Page:Devonshire Characters and Strange Events.djvu/356

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PHILIPPA GARY AND ANNE EVANS

IN the month of August, 1672, the wife of a dyer of Plymouth, one William Weeks, died after "many and frequent vomitings." Shortly after that Mr. Weeks and his daughter were seized with the same symptoms—violent pains internally, cold sweats, faintings and vomitings; and in an engraving of the period relative to the tragic event about to be related, Mr. Weeks is shown in bed affected by this last symptom. At the outset the physician who attended them suspected poison, and he was confirmed in his suspicions when a neighbour who had entered the house found a pot in the kitchen with "crude arsenick" in it. Moreover, Mr. Weeks's granddaughter, child of a Mistress Pengelly, was affected in precisely the same manner.

Philippa Gary, the nurse, together with Anne Evans, the servant, first drew attention to themselves by counterfeiting sickness and vomiting, but the general prostration and agony were lacking in their case. The administration of emetics led to the recovery of the child and of Mr. Weeks, but Mistress Pengelly died in great agonies.

This "horrid accident" caused much commotion, and the nurse and the girl were arrested. The first brought before the mayor was Anne Evans, "apprentice to the said Mistress Weeks, a poor child, whose mother being dead, had been bound out in the Mayoralty of Mr. Peter Schaggel, Anno 1672, by the

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