登陆注册
5301800000074

第74章 Part 6(1)

It may be proper to ask here how long it may be supposed men might have the seeds of the contagion in them before it discovered itself in this fatal manner,and how long they might go about seemingly whole,and yet be contagious to all those that came near them.I believe the most experienced physicians cannot answer this question directly any more than I can;and something an ordinary observer may take notice of,which may pass their observations.The opinion of physicians abroad seems to be that it may lie dormant in the spirits or in the blood-vessels a very considerable time.Why else do they exact a quarantine of those who came into their harbours and ports from suspected places?Forty days is,one would think,too long for nature to struggle with such an enemy as this,and not conquer it or yield to it.But I could not think,by my own observation,that they can be infected so as to be contagious to others above fifteen or sixteen days at furthest;and on that score it was,that when a house was shut up in the city and any one had died of the plague,but nobody appeared to be ill in the family for sixteen or eighteen days after,they were not so strict but that they would connive at their going privately abroad;nor would people be much afraid of them afterward,but rather think they were fortified the better,having not been vulnerable when the enemy was in their own house;but we sometimes found it had lain much longer concealed.

Upon the foot of all these observations I must say that though Providence seemed to direct my conduct to be otherwise,yet it is my opinion,and I must leave it as a prescription,viz.,that the best physic against the plague is to run away from it.I know people encourage themselves by saying God is able to keep us in the midst of danger,and able to overtake us when we think ourselves out of danger;and this kept thousands in the town whose carcases went into the great pits by cartloads,and who,if they had fled from the danger,had,I believe,been safe from the disaster;at least 'tis probable they had been safe.

And were this very fundamental only duly considered by the people on any future occasion of this or the like nature,I am persuaded it would put them upon quite different measures for managing the people from those that they took in 1665,or than any that have been taken abroad that I have heard of.In a word,they would consider of separating the people into smaller bodies,and removing them in time farther from one another -and not let such a contagion as this,which is indeed chiefly dangerous to collected bodies of people,find a million of people in a body together,as was very near the case before,and would certainly be the case if it should ever appear again.

The plague,like a great fire,if a few houses only are contiguous where it happens,can only burn a few houses;or if it begins in a single,or,as we call it,a lone house,can only burn that lone house where it begins.But if it begins in a close-built town or city and gets a head,there its fury increases:it rages over the whole place,and consumes all it can reach.

I could propose many schemes on the foot of which the government of this city,if ever they should be under the apprehensions of such another enemy (God forbid they should),might ease themselves of the greatest part of the dangerous people that belong to them;I mean such as the begging,starving,labouring poor,and among them chiefly those who,in case of a siege,are called the useless mouths;who being then prudently and to their own advantage disposed of,and the wealthy inhabitants disposing of themselves and of their servants and children,the city and its adjacent parts would be so effectually evacuated that there would not be above a tenth part of its people left together for the disease to take hold upon.But suppose them to be a fifth part,and that two hundred and fifty thousand people were left:

and if it did seize upon them,they would,by their living so much at large,be much better prepared to defend themselves against the infection,and be less liable to the effects of it than if the same number of people lived dose together in one smaller city such as Dublin or Amsterdam or the like.

It is true hundreds,yea,thousands of families fled away at this last plague,but then of them,many fled too late,and not only died in their flight,but carried the distemper with them into the countries where they went and infected those whom they went among for safety;which confounded the thing,and made that be a propagation of the distemper which was the best means to prevent it;and this too is an evidence of it,and brings me back to what I only hinted at before,but must speak more fully to here,namely,that men went about apparently well many days after they had the taint of the disease in their vitals,and after their spirits were so seized as that they could never escape it,and that all the while they did so they were dangerous to others;I say,this proves that so it was;for such people infected the very towns they went through,as well as the families they went among;and it was by that means that almost all the great towns in England had the distemper among them,more or less,and always they would tell you such a Londoner or such a Londoner brought it down.

It must not be omitted that when I speak of those people who were really thus dangerous,I suppose them to be utterly ignorant of their own conditions;for if they really knew their circumstances to be such as indeed they were,they must have been a kind of wilful murtherers if they would have gone abroad among healthy people -and it would have verified indeed the suggestion which I mentioned above,and which I thought seemed untrue:viz.,that the infected people were utterly careless as to giving the infection to others,and rather forward to do it than not;and I believe it was partly from this very thing that they raised that suggestion,which I hope was not really true in fact.

同类推荐
  • 山舍南溪小桃花

    山舍南溪小桃花

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 六十种曲四喜记

    六十种曲四喜记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 书湖州庄氏史狱

    书湖州庄氏史狱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Elements of Law Natural and Politic

    The Elements of Law Natural and Politic

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 孙膑兵法

    孙膑兵法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 混世王妃的温柔王子

    混世王妃的温柔王子

    上一世,她深深爱过一个人,把他当作她人生中最明亮的星星,可最终,他却以一句“我给你的承诺多了,哪一个实现了呢?”结束了她的幻想。上一世,她为他做尽违心之事,助他登上皇位,可他却在事成之后,残忍杀掉她挚爱的姐姐,带着她的妹妹进府,废掉她的王妃之位。上一世,人尽皆知,相府二小姐自小体弱多病,形容不足,已经十八岁了,却还是十三四岁的样子,脑袋也不是很机灵,经常会忘记刚刚才发生的事情,像一个还没长大的小孩子。虽说她长得唇红齿白,肤如凝脂,再加上一身空灵的气质,仿若下凡的仙子,可是哪个男人愿意娶一个只能看着,还得好好养着却不能碰的瓷娃娃回家呢?屈辱的死去,幸运的重生到五岁那年,刚好是她中毒的那一年,也是改变她一生的一年!什么二娘三妹丞相爹爹,她都不会往眼里去!至于那些纠缠着她的王公贵族,她也给他玩一回用完便丢!这一世,她要做一个混世小魔王!她发誓,既然老天给她这个机会看清一切,那么,那些害过她的人,她一个都不会放过!纵使做尽天下恶事,也在所不惜!纵使当一个无心的人,她也不会后悔!犹记得,初见时那残酷的少年因她心甘情愿的一跪而动容的样子。犹记得,年少时那个把人当礼物送给她的王子,长剑一挥,道:你若不要,我就杀了他!犹记得,当她故意闯下大祸,那少年在她和他最爱的母妃之间左右为难的样子。……今生她注定是无心之人,注定要伤害爱她的人,若是那人能够不辞冰雪为卿热,若是那人愿意一生护她平安喜悦,结局,是否会好一点呢?可她最终,还是用计离开,她的人生才刚刚开始。看强悍的混世小魔王如何玩转人生吧!
  • 赵后遗事

    赵后遗事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 残虹诗集:半生风雨仄平中

    残虹诗集:半生风雨仄平中

    人生总是会有阴晴变幻的坎坷,也难免铺天盖地的风雨,而谁的一生不是伴随着这些风雨起起落落,就像历久弥深的唐诗宋词,平平仄仄,让人充实无比,又回味无穷。风雨路上,期待你与作者并肩,共赴这场诗词之约。《残虹诗集半生风雨仄平中》是作者用诗词体裁记录心情的一本个人诗词集,前后有十几年的时间跨度,系作者坚持创作的结晶。
  • 留守的伙伴

    留守的伙伴

    我们的校园在县城最边远的偏僻小镇上,洋槐花盛开的时候,馥郁洁白。特殊班的留守儿童在全校数第一,教室里的课桌凳是那时学校的唯一——“双星座”,把学生1+1串在一块儿。回忆是美好的,也有淡淡的苦涩。我们是特殊班的留守伙伴,把心语系在鸽子飞翔的翅膀上。
  • 穿越之舞倾天下

    穿越之舞倾天下

    二十一世纪的天才少女龙炫舞在一场蓄意的谋杀中,穿到了古代的南月国成为一个刚出世的小宝宝,看她如何运用现代智商玩转古代,倾倒众家美男.她多情而不滥情,腹黑但不恶毒,聪明而不矫情,她的一切的一切让无数优秀男子为其倾倒,到底谁才是她心目中的唯一....."爱情就像握在手中的流沙,攥的越紧就流的越快,所以我只有轻轻的捧住她,不让流沙从手中溜走!"他是当朝左相,拥有绝世文才,但是仍旧孑然一身......她说“你是我的哥哥,也是这个世界上第一个对我好的人,但是我带给你的只有痛心和伤害,除此之外,我什么都不能给你,所以请你放手!因为我不忍心看到你痛苦!”他说“我不怕受伤,只怕你不幸福,你是我在这世上唯一的牵挂!”她哭着说“为什么你总是喜欢受伤......”他是当朝的太子,一次意外的相遇,成为他心中的牵挂他说“为什么我不早些遇到你,现在我又如何能放手?”她说“既然错过了,就是错过,我们之间只是错误的相遇!”他说“即使是错的,我也要拼一下!”他是东辰国的太子,一次落魄的遭遇让他遇见此生的挚爱,他说“只要是为了你,就算抛弃我的灵魂和生命也在所不惜”她说“我分不清是该爱你还是恨你,请你让我走吧!”他说“不管怎样都好,只要不要忘了我!”他是南月国的南昭王,在他眼中从没有任何人或事可以令他动容;而她却这么突然的闯入他的生活,令他的世界充满了色彩!他说“你这个小妖精,为什么不肯说爱我!”她说“爱这个字,太沉重,我怕负担不起!”他说“难道你害怕就离开吗?你知道我的心有多痛吗?”还有他,他,他......一个个都被她深深地吸引着,到底谁才是她心目中的唯一,谁才能与她执子之手与子偕老......本文坚持一对一,男主个个专情,女主也有自己的原则,女主不是万能,但是却有些小聪明,本文有些慢热,但是继续看下去会越来越有意思请大家喜欢的话就多多收藏和投票票给我,有什么意见给我留言,我看到会回复的,最后谢谢各位的支持!推荐下好友的文小妖叶叶的《独爱杀手夫君》凌格格的《小爹爹!》最后感谢大家长久以来对我的支持,谢谢你们的钻石和鲜花还有就是请多多收藏,给我投票票哦!我会继续努力的!
  • 我的身体有神魔

    我的身体有神魔

    千米冰川底部,一座神秘恢宏的血色天宫,坐落于八尊远古神尸的肩膀之上。一名平凡都市青年,误入了血色天宫,获得上古诸天神魔的灵魂和神秘传承。
  • 穿越時空de愛

    穿越時空de愛

    我一个21世纪的少女,居然莫名其妙地穿越了?光穿越就算了,天啊,我的清白啊!QQ群:44981483MSN:[email protected]喜欢我文的,欢迎你来加我!http://m.wkkk.net/a/58025/我的新书!穿越文!拜金女之乌龙穿越计!才刚开始希望大家多去捧场!
  • 网王之男神约会吗

    网王之男神约会吗

    “手冢男神,我不管冰山在北极,南极,更甚至在西伯利亚,我忍足锦葵一定会把你追到手,绝对会成为站在你身边的那个人!”忍足锦葵霸气的宣言要扑倒手冢,为了达到这个目的,她是三十六计全部用上,可是男神貌似却和她越来越远,她手一握,一咬牙,决定先扑倒再去培养感情【喜欢不需要任何理由,爱才需要理由!】【群号:205913624,欢迎大家前来玩耍~~】
  • 篆刻:金石篆刻艺术

    篆刻:金石篆刻艺术

    我国古玺的源头可以上溯到新石器时期的印纹陶,后经商周时的甲骨文、铭文、石鼓文等雕刻影响,至战国时形成整体形象。在发展过程中,重要的动力来自文字体系的演变和完善,同时体现了不同时期和不同地域的审美风尚。随着玺印的使用相对普及,其文字表现形式也趋于多样化。先秦古玺留存于世的大多是战国玺。古玺形状各异,内容有官职、姓名和铭文等,玺文精练,章法生动,传达着远古文明发端的信息。随着时间的漫漶,显得越发神秘、朦胧和迷幻,让人感受到一种神奇、古朴的气息,令人心驰神往。
  • 修禅要诀

    修禅要诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。