[32] After sending these letters to the press, I saw in the public prints that the Bishop of the Diocese had forbidden the funerals of the dead from Cholera to be received in the churches of London. Instead of thus forbidding a part, better have the whole of the service performed there (where crowds do not come) under cover from the weather, than in the open churchyard, where the mourners uncovered, are exposed in every way to damp and cold, and the jostling of the mob; better still have all the service deemed necessary, performed at the residence of the deceased.
Were I called upon to criticise what I have now written, and to review all that I have seen, read, and heard on the subject, I would conscientiously declare that the importation of Cholera Morbus into England or anywhere else, had been clearly negatived, and its non-contagious character almost as clearly established, always however with the proviso and exception of the possibility of its being made a temporary contingent contagion, amidst filth and poverty, and impurity of atmosphere, from overcrowding and accumulation of sick, but neither transmissible nor transportable out of its own locality, through human intercourse. As the disease, like all the other great plagues, which at various periods have desolated the earth, evidently came from the east, it would be most desirable in pursuing our investigation, to have a clear knowledge of the mode of its introduction into Russia on the eastern boundary of Europe. Unfortunately we can place no dependence upon the reports that have been published to prove importation there, which are lame and contradictory, although coming from the avowed partizans of contagion; but even had they been better gotten up, we could not, unless they had been confirmed by the experience of other nations, have received them with implicit reliance.
The Russian Employé of the provinces, mendacior Parthis, not
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from greater innate moral depravity than others, but from the corruptions of
a despotic government which compel him to live under the rod of a
master, amidst a superstitious barbarous population, whose dangerous
prejudices he dare not offend, can only give utterance to what his
tyrants command. Even at the more civilized capital of Petersburgh, the
mob rose in arms to murder the foreign physicians when they did not act
according to their liking. Could the truth then be heard on such a
field, or what native officer would venture to impugn the authority of
his rulers, proclaiming contagion? If he did, he must cease to live in
the official sense of the word. Throughout Europe, from east to west,
the disease has followed its own route according to its own
incomprehensible laws, despite of every obstacle and precaution. We have
the authority of our own Central Board for believing that the disease
cannot be conveyed by merchandize of any kind, and that of our mission
to Russia for greatly doubting whether it can adhere to personal
clothing or bedding; and will it be pretended that human beings,
labouring under such a distemper in any form, could have been the
vehicles of spreading it in a straight line for thousands of miles
throughout civilized nations, armed and prepared to defend themselves
against its inroads,—they tried, but in vain. We, too, may strive to
discover the demon of the pestilence amidst the clouds of the climate,
or the winds of Heaven. He remains hidden to our view; and until better
revealed, it only remains for us to exercise towards our fellow men
those duties which humanity prompts, civilization teaches, and religion
enjoins.
POSTSCRIPT.
My friend, Doctor Stanford, of the Medical Staff, now settled here, has
given me the following valuable information, which my own observation
confirms, regarding the agency of panic, in promoting the diffusion of
epidemic disease. He happened to be serving with part of the British
army, at Cadiz, when an eruption of yellow fever took place there, in
the autumn of 1813, and as usually happens amongst medical men, the
first time they have seen that fever, some of them were staunch
contagionists, and impressed that belief upon the corps to which they
belonged. In all these the disease was most fatal to great numbers. The
men being half dead with fear, before they were taken ill, speedily
became its victims, to the great terror and danger of their surviving
comrades; but in the other regiments, where no alarm had been sounded,
the soldiers took the chances of the epidemic with the same steady
courage they would have faced the bullets of the enemy, in the lottery
of battle; escaping an attack for the most part altogether, or if
seized, recovering from it in a large proportion. From this picture let
us take a lesson, in case the impending epidemic should ever come to
spread in the populous towns of England, and the cry of contagion be
proclaimed in their streets. The very word will spread terror and dismay
throughout the people, causing multitudes to be infected, who would
otherwise, in all probability, have escaped an attack, and afterwards
consign them to death in despair, when they find themselves the marked
and fated victims of a new plague. Whatever they see around them, must
confirm and aggravate their despair, for desertion and excommunication
in all dangerous diseases, too certainly seal the fate of the patient.
It will be vain to tell them that hireling attendance has been
provided,—the life of the Choleraic depends upon the instant aid—the
able bodied willing aid of affectionate friends, who will devote
themselves to the task, and persevere indefatigably to the last.
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If these be driven from his bed, his last stay is gone, for without their
active co-operation the best prescription of the physician is only so
much waste paper. What, let me ask, must have been the fate of the
patient, and what the consequent panic, if the case of Cholera that
occurred in London, a month ago at the Barracks of the Foot Guards, had
been proclaimed, and treated as a contagion? The poor fellow was
promptly surrounded by his fearless comrades, who with their kind hands
recalled and preserved the vital heat on the surface, by persevering in
the affectionate duty of rubbing him for many hours; but had the Medical
Staff of the regiment been true contagionists, they must, as in duty
bound, have commanded, and compelled every one of them to fly the
infection. It depended upon them, to have spread around a far wilder and
more dangerous contagion than that of Cholera Morbus, or any other
disease,—the contagion of fear—and from what occurred at Cadiz, as
above related, it is to be hoped our medical men will now see how much
they will have it in their power, when Cholera comes, to pronounce, or
to withhold sentence of desolation upon a community. The word Contagion
will be the word of doom, for then the healthy will fly their homes, and
the sick be deserted; but a countenance and bearing, devoid of that
groundless fear, will at once command the aid, and inspire the hopes
that are powerful to save in the most desperate diseases.
It is stated, in a Scotch newspaper, that two poor travellers, passing
from Kirkintulloch to Falkirk, ran the risque of being stoned to death
by the populace of the latter place, and were saved from the immolation
only by escaping into a house; and in an Irish one, that some
shipwrecked sailors incurred a similar danger. Such barbarities must, in
the nature of things, be practised every where under a reign of terror,
however humane or christianized the people may be—even the fatalism of
the Turk would not be proof against it. In Spain they have been enacted
in all their horrors (thanks to the quarantine laws) upon the
unfortunate
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[Pg 37]
victims of yellow
fever;[33] and
we shall soon see them
repeated amongst ourselves, unless the plain truth be promulgated by
authority to the people. Let them be told if such be the pleasure of our
rulers, (for it is not worth while disputing the point), that Cholera
Morbus is a contagion, but of so safe a nature in regard to
communicability, that not one in a hundred, or even a thousand, take the
disease,—that in this country, besides being a transient passing
disease, which according to certain laws and peculiarities of its own,
will assuredly take its departure in no long time; it is limited almost
always to particular spots and localities—that it is in their own
power, while it remains, to correct the infectious atmosphere of these
spots, by attention to health police—that they may fearlessly approach
their sick friends with impunity, for that the danger resides in the
above atmosphere, and not in the person of the patient; and that in all
situations they may defy it, for as long as they observe sobriety of
life and regularity of habits. Thus will public confidence be restored,
and thus be verified the homely adage of, "honesty, in all human
affairs, being ever the best policy"; for the concealment, or perversion
of the truth, however much it may be made to serve the purposes of the
passing day, can never ultimately promote the ends of good government
and true humanity, but must lead, sooner or later, to the exposure of
the delusion, or what would be far worse, to the perpetuation of error
and prejudice, and grossest abuse of the people, in regard to those
interests committed to our charge.
[33] Vide O'Halloran, upon the Yellow Fever in Spain.
Doctor Henry, of Manchester, has, in a late paper, published some most
interesting experiments, upon the disinfecting power of heat. He found
that the vaccine virus was deprived of its infecting quality, at
140° of Farenheit, and that the contagions of
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[Pg 38]
Scarlatina, and Typhus fever,
from fomites, were certainly dissipated and destroyed, at the dry heat
of boiling water. In regard to these last, he might surely have ventured
to fix the standard of safety at a greatly lower temperature; for if the
grosser vaccine matter could be rendered inert at 140°, there can be
little doubt of the subtile gaseous emanations, which constitute the
aerial contagions, being dissipated by the same agent, at an inferior
degree. In the absence of direct experiment, we may venture to infer,
that 120° would suffice, to nullify these last. Such, at least, has been
the belief of those, who have been employed to purify ships, barracks,
and hospitals, from contagion, and I should think it must have been
founded on
experience.[34]
[34] As far back as the years 1796-7-8, this fact was familiar to us in the St. Domingo war, only we were satisfied with a minimum heat of 120°, from a belief that a temperature of that height, as it coagulated the ova of insects (the cock roach for instance), and was otherwise incompatible with insect life, would avail to dissipate contagion.
He does not treat of the disinfecting property of light, although such
an agent was well worthy of his notice; for the power, which in closely
stopped bottles can deprive Cayenne Pepper of its sting—render our
Prussic Acid as harmless as cream, and convert the strongest medicinal
powders into so much powder of post, can also avail to destroy the
matter and principle of Contagion. In fact, no other is used for
purifying goods, at our Lazzarettoes, where suspected articles of
merchandise, after some nugatory fumigations, are simply exposed to
light and air with such certain effect, that there is not, I believe, in
this country, any record of infection being propagated from them
afterwards. The experiments of Doctor Henry are as simple and beautiful
in themselves, as they promise to be useful and important, for now even
the horrible contagion of hospital gangrene would appear to be under the
controul of the pure agent he has been describing; and the principle now
established of light and heat, the grand vivifying powers of the
creation, being the sure and true preservers
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[Pg 39]
of the creature, man, from
the poisons generated even by himself, and otherwise around him, calls
for our admiration and gratitude, as shewing that these agents and
emanations of Almighty power can be made, in the hands of the practical
philosopher, to serve the purposes of domestic science, and in as far as
we can see, to fulfil, at least in that respect, the best intentions of
the Creator.
PRINTED BY R. OXLEY, AT THE EXPRESS OFFICE.
Transcriber's Note
Spelling variations have been retained in this ebook to match the original text, e.g., quarrantines & quarantines, shew & show, Farrell & Farrel, control & controul, employe & employé, coridors, land wind & land-wind, reccommended & recommended, versts & wersts, clothing & cloathing, apalling & appalling, prima facie & primâ facie, alledged, and par metier & par métier.
Placement of footnote markers has been regularized to be located outside of neighboring punctuation.
The following typographical corrections have been made to this text:
PART I
| Foot 1: | Removed stray comma (As medical men in this Country employ) |
| Page 6: | Changed possesss to possess (still do not possess) |
| Page 13: | Removed superfluous quote marks (Petersburg;—this gentleman) |
| Page 19: | Removed duplicate word 'of' (has become a magazine of) |
| Page 19: | Changed . to , (the cause of cholera,) |
| Page 21: | Changed , to . (&c., in the office) |
| Page 22: | Changed Mauritus to Mauritius (at the Mauritius before) |
| Page 22: | Added . to Dr (Dr. Hawkins admits) |
| Page 24: | Changed . to , (Martin M'Neal[6],) |
| Page 24: | Changed knowlege to knowledge (any knowledge himself) |
| Page 26: | Changed circustances to circumstances (two circumstances) |
| Page 28: | Removed duplicate word 'a' (at least for a time) |
| Page 32: | Changed intercouse to intercourse (or great intercourse) |
| Page 33: | Added . to Dr (and Dr. Hawkins) |
| Foot 11: | Changed importan to important (in the important) |
| Page 39: | Moved misplaced comma (at Barcelonetta, the) |
| Page 45: | Changed teminated to terminated (terminated favourably) |
| Page 46: | Removed stray hyphen (he persists in giving) |
| Page 50: | Moved misplaced period (this calamity (the cholera).) |
| Page 51: | Changed çaon to 'ça on' (toute ça on trouve) |
| Page 53: | Deleted superfluous end-quotes (took place.) |
| Page 53: | Changed confied to confined (been confined to her bed) |
| Page 53: | Changed macron to aigu accent (employés attached) |
| Page 53: | Changed authorties to authorities (authorities wished) |
| Page 54: | Changed dimished to diminished (diminished all at once) |
| Page 54: | Changed á to à (tout à coup) |
| Page 54: | Changed entassès to entassés (crowded [entassés]) |
| Page 54: | Changed Franec to France (state like France) |
| Page 56: | Added missing end-quotes (to the Burraumposter.") |
| Page 57: | Changed em-dash to hyphen (Leicester-square) |
PART II
| Page 11: | Changed typhoi'd to typhoid (the typhoid principle) |
| Page 15: | Changed affluuent to affluent (houses of the affluent) |
| Page 17: | Changed 'in' to 'In' (in my last letter) |
| Page 21: | Changed absorded to absorbed (absorbed into the soil) |
| Page 22: | Changed 'in' to 'it' (would certainly have kept it) |
| Page 24: | Changed procees to process (drying process) |
| Page 26: | Changed saered to sacred (the most sacred duty) |
| Page 30: | Added missing ending punctuation (following morning.) |
| Page 31: | Removed duplicate word always (always afford) |