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THE KNICKER BOCKER
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IN 1837 I was a resident in Galata, one of the faubourgs of Constantinople, sufficiently near the scenes of death caused by the ravages of the plague to be thoroughly acquainted with them, and yet to be separated from the Turkish part of the population of that immense city. It is not material to the present sketch to dwell upon the subject of my previous life, or the causes which had induced me to visit the capital of the East at such a period of mortality; and I will therefore only add, that circumstances of a peculiarly painful nature. | THE KNICKERBOCKER VOL. XXIII. June 1844. NO. 6. THE PLAGUE AT CONSTANTINOPLE. BY AN EYE-WITNESS. In 1837 I was a resident in Galata one of the faubourgs of Constantinople sufficiently near the scenes of death caused by the ravages of the plague to be thoroughly acquainted with them and yet to be separated from the Turkish part of the population of that immense city. It is not material to the present sketch to dwell upon the subject of my previous life or the causes which had induced me to visit the capital of the East at such a period of mortality and I will therefore only add that circumstances of a peculiarly painful nature obliged me to locate myself in Galata where there were none to sympathize in my feelings or any one with whom I could even exchange more than a word of conversation. I saw none but the widowed owner of the house in which I had a chamber her daughter Aleukâ and Petraki her little son. While the epidemic raged we four endeavored to keep up a rigid quarantine. Each recommended to the other the strictest observance of our mutual agreement not to receive any thing from without doors except the necessaries of life and whenever we left the house which was to be as seldom as possible not to come in contact with any one. Whenever I went out I invariably wore an oil-cloth cloak and by the aid of my cane prevented the dogs of the streets which are there so numerous from rubbing against me. If I visited any one which I seldom did I always sat on a bench or chair to prevent conveying or receiving contagion and before even entering the house I always underwent the preparation of being smoked in a box which during the prevalence of the plague is placed near its entrance for that purpose. These boxes were some eight feet high by three square the platform on which the feet rested elevated about a foot above the earth so as to admit under it a dish containing the ingredients of the prophylactic and a hole in the door to let the face out during the smoking of .