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Friday, September 4, 2009

The Successful Campaign

After dallying as long as I was able to justify as a student of Dr.Snow, and still holding down a position as housekeeper to Mr.Marlowe I obtained a very favourable reference from Mr.Marlowe before despatch bumped me forward to 1854 where I have been engaged on a temporary basis as governess to three very intelligent and very lively children. The youngest, Aquila, is too young to begin lessons as such and plays happily in the nursery, but her older brother Cornelius, and sister Tabitha are already able to read simple books and Cornelius is showing a good grasp of the first principles of arithmetic.
And it is in my capacity as governess that my employer, Mrs.Hesketh requests my assistance to record the minutes for the St.James Parish Vestry:

Parish of St.James

Vestry minutes

Thursday, September sixth, Eighteen hundred and fifty four

The meeting was called to order by the Reverend Henry Whitehead. The Reverend led the assembled company in the Lord's prayer.
  • Mrs.Hesketh presented the minutes of the previous Vestry. Mr.Richard Scammell moved that the minutes of the previous Vestry should be accepted. Mr.Timothy Raikes seconded the motion. The motion was carried.
  • Senior Warden, Mr.Geoffrey Ames reported that the perpetrator of several minor thefts in the vicinity of Hanover Square had now been apprehended and was in police custody awaiting trial.
  • Junior Warden, Mr.William Frere presented an appeal from Mrs.Belman for assistance in defraying the funeral expenses incurred by the death of her husband, a victim of the cholera.
  • The Rector, Reverend Henry Whitehead, presented a petition to the Vestry to hear the opinion of Dr.Snow concerning the recent outbreak of cholera in the region of Broad Street. The petition was accepted, and Dr.Snow was introduced to the Vestry to present his opinion that the source of the infection was the communal pump at the corner of Broad Street, and that the most efficacious and immediate remedy to contain the infection would be the removal of the pump handle, obliging the residents to obtain their water from Bridle Street or Marlborough Mews. Dr.Snow expressed the opinion that the communal pump was in close proximity to a septic pool from which the domestic water supply was being contaminated, although the opinions of the medical profession concerning the mechanism of contamination continue to be divided.
  • The Treasurer, Mr.Philip Spaulding presented the parish accounts for August for approval. The parish accounts for August were accepted.
Once the Vestry business was concluded I took a few minutes to seek out my former teacher, who seemed quite glad to see me once more, though we were soon joined by the Reverend Whitehead. I learned that the two gentlemen had cooperated closely in searching out the causes and extent of the most recent cholera outbreak and as the Reverend said, we truly owed much to our heavenly Father for the conclusion of a successful campaign. So, when a few days later I encountered the rather unusual combination of a lady operating a barrel organ playing a jaunty tune while her gentleman associate peddled musical scores, I seized the opportunity to obtain a copy of the following dance:

References

View a map of the affected area at Google Maps
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Friday, August 28, 2009

Death by diarrhoea

With Mr.Marlow spending the next two weeks touring Scotland, I have permission, and opportunity to spend more time accompanying Dr.Snow and pursuing my studies. And while the merchant families provide the greater part of his income, his compassion extends to treating many of the Irish immigrants who can barely afford a guinea for a consultation, unlike one of his colleagues who I met in the course of business, and who declined to attend a sick child because the family could not afford his fee, but neither were they poor enough to qualify for support from the parish rate.
I was aware of the outbreak of cholera in the city, and have been very careful about boiling water for use in the house, and taking a small flask of boiled water with me when I accompany the doctor since I can't afford to risk being infected myself1. When I arrived at Dr.Snow's consulting room this afternoon it had already been made abundantly clear to me just why so many people choose to leave London during the summer. There are some districts where the smell is just unimaginable! I was reminded of the smell of newly-turned stale horse-manure, and it seemed to linger in small pockets all along my route. Even breathing through my mouth I found myself gagging and holding a handkerchief and a small spray of lavender (threepence-halfpenny) over my face.
When I arrived, Dr.Snow first asked me to read a 39-page pamphlet2 which he had written: it seems astonishing that I should have held one of the first printed copies of a small book with the power to change the course of scientific thought. But in typical manner, before I had time to read the book thoroughly, Dr.Snow invited me to join him in his laboratory, a small room adjacent to his surgery where he directed me to examine for myself two slides which he had mounted; one prepared with water from a brook on Hampstead Heath, the other with water from the Thames.
While the Hampstead Heath sample has its share of flotsam, the sample from the Thames seems positively crowded by comparison!
I was still making my own drawings from the slides under the microscope when Dr.Snow had a visitor; a Police constable had arrived to request his assistance in caring for an injured navigator, a "Tunnel Tiger", having first tried to obtain the services of Dr.Barrett, being nearer to Rotherhithe. But since Dr.Barrett was already attending a patient, he recommended his colleague Dr.Snow, even though it would mean travelling further.
When we arrived at the Police station where Brendan Daugherty had been made as comfortable as possible my first impression was that a drunken Irishman had injured himself. It wasn't until Dr.Snow began taking the man's verbal history while he gently unbandaged the poor fellow's ruined hand that I understood; his intoxication was the result of cheap brandy, administered as an analgesic. And it is as a tribute to this unfortunate, and so many like him, that I include the following song:

References

  1. Recommended precautions for preventing, and coping with cholera
  2. On the Mode of Communication of Cholera, reprinted 1855
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Friday, August 21, 2009

Primum non nocere (Firstly, do no harm)

When Samuel Johnson said that
You find no man, at all intellectual, who is willing to leave London. No, Sir, when a man is tired of London, he is tired of life; for there is in London all that life can afford.
he was fortunate enough to be living in a less industrialized age; the city has grown since Johnson's day, with factories powered by steam-engines, and soot in the air obliging everyone to wear clothes of black or dark brown, and to launder another wash every other day.
In the height of summer, some of the better residential streets can afford the cost of a water-bowser to come and sprinkle water to keep the dust down (they leave scarcely enough water to make mud) but for the most part, the paving-stonesare littered with horse droppings and other, less savoury leavings. Every street is the business office of those women whose companionship is available commercially, and the highway of those who either choose their "pitch" and settle on an upturned basket to sell flowers, ribbons, matches, or other small commodities, or those who hawk their wares from door to door.
The businessmen of the streets begin their day early, and by half-past six or seven o'clock I can venture out to buy fresh milk from one of the city dairies (a development largely made possible by the railways), fresh flowers to sweeten the rooms, or to seek out the services of one of the itinerant chimney-sweeps if the chimneys have been giving trouble.
Dr.John SnowIt's a bright warm August morning with the sounds of street vendors filtering through the kitchen window and I am up to my elbows in flour in the kitchen when the doorbell rings, so I clean my hands quickly, straighten my dress and scurry upstairs to answer the front door to Dr.Snow again. Mr.Marlowe has been out of bed since eight o'clock and when I last saw him, was looking quite relaxed in his smoking-cap and jacket in his study, so I invite the doctor to wait in the withdrawing room while I enquire whether Mr.Marlowe is at home to the doctor. As I expected, I am instructed to ask the doctor if he would remain in the drawing room to await the arrival of his host, and then prepare morning tea. When I return with the tea service, the two gentlemen are examining a sheaf of handwritten notes and Mr.Marlowe seems quite excited. In the course of pouring the tea I learn that the subject under discussion is the use of anaesthetic preparations as an adjunct to obstetric procedures. My interest must have shown on my face because Dr.Snow asked me if I had any understanding of the subject under discussion, to which I replied that I knew only as much as was proper to my sex.
Then madam, would you not agree that the delivery of a child without suffering would be a great blessing to womankind?
I would indeed doctor. Do you suppose that the science of medicine might offer such a boon someday?
Mr.Marlowe looked at me with the kind of look I have learned to recognize, and beware of:
I think, Mrs.Crawleigh, you are being disingenuous! and that you have more understanding of our conversation than you would willingly admit!
(Am I really that obvious? I really need to be more careful!)
Ordinarily I would find your curiosity impertinent, and perhaps even consider that you might be better employed as a governess, but you have given me no cause for complaint so far, and I hope to have none. Might I ask of you, only that you be a little more open with us in this house?
If you would excuse me for being so bold, Mr.Marlowe, I must admit I have a great deal of interest in the science of medicine, though I know little of it.
Good Heavens Marlowe! Perhaps you should encourage your housekeeper to enrol in the new Bedford College? Did you see it mentioned in the London Times a few weeks ago? a college for women! In all seriousness though Mrs. Crawleigh, if Mr.Marlowe has no objection perhaps we might see if you are an apt student? You must not mention this arrangement to anyone else however, or any agreement shall terminate immediately upon discovery.
It was as a result of this newly-established relationship that I collected the following song a few days ago. We had attended a particularly difficult confinement, a footling breech presentation, and Doctor Snow had entrusted me with the task of administering the anaesthetic to his patient, a terrifying responsibility for me since too much might cause cardiac arrhythmia, and too little would allow the patient to regain consciousness under horrifying circumstances. By the time we returned to Dr.Snow's office it was nearly dawn and I was still alert with the nervous energy of the night's work. So, it seemed, was Dr.Snow. For he asked me whether I could play the pianoforte, and produced a book of dances which he had acquired recently from an American publisher, turning to this page, which made me smile:
The Medical Student polka
Listen to the medical student polka

References

For the musical score, reproduced above, I am obliged to the Library of Congress
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Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Gold or potatoes?

Well, as much as I enjoyed our ha'penn'orth of liveliness, my hosts are hard up and I've mooched on them more than is fair. During the past week Mr.Bradleigh has been good enough to employ me in a variety of make-work jobs in his shop, mostly the kind of work that a junior apprentice would do; sweeping, tidying shelves, fetching water with two  five-gallon buckets on a yoke. Fetching water is quite an adventure all by itself; I take up the yoke with the two empty buckets, not too great a load, and make my way down to the common pump where, depending on the hour, I may have time to exchange gossip with other women fetching water, or the occasional Peeler1, pausing in his rounds for a drink. Lifting and carrying the yoke once the buckets are full is a task demanding more concentration. The load is not only heavy, but unwieldy and it is perilously easy to spill enough water that I will have to make another trip when I would rather be doing something less arduous.
It is largely thanks to Mr.Bradleigh that I have managed to secure a position as temporary cook/housekeeper (with the help of some carefully researched references) to Joseph Marlowe. For all my snooping when tidying his rooms I cannot get a clear picture of his means of living; he has income from several rents but, so he tells me, he also enjoys wagering on horse races. A fact which is confirmed by the Bradshaw's Railway Companion which he keeps on his desk.
In a small room at the back of the house on the second floor, Mr.Marlowe has a wunderkammer where I have been busied to my heart's content polishing and dusting an extraordinary collection that includes:
  • the skeleton of a duckbilled platypus, with its bill preserved in situ
  • a Leyden jar
  • a microscope and set of dissecting instruments
  • a framed collection of rare and unusual beetles
  • a piece of amber with a trapped fly
And the only visitor to the house since I have been in his employ has been Dr.Snow. Not in a professional capacity, apparently, as I was called upon to serve tea in the withdrawing room. A good servant is supposed to hear everything and repeat nothing. Well, I suppose I'm not the worst servant in the world. While I was polishing the balustrade in the hallway I could overhear the two gentlemen discussing the discovery of gold on the east coast of America and the possibility of investing funds in a mining enterprise near Sacramento.
The news of the "Gold Rush" in America, as the newspapers are referring to it, and the continuing depredations resulting from the potato famine are the issues, other than the weather, that everyone is ready to offer an opinion on when I attend divine service on Sunday. As the employee of Mr.Marlowe, I am permitted to sit in his pew near the front of the church, but excusing myself on the grounds that I have seen friends whom I should like to speak with, I find a place at the back of the church before the service begins, where I can learn more from those who are obliged to stand through the service.
The Crawleigh family is in attendance in their entirety, the children's faces scrubbed and pink, and William is more friendly towards me, referring to this morning's preacher variously as "A regular Gospel-Grinder" and "a bit of a tub-thumper". Mrs.Crawleigh was just getting started on a tirade about the iniquities of the landowning classes towards the "Micks" when Mr.Crawleigh shut her up rather rudely as the priest left the vestry:
Still your clapper, hay-bag!
Before leaving the church, I make arrangements to meet the family at the Red Lion in the evening when I have a few hours of free time.
With Mr.Marlowe's permission, I am my own mistress from 8 o'clock in the evening, and at the Red Lion, I find William, Susan, the children, and even Grand-Mama Caroline tucking in to a repast of chonkeys over small beer and milk for the youngest in the company of a burly seaman.
I am a little taken aback when Mr.Crawleigh begins eulogizing my virtues to the seaman, who, it seems, is his cousin. In contrast to William's manner, Jeremiah conducts himself toward me like a gentleman and I find myself quite charmed. In due course, our discussion turns once again to the matter of the American "Gold Rush" and Jeremiah entertains us all with a song he learned during a shore leave in San Francisco:
Also adapted as
  1. Police constable. The nickname comes from Sir Robert Peel, who was for a long time suspected of founding the Metropolitan Police force as his private army.
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Friday, August 7, 2009

The rabbit is out of the hat! (again)

So, here I am. Back in the saddle, so to speak, in what should have been a deserted London churchyard in the last twilight minutes before dawn, with my letter of introduction to William Crawley explaining my circumstances, and asking him, as the surviving relative of my late husband to help me find "a position" and lodgings. Since I have no dependent children and am still of an age to work it seemed like a fairly good ruse to get started. However, I think the poor derelict who was aroused from his drunken slumber by my arrival may recover given time, and good care. He might even dine out on his experience if he can find an audience gullible enough!
I guess the time to be nearly six o'clock as the sun comes up and I make my way towards Beaver Street. Not named for the American rodent, so much as for the hats made from its felt. Far from being the prosperous frontage I was expecting, Bradleigh hats is a cramped, smelly workshop squeezed into a small property opening off an equally small alley from the street: with its low ceiling and close walls there is barely room for two people to pass and the vinegar smell of sulphuric acid announces my proximity to Bradleigh's as soon as I enter the alley.
When he shows up, around six-thirty, William (who smells of cheap beer and is still finishing off a pie) seems less than pleased to meet his mourning sister-in-law and spends the first fifteen minutes of our encounter trying to persuade me to join the oldest profession, or at least, leave him in peace until midday. When I finally persuade him to open the letter he reads it with considerable difficulty and I have to help him with some of the words, which does nothing to improve his disposition.
Our discourse is still continuing when Mr.Bradleigh himself arrives, slightly shorter than William, he has a well-developed beer belly and a naturally gregarious disposition. As soon as my relationship to William is explained, I am invited to join him in his office for a cup of tea, and it is as he pours tea for me that I notice the involuntary tremor of his hands. It seems quite likely that Mr.Bradleigh is starting to show the symptoms of mercurial poisoning, always a hazard of his trade.
To cut a long story short, after Mr.Crawleigh's rather cool reception I thought perhaps I might have a better chance if I could make contact with his wife, and set about the business of locating her. After a couple of hours questioning market traders, a constable, a priest, and the proprietor of a gin-shop, and being accosted by two young men who were annoyingly persistent in their approaches despite my best efforts to hide in my poke bonnet, I was decidedly in need of sustenance and refreshment which led me to seek refuge in the Red Lion public house. It was while waiting to receive my hot pork pie and glass of perry that I overheard the landlord instructing his barmaid to fill the pitcher for Mrs.Crawleigh.
When Mrs.Susan Crawleigh arrives twenty minutes later to collect her pitcher, my host makes the briefest of introductions and I find myself swept into the keeping of this human steam-engine of a woman, physically large and bustling with a quiet energy she invites me to return home with her, greeting perhaps half the people we pass on the way as if they were family. The Crawleigh apartments are very modest: three rooms on the second floor of an older house, with a shared privy behind the property. The two older Crawleigh girls are counting pins into papers and stirring a cauldron of laundry over a coal fire while three-year old Jacob Athanasius proudly demonstrates his wooden sword and shield, a model soldier in years to come, and baby Eliza sleeps fitfully in her crib.
Although Susan has several suggestions for possible employers, I am put to work by the family today, taking Jacob and Jane along the canal towpath to collect dandelions for winemaking, tonic, and coffee. And when Mr.Crawleigh finally returns from work the children have been laid down to sleep, under the watchful eye of grandmother Caroline so that the three of us can visit the music hall. The layout of the hall is more reminiscent of a cabaret club than a theatre, with tables arranged so that the audience can see the acts on the stage at one end of the hall. To one side, a Master of Ceremonies announces each act in the most astonishingly convoluted and verbose terms, and Mrs.Crawleigh ensures that we are well-provided with liquid refreshment from the bar at the back of the hall.
Most of the entertainments seemed unremarkable, and a little vulgar to me, but the following recently published Neapolitan barcarolle was encored twice before the performers were allowed to leave the stage.
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Friday, June 5, 2009

A Gen'leman and a Scholar!

The ExplorerIf my blogs are a bit less intense over the next few weeks, it will be because I have been entrusted with a protegé whom it is my responsibility to educate in the practical matters of temporal exploration. When Madam Director first presented Dr.X (not his real name) to me I was a little surprised; in the years that I have been exploring, I have learned not to react overmuch to the astonishing variety of costumes with which humanity cover their nakedness but even so, Dr.X managed to take me rather by surprise.

The gentleman standing beside my working table was outfitted in frock-coat, and leather gloves, carrying a silver-capped cane and a top hat, and from his vest pockets two chains dangled (two pocket-watches?). My first thought was that he had not had time to change his dress after returning from an excursion. But then I noticed the goggles perched on the rim of the top hat which he was carrying. As well as shoulder-length hair he sported the most magnificent mutton-chop whiskers I think I have ever seen!
Later in the course of introduction, I learned that one chain supported his rather splendid pocketwatch, a late Victorian original with the most beautiful engraving, while the other connected to a magnificent brass compass with a miniature sextant built in!
I have to admit that since stretching the fabric of the universe in order to escape from the playpen of the present and go exploring sometimes results in unexpected arrivals in the farthest reaches of possibility, Dr.X seems like an ideal recruit, at least at first glance. But I can't take my eyes off his beautiful silk hat!

Not surprisingly, Dr.X wanted to discuss some of the items on the departure briefing list at length.
        Before departure: items to review   
  • Healthcare
             
    • familiarize yourself with common herbal remedies
    •        
    • garlic - good for repelling lice
    •        
    • cloves - helpful for minor toothache
    •        
    • mint - for chest congestion and digestive upsets
    •        
    • fennel seed tea - helps regulate digestion
    •    
  •    
  • Fire
             
    • lighters - not allowed
    •        
    • safety matches - not allowed
    •        
    • learn to use flint & steel to light tinder
    •        
    • carry a tinderbox
    •    
  •    
  • Water
             
    • learn to recognize safe sources of potable water
    •    
  •    
  • Forbidden (unless cleared by departure operator)
             
    • personal electrical/electronic devices (including hearing aids)
    •        
    • watches
    •        
    • synthetic jewelry
    •        
    • synthetic fabrics
    •        
    • modern paper items
    •        
    • contraceptives
    •                
    • fountain or biro pens
    •        
    • lead pencils
    •        
    • eraser
    •        
    • contact lenses
    •        
    • toilet paper (if a sponge or rag is not provided, be prepared to experiment with alternatives! grass, moss, etc.)
    •    
among other things.
What kind of steampunk would you be?
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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

At the Sign of the Crumhorn, in Hart Lane


The most obvious thing about arriving in London in 1533 is the skyline. As soon as we get out of these tiny crowded alleys do you see what's missing? Where the dome of St.Paul's cathedral will one day dominate the skyline, right now, there is a towering spire.
Needless to say, I haven't been idle. In fact, I managed to get a short-term job helping in the shop of Master Joäo Dias, selling musical instruments which are made in his own workshop. I've been hoping, ever since I started researching, that my collection of songs would prove helpful someday.
Now the really exciting bit, for me anyway, is that yesterday a gentleman came into the shop to ask about buying a chest of shawms, and to have the nut replaced on his lute. Nothing too remarkable in all that, but while trying out a couple of instruments he explained that he is one of the court musicians, retained by the King, and needs his lute to play for a banquet in a couple of days time.
The guest of honor is Jean de Dinteville, his excellency, the ambassador of France. You probably know him from Hans Holbein's painting which the Victorians tagged with the title “The Ambassadors” with its curious distorted skull dominating the foreground.
Anyway, in the course of assisting our customer yesterday, he asked me if I would help him reach a decision by playing a duet, with me on tenor shawm, and him on alto, which is how I learned this number:

Turns out, it's by His Majesty no less! So I asked the customer if he knew this number?

Sure enough, he did indeed, it being a well-known tune.
While we were jamming, another gentleman strolled into the showroom and waited until the previous customer had left before asking me if he could speak with Master Dios. As soon as he saw the newcomer, Master Dios smiled broadly and greeted him "Shalom aleichem!" with a hug, taking him to the back of the building.
When the two men returned to the showroom, I ventured a cautious "Baruch haba!"
Both men looked at each other, then the newcomer introduced himself to me as Master Luis Lopes, button maker, and a friend to the new Christians of Portugal, and invited me to join with God's people for worship in a few days time.
I thanked him for his very hospitable offer but declined on the grounds that I was planning to leave for the continent within a few days (more or less true). Expressing regret that I wasn't able to stay longer, he asked me at least to send a letter and tell him of my fortunes when things were more settled.

London, then

To help get your bearings, there's a segmented map of London in the time of Henry VIII, here.
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