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commercial or official employments enabled them to communicate information as to facts, and on the principle and efficacy of the laws of Quarantine; all the opinions of the medical men whom your Committee have examined, with the exception of two, are in favour of the received doctrine, that the Plague is a disease communicable by contact only, and different in that respect from Epidemic fever; nor do your Committee see any thing in the rest of the evidence they have collected, which would induce them to dissent from that opinion. It appears from some of the evidence, that the extension and virulence of the disorder is considerably modified by atmospheric influence; and a doubt has prevailed whether under any circumstance, the disease could be received and propagated in the climate of Great Britain. No fact whatever has been stated to show, that any instance of the disorder has occurred, or that it has ever been known to have been brought into the Lazarettos for many years: but your Committee do not think themselves warranted to infer from thence, that the disease cannot exist in England; because in the first place, a disease resembling, in most respects, the Plague, is well known to have prevailed here in many periods of our history, particularly in 1665-6: and further, it appears that in many places, and in climates of various nature, the Plague has prevailed after intervals of very considerable duration.

Your Committee would also observe, down to the year 1800, Regulations were adopted, which must have had the effect of preventing goods infected with the Plague from being shipped directly for Britain; and they abstain from giving any opinion on the nature and application of the Quarantine regulations, as not falling within the scope of enquiry to which they have been directed; but they see no reason to question the validity of the principles upon which such regulations appear to have been adopted.


14th June, 1819.