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This item is filmed at the reduction ratio checked below/ Ce document est film^ au taux de reduction indiqud ci-dessous. 10X 14X 18X 22X y 12X 16X 20X 26X 30X 24X 28X n 32X Th« copy filmwd hers has bean reproduced thanks to the generosity of: Library Division Provincial Archives of British Columbia The images appearing here are the best quality possible considering the condition and legibility of the original copy and in keeping with the filming contract specifications. Original copies in printed pap.r covers are filmed beginning with the front cover and ending on the last page with a printed or illustrated impres- sion, or the back cover when appropr jts. All other original copies are filmed beginning on the first page with a printed or illustrated impres- sion, and ending on the last page with a printed or illustrated impression. The last recorded frame on each microfiche shall contain the symbol — »- (meaning "CON- TINUED"), or the symbol V (meaning "END"), whichever applies. 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Tous les autres exemplaires originaux sont film6s en commenpant par la premiere page qui comporte une empreinte d'imr)re8sion ou d'illustration et en terminant par la derni^re page qui comporte une telle empreinte. Un des symboles suivants apparaitra sur la derniire image de cheque microfiche, selon Ie cas: Ie symbols — ► signifie "A SUIVRE ", Ie symbols V signifie "FIN". Les cartes, planches, tableaux, etc., peuvent dtre filmAs d des taux de reduction diff^rents. Lorsque Ie document est trop grand pour dtre reproduit en un seul cliche, il est fiim£ A partir de I'angle supArieur gauche, de gauche it droite, et de haut en bas, en prenant Ie nombre d'images nAcessaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la mdthode. 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 S 6 :-:.''. ^ t-'\. / erf PROBABLE FATE OF SIR JOHN FRANKLIN AND CREW; OK, THE SCUEVY IN THE ARCTIC SEAS, AND CORRESPONDENCE OF CAPTAIN W. WHITE WITH THE LORDS OP THE ADMIRALTY, AND THE PRINCIPAL COMMANDING OFFICERS OF THE LATE ARCTIC EXPEDITIONS, ox ITS PREVENTION xiND CURE. BY CAPTAIN W. WHITE, LATE Hoy, E. I. C. S. Author of the "Evils of Qaarantiiie Laws, and Nou-Existence of Pestilential Coutagion ;" "The Means of Prevention and Method of Cure for the Cholera Morbus," &c. &c. —Published in 1839. LONDON; PIPER BROTHERS AND CO., 23, PATERNOSTER-ROW. 1852. Price Two Shillings. ■*.-.r.- 4t ■i 1 PROBABLE TATE OF Sin JOHN FRANKLIN AND CREW. 8fc. Sfc. 8fc, *' The all-surrounding heav'n, — the vital air Is big with death ; though no convulsive agony Shakes froui the deep foundations of the world The imprisoned plagues, a secret venom Oft corrupts the air, the water, and the land." Science op Lifi:. The old year has passed, remarkable chiefly for the total abstraction of all thought and consideration for all affairs but that of " the Royal Hobby," the " Grandfather of Hobbies." In its vortex was swallowed up and lost sight of the dreadful calamity which had but just afflicted the nation, — the hundred thousand people who had perished by the plague. It was passed over as though it required no concern, or indeed any care to be taken against the future. The new year has been ushered in with momentous portcntions — how it will end, remains to be seen ; but, at all events, there is now ample opportunity for serious consideration of many topics which deeply affect the welfare of humanity and the interests of the British nation at large. Considering the numerous expeditions which have been sent from time to time, during many centuries, into the Arctic seas, for the discovery of a north-west passage, the failures and the disasters with which they have been attended, it is somewhat surprising that in this enlightened age so Utopian a scheme should still have been persevered in ; and not less so, that, after all the sad experience which had been bought, ships should have been sent upon so dangerous a service without being- provided with a ship of retreat : the only security against shipwreck and other disasters incidental to such a voyage. To that omission may be ascribed the absence of all knowledge concerning Sir John Franklin, and the too probable melancholy fate of himself and crew. o r o r> f> The problem of a nortli-west passage seems to have been first proposed in the ninth century. From that period up to 1563, various voyages had been undertaken for the purpose of solving the question ; and in that year Sir llugli Wiiloughby sailed from England, and is said to have discovered Nova Zembla: but, on his return, he was frozen to deatli in La])land, with all his men! Between 1555 and 1577, several other voyages were undertaken for the same purpose, but no advance made towards a discovery of a passage. In 1578, two brothers, of the name of Frobisher, sailed upon the same " Tom-fool errand ;" but they never returned, nor is there any conjecture respecting their fate ! From that period up to 1719, many other unsuccessful attempts were made, and in the intervening- period between that year and 1722, voyages are recorded to have been made by Knight, Barlow, Vaughan, and Scroggs ; but no account of them was ever received ! John Monk also sailed on a voyage of discovery to the north in 1719, and the only account received of him was, that all his men but two had died ! In 1722 Behring sailed and discovered the straits and island which bear his name ; he was afterwards wrecked upon Behring Island, and there he died! Between 1722 and 181(S, many other voyages were made, and all were equally unsuc- cessful. In the latter year Buchan made a fruitless attempt to reach the Pole, and was obliged to return in consequence of the damage sustained by his ship. In 1823 Captain Parry was compelled by the scurvy to abandon his expedition, and with the Furi/ and Ilecla to return. In a third expedition in 1825, he was equally unsuccessful, ar.d the Fiwi/ was wrecked. In 1832, Rear-Admiral Sir John Ross, C.B. (then captiun), after having been frozen up in the ice for four years was obliged to abandon the Victor?/, and, with great peril and difficulty, at length was saved. "The colours were, therefore," he says, " hoisted and nailed to the mast ; we drank a parting glass to our poor ship, and having seen every man out, in the evening, I took my own adieu of the Victory^ which had deserved a bet- ter fate. It was the first vess, 1 that I had ever been obliged to abandon, after having served in thirty-six, during a period of forty-two years. It was like the last parting with an old friend ; and I did not pass the point where she ceased to be visible without taking a sketch of this melancholy desert, rendered more melancholy by the solitary, abandoned, helpless home of our past years, fixed on immoveable ice, till Time should perform on her his usual work. The sea was everywhere one solid mass of ice : all was rock ; it seemed as if there never was to be water again." Notwithstanding all these successive failures and disasters, over a period of so many years. Sir John Franklin was sent, in 1^45, upon what has been truly called a " Tom-fool's errand" to nl 1 5 e been 1 up to rposc of ougliby d Nova ,aj)land, il other advance jrothers, Tom-fool njecture J, many srvoning- ;M'(lcd to scroggs ; onk also and the two had raits and cd upon nd 181(S, y unsuc- ;tempt to ice of the 'arry \>as and with in 1825, iked. In I in), after )bliged to ficulty, at he says, : glass to ; evenuig, wed. a bet- obliged to period of •Id friend ; be visible rendered 5 home of le should where one iiere never disasters, as sent, in errand" to the Arctic seas ; and, as all the world knows, has never been lieard of — a period now of seven years. Expedition after ex- ])edition has been sent in search of him, and they have all proved singularly unsuccessful in llicir object. The only traces of his ex],edition arc such as leave little doubt as to his probable fate. It is proved that Sir John Franklin wintered in 1845 in a deep bight between Bcechey Island and Cape Ryle/. There the exploring expeditions of 1851 found three monuments erected to so many men of the Erebus and Terror s crews, with the following momentous epitaphs upon them: — " Choose you this day whom ye will serve ;" — " Thus saith the Lord of Hosts, consider your ways ! " The black painted grave-boards Avith those significant pass- ages of Scripture in white letters, were evidently erected for the information of future expeditions that might visit those parts, and, not improbably, they may then have thought it might be in search for themselves. It is singular, however— very singular — that no memento was left regarding the cause of their deaths, or any as to the period of the arrival and depar- ture of the ships, or of the course which they intended to pursue. There is much mystery in all that. All that we know is the painful fact, that in so early a part of the voyage as January 1846 there had been buried two of the crew, and in April a third. It must be all conjecture as to the complaints of which they died ; but if past experience in those seas enables us to come to any conclusion, it was in all probability from the scurvy, the pest of the sea — a terrible disease ; and when it once attacks a crew, it is seldom got rid of without a change of climate, food, and scene. Even when it seems to have been subdued, it seldom fails to re-appear, and then even in a more malignant form. Such was the case in Anson's disastrous expedition. It attacked tlie crews in a most terrific manner in 1741, after rounding Cape Horn, and after some months the survivors were perfectly recovered ; in the follow^ ing year, on their leaving the coast of Mexico, they expe- rienced an equally terrible recurrence of it. The scurvy ap- peared in the Fury and Ilecla Captain Parry's expedition to the Arctic seas in 1822, and disappeared ; and in 1823 it re-appeared again. Upon that subject v/c find in the Report of the Voyage, that " the re-appearance of the scurvy in the most favourable month of the year (August) and after a more liberal supply of fresh animal food than they could calculate upon procuring hereafter, were all confirmatory proofs of the progress of the evil." But let us look at the Report given by Captain Parry himself: — " I am now under the disagreeable necessity of entering on a subject which I had at one time ventured to hope need scarcely have occupied any part of this narrative — I mean the % I 1 i^ I I 6 scurvy : some slight but unequivocal symptoms of the disease were this day (July 30, 1823) reported to me by Mr. Edwards, to have appeared amonpj four or five of tlie Fim/s men, ren- dering it necessary, for the first time during the voyage, to have recourse to anti-scorbutic treatment among the seamen and marines. During our first winter, the only instance in which any such symptoms had been discovered occurred in Mr. Jer- main, the purser of the Ilecla, who, however, recovered by the usual treatment, as the summer advanced. This short and dubious season being ended, the carpenter and boatswain of the Ilecia were also affected ; and, in the course of the second winter, Mr. Jermain's complaint returned with greater severity. In the months of February and March, Messrs. Henderson, Halse, and Scallon, of the Fiiri/, were occasionally disposed to scurvy ; Mr. Edwards (the surgeon) was, for a week or two, pretty severely attacked by it, and my own gums becoming somewhat livid, rendered a short course of additional lemon- juice necessary to restore them. These cases, however, shortly and permanently recovered ; but in the spring, and even as late as the month of June, when there was reason to hope that every symptom of this kind would be removed by the increased warmth and cheerfulness of the season, and a change of diet afforded by the game, the disease again made its appear- ance in the carpenter and boatswain of the Ilecia, and soon after attacked the gunner and Mr. Fife, the Greenland master. These cases, which were much more severe than any we had before experienced, had not now recovered, when the gums of four or five of the Fury's men betrayed this insidious disease lurkir ^thin them, and made it necessary to administer lemon-j a to them in more copious quantities than ordinary. " It will, perhaps, be considered a curious and singular fact •in the history of sea-scurvy, that during the whole of the pre- ceding part of this voyage, none amongst us but officers should have been in the slightest degree affected by it, a cir- cumstance directly contrary to former experience. To what- ever cause this might be attributed, it could not, however, but be highly gratifying to be thus assured, that the various means employed to preserve the health of the seamen and marines, had proved even beyond expectation eflficacious." It is somewhat difficult to make out what Captain Parry really meant to say relative to the first appearance of the dis- ease. In the first place he tells us, that " during our first winter, the only instance in which any symptoms had been discovered, occurred in Mr. Jermain, the purser of the Hecla,^'' and that in the second winter " it returned with greater severity ;" and after winding up what followed next, he informs us, " that during the whole of the preceding part of this voyage, none amongst us but officers were affected in the slightest degree." i 'i < I disease thvards, en, ren- 'ag'o, to soauicn n which ^Ir. Jer- 1 by tlic ort and wain of second jevorily. nderson, posed to or two, ecoming Icmon- , shortly even as ope tliat iicreased of diet appear- md soon . master. we had gums of 3 disease (minister rdinary. ular fact the pre- oflicers it, a cir- ro what- T, but be s means marines, n Parry the dis- 3ur first ad been J Heclar ^verity;" IS, " that je, none degree." How, then, can it be that Mr. Jcrmain's was the only case up tothe29thof July 1823? " That a ship's company," continues the Report, " should begin to evince symptoms of scurvy after twenty months entire de- pendence upon the resources contained within their ship — an cx])criment hitherto unknown, perhaps, in the annals of navi- gation, even for one-fourth part of that period — could scarcely, indeed, be a subject of wonder, though it was at this particular time a matter of very sincere regret. From the health enjoyed by our people during two successive winters, unassisted as we had been by any su})ply of fresh anti-scorbutic plants or other vegetables, I had begun to indulge a hope that, with a con- tinued attention to their comforts, cleanliness, and exercise, the same degree of vigour might, humanly speaking, be ensured, at least as long as our present liberal resources should last. Present appearances, however, seemed to indicate differently ; for though our sick list had scarcely a name upon it, and almost every individual was performing his accustomed duty, yet we had at length been impressed with the un])leasant conviction that a strong predisposition to disease existed among us, and that no very powerful exciting cause was wanting to render it more seriously apparent. Such a conviction at the present crisis was peculiarly disagreeable ; for I could not but lament any circumstances tending to weaken the confidence in our strength and resources at a time when more than ordinary exertion was about to be required at our hands." If the scurvy, " evincing itself after twenty-seven months," in a ship "entirely depending upon the resources contained within it," could " scarcely be a matter of wonder," where would be the " wonder'^ in Sir John Franklin, under similar circumstances, without " any supply of fresh anti-scorbutic plants, or other vegetables," being attacked? Indeed there is the proof by the graves of his men, that it had attacked him at a much earlier part of the voyage. In short, the very fact of his so soon losing his men was of itself a predisposing cause to produce it in his crew, even supposing that scurvy was not the cause of their decease. The predisposing causes may be thus arranged : — 1. Cold and moisture ; sudden transitions from heat to cold, and vice versa. 2. Indolence, or want of sufficient exercise to preserve the due tone and strength of the muscular fibres. 3. Excess of exercise ; and, on the contrary, extreme hard labour disproportionate to the bodily strength, and the means of recruiting its daily waste. 4. Health impaired by preceding illness ; and, 5. A gloomy sorrowful state of mind, which has a mani- fest tendency to relax the solids, impair digestion, and, of • f 8 consequence, communicate a morbid taint to the fluids. Of this fact, a remarkable instance is recorded by a respectable writer named Vander Mye, who says, " that during the famous siege of Breda, upon the report of bad news, the scurvy alwmjs spread astonishingly amongst the troops ; but was in a manner altogether checked by the arrival of agreeable in- telligence." The OCCASIONAL or exciting causes are principally these : — 1. Diet of difficult digestion, as animal food hard dried and long salted. 2. Food containing little nourishment, and such articles as naturally contain but a very small portion of that matter which is convertible into nutritious chyle, and fitted to repair that waste which the body daily undergoes. 3. Certain passions of the mind, as sudden grief and joy. Of all these predisposing causes Sir John Franklin had abundance, and more than abundance, by the putrid " animal food" with which he was supplied. Upon the 7th of August, Captain Parry " began to entertain doubts" considering the state of " the health of his officers and men," " whether it would still be prudent remaining out," and whether the probable evil did not jiossibly far outweigh the possible good. Therefore, "in order to assist his own judg- ment on this occasion upon one of the most material points, he requested the medical officers of the Fury to furnish him with their opinions as to the probable effect that a third winter passed in these regions would probably ])roduce on the health of the officers, seamen, and marines of that ship, taking into consideration every circumstance connected with their situa- tion." The reply of Mr. Edwards was as follows : — " During the last winter, and subsequently, the crew of the Fury in general, together with the increased number and character of their comjDlaints, strongly indicated that the pe- culiarity of the climate and service was slowly effecting a serious decay of their constitutional powers. The recent appearance also of several cases of incipient scurvy in the most favourable month of the year, and occurring after a more liberal and continued use of fresh animal food than we can calculate upon procuring hereafter, are confirmatory proofs of the evil. " With a tolerable prospect of eventual success, other cir- cumstances remaining unchanged, I should yet expect an increase of debility, with a corresponding degree of sickness, though, at the same time, confident of our resources being equal to obviate serious consequences." The report of the medical gentlemen was forwarded to Captain Lyons of the Hecla, requesting his opinion. It was :— ds. Of poctable famous scurvy vas in a able in- ncipally ried and tides as sr which >air that Uoy- , Llin had " animal sntertain icers and )ut," and eigh the vn judg- oints, he lim with d winter le healtli ing into ir situa- w of the ber and the pe- ecting a e recent the most a more we can proofs of ither cir- xpect an sickness, es being arded to X was : — 9 "As I consider the healtli of your crow most important in every point of view, I shall in the first place state that, indc- pcnclontly of the weighty opinions of your medical olliccrs, it has for some time been my opinion, that the Furi/ passing a third winter in this country would be extremely hazardous. I am induced thus to express myself from the great change I have observed i" the constitution of the oiKcci's and men of the Hecla, and by the appearance of some severe cases of scurvy since the summer has commenced ; I am also aware that the same scorbutic symptoms have been noticed, and do still exist in the Fury. " Our long continuance on one particular diet, almost total deprivation of fresh animal and vegetable food for above two years, and the necessary and close confinement for several months of each severe winter, are undoubtedly the causes of the general alteration of constitution which has for some time past been so evident. I therefore conceive that a continued exposure to the same deprivations and confinements, and the powerful monotony of a third winter to men whose health is precarious, would in all probability be attended with very serious consequences." The gallant officer therefore, con- cluded with advising, " that the Fury and '^Tecla return to England." This they did as soon as the ice would permit. It is clear that the Erebus and Terror must have been exposed to all the same concurrent causes of disease, if not in a much h.i; I.er degree. It will have been observed that on the 9th of August the surgeons report how '■'■ confidonV they were " of their resources being equal to obviate serious consequences," even though the expedition did not return to England. How that confidence was well grounded, the death of Mr. Fife, on the 6th of Sep- tember following, as recorded by Captain Parry, will best explain. " In the afternoon of the 6th (page 479), I was much pained at being informed, by telegra[)h from the Hecla, that Mr. Fife, Greenland master of that ship, had just expired, an event which for some days past there had been too much reason to apprehend, the scurvy having within the last three weeks con- tinued to increase upon him. It is proper for me, however, both to the medical ofiicers under whose skilful and humane care he was placed, and to the means in which we were in this way so liberally supplied, to state that a part of the time Mr. Fife had taken so great a dislike to the various anti-scorbutic remedies which were administered to him, that he could seldom be induced to take any of them. The disease, in consequence, reduced him to a state of extreme debility, which at length carried him off without pain." All that can be collected from this is, that under the " skilful i.ri-%r^'^' i i ! I 10 treatment of the disease" the patient got worse and worse; and as for the "various anti-scorbutics" that were "administered to him," they were worse tlian useless, positively injurious, as evidenced by the fact that he " took so great a dislike to them that he seldom could be induced to take any." This case will be found discussed in the correspondence which accompanies this. But fi'om this one circumstance wo collect the fact that, notwithstanding all the '•'■ coiifidcnce" of the medical men in their " resources" had those shi])S continued another winter out the probability is that they all would have died had they taken " so great a dislike" to the " various remedies" as Mr. Fife had done. Of the expeditions now in IBehring's Straits, the Plover^ it appears, after being but seven months in the ice, had re- turned to the Sandwich Islands, the crew much affected with the scurvy ; " unable to contend with the rigour of another winter in those latitudes." A fresh crew was made uj) for her fj-om volunteers from the Herald, and drafts from the Enter- prise and Investigator ; and she again proceeded to Behring's Strait. AVe also find that there she suffered again from the scurvy, and would a second time have returned, had her crew not again been replenished from the Dccdalas. The scurvy is also understood to have made its apjDearance on board the Enterprise, Captain Collinson. All those circumstances tend to confirm the probability that the scurvy had at a very early period of Sir John Franklin's voyage made its appearance in his ships; and if so under all the circumstances, there is very little probability of him or of any of his crew being found alive. If it was " extremely dan- gerous," and " probable to be attended with very serious con- secpienccs" to Captain Parry, " the passing a third winter in that country," how much more so must it have been for Sir John Franklin to have made up his mind, as we have been assured that he did, to spend five, six, or seven winters in the ice. But this was the most improbable thing in the world ; he was too experienced and too cautious a man to risk any such an ex- periment. The same may be said of the hypothesis of his having run up the Wellington Channel, after leaving his winter quarters in 1846, and that too with a sickly crew. Had he resolved upon such a measure, there can be little doubt but that he would have left an intimation of it near the graves. He well knew that the Wellington Channel ic often for years frozen up, and that under all circumstances the return of his ships would be extremely problematical. He also knew that he would be exposed to the greatest danger for the want of a ship of retreat. He had been warn')d before leaving England by his friend Rear-Admiral Sir John Ross, who foresaw the perilous situation in which he would be placed, not to attempt 1 worse; a nd Ldniiiiistered injurious, as like to them liis c;if=e will accompanies :he fact that, ical men in 3ther winter ed had they ;dics" as Mr. , the Plover, ice, had re- affected with r of another de up for hsr m the Enter- to Beh ring's ^•ain from the had her crew The scurvy is on board the robability that hn Franklin's f so under all^ ' of him or of ixtremely dan- •y serious con- 1 winter in that in for Sir John c been assured n the ice. But d ; he was too ly such an ex- pothesis of his ,ving his winter 3rew. Had he ittle doubt but lear the graves, often for years le return of his also knew that ►r the want of a eaving England dio foresaw the , not to attempt 11 to carry into effect the orders of the Admiralty, to enter Bar- row's Strait — his original destination — until such time as he had rectified the evil by establishing a retreat upon one cf the islands to the north of Barrow's Strait, by building a house upon it. Tliis it appears he did not do; and it is scarcely possible to believe that he would have ventured any such passage without it. But if so, the opinion which Sir John lioss expressed previous to the sailing of the expeditions in 1850, that **if he did not do so, there is very little chance of his ever being found," has turned out too true. There is no evidence, however, that Wellington Channel was open in the summer of 1846; on the contrary, there is every reason for supposing that it may have boon closed. The circumstance of its being open in 1851 is ac- counted for by Mr. Abernethy, late master of the Felix, Rear- Adniiral Sir John Boss, as being "the mildest summer he ever knew in those seas." Mr. Abernethy has lately been ex- amined before the Committee of the Admiralty on the recently returned Arctic expeditions; and in what estimation his opinions might 1)6 held is best collected from the following facts : — He has been six voyages in whalers ; two voyages in the Arctic regions with Sir John Parry in the llccla ; was quarter- master and coxswain of Sir Edward Parry's boat, the Enter- prise, and was with him when the FurT/ was lost; he was mate in the Victory, Admiral Sir John Ross, when frozen up for four years, and then abandoned ; he was one voyage with Sir James Clark Ross in the Erchus (one of the missing- ships), to the Antarctic seas ; and one with him in the Enterprise in the Arctic seas, acting ice-master ; and lastl}^, master in the Felix, Rear-Admiral Sir John Ross. He also thinks it very doubtful if it was open in 1 846 ; or if it w as that Sir John Franklin ever attempted to pass up. " The naviga- tion," he says, "is most dangerous, the tide running five knots an hour, with heavy floe ice, cross currents, and broken land." The ships, moreover, he says, " were totally unfit for the navigation." The same may be said of H. M.'s ships just returned. " They drew too much water, — and being wall- sided could not rise with the pressure of the ice, and the floe ice must either go under or over them ; but much more likely over than under." Of the power and effect of floe ice there has been a very striking representation recently given in the sketch of H. M. S. Intrepid, which appeared in the Illustmted London Neivs. It is in fact admitted that the Phacnix steamer now fitting out at Deptford, is the only vessel ever fitted out fit for those seas ; for she will, from her top fashion, go over the floe, M hile others will go under. This is the opinion of many ex]>erienced and scientific oflicers and men who have been in those seas. 12 { I« ill i; ( i So extremely dangerous, indeed, is the navigation in Well- ington Channel, it is supposed to have been the reason why Captain Austin, notwithstanding his abundant supplies, declined running up. Indeed it appeared to be quite superfluous after Mr. Penny had written to him a note, stating that " all had been done up Wellington Channel that could be done." If this be correct, it seems to have been a most extraordinary thing that it should have been asserted that Mr. Penny came to England expressly to obtain a steamer to take him up the Wellington Channel, and that he did actually apply to have the same placed at his command. This, as a matter of course, gave rise to much speculation as to the propriety of Captain Austin not having gone up the Channel, and, it is said, gave occasion for the Committee of Inquiry at the Admiralty as to the pro- ceedings of the late Arctic expedition. Upon that point Sir Edward Parry held some conversation with Mr. Abernethy, and the answer which he got was, that ''he thought Captain Austin had done right" in not risking his ships in Wellington Channel. Where the difference of danger in 1851 and 1852 may be, it is difficult to understand. But even supposing that Sir John Franklin did proceed up Wellington Channel in the summer of 1846, what probable chance can there now be of a possibility of his being alive, or that any traces of the ships or crew will ever be found. If it was " dangerous," '* extremely hazardous," and " probable to be attended with serious consequences," Captain Parry's " re- maining a third winter in that climate," how much more so must it have been for Sir John Franklin to have continued there seven ? If he did go up, it is evident that he did so with a sickly and deficient crew ; the proof of which is the three graves at Beechey Island. But supposing the crew to have been all in good health, and that he was locked up in tlie ice for a winter or two, with evenplenty of /?roumons (!) on board, would he continue there year after year quietly awaiting his fate, without making any effort to save himself and crew? Is it not much more likely that he would have abandoned his ships in the summer months, and travelled southwards with a hope of extricating himself. If he did do so, it is tolerably clear that he must have perished. But supposing, again, that he had no occasion to do that, the ships in the summer months having floated, and again become exposed to the "dangerous naviga- tion, the tide running five knots an hour, with heavy floe ice, cross currents, and broken land," and that with a sickly and disheartened crew, what must have been his fate ? Everybody knows that a ship in the finest climate and smoothest seas cannot be worked without a healthy crew ; and in the Arctic seas, as Captain Lyons has observed, it is most important in every point of view. Without one, the ships would inevitably It n in Well- eason why ■s, declined 1 110 us after at " all had done." If traordinary enny came him up the to have the ourse, gave )tain Austin ,ve occasion to the pro- point Sir iVbernethy, ght Captain Wellington 31 and 1852 proceed up lat probable ing alive, or found. If it ' probable to Parry's " re- uch more so »re continued e did so with is the three ;rew to have ip in the ice "! ) on board, awaiting his i crew? Is it ned his ships with a hope jly clear that at he had no onths having ;rous naviga- 3avy floe ice, a sickly and Everybody loothest seas 1 the Arctic important in dd inevitably 13 be beaten to atoms between the ice, or swamped by the floe. If wrecked, there is about as much probability of finding any tokens of it as there was of the Fury, as narrated by Sir John Ross. " We proceeded now," says Sir John Ross, " to the beach where the Fury had been abandoned, but not a trace of her hull was to be seen. There were many opinions, but all were at liberty to conjecture what had become of the wreck. Having often seen, however, what the moving masses of ice could do on this coast, it was not difficult to guess in general what we could not explain in detail. She had been carried bodily off", or had been ground to atoms and floated away to the drift timber of these seas. At any rate she was not to be found : we had seen no appearance of her during the ten miles we had coasted within pistol-shot of the shore to the southward of the place, and we now examined it for two miles to the northward with no better success." The Fury was wrecked upon a known spot in 1825, and many of her stores landed. The search after her took place in the summer of 1829. The result is seen. What chance can there then be of finding the wreck of the Erebus and Ttrror^ without the slightest clue where and when, or even that it ever did take place; that probably, too, five or six years ago, the period since they left their winter quarters at Beechey Island ? The most probable thing is, that when the Erebus and Terror were lying in the bight between Cape Ryley and Beechey Head with a sickly crew, at so early a period of the voyage, Sir John Franklin resolved that, as soon as the s ^ason would permit, he would return to England; a precedent for which he had in the Fury and Hecla under Sir John Parry. With such a determination, it is possible that he may have thought it quite unnecessary to leave any memorandum of his having been there, or where he was going, anticipating that in a short time he would arrive in England and have the oppor- tunity of explaining it all. The painted grave-boards at the tombs of the men who had perished, might therefore have been merely erected as marks of respect in memory of the dead. If he did leave his winter-quarters with a view of returning to England, it is very possible that he got locked up, like Sir James Clark Ross, in a field of ice, and like him may have been drifted away " thousand miles ; but not being so fortunate as him, his ships upon the breaking up of the ice may have b^en crushed to atoms, or have foundered from the want of a healthy crew. Upon this point we cannot do so well as to shew the proba- bility of it from the extreme danger to which the Fury and Hecla were exposed when about to return to England. '• We know," says Captain Lyons, " from the experience of J „ '. ill ! ) ' :; 14 last year, that it is not before the end of August or the begin- ning of September that the ice br:!aks up in the strait of the Fury and Hecla^ and that it is not until that period that you will be enabled to re-examine its western entrance. Even when you should have done so, and, as there is every reason to expect, found it still closed, you would have barely sufficient time to return to Igloolik to pass another winter. Again, should the sea prove open to the south-eastward, and should you deem it expedient to attempt, by rounding the very exten- sive land in that direction, to find some other passage to the westward, I conceive that the extreme lateness of the season would not admit of your making discoveries of any importance, or, at all events, of such importance as to warrant your passing* a third winter at the risk of the safety of your officers and crew." At this period, July 18 — "Although the dissolution of ice was hourly going on," says Captain Parry, "yet no very sen- sible alteration had taken place for some time past, such as might give us hopes of a speedy release from our confinement — the barrier of ice remaining fixed between the ships, and the sea was above five miles in breadth, though we lay at the very mouth of the bay, and the only chance of our soon getting out rested on an accidental crack of the floe, extending from near the point of Oongalooyat across to the mainland, and which had lately become somewhat wider." "The first of August now arrived, and yet, incredible as it may appear, the ships were as securely confined in the ice as in the middle of winter." The gallant captain then " determined, notwithstanding the apparent hope- lessness of sawing their way through four or five miles of ice, to begin that laborious process ; not, indeed, with a hope of cutting a canal sufficiently large to allow the passage of the ships to sea, but with a view to weaken it so much as, in some measure, to assist its disruption whenever any swell should set in upon its margin." Having made the necessary preparations, the captain con- tinues : — " On the 4th, our sawing work was commenced, with the usual alacrity on the part of the officers and men, and three hundred and fifty yards of ice were got out before night, its thickness varying f"om one to four feet." The sawing was continued, and on the 6th there was " now a broad canal, eleven hundred yards in length, leading from the open water towards that formed by the gravelly space." We must here leave the enterprising voyager in his dan- gerous drifts, in " closely packed ice, flat and dangerous shores," until evening of the day on which Mr. Fife, Greenland master of the Hecla, had died, who, it appears, was a " very deserving individual, sincerely regretted by Captains Parry and Lyons and the otaer officers, and whose qualities as a ili. 15 e begin- t of the hat you Even jasoii to ufficient Again, should exten- e to the season ortance, passing ers and I of ice ery sen- such as inement and the ;he very ting out near the id lately arrived, securely gallant it hope- i of ice, hope of i of the in some ould set tin con- 3d, with id three ight, its ng was , eleven towards lis daii- igerous aenland " very irry P es as a seaman and navigator, had it pleased God to have spared his life, would have rendered him an ornament to the naval ser- vice, into which he was to have been admitted as a master on the return of the ships to England." Alas ! how melancholy to think of "deserving individuals" in so hopeless a project with the scurvy losing their lives. " In the night of the Gth," continues Captain Parry, " the ships, which had before nearly closed each other, were again separated to the distance of several miles, though no motion was perceptible in the masses of ihe ice about them. The Hecla was now carried towards Winter Island, and the Fury up Lyon Inlet, so that on the 10th we had reached the islands up Five-Hawser Bay within three-quarters of a mile, where the Hecla was barely visible from the mast-head. On the evening of the Uth, however, the wind at length began to freshen from the north-west, when the ice almost immediately commenced driving down the inlet at the rate of a mile an hour, carrying the Fury with it, and within half a mile of the rocks, the whole way down to Cape Martineau, but keeping her in deep water. In the mean time the Hecla had been swept into much more dangerous situations, passing along the east and south sides of Winter Island; and after driving nearly up Five-Hawser Bay, being carried near some dangerous shoals about Cape Edwards, where Captain Lyons expected every other tide that she would take the ground. Indeed, for the last ten or twelve days, the situation of the Hecla had been one of imminent danger, and every exertion to remove her from it had proved unavailing. From this time, however, the ice continued to drift to the south- ward, and by some means or other the ships once more closed each other." "On the following day," the 15th, "when the ships had closed each other within a mile, we could see the clear water from the mast-head, and the Hecla could not have been easily extricated. Such, hovvever, are the sudden changes that take place in this precarious navigation, that not long afterwards the Fury was quite at liberty to sail, while the Hecla was now, in her turn, so immoveably set fast, and even cemented between several very heavy masses, that no power that could be applied was sufficient to move her au inch. In this situation she '"'^'nained all the 16th, without our being able to afford her any assistance ; and the frost being rather severe at night, we began to consider it not improbable that we might yet be detained another winter. We were, perhaps, indeed indebted for our escape to a^ strong westerly breeze, which blew for several hours on the 17th, when the ice being sufficiently close to allow our men to walk to the assistance of the Hecla, we succeeded, after several hours of hard labour, in forcing her into clear water, when all sail was made to the eastward, and mm il ' 1 ■ I ,1; I 16 we shaped our course for the Trinity Islands in a perfectly open sea. " We thus finally made our escape from the ice, after having been almost immoveably beset in it for twenty-four days out of the last twenty-six, in the course of which time the ships had been taken over no less than one hundred and forty leagues of ground, generally very close to the shore, and always unable to do anything towards effecting their escape from danger. When it is considered that, to have taken the ground in this situation, with strong and high tides keeping the ice in con- stant motion, must have almost involved the certain loss of the ships, and without the possibility of one offering assistance to the other, we cannot but consider this as one of the most providential escapes it has ever been our lot to ex- perience." The fact is, research and succour were sent too late. We find the graves of three of the men buried in the early part of 1846 ; and this is all that is known, or likely to be known regarding that ill-fated expedition. This scanty, but sig- nificant piece of knowledge, we only acquire in the latter part of 1851, and now six years since that took place. Had this discovery been made in 1847, it is impossible to say what happy results might not have taken place. When he was missing in 1847, that was the period for research; nor was it neglected from the want of the necessity of it not having been pointed out. By some documents which were printed and circulated by Rear- Admiral Ross some ye'^rs ago, it appears that anticipating the very calamity which has taken place, on the departure of Sir John Franklin from England he gave him a " solemn promise" that " if he were missing in the spring of 1847, he would volunteer and do all that was possible for his relief;" and that " he did then offer his services to the govern- ment," strongly urging upon them " the importance of sending out immediate relief," and that he repeated it "in each suc- ceeding year." The government, however, it seems, were deaf to that humane call. " But," says he, " I can impute no blame to the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, who were unfortunately misled by the numerous opinions adverse to mine, such as the sending early relief, and more in particular the size and description of the vessels to be employed upon that important service." " Early relief" to the missing ships was everything, and how " adverse opinions'^ could have bc^n entertained upon the sub- ject is very difficult to understand; and still more so, how the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty could, on such a point, have allowed themselves to be so influenced by " adverse opinions ;" equally so as regards " the size and description of the vessels." It in fact amounts to this, that they had no opinion a perfect!}^ fter having r days out e ships had leagues of ays unable >m danger, and in this ice in con- ain loss of J assistance )ne of the lot to ex- late. We irly part of be known % but sig- latter part Had this I say what en he was nor was it aving been rinted and it appears 1 place, on e gave him e spring of ible for his he govern- of sending each suc- ems, were impute no ', who were adverse to I particular oyed upon ^, and how »n the sub- 50, how the ch a point, ^ " adverse ption of the no opinion •m 17 of their own, and were entirely regulated by the opinions of others . And as in that instance it is possible the same authorities who cominandod so much respect, may reguhite many other movements in that important branch of the pubHc service. A serious thing, when great interests are at stake. The more we look into the case of Sir John FrankHn the more liopeless does it become. He sailed in the spring of 1845, and he then had but three years provision on board. By some " miraculous" process it is said to have been con- verted into five ; and by his own " wonderful penetrating fore- sight," lie found out that he could make it " last him for seven.'^ That period has transpired ; yet we are now told that he could not have perished for want of food, as some Russians lived for many years in those latitudes upon the pro- duce of the country. Everybody knows that the Russians can live upon tallow and oil ; and that the flesh of the horses killed in the French campaigns in Russia was greedily de- voured by them. To talk of what Russians have done, has no reference to what an Englishman can do. There is no vege- table or farinaceous food in those regions ; and these are in- dispensable to the preservation of Englishmen's health ; they have been used to them from their cradle and could not live long without it. If food had so much to do in produc- ing the scurvy in the Fury and Hecla, and again in the Plover, why should not a worse supply have had a more serious effect upon the crews of the Erebus and Terror ? But the most distressing part of the whole affair, if not the most culpable, remains to be told; and which, it will be sup- posed when it came to the knowledge of Sir Francis Baring, First Lord of the Admiralty, must have shook his faith in the "sanguine expectatiori* which, in the spring of 1860 he ex- pressed in the House of Commons, "that the ships would be found and the crews all well." It appears, by the Times o^ the 16th of August 1851, that on the previous day Sir Francis . Baring in company with Captain Milne and some other Lords of the Admiralty, " paid a visit to the Royal Clarence Dockyard (Superintendent Captain Sir Edward Parry, F.R.S.) at Portsmouth, which establishment they duly inspected." On the same day, a bench of magistrates, at the application of the parochial authorities in the vicinity of the dockyard, were considering what steps ought to be taken for the removal of a plague in the town. It proceeded from gases exuding from some thou- sand of tin canisters of what is called patent preserved meats, polluting the atmosphere of the place so as to occasion fainting and sicknessto such an extent, that it only required an impested state of the air, like in 184^, to have bred a most destructive plague. The Times of the same day states that " it is a pain- B w I !! ! ' t 18 fully important fact, too, that this description of preserved meat formed a large proportion of the provisions supplied to the ex|)lorin^ ships under Sir John Franklin, and other vessels which have been sent at various times on distant services." It is, indeed, a painfully important fact ; for it has since to a great extent been corroborated by ships in the East Indies and on the Mediterranean stations returning further large quantities of those putrid meats into the " Jioi/al Clarence Vic- tualling Vcrd" at Portsmouth ; the total number of cases amounting to somewhere about nine thousand, two thousand of which it appears the " contractor's^^ (!) agent removed, in August, from the dock-yard. No doubt to be resold again for shins in the mercantile navy. The examination in August was obliged to be discontinued for fear of the health of the town ; and it has been resumed now that the weather is cold considering that it might be done with impunity. This has been requisite, as every case is obliged to be opened in order to come at the " contractor & security" for the amount of value for what is bad. The results of the examinations have been so very similar, it is impossible to do better than to look into the Report of Dr. Andrew Clerk, of Halsar Hospital, and Dr. Rundall, of High- street, Portsmouth, as it appeared in the Times in August 1851. '* On entering the store in which the preserved meat is kept, the atmosphere was found to be impregnated with a very disagreeable odour, which, in the immediate proximity to the cases, was so powerful as to produce a sense of faintness, and to excite nausea. A piece of wood that had been recently painted white, and exposed to the foetid atmosphere, had become of a dark brown colour, and it was inferred from this that the gas pervading the store was owing to the escape of sulphuretted hydrogen gas from animal matters in a state of putrefactive fermentation. By chemical examination, this in- ference and the source of the gas was traced to the cases of meat. Covers of these cases were lifted up by the pressure of the gaseous matter evolved from the decomposition of the contents. When these cases were opened, variable qualities of gas escaped, of a similar character to that pervading the store, more intense, sickening, and almost insufferably noxious. From some of the cases, at the point of communication with the atmosphere, there dripped a thin, black, foetid fluid, found, by microscopic and chemical examination, to be the result of putrefying gelatine and fat. In only one of the cases were the contents solid, and this case had been by accident perforated at the top, and the surface of the meat correspondmg with it was covered with a greenish mould. Others of the cases contained more or less of a whitish-coloured, frothy, foetid fluid ; the gelatine in them had become completely liquefied, and the masses of fat that had resisted putrefaction, were yellow, bard, brittle like wax. Seve- I (1 n si 1 preserved pplied to er vessels ices." ,s since to ast Indies lier large rence Vic- ' of cases lousand of in August, )r ships in as obliged n ; and it onsidering I requisite, me at the hat is bad. milar, it is ort of Dr. I, of High- igust 1851. d meat is i^ith a very lity to the itness, and n recently )here, had [ from this escape of a state of m, this in- le cases of jsure of the le contents, as escaped, ore intense, jome of the >here, there )scopic and ig gelatine s solid, and )p, and the sred with a •e or less of le in them fat that had ivax. Seve- 19 ral other cases were reduced to such a state of putrescence, that the nature of their contents were scarcely recognisable ; six of these were taken at random from the stock and for- warded to the Museum at Ilaslar for examination. These examinations detected, in one canister, portions of lips, tongues, pancreas (sweetbread), mesentery with diseased glands, as also intestines (gut), which included feculent matter. A portion of liver was also found in the fluid debris of this case. In another was found a portion of tongue, epiglottis, pancreas, and mesen- teric glands. The examination of the other cases detected similar contents. *' The res!ilts arrived at by these examinations were, that all the cases of preserved meat examined exhibited unequivocal signs of decomposition and decay ; that most of the cases evolved, when pressed, a greater or less quantity of highly noxious gas (sulphuretted hydrogen), and that all of them emitted the odour of it ; 'that the fatty and gelatinous parts of the contents were all of them partially, and some wholly, liquefied and decomposed ; that the fat undecomposed was usually hard, and almost as brittle as wax ; that the meat loss affected was, in all the cases, more or less diseased, in one case partially, and in another wholly, reduced to a semi-fluid putrid mass : and that in two of the cases portions of internal organs were present which had been absolutely diseased before death. In the examination of these cases, one of the labourers, John Haynes, who assisted in opening them, became ill, and remained so during the night and a portion of the next day." There were six thousand cases of this "preserved" meats in- tended for the use of her Majesty's ships of war, opened at the dockyard, early in January this year, 1852 — the canisters holding about ten pounds each. Of those examined, scarcely one-fifteenth was found fit for human use, and even that, though given to the poor, was scarcely fit for dogrs. The contractor for those "preserved" meats is reported, in the Times, as not to be found. He lived at Greenwich, and he is said to have had some powerful influence at the Admiralty (parliamentary ?) which secured him against all competition a regular succession of contracts, during the last seven years, for the supplying those "preserved" meats for the use of her Majesty's Navy! That he is not to be "found" cannot be much surprised at, as he could not have been, for a succession of years, carrying on the horrid traffic, without anticipating a time when he might lose his patronage and be publicly called to account for his manifold sins and wickedness. But it is a lii matter of surprise that this very personage, Mr. G?<)ldner, should now be said to be at Galatz busily employed in " preserving " meats for "first-rate makers" in London, to whom, some time since, his London establishment was transferred. But what is B 2 mm II i:| :| 1 1 •i *} V-: ' 1 if f 1 . !i) 20 more surprising than all, is that the said firm obtained a ''prize medal" at the Great Exhibition for " patent preserved meats;" and they are now to be had by epicures at most of the principal Italian shops at the west of the town — the canister emblazoned Tfith the royal arms, painted in all colours but the true. It would be very unjust to cast all blame upon one indi- vidual, when to others there is a portion due. For years before the contract for hermetically sealed provisions was guaranteed to Goldner, complaints were very common of the frequent bad quality of the preserved meats sent to sea. A friend of mine, many years a captain of one of the largest East Indiamen, and who has not been to sea for these ten years, some years ago told me that when the soup and bouilli was served out to the troops on board, they would receive it for a mess, and forthwith toss it into the sea. On this point there is a letter in the Times of the 12th of the present month, January, which it is as well to look at here as affording a tolerable proof of the sort of traffic which has been carrying on — it is signed " A Soap Maker,*' and it is to be presumed its genuineness, and the respectability of the party was, previous to publication first ascertained by the Times. It is as follows : — " About eight months ago I was offered upwards of twenty tons of preserved meat at 2/. ])er ton, and I agreed to take it at that price to extract the fat from it to use it in my trade ; but when it was brought to be delivered, the stench was so dreadful that I was obliged to order it away. Surely the present dis- covery is not a new thing to the Government officials, as I know that the twenty tons had been sent into the dockyard ; and as it was London made, and by first-rate makers too, I feel constrained to write this letter to warn the authorities that all bad meats does not come from Galatz." The putrid "preserved" meats which have b^en su])plied to the Royal navy is truly a most horrible affair ; and as to what dreadful consequences it may have been it is impossible even to conjecture. There can be no question but that the gases from those putrid meats, in the hold of a ship, with an infected state of the air, would be sufficient to breed a plague. In 1819 Captain White inspected a shiji called the Beiigal, lying out- side the docks on the Keerpoy side of the river op])Osite Calcutta, with a view of taking a passage in her to England. She had been in dock for repairs, the crew were still on shore, and she nad begun taking some cargo in. She was from Liverpool, and was bound for that port. The captain was a very nice man ; and Captain White took a passage condi- tionally. The captain mentioned that he had a party on such a day coming to a ball and supper, and very politely invited Captain White to join it ; but which was, from various causes, as politely declined. The ball took place. Alas, what a ball ! t a " prize I meats ;" principal ibluzoned e. one indi- irs before laranteed jiient bad of mine, men, and years ago ut to the forthwith the Times is as well le sort of ^' A Soap and the ition first of twenty take it at ade ; but b dreadful esent dis- ciuls, as I lockyard ; too, I feel !S that all upplied to 19 to what lie even to ^ases from scted state In 1819 lying out- • opposite England. I on shore, was from tain was a ge condi- ;y on such ely invited )us causes, lat a ball ! .-Sj. 31 Tliey kept it up, as it appeared, until near dayliglit, and then the jiarty, consisting of about twenty-two, gejiarated for tlieir rosp''ctive homes, never to meet again. On the following morning, when at breakfast, reading tlie newspaper, he was sliockcd to read of tlie sudden death of ten or twelve of the party who haii been at the ball, and that there were few expected to live. In the midst of their mirth and enjoyment, they were inhaling a pestilential air that caused their deaths. It turned out tiiat the part of the cargo which they had taken on board, consisted of hundreds, if not thousands of bullocks' horns, and those not sufficiently dried to stow in the hold of a ship. A })rovidential escape, thought Ca})tain White. More deaths were announced on the following day ; and in all they amounted to nineteen. The horns were forthwith relanded, and the ship purified. But for that unfortunate ball, in all probability a still more disastrous event would have happened. The ship, with a valuable cargo, numerous passengers, and her crew, might have gone to sea ignorant of the dangers concealed on board. A malignant putrid fever might have broken out and killed every one in the ship In mentioning tliat case it is in order to shew that the supplying her Majesty's navy with putrid " preserved" meats is no inconsiderate afiair, and that it is impossible to conjecture what dreadful consequences it may have produced. And this seems to be the more necessary as it has been stated, '*that in consequence of the reports of the transaction, the representa- tives of the press had been prohibited attending the further examination of the abomination of putrid " preserved" meat. A measure no doubt originating in fear and alarm as to what the consequences ultimately might be. The ostrich, a very large bird, thrusts its head into a hole and turns its tail against the simoom with a view of avoiding its effects. The Lords of the Admiralty may shut the gate of the Portsmouth dockyard against reporters, but they will discover that that will not pre- vent them from obtaining a knowledge of what passes therein ; nor will it shelter them from the pertinent and stringent com- ments of the press. These '^ putrid meats," it appears, have now been more or less in use for many years. It has been stated that " a clean ship is the healthiest of human abodes." How, then, are we to account for the dreadful sickness and mortality which has of late years taken place in many of our ships of war, which may be presumed to be as " clean'''' as any ships can be ? Have those ships been supplied with any of the putrid "preserved" meats, and emitted the gases from the hold tainting the air in the ship? When the cholera was at Malta in 1850, H. M. squadron put to sea and cruised at a long distance from the 22 i ;; ii' . i^ <:!-■ island ; yet they had 300 cases and many deaths took place. The Apollo troop-ship from Hong Kong the Ist of INIarcli 1^60, arrived at Portsmouth on the (ith of August ; sixty soldiers, three seamen, and three children having died on the passiige from cholera and dysentery. Tiie Bellerophon from her stat(! was suddenly ordered in September 1850, to leave the Mediterranean squadron and repair to England: upon her arrival at Plymouth on the 14th of October, she was ordered still to crr.ise at sea. Had any of those ships the patcMit " preserved meats^' on board? The J^^ox frigate took them out to India and has returned them to the dockyard. The same is said to have been the case with some ships in the INIediter- ranean squadron. The Plover was well supplied with them for the Arctic seas ; and many were seen weeping when carried on board ; a sure sign that they were bad. It appears to have been Eointed out, and yet they were passed. It has been seen that she as once returned to the Sandwich Islands from the scurvy ; and twice had her crew, or a large portion of it, exchanged, as unable to stand the rigours of the climate. It is stated by Mr. Abernethy tliat the whole of the j)reserved meats in the Enterprise m her voyage to the Arctic seas, under Sir James Clark Ross, were " indifferent stuffy" though not so bad as those recently discovered at Portsmouth. The salt meat, he says, was also very bad, — "The coarsest possible of the kind. When boiled it once shrunk away from six pounds to two, was as hard as a brick, Salter than brine, and for all the purposes of nutriment he might as well have had so much swab." This piece of beef was sent upon deck and was seen by Captain Sir James Clark Ross. It is also stated that Sir James Ross on his return in 1829 did report to the Lords of the Admiralty, the scandalous state in which the " pre- served" provisions with which he was supplied were in ; and it is clear that no notice was taken of that complaint, as fresh contracts were afterwards given, and other ships equally badly, if not worse, supplied. The complaint of the provisions in Sir James Clark Ross's expedition, had the effect of procuring somewhat better supplies for Captain Austin's expedition, and they were London made, but anything but what they ought to have been. There is no doubt but that almost ever since the contract of 1845 was given, complaints have been con- tinually made : — and that without an attempt to suppress the monstrous evil. There is a great mystery in all this, — iiov/, why, and wherefore the contractor Goulding was allowed for so long to continue in his horrid traffic. The Hercules (72) troop ship, in 1850, in her voyages from Ireland to the Medi- terranean, the West Indies, Halifax, and Nova Scotia, convey- ing from place to place different regiments, had those "pre- served " provisions twice a week ; and when they were to be k place. Ii 1S50, soldiers, passiige Dm lior ave the )OTi her ordered ; patofit lem out le same lediter- iiem for rricd on ve heen that she scurvy ; hanged, J stated leats in dor Sir t so bad It meat, of the >unds to all the much '^as seen :hat Sir i Lords " pre- ; and it IS fresh J badly, s in Sir Dcuring on, and ught to T since m con- ess the — how, ved for 'es (72) Mcdi- ;onvey- ! *^pre- ; to be 23 served out, it is said that a general murmur prevailed in the ship ; and that wiicn delivered, some of them were continually being found bad, and tlirown overboard. There has, moreover, been a most mysterious difference made in the distribution of the salt and ^'preserved" meats, totally nnaccountable until the Lords of the Admiralty condescend to explain why it was made. If a man or a mess — and whicli in a line of battle ship consists of twenty-four — at any period had rather not draw their rations of salt meat, fourpence is allowed for each such ration. The money thus obtained is laid out to buy articles which they find more useful. When the ^^pre- served*' provisions are served out, no allowance is made if lliey do not wish to receive them ; and the consequence is, that, instead of remaining in store, they arc received by the men, and often thrown overboard. Now, where is the diflei'encc in the estimation of tlie Lords of the Admiralty for stores between salted and '^preserved" meats? and why should the difference have been made, that for the salt they may have an allowance, but for the latter none is permitted '( It is affirmed that there are thousands of the men who never could be brought to taste the " preserved" meats, or even bear the sight of them. Who benefited by that distinction but the contractor ? and what could secure him new contracts so well as that of compelling the men to receive that which they could not use, and which they would throw into the sea? But bad is the best; for it is declared, that whether it was mutton, beef, or bonilli served out, all were equally alike tasteless, and one and the same thing. " It is, indeed, a very serious thing," as has been observed, and it is to be hoped will obtain a most searching inquiry by a Committee of the House of Commons, and measures be adopted to oljviate the possibility of such rascally proceedings recurring again. It will not have been forgotten the frightful mortality which took place in 1847 and 1848 on the coast of Africa in the squadron, nor the peculiar and dreadful case of the Eclaire, even after she had left the coast, and on the voyage home to those who went on board to afford relief, and after she arrived in England, when the men were obliged to remain on board and continue to breathe a pestilential atmosphere and in it ordered out to sea ! " With- out doubt," said the Times, " one of the most revolting inci- dents that ever insulted a civilized community, an outrage upon humanity, and disgrace in the country in which it oc- curred." The advocates of pestilential contagion were the authors of that " outrage upon humanifi/.'' Whereas, instead of the crew infecting one another and all those who went on board the ill-fated Eclaire, is it not possible tliat it may have proceeded from the gases exuding from ^* preserved" provisions in the sliip, and the same on the coast of Africa. ;nJ "i 24 From the facts which have been detailed, it is evident that no reliance can be placed in contracts for meats, particularly those of the " preserved" kind. The only way of avoiding, for the future, "dirty goods," at any price, is for the Government to establish '' preserving," if not " curing" departments of their own. They build their own ships, make their own sails, make their own biscuits, and in short do everything but the most essen- tial thing, and that is " preserve" their own meats. Twenty or thirty thousand a year might be saved by it, and better pro- visions furnished by fifty per cent. — that is, if properly and economically managed, but not so if made a Government job, with some well-paid high official at its head, knowing nothing about the trade, could take his salary, and leave the work for knowing under-strappers to do. Once more to revert to the painful subject of the missing expedition. As long as there could have been a rational hope to be entertained that there was a chance that Sir John Franklin could be found, or any traces made of his ships and crew, it was an imperative duty to use every exertion to find them out. It would have been criminal not to have done so. When all prospect of hopes fail, and they certainly appear to do so, it seems to be highly criminal to risk the lives of men on such a forlorn hope. These observations are made with pain and extreme regret, because tboy must prove distressing in the extreme to many a re- lation and friend. But why apologize when the same sentiments have been given by Sir Francis Baring, the First Lord of the Admiralty, himself. It may be remembered that in the spring of 1851, Sir T. D. Ackland urged upon Sir Francis Baring the necessity of sending out a steamer to meet Captain Austin on his return from the Arctic seas, or rather to ascertain if he had not been locked up there. He had with him two steamers, quite enough to bring him home if he were safe. To that proposition Sir Francis Baring replied: — "The Lords of the Admiralty having a very serious responsibility upon tliem, did not think themselves justifiable in sending other gallant men to risk their lives in this service. They must now do their duty in not risking the lives of others." In what respect, and under what circumstances, has that " serious responsibilittj^' been shaken or removed ? What circumstances have occurred to ''justify'" them " in sending other gallant men to risk their Iwes"? How, and by what means, can they shew that they are "now doing their duty" by "risking the lives of others"? It is truly paradoxical. ^owxG '^ adverse opi?iio?is" must assuredly have induced Sir Francis Baring to change his mind. If anything were .vanted to prove the hopelessness of the case, and the wild and romantic hypotheses still entertained dent that rticularly iding", for iTernnient s of their ils, make )st essen- vventy or itter pro- erly and lent job, nothing work for missing: nal hope Mr John hips and 1 to find done so. ppear to " men on e regret, my a re- iitiments d of the e spring Baring Austin lin if he teamers, To that ords of upon other Tliey others." as that What sending y what • duty" ioxical. led Sir 25 as to where Sir John Franklin had gone, how he could have lived, how he is to be rescued, or what has been his fate, it is that of Lieutenant Pirn of his having been wrecked in the glacier sea to the north of Siberia, a delusion in which Sir Roderic Murchison, President of the Royal Geograi)hical Society, and many other humane gentlemen also shared. Under their auspices he went to St. Petersburgh, — mot with a very gracious reception at the Imperial court. After alhiding to " the lively interest which the Emperor has not ceased to take in the generous efforts made by the British Government to discover the traces of the Franklin expedition, as evinced by the co-operation of His Imperial Majesty," Count Nesselrode, in his letter to Sir Hamilton Seymour, the ambassador at St. Petersburgh, observes : — *' With similar sentiments of sympathy, the Emperor heard of the expedition proposed by Lieutenant Pim, of the British navy. But, unfortunately, between the conception of such a project and its realisation physical difficulties and insurmoun- table obstiicles exist, which Mr. Pim, guided by his generous devotion, does not seem to have sufficiently foreseen, and con- cerning which it is the duty of the Russian government to enlighten him. *' It is easy to trace in the map of the world, across the immense wildernesses of northern Siberia, an itinerary which might lead to the end desired to be reached by Lieutenant Pim ; but, in executing such a project, it must not be for- gotten that, in addition to the enormous distances to be traversed, vast deserts must also be passed over, which, buried under eternal snows, offer neither means of transport nor provisions, — unexplored regions, in whioh tribes of savage people are scattered at wide intervals, — people over whom the Russian power exercises only thesbghtest influence, and whose warlike character, barbarous customs, and liatred of strangers are such, that the Imperial government would find it impos- sible to guarantee the personal security of Lieutenant Pim and his party." of the rtained ':l SECTION II. THE SOUETY IN THE ARCTIC SEAS. Sfc. S(c. Sfc. 11 lliii' Uv If!! li'. ," "J MS'M iii ' I i I Fr^m what has been detailed in the preceding pages, it will be evident the extreme dangers to which Sir John Franklin will have been exposed by the scurvy, as well as from the naviga- tion in the Arctic seas. It has been seen that Captain Sir Edward Parry, who, it is said, had the very best of preserved meats on board, and abundance of fresh provisions obtained upon the spot, yet had the scurvy, and it disabled his officers and crew. The various expeditions which had for centuries explored in those seas and never returned — in all probability some of them may have perished by that disease. Indeed, the dreadful havoc which it has at various times made in our ships, has caused the failure of the most important enterprises. Take, for instance, Anson's voyage in 1741 to the South Seas; the ravages it committed were of the most frightful character, as will be seen at a future page. It led to the destruction of five-sixths of the crew, and the loss of many ships ; but, what was worse than all, the failure of the expedition to capture Baldavi, and the capture of the Spanish settlements of Mexico, Peru, Panama, and California. In short, if not the foundation, it caused the superstructure of the national debt ; as the capture of those possessions, from which the Spaniards drew their sup- plies to carry on their wars against Great Britain, would have enabled the British to have dictated to them any terms of peace. The loss of Anson by the scurvy seems to have fallen little short of thirteen hundred men. The Rev. Mr. Walker, chaplain of the Centwio?}, after particularizing the horrid event which had taken place, mikes a solemn admonition to our rulers which seems to be somewhat applicable here. " I C'-i'inot but observe," he writes, " how much : 's the duty of all those who, either by office or authority, have any inHucnce in the direction of our naval affairs, to attend to this important article, the preservation of the lives and health of our sramen. If it could be supposed thai the motives of humanity were insufficient for this purpose, yet policy, and a regard to the success of our arms, and the interest and honour of each ])articular commander, should naturally lead us to a careful and impartial examination of every prohible method proposed <> '^ 'M EAS, , it will be iiiklin will he navif^a- aptain Sir preserved s obtained his officers I" centuries probability Indeed, ade in our enterprises, outli Seas ; character, truction of but, what to capture of Mexico, bundation, the capture their sup- ^ould have terms of ave fallen . Walker, orrid event ion to our s the duty have any end to this health of motives of licy, and a nd honour 1(1 us to a od proposed 27 for maintaining a ship's crew in health and vigour. But hath this been always done ? On the contrary, have not salutary schemes been often treated with neglect and contempt ? And have not some of those who have been entrusted with experi- menting their effects been guilty of the most indefensible partiality in the account that they have given of their trial ? I clo not believe this conduct to have arisen from motives so savage as the first reflection thereon does naturally sugges* ; but I rather impute it to i',n obstinate, and, in some degree, superstitious veneration attached to such practices, which have been long established, and to a settled contempt and hatred of all kinds of innovations, especially such as are projected by landsmen and persons residing on shore." It would hardly be supposed that this solemn warning, after such a dreadful event, would ever be lost sight of by those having " the direction of our naval affairs." The late dis- clo: ure of the *' preserved" meats would make it appear that "the preservation of the lives and health of our seamen," either from " policy" or " motives of humanity," was not any longer considered to be " most important in ever?/ point of view" ; ;ind the following correspondence loith the Lords of the Admiralty will also afford a tolerable sort of prime specimen of their " careful and impartial examination of every probable method proposed for maintaining a ship's crew in health and vigour ;" particularly so when " exposed to the rigours of the climate " in the Arctic seas. CORRESPONDENCE. Captain White to the Lords of the Admiralty. Islington, January 1st, 1850. My Lords, — As you will naturally feel most anxious that the ships about to proceed on the Arctic expedition should be provided with everything which could possibly contribute to the health or comfort of the officers and crew, I have this day taken the liberty to forward to your lordships a jar of my curry or mulligatawny paste for trial ; considering that it is possible that it might be found to be most useful, if not valuable, in the Arctic seas. It is perfect, requires no addi- tions, and its general character is tested in a minute, with any meat. I beg also to state, that I have transmitted a jar of it to Captain Collinson in order that he might try it, and I have acquainted him of this address intended to be made to you. Herewith is enclosed some printed instructions for its use ; in addition to which, I would beg leave to observe that it eats fine instead of mustard with hot or cold salt meats, and par- ^Hi', i"JI til^!: f! o i Mi ;i\' i 28 iicularly so with the latter when diluted with vinegar. In tlie absence of all vegetables it will afford an excellent soup. Thus, the salt meat should be boiled in fresh water, and the liquor kept until cold, and skimmed of the fat ; to every quart of liquor, boil in it four ounces of rice, or as much as it will absorb, and when the rice is nearly done, stir in a small bit of the paste, agreeable to palate. Care, however, must be taken that the rice is not boiled too much, or, if so, the fine bland muci- lage with which it abounds will be drawn out, and its stamina lost. It will also be found greatly to improve the flavour of all tlie preserved soups, and to render them far more comforting to the stomach, more durable and supporting, and, what is of great consequence, more conducive to health. This latter point is of so much importance, I should have been tempted to have dwelt upon it but for the fear of being considered obtrusive. However so far I will state, that during the late epidemic the healthful and medicinal qualities of the paste in cases of debility were fairly tested, in scores of in- stances, in many cases in public institutions with the approba- tion of the medical attendants, and in many other cases with- out ; and the results invariably proved most successful, — such, indeed, as had been fully anticipated when the paste was invented twelve years ago. The French cook Charlotte at the Reform Club may be named as one instance, and M. Soyer himself ?s another, who benefited from it after an attack of cholera. It now remains for your lordships to decide as to the possible use of it in the Arctic expeditions now fitting out ; as also whether it is capable of being made generally useful in the Royal Navy. — I have the honour to be, my lords, your most obedient humble servant, W. White. i I Captain White to Captain Collinson, C. B., Commanding H. M.'s Ship Enterprise and expedition fitting out. January 1st, 1850 Sir, — As it must be a matter of the utmost importance that the sliips proceeding upon the Arctic expedition should be provided with everything which can possibly contribute to their comforts or promote the healtli of the officers and crew, I have this day forwarded to the Lords of the Admiralty a jar of my curry or mulligatawny paste, conceiving that it miglit be found useful in the Polar seas, and for tlieir consideration as to its being used in the expedition now fitting out. I have there- fore had the pleasure of forwarding to you to-day, a jar for your obliging acceptance, and which I beg that you will try, instead of mustard or sauce, with anything at dinner as it will at once shew its merits. r. In the ent soup, ir, and the v^ery quart ^ill absorb, bit of the taken that and miici- iminalost. of all the forting to what is of oiild have of being; lat durnig ties of the res of in- approba- ases with- "ul, — such, paste was otte at the M. Soyer attack of le possible t ; as also ;ful in the your most White. nmandiiig out. 1st, 1850 tance that should be tribute to lid crew, I ty a jar of niig'ht be ation as to ave there- , a jar for L will try, I' as it will 29 If the Lords of the Admiralty should decline sending any of it for the use of the expedition, I shall be happy to present for your acceptance a small case for your own use in the Arctic seas. — I have the honour to be, sir, your most obedient servant, AV. White. To Captain Collinson, C. B. &c. &c. The Lords of the Admiralty to Captain White. Admiralty, January 3rcl, 1850. Sir, — With reference to your letter of the 1st instant, trans- mitting ajar of your curry or mulligatawny paste, and offer to supply it for the officers and crew of the Arctic expedition, I am commanded by the Lords Commissioners to thank you for your communication, but to acquaint you that they must decline your offer. — I am, sir, your obedient servant, W. R. Hamilton. To Captain White, &c. &c. Captain White to Captain Collinson. January 4th, 1850. Sir, — The Lords of the Admiralty having declined supply- ing the officers and crew of H. M.'s ships about to be employed in the Arctic seas under your command with the curry or mulligatawny paste, I beg to state that upon your now inti- mating your intention of your obliging acceptance of the pre- sent proposed, it will with very great pleasure be forwarded. — I have the honour to be, sir, your most obedient servant, W. White. To Captain Collinson, C.B. &c. &c. Captain Collinson to Captain White. H. M. S. Enterprize, AVoolwich, January 6th, 1850. Sir, — I shall have much pleasure in accepting the kind pre- sent you are good enough to offer, and will not fail to reserve it for some period of great exertion, when I have little doubt but that I shall be enabled to report satisfactorily as to its nutritious and comforting qualities. It has for several years been my opinion that the substitution of curry instead of peas would be attended with beneficial effects in H. M.'s navy, and had I returned to a tropical climate in charge of a surveying expedition, it was my intention of proposing it to the Lords. — Believe me to be yours very truly, R. Collinson. To Captain White, &c. &c. 30 m • ;'j' J:.' i » Captain White to Captain Collinson. Islington, January 9th, 1850. Sir, — I have this day had the pleasure to forward to H. M. dockyard to your address, a case containing one dozen pints curry or mulligatawny paste, a small jar of curried beef, a copy of my work on " The Evils of Quarantine Laws, and Non- Existence of Pestilential Contagion ; the Means of Prevention and Method of Cure for the Cholera Morbus, &c." published in 1837 ; as also a copy of my " Essay on Curries; their healthful and medicinal properties, and importance in various points of view ; and Doctors Paris and Combe, and the celebrated French physicians Laennec, M. Barras, and Broussais, on diet and indigestion:" by the acceptance of which you will confer a particular favour and I shall be much obliged, hoping that one and all may prove useful or amusing. The observation in your note of the 6th with regard to *' having for some years been of opinion that the substitution of curry in lieu of peas would be attended with beneficial effects in H. M.'s navy ; and had you returned to a tropical climate in charge of a surveying expedition it was your inten- tion to propose it to the Lords of the Admiralty," must I pre- sume be in allusion to its use in soup. In that respect I agree with you, and would recommend rice instead of peas, which are too flatulent, and generate gas. I have, for many years, been convinced that an excellent " beef curry t' preserved in tin, might with great advantage be introduced for use in the navy. I have, therefore, had the pleasure to forward to you a sample of what I have contemplated. It eats fine cold, as well as when warmed. There is neither bone nor fat : six ounces warmed, and a quarter of a pound of rice boiled nice and dry, would be as much as any man could manage. Four ounces warmed in half a pint of water, gives a basin of excellent mul- ligatawny or soup. From Captain Parry's journal we learn that the breaking out of the scurvy greatly depressed the spirits of the ofiicers and men, and that after twenty-seven months, it was one of the principal causes of abandoning further enterprise ; Captain Lyons stating to Captain Parry that he considered the health of the crew " of most importance in every point of view." The medical officers report it to have proceeded " from the pecu- liarity of the climate and service slowly effecting a serious decay in the constitutional powers of the officers, marines, and seamen ; from long continuance on one particular diet — almost total deprivation of fresh animal and vegetable food for above t years, and the necessary close confinement for several months of each severe winter, undoubtedly causing the general alteration of constitution," with " every appearance of an IP^ th, 1850. o H. M. zen pints f, a copy nd Noii- 'evention )lislie(l in healtlit'ul points of jlebrated !, on diet confer a ^ing that ;gard to >stitution )eneficial tropical ur intcn- st I prc- , I agree LS, which ly years, d in tin, he navy. sample well as ounces and dry, r ounces iut mul- )reaking otticers 16 of the Captain e health ." The 16 pecj- serious nes, and almost )r above several general of an 31 increase of sickness;" and therefore, that "the Fur?/ and Hecla passing a third winter in that country, would be ex- tremely hazardous, and probably be attended with very serious consequences, after the general alteration of constitution which had taken place in the officers, marines, and seamen." It also appears that Mr. Fife, the Greenland master of the Hecla, had died of scurvy, " in a state of extreme debility, almost without pain," and that he had taken so great a dislike to the various anti-scorbutic remedies whicli were administered to him, that he could seldom be induced to take any of them." It was facts such as these, presumed to be well remembered, which induced me to obtrude myself upon the attention of the Admiralty ; and I cannot but think that, under similar circum- stances, curries would be higlily useful, and prove to be a powerful anti-scorbutic. It is evident that the "kind of diet" in use, however excellent of its sort, was, from its deficiency of nutriment, or exciting power to preserve health, the chief cause of the " constitutional decay" whicli had been " observed for many months before the scurvy broke out." It also now appears that the same evil, arising from the same cause, has oc- curred in the PloveVj after being only seven months in the ice. It would therefore seem manifest that to prevent a recurrence of such sad disasters, a more nutritious and invigorating diet is necessary. This can alone be found in what I call a good Indian curry ; but certainly not by the use of the materials generally sold for making of the dish. The aromatics strengthen the tone of the stomach, and very materially aids " the all mysterious process of digestion" Hence it is why aromatics are much used in medicine, but certainly with but a very imperfect knowledge of the extent of their powers for the preservation of health or the prevention and cure of disease. Now, sir, 1 will wish you farewell. May Providence protect you your officers and crew through your perilous voyage, and crown the object of your praiseworthy exertions with complete success, and speedily restore you safe to your native land and friends ! — I remain, sir, yours obliged and truly, W. White. To Captain Collinson, &c. &c. Captain Collinson to Captain Whitb. Captain Collinson returns his sincere thanks for the kind and useful present Captain White has sent him, and although he feels very grateful now, has not a doubt but what he will be more so, after experiencing a comfortable repast after a hard day's work in the Polar Regions. H. M. S. Enterprise, Greenhithe, January 10th, 1850. i 'U ll 32 Captain White to Captain Collinson. Islington, January 14, 1850. SiR^—Many thanks for your very kind and flattering note, and I sincerely hope that after " reserving the paste for some period of great exertion," yoii may not be disappointed in your expec- tations of a " comfortable repast" from it " after a hard day's work in the Polar Regions." I must beg of you to beheve that you are under no obliga- tion to me for so paltry a present ; and which would not have been made so small but that I was apprehensive that if it was larger its acceptance might prove to be irksome. The only value it can possibly have, is the utility it may possibly prove when you are in those frightful regions of ice and snow. Finding that you touch at Devonport, I have availed myself of the opportunity of forwarding to you that which may pro- bably be of much importance in case of the scurvy attacking the crew. In my letter of the 9th I alluded to the effects which the scurvy had upon Captain Parry's officers and crew. That cir- cumstance has induced me to direct my attention to endeavour to supply you with such information as I think may be the means of preventing a similar catastrophe in future. At page 57 of "The Evils of Quarantine Laws," &c., you will perceive the great difference of opinion which prevailed before a committee of the House of Commons as to the treat- ment of scurvy, between the highest medical officers of the navy, Sir AVilliam Blane and Dr. Baird, and other physi- cians of great eminence, such as Dr. Charles Maclean, and Drs. Roffet and Latham.* The two former avowed that * During the Milbank pestilence of 1823 — a mixture of scurvy and dysentery, — the disputes ran so high between the medical authorities as to the treatment, by Drs. Latham and Roget of it with calomel, that a com- mittee of the House of Conmions was appointed to examine medical authorities upon the practice, the mortidity liaving been dreadful, and some of the doctors imputing it in great measure to the treatment which had been pursued. The Select Committee having asked those two physicians, " Have you any observations to make upon what has been said ? " replied, " One word only : after all the hinting, hesitating, and disapproving, the unanimous conviction of my colleague and myself is, that if we had not treated this disease upoji general 2i>'inciples, and that if, in particic/ar, we had not pushed that owe remedy of mercury to the full extent to uliich we have pushed it, every one of the individuals ivho have been affected tcith dysentery in the Penitentiary mould have inevitably perished. We have stated it as the result of our observation, that certain dysenteries (and the dysentery of the Penitentiary is one of them) are as actually controlled by mercury as that disease is certainly controlled by it, for which mercury is a reputed specific." But so completely did the doctors disagree with regard to the use of calomel at the Milbank Penitentiary epidemic, which was "scurvy and dysentery," one of them, Su: WilHam Blane, assumed that " mercury was 33 they spoke in utter ignorance of the nature of the disease, or of the practice which had been pursued and had proved to be most successful. I have therefore forwarded for your inforuia- I II tiou some exceedingly valuable extracts, cases of scurvy of the ■ ;| most intense form, from a work of the late Dr. Charles Maclean, in which he and other physicians had successfully treated it, in order that, should occasion arise, they may be consulted, I have not a doubt of the success of the practice in every case^ if the instructions of the talented doctor are but attended to. Under them, as you will perceive, a captain in the army was enabled to save the whole of a ship's crew in as desperate u condition as could possibly be. Why should not doctors be able to do the same ? I have been the more anxious to send you those extracts because in the Furj/ and IJecIa the anti-scorbutic particularly lelied upon was lime-juice. Whereas it is but an indifferent substitute for the nitric acid, which, if properly administered, seldom fails in the worst cases, and where it does, as it will be seen, mercury and opium always had the effect. I trust that occasion may never arise to require the use of such remedies; but if it should, I shall be ha])py to find that this communication has not been without its good use. I would however beg to suggest, that, like the paste, you reserve the information for a period when the doctor's prescriptions may have failed. They will then be better appreciated, and readily attended to. Once more bidding you adieu, with an anxious desire that every good may attend you, — I remain. Sir, yours truly and much obliged, W. White. To Captain Collinson, &c. &c. . prejudicial in scurvy, and he would dismiss a medical officer from the navy who should employ it." Dr. Baird, another naval medical witness, also declared that " he had never heard or read of the practice, and he would do the same." "Now, if they had never heard or read of the practice, they never could have known the scientific application of mercury in that disease to be fol- lowed by failure, or to be absolutely productive of mischief. Then, upon what grounds could their pmn objections to the practice bo maintained? With what assurance and face of brass could they dare venture to diamiss a surgeon, who should successfully use a powerful medicine the valuable properties of which they were themselves, by their own admission, un- happily ignorant of." "Dr. Maclean proved, in the year 1796, the utility of calomel in dysentery. It is forty-seven years since it was discovered, thirteen since the Board from the College of Physicians were at last obliged to admit that it " had been very successfully adopted in this disease" in the Penitentiary, yet to this hour they have not adopted or countenanced it. The reason is this, they are totally ignorant of its powers and the scientific principles on which it should be employed."— Captain fVhite's Evils of Quarantine Laws, S^c. 34 By Captain CoUinson's notes it would appear tolerably clear, that had the Lords of the Admiralty condescended to have consulted him as to the sup}»lyin<; of tJic proposed material for the expedition under his coniuiand, he would have recom- mended its use ; and, in all probability, now that he may be in a perilous ])Osition in the Arctic regions, avowedly with the scurvy on board, he regrets the want of its " nutritious and comforting qualities" for general use amongst his crew. It is not for Cajjtain ^Vhite to call in question the propriety of the decision to which their lordship's had come to, but he may be permitted to observe, that the subject of his communication seemed to have required more consideration than it met with. Indeed, the very sailing orders of the Admiralty to Ca])tain Collinson would point out the importance which attached to the suggestion, or to any remedy that afforded a prospect of preventing scurvy in the crew. The Plover, after having been but seven months in the Arctic seas, had then just returned to the Siuidwich Islands, with the crew much affected by the scurvy. Their lordships, therefore, " considering the nature of the service on which the Plover will already have been em- ployed, and that a portion of the crew may be tiiifit to contend with llie rigours of a further stay in those latitudes," directed Captain Collinson " to call for volunteers from that ship and Herald, to form a crew for the Plover^ and the remainder necessary to make up the crew to be made from the Enterprise and the Investigator." This was accordingly done ; and we now find that the Plover has again for a second time returned to the SandAvicli Islands, with the scurvy on board ; and that the Dccdalus assisted her again by removing the men with the scurvy, and replenishing her with some of her own crew. The Enterprise and Investigator were " equipped for the Polar climate with warm-air apparatus." This was all very well for the lungs and skin ; but surely, when " considering the nature of the service" in which they were to be " employed," some " warm apparatus" for the stomach and the belly might also as well have been supplied. Upon the occasion of the fitting out of the expedition under the command of Captain Austin Captain White thought it expedient to transmit to the gallant commander a copy of the correspondence which had taken place with the Lords of the Admiralty and Captain Collinson, in order that, if he thought fit, he might ^ have the opportunity of securing some of the material for his own use. It was accompanied ,.ith ajar of the curried beef, as presented to Captain Collinson, and in a day or two a jar of the paste. The same etiquette was observed to Captain Ommanney. 35 II. M. S. Itcso/ule, "Woolwich, 20tli March 1850. My dear Sill, — I am directed by Captain Austin to request yon to accej)t his warmest and best thanks for your very kind and acccptabk; present ; the })roperties of which he is anxious to take an early opportunity of testing. Captain Austin desires me also to say, that as the dietary of tlie expedition now fittin<^ out under his connnand lias been already fixed upon and ordered, he does not feel himself justified in recommending- any alteration or addition thereto. — I have the honour to be, Sir, your obedient servant, James Priggs, R.N, To Captain White, &c. &c. Witli the " dietary" so " fixed," there was a large supjdy of smashed apples and lime-juice intended as a new antiscorbutic — Captain Collinson had also been supplied with the same. But it does not, however, ai)pear to have been very i)otent, as the Enterprise, Resolute, Assistance, and, for aught we know, the Investigator, have all suffered fiom the scurvy ; and, as far as smashed apples go, we may safely say that it never will ^irevent or have any decided effect in checking it. II. M. S. Asslstanccy Woolwich, loth March 1850. Captain Ommanney presents his com])liments to Captain White, and begs to express his thanks for the present of curry paste which has been so kindly forwarded to him, and hopes soon to try its good qualities, which he will report upon. To Captain White, &c. &c. Captain White having forwarded to the care of Mr. Sloman of the " Ship" at Woolwich the jars of curried beef and paste for Captains Austin and Ommanney, the latter being residing at his house. Captain White was somewhat surprised by a note to find Captain Collinson acknowledge the receipt of the paste, and no notice taken of the beef which was sc t as a sample of what had been submitted to Captain Collinson, in answer to his observation that " curry might be introduced with advantage into H. M,'s ships," a note was written to Captain Collinson expressing a hope that it had been received safe, and the following was the reply : — H. M. S. Assistance, Woolwich, 10th April 1850. Dear Sir, — I have given your curry paste a further trial, which proves very palatable and satisfactory, I shall there- fore thank you to forward me eighteen pots for my sea-stock. The curried beef which you spoke of I have never seen. c 2 I ]■:! 36 Slioukl you favour nio Nvltli another si)ccimcii, I sliall ])e luippy to give it a trial. — I rcinain, yours truly, Eras. Osimannev. To Captain White. To Mr. SLOMANof the " Ship," at Woolwich. Islington, April 17th, 18.^0. Sir, — I have been much surprised by a note which I have rec(?ivcd from Captain Ominanney, II. M.'s ship Assistance, by which it appears that tlie jar of curried beef wliich was trans- mitted to you on the 8th of March, accompanied by a note requestino- that you would j)resent it to that ollicer with my respectful compliments, has not been received. Ca])tain Ommanney in that note says, — " with regard to the curi'ied beef wliich you speak of, I have not seen ; and should you favour me with another specimen I shall be happy to give it a trial." I must beg that you will have the goodness, by return of post, to afford me an explanation of the affair. — Sir, I am your obedient servant, W. "White. Mr. SlOiMAn to Captain White. Snip Hotel. Sir, — I cannot see by what right or reason such a note as I received this day from you should be wrote ; for, whatever parcels you sent here, wlioever they were for, to them tliey were sent as soon as the addresses of those gentlemen were known. Captain Ommanney was staying with me for a few days till his lady came down, then he went into lodgings, and to those lodgings I sent whatever was received here for him ; and the parcels for Caj)tain Austin I was advised to keep till he came to AVoolwich ; and as soon as I knew that gentle- man's address here, to him 1 sent your parcels, so I cannot really see any sufficient excuse for your writing to me in the terms of the note of this day. — I am, sir, your obedient servant, William Sloman. To Captain White, &c. &c. Captain White to Mr. Sloman. Islington, April 27tli, 1S50. Sir, — Your note, without date, post-mark the 18th, has been received, and it is very unsatisfactory. There is but one " parcel," the delivery of which is called in question ; and that is the " curried beef." It can be proved that it was delivered to you on the evening of the 8th of March. It was accompanied with a note of that date, in reply to one of yours of the same day, in which you *^^ 37 say, " WG arc full of anient spirits ; and real (jood fellows they arc. I slioiikl wish you to come down, and spend an evening' with those jolly ' North Polars,' who, no doubt, would appre- ciate your splendid ' curry.' Captain Onnnanncy is here, and his lady is about to join him here next week." It was the circumstance of Captain Onunanney residing at your house, that induced me to send the present of the three- j)oundjar of "curried beef," for the jolly "North Polar" through your hands, with a ho})e that he would have had an oppor- tunity of testing its " excellent quality." 1 was the more in- cited to do so as in that nolo you say, " only bear in mind captain, tiiat you may safely reckon on my assistance in making- known the excellency of your discovery." It is seen by your notes that Captain Omnianney was residing at your house on the 8th of March, and that he continued to do so until after the 15tli. In your note of the 20th of A})ril you say, " Captain Ommanney was staying with me for a few days until his lady came down ; he then went into lodgings, and to those lodgings I sent whatever was received for him here." The 8th of March was on a Monday. Wlien Captain Ommanney's lady "came down" " next week," it could not have been earlier than Monday the loth. Thus, by your own shewing, he was residing at your house for at least a ^eek after the present was delivered to you. In a note of the 15th of March Captain Ommanney acknow- ledged the receipt of a " present of a jar of curry paste." It had been transmitted directed to him at your house, subse- quent to the forwarding of the jar of beef. As in it he had taken no notice of the receipt of the latter, on ray replying to the note I expressed a hope that it had been received safe. On the IGtli of April, his reply is, " tlic curried heef of ichich you spoke 1 have never seen"! Frou) these facts it is clear that although Captain Ommanney was residing at your house when the present was received it was not delivered to him ; and, equally so, that it was " not after he went into lodgings to those lodgings sent." It is under circumstances such as these that you tell me, you " cannot sec hy what right or reason' I " beg of you to afford me an explanation of the matter," as you " cannot see a sufficient excuse" for my having done so. It is certainly a very effron- tory way of dismissing the subjoJt ; but it will not do. 1 call upon you for a better explanation than that which you have sent ; and also to unriddle your inconsistencies. It is impera- tive since you have endeavoured, and not in a very creditable manner, to extenuate yourself by calling in question the vera- city of Ca])tain Ommanney, by indicating that he must have received a present which he declares he has " never seen"! I consider that you have treated both Captain Ommanney and mm lliJl' 38 myself very ill, and that without " any svfficient c:cmc" Pre- vious to the 8tli of March, I had presented you vith n pint jar of the paste and a jar of the curried heef, for which you returned your " best thanks." Subsequently, by your own in- vitation, I " relied upon you" ; and what has been the result ? I have sustained injury and loss by your conduct; andCajitain Onunanney is gone to sea without articles which he otlic wise would have had. A copy of the correspondence has been forwarded to^ that officer; and upon the reply that may be sent to this, my future proceedings will depend.— Sir, yours obediently, W. White. To ]\rr. Sloman, Ship Hotel, Woolwich. Copies of Captain White's note and Mr. Sloman's reply being forwarded to Captain Ommanney, tlie following was the reply : — II. M. S. Assistances Wool'vich, 23rd April 1850. Dear Sir, — I regret you should have taken so much trouble about the jar of curried beef. It is to be hoped that it fell i)ito the hands of the "jolly North Polar fellows," who will appre- ciate its merits. I shall thank you to forward twelve pots of the paste, similar to that you sent as a specimen, and twelve jars of the curried beef, the same size that you sent me. Tliey should be here if jiossible to-morrow, as we leave on Thursday. — I remain, yours truly. Eras. Ovmanney. To Captain White, &c. &c. Captain White to Captain Sir John Ross, C.B. Islington, March 9th, 1850. SiT{, — Considering the great experience which you have had in the Polar seas, and the i)robability of your again proceeding there, I have been induced, although a stranger, to take the liberty of addressing you upon a subject which may net be altogether unacceptable, as it is connected with the :omi'orts, welfare, and tlie lieaKli of officers and crews of ships destined to explore the Arctic seas in search of Sir John Franklin and crew. lEerewitli 1 have the honour to forward, for your obliging perusal, a '^cpy of a correspondence which has taken place be- twecn the Lords of (iie Admiralty, Captain Collinson, and my- self, upon the use of curry ii- the exploring ships as an occa- sion d more stimulating and invigorating diet for the otHcers and crew ; as also probably efficacious as an anti-scorbutic — a disease from which former expeditions have sutferf d much. "m 39 Debility, extreme debility, is tlie piominont leature of fclie scurvy. " Rejecting diseases of indirect debility and exces- sive excitement," says the late celebrated Dr. Charles Maclean, " facts and inferences shew the reception of only one class of morbid affections which consist on deficient excitement, and to be oiired by a proportional increase of the action of tlie excit- ing- powers." TJie scurvy in the Fur?/ and Ilecla, which is animadverted upon in my letter to Captain Collinson, in the first i)lace is asci'ibed to " the long continuance on one particular diet," as the ])rincipal cause of producing" the " seri'^us decay in the con- stitutional powers of the officers, marines, and seamen ;" and in the second, to " the peculiarity of the climate and service" in the Arctic seas. The scurvy, the epidemic of the sea, has frequently appeared in various climates, hot and cold, and in the extreme seasons of the year. " Epidemic and pestilential diseases," says Dr. Charles Maclean, " are produced by the diminished exciting powers of the atmosphere, somprehending all the intermediate degrees of affection between the slightest catarrh and the most destructive pestilence, — to which diminished exciting power is always superadded the influence of heat and moisture, soi! and situation, food and water, corporeal labour, the passions and emotions of the mind." In this short sentence we have a truly philosophic explana- tion of the concurrent causes which produced the scurvy in Commodore Ai'sou'^ ileet, round Cape Horn and the South seas, as also in the JFu?'?/ and llccla in the Ai'ctic. It shews that under similar circumstances the disease would again ap])ear. It also shews tliat " the continuance on one particidar diet" could only have been so far an auxiliary in ])roducing the disease, or the "gradual and serious decay of the constitutional powers of the othcerci, marines, and seamen," in as fa." as that it was deficient in " nutriment," or '' exciting power," to resist the effects of the " diminished exciting powers of the atmosphcie ;" and it demonstrates that a more stimulating and invigorating diet was retpiired. " When a patient is weak," says Dr. Mac- lean, " he not only requires a greater sum of exciting po>ver, but jjrovided that applied be the proper kind, and adequ.'ilj in degr-.je, and i<^& action duly supported, it will give him a con- stant acquisition of strength." Mr. Fife, the Greenland master of the Ileda, as will be seen by my letter to Captal-i C^Hinson, had been for several weeks ""in a' state of extreme debility, almost without jtain," and he had taken so great a dislike to the various anti-scorbutic remedies which were administered to him, that he could seldom be induced to take any of them," and for the " three weeks pre- vious to his death, the debility continued to increase." 5| .< iii 40 Here we have a case vvliich " consisted in deficient excite- ment," and which was required "to be cured by a pro})ortionate increase of the action of the exciting powers." The " exciting powers" or remedies, applied in this instance, were either not ^^ proper in kind" or, if" proper in kind" not " adequate in degree," or their " action didy supported ;" for the patient, instead of " ac- quiring a constant acquisition of strength" became weaker every day until such time as death terminated his miserable existence. Luis case of Mr. Fife affords a practical illustratiou of the correctness of Dr. Maclean's remark, that " it is in duly appor- tioning the sum, or allotting- the kind of remedial powers to the sum of disease and the nature of the organs affected, that medical skill may be said almost wholly to exist." The question then is, in the scurvy what are the '•^proper kind" of " exciting powers" to be applied in order to resist a " disease j^roduced by the diminished exciting jiowers of the atmosphere." It is generally admitted that diet has much to do in the production of scurvy. It would therefore follow, that whenever there is a tendency to that disease, the exciting properties of the food ought to be regulatec; to tlie higliest possible standard compatible with health, in order, by those means, to resist the baneful effects of the " dinunished exciting power of the atmosphere, to which is superadded the influeoca of heat, cold, moisture, food, and water, corporeal labour, the passions and emotions of the mind," so ^^ pecidiar to the climate and service" in the Arctic sers. It will be rememberod that, during the cholera of 1849, the Genejicil Board of Health prohibited the use of "cabbages," " fruit, though dried," " salt meats," and " &e.," as calculated to produce the disease ; and that the Loyal College of Piiy- sicians, " considering that the pubMc would naturally, on that occasion, look to them for advice," exhorted them to the use of the articles so condemned, " as with most persons a proportion of those articles were necessary for the preservation of health," and that " nothing promotes the spread of epidemics so much as die want of nutriment to fall into that ill condition wliich, in its highest degree, is called scurvy." It would be out of place here to comment upon so disgrace- ful a collision at such a period between two such important public bodies, or to point out what evils it may have produced ; but if such high authorities as the lioyal College of Physicians admit, that the want of " nvtriment" in food " promotes the spread of epidemics," and " induces to fall into that ill condition which, in its highest degree, is called scurvy," it will be clear that the food taken into the Arctic seas should possess all the '' nutriment" possible to resist the baneful oliects of the " pecu- liarity of the climate and service." And, for this purpose, we may ask, what food would be so appropriate and proper as a h i m 41 good " beef curry" witli some rice. A " beef curry" made as that jiresented to Captain Coliiiison by me, a jar of which I have now the honour of forwarding for trial by you, ] osscsses the higliest possible degree of nutriment and exciting power capable of being introduced into food. While the rice, which should always be eaten with it, possesses the valuable twofold properties of vegetable and bread, and the mild bland nmcilage with which it abounds, shields the stomach and intestines IVoni acrimonious humours. Matters of no small importance to sailors in the Arctic seas. "The reappearance of Jie scurvy" on board the Hccla and the Fury, " in the most favourable month of the year," after beiKf^ but twenty-seven months at sea, with eighteen months provision still on board, evidently demonstrated the necessity of a 'more stimulating and invigorating diet. It was in this dilemma that Captain Lyons told Captain Parry, " I consider the healtii of your crew most important, in every point of view." An axiom that must ever hold good at sea, and proves that too much attention cannot be paid to the food ; especially !l"o in the Arctic seas. I trust that I shall be pardoned obtruding so long upcii your time and attention a subject which your great exjiericnce enables you to form a correct opinion upon. I may be right — and I do not think that I am wrong in my conclusion — that as an occasional diet, and under extraordinary circumstances, the ships of the royal and mercantile navies require for the main- tenance of liealth., a more stimulating and invigorating diet i-ian has hitherto been in use. As well as the jar of " curried beef," I have the honour to forward for your obliging acceptance and trial, ajar of the curry or mulligatawny paste, as presented to the L*^ rds of the Admiralty and Captain Cc^linson. With regard to the use of lime-juice as an anti-scorbutic facts and circumstances have induced me to believe that too mneli reliance has been placed upon it, and that more efficient r 'media's might be found. I have considered the subject well, a 1 .•»i;' the sake of humanity I have tried to make one out. CciiSkl zing what you and your ])eople may hereafter have to endui'ij '' om so implacable a foe, I have invented for your use, if upon trial you should ajiprove of it, a new anti-scor- butic aciu, which, from its peculiar component parts, I have every reason to hope that it would prove far more efficacious than the lime-juice. I have, therefore, the honour to forward a small bottle of it for an obliging examination by you. With many apologies for this extremely lengthy communi- cation, which I trust that the imi)ortance of the interests at iiw{;k ' may seem to excuse, I. shall be very much gratified to iind that it has not given offence, or proved to be altogether ^i 42 unacceptable to you. — I have tlic honour to be, sir, your most obedient servant, W. White, Late Captain II. E. C.'s Bengal Army, To Captain Sir John Ross, R.N., CIS., &c. &c. Captain Sir John Ross, R.N., C.B., to Captain White. 267 Strand, 18th March, 1850. My dear Sir, — I have to acknowledge, with many thanks, your communication of the 9th instant, and enclosures contain- ing' your correspondence with the Admiralty and Captain Collinson, which could not be but deeply interesting- to me, particularly so as I am about to proceed on a voyage wlierein the information thus afforded may be of infinite service. It is true that, having been employed on services wher6 the health of tlie crew was of more than ordinary importance, my attention has long been called to the subject, and I have ascertained, beyond all doubt, that the great secret for the preservation of health, is to vary the diet as much as possible, that is, not to live many fhys without a change. I have known even ships at Spitliead, ' ■ on fresh beef and vegetables, attacked with scurvy, whic .sappeared when a change of salt meat was given. I am noi of opinion that the atmosphere has anything to do with disease. The Esquimaux lives entirely on animal food, and the scurvy is unknown amongst them, although they have neither vegetable nor farinaceous food ; and this I attribute to the quantity of animal oil which tliey consume, and which acts on the bowels in the same Avay that vegetable food does with us. I have found that lime-juice, with sugar, is a preventive but not a cure for the scurvy ; and I consider any acid, which, by any chemical process, is dejjrived of its nutri- tious, is also deprived of its anti-scorbutic qualities. In the year 1795, I was fifth mate of the Queen East Indiaman. We had a most tedious passage from Bengal, and out of 105 men, fifteen had perished, with the scurvy. On arriving at St. Helena, those who were very badly affected, twenty-eight in number, were carried on shore, and buried in eaVth up to their chin, and fed on water-cresses, and it was astonishing to sec how wonderfully they recovered, not one of them died. The absence of scurvy among the natives of India is attri- buted (and I believe justly) to the universal use of curry, which, by stimulating the digestive organs, must be very conducive to health, and I have no doubt that the curry paste produced at your manufactory, which is certainly much superior to any that I have met with, must have a most salutary efiect, and I would strongly recommend that a considerable proportion should be supplied. Nothing could be better than the heef curry you were so kind as to send me to report upon, and ■I 1 43 whicli I received Avlieii I had a party of friends, and who were iiiiauiiiious as to its excellent flavour and quality. If the acid you sent me has not gone through a chemical process, which could destroy ite nutritious or anti-scorbutic qualities, it will also be a great advantage to the navy, espe- cially if not more expensive than lime-juice. It is much more palatable, and its acidity being moderate, it cannot have an injurious effect on the constitution. AVith regard to the cure of the disease, there is, I believe, none in which there is so complete a difference of opinion ; and it is possible that all may be right in some cases, of whicli there is ind d a great variety ; but I believe that when it lias attacked the heart, there is little hope for the patient. The practice of giving opium and calomel, I believe to be peculiar to Dr. Maclean, and I think may very probably be the most eflbctual. I beg to return you my best thanks for your valuable com- munication on this interesting subject, and I remain with truth and regard, dear sir, your very humble servant, John Ross. To Captain White, &c. &c. Captain Sir John Ross to Captain White. P. M. 18th March 1850. Dear Sir, — I had finished the report you will receive herewith, when your kind note of this day's date arrived, with the second specimen of your anti-scorbutic acid^ which I have also tried, and find agreeable to the taste, though a little more piquante than the former. If the liquid has gone through no chemical process v.^hich could destroy the nutritious and anti- scorbutic qualities, there can be no doubt it would be superior to lime-juice, as being less severe on the constitution, and less liable to injure the coats of the stomach. It is well-known tliat the powders for making lemonade, sold in the shops, have no effect in preventing scurvy, from its antiscorbutic qualities being annihilated in the chemical process of its production. But if the ingredients of which your acid is made are in their original state, there can be no doubt but its use will be effectual. I am not yet in a position to give you an order for the sujiply, but when I am you shall hear from me. I am sure that Captain Austin will be as desirous as I am to give your inventions a fair trial ; and if we have an opportunity, there can be no doubt that you will have a full and fair report from us both. I again entreat you to accept of my best thanks, and I remain, very faithfully, dear sir, your very humble servant, John Ross, Captain, R.N. To Captain White, &c. &c. 44 T Captain AViiite to Sir John Ross, R.N., C.B. Islington, March 28th, 1850. My dear Sir, — I have with mucii pleasure to acknowledge the receipt of your kind and valuable '* Report on Curries," for whicli I request that you will accept of my most sincere thanks, and for the trouble which you have taken to peruse luy letter of the 9tli instant and the documents which accom- panied it. It is extremely gratifying to find that the correspondence with the Lords of the Admiralty and Captain Collinson proved to be " deeply interesting" to you ; and that, in event of your " proceeding on "> voyage to the Arctic seas, the information" thus afforded " may be of infinite service to you." " To vary the diet as much as possible," I believe with you, is one of the " great secrets for preserving of health." You state that you " have known even ships at Spithead, living upon fresh beef and vegetables, attacked with scurvy, which disappeared when a change of salt meat was given." To salt provisions has usually been ascribed the cause of scurvy. The precedent you refer to would reverse the order of things. But it is not the only instance with plenty of fresh provisions on board that the scurvy has raged even unchecked by salted meat, of which, it is presumed, they had plenty on board. It was the case in Commodore Anson's fleet in the South Seas, and also in the Fury and Hecla in the Arctic seas. You state that you are " not of opinion that the atmosphere has anything to do with the scurvy," the epidemic of the sea ; and the reason which you offer in confirmation of it is, thai " the Esquimaux live entirely on animal food, and the scurvy is unknown among them, although they have neither vegetable nor farinaceous food ;" and you " attribute it to the quantity of animal oil wdiich they consume." Those observations are, I presume, intended to be applied to the opinion which I have quoted from Dr. Charles Maclean, that " all epidemic and pestilential diseases are produced by the diminished exciting power of the atmosphere." It is of little or no consequence whatsoever why the scurvy is " unknown among tlie Esquimaux." It is sufficient that the crew of the Fury and Hecla were attacked by it in a severe epidemic form ; tiiat it com})elled the abandonment of the expedition ; and that the surgeons of those ships declared it to proceed from the " peculiarity of the clhnate ;" and, moreover, it will be pretty clear that British sailors could not live in the Arctic regions, like the Esquimaux, on " animal oil" Hi])pocrate9, the father of physic, and the most celebrated 46 Ig-G I ancient and modern physicians, attributed all epidemics to proceed from the state of the atmos])herc. The philanthropic Dr. Arbutlmot affirms that " there arc no changes in human bodies known, but are produced by the contents, properties, and qualities wliich, we are assured, the air is endued with, espe^'. illy by the great enormities and sudden successions and alter itions." The destruction of Anson's fleet by the scurvy was evidently brought about by " the great enormities and sudden successions and alterations, contents, properties, and qualities of the air." It broke out twice, at two distinct seasons of the year, winter and summer ; in different climates, the one warm, the other cold. The talented historian, Walker, the chaplain of the fleet, records it : — " We opened the straits Le Marie at 10 A.M. on the 7th of March 1741, in excellent health and spirits, with fine weather and a brisk gale ; and were hurried through by the rapidity of the tide in about two hours, though they are seven or eight leagues long*. The brightness of the sky, and the serenity of the weather was indeed most remark- ably pleasing ; for though the winter Avas advancing apace, yet the morning of this day, in its brilliance and mildness, gave place to none we had seen since our departure from England. * * We had scarcely reached the southern extremity of the straits of Le Marie, when our flattering hopes were instantly- lost in the apprehension of immediate danger. For, before the foremost ships of the squadron were clear of the straits, the serenity of the sky was suddenly changed, and gave all the pi'esage of an impending storm. The wind shifted to the southward, and blew in violent squalls." This was " followed by a succession of violent gales, such as the oldest and most experienced mariners on board had never witnessed. Soon after passing the straits, the scurvy made its appearance." From this it would appear to be clear, that " the great enormities, and sudden successions and alterations, contents, properties, and qualities of the air," was the immediate cause which in that instance produced the scurvy. According to the learned historian, by the end of August 1741, the Cc?itu?w?i had lost two hundred and ninety-two seamen, and out of one hundred and twenty-six marines but four remained alive ! The Gloucester, another of the squadron, wdth a much smaller crew, had also buried two hundred and ninety seamen, and forty-six marines out of forty-eight. The Trial, out of her complement of eighty, had buried forty-two. Thus those three ships, which, on their departure from England, had nine hundred and sixty- one men on board, from the period when they passed the straits of Le Marie, the 7th of March, had lost six hundred and twenty-six men. The frightful ravages of the disease upon that ill-fated m 46 expedition did not end there. By the middle of Sept. 1741, the survivors were again In good healtli, and on the 19tli the three ships left Juan Fernandez. In May 1742, when tliey were leaving the coast of Mexico, they again encountered a succession of storms ; the Gloucester and Trial had been rendered unseaworthy, and were both sunk. By tlie 28tli of August 1742, when tliey arrived at Tinian, " all the imnds," says Walker, " they could muster, capable of standing to a gun, of the united crews of the Centurion, Gloucester, and Trial, which consisted altogether, when we departed from England, of near a thousand souls, including some negro and Indian prisoners, amounted to seventy-one, most of which number too were incapable of duty." Of this second attack, the historian makes the following Important remarks : — " Some of us were at first willing to bel.eve that in this warm climate, so different to what we felt In passing round Cape Horn, the violence of this disease, and Its fatality, might in some degree be mitigated, as It has not been unusual to suppose, tlia^ its particular virulence in that passage was in a great measure owing to the severity of the weather. But the havoc of this distemper In our present circumstances soon convinced us of the falsity of this speculation, as It likewise exploded some other opinions, which usually pass current about the cause and nature of this disease. It has generally been presumed, that plenty of fresh provisions, and of water, are effectual preventions of this malady. In this instance, we had a considerable stock of fresh provisions on board, as hogs and fowls , and we every day caught great abundance of fish ; and each man had five pints of water a day. Yet neither were the sick thereby relieved, nor the progress of the disease retarded. It has been esteemed that to keep ships clean and airy between decks as much as possible would prevent the appearance of scurvy, or at least mitigate Ifs effects. We kept all our ])orts open, and took all pains In cleansing and sweetening the ships, yet neither the progress nor the virulence of the disease were thereby sensibly abated." From this we collect the Important truths, that climate, heat or cold, the presence or absence of fresh provisions, is not the great remote cause of the scurvy at sea, although influenced by them ; but that, hke the epidemics of the land, it depends upon a jiecullar state of tiie atmosphere, capable of giving rise to it, and according to its degree will be the Intensity of the disease. The disease has appeared under every variety of circum- stance, latitudes, and seasons of the year; and this forcibly brings to our consideration the importance of the observation of Dr. Charles Maclean, that " of the qualities of the air upon which those maladies depend, we are ignorant, excepting as they manifest themselves in their effects, and if we had at all 47 times the means of ascertaining, it would be of little use unless we could have, at the same time, the power of remedying them." The learucd doctor also observes: — "The causes of epidemic diseases, in counju:)n with other diseases, is an undue or diminished action of certain exciting powers upon the organs particularly aH'ectcd. Tlic principal exciting power is, in this case, the atmospheric air. If the cause of any effect be that without which it cannot be produced, and if epidemic diseases never arise but in a noxious atmosphere, it follows that a noxious atmosphere must be the cause of those maladies. There can nothing else be necessary. "The experience of the years 1849, 1850, and 1851, esta- blishes that axiom. The Tliames, ' the polluted Thames,' grave-yards, drains and sewers, could not, in the same seasons, in one year be a source of pestilence and death, and for two succeeding years become a fountain of health." " Whatever," says Dr. Maclean,* " be the precise nature of those changes in the properties of the air, by which epidemic affections are produced, as all diseases are the result of dimi- nished excitation, it is competent to infer that, in this instance, the effect is produced entirely in consequence of a diminution of the exciting power of the vital element. This change may con- sist of a diminished exciting power of the air in its ordinary state, or when that power has rreviously been unusually augmented. Hence, in the production of pestilences, an importance is justly attributed to unusuol vicissitudes of the atmosphere. From every record of epidemic and pestilential diseases, it appears that they have their stated seasons of recurrence ; that those seasons are such months as are most remarkable for vicissitudes of the atmosphere ; that they become general only in years when those vicissitudes are extreme ; that they do not occur in seasons when the degrees of heat or cold, however intense, are equable, nor in years when the state of the atmosphere remains temperate throughout, and that they uniformly cease with the establishment of an equable state of the atmosphere, whether the weather be hot or cold." " Although there can be no doubt that, from the improved condition of societies in modern times, a more highly noxious state of the atmosphere is necessary to produce the same degree of disease, and that plagues will, consequently, continue to be much less frequent than formerly in civilized countries, yet it cannot reasonably be inferred, either that they will remain ex- empt from them, or that, when they do occur, the mortality will not be as great as formerly." How ])rophetic were those forebodings, and how amjily were they verified in the years 1848 and 1849 ! There had * Dis.ertation on the Source Ci Epidemics aud Pestilential Diseases, 1796. 48 been no cpideuilc of an intense form since the Great Plague of London ; for, altliough in 1832 the country suffered much from cholera, the atmosphere was not sufHciently impure to raise a pestilence. Yet, in 1832, the metropolis was in a far more crowded and filthy state than in 1849, with Fleet Market, Sullron-hill, St. Giles's, &c. " The all surroundhig heaven, the vital air, Is bi{,' with death ; and though the putrid south Be shut, thougli no convulsive agony Shakes from the de(>p foundation of the world The imprisoned plagues, a secret venom oft Corrupts the air, the water, and the land." Science of Life. It is a curious circumstance which you mention as having* happened in the Quem East Indiaman in 1795, when you were a midshijunan, on her voyage from Bengal to St. Helena. You state that you had had " a most tedious passage" to the island, no doubt occasioned by storms ; and of the crew of 105 men, " fifteen had died of the scurvy, and that seventy were still laid up witli it on our arrival at that island ;" and that then " those who were badly affected (twenty-five in numbei') were carried on shore, and buried up to the chin in earth, and fed upon water-cresses, and th'".. it was astonishing to see how wonderfully they recovered, and not one of them died." It is not difficult to conjecture the share which the water- cresses, combined with other causes, may have had in pro- ducing the wonderful recovery ; but it is not so easy to com- prehend what effect the burying them up to the chin could have had in bringing it about. Are we to assume from it, that the earth possesses properties capable of absorption by the pores of the skin ; that they are re-vivifying, invigorating, and affording nutriment to the human frame — the same as with plants? I look upon the practice to have been one of those extravagant acts of folly to which the conjectural art of medicine is so prone, without any rational cause capable of being assigned for its adoption, and which has so much dis- graced the medical profession, and brought the science into con- tempt. Of those extravagant acts of folly, we had recently some tolerable proofs during the cholera, with " cold wet sheets" and "boiling hot blankets:" thus employing means of a diametrically opposite natiL s for the cure of the same disease. Just upon the same irrational ground, the pe-ni- cious system c. blood-letting has been for ages purs\ied, namely, of " e; tracting blood," as Dr. Charles Maclean ob- serves, " to have the pleasure of throwing more opium or mercury into the system than otherwise would be necessary. To debilitate, in order to strengthen; to accommodate the state of the patient to the sum of medicine intended to be 49 given, ratlier tlian proportion the sum of niodicine to tlie state of the patient!" that is, when tiie " patient's excitement is five degrees helovv tlie iiealthy standard," to ** lower it five degrees more," tliat it " may afterwards be raised with greater safety ; wlien it will be required to apply double the force that would at first have been sufllcient." I should rather attribute the recovery of the twenty-five men to the increased " exciting powers of the atmosphere, the influence of soil and situation, food and water, the passions and emotions of the mind," affording to the water-cresses their due. But as to the burying them up to the chin having had any share in producing the effect, it ajjpcars very like what Dr. Johnson defines quackery, — " bad ads in physic!" It appears, by Anson's voyages, that when the Centurion, after the dreadful ravages which the scurvy had made, reached the island of San Francisco, there they '* found almost all the vegetables which are usually esteemed to be particularly adapted to the cure of scorbutic disorders, which are contracted by salt diet and long voyages. Here we had," says the his- torian, " great quantities of water-cresses, &c. which were extremely grateful to our palate, and likewise of the most salutary consequence to our sick in recovering and invigorating them, and of no mean service to us who were well, in destroying the lurking seeds of the scurvy from which, perhaps, none of us were totally exempt, and in refreshing and restoring us to our wonted strength and activity." But notwithstanding the thus " destroying the lurking seeds of the scurvy," and " restoring them to their wonted strength," on the following year, after leaving the coast of Mexico, the disease again broke out in a frightful form, destroying a further very large portion of the crew. " Those who had continued healthy began to fall down apace, no day passing that they did not bury eight or ten, or sometimes twelve a day." Upon the survivors reaching the island of Tinian, there they again found plenty of water-cresses, and there " the diseased received so much benefit from the fruits of the island, particularly those of the acid kind, that in a week's time, there were but few who were not so far recovered as to be able to move about without help." In those dreadful pestilences we may see the correctness of the conclusions to which all the most celebrated ancient physi- cians as well as modern, that all epidemics proceed from the air ; and that there are no changes in human bodies known, but are produced by the contents, properties, and qualities which we are assured the air is endued with, especially by the great enormities and sudden successions and alterations, " com- prehending all the intermediate degrees of affection between the slightest catarrh and the most destructive pestilence," 50 occasioned no doubt "by tlie diiiiiiiisliod exciting power of the ntmosj)licM'o, to vvliich diniinisli(3(l excitiii}^ power is always superadded tlie inHucuce of heat and moisture, soil and situa- tion, food and water, corporeal labour, the passions and emotions of the mind." It was the circumstances mentioned of the " benefit which had b('(Mi derived in that ill- fated expedition from fruits of the acid kind," which directed my attention to the construction of the anti-scorbutic acid which I have had the ])leasure of presenting to you ; and I am sincerely rejoiced to find that you think so well of it. It is made purely of '•''fruit^' with a salu- tary admixture of aromatics of the highest class, and thus rendered "grateful to the ])alate:" a niatter so essential to " invalids," as most physicians will admit. It has gone through no chemical procecs to impair its " nutritious properties." As for " price," it cost three times that which is called lime- juice. It has been expressly prepared ;br you; and I shall furnish you with any quantity, without regard to price, being anxious that, if occasion should occur, you may benefit by it. Your report on curries is gratifying; I am glad that you approve of the curry paste, and think so well of the curried beef. Of course, after the Lords of the Admiralty's refusal ^^ io supply the officers and crew" of Captain Collinson's expedition, I can make no use of your recommendation. When your departure is fixed, I shall be most happy to present you ■with a similar case of paste as that I had the pleasure to present to Captain Collinson, and to supply you with anything that I have at cost price. If I had no occasion to apologize for the length of my for- mer letter, I hope that I have no occasion to do so now, as it lias in a great measure been occasioned by some of your own remarks, which seemed to call for a reply. As the former letter proved to be so interesting, I trust that this will be no less so. — Believe me to be, my dear sir, yours, obliged and most truly, W. White. To Captain Sir John Ross, ll.N., C.B , &c. &c. 1^ Immediately after the despatch of the foregoing letter, Cap- lain White and Sir John Ross became personally acquainted. Sir John Ross, who at this period was much engaged in orga- nizing his expedition, had more than once occasion to visit Scotland, and had no time, even had it been necessary, to have entered into a reply. The period of his departure having arrived, and being provided with the stores suVhite, the following concluding letter was ad- dressed : — c 61 ^ Cui)taiu \V. White to Sir Joun Ross, R.N., C.B., &c. Islington, May 14, 1850. jNiY di:ar Sir, — I have been confined to my bed ever since the 5th, the day I took a parting- leave with you. Although still confined and in great pain, and unable to get up, I have contrived to take such extracts from Dr. Maclean's works as will illustrate the principles upon which that truly great physician and philosoj)her establishes his doctrine of excita- tion ; and it is accompanied with various cases of scurvy as cured by him. His remedies for the scurvy are: — 1st, nitric acid; 2ndly, calomel and opium. From the cases detailed, it is evident that they are both remedies comj)etent to the cure of the disease in its worst form, though probably, in some instances, from the particular organs which may be affected, tlie one may prove more adapted than the other ; but in no instance should the opium and calomel be resorted to but in cases where the intensity of the disease has baflfled the effects of the nitric acid. A case which, in my humble opinion, can rarely occur if the nitric acid is duly applied before the disease has far advanced, or from the neglect of the patient of regularity in taking his medicine. You will perceive that I have great faith in the nitric acid, and presently I will more fully explain why I was induced to recommend it so strongly to Captain Collii .on, and now to yourself. Dr. Charles Maclean appears to have been the first medical man that ever tried it ; but it is not clear that it did so upon any definite principles, or with any accurate knowledge of cause and effects. But he was a great physician, and has done more to lay the foundation of a better and more scientific knowledge of pathology, and practice of medicine, than any man who has ever preceded or succeeded him in this world. His works, his labours, his extensive experience, in almost every part of the globe, proves it. If the public have not derived the benefit from them which they might have done, the odium and blame rests upon the apathy and indifference with which colleges of physicians and medical schools look upon all new discoveries ; and which, probably, their wounded vanity induces them to treat with contempt. In short, as Dr. Sanders says of the former, " what does not seem to have emanated from these chieftains must — if the whole race of men should perish — be circumspectly suppressed, or strenuously opjiosed." In 1795, there appeared two treatises on the scurvy. The one by " Thomas Trotter, M.D., Physician to the Fleet under Admiral Lord Howe/' the other by " D. Patterson, surgeon D 2 52 I ! to H. M. S. liesohition, one of the sliip^ >vlilcli accompanied Vice-Admiral George rlurray to America." Mr. Trotter informs us, tli.ti, he " tried diluted sulphuric acid;" and that " it was continued for a week, during which time the symptoujs fc ;ame worse. " That in another case he tried the " concentrated acid of tartar for the same ))eriod with no apparent symptoms of recovery," and he died. In another instance he "gave nitre for six days," and " all the symptoms were worse;" the "acetous acid" was then "tried for six more, and on the twelfth day the patient was much worse in all the symptoms of scurvy," and died. Mr. Patterson's panacea was " two ounces of nitre dissolved in a quart of ship's vinegar," and which he named " acetum nitrosum;" and which^ from his account, appears to have been " very successful." By Case X., by Dr. Maclean, it will be perceived, that it was on the 3rd of December 1798, that he " had the first good opportunity to try he effects of the nitric acid," and with what success is to be seen ; as also in the numerous other in- stances in which it was tried. By this it would appear to be established that Doctor Maclean was the first to use the nitric acid for the scurvy, and that until 1798 its utility for the disease was unknown. We are not told under what circumstances or principles Doctor Maclean was " resolved to try the nitric acid the first good opportunity," but it is possible that '■ may have been suggested by Mr. Patte/: son's success with his " acetum ni- trosum," or vinegar and niti-e. I will therefore explain the reason why, independent of the doctor's successful practice, I recommend the use of the " nitric acid," and feel convinced that it is superior to every other remedy when the disease has fairly taken ground. The learned and ingenious Professor J. J. Plank, M.D., of Vie iua, towards the end of the last century, in his work " Hyaralogia Corpous Hiimani" lays it down : — "The elementary principles of our body hitherto known are, \.azof, an element which, combined with hydrogen, con- lititutes volatile 'A\\idX\e>> ; with the matter of heat, azotic gas; with carbon, the gluten of animal fibres. " Azot is the primary element of the animal body, for it may be procured from almost e ery part of the animal by means of the nitrous acid, this having a greater affinity with tie elements than the azot itself. The mucus, jelly, membranes, tendons, ligaments, and cartihages, afford it in a less degree by means of the nitrous acid. The lymph, serum of the blood {its vital jiort), the water in dropsies, the liquor amnii, and cheese afford more." The fact that the " nitrous acid having a greater affinity" with 53 the " elements of tlie animal body than the azot itself," fully explains why it must be superior to any remedy that can be found, and demonstrates why Dr. Maclean was so successful in its use. It also shews that the failure of the " diluted sul- phuric acid," " concentrated acid of tartar," and " acetous acid," "w ~s, ^rom their having no " affinity with the elementary prin- ciples of the body," and which may be considered as demon- oti .ted by the partial success which attended ihe administration of the " nitrous vinegar." Why its success was but partial is c^xplained. The vinegar does not possess the power of decom- posing the nitre, but vitriolic acid does, and when thus dis- solved it is called " Nitj-ic Acid." In regard to his remedies of " mercury and opium," Dr. Maclean says, " no exclusive virtues are however attributed to them. It is not supposed that any agent has an exclusive power of curing any disease ; although some agents are more proper than others, there are undoubtedly some, and probably mctny remedies, if not equally, at least sufficiently appropriate." From this, it appears to me that when the learned doctor was using the " 7iitric acid," he could not have been aware of its great " affinity" with " the elements of the animal body." Otherwise, how is it possible, after its " uniform success" in 1798, and the notorious failure of the other acids, and every remedy, with exception of the " nitrous vinegar," that in this preface to his work in ^ S19, on " The Improvement of Medical Science," have said, '^it is not supposed that any agent has an exclusive power of removing disease, or of exclusive virtues." The very " uniform success of the nitric acid" proved its " ex- clusive power," and " exclusive virtues." Plants, vegetables, and fruit, possess a great degree of nutri- tion, which readily amalgamates with the fluids. I have therefore little doubt that the paste, which is purely vegetable and aromatic, with the auxiliary of the anti- scorbutic acid made of fruit, will afford you official remedies against the disease, if not, you have only, according to the instructions herewith sent, to add the " nitric acid" to the anti-scorbutic. I now, my dear sir, bid you farewell. May Heaven protect you in your perilous jiursuit, and finally, whatever be the result, may He restore you safe to your native land. — Believe me to remain, yours most truly, W. White. To Captahi Sir John Ross, R.N., C.B., &c. &c. Sir John Ross, C.B., to Caj)tain Wiiitk. Ayr, IGth May 1850. My dear Sir, — I return you many thanks, both for your communication touching the treatment of the scurvy, the 54 instructions for the use of the different articles you supplied me with, and for the extracts from Dr. Maclean's works. To gratify the good folks of Ayr, and the Steam Navigation Company, I have postponed my departure from hence till Monday, at four p.m., when I shall be accompanied by several steamers, loaded with well wishers to the cause. This, however, does not delay my departure from Loch Ryan, on the 23rd inst.,when my little vessel of accessary, will be towed quite out of North Channel of Ireland. A vessel more completely fitted and adapted for navigation among ice never left the shores of Great Britain or ever manned with a better crew. We go heart in hand in the accomplishment of the great object, which, v.nder a merciful Providence, we hope that our humble endeavours will be successful. I have now only to reiterate my best thanks for the kind interest you have taken in the advancement of our enterprise, and with most sincere wishes for the continuation of your health, I am, with truth and regard, my dear sir, very faithfully yours, John Ross. SECTION III. PEOPEETIES AND POWERS OE CUEEY. In th-B early ages, medical botany was studied with care, and the pro])erties of vegetables and aromatics well understood ; and all human disorders, if cu'-able at all, yielded to their powers. Such was also the opinion of the great physician. Dr. Boerhav^e, and subsequently of many other eminent medi- cal men. The English Linnaeus, Sir John Hill, declared that " every human complaint will either admit of relief or may be cured by vegetable substances." " The production of the vegetable kingdom," observes Boerhave, " supply an abun- dant variety of juices, which most readily assimilates with, or (from experiments frequently tried) are more analogous to the nature of animal Jluids, and better fitted to correct and purify them when in a morbid and vitiated state, and furnish a healthy, nutritious chyle, than any preparations skill or in- genuity can ever extract from the mineral kingdom. What affinity (he properly asks) can there exist between metals^ minerals, &c., and animals? Much, however, may be con- fidently hoped for and expected from tlie adminibtration of vegetables, whose couiponeut parts and juices are nearly similar to our own." m 55 The celebrated physician, Joshua Webster, who died in 1741, at the advanced age of ninety-eight, and who studied medical botany all his life, was of the same opinion as Boer- have. He thought very highly of " cordial and invigorating articles" for the scurvy, and in consumption too. " It is an axiom," he says, " that a disease, the leading features of which are weakness, must be cured by invigorating remedies, if at all curable." " A weak body," he also observes, " can do little towards the expulsion of an internal foe, unless the constitu- tional effects, or, in the language of the schools, the vires medicatrices, be j^owerfully seconded by the action of well contrived remedies ; with this intention, a diet, consisting of cordial, invigorating articles, which contain a large quantity of nutriment in a small compass, is entitled to the first considera- tion, and will do infinitely more towards the restoration of health than drug-enamoured jjcrsons may easily believe, or drng-retailers be willing to allow. Nevertheless, it is a demon- strative truth, that by due patience, perseverance, and a strict attention to rules, many have been cured of confirmed con- sumptions by a judicious dietic plan, unaccompanied by a profusion of disgusting, nauseating drugs, assisted only by a single medical preparation, which was competent to decom])Ose and expel the morbid virus, the latent contaminating principle or basis of the disorder." From those great physicians we learn the vast importance which attaches to the vegetable kingdom for the cure of dis- ease, and of "cordial invigorating articles towards the resto- ration Oi" health." But still, with those convictions upon tlieir minds, they do not appear to have understood the means of turning theur theory into practice. This seems to have re- mained for future generations by accident to iiiid out, ns it shortly will be seen. The vast importance of food of proi"^ kind, in time of health as well as disease, is admitted by aii modern eminent writers on diet and indigestion, such as M. Brossnl , Barrass, and Laennec, Drs. Paris and Coombo. Dr. Crele, in hh (ssay on good living, remarks, that " philosophers would have been more usefully employed in examining the qualities of turtle, or the ])rocess of pickling, than in pursuing idle ctouderics, and spinning fantastic theories." He had " had recourse to botany, zoology, physiology, and all the sciences ;" had " ransacked all the libraries for the opinion of the learned;" " the best living authorities for their knowledge of dainties ;" and " ama teurs of fortune" " to obtain information on the great process of eating and drinking ;" " but after all," he acquaints us, that "he had to lament that our most profound knowledge was only a sort o^ rcs-pedahle ignorance;" and that " chemistry, *ae7ice of ?/ie to&/e, {greatly disappointed 1" '» to' Hopes, 56 even the voluminous systems of the science, with easy intro- ductions to chemistry in everybody's hands, none of'tliem, no not one, even one, mentions in detail the process so important to our existence, as the preparation of food, in preparinf^ it skilfully on scientific principles, so that it shall prove both savoury to the taste and wholesome to the constitution." Let us now turn to the pages of Captain White's " Essay on Curries, their Healthful and Medicinal Properties,'' published in 1844 (now out of print), to learn the "process so important to our existence" as the " preparation of food" " skilfully on scientific principles, so that it shall prove both savoury to the taste, and wholesome to the constitution." "The healthful and medicinal properties of curries rest upon qualities not before sufficiently understood. Although the value of aromatics for stomach purposes, in health as well as disease, is well knoAvn, it has always occurred to the author, that the method of most effectually administering them, is but very imperfectly understood. The simplest and best way is evidently in the food. More importance is to be attached to tliis than the medical profession will admit of. But it must not be forgotten by them, that they themselves ni'-ke very free use of aromatics in most stomachic and bowel complaints, and invariably in all cases of extreync exhaustion from long or serious illness, to give tone to the stomach, digestion. and aid the organs of In short, they form the great sheet-anchor of the medical world, and constitute the basis of ' confectio aromatice^ the quintessence of their cordial saline draughts." " As a savoury and healthful diet, easy of digestion, no dish can be compared to a curry. This is easily accounted for. The compound from w^hich a curry is made out of India consists of a variety of seeds and aromatics, highly impregnated with essential oils, of different flavours and properties, and some few roots that contain valuable stomachic properties. These, when blended together with care as to due proportions, afford a most savoury dish, and at the same time a diet that is highly con- ducive to health, by its invigorating powers and capacity, to keep the body in the most salutary state. The qualities of the respective ingredients are cordial, tonic, stimulant, and aperient; in effect, highly digestive, anti-bilious, anti-spasmodic, anti- flatulent, soothing and invigorating to the stomach and bowels, preventing debility in warm weather, and fortifying the con- stitution against susceptibility to cold in the severest ; and very frequently being capable of being partaken of when all otIieV food is rejected ; its very fragrance often provoking an a})])etitc when none prevails." Curry so constituted, the basis of which being purely aro- matic, cannot have been objected to by the medical proiession on that account, as they make very free use of aromatics them- 67 selves, ill all stomach and bowel complaints, and invariably in all cases of extreme exhaustion, from long and severe illness, to strengthen the tone of the stomach and aid the organs of digestion. Their prohibiting the use of curries, as pernicious and jjositively injurious to health, has been in consequence of the fiery compounds generally sold, devoid of aromatics, and miserable jumbles of peppers, roots, &c., without any reference to the quality, proportions, or knowledge of the effects wliich they are calculated to produce ; and merely looked upon as a way of making matter of gain. The compounders and making vendors having- no knowledge , and for tho most are merely, at the of the dish part ignorant that those dried materials best, but a very indifferent substitute for the raw ingredients, which are invariably throughout India used. Yet we have "Schah Soojalis Cio^ry Powder,' " Tippoo SahaWs Curry Powder " declared to be made from " The Original Receipts'' of the very powders used by those celebrated Indian princes. " All curries," continues Captain White, " are stimulating, and that without inordinate use of peppers ; and this very stimulating power, qualified as it is in its effect by the virtues of the essential oils, may be considered as one of their most valuable properties. The bile, indeed, which plays such an active part in the economy of human life in time of health and disease, possesses stimulating powers without which life v ould be extinct. In all cases of debility of the nervous svstem, where curries would be very useful, we shall be told that they would be extremely dangerous because of the " great difhculty sometimes, in distinguishing it from inflammation." Yet we are at the same time told by The Medico- Chirurgical Review, that " dire experience has taught some thousands of medical men, on both sides of the channel, that the stomach and bowels may be the seat of an affection purely nervous, quite indepen- dent of inflammation. Such is the case in the cholera morbus, a failure of the nervous energy, and the consequent inertness of the digestive organs ; and which has long been considered by the most eminent patliologists as the ' seat of the disease.' " Broussais and Laennec " lay it down as a valuable practical rule in chronic affections of the heart, that, previous to having recourse to any remedies intended to act directly on it, we ought to be assured that the digestive organs are in a healthy state ; that their mucous surfaces are freed from irritations, their vascular system not morbidly distended, and the liver is performing its secretory functions." " We hold this," says The Medico- Chirurgical Review, "to be a golden rule, as well in other chronic diseases as affections of the heart." This doctrine will apply to the scurvy, for, until the digestive organs act with healthy energy, it is impossible that any bene- fit can be derived from food. 68 " The fulfilment of healthy digestion," says Dr. Coombe, "is of even greater importance tiian the selection of tlie proper kind of food. This," he says, " is to be ascertained by person- ally observing what kind of food agrees best with the stomach and constitution. When there is no undue oppression and dis- comfort after our meals, but, on the contrary, we feel light or refreshed, and, after a time, ready for renewed exertion, we may rest assured that the food we have taken is wholesome and suitable for us, whatever be its nature and general effects ; whereas, if without committing any excess or other dietic error, we experience the opposite sensations of oppression, languor, and uneasiness, we may be just as certain that our food, what- ever its general character for lightness and digestibility, is not wholesome or suitable for us under our present circumstances." Dr. Paris, on the same subject, observes, that " the advan- tages which are produced by rendering food (/rateful to invalids, arc so striking that the most digectible aliment, if it excite aversion, is more injurious than that which, though in other res})ects objectionable, gratijies the -palate. If feelings of disgust or aversion are excited, the stomach tvill never act with healthy energy on the injestia, and in extreme of dislihe, " they are either returned or they pass through the alimentary canal almost un- changed. On the other hand, the gratification which attends a favoarite meal is in itself a specific stimulus to the organs of digestion, especially in weak and debilitated habits." It would appear from this, that two things are highly essen- tial for invalids, namely, a food that is grateful to the j)alate, and at the same time most digestible. This can only be found in a curry such as that made from Captain White's Paste, " pre- pared skilfully on scientific principles ;" " food both savoury to the taste, and wholesome to the constitution;" "grateful to the palate, and in itself a specific stimulus to the organs of diges- tion, especially in weak and debilitated habits," ^'^ exciting the stomach to act with healthy energy^ This may be accounted for in a twofold way. In the first place, from the character of the materials used in the compound ; and in the next, by the method of cookery. By cookery, the principles of food are chemically changed, and the extent and nature of these ehaiges greatly dej^end upon the manner in which meat is applied. In boiling, a large portion of the soluble constituents are lost, while in stewing, the process of a curry, they are preserved, and the constituents not properly soluble are rendered softer, more pulpy, and, consequently, easier of digestion. Thus very materially aiding what is termed ** the almost mysterious process of digestion,'' and a knowledge of " the greatest act," which we are told by The Medico- Chirurgical Review, " consists in regulating the diet to the susceptibility of the stomach." From the remarks of those celebrated physicians, we per- m 59 ceivo the vast importance 'svliicli is to be attached to affording to invalids " diet agreeable to the palate." Mr. Fife, the Greenland master of the llecla, had been for several weeks "in a state of extreme debility, al"iost without pain," and required a greater sum of exciting po\, • than was applied to him. He had " taken so great an aversion to the various anti- scorbutic remedies which were administered to him, that lie could seldom be induced to take any of them." No " specific stimulus to the organs of digestion," so essential, " especially in weak and debilitated habits," was administered to him." No " food grateful to the palate" afforded to him. " Feel- ings of aversion and disgust were excited ;" and for the last " three weeks previous to his death, the debility continued to increase." It is impossible to say what effects curry in this case might have produced ; but, upon the principles laid down by the celebrated physicians who have been quoted, there is every reason to believe that had it been afforded to him, and had it proved ^^ grateful to the palate," it would have been a " favourite meal," and, consequently, a specific stimulus to the organs of digestion, and " the stomach" would have " acted with healthy energy in the injestia." By those means, " a very valuable life," as Captain Parry records it, "might have been saved." It will have been observed that Captain White in his letter to the Lords of the Admiralty of the 1st of January 1850, states, that during the cholera of 1849 the hepuhful and medi- cinal qualities of the curry paste had been idirly proved, in scores of instances, in public institutions with the approbation of the medical attendants, and in many other instances without, and that the results invariably proved most successf'il. It will, therefore, now be proper that some demonstration should be given of the truth. In January 1849, when the cholera had broken outat Jennings- buildings, or the Rookery, at Kensington, Captain White by the politeness of Mr. Gazzarroni, surgeon to the Kensington j)oor- housc, was permitted to accompany him round the buildings to see the various cholera patients. This he did many times, fre- quently remaining there for an hour or two at a time. His object was to see the precise symptoms of the disease, and the treatment adopted for its cure. After repeated visits he be- came convinced, that besides the locality the want of better food was the cause of producing much of the disease, and that the convalescents required a better and more stimulating food than that they had been used to. There were but two ways of avoiding the evil : the one was that of the removal of the whole of the people in the buildings to more open parts of the town ; the other, the afibrding them plenty of diet suitable to the occasion. On this subject Dr. Charles Maclean observes : — 60 " As epidemic disorders depend upon the qualities or vicissi- tudes of the atmosphere in its capacity of an exciting power, so tlic proper means of prevention will consist in the general removal of persons exposed to the operation of those qualities or vicissitudes, into air more pure, or more agreeable ; or, in situations where, consistently with the views, occupations, or necessities of the inhabitants, such removal cannot be effected, in maintaining the excitement of each individual at the highest practical degree of vigour, so that he may be enabled to resist the influence of those qualities or vicissitudes of the atmosphere to which he must continue exposed." Having submitted to Mr. Gazzarroni those views upon the subject, there appeared to be insuperable difficulties in the way of adopting either plan. The population were between six and seven hundred, and the bulk of them had alone their own resources to look to ; in short, that it was only the sick to ■whom he could order food. I felt perfectly persuaded that had they been fed upon rice and a curry made even from the coarsest part of the ox, it would instantly have changed the complexion of the place. I therefore proposed to send Mr. Gazzarroni a beef curry for trial by himself, in order that he might ascertain its quality and try its effects. This he did, and found it to be a most excellent stomachic ; and thought that it might be introduced, with very great advantage, to old peo- ple in the workhouse who had lost their teeth, and he ex- pressed swish to try it; and suggested that Captain White should obtain permission from the Poor- Law Board, in| order that it might be done. The application was made. At the same moment the cholera was committing its ravages at the Female House of Refuge at Hackney. Captain White visited that institution, and was very politely received by the resident assistant-surgeon, Mr. Reynolds, by whom he was very olitely conducted over the wards. The weather was exceedingly boisterous, almost an incessant hurricane, with heavy rain. A large portion of the inmates had been removed. In one ward there were seven cholera cases, some of whom were doing well. In another ward there were five convalescent cholera and dyspepsia patients. Upon leaving the wards Captain White expressed to Mr. Reynolds his opinion of the benefit that the latter patients might derive, particularly so considering the weather, from curry ; and he mentioned to him the trial which had been made by Mr. Gazzarroni, and tliC application which had been made to the Poor-Law Board, at the same time pro- posing to send a beef curry for Mr. Reynolds to try himself. He very readily accepted the offer, and on the following day, by twelve o'clock, it was sent. Captain White also called about one, and shewed Mr. Reynolds the answer of the Poor- Law Board, stating that there could not possibly be any objec- I 61 tion to the trial of the ciiiTy in the workhouse at Ken^Inc:toii if tlio guardians did not object; but that they were not eni- powcrod to issue orders to require them to do so. Mr. Reynolds having partaken of the curry liked it himself so much and so highly approved of it, he resolved to offyr it to some of the convalescent cholera and dyspepsia patients. Having done so and a desire having been expressed by several to have it, Captain White caused some vice to be boiled, superintending it himself, and when ready it was served out with the rice to one of the matrons, suffering under diarrhoea, several dyspepsia and convalescent patients ; some others in health also partook of it — in all, eight ; and Mr. Reynolds himself dined off of it. On the next day when he called he found that it had agreed remarkably well wi'h all of them but one, and that one a very severe dyspepsia case, the patient not having for many days taken any food, and at the time had a blister on her chest. She had taken a liking for it, when she would have equally have rejected any kind of food. The whole of those who had partaken of it felt it so comforting and invigorating that they all expressed a wish to Mr. Reynolds to have it again. A supply was accordingly sent on tlie next day, and Mr. Reynolds and the whole of them again dined off of it. This was on a Thursday. When Captain White called on the Friday, he learned that it had again given very great satisfaction, and that they had all expressed a wish that they might be allowed to have it twice a week ; and Mr. Reynolds stated his intention to recommend to the com- mittee, when they sat oi the following day, that the request should be complied with. That recommendation was made, and Captain AVhite learned from Mr. Reynolds that it was objected to, and refused, one of the committee observing, that they wanted no " newfangled things introduced there." In fact, Mr. Reynolds appears to have met with anything but approba- tion for what he had been allowing to be tried, or having permitted Captain White to traverse the wards, to see and learn that which it would have been somewhat inconvenient and disagreeable to meet the public eye. Mr. Cobb and Mr. Granger, of the Board of Health, may probably unucrstand this, and remember something about the -perfurattd zinc -plates instead of glass in the windows. Mr. Reynolds ofl'ered to testify to what had taken place ; but, when requested to do so he declined, as he had been admonished to do nothing of the sort. By whom he was so admonished is easily to be seen. Mr. Reynolds happened to be a pupil at the London Hospital under Doctor Cobb, and he had by him been sent to reside at the Refuge when the cholera broke out ; the surgeon belong- ing to the institution, as Captain White understood, considering the disease to be infectious, not wishing to attend. Rlness, of 62 :l course, was tlie ostensible excuse. As often as Captain White called, tliere was no surgeon there. Let us now return again to the cholera at Kensington. The experiments which had been tried at Hackney were reported to Mr. Gazzarroni, as also the letter presented to him that had been received from the Poor-Law Board. Mr. Gazzarroni imme- diately communicated the subject to Mr. Godricli, of Old Bronip- ton, and Mr. Frost, of Notting Hill, to whom jars of the curried beef and curry paste were forthwith sent for trial. After trying the beef curry, and many experiments with the j>aste, those gentlemen, highly approving of both, announced their readiness to make a favourable report to the guardians, and to recommend a trial of the " curried beef" with twenty of the inmates of the workhouse. A letter was then addressed by Captain White to the guardians accompanied with a copy of his letter to the Poor- Law Board, together with their reply. The surgeons were then called upon and they made their report, and the guardians sanctioned an immediate trial. " Beef curries " for twenty was sent down, and Captain White attended in the kitchen and boiled the rice. It was a Board- day, and that upon M'hich the inmates had roast meat. The surgeons and many of the guardians were present, when, after prayers, Mr. Gazzarroni announced to the paupers that a beef curry, much approved of by him and his brother surgeons, had been prepared for a few as thought proper to try it. The offer was readily embraced, and seventeen partook of it in preference to the roast meat ; and all of them liked it very much, and it was afterwards found to agree with them all very well. The beef curry being nearly all gone without the guardians having had a taste, as Mr. Gazzarroni had some of the paste it was suggestec' that the disappointment should bo remedied by some fish curries that could be quickly made. Mr. Gazzarroni then, at his own expense, immediately sent off for four pounds of salmon and two pair of soles, and four pounds of rice was instantly put on to boil. In ten minutes the fish appeared, and in the presence of the surgeons and several of the guardians. Captain White set to work to cook it in his ''new fangled" way, — that is, cutting it into small pieces. In ten minutes it was on the stove, floating in a pale straw coloured liquor, about the consistency of cream, made from the paste diluted with water. In ten minutes more the fish vvas done, shipt, and with the rice upon the table in the board- room, as was promised, within one half hour by the clock. Eleven of the guardians and the three surgeons sat down to partake of it. A \er the elapse of an hour the three surgeons returned and Mr. Godrich reported the high approbation of all the guardians of the dish, and that it was the opinion of all of them that it was by far the best way of any of cooking salmon ; m 63 that they were very much obliged for the treat ; but that some of the guardians thouglit tliat in no shape or form could curry be introduced. To that decision Captain White did not the least object; in short, he never expected it, and his ol)ject had been obtained by having the healthful and medicinal proj)er- ties of his preparations of curry fully ascertained. Those experiments were followed uj) with others of a different description, and with very great success. On the 28th of June, Mr. Hearder, 18, Skinner-street, Snow- liill, mentioned to Captain White a death from cholera which had taken place some time before opposite to his house. Having incpiired as to the neighbourhood in the rear, finding that there was a court, he went over to ascertain its state, and he found it to be exceedingly clean and well drained, and that no case of cholera had been there. About the 10th of July he happened to call again, and he was then told that a very severe case had some days before taken place in the buildings, and he believed that the individual had died, and that, from the description given of the woman, he thought that she was the same as Captain White had spoken to when he was previously there. Captain White immediately went over, and found that it was the same woman ; but that she was not dead. He went to her house ; her name was Harriet Hills, aged fifty-two, wife of a tailor. He was informed that she was very ill, had been carried about nine days before to St. Bartholo- mew's Hospital to all appearance dead ; but that she survived and had returned home the day before very bad. Captain White requested permission to see her, and was invited up- stairs. He found her in a state of extreme exhaustion, and her brain much affected from the^ powerful narcotics which had been given to her ; and unable to take any kind of food, even tea. He recommended some beef tea to be made, and in an hour's time he called again with a small jar of the paste, recom- mending that a little of it should be used therein. After a day had passed, he called again, and found that she had had a most severe relapse of diarrhea. She was scarcely able to speak, and evidently would soon have been in a stage of collapse. She had for some hours been taking medicine which a surgeon had given her, but under it she continued to get worse. Per- ceiving that it was a case of life or death at the moment, Captain Wliite obtained a bottle, and went and procured that which alone he thought could be of any use ; that was lovage and brandy. It was with dilHculty that a teaspoonful at a time at the interval of many minutes could be taken in ; but it had a gradual and decided effect ; so much so, after a quarter of an hour she began to talk. It took about half an hour to get a wineglass of it down, by which time the tenesmus had stopped, and patting her hand upon her forehead, she said, 1 ■I I -i 64 " Oh, 1 foci so iniicli relieved ; but I sun sleepy." Capt. White desired her to sleep, and for her not to be disturbed ; and when she awoke to re])eat the mixture, branand, then put into Captain White's hands a note, observing, ' I can't make this note out.*' Stupidly enough thinking 'c possible that the D>an could not read. Captain White began xo do it to him, when he interrupted him with, " 1 can read it ; but I can't make out what he means. I never said that it was cholera morbus ; it was Mr. Southwood who said so." 66 11 ii The note was to the overseer of tlie workhouse, and was this: — " Mil him is unsible to go to work, being unwell, but falsely reported cholera." Signed " Loyd." For reasons best known to himself, C£)j)tain M'hite advised Millain to give no more of the medicine to his wife, but to go again to Mr. Law- rence. He replied, " I don't intend that she shall have any more ; she has got worse since she took it : I will wait until the morning, and 1 can get orders without going to the workhouse for them." " ]3y the moaning," replied Captain AVhite, " with- out aid, she will be dead. Put on your hat, and come with me to Mr. Soutlnvood." In a few minutes Captain White presented himself to iMr. Southv ood, who gave him the explanation hov; his patient had come to change hands. Captain White than mentioned what had passed ai; Millam's.and he told Mr. South- wood that the husband was at his door, and he recommended Mr. Southwood to resume his patient, as, if she died, he should openly attri})nte it to mismanagement. Much to his credit be it said, Mr. Southwood imujcdiately put on his hat, saying to Captain White, " I will accompany you to see her." They entered the apartment, ar.d Mr. Southwood found her mucli worse than wlien he saw her last. He directed the husband to attend at his house for some medicine, and Captain White and Mr. Soutlnvood went down stairs together, and at the door wished good-night. Somewhat restless and anxious about his patient. Captain White called at about one o'clock on the following day, and, as apprehended, found her getting worse. He immediately waited upon Mr. Southwood, and told him that if other remedies were not applied, that he would certainly lose his patient. They again proceeded in company to see her. M:*. Southwood was by this time fully aware of Captain White's knowledge of the disease, and asked him what he would recommend should be done. Captain White in- stantly suggested ; and he was told that it should be imme- diately sent. Captain White at nino o'clock visited the womrai again, perfectly satisfied that if his suggestions had been attended xo, he v/ould find her getting belter. He, however, found her much worse, unable to speak, going off in what the doctors call consecutive fever, — a new disease, the result of bad treatment after the original comjdaint had been removed. Captain White iorthwith called upon Mr. Southwood and complained of his not having given the medicine as promised. Mr. Southwood excused himself by its having been from a pressme of business forgotten; but that he had recollected it and was just going to send the medicine off. To this Captain White objected as so much time had been lost, and as the remedies which were at once to be applied every two hours, would now be inert, — and another reasgn assigned was, that there was no relying upon the punctuality of administering 67 medicine throughout the night; and unless more powerful remedies were applied before the morning she would be a corpse. Mr. Southwood again accompanied Captain AVhite to see her, and Captain White again prescribed, and it was given to Jier. Mr. Southwood at the same time giving instructions, that if she was worse immediately to call him ; and in that case Captain White had suggested what to do. The next day, at twelve o'clock. Captain White had found the woman had slept toler- ably throughout the night, and was again comfortable and doing well. Mr. Southwood had not been to see her, and as she was better, they had not gone to him, expecting that he would call. Captain White called upon Mr. Southwood, and congratulated him upon the state of his patient. From Mr. Southwood he learned that he had been pressed very hard with other cases, and as he had not been called upon as he liad desired, he con- cluded that she was better. Captain AVhito then suggested to him what next to give her, in which Mr. Southwood acquiesced : he also recommended that beef tea should be given her with some of the curry paste, and mentioned the success which had attended it in the case of the woman Hills, lie at once acqui- esced in its application, and the little jar which liad been brought for Mr. Southwood to give to his ])atient, he requested that Captain White would do it himself, and give the neces- sary instructions to them. They again rejiaired to the bed- side and found the patient comfortable but very weak, with beef tea ready on the hob, which she hud tried and could not take. Captain White told her that he had brought some- thing to put into it, approved of by Mr. Southwood, that would coax it down. A little of the tea was i)ut into the cup, a piece of paste about the size of a ])ea stirred in, this she liked very much, it was increased to her ])alate, and she greedily took it down. She was told to take as much as she fancied, and punctually to take her medicine. On the following day she was cheerful and much better; on the next, when Captain White called, she was sitting u}) with her family at tea. Mil- lam the husband had been in charge of the horses and harness of the Lord Mayor's state carriage for eighteen years. The medical profession will doubtless think that Mr. Southwood was wrong in abetting such atrocious quackery, and that it were better that she had died by adhering to the doctrines and dogmas of medical schools. The public, how- f'vci-, Captain White thinks, Avill say that Mr. Southwood acted quite right, and will give him great praise for having done so. IMr. Southwood had been in India, and he had there imbibed more enlarged view? ; and he justly considered that the medical education which Captain White had iiad, and his great experience in the aisease, repeatedly in India as well as in Enuland, was entitled in such a case to consideration. 68 I But how (lirt'erent was the result of the practice of a medical gentleman at the very same time a few paces off? Bryant, aged 40, No. 6, Way-square, Whitecrossstreet, a strong powerful man, had been ill of diarrhcea then cholera in all three days. He was then placed in cold wet sheets in which he died, as hundreds of others did elsewhere. Dr. Bally, physician to the Milbank Penitentiary, at a coroner's inquest on the body of one of the inmates who had died of cholera, swore that having rtad in " The Times " of the practice, he had tried it but it did not succeed." The proof was in the man then lying dead before them. Now of course Captain White's practice, though he saved his patients, was downright quackery, and if either of those women had died under his hand, by the evidence of medical men it would have been brought in manslaughter, and he would have been committed to Newgate to stand his trial for the offence. This he was perfectly prepared for ; and quite ready to meet ; and in some degree anticipated. But it would not have been a very pleasant day for some others if he had stood in the dock, for in cross-examination there would have been elicited some comical truths. But talking of quackery, Captain W^hite would ask Dr. Bally, if it was not first-rate quackery placing the man in cold wet sheets ; and further to shew by what doctrines of the Schools of Physic was it done? It must have been when the routine practice of the schools had failed. The only excuse for which is thus furnished by the eminent Dr. Charles Maclean. Speaking of the young physician, and why it is not applica- ble to the old he does not say, he observes that, " Relying upon the knowledge acquired at the Medical Schools, in no case of severe disease is the result of his treatment corresponding with his expectations, whether he attempt to apply the doctrines of Hippocrates, Celsus, or Gallen ; Paracelsus, Staahl, or Hoff- man ; Boerhaave, Cullen, or Brown. In the practical appli- cations, he finds, to his sorrow, that thos>e precepts which spe- culatively he was wont to consider as infallible, are nothing more than mere authoritative opinions ; and that medicine is still too truly in the degraded condition of a conjectural art." This latter fact at the conclusion of the cholera was admitted by Mr. Granger, of the Board of Health, when he said, *' how- ever degrading it may be to the medical profession, th^re is no cure for the ])laguc ; there is no cure for typhus ; there is no cure for cholera !" With one more case and Captain White will have done. Calling one morning at the kitchen of the Reform Club to see M. Soyer, Charlotte, a French cook, came up to him, looking exceedingly ill, and 8ta.,ed that she had been laid up nine days with the cholera, and could retain nothing not even tea upon her stomach. Captain White recommended her to take some m 69 beef tea, and as there was none to try some light soup with a little of the curry paste in it. Some was immediately brought, and Captain White stirred a little of the paste in. When she tasted it she said, "Oh, it was very nice!" Captain White added more of the paste, and brought it up to her palate. She immediately partook of it ; it remained upon her stomach, and in five minutes she said, " I feel so warm and comfortable here," putting her hands upon her chest, " and I have not been warm these six weeks before ! " She had beef tea made, and continued it with the paste until she got well. She then had a second attack, and the doctor was sent for ; but before his medicine had arrived she had sent for lovage and brandy and taken it ; and when the physic came, in the presence of the other servants she threw it under the g/ate. With the lovage and brandy, beef tea and paste, she cured herself. After this, Captain White when he called, was greeted as " Doctor White." It was a knowledge of the various successful experiments which had been tried which induced M. Soyer to write his anti-cholera diet, consisting of curries, and which was adver- tised as highly approved of by the General Board of Health. It also induced liim to give his lovage and brandy cure. Both of which if he had taken Captain White's advice he would at such a time have abstained from. It will here be requisite to caution the public against the use of all pastes but Captain White's as probable to produce any such effects ; and as it is not generally to be had, most of the fashionable shops having ever since its introduction opposed it, and declined, under a variety of pretexts, to supply the public with it, because of greater profit being derived from other inferior articles. Captain White begs to call attention to a few houses who sell nothing but his curry powder and curry paste ; both of which have been for the last four years exclusively used at the Oriental Club, Hanover-square, and now at the Reform, and other clubs -.—Robinson's, 44, Piccadilly; M. P. Davies, 63, St. Martin's Lane ; Wood, 88, Oxford-street ; Dunn, 69, Cannon-street ; and Skelton, 49, Bishopsgate- street ; and such houses as may exhibit a card. The public are also cautioned against a paste soid at very respectable shops, with forged labels liaving tlie Indian arms of Captain White upon it. The public are also cautioned against any curried beef that may now be offered for sale, preserved or otherwise, and be assured that they are nothing but gross pick-packet imposi- tions ; as the curried beef never has or is intended to be offered for sale. By the facts which have been stated it will appear tolerably clear that when Captain White obtruded the curry paste upon the notice of the Lords of the Admiralty, there were some toler- m 70 able good ground for assuming that it might be useful in the Arctic seas, as "occasionally" affording a " more stimulating diet," if not useful as an anti-scorbutic ; and that had they but condescended to inquire, as intimated, at the Reform Club, they would have had ample testimony afforded to them of the powers of the paste in cases of extreme debility during the cholera of 1849. Let us now consider the Reports which have been made of the curry paste by the officers who took it with them into the Arctic seas. Of course from Captain CoUinson commanding in Behring's Straits, none as yet can have- been received. Captain White in his letter to the Lords of thd Admiralty, January 8th, 1850, states, that " it will also be found greatly to improve the flavour of all the preserved soups, and to render them far more comforting to the stomach, more durable and supporting, and, what is of great consequence, more con- ducive to health." This, of course, was intended to apply to those productions from the very best makers, and certainly- not supposing that it was to be applies . putrid meats. The prompt decision of the Admiralty, that " they must decliuv? to supply it for the officers and crew of the Arctic expedition" under Captain Coliinson's command, induced Captain White to doubt whether in his representation to their Lordships he must not have made a mistake. He therefore submitted the subject for the opinion of a very expejienced officer Captain George Denny, H. E. I. C, of the firm of F. Green k Co., 64 Cornhill, and his answer was to the following effect : — G4 Cornhill, January 10, 1850. My dear White. — It is eight years since I wrote to you that your paste makes the best curry I ever tasted out of India. The beef curry which you now have sent proves it ; and it was one of the best I ever tasted, and I made my dinner off of it. Why do you not put it up in tin canisters, the same as the preserved meats, so that it could be taken to sea ? It would be invaluable there. There can be doubt whatever but that the paste would greatly improve all the preserved soups and meats that are taken to sea. — Believe me, niy dear White, yours, most sincerely, George Denny. Captain Erasmus Ommanney to Captain W. White. 20th October ISol. Sir, — It affords me great satisfaction to express my opinion relative to the curry paste with which 1 was supplied by you during the late expedition to the Arctic seas. Its flavour surpasses any I have ever tasted ; in the absence of any great change of diet it always afforded a most palatable diet, and 71 greatly relished ; it is well adapted for all ships, as it is easily made without the aid of a first-rate cook ; and all sea-going people should take It. It is an admirable article, and 1 should always like to use it, and be happy to give it my best recom- mendation. Erasmus Ommanney, Capt. R.N. Late of H. M. S. Assistance, Arctic Expedition. Admiral Sir John Ross to Captain W. White. London, Nov. 10, 18.5L My dear Sir, — I am afforded much satisfaction by giving you my willing testimony of the vast superiority of the anti- scorbutic acid which was supplied by you to the Fellx^ during our late voyage to the Arctic seas, over every other kind of anti-scorbutic 1 have ever met with, as was proved in two very serious cases of scurvy when the lime-juice and sugar would not remain upon the stomach, while thd acicl not only did con- tinue, but was decidedly more efficacious. The curry paste is also no less superior to everything of its kind, and vas so found by us during our late voyage ; and was exceedingly useful. Both of the articles having been universally approved of, I have no hesitation in recommending them for general use both in tlie royal and mercantile navies. — I remain, my dear Sir, yours faithfully, John Ross, Rear Admiral. Captain W. White. Commander Phillips, R.N. to Captain White. Woolwich, 29th December 185L My dear Sir, — On re-opening of the " Steam School" here, I am favoured with a very handsome Christmas-box from you, in the form of curry paste, and a kind note, dated six days back, which I hope I shall not be held rude in not earlier replying to, as, in truth, the Christmas holidays kept it from me till this day. I am pragmatical about curry, my India service has made me so, and 1 have always held tliat curry in perfection must be made and eaten in India, although they make very good ones at the Cape and St. Helena. But I can safely affirm that the curry paste we had on board Sir John Ross's vessel, and made by you, is decidedly the best article of the kind twenty-three years' sea service has brought under my observation. It is excellent on bread and butter, as well as an immense improvement of every kind of soup. For Arctic service I would suggest that the package should be of the lightest material. i ',■ J v-Sf"' 72 With best wishes and sincere thanks for your kind and y&J palatable recollection.— I am, my dear sir, truly yours, C. Gerons Phillips, f _\,;; i : ' :i jit-i-^} \,i • ..: Mr. Adertheney, Master of the Felix to Captain White. ■!■ 3, Trafalgar-street, Woolwich, 20th Nov. 1851. Sir, — I beg to say I have received your letter enclosing a copy of a note from Admiral Sir John Ross, late commanding the Felix in the Arctic seas, of which ship I was the master, and in which letter you ask my opinion, as having been many years in the Arctic seas, as to what I think of the curry and mulligatawny paste which was used during the late voyage. I can fully confirm the report of the Admiral, both as regards the curry paste as also of the anti-scorbutic acid. Both of them are articles of great value for ship use. Fro^n the long experience which I have had in the Arctic and Antarctic seas, I have no hesitation in saying that the curry paste is the most useful, and the anti-scorbutic acid the most valuable articles ever taken to sea to prevent that horrible disease the scurvy, the dreadful eflfects of which I have seen so .much of during six voyages in whalers, two voyages in the Arctic regions with Sif Edward Parry, in the Hecla; one with Admiral Sir John Ross, in the Victory ; one voyage with Sir James Clark Rdss, in the FrebuSy to the Antarctic seas ; one with him to the Arctic seas in the Enterprise; and a voyage with Sir John Ross in the Felix. — I remain, sir, your most obedient servant, T. Abertheney, - — - Late Master of the Felix. Those testimonials, honourable and gratifying as they are, are chiefly valueable to Captain White, as they prove that in his address to the Lords of the Admiralty there was no hum- bug ; while at the same time the whole of the correspondence, it is to be hoped, will prove j^ *> iia -i^. '.n ■'i'z^, finis. ._ , \ .^#^09i *■■;'>■' ■■ .,up. .u. rf fi •-^^