[1009] The Red Crosse (broadside). London, 1625.
[1010] Parish Histories, and in Lysons’ Environs of London.
[1011] Britain’s Remembrancer, containing a Narrative of the Plague lately past. London, 1628.
[1012] The Fearfull Summer, or London’s Calamitie. Printed at Oxford, 1625 (reprinted with additions, Lond. 1636).
[1013] Holland’s Posthuma. Cantab. 1626.
[1014] The Weeping Lady, or London like Ninivie in Sackcloth. By T. B. London, 1625.
[1015] Hist. MSS. Commission, XI. pt. I, p. 6.
[1016] Bradwell’s book, to be mentioned in the sequel, was written for practice during the plague. There is a reference to something of Sir Theodore Mayerne’s on the plague of 1625, which I have not succeeded in finding. His Opera Medica contain ordinary cases treated by him in London in December, 1625, but there is no mention of plague-cases. Woodall’s essay on plague, published in 1639, thus refers to his experience in the epidemic of 1625: “In anno 1625 we had many signes contrarie to the plagues in other times; yea, and many did dye dayly without any signes or markes on their bodies at all.”
[1017] C. and T. Charles I. I. 48.
[1018] A Watchman for the Pest, teaching the true Rules of Preservation from the Pestilent Contagion, at this time fearfully overflowing this famous Cittie of London. Collected out of the best authors, mixed with auncient experience, and moulded into a new and most plaine method. By Steven Bradwell, of London, Physition. 1625.