Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,188 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works.

Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,188 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works.

Without the presence or the fear of these exotic maladies, the forlorn voyagers of the Mayflower had sickness enough to contend with.  At their first landing at Cape Cod, gaunt and hungry and longing for fresh food, they found upon the sandy shore “great mussel’s, and very fat and full of sea-pearl.”  Sailors and passengers indulged in the treacherous delicacy; which seems to have been the sea-clam; and found that these mollusks, like the shell the poet tells of, remembered their august abode, and treated the way-worn adventurers to a gastric reminiscence of the heaving billows.  In the mean time it blew and snowed and froze.  The water turned to ice on their clothes, and made them many times like coats of iron.  Edward Tilley had like to have “sounded” with cold.  The gunner, too, was sick unto death, but “hope of trucking” kept him on his feet,—­a Yankee, it should seem, when he first touched the shore of New England.  Most, if not all, got colds and coughs, which afterwards turned to scurvy, whereof many died.

How can we wonder that the crowded and tempest-tossed voyagers, many of them already suffering, should have fallen before the trials of the first winter in Plymouth?  Their imperfect shelter, their insufficient supply of bread, their salted food, now in unwholesome condition, account too well for the diseases and the mortality that marked this first dreadful season; weakness, swelling of the limbs, and other signs of scurvy, betrayed the want of proper nourishment and protection from the elements.  In December six of their number died, in January eight, in February, seventeen, in March thirteen.  With the advance of spring the mortality diminished, the sick and lame began to recover, and the colonists, saddened but not disheartened, applied themselves to the labors of the opening year.

One of the most pressing needs of the early colonists must have been that of physicians and surgeons.  In Mr. Savage’s remarkable Genealogical Dictionary of the first settlers who came over before 1692 and their descendants to the third generation, I find scattered through the four crowded volumes the names of one hundred and thirty-four medical practitioners.  Of these, twelve, and probably many more, practised surgery; three were barber-surgeons.  A little incident throws a glimmer from the dark lantern of memory upon William Direly, one of these practitioners with the razor and the lancet.  He was lost between Boston and Roxbury in a violent tempest of wind and snow; ten days afterwards a son was born to his widow, and with a touch of homely sentiment, I had almost said poetry, they called the little creature “Fathergone” Direly.  Six or seven, probably a larger number, were ministers as well as physicians, one of whom, I am sorry to say, took to drink and tumbled into the Connecticut River, and so ended.  One was not only doctor, but also schoolmaster and poet.  One practised medicine and kept a tavern.  One was a butcher, but calls himself a surgeon in his will, a union of callings which suggests an obvious pleasantry.  One female practitioner, employed by her own sex,—­Ann Moore,—­was the precursor of that intrepid sisterhood whose cause it has long been my pleasure and privilege to advocate on all fitting occasions.

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