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prehensible laws, despite of every obstacle and precaution. 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 againsts 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 Dr. 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 had 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. 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 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 risk 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 victims of yellow fever*; and we shall soon see them repeated amongst ourselves, unless the plain truth be promulgated by authority of 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, takes 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

* Vide O'Halloran, upon the Yellow Fever in Spain.

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.

THE END.

WILSON AND OGILVY, 57, Skinner Street, Snowhill, London.

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Agriculture and Rural Affairs. Robinson's Artof Curing, Pickling&c. 25

Bayldon On valuing Rents, &c.
Crocker's Land-Surveying
Davy's Agricultural Chemistry
Greenwood's (Col.) Tree-Lifter
Hannam on Waste Manures

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Short Whist

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Thomson On the Sick Room

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Thomson's Interest Tables

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Tomlins's Law Dictionary

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Webster's Domestic Economy

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Dahlmann's English Revolution - 7
De Sismondi's Fall of Roman Empire S
66 Italian Republics
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Dunham's Hist. of Spain & Portugal 8
History of Europe dur-
ing the Middle Ages
Hist. of the German Emp. 9
History of Denmark,
Sweden, and Norway -
History of Poland

Dunlop's History of Fiction

Eccleston's English Antiquities

Fergus's History of United States
Grant's (Mrs.) Memoir and Corre-
spondence -

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Low's Elements of Agriculture

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Breeds of the Domesticated
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On Landed Property -

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On the Domesticated Animals 19

Whitley's Agricultural Geology

Arts and Manufactures.

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Botany and Gardening.

Abercrombie's Practical Gardener
and Main'sGardener's
Companion

Callcott's Scripture Herbal

Conversations on Botany

Drummond's First Steps to Botany
Glendinning On the Pine Apple

Greenwood's (Col.) Tree-Lifter
Henslow's Botany -

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Hoare On Cultivation of the Vine -
On the Roots of Vines
Hooker's British Flora

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Gwilt's Encyclop. of Architecture
Haydon On Painting and Design
Holland's Manufactures in Metal - 13
Loudon's Encycl. of Rural Architect. 18
Maitland's Church in the Catacombs 20
Porter's Manufacture of Silk -

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Haydon On Painting and Design -
Historical Picturesofthe Middle Ages12
Horsley's (Bp.) Biblical Criticism- 13
Jeffrey's (Lord) Contributions to
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Keightley's Outlines of History

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Laing's Kings of Norway

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Jackson's Pictorial Flora
Lindley's Theory of Horticulture
Guide to the Orchard and
Kitchen Garden -
Introduction to Botany -
Flora Medica -
Synopsis of British Flora
Loudon's Hortus Britannicus
Lignosis Londinensis 18
Self-Instruction for Gar-
deners, &c. -
17
Encyclop.of Trees & Shrubs18
Gardening 17
Plants
Suburban Gardener
Repton's Landscape Gardening
Rivers's Rose Amateur's Guide
Rogers's Vegetable Cultivator
Schleiden's Scientific Botany
Smith's Introduction to Botany
English Flora -
Compendium of Eng. Flora 27

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Chronology.

Lempriere's Classical Dictionary
Macaulay's Crit. and Hist. Essays
Mackinnon's History of Civilisation 19
Mackintosh's Miscellaneous Works 19
History of England

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M'Culloch's Historical, Geographi-

cal, and Statistical Dictionary

Maunder's Treasury of History

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Mignet's Antonio Perez and Philip II.21
Milner's Church History

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Moore's History of Ireland

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Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History 22
Müller's Mythology

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Blair's Chronological Tables
Calendar (Illuminated) & Diary, 1846 14
Nicolas's Chronology of History 23
Riddle's Ecclesiastical Chronology 25
Tate's Horatius Restitutus

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Nicolas's Chronology of History

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Ranke's History of the Reformation 25
Roberts's Duke of Monmouth

Rome, History of -

Russell's Correspondence, of the
Fourth Duke of Bedford

Scott's History of Scotland

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Stebbing's History of the Church -

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66 History of Reformation 28
"c Church History
Switzerland, History of -
Sydney Smith's Works -

Commerce & Mercantile Affairs. Thirlwall's History of Greece

Tooke's History of Prices

Turner's History of England

Tytler's Elements of General History 31
Zumpt's Latin Grammar

Juvenile Books.

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Boy's own Book (The)

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Leslie's Life of Constable
Life of a Travelling Physician
Mackintosh's Life of Sir T. More
Maunder's Biographical Treasury 21
Mignet's Antonio Perez and Philip II.21
Roberts's Duke of Monmouth
Roscoe's Lives of British Lawyers- 26
Russell's Bedford Correspondence
Shelley's Literary Men of Italy,
Spain, and Portugal

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"6 Lives of French Writers -
Southey's Lives of the Admirals - 28
Life of Wesley
Townsend's Livesof 12EminentJudges30
Waterton's Autobiography & Essays 31

Books of General Utility.

Acton's Cookery

Black's Treatise on Brewing

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Supplement on Bavarian Beer 4

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Conscience's Flemish Sketches

Hawes's Tales of the North Ameri-

can Indians -

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Howitt's (Wm.) Boy's Country Book 14
Marcet's Conversations-

On the History of England

On Chemistry

On Natural Philosophy

Marryat's Masterman Ready-

Mission; or,Scenes in Africa21

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On Political Economy

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On Vegetable Physiology
On Land and Water

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M'Culloch's Geographical Dictionary
Murray's Encyclop. of Geography-
Ordnance Maps and Publications of
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On Language -

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The Game of Grammar
Willy's Grammar

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Lessons on Animals, &c.

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Parrot's Ascent of Mount Ararat

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Donovan's Domestic Economy

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History and Criticism.

Adair's (Sir R.) Memoir of his Mis-
sion to Vienna
Negotiations for the Peace

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of the Dardanelles -

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Loudon's Self-Instruction

Maunder's Treasury of Knowledge

Biographical Treasury

66 Scientific and Literary
Treasury

Treasury of History

Universal Class-Book - 21

Parkes's Domestic Duties

Pycroft's (Rev. J.) English Reading 25
Riddle's Latin-Eng. Dictionaries

25

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Addison's Hist. of Knights Templars 3

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"History of the Temple Church 3

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Bell's History of Russia

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Blair's Chron: and Histor. Tables -
Bloomfield's Edition of Thucydides 4

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Cooley's History of Maritime and
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Crowe's History of France

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Wigan (Dr.) On Duality of the Mind 32

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