Page:The last man (Second Edition 1826 Volume 2).djvu/165

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
THE LAST MAN.
155

Calm was now restored to the metropolis, and to the populous cities, before driven to desperation; and we returned to the consideration of distant calamities, wondering if the future would bring any alleviation to their excess. It was August; so there could be small hope of relief during the heats. On the contrary, the disease gained virulence, while starvation did its accustomed work. Thousands died unlamented; for beside the yet warm corpse the mourner was stretched, made mute by death.

On the eighteenth of this month news arrived in London that the plague was in France and Italy. These tidings were at first whispered about town; but no one dared express aloud the soul-quailing intelligence. When any one met a friend in the street, he only cried as he hurried on, "You know!"—while the other, with an ejaculation of fear and horror, would answer,—"What will become of us?" At length it was mentioned in the newspapers. The paragraph was inserted in an obscure part: "We regret