Reading Defoe’s Journal of a Plague Year (So You Don’t Have To)

Because I’m a glutton for punishment, I’ve been reading “plague literature,” which is really only interesting if you happen to be going through something comparable as we are now. Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of a Plague Year is just what you’d expect — an account of one year in the life of a Londoner as he navigates the complexities of surviving the Great Plague of 1665.

To begin with the differences, Covid-19 has nothing on the Black Death. Bubonic plague is a gruesome bacterial infection that causes horrible symptoms with a very high chance of mortality. It’s definitely a matter of degree. But it was a pandemic, at least in the British Isles, and despite the long span of years between our two events, there are surprising similarities between “the Plague Year” then and now.

It should also be pointed out that Defoe’s Journal is not a real journal — he was only 5 years old when the events occurred and his book was written over 50 years later. However, as a Londoner born in or near St. Giles, Cripplegate where the plague started, his interest in the subject must have been keen. So although Defoe’s account is well researched, Journal of a Plague Year is what you might call fictionalized fact.

The book begins thusly (cue ominous music):

“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.”

Everyone knew what that meant. It meant the plague was coming. When would it come? Where would it strike? Would it come at all? People fretted these questions all fall and into the early winter. Meanwhile, the government immediately met to discuss “ways to prevent its coming over” but, Defoe says, “all was kept very private.” Meanwhile, the plague percolated in the background just as coronavirus did around the world in 2020.

It wasn’t until early December that the first cases emerged in the suburban borough of St. Giles, just south of London. The first statistics were created: “Plague, 2. 1 parish affected.”

Says Defoe, “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 there were no more cases for six weeks.

After this, it became a game of watching the numbers, the so-called Death Lists that each parish issued weekly to report how many people had died and of what. Of course, in the early going, no one wanted to admit they had the plague, so (Defoe theorizes) people lied on the death notices and said it was something else like an accident or spotted fever. But the numbers went up and up, and pretty soon, people couldn’t hide it anymore.

By June, Londoners were pretty convinced they were in for it, and anyone who could escape London for the countryside did so posthaste. Defoe says (backed up by actual diarist Samuel Pepys) that there were so many people evacuating, by horse, cart, post, and on foot, servants and possessions in tow, that it hardly seemed there could be any people left in London to catch the plague. But there were.

A flood of governmental decrees was issued, in this case from the Lord Mayor of London, aiming at mitigating and relieving the plague. All but essential businesses were closed. Provision was made for the poor and unemployed, of whom there were many. Many new job titles were created such as watchers and dead cart drivers. Most controversially, any household stricken with the plague was ordered “shut up” with all members of the household inside, regardless of their state of health, and kept there under 24 hour armed guard.

You can imagine the distress of families thus locked in together. This is not to say that they were abandoned there to die — they received home food delivery free of charge, medicine and medical assistance, and anything else they needed. They just couldn’t leave the house.

The trouble with this practice was that healthy people anxious to avoid infection were forced to remain in the house with plague victims. This resulted in a great outburst of civil disobedience, which is to say, many people who had been shut up simply escaped, out of back doors and windows, or, if they could get the guard drunk enough, out the front door. While Defoe agreed that it was a good thing to keep plague victims from raving in the streets, he thought it cruel to keep the “sound” in with them, and felt that since so many escaped confinement and ran away taking their contagion with them, it did no good in the end.

It wasn’t until the plague reached its peak in August that people started to realize that apparently healthy people could still transmit the plague. The idea of a symptomless carrier was probably the most frightening to contemporary Londoners. Up to then, they could identify plague victims much as we identify zombies today — they looked horrible and were lurching around. But healthy plague carriers was too much. Many people who had been trying to keep a limited social life going up to that time went right back into isolation.

Defoe goes on at length about the psychology of the people, from nonchalance in the early going to panic when the Plague struck, to abject fear and misery during its height, and finally resolving into resignation and nihilism as it seemed as though none would escape. But then in late September, with weekly numbers approaching 20,000 dead, a strange thing happened. The death rate began to fall. As many as before and more so caught the disease but the numbers of the dead declined. It was, says scientific-minded Defoe, an act of Divine Providence, a reprieve direct from God on high. Today, we might have other postulations.

As for the citizens, their greatest desire was a return to normalcy — to go back to face to face meetings, parties and gatherings, and normal social relations between people. People’s desire to hang out together was so great that restrictions were dropped as soon as the numbers did. This led to many unnecessary deaths, according to Defoe, because people were still dying, just not so many. But clearly man is a social animal and to be deprived of human company was a fate worse than death for many.

Once the plague was over, it took a while for things to return to normal. From a trade standpoint, it was months before any European port would allow English ships to enter. Moreover, the poor and unemployed were generally still poor, but the plague being abated, no one bothered to help them any more.

Nevertheless, the Great Plague gradually ebbed away never to return, and life did finally return to normal. Gone were the dead carts and gruesome sights and sounds of dying people. Gone the open pit graves outside of every church in London, filled to the brim with the bodies of the recently dead. Gone the fear of making a mistake and catching it yourself. It was all over, if not forgotten.

In light of all that had happened, it may have been just as well that the following year, the entire city burned to the ground in The Great Fire of London. The fire may not have killed the plague but it certainly destroyed a lot of plaguey places, giving people a chance to rebuild anew.

A Journal of a Plague Year is a gripping little book that manages to make something quite awful into a surprisingly entertaining read. The details are horrific but there are so many interesting similarities to our own times, that it carries you right along. Readers of today will recognize many elements from this strange and terrible episode in human history.

And so, as we close, I will leave you with the final lines of the novel, a couplet attributed to our fictional narrator, H.T., and of which I will say in advance, may we all be so lucky:

“A dreadful plague in London was
In the year sixty-five,
Which swept an hundred thousand souls
Away; yet I alive!”

On the Absurdity of Sacrificing People for the Economy

On the absurdity of thinking that some people are expendable, that only old people die of this thing, that saving the economy is more important than saving people’s lives, that the economy can be saved at all while people are dying by the hundreds in our major cities and beyond, that people exist to serve the economy and not the other way around, that the economy is even worth saving in its present form, and that more of what got us here is what we really need.

I’ve been hearing an argument lately, mostly from the right, that coronavirus isn’t really that bad, and that even if it does kill some old people, those would be acceptable losses if it means the economy keeps rolling as usual.

I have a few problems with this argument, on moral, practical, procedural, psychological, and existential grounds.

Morally, the whole “sacrifice your granny for the good of the economy” line seems like an utterly heartless thing to suggest, regardless of how active or inactive your granny might be. Back in Catechism class we were taught the Ten Commandments, one of which is “Honor thy father and thy mother.” Being rated not worth saving hardly seems like a just reward for managing to survive 70+ years on Planet Earth.  Moreover, it puts our commitment to the first commandment into question.  

But even if we do decide to throw granny under the bus, there’s still the fact that lots of younger people manage to get sick from coronavirus, and sometimes, they too need medical help. Today, even with major stay-at-home restrictions in place, hospitals are struggling to care for the patients that are coming in.  To underline that, even with lots of effort going into containing the virus, the virus is still overwhelming our hospitals.  

But just for the sake of argument, let’s say we open the gates, send everyone back to school and work, and let the chips fall where they may. Let’s also assume that the experts are right and cases spike as soon as we ease restrictions. By this logic, a lot more people would get coronavirus, and some of them, let’s say a noticeable number of them, die. How does it affect the economy when large numbers of people are calling in sick, and some proportion of them never return? Is a major die-off of human beings bullish?

Procedurally, what do you do about medical equipment, facilities and staff during all this courageous saving of the economy? If we’ve decided to risk a larger outbreak for the good of the economy, is it any longer necessary to try to save everyone?  And then there are all the elderly people in nursing homes and other institutions. Should precautions be taken to protect their safety, or should we just let the virus rip and plan on having a lot of capacity in the rest home market in coming months?

Finally, there’s the psychological impact of all this fear, sickness, and death that will inevitably accompany a premature return to business as usual. No matter how practical we’re being about the economy, there are going to be some people who are going to feel it more than others.   Some may feel guilty about it, or angry, or depressed, while others (say, middle aged people who still work) may simply live in fear of getting the virus themselves. People will be compelled to do what they have to do to survive, but a lot of them aren’t going to feel good about it.   Imagine that the government ordered everyone of all ages under retirement to go back to work now.  How would that feel?  

In the not-too-distant future, we’ll look back on this, and some will say, “Oh well, it was bound to happen. There was nothing we could have done.” Which isn’t at all true. Our hyper capitalist, globalist, neoliberal economy is built on endless “growth,” not on building a decent and equitable society.  In our economic system, it’s up to the individual to help himself. Women and children can line up in the back.

Not even during the Great Depression have we seen so many industries shut down, so many businesses doing little or no business.  The New Deal allowed people to survive the Depression.  The money stoppage of the 2009 financial crisis was alleviated by loosening credit and bailing out the banks.  But with coronavirus, we can’t just turn the economy back on through mechanical means.  We have to decide (or our leaders do) whether the risk of killing additional people is worth the prize of a restarted the economy.  Die for the Dow! could be our motto, but that brings us back to morals.

Because coronavirus is a natural and not a man-made disaster, it forces us to think of that amorphous force we call Nature, and how much we’ve abused it over the decades. We know our way of life is killing the planet, just as coronavirus is killing us. Some may wonder if coronavirus could in any way be connected to that abuse.  And yet we’re told that the most important thing right now is to get the economy going again, the very engine of the growth that’s killing the earth and all who live here. 

Coronavirus is proving to be the great disruptor that forces us to rethink our assumptions.  As the old system breaks down before our eyes, we have an opportunity like no other to envision a better way. What kind of system would help humans and the planet – all classes, all species — not just in the future but right now? Getting to that system is a project worth taking on, unless of course we want the next disaster to be even worse.

Thoughts on Coronavirus Relief

Natural Law

There’s been an emergence in Trump’s most recent rhetoric of belief in a natural law which states something like the following:

The rich deserve to get more because they have more.

The poor deserve to get less because they have less.

The rich stay rich; the poor stay poor.

This is the way things are supposed to be.

So simple.

But is it true?

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The Return of Paper Towel Emergencies

Back in my childhood, paper towels were regarded as an expensive commodity, to be used rarely, if at all, and only on the most spectacular of spills.  For a spill to be worthy of a paper towel, a Paper Towel Emergency had to be declared unanimously  by all assembled.  Otherwise, we were supposed to use the kitchen sponge or a dish cloth to wipe up the offending area.  

Over the years, it’s been my opinion that our household has gotten way too lax in our use of both these items. Channeling my dad, I see the paper towels come and I see them go, and I think, how could we use so many paper towels?  But we do.  Same with kitchen sponges.  I was raised in a two sponge household — one for disgusting messes and one for dishes.  I am sorry to report that that this rule is not strictly followed in our house.  Consequently, we go through more kitchen sponges than I consider appropriate, especially at the new going rate of a buck a sponge. 

Well, times have changed.  The coronavirus grocery shortages have put an end to the casual use of just about everything.  We now have half a roll of paper towels and one, groty kitchen sponge to hold us until we find some more.  

This makes things complicated.  Just this morning, I was forced to decide whether the little pile of cat vomit that greeted me on waking justified a paper towel.  After a brief debate, I decided it was too early for that nonsense, and used a single half sheet of paper towel along with a spatula to scrape up the remains.  

Sometimes it’s the little things that bring it home to you — those moments when you realize, we’re not in Kansas anymore.  Meanwhile, here at the homestead, not only are we starting to be out of things, we’re afraid to even go to the store to look for them!

Coronavirus as Disaster Epic

For most of my life I’ve been a fan of end-of-the-world movies, but now that the end times are surely upon us, the genre feels particularly apropos. Not that I especially want to watch them right now — these days, I’m preferring old musicals with cheery melodies and lots of tap dancing. But I’m glad I did watch the end of the world flicks when they came out. They’ve given me good preparation for global disasters of all kinds including asteroids, Planet X, aliens, nuclear wars, fascist pod people, smart computers, zombie epidemics, and generic apocalypses from A to Z.

Admittedly, coronavirus would probably make a pretty static end-of-the-world movie given that most of the participants are just locking themselves in their homes trying not to catch coronavirus. Nevertheless, if someone wanted to make a disaster film out of it, they could.

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There’s Something Very Unifying About A Global Crisis

There’s something very unifying about a global crisis — a great inescapable event that affects us all at the same time.  Such crises seem rare but in modern times, they happen often.  We have world economic crises, a global climate crisis, and a crisis of faith in our leaders that’s led to widespread social uprisings around the world.  These sorts of crises affect everyone to some extent, but the effects are hard to gauge.  Some people are affected disproportionately, others not at all.

But in the case of coronavirus, it’s different.  Coronavirus is affecting everyone — rich and poor, young and old, all races and creeds — at the same time.  And while some of us say to ourselves, “It’s just the flu” or “I’m young, it won’t kill me,” our lives are still being majorly impacted by it.  For starters, there are social restrictions and they’re getting tighter by the hour.  Moreover, the world economy is shutting down, which means that along with toilet paper, money is going to be in short supply..

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Coronavirus, Fear, and Airborne Toxic Events

Coronavirus is a bit like the Airborne Toxic Event in DeLillo’s White Noise. It’s out there, it’s a threat, there’s nothing we can do about it, so it just lurks there in the back of our minds, occasionally reinforced by headlines and half-heard news broadcasts. Another thing that might get us.

The trouble is, there are so many of these things already, that if we let ourselves think about them, we might become hysterical. Coronavirus — a murky danger that could and likely will happen to at least some of us, eventually.

This is how the Terrible Twenties begin, ushering in a time of rumor and fear, as well as genuine peril…