The Speckled Monster in Regency Society ~ Guest Post by Shirley Raye Redmond

While enjoying Regency romances with their witty dialogue and ton parties,

one seldom considers the dark and often fatal shadow which loomed over

those that lived during that time period—small pox, often referred to as

“the speckled monster.” The disease killed hundreds of millions of

people—more than the Black Death and the wars of the 20th century put

together!

A woman who was considered a great beauty during this time period was

usually one who had not been seriously disfigured by smallpox. It was

understood by portrait artists of the day that they were not to paint in

the disfigurements and pockmarks of their subjects. Edward Jenner was the

British physician responsible for the first smallpox vaccine. His wife was

a Sunday School teacher who held classes in their home.

AP PruJane Austen’s dearest friend Martha Lloyd was scarred by smallpox for the

remainder of her life. Several members of the Lloyd household died from

the disease. A character in Austen’s novel Northanger Abbey is disfigured

and crippled by the dreaded disease.

But most writers of Regency novels do not mention small pox even though

one in four people died from the disease during this time period. I

decided to make the subject a key factor in the plot of my new

inspirational, PRUDENCE PURSUED and addressed the issue right away on the

first page.


Excerpt from Prudence Pursued: 


“You should not wear that to the pox party,” Prudence Pentyre said, indicating her younger cousin’s dress of light green Italian silk. “I recommend something with short sleeves which allows you to expose your forearm to the lancet.”


 


Margaret shuddered. Her plain face, pale and lightly freckled, appeared downcast. “Oh, Pru, I wish I didn’t have to go.” She stood, slender shoulders drooping, in front of her open wardrobe.


 


“Truly, Meg, there’s nothing to worry about,” Prudence assured her, slipping a comforting arm around her cousin’s slim waist. “Papa had all of us vaccinated with the cow pox when we were still in the school room—and the servants too. I’m quite surprised my Uncle Giles didn’t do the same,”

Prudence replied.


To find out what pretty milkmaids had to do with Edward Jenner

successfully finding a way to prevent small pox, you’ll have to read the

rest of my novel. For more information about the horrors of the disease, I

recommend The Speckled Monster by Jennifer Lee Carrell (Penguin)


Prudence Pursued

By Shirley Raye Redmond


At the advanced age of twenty-seven, Prudence Pentyre is on the shelf.

Content to occupy her time by attending meetings of Mr. Wilberforce’s

Abolition Society, Prudence is resolved to see that her younger cousin

Margaret, shy and plain, does not share her own unmarried fate.

Despite her best efforts, all of Prudence’s matchmaking attempts fail.

Margaret proves reluctant to accept Sir James Brownell’s marriage

proposal, and fears being “bovinised” if she undergoes the controversial

cowpox vaccination he recommends. And the dashing baronet—with his

sunburned skin, eye patch, and unfashionable attire—seems more concerned

about the plight of headhunters in Borneo than Margaret’s stubborn refusal

of his offer.

Prudence, on the other hand, finds herself unexpectedly smitten with the

man. Can she trust that God’s plan for her life is richer and more

rewarding than the one she had planned for herself?

Available through Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Smashwords, Kobo, and iTunes.

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Published on November 23, 2014 22:00
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