wea GROWTH OF THE CITY SI
 and the fine priories of St. Helen and the Holy Trinity by Aldgate.
 St. Paul’s was intact, except that the tower had lost its lofty spire, and
 at least one hundred parish churches still existed. Stow, counting
 Westminster, makes them one hundred and twenty-three. Smith,
 another authority of the same period, says London “hath 108 parish
 churches within the walles.” After Stow’s time we have the domestic
 life of the citizens delightfully described in words by Pepys, and by
 Hollar in prints and
 clear estimate of the ls Se aa ie wes
 changes wrought by the 335
 fire. Population had
 immensely increased,
 and the city had grown
 more unwholesome in
 proportion. The plague
 claimed its. victims
 every year. Had they
 but known it, the
 citizens had the remedy
 at their doors. The
 fresh, clean water of the
 New River had been
 brought in by Sir Hugh
 Myddelton as far back
 as 1620, but was uni¬
 versally neglected in
 favour of the Thames,
 the churchyard springs,