The Epidemics of the Middle Ages by J. F. C. Hecker and John Caius
CHAPTER VI.
1738 words | Chapter 17
SWEATING SICKNESSES.
Sect. 1.—The Cardiac Disease of the Ancients. (Morbus Cardiacus.) 306
2.—The Picardy Sweat. (Suette des Picards—Suette Miliaire.) 315
3.—The Roettingen Sweating Sickness 324
Chronological Survey 330
Catalogue of Works referred to 339
APPENDIX.—A Boke, or Counseill against the Disease commonly
called the Sweate, or Sweatyng Sicknesse. By
Jhon Caius 353
LIST OF OFFICERS AND MEMBERS 381
THE BLACK DEATH.
TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE.
In reading Dr. Hecker’s account of the Black Death which destroyed so
large a portion of the human race in the fourteenth century, I was
struck, not only with the peculiarity of the Author’s views, but also
with the interesting nature of the facts which he has collected. Some
of these have never before been made generally known, while others
have passed out of mind, being effaced from our memories by subsequent
events of a similar kind, which, though really of less magnitude and
importance, have, in the perspective of time, appeared greater, because
they have occurred nearer to our own days.
Dreadful as was the pestilence here described, and in few countries
more so than in England, our modern historians only slightly allude to
its visitation:—Hume deems a single paragraph sufficient to devote to
its notice, and Henry and Rapin are equally brief.
It may not then be unacceptable to the medical, or even to the general
reader, to receive an authentic and somewhat detailed account of one of
the greatest natural calamities that ever afflicted the human race.
My chief motive, however, for translating this small work, and at
this particular period, has been a desire that, in the study of the
causes which have produced and propagated general pestilences, and of
the moral effects by which they have been followed, the most enlarged
views should be taken. The contagionist and the anti-contagionist may
each find ample support for his belief in particular cases; but in
the construction of a theory sufficiently comprehensive to explain
throughout, the origin and dissemination of universal disease, we
shall not only perceive the insufficiency of either doctrine, taken
singly, but after admitting the combined influence of both, shall even
then find our views too narrow, and be compelled, in our endeavours
to explain the facts, to acknowledge the existence of unknown powers,
wholly unconnected either with communication by contact or atmospheric
contamination.
I by no means wish it to be understood, that I have adopted the
author’s views respecting astral and telluric influences, the former of
which, at least, I had supposed to have been, with alchemy and magic,
long since consigned to oblivion; much less am I prepared to accede
to his notion, or rather an ancient notion derived from the East and
revived by him, of an organic life in the system of the universe. We
are constantly furnished with proofs, that that which affects life is
not itself alive; and whether we look to the earth for exhalations,
to the air for electrical phenomena, to the heavenly bodies for an
influence over our planet, or to all these causes combined, for the
formation of some unknown principle noxious to animal existence, still,
if we found our reasoning on ascertained facts, we can perceive nothing
throughout this vast field for physical research which is not evidently
governed by the laws of inert matter—nothing which resembles the
regular succession of birth, growth, decay, death, and regeneration,
observable in organized beings. To assume, therefore, causes of whose
existence we have no proof, in order to account for effects which,
after all, they do not explain, is making no real advance in knowledge,
and can scarcely be considered otherwise than an indirect method of
confessing our ignorance.
Still, however, I regard the author’s opinions, illustrated as they are
by a series of interesting facts diligently collected from authentic
sources, as, at least, worthy of examination before we reject them, and
valuable, as furnishing extensive data on which to build new theories.
I have another, perhaps I may be allowed to say a better, motive for
laying before my countrymen this narrative of the sufferings of past
ages,—that by comparing them with those of our own time, we may be made
the more sensible how lightly the chastening hand of Providence has
fallen on the present generation, and how much reason, therefore, we
have to feel grateful for the mercy shown us.
The publication has, with this view, been purposely somewhat delayed,
in order that it might appear at a moment when it is to be presumed
that men’s thoughts will be especially directed to the approaching
hour of public thanksgiving, and when a knowledge of that which they
have escaped, as well as of that which they have suffered, may tend to
heighten their devotional feelings on that solemn occasion.
When we learn that, in the fourteenth century, one quarter, at least,
of the population of the old world was swept away in the short space of
four years, and that some countries, England among the rest, lost more
than double that proportion of their inhabitants in the course of a few
months, we may well congratulate ourselves that our visitation has not
been like theirs, and shall not justly merit ridicule, if we offer our
humble thanks to the “Creator and Preserver of all mankind” for our
deliverance.
Nor would it disgrace our feelings, if, in expiation of the abuse
and obloquy not long since so lavishly bestowed by the public on the
medical profession, we should entertain some slight sense of gratitude
towards those members of the community, who were engaged, at the risk
of their lives and the sacrifice of their personal interests, in
endeavouring to arrest the progress of the evil, and to mitigate the
sufferings of their fellow men.
I have added, at the close of the Appendix, some extracts from a scarce
little work in black letter, called “A Boke or Counseill against the
Disease commonly called the Sweate or Sweatyng Sicknesse,” published
by Caius in 1552. This was written three years before his Latin
treatise on the same subject, and is so quaint, and, at the same time,
so illustrative of the opinions of his day, and even of those of the
fourteenth century, on the causes of universal diseases, that the
passages which I have quoted will not fail to afford some amusement as
well as instruction. If I have been tempted to reprint more of this
curious production than was necessary to my primary object, it has been
from a belief that it would be generally acceptable to the reader to
gather some particulars regarding the mode of living in the sixteenth
century, and to observe the author’s animadversions on the degeneracy
and credulity of the age in which he lived. His advice on the choice of
a medical attendant cannot be too strongly recommended, at least _by a
physician_; and his warning against quackery, particularly the quackery
of _painters_, who “scorne (_quære_ score?) you behind your backs with
their medicines, so filthy that I am ashamed to name them,” seems quite
prophetic.
In conclusion, I beg to acknowledge the obligation which I owe to my
friend Mr. H. E. Lloyd, whose intimate acquaintance with the German
language and literature will, I hope, be received as a sufficient
pledge that no very important errors remain in a translation which he
has kindly revised.
London, 1833.
PREFACE.
We here find an important page of the history of the world laid open
to our view. It treats of a convulsion of the human race, unequalled
in violence and extent. It speaks of incredible disasters, of despair
and unbridled demoniacal passions. It shews us the abyss of general
licentiousness, in consequence of an universal pestilence, which
extended from China to Iceland and Greenland.
The inducement to unveil this image of an age, long since gone by, is
evident. A new pestilence has attained almost an equal extent, and
though less formidable, has partly produced, partly indicated, similar
phenomena. Its causes and its diffusion over Asia and Europe, call on
us to take a comprehensive view of it, because it leads to an insight
into the organism of the world, in which the sum of organic life is
subject to the great powers of Nature. Now, human knowledge is not yet
sufficiently advanced, to discover the connexion between the processes
which occur above, and those which occur below, the surface of the
earth, or even fully to explore those laws of nature, an acquaintance
with which would be required; far less to apply them to great
phenomena, in which one spring sets a thousand others in motion.
On this side, therefore, such a point of view is not to be found, if
we would not lose ourselves in the wilderness of conjectures, of which
the world is already too full: but it may be found in the ample and
productive field of historical research.
History—that mirror of human life in all its bearings, offers, even for
general pestilences, an inexhaustible, though scarcely explored, mine
of facts; here too it asserts its dignity, as the philosophy of reality
delighting in truth.
It is conformable to its spirit to conceive general pestilences as
events affecting the whole world—to explain their phenomena by the
comparison of what is similar. Thus the facts speak for themselves,
because they appear to have proceeded from those higher laws which
govern the progression of the existence of mankind. A cosmical
origin and convulsive excitement, productive of the most important
consequences among the nations subject to them, are the most striking
features to which history points in all general pestilences. These,
however, assume very different forms, as well in their attacks on
the general organism, as in their diffusion; and in this respect a
development from form to form, in the course of centuries, is manifest,
so that the history of the world is divided into grand periods in which
positively defined pestilences prevailed. As far as our chronicles
extend, more or less certain information can be obtained respecting
them.
But this part of medical history, which has such a manifold and
powerful influence over the history of the world, is yet in its
infancy. For the honour of that science which should everywhere guide
the actions of mankind, we are induced to express a wish, that it may
find room to flourish amidst the rank vegetation with which the field
of German medical science is unhappily encumbered.
THE BLACK DEATH.
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