, the unwholsomness of their diet, the nastiness of their chamber, and the artifice of their tender, they are conveyed away forsooth, in order to their security, and in the mean time the well-furnished house lyeth at a beggar or

Page 10

two's mercy for a quarter, of a year together.

During which time the Plague-brokers diligently attend, and there goeth a Tankard that shall infect the fifth Cupboard; here the set of Spoones that taint the hundredth dish of Broath; this man steales a bargain of the Cloak that kills ten Men; another buyeth a Suit that infects Bristol; and a third gets a fine Childs Coat that shall cut-off a first-born Son. In vain do you here ob∣ject the severe Lawes against removal of infected Goods before the 40. dayes are past, when the careful Nurse dares not stay out the 40. houres, least a right owner interpose, or cunning Lawyer seize on the house and the estate; but let the Estate go, a World cryeth the Patient for an able Physician, that might help the nature, or a serious Divine that may settle the soul; and neither must be sent for, for the doors are fast; and if the rigid overseers per∣mit that civility they dare not come on pain of being shut up themselves, and by serving the necessities of one man being made unserviceable unto all.

Fifth Reason against shutting men in infected Houses from the Condition of those Houses.

BUt if you have no bowels of compassion for us; O have a care of your selves, the shut houses killing no fewer without then within, and being as likely to breed a Plague if it were not as they are sure to encrease it, now it is: imagine Infection it self penned into a rage and fury ready upon the least passage through a door or window to break out and choak a whole street, as that will in a while a City, and that a Kingdome; and this infection growing stronger by the Leaveless despair of the poor Inhabitants, the Rooms hung with Cobweb, the Flowre having dust and rub∣bish enough to bury the Infected, the Meat stinking in the Pan∣try, and the Beer soweing in the Cellar, while the people rot in their several Chambers; the Cloaths when clean infected by the owners, and now being foul infecting them; again Doggs and Cats if alive spreading the infection abroad, if dead increa∣sing it at home; the Air they breath subtly conveying death that way it did formerly life, the water stinking and readier to pro∣voke the flame within, then to quench it: Servants formerly the

Page 11

stay and honour, now the burden of the Family.

The poor peoples own endure, if they cannot, as they cannot commonly under this Pestilence expell it, killing them, and if they can, poysoning them i their sweat is cast by them upon their Cloaths, and evaporated upon the House round them, and by those Cloaths and that House sent back again upon them. In vain are poor people shut within a House, as unless the house itself be shut within another, and that within a third, and so ad Infinitum; the wind, you say, purges the Air round about the house, hardly when so deeply infected as a close house must needs be; yet if the Wind cleareth the Infection of the House; would it not likewise clear that of the people were they admit∣ted to an open and free air?

Sixt Reason against shutting up of Infected Houses, because that keeps Men in ignorance of the nature of and remedy against the Plague.

NAy this method gives the Plague its power of being dead∣ly, all diseases were deadly till men by converse under∣stood the nature of them, their original, and the experience in their cure: What the Pestilence is now, the French Pox, the small Pox, and the spotted Fever, were in Queen Eliz. time, and had been to this hour, had men been shut up from Physicians and all other persons in the small Pox, &c. as they are now un∣der the Plague.

Discourse with the Physician in this case, and he will talk to you, out of his Books 40. receipts at a breath, but not a word can he say of the experience he or any other hath had of the cure of this disease; which is the onely safe way of practice; specula∣tive rules being at too great distance from practise before the particular circumstances of the disease, the person, and fits be perfectly understood; as they are by none but by such as con∣verse freely with the Patient as men do in Holland and most other parts of the World; where they have attained to so much fami∣liarity with the disease that (under God) observing how it grow∣eth and begins; how men take it at first, and how they recover

Page 12

of it, have been able by Gods blessing in a short time to give a stop to the infection, and health to the infected.

An instance of which experience take here in the 75. wayes whereby men have got this Plague this year 1665. as upon exa∣mination of divers Families now infected by persons that have conversed with those Families and other infected persons during this Infection hath appeared.

SECT. I. The Wayes whereby the Plague hath taken Men this year ob∣served by them that have conversed with the infected in order to the finding out of the true nature, original, and was of curing the Plague. Which may be a Caution to the Citty and Country.

1. FAmily by ones overheating himself, and drinking small Beer upon it.

2. By eating a pound of Red Cherries upon a wager.

3. By a Coat one bought of a Broker behind S. Clements church.

4. By a Sink shut up by reason of the Waters not running in their backside.

5. By the opening of a Vault that had been many years shut.

6. By a Nosegay brought by an infectious place.

7. By a Vow not to eat any thing in 24. houres, and in the mean time going fasting through an infectious place.

18. By an infected Hackney Coach.

9. By an infected Sedan.

10. By an infected Cushion whereon the Waterman confessed there sate a woman that within two hours after died suddenly.

11. By eating a Cucumber.

12. By a Melon.

13. By Redishes.

14. By drinking Water.

15. By a Tanker bearer.

16. By a Chair woman.

17. By drying of Cloaths before the door.

18. By a Cat in Catter wouling.

19. By a Spaniel.

Page 13

22. By opening the pores, and excessive sweat in walking.

23. By a Dinner of Soales in Fishstreet.

24. By a dish of Eeles.

25. By stopping of an Issue.

26. By a Codling Tart and Cream.

27. By a Dish of French Beanes.

28. By Cabbages.

29. By Turneps and Carrets.

30. By eating the Fat near the Rump of a Loyne of Mutton, and drinking cold beer immediately upon it.

32. By a Cold which turned first into a putrid Feaver, and at last into the Plague.

33. By siting up too late, and so drying and inflaming the Blood, and weakening Nature.

34. By an unseasonable sleep that caused C••••••••••es, and in∣digested matter which bred upon the weakening of the Vital and Animal Spirit▪ a Feaver, and that turned to the Pestilence.

35. By neglecting to let blood at the usual time.

36. By want of Necessaries, and by hungry meales.

37. By wetting the Feet in a slip out of a Boat by the Water side.

38. By a burden of Linnen carried from St. Giles to Chelsey.

39. By an House of Office near a Man's Window.

40. By close Chambers nastily kept, and looking southward.

41. By an immoderate eating of Caveare, and Anchoves.

42. By a Goosberry fool.

43. By a rotten Shoulder of Mutton.

44. By a Dish of Eeles.

45. By a Sink not well looked to before a door.

46. By an undue and immoderate Venery.

47. By idle Beggars who wandred from place to place.

48. By frequenting scurvy Tipling houses and Bowling allies.

49. By dead Beer.

50. By drinking heady strong beer, after a long custome of drinking Ale, which bound the persons that did so, and put them in Pestilential Feavers.

51. By eating Pork and Bacon.

52. By Tame Pigeons that flew up and down in an Alley.

Page 14

53. By the Funnel of Church Vaults, flaughter houses, and shallow graves.

54. By the Rakers or Ragg women.

55 By entertaining all sorts of comers, as brokers, and parti∣cularly by buying of bed cloaths and hangings.

56 By the stopping of the monthly courses.

57 By the crudities of plentiful meals.

58 By over long fasting (the bodies being too empty) and receiving more a•••• i then they give one, the spirits that were weakened for want of due nourishment, having least strength to resist the Contagion.

60 By eating of Quinces.

61 By s••••ole or and Lettice.

62 By Pompions, Musmillions, and Cucumbers▪

63 By festered Wounds and Sores.

64 By conversing with a man of stinking breath.

65 By children running and playing till they over-heated themselves.

66 By neglecting to purge at the usual times.

67 By standing fasting before an infected house.

68 By a Letter received from an infected person.

69 By money taken for Physick administred.

70 By an infected Vain of gloves.

71 By Lodgers.

72 By Frettirs, Melancholy, and Disbou••••••••.

73 By an Eastern Window.

74 By an extraordinary definition of humours.

75 By Feavers, caused either

1. By overmuch heat in the spirit or breath, which causeth either the Febris simpliciter 〈◊〉〈◊〉, or the Febris Diaria.

Or 2. By overmuch heat in the humours, which causeth a gas∣trida fbris which 〈◊◊◊〉〈◊◊◊〉

I. Within the Vessels, and that either,

1. When all the humours put•••••••••• and 〈◊〉〈◊〉 equally, and cause a fever called S••••••••bu•••• 〈◊〉〈◊〉

Page 15

Or 2. When one onely humour pu∣trifieth, as

  • 1. Choler which causeth a continual ter∣tian or burning feaver.
  • 2. Flegm, which being putrified, causeth a continual quotidian.
  • 3. Melancholy, which being putrified, cau∣seth a continual quartan.

Or, II. Without the Vessels, causing an intermitting feaver, either tertian, if it be rotten Choler; or exquisite, and pure Quotidian, if it be sweet Flegm, or Epialos, or glasen, or an inter∣mitting Quartan if it be rotten Melancholy.

Or, III. In the fleshy part, causing either Hectick Fever or Marasmus.

SECT. II. Observations touching the Recovery of those that have been since April last cured of the Plague.

1. THe Botch appearing on any side the vein, was cut on that side.

2. If the botch appeared behind the ears, or about the chin, or in other parts of the face or neck, they did let bloud in the Cephalica Vein on the same side.

3. If under the Arm-holes, they cut the innermost vein of the arm, on the same side commonly called the 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 vein, or the middle vein, if that did not appear.

4. If under the shin bloud was drawn the Ankles of the same side.

5. The aged and weak are not bled, but cupping-glasses are applied to their necks, shoulders, backs and legs.

6. If the contagion seizeth any man at meals, or when he is full of meat or drink, he immediately vomiteth; as soon as the bo∣dy or stomach is emptied, applying Eleciuarium de Ouo, which the Emperour Maximilian used, or some other Medicine to the outward parts that might draw the poyson of the disease to it, and call it back from the heart.

7. When the infected person hath applyed this or some other

Page 16

Medicine of the like nature, he is laid in a warm bed, made with soft sheets, and well-covered with cloaths, to the intent he might there sweat three or four hours or longer, according to his strength, and when by this means they could hardly provoke him to sweat, they laid tyles heated at the fire to his feet, which might, by reason of their extraordinary heat provoke sweat. And in all this time that the infected man did sweat in, they took a special care that he neither slept, eat, nor drank. After his sweating, diligently rubbing, and wiping off the sweat, with very clean, and fine Linnen cloaths, afterwards permitting the poor man to rise out of bed, upon condition that he looked not by any means into the open air, the air of the place wherein the sick lieth being corrected and amended by odoriferous things, and sweet smelling perfumes daily four or five times.

8. The Infected person was removed from one chamber to another, because the air of one chamber, by the continual tarry∣ing of the sick in it, is much corrupted, and not easily amended or corrected, the chamber into which he went being very well perfumed before hand.

9. Two or three hours after the Patient hath sweat, they made him some Chicken broth, which they gave him in little proportions, but often, for an infected person must be nourished by little and little: to the broth they added the Chickens flesh, sodden with Sorrel, or with the juice of Lemmons, or else Verjuice.

10 The sick is kept altogether from sleeping the first day, by talk of the assistants, by rubbing their extreme parts, by pulling their eares, nose, and hair, or by dipping a sponge in very sharp vinegar, and holding it to the Nose.

11. The infected man that is thirsty, useth this potion,

℞. Julep of Violets ℥jjj. Syrup of the sharp juice of Citrons ℥j. ss. Syrup of sowen Endive ℥jj. of the Decoction of Sorrel, Scabious, & flowers of Bugloss ℥ ten, or so much of their distilled waters, commixing them, and making them a potion, or the like.

12. He takes the water wherein Barley had been sodden a little, and commixed with it the juice of Roses, of Sorrel, or Lemmons, or of unripe Grapes, and takes it instead of drink, and he had Medicine that comforted his heart when he was sick and very weak, and it was this;

Page 17

℞. Conserves of Violets, Roses, and Bugloss. ana. ℥j.ss. Bole∣armoniack preparate ʒj. Red Coral ℈j. barks of Citron apple ʒj.ss. Camphire ℈5. with Syrup of the juice of sharp Citrons, as much as is sufficient to make an Electuary or liquid Antidote. Also he did lay upon the Region of the heart (having felt some heat about his breast) this Epitheme.

℞. Waters of Roses, Bugloss and Sorrel ana. ℥jjj. Powder of Electarium de Gemmis ʒj. Wood of Aloes, red Saunders, the barks of Citron apples beaten to powder, the bone of Harts heart, ana. ℈. Saffron gr. 6. all commixed, and to an Epi∣theme. He did not apply the Epithemes but when they were hot, and assoon as they were cool they took them off, for then they did shut up the pores, and brought him to no small grief.

13. He used cordial baggs, as this is;

℞. Flowers of red Roses, water Lillies, and of Violets, ana. ʒjj. of all the Saunders, Coral, white and red, Spodium, Pearls ana. ʒjjj. Cinamon, Cloves, the bone of Harts heart, Wood of Aloes, barks of the Citron apple, Saffron, ℈j. Seed of Sorrel ℈jj. Seed of Purslain, gr. iiij beat all these into fine pow∣der, and made two square baggs of silk, and applied each after the other being hot.

Moreover, he did endeavour to draw the venemous humour to the place where the botches appear'd and burst out, and he did it by setting to it Cupping-glasses, or by Medicines that had the vertue to draw those humours, which were these;

℞. Fat figs, in number six, great Raisins ℥jjj ss. salt Gum ʒjj. Honey ℥j. with Oyl of Camomil, made into the form of an Em∣plaister, and applyed hot to the hotch.

14. He used this following Plaister which is commended by all skilful men.

℞. a great Onion, and cut off the head of it, picking out the core from within, and fill it with Theriaca Andromachi, adding to it the juyce of Rue, or Sage, which done, stopped the top of the Onion with Lute, and set the Onion in the Embers to rost, and when it was well rosted, he pulled off the bark, and brayed it in a mostar, till it was thick, like an Emplaister, and applied it hot to the botch.

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15. This following Emplayster was very much used, for it helped to rot ℞. meat of Fenugreek and Tineseed of Flours of Cammomill, ana. ℥ss. Roots of Althea and white Lillies, ana. ʒss. 6. Figs, Leaves of Deptaine ʒjjj Veterian ʒjj Mustard seed ʒj.ss. Dovesdung, ℥.ss. Oyles of Cammomill and Lillies ℥j.ss. made into the form of an Implayster.

16. He kept the house where he did lye clean from all filthi∣ness and sluttishness, he kept the Windows shut, and when he had them open, he opened them towards the East or North, quar∣ter after Sun rise.

Seventh Reason why Houses should not be shut up for the Plague, Because people are so much afrighted out of Town, and the bad consequence thereof.

BUt if it be of no consideration among you to allow a liberty to the Infected to converse with such discreet men as are not so, because they may (as you see before your eyes some have done to their own and other mens great benefit) understand the original, the nature, and the proper way of Curing this disease; yet consider what it is by these severe Courses, to affright so ma∣ny thousands from their respective Habitations, thereby not onely scattering the Infection abroad, but obstructing Trade at home, and leaving other thousands without any employment, to tipple, loyter, and wander from one place to another; and for want of Necessaries on the one hand, and by excesses on the o∣ther, infect, and are infected; Whereas, had they due employ∣ment they would not meet in heards as they do, they would not surfet with rioting and drunkness; but they would securely stick to their work, keep their bodies by exercise and temperance in a good frame, and provide themselves wholsome dyet and Phy∣sick; fly, these poor men cannot as the Rich, for none will enter∣tain them, and they are not able to maintain themselves; Work they cannot, for none will employ them, and they have nothing to do but to commit those sins, which certainly deserve, and in∣fallibly bring the Plague upon them. Take, O take these Reasons and many others, which your own judgments will suggest to

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your serious Consideration, but as they are tendred with all humble and due submission to the care and authority of those ex∣cellent persons who are over us as intent as ever Magistrates were upon the means of our welfare.

For an Eighth Argument I alleage the mischief and sad conse∣quence that may arise from the high fits of Frenzy, that usual∣ly attend this and all other the like Distempers; wherein the sick (if not restrained by main force of their Attendants) are ready to commit any violence, either upon themselves or other, whe∣ther Wife, Mother, or Child. A sad instance whereof we had this last week in Fleet Lane, where the Man of the House being sick, and having a great Swelling, but not without hope of be∣ing almost ripe for breaking, did in a strong fit rise out of his bed, in spight of all that his Wife (who attended him) could do to the contrary, got his Knife, and therewith most miserably cut his Wife, and had killed her, had she not wrapped up the sheet a∣bout her, and therewith saved her self, till by crying out Murther. a Neighbour (who was himself shut up) opened his own doors, and forced into the house, and came seasonably to her pre∣servation. The man is since dead, when in all likelihood (had he not by arising struck in the disease) he might have recovered.

Add to this a serious confideration of the sad condition of Women neer the time of their travel, (or newly delivered) when shut up, (as 'tis the case of many at this time) having neither Midwife to help them, nor Nurse to attend them, nor Necessa∣ries provided for them, nor any friends to comfort them; and in this condition have continually for their object their own poor innocent Babes newly brought into the World, either to be star∣ved for want of sustenance, or poysoned by the Breasts that should preserve them.

For conclusion I shall onely say that a liberty of fresh Aire, and access of such as are willing to visit their sickfriends, may be so regulated and limited as not to spread the Infection, and I am sure will save the lives of Hundreds, who by so severe and close restraint are little better then Murther'd, or buryed alive.

Be yee merciful as your Heavenly Father is merciful.
FINIS.

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