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 IGO BRITISH PHYSICIANS. room elsewhere and about a fortnight afterwards this is the entry in his diary : — " Aug. 3d. — To Dagenhams. All the way, peojDle, citizens, walking to and fro, enquire how the plague is in the city this week by the bill : which by chance at Greenwich, I had heard was 2020 of the plague, and 3000 and odd of all dis- eases. By-and-by met my Lord Crewe returning : Mr. Marr telling me by the way how a maid-ser- vant of Mr. John Wright (who lives thereabouts), falling sick of the plague, she was removed to an out-house, and a nurse appointed to look to her ; who being once absent, the maid got out of the house at the window and ran away. The nurse coming and knocking, and having no answer, beheved she was dead, and went and told Mr. Wright so ; who and his lady were in great strait what to do to get her buried. At last resolved to go to Burntwood hard by, being in the parish, and there get people to do it. But they would not ; so he went home full of trouble, and in the way met the wench walking over the common, which frighted him worse than before ; and was forced to send people to take her, which he did ; and they got one of the pest-coaches and put her into it, to carry her to a pest-house. And passing in a nar- row lane. Sir Anthony Browne, with his brother and some friends in the coach, met this coach with the curtains drawn close. The brother being a young man, and believing there might be some lady in it that would not be seen, and the way being narrow, he thrust his head out of his own into her coach, and to look, and there saw some- i