Old Saint Paul's eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 723 pages of information about Old Saint Paul's.

Old Saint Paul's eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 723 pages of information about Old Saint Paul's.

THE PLAGUE AT ITS HEIGHT.

Amabel’s departure for Berkshire caused no change in her father’s mode of life.  Everything proceeded as before within his quiet dwelling; and, except that the family were diminished in number, all appeared the same.  It is true they wanted the interest, and indeed the occupation, afforded them by the gentle invalid, but in other respects, no difference was observable.  Devotional exercises, meals, the various duties of the house, and cheerful discourse, filled up the day, which never proved wearisome.  The result proved the correctness of Mr. Bloundel’s judgment.  While the scourge continued weekly to extend its ravages throughout the city, it never crossed his threshold; and, except suffering in a slight degree from scorbutic affections, occasioned by the salt meats to which they were now confined, and for which the lemon and lime-juice, provided against such a contingency, proved an efficacious remedy, all the family enjoyed perfect health.  For some weeks after her separation from her daughter, Mrs. Bloundel continued in a desponding state, but after that time she became more reconciled to the deprivation, and partially recovered her spirits.  Mr. Bloundel did not dare to indulge a hope that Amabel would ever return; but though he suffered much in secret, he never allowed his grief to manifest itself.  The circumstance that he had not received any intelligence of her did not weigh much with him, because the difficulty of communication became greater and greater, as each week the scourge increased in violence, and he was inclined to take no news as good news.  It was not so in the present case, but of this he was happily ignorant.

In this way, a month passed on.  And now every other consideration was merged in the alarm occasioned by the daily increasing fury of the pestilence.  Throughout July the excessive heat of the weather underwent no abatement, but in place of the clear atmosphere that had prevailed during the preceding month, unwholesome blights filled the air, and, confining the pestilential effluvia, spread the contagion far and wide with extraordinary rapidity.  Not only was the city suffocated with heat, but filled with noisome smells, arising from the carcasses with which the close alleys and other out-of-the-way places were crowded, and which were so far decomposed as not to be capable of removal.  The aspect of the river was as much changed as that of the city.  Numbers of bodies were thrown into it, and, floating up with the tide, were left to taint the air on its banks, while strange, ill-omened fowl, attracted thither by their instinct, preyed upon them.  Below the bridge, all captains of ships moored in the Pool, or off Wapping, held as little communication as possible with those on shore, and only received fresh provisions with the greatest precaution.  As the plague increased, most of these removed lower down the river, and many of them put out entirely to sea.  Above the bridge, most of the wherries and other smaller craft had disappeared, their owners having taken them up the river, and moored them against its banks at different spots, where they lived in them under tilts.  Many hundreds of persons remained upon the river in this way during the whole continuance of the visitation.

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Old Saint Paul's from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.