Tuesday, January 5, 2016
Books We Love New Releases
Check out these Books We Love new releases, now available from Amazon, Kobo, Nook, Apple, and your favorite online book sellers.
Monday, January 4, 2016
The Death of King Charles II by Katherine Pym
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Buy Here |
Last time, I mentioned King Charles II's death and how nasty it was. Happy New Year to you with this macabre tidbit. May 2016 treat you better than 1685 bestowed upon the poor king.
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King Charles II, Older but Healthier |
First, a little about him…
After his father was beheaded, King Charles II went into exile where he learned to keep his own
counsel. He loved sex. Prompted by others, his revenge extended to only a few
of the regicides, but he took no joy in it.
Charles took a long time to
come to a state decision. He’d put it off with a wave of his hand, and play
with one of his women. He loved spaniels, and several romped in his private
chambers, soiling the floors so that no one could walk across the room in a
straight line.
Even though he reigned in a
Protestant country, while on the run in 1651 after his defeat at the Battle of
Worcester, Charles was protected at their peril by Roman Catholics. For a few
hours, Charles hid in a priest hole, very snug and claustrophobic, while
Parliament men searched for him. By the end of his trek through England and
into exile, Charles had gained a high regard for Catholics and Catholicism.
But I digress.
While Charles reigned, he
did not confide in many. He was considered an enigma by both his contemporaries
and those who study him. He had a kind heart. His nature made people
comfortable. They confided in him, wanted to be near him. But when Charles
wanted to be alone, or was tired of the subject, he’d pull out his watch. Those
who knew of this would quickly state their business, for soon their king would
walk away.
Charles loved reading (not
political or religious). He brought great strides to the theatre sector, and he
enjoyed science. In 1660, he approved a charter for The Royal Society. The
group of great minds, Isaac Newton for one, met at Gresham College in London
City. Experiments took place there, including draining the veins of a dog into
the veins of another dog. The results amazed those curious people.
So, we come to his death…
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Physician's Tool |
‘He fell sick of a tertian
fever’, but the official cause of death was: Uremia (per dictionary.com—“a
condition resulting from the retention in the blood of constituents normally
excreted in the urine.”), chronic nephritis and syphilis.
On the evening of February
1, 1685, Charles went to bed with a sore foot. By early morning, he was very
ill with fever. His physician (Sir Edmund King) tended to his foot while a
barber shaved his head. Suddenly, the king suffered apoplexy. His physician
immediately withdrew sixteen ounces of blood.
Sir Edmund took a big risk,
and could have been charged with treason. The protocol was to get permission
from the Privy Council prior to a bloodletting the monarch.
For several days, Charles
was tormented by his physicians. As a private man this must have been
difficult. Surrounded by more physicians than could gain his bed, they
attempted to remove the ‘toxic humours’ that penetrated his body.
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17th c - Hooke's Microscope |
He was bled and purged.
Cantharides plasters were stuck to his bald pate, which caused blistering. They
attached plasters of spurge to his feet, then red-hot irons to his skin.
Besides the large number of physicians crowding his bed, His Royal Highness’
bedchamber was filled to the walls with spectators (family members and state officials).
They gave the poor king
“enemas of rock salt and syrup of buckthorn, and ‘orange infusion of metals in
white wine’. The king was treated with a horrific cabinet of potions: white
hellebore root; Peruvian bark; white vitriol of peony water; distillation of cowslip
flowers; sal ammoniac; julep of black cherry water (an antispasmodic); bezoar stone from the stomach of a goat. He was forced to drink boiled spirits from a human skull.”
After days of this, he
apologized for taking so long to die, then added, “I have suffered much more
than you can imagine.”
Finally, on February 6,
1685 “the exhausted king, his body raw and aching with the burns and
inflammation caused by his treatment, was given heart tonics, to no avail. He
lapsed into a coma and died at noon on February 7.”
His death is considered by
historians as “iatrogenic regicide”.
~ * ~ * ~
I give thanks to:
Royal
Poxes & Potions, The Lives of Court Physicians, Surgeons & Apothecaries, by Raymond Lamont-Brown.
Wiki-commons public domain
Labels:
17th Century,
17th century London,
brutality of early medicine.,
Charles II's death,
medicinal history
Author of historical novels set in 1660's London with one novel of the French Revolution.
Saturday, January 2, 2016
The Road to Hell is Paved with Good Intentions... by Diane Bator
They say the road to hell is paved with good intentions. So are the pages of a good novel.
In real life, we all have all had good intentions that go wrong. That is one of those things that makes us all human and makes our characters more believable. Sometimes a character is only "evil" because he or she makes choices that seem like a good idea at the time. Many times he has the ability to undertake something that will correct a bad situation but fails to do so due to spite, procrastination, laziness or vice. These situations are what create such great tension and conflict in many novels and movies.
One of the best examples I can think of is Professor Severus Snape in the Harry Potter series. He is a character we all love to hate, yet we find out in the end that all he has wanted from the beginning is to protect Harry rather than see him killed. His actions were intended to help Harry all along and yet, Snape's own good intentions cost him his life.
In my third Wild Blue Mystery novel The Bakery Lady, Christina Davidson has good intentions when she returns to Packham to help out in her family bakery when her mother dies, but gets stuck with running the shop when her father takes off to Florida to grieve. While part of her wants to remain in town until her father returns, she soon discovers her husband stands accused of murder.
Private Detective and Good Samaritan Leo Blue has the best of intentions when he promises to help set things straight and plans to bring husband and wife together for Christmas. Even if it costs him his sanity and possibly the love of his life. It seems the harder he tries to solve the case, the more his good intentions will cost him.
One good quote about good intentions comes from Stephen Garrard Post writing about altruism: "If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, it is partly because that is the road they generally started out on." In other words, mankind normally acts from less worthy, selfish motives. While that may not be normally true in real life, it does make for some great reads.
May 2016 bring many more fantastically flawed characters to read & write about.
Diane Bator

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