Produced by Tokuya Matsumoto and David Widger
A JOURNAL OF THE PLAGUE YEAR
By Daniel Defoe
being observations or memorials of the most remarkable occurrences, as well public as private, which happened in London during the last great visitation in 1665. Written by a Citizen who continued all the while in London. Never made public before
It was about the beginning of September, 1664, that I, among the rest of my neighbours, heard in ordinary discourse that the plague was returned again in Holland; for it had been very violent there, and particularly at Amsterdam and Rotterdam, in the year 1663, whither, they say, it was brought, some said from Italy, others from the Levant, among some goods which were brought home by their Turkey fleet; others said it was brought from Candia; others from Cyprus. It mattered not from whence it came; but all agreed it was come into Holland again.
We had no such thing as printed newspapers in those days to spread rumours and reports of things, and to improve them by the invention of men, as I have lived to see practised since. But such things as these were gathered from the letters of merchants and others who corresponded abroad, and from them was handed about by word of mouth only; so that things did not spread instantly over the whole nation, as they do now. But it seems that the Government had a true account of it, and several councils were held about ways to prevent its coming over; but all was kept very private. Hence it was that this rumour died off again, and people began to forget it as a thing we were very little concerned in, and that we hoped was not true; till the latter end of November or the beginning of December 1664 when two men, said to be Frenchmen, died of the plague in Long Acre, or rather at the upper end of Drury Lane. The family they were in endeavoured to conceal it as much as possible, but as it had gotten some vent in the discourse of the neighbourhood, the Secretaries of State got knowledge of it; and concerning themselves to inquire about it, in order to be certain of the truth, two physicians and a surgeon were ordered to go to the house and make inspection. This they did; and finding evident tokens of the sickness upon both the bodies that were dead, they gave their opinions publicly that they died of the plague. Whereupon it was given in to the parish clerk, and he also returned them to the Hall; and it was printed in the weekly bill of mortality in the usual manner, thus--
Plague, 2. Parishes infected, 1.
The people showed a great concern at this, and began to be alarmed all over the town, and the more, because in the last week in December 1664 another man died in the same house, and of the same distemper. And then we were easy again for about six weeks, when none having died with any marks of infection, it was said the distemper was gone; but after that, I think it was about the 12th of February, another died in another house, but in the same parish and in the same manner.
This turned the people's eyes pretty much towards that end of the town, and the weekly bills showing an increase of burials in St Giles's parish more than usual, it began to be suspected that the plague was among the people at that end of the town, and that many had died of it, though they had taken care to keep it as much from the knowledge of the public as possible. This possessed the heads of the people very much, and few cared to go through Drury Lane, or the other streets suspected, unless they had extraordinary business that obliged them to it
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Journal of the Plague Year, written by a citizen
- 2: Were from twelve to seventeen or nineteen each
- 3: Had removed for fear of the distemper
- 4: About midway between Aldgate Church and Whitechappel Bars
- 5: As to my argument of losing my trade
- 6: When visited with an infectious distemper
- 7: And from the noisome pestilence
- 8: In the parish of Whitechappel three
- 9: Cripplegate parish alone buried 886
- 10: Really frighted with the distemper
- 11: One foretold a heavy judgement
- 12: Gadbury's Astrological Predictions
- 13: And profane and impenetrable on the other
- 14: Till Bishopsgate clock struck eleven
- 15: But endeavoured to suppress them and shut up their meetings
- 16: After the first demand of 'Will there be a plague
- 17: 'Infallible preventive pills against the plague
- 18: ''An Italian gentlewoman just arrived from Naples
- 19: As particularly the word Abracadabra
- 20: In all the circumstances of the distemper
- 21: And which took place the 1st of July 1665
- 22: 'For better assistance of the searchers
- 23: Or falleth otherwise dangerously sick
- 24: No infected Stuff to be uttered
- 25: Laystalls to be made far off from the City
- 26: And common councilmen shall meet together weekly
- 27: Which used to be the chief business of the watchmen
- 28: The watchman had knocked at the door
- 29: The watchman consented to that
- 30: Even in the face of the watchman
- 31: 'my child has not the distemper
- 32: So others got out by bribing the watchmen
- 33: But had worked for his living at a sailmaker's in Wapping
- 34: And the buriers immediately gathered about him
- 35: The buriers ran to him and took him up
- 36: Which was in view of the tavern windows
- 37: Was struck from Heaven with the plague
- 38: And the violent raging of the infection
- 39: Some violence was offered to the watchmen
- 40: Went along the road to Islington
- 41: Had yet the distemper upon them
- 42: Which the physicians call effluvia
- 43: As I had convenience both for brewing and baking
- 44: The butcher would not touch the money
- 45: Terrible shrieks and screechings of women
- 46: Mothers murdering their own children in their lunacy
- 47: If you heard it in Whitechappel
- 48: They applied to the parish officers
- 49: But when I looked towards the warehouse
- 50: Who was at that time undersexton of the parish of St Stephen
- 51: But after some pause John Hayward
- 52: The city could never have subsisted
- 53: Dismissed their journeymen and workmen
- 54: As particularly by relieving the most desperate with money
- 55: The clerks and sextons not attending for weeks together
- 56: Ordinarily carried in them to the pest houses
- 57: For innumerable of the bearers died of the distemper
- 58: But he then takes up the purse with the tongs
- 59: 'and there my poor wife and two children live
- 60: ''I have gotten four shillings
- 61: I asked him if the distemper had not reached them
- 62: And he carried me to Greenwich
- 63: And raged most violently in Cripplegate
- 64: The infection got in among them and made a fearful havoc
- 65: Most of the midwives were dead
- 66: And having received the infection
- 67: And sometimes taking the distemper from them and dying
- 68: And out of the infected suburbs
- 69: And therefore they do not starve you
- 70: And about five or six in Ratdiff Highway
- 71: Who was acquainted very well with the sailmaker
- 72: As in Shoreditch and Cripplegate parish
- 73: And so in the back road from Hackney
- 74: And upon this a parley began between the joiner
- 75: If it were only for want of people left alive to be infected
- 76: Giving the ferryman money beforehand
- 77: This is not the king's highway
- 78: What quantity of provisions will you send us
- 79: Laid aside their design of going to Waltham
- 80: The Epping men told them again
- 81: 'as to being chargeable to you
- 82: And had cut all their tent cloth out to make them coverlids
- 83: They had the distemper upon them
- 84: They moved towards the marshes on the side of Waltham
- 85: Because they were able to subsist themselves
- 86: There the constable resisted them again
- 87: But even willing to infect them
- 88: Those watchmen would answer saucily enough
- 89: Sometimes the watchmen were absent
- 90: It confined the distempered people
- 91: And swam back to the Stillyard
- 92: Which was most piteous to hear
- 93: And in the river which runs from the marshes by Hackney
- 94: To prevent the spreading the infection
- 95: Notwithstanding it was infected
- 96: And confining the sick was no confinement
- 97: By laying strong caustics on them
- 98: That the living were not sufficient to bury the dead
- 99: The breaches seem rather to widen
- 100: And the complaints of distressed and distempered people
- 101: 000 from the 22nd of August to the 26th of September
- 102: Wherein they say that the dead lay unburied
- 103: Would certainly spread it among others
- 104: The Lord Mayor and the sheriffs
- 105: It increased prodigiously in Cripplegate
- 106: And all the Southwark parishes put together
- 107: Their very clothes retained the infection
- 108: Even into infected houses and infected company
- 109: And deliverances of persons when infected
- 110: They knew nothing of their being infected
- 111: And yet be contagious to all those that came near them
- 112: As I suppose all distempers do
- 113: Was thus infected by the father
- 114: Or of the distemper being in that place
- 115: As having died of other distempers
- 116: And the succession of the distemper really preserved
- 117: The most dangerous and the most liable to infection
- 118: To the relief of the poor of this distressed
- 119: I mean that of the progression of the distemper
- 120: Much less to unlade their goods
- 121: That all the kingdom was infected likewise
- 122: Even as low as the river Medway
- 123: By the very stench of which infection may be propagated
- 124: Especially at Newcastle and at Sunderland
- 125: The manufacturing trade in England suffered greatly
- 126: The bill decreased almost two thousand
- 127: Notwithstanding the decrease of the distemper
- 128: But the distemper broke out in his family
- 129: To the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen of London
- 130: And was taken in particularly for Bishopsgate parish
- 131: But were belonging to Stepney parish
- 132: A plague is a formidable enemy
- 133: Who were more subject to be infected
- 134: I several times took Venice treacle
- 135: Having sufficiently cleansed them
- 136: Carried so much gunpowder into his master's house
- 137: Certainly the circumstance of the deliverance
- 138: Whole families that were infected and down
- 139: Appeared very sensible of their unexpected deliverance
