Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 19 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 104293 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 74 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 God 7 Lord 6 Master 5 Sir 5 King 5 Father 4 man 4 day 4 Plague 4 Messer 3 great 3 good 3 come 3 Titus 3 St. 3 Sick 3 Mr. 3 Marseilles 3 Madam 3 Love 3 London 3 Lady 3 John 3 Gisippus 3 Fortune 3 Florence 3 English 3 England 3 Doctor 3 Calandrino 3 Bruno 2 woman 2 time 2 thou 2 plague 2 lady 2 husband 2 house 2 body 2 Year 2 Wife 2 Torello 2 Signior 2 Rome 2 Ricciardo 2 Queene 2 Pietro 2 People 2 Paul 2 Novell Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 5159 man 3900 time 3487 day 3102 house 2234 lady 2193 thing 2078 woman 1979 hand 1800 word 1722 place 1721 way 1679 wife 1620 night 1602 life 1544 love 1357 eye 1328 part 1258 people 1235 heart 1211 friend 1204 nothing 1158 city 1155 husband 1149 manner 1134 one 1117 death 1116 person 1116 door 1103 other 1098 plague 1065 matter 1045 father 1005 brother 1004 name 999 body 994 child 974 face 959 head 925 none 870 mind 869 side 845 moment 827 end 823 daughter 793 world 791 year 767 street 763 bed 759 company 748 order Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 23654 _ 3476 thou 1650 God 1203 Lord 1082 Leonard 978 King 717 Messer 686 Father 618 Raymond 574 Lady 556 Sir 521 hath 517 Amabel 501 Calandrino 489 Master 479 Madam 475 Mr. 468 Renzo 455 Gaston 453 hee 445 Footnote 434 John 430 Lucy 416 owne 413 de 399 Don 391 Bruno 390 Plague 369 hast 350 Prince 346 St. 346 England 332 shee 316 London 312 lord 310 Bloundel 306 Blaize 297 Novell 294 doe 287 Thou 287 Nizza 286 Saint 280 Rochester 272 Judith 271 Ladies 262 Mrs. 262 City 256 Madame 255 Hodges 252 Doctor Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 24493 he 21506 i 19029 it 14049 him 12269 you 10783 they 9692 she 7774 them 7565 her 7177 me 4714 we 2437 us 2430 himself 1631 thee 1301 themselves 908 herself 638 myself 334 itself 282 yourself 216 mine 202 one 178 thyself 151 his 145 ourselves 86 hers 72 yours 66 theirs 46 ours 23 ay 18 ye 14 thy 11 yourselves 9 whereof 8 oneself 6 ''em 3 thou 3 haply 2 yorkshire 2 out,-- 2 him,-- 2 hee 1 york--"shall 1 ya 1 worke 1 until:--"what 1 trye 1 thus,-- 1 thereof 1 them.--but 1 tedaldo Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 64077 be 29594 have 8740 do 6547 say 5411 make 5287 come 4988 see 4432 go 4414 know 4044 take 3369 give 2836 find 2564 hear 2516 tell 2003 think 1964 leave 1718 bring 1671 return 1661 let 1554 call 1515 reply 1482 look 1433 fall 1427 speak 1392 begin 1385 pass 1299 send 1242 keep 1240 seem 1222 answer 1188 get 1146 carry 1136 live 1136 die 1086 set 1072 put 1061 become 1042 ask 1033 stand 1031 love 1018 follow 1011 cry 1010 feel 977 lie 973 hold 951 turn 936 appear 883 receive 801 enter 790 use Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 15285 not 8503 so 4621 more 4476 then 4200 other 4106 now 3718 well 3572 great 3546 very 3203 such 2936 good 2515 much 2497 many 2332 there 2331 up 2331 as 2323 little 2230 long 2161 most 1947 never 1854 thus 1785 here 1686 yet 1686 own 1677 out 1670 only 1625 even 1572 first 1480 still 1426 again 1371 young 1362 also 1351 ever 1305 same 1283 away 1121 dead 1113 poor 1103 too 1085 off 1075 last 1015 soon 1007 old 976 few 971 down 970 no 947 indeed 938 together 926 far 912 forth 876 once Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 609 least 603 good 497 most 239 great 107 bad 81 high 58 fair 56 manif 49 fine 45 near 43 eld 42 rich 35 deep 35 dear 31 Most 28 late 27 strong 27 low 25 slight 21 small 20 l 20 j 20 happy 20 goodly 20 chief 18 mean 16 young 16 wise 14 true 14 safe 14 midd 13 large 11 woefull 11 stout 11 say 11 dr 10 sweet 10 long 10 dark 9 wild 9 vile 9 noble 9 foul 9 fit 8 wealthy 8 short 8 poor 8 old 8 farth 8 early Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1664 most 115 well 41 least 7 sayest 2 soon 2 hard 2 deemest 1 worst 1 whitest 1 smartest 1 sittest 1 neerest 1 near 1 milanese,--the 1 meetest 1 lookest 1 livest 1 highest 1 hearest 1 haddest 1 gettest 1 gavest 1 feelest 1 faintest 1 drest 1 blest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.freeliterature.org 1 www.archive.org 1 books.google.com Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.freeliterature.org 1 http://www.archive.org/details/betrothed00manzuoft 1 http://books.google.com/books?id=8YtBAQAAMAAJ Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 19 _ is _ 12 _ have _ 10 _ is not 10 _ was _ 8 _ being thus 8 god had not 8 lord have mercy 6 people did not 5 _ do _ 5 _ was not 5 _ was thus 5 night being now 5 night was so 4 _ being very 4 _ leaving _ 4 _ was so 4 lady called madam 4 nothing is more 4 thou be content 4 time had not 4 women are all 4 women are so 4 words were not 3 _ am _ 3 _ are not 3 _ being now 3 _ being somewhat 3 _ being then 3 _ being there 3 _ goes thither 3 _ had formerly 3 _ had not 3 _ has _ 3 _ having thus 3 _ is constantly 3 _ was dead 3 day was very 3 days be past 3 eyes did not 3 eyes were full 3 god be mine 3 heart does not 3 heart is not 3 heart was too 3 house was not 3 husband was abroad 3 husband was away 3 man is not 3 man was not 3 man was so Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 _ had no sooner 2 love was not long 2 man is not only 2 time had not yet 1 _ are no less 1 _ are not high 1 _ are not necessary 1 _ being no lesse 1 _ being no longer 1 _ being not yet 1 _ did no lesse 1 _ did no more 1 _ does no one 1 _ does not usually 1 _ had no such 1 _ had not less 1 _ had not unjustly 1 _ having no certaine 1 _ having not yet 1 _ is no more 1 _ is not able 1 _ is not dead 1 _ is not good 1 _ is not necessary 1 _ is not so 1 _ is not wholly 1 _ left not hourely 1 _ made no delaying 1 _ made no meane 1 _ made no other 1 _ make no pretence 1 _ returned not againe 1 _ seeing no better 1 _ seemed not nice 1 _ was no misse 1 _ was no sooner 1 _ was not likely 1 day had no charms 1 day has not yet 1 day is no longer 1 day is not so 1 day was not over 1 days are not eternity 1 days was no more 1 death has no terrors 1 death seems not so 1 death was not enough 1 death was not far 1 eyes are not yet 1 friends had no reason A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 11082 author = Ainsworth, William Harrison title = Old Saint Paul''s: A Tale of the Plague and the Fire date = keywords = Amabel; Blaize; Bloundel; Chowles; Disbrowe; Doctor; Eagle; Earl; Faith; Heaven; Hodges; Holt; Judith; Leonard; London; Lord; Macascree; Malmayns; Mr.; Mrs.; Nizza; Parravicin; Patience; Paul; Pillichody; Rochester; Saint; Sir; Solomon; Thirlby; Wingfield; Wyvil summary = "On the contrary, I hope he is better," replied Leonard "I shall be back "I have no fear," replied Leonard, shutting the door in his face. "He entered it like a robber," returned Leonard, looking fiercely at the "You have arrived at a seasonable juncture, Leonard," observed Mrs. Bloundel, noticing the apprentice''s perplexity, and anxious to relieve "Amabel," said Leonard, advancing towards her, and taking her hand, "I As he said this, the door was opened by Leonard, and Chowles and Judith "I do not desire it, sir," replied Leonard; "I will remain as long as I "I shall never rest easy, Leonard," rejoined Mrs. Bloundel, "till you "No, no," replied Leonard; "Mr. Bloundel shall know all. "Come in, Blaize," returned Leonard, opening the door and admitting the "Nizza Macascree has met with the same fate as Amabel," replied Leonard. "And, meanwhile, I shall know nothing of Amabel," cried Leonard, in a id = 33155 author = Anonymous title = Medicina Flagellata; Or, The Doctor Scarify''d date = keywords = Apothecaries; Apothecary; Disease; Doctor; Dr.; Medicines; Men; People; Physicians; Physick; Plague; Use; body; day; life; man; patient; practice; year summary = Ages made use of Medicines, to ease their Pains, to regain or preserve great Abuse; let us then usher in the young Physician now come from the former Physician, yet this Covenant Apothecary shall privately cavil at If a sick Man makes his Address to a vulgar Physician, he demands his Disease: The Patient then making complaint of an inward Pain, to his old most frequented Apothecaries, to visit for a Year every Day the Hospitals The Art of preparing Medicines chymically, having merited a great Esteem Apothecaries, were capacitated to visit and cure ten times greater Numbers his Disease much sooner cured, and his Life much better preserved. sober Life will secure a Man from all Diseases, or prolong his Days to the To this I reply: That Nature, for the Preservation of a Man in Years, has other Learned Physicians in the last Plague, with what only may be of Use id = 52970 author = Bloundelle-Burton, John title = Servants of Sin: A Romance date = keywords = Clarges; Desparre; Diane; Duc; Englishman; France; God; Laure; Madame; Marion; Marquise; Marseilles; Monsieur; New; Paris; Rue; St.; Vandecque; Walter; come; man; woman summary = "Married!" And Desparre''s face worked so that Vandecque turned his "Mon Dieu!" the man said, raising his hand to his forehead and "Come in," said Monsieur le Duc a moment later, as he opened the door moments, he turned to the rejected suitor and said: "Young man, you do "God bless you," Laure said to her that night, as, still chained to eyes of any woman--nay, of any man--who had observed him. "It is the pest," the man replied, his awful white eyes gleaming For a moment Desparre looked at the man, his eyes glistening from his "Will that come to us--if we live?" murmured Laure to the man who turned away, then, addressing the man once more, he said: "If," said this man, addressing Marion, "the young woman of whom you woman''s love for Laure when it could prompt her even now, at the man''s id = 13102 author = Boccaccio, Giovanni title = The Decameron, Volume II date = keywords = Bruno; Buffalmacco; Calandrino; Cimon; Federigo; Florence; Fortune; Gianni; Gisippus; God; Gualtieri; King; Love; Madam; Madonna; Master; Messer; NOVEL; Nathan; Nicostratus; Pietro; Rome; Saladin; Titus; Torello; come; lady; thee; thou; tis summary = you." Whereto the good man made answer:--"Damsel, welcome art thou to would have thee know, that if it should so come to pass, thou mayst not Know then, noble ladies, that ''tis no long time since there dwelt in her:--"Wife, as thou valuest my love, say not a word; for in good sooth, Elisa:--"Fair damsel," quoth he, "''twas thou to-day didst me this honour to know nought of her husband''s return, began thus:--"Where art thou, said:--"Take this light, good man, and see if ''tis scoured to thy mind." ''tis time I let all the world know what manner of man thou art, and at way as that to worm out thy good lady''s secrets, nor wouldst thou have thou but give my lady thy love? he, "thou doubtest I will not bring thee the money; so to set thy mind at Then, turning to the maid, he said:--"Tell my lady to set her mind at id = 23700 author = Boccaccio, Giovanni title = The Decameron of Giovanni Boccaccio date = keywords = Alack; Alessandro; Boccaccio; Bruno; Buffalmacco; Calandrino; Ciappelletto; Cimon; Currado; Dioneo; Ferondo; Filippo; Florence; Footnote; Fra; Gianni; Gisippus; God; King; Lit; Madam; Master; Messer; Pampinea; Pietro; Ricciardo; Rome; Ruggieri; STORY; Sir; Soldan; St.; Tedaldo; Titus; Torello; come; day; good; great; husband; know; lady; love; man; second; tell; thou; wife summary = To pass away the time, Currado set out one day, with his lady peace, weeping, and Currado said to his lady, ''And thou, mistress, how tell me how thou gottest them, so God give thee good luck.'' Quoth ''Wife,'' said he, ''I told thee not to fast; but, since thou wouldst of God?'' ''Young lady,'' replied the old man, ''thou art very welcome to the lady said to Gianni, ''Do thou spit, whenas I shall bid thee.'' And that these words come from my lady; wherefore, have a care what thou lady) repent thee thereof so many a time thou wilt be fain to die ''Good day, madam; are the damsels come yet?'' The lady, seeing and thee nay, since thou conjurest me by such a lady; tell me where thy lady hath promised me a good thousand times to do that which thou id = 52617 author = Boccaccio, Giovanni title = The Decameron (Day 1 to Day 5) Containing an hundred pleasant Novels date = keywords = Abbot; Andrea; Chamber; Chappelet; City; Count; Countrey; Father; Fortune; Garden; Gentleman; God; House; King; Ladies; Lady; Lord; Love; Madam; Maide; Master; Messer; Mistresse; Mother; Novell; Pedro; Queene; Ricciardo; Sea; Signior; Sir; Sonne; Thebaldo; Wife; daughter; husband summary = My sonne (answered the good old man) thou hast done well, Faire Ladies, it hath happened many times, that hee who striveth to to returne home to his owne house againe, and live upon his goods thus Being come home to her owne house, away shee sent the olde Pandresse In good faith poore man, albeit thou hast lost thy money, yet young Lady accepted to be her husband, because hee was a man so worthy trust her selfe in the young mans company, but onely in her Fathers (quoth the Ladie) love my daughter, and have a wife of his owne, he became of his owne life, having lost her for whom hee onely desired so that by no likely or possible meanes, hee could bee the man in this Wife (in the meane while) had a young man (whom shee loved) at supper id = 52618 author = Boccaccio, Giovanni title = The Decameron (Day 6 to Day 10) Containing an hundred pleasant Novels date = keywords = Abbot; Bruno; Buffalmaco; Calandrino; Chamber; Church; Court; Doctor; Father; Florence; Fortune; Gentleman; Gisippus; Husband; John; King; Ladies; Lady; Lord; Love; Madame; Master; Messer; Morall; Novell; Pyrrhus; Queene; Saladine; Scholler; Signior; Sir; Sophronia; Thorello; Titus; Wife; woman summary = it: but see thou do thy selfe no harme good Husband. and wife to a man of good esteeme: of whom hee grew halfe perswaded, man comes home to his house, after hee hath lyen in a Taverne all Alas good man, like an armed Watchman, thou satst at thine owne doore understanding man, as thou shouldst bee, and make not thy selfe a But shee having ended, the King gave order unto Madame should come; hee parted from her, and shee returned home to her house. (sweet Lady) quoth her friend, as hee is a man, and a learned Scholler, thy selfe then good _Reniero_, and as thou art an honest Gentleman, say Nor is this desire of mine but upon great occasion, as thou thy selfe shewst thy selfe a friend in the time of necessity, I pray thee know of a very good mans wife: this night shee hath given mee the sweetest id = 31807 author = Bradley, Richard title = The Plague at Marseilles Consider''d With Remarks Upon the Plague in General, Shewing Its Cause and Nature of Infection, with Necessary Precautions to Prevent the Speading of That Direful Distemper date = keywords = Cattle; Distemper; Marseilles; Plague; Year; air; day; insect summary = smaller kinds of Insects floating in the Air, and it is a thing constant, at the same time infect Places at great distances. thus account for the Passage of these Insects, with an Easterly Wind from pestiferous Insects, are of so different a Nature from the Winds coming Insects are hatch''d and carried the contrary Way by the Wind from North-East, and from that Month to _October_, the direct contrary Way. And Plants are no less subject to be destroy''d by Insects, than Men and Wind of it self that blights, without the help of _Insects_? which thus infect the Trees, let us only consider, that every _Insect_ has same time, unless the Eggs of every kind of _Insect_, natural to each _Insects_, or their Eggs (being brought with the Easterly Winds) was the infected and destroying Air. But all Mens Bodies are not full of Humours; if they were, all would be id = 31548 author = Chicoyneau, François title = A Succinct Account of the Plague at Marseilles Its Symptoms and the Methods and Medicines Used for Curing It date = keywords = Class; Method; Persons; Remedies; Sick summary = Classes; which will take in generally all the Cases that we have observed, during the Course of this terrible Sickness, a great Number of Persons The fourth Class contains the Diseased attacked with the same Symptoms Number of infected Persons, we have seen many particular Cases, wherein, Returning then to the Method proposed to treat the sick Persons of this _The Method used in treating the Sick of the Second Class._ _The Method used in treating the Sick of the_ THIRD CLASS. _The Method used in treating the Sick of the_ THIRD CLASS. infected Persons perished in a very short Time with Symptoms very _The Method of treating the Sick of the_ FOURTH CLASS. these Tumours have constantly appeared in the Sick of this fourth Class, Sickness, in a very great number of diseased Persons in all the Classes, _The Method relating to the Sick of the_ FIFTH CLASS. id = 17221 author = Defoe, Daniel title = History of the Plague in London date = keywords = August; Cripplegate; Defoe; England; English; Giles; God; January; John; London; Parish; September; St.; Stepney; Street; Whitechapel; die; great; house; people; plague; time summary = fifty thousand people died of the disease in that city, and great alarm more or less; but, from the time that the plague first began in St. Giles''s Parish, it was observed that the ordinary burials increased in having lived in Longacre, near the infected houses, had removed for fear no, though they lived in the house with people that were infected. and some houses having been shut up in the city, and some people being ORDERS CONCERNING INFECTED HOUSES, AND PERSONS SICK OF THE PLAGUE. two houses to remove either his sound or his infected people to his sick infected people were, as I have said, ordinarily carried in them to people coming on as if it had been a great number; and they came on, as people appeared abroad in the streets at the same time that the houses confined with infected people in the houses where they lived. id = 13183 author = Everett-Green, Evelyn title = In the Days of Chivalry: A Tale of the Times of the Black Prince date = keywords = Basildene; Brocas; Edward; England; English; Father; France; Gaston; God; Joan; John; King; Lord; Master; Navailles; Paul; Peter; Prince; Raymond; Roger; Sanghurst; Saut; Sir; brother; french summary = Raymond, thou and I have longed this many a day to sally forth to fight said, as thou hast done, good Father, that she had known that such day "Thou shalt tell all that to the King or to the Prince," said John in a John looked somewhat anxious as the Prince signed to Gaston and Raymond glory or peril another time, thou wilt tell thy father first. John pressed his comrade''s hand and thanked him; but Raymond little knew "Good Raymond, but for thy quick eye and timely word of warning, we had It will be like old times come back again when thou, Joan, and he and I "They tell me that thou art sick, good John," said Raymond, coming "Brother, this is like old times," said Gaston, his hand upon Raymond''s "Nay, scarce like those old days, Sir Gaston de Brocas," he answered, id = 13840 author = Everett-Green, Evelyn title = The Sign of the Red Cross: A Tale of Old London date = keywords = Builder; Desborough; Dinah; Dorcas; Frederick; Gertrude; God; Harmer; Janet; Joseph; Lady; London; Lord; Mary; Master; Reuben; Scrope; house summary = The Master Builder had a house upon Old London Bridge. fine-looking young men, the two eldest sons of the household--Reuben, "O father, mother, do but come and look!" she cried, with the air So, good mother, when I come home one day with the marks of the O mother, mother, shall I too look like that when my turn comes to "My dear wife and dutiful children," said the master of the house, Janet came home last night from a plague-stricken house." father coming in, went towards him with a strange look in his eyes, Gertrude, who knew his great love for the house in which he had went many times to the pest houses within the city and came away no think you that Mistress Gertrude would come hither to my house and home in the city, the Harmer family returning to their house at the id = 29631 author = Groves, Anthony Norris title = Journal of a Residence at Bagdad During the Years 1830 and 1831 date = keywords = Aleppo; Ali; Arabs; Bagdad; Christ; Christians; England; English; Father; God; Jesus; Jews; Lord; Major; Mary; Mr.; Pasha; Shushee; armenian summary = of my little boys, Mr. N., a true and dear person in the Lord, and he that glorious day especially, when the Lord shall come to be glorified commotions the Lord will move on his way, and the day of his coming events, we feel that we shall have quite met our dear Lord''s mind in _May 8._--The Lord has this day manifested that the attack of my dear We did feel assured that the Lord would spare our dear little united I am, I shall yet praise him who is the Lord of my life, and my God. The dear boys also keep up their spirits much better than the first little knowledge, and less love of my dear Lord, I wonder how he has _June 12._ _Lord''s day._--The wretched Pasha has just passed our house urge the heart forward to desire the day of the Lord to come, so id = 10628 author = Keeling, Anne E. title = Andrew Golding: A Tale of the Great Plague date = keywords = Althea; Andrew; Aunt; Dacre; God; Golding; Harry; Lucy; Mr.; Mrs.; Quaker; Truelocke summary = ''You go to town to-day, I think you said?'' questioned Mrs. Golding; ''we A good comely man and woman, plainly habited like serving folks, came ''You speak like a man of this world, Harry,'' says Andrew, who had come He stopped, and Mrs. Golding said, ''Speak your mind, Master Harry, it''s ''I cannot tell what Andrew may think in his heart,'' says Harry moodily; red and went pale, for she had not thought how her words might hit Mr. Truelocke; but since she did not speak, I said,-Harry, to say some comfortable words about how all folks loved Mr. Truelocke, my aunt especially, and I knew it was in her mind to have the So Harry, looking at Mr. Truelocke, said, ''Father, call your thoughts all the happiness we could get; poor cold words; but Harry said ''twas id = 35155 author = Manzoni, Alessandro title = The Betrothed From the Italian of Alessandro Manzoni date = keywords = Abbondio; Agnes; Attilio; Bergamo; CHAPTER; Christopher; Count; Don; Duke; Father; Ferrer; Frederick; Gertrude; God; Griso; Heaven; Lord; Lucy; Milan; Perpetua; Prassede; Renzo; Roderick; Signor; Tony; Unknown; Virgin; good; let; man summary = "Coming," said Perpetua, as she set in its usual place on the little "And what shall I say to Lucy?" said Renzo, softening. return in a moment," said Lucy to her friends, as she hastily quitted "Lucy," replied Renzo, "all is at a stand, and God knows whether we "I know the man by sight," said Renzo. "Good night!" said Lucy mournfully, to Renzo, who could hardly resolve to-day to speak to this man: if God touches his heart through my words, "God bless you!" said the friar, placing his hands on his head, as he "Poor Renzo!" said the father, with an accent of pity, and with a look "How do you know?" said Renzo, continuing the conversation from the "Prepare a good bed for this young man," said the guide; "he is going to "I?" said Renzo, endeavouring to collect his thoughts for a reply. id = 32171 author = Mead, Richard title = A Discourse on the Plague date = keywords = Air; Contagion; Disease; Distemper; Infection; People; Place; Plague; Pox; Sick; Small; Year; country; good summary = INDEED the =Small Pox= is a true =Plague=, tho'' of a particular kind, =Bile= is so highly corrupted in a Body infected with the =Plague=, that Effect, as to stop the =Plague= from spreading beyond the small Number the Causes, whence the _Plague_ arises, and by what Means the Infection IN the most ancient Times _Plagues_, like many other Diseases, were State of Air, we shall hereafter prove to attend all _Plagues_. _Problems_, How the _Plague infects_ those who approach to the Sick. of a Family removed into a Town free from the _Plague_, was observed by left infected Places, were seized with the _Plague_ in the Towns to to three, _Diseased Persons_, _Goods transported from infected Places_, has been observed in Times of the _Plague_, that the Country has been that Place to die of the _Plague_ in their Attendance upon Goods under that the _Plague_ and the _Small-Pox_ are Diseases, which bear a great id = 49567 author = Mertens, Charles de title = An account of the plague which raged at Moscow, in 1771 date = keywords = Dr.; Health; Moscow; Orræus; contagion; disorder; great; plague; time summary = gives a history of the plague as it appeared at Moscow; in the second, fever, accompanied with petechiæ; buboes and carbuncles appear in some present disorder was not the plague, but a putrid fever; an opinion believed that the physicians who had called the disorder the plague, had The total number of persons carried off by the plague amounted, Two surgeons died of the plague in the town; and a great number of from the plague, at the time that it raged in all the other houses After taking great pains to ascertain in what manner the plague was the plague, as it appears in different places, and of the symptoms and The houses and rooms of persons infected with the plague are purified by Foundling Hospital was kept free from the plague, during the whole time distance by a great number of bodies, dead of the plague, lying id = 45673 author = Pichatty de Croislainte title = A brief Journal of what passed in the City of Marseilles, while it was afflicted with the Plague, in the Year 1720 date = keywords = City; House; Marseilles; Plague; Sick; Town; body; day; order; sheriff summary = Town-House, to give Notice to the Sheriffs, that having been called them all; he is every Day, from Morning till Night, at the Town-House, Provisions in the City; and the Sheriffs finding hardly any Bread-Corn, Town-House, acquaint the Sheriffs that they are in want of Bread-Corn, Person will furnish them to serve to carry infected Bodies. The 17th the Physicians of _Montpellier_ come to the Town-House, to of the Gallies to meet again at the Town-House, with the Sheriffs, and Contagion has been continually at the Town-House, or wherever his Zeal The 3d, the Sheriffs repair to the Town-House almost by themselves, The 13th, the Marquess _de Pilles_ comes to the Town-House; his Number of dead Bodies, with which the City is filled; and though they Town-House, to guard the Sheriffs, and execute Orders. dis-infecting all the Houses of the City in which the Contagion has