Writers Tricks of the Trade SPRING 2017 ISSUE 2, VOLUME 7 | Page 21

The Five Senses of Historical Fiction (Cont’d) to heat water and bring it to the tub for filling), they did bathe from buckets, from rivers and streams, and in the public bath houses, men and women together. No, they did not suffer from the same Victorian attitudes about their bodies, but cleanliness and good smells were important. Good smells were associated with holiness and so all tried to achieve some level of acceptable smells. 2) H EARING . After you adjusted to the smoky streets, what might you hear? Certainly you would hear the lowing of animals: horses, cows, sheep, goats, dogs, cats, chickens, geese. You’d hear the calls of the merchants to buy their wares. For in London, unlike the provincial towns and villages, there was a constant source of commerce. You didn’t have to wait for market day to get the goods and services you sought. This was London! The second largest city in Europe, second only to Paris. You’d be inundated with the constant sound of bells from all the many parish churches. The bells would break up your day by telling you the hour (this was the call to prayer for the monks and nuns in residence in the monasteries about town, the Liturgy of the Hours, also called the Divine Office.) Which brings up another issue. You could certainly hear the people talking and laughing together, but though they are speaking English, they are speaking a form of the language called Middle English, a lilting cross between modern English, German, and French with some Gaelic thrown in for good measure. It wouldn’t be easy to understand what they were saying, especially with the more archaic expressions no longer in use. 3) S IGHT . You would see a bustling metropolis, where the buildings were crammed against one another, where sometimes there were no right angles, and walls were twisted and bent toward one another across the lanes. Two or three story structures, all vying for space. Some had outside stairwells leading up to the higher stories, and some had instead rickety ladders. Some even had makeshift bridges spanning the avenue, though many of these were illegally built. Most citizens were still too poor to have glass in windows. Some windows had oiled skins stretched across them allowing in the light, but most others simply closed with wooden shutters. The people themselves were dressed in colorful woolens, russets, greens, blues, and yellows. Vegetable and mineral dyes were used for coloring yarns and cloth. Shoes were leather and some had wooden shoes to wear either on stockinged feet or as slip-ons over their shoes to keep them above the mud. And the more fashionable wore their shoes long and pointy. So long, in fact, that the toes had to be tied to one’s calf just below the knee. Hoods, veils, and stylish hats covered heads, while cloaks covered shoulders when the weather was unkind. W RITERS ’ T RICKS OF THE T RADE S PRING 2017 P AGE 13