Dark Origins – A Journal of the Plague Year by Daniel Defoe based on the Great Plague of London, 1665 #DarkOrigins #readingcommunity #history
Posted: October 25, 2023 Filed under: Books, Dark Origins, Fiction, Historical Fiction | Tags: A Journal of the Plague Year, BookReview, Daniel Defoe, Dark Origins, Robbie Cheadle, Writing to be Read 28 Comments
Overview

A Journal of the Plague Year by Daniel Defoe is a most interesting book particularly in light of the recent Covid-19 pandemic that swept the world.
It is written in the first-person as a first hand account of the protagonist’s, identified as H.F. and described as an unmarried saddler, experiences during the great plague that afflicted London in 1665. The story is fiction but it contains detailed statistics of the death bills as the plague started to take hold and over the months of its duration, charts, data and extracts from government documents which make it read like the non-fictional personal diary of someone who was recording the facts and figures of the time.
When the plague first comes to the city, it is contained to certain parishes and is staved off by the colder winter weather, but when late spring and summer arrive, the numbers of the infected and the dead increase significantly. The protagonist is aware that the rich are leaving the city, but he is very religious and believes that God wants him to stay.
He describes how the poor are tricked into purchasing preventative medicines and charms by quack doctors, fortune tellers, and other tricksters. It is interesting that he picks this thread up again later in the book and states that all of these ‘pretenders’ succumb to the plague.
H.F. describes in detail the horror of the plague. How infected people go mad and run naked through the streets until they drop down dead. He describes how the authorities implement a system of the shutting up of houses in terms of which when any member of a household was identified as having being infected, the entire household were locked up in the house and a watchman placed outside the door so they could not escape. The protagonist is not in favour of this system as it results in all the inhabitants of the household becoming infected and dying of the plague. It also results in a lot of desperate bids to escape shut up houses that resulted in the plague spreading further. Interestingly enough, a similar attempt to keep people in their homes during the Covid-19 pandemic also didn’t achieve the expected success and resulted in a huge amount of resistance by people.
H.F. depicts a governing structure in the city that is sympathetic to the situation of the poor and ensures that people have access to bread at a reasonable price throughout the duration of the plague. He goes into a lot of detail about the price of bread versus the weight of the loaves before the plague. The city is kept free of bodies which are collected at night and taken to mass graves.
The protagonist also goes into a lot of detail about the effect of the plague on the people of the city. The grief experienced by survivors who have lost their entire families and who follow their dead loved ones and throw themselves into the mass graves and other ‘infected’ people who effectively kill themselves because of the pain the disease is inflicting on them.
The narrator tells a lengthily story about three brothers who leave the city to escape the plague and meet up with a small band of other people also leaving. The difficulties experienced by Londoners who left the city and attempted to live in the countryside while the plague raged are detailed. The suspicion and lack of welcome by the rural villages and town who do not wish to accept any Londoners into their areas for fear of their carrying the plague, and the lack of shelter, food, and other amenities. The three brothers and their band manage to make a success of it with some help from a local wealthy landowner. They actually outlive a lot of the villagers when the plague does spread out of London and into the surrounding countryside.
Reading this book after the Covid-19 pandemic was fascinating. The parallels between this event more than 350 years ago in London and the experiences and reactions of people during the time of the pandemic are have a dreadful similarity. People turn to religion and to quack remedies, people resist the attempts by authorities to contain the disease by findings ways to escape from their homes, people suffer depression and loss.
This book is certainly not for everyone as it is filled with facts and figures, but I found it very interesting and appreciated the historical information shared.
The Great Plague of 1665 – 1666

The plague that broke out in London in 1665 was the worst outbreak to effect England since the black death of 1348. It is believed at approximately 15% of the population of London died. The recorded deaths were 68,596 but it is believed at least 100,000 people died. The population of the city in 1665 was 460,000.
The plague was carried by fleas on rats and they were attracted to the poorer parts of the city where rubbish and waste filled the streets.
There were three types of plague:
- Bubonic plague that caused swellings (buboes) in the lymph nodes found in the armpits, groin and neck. These sufferers experienced headaches, vomiting and fever. Sufferers had a 30% chance of dying within two weeks.
- Pneumonic plague which attacked the lungs and spread to other people through coughing and sneezing; and
- Septicaemic plague which occurred when the bacteria entered the blood. The chances of survival of this type of plague were very slim.

The treatments and methods of prevention were privative. Patients were bled with leeches. The air was cleansed using smoke and heat as people thought bad air caused the distemper. Children were encouraged to smoke to ward off bad air. Some people sniffed a sponge soaked in vinegar.
When the winter arrived, the plague started to decrease. Scientists believe this was due to people developing a stronger immunity to the disease rather than the great fire of London on 2 September 1666, making any notable impact through the destruction of houses within the walls of the city and on the banks of the River Thames. Many of the plague deaths had occurred in the poorest parishes outside the city walls
On The Plague Year: London, 1665
By DM Lovic
In London Town, the children played, the kittens purred, the flowers bloomed,
The adults laughed, the horses neighed, for no one knew they all were doomed.
Yes, all within the world was right when Death sneaked into town that night.
Beneath a haunted summer moon, upon a flute that whistled flat,
He played a slow, hypnotic tune that summoned every flea and rat
Who came from cellar, slum and glade to march the Devil’s plague parade.
Searching streets from side to side, the weakest souls with sword he struck,
Then left a token on their hide to signify the loss of luck.
For no one touched would e’er be saved, ‘twas six mere hours from spot to grave.
The wealthy fled to distant hills, doors were bolted, shutters locked,
But none could stop the morbid chills when death stood on the stoop and knocked.
Inside, they wept and fought with fate but, patiently, he’d smile and wait.
Sickness turned into despair, howls of terror, dreadful shrieks,
They echoed through the London air for weeks and weeks and weeks.
But panicked cries and wailing tears were only music to his ears.
One ghastly year that madness reigned and when Death fin’ly had withdrawn,
The price was tallied and explained: one hundred thousand souls were gone.
And London Town, in stark reverse, returned to life without the curse.
On city streets, the children played, the kittens purred, the flowers bloomed,
The adults laughed, the horses neighed, for every soul knew he was doomed.
From: The Poetry Nook
About Roberta Eaton Cheadle

Award-winning, bestselling author, Roberta Eaton Cheadle, is a South African writer and poet specialising in historical, paranormal, and horror novels and short stories. She is an avid reader in these genres and her writing has been influenced by famous authors including Bram Stoker, Edgar Allan Poe, Amor Towles, Stephen Crane, Enrich Maria Remarque, George Orwell, Stephen King, and Colleen McCullough.
Roberta has two published novels and has horror, paranormal, and fantasy short stories included in several anthologies. She is also a contributor to the Ask the Authors 2022 (WordCrafter Writing Reference series).
Roberta also has thirteen children’s books and two poetry books published under the name of Robbie Cheadle, and has poems and short stories featured in several anthologies under this name.
Roberta’s blog features discussions about classic books, book reviews, poetry, and photography. https://roberta-writes.com/.
Find Roberta Eaton Cheadle
Blog: https://wordpress.com/view/robertawrites235681907.wordpress.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/RobertaEaton17
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/robertawrites
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Roberta-Eaton-Cheadle/e/B08RSNJQZ5
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I definitely want to read this book, Robbie. Sounds ultra-depressing but compelling. And a compelling review by you.
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Hi Dave, it is very historical and does include a lot of facts and figures but I found it completely fascinating especially given our recent pandemic. I kept comparing then and now and thinking how little has really changed when the chips are down like this.
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I agree, Robbie, that some long-ago events still feel VERY relevant to recent events.
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I had no idea Defoe wrote about that topic. Difficult times. I’m not sure we learned much about fighting pandemics in the past 500 years.
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Hi Jacqui, that is exactly what I thought. The authorities did their best then, and they made a good job of it considering the circumstances, but they couldn’t control human nature any more then than the authorities could in 2020/21. It is such a fascinating read if you like history and aren’t put off by facts and figures.
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Amazing. History does repeat itself.
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Oh yes, all the time. The amazing thing is that humanity never learns from it.
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Fears of death bring out the worst in people.
I do have to disagree with you about the lockdown though–it definitely saved lives here in the city. I have a friend who teaches high school in Harlem and most of her students continued to wear masks in school long after the the lockdown was lifted and the requirement to wear masks was lifted, because they lost so many family member who, as essential workers, were exposed to the virus through their jobs and brought it home, which then caused the deaths of many of their family members, particularly the elders. But of course now, as then, it was not handled or coordinated well. Panic does not encourage rational thinking. (K)
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Hi Kerfe, I think it saved lives when people implemented it seriously. Many didn’t though. I’ll relook at what I wrote as my message was clearly lost in translation.
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It’s true that too many did not want to be restricted. But for those who did comply (and of course many workers could not) it definitely saved lives. I’m not sure it has an exact parallel to the plague–the world was very different then. No one used armed guards to keep people in their buildings. People were allowed to go out and get food, etc. No one was arrested for not wearing a mask, although they might be denied entry to the grocery store or the doctor’s office. People complained about how harsh it was, but in comparison, it was not that onerous. The fears were the same I’m sure though.
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Yes, I am sure the fears were the same. Some countries implemented the restrictions more rigidly. We had soldiers with machine guns keeping people off the beaches during lock down.
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That’s harsh! I would resent that too.
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At one point, I’d wanted to read this book, but I don’t anymore.
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Hi Liz, do you not want to read it because of my review or for another reason?
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Hi, Robbie. I enjoyed and appreciated the contextual and statistical information in your review; I learned a lot from it. With Covid still lurking, I’m staying away from books and films that deal with contagious disease.
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Okay, I understand that completely. I thought that was the case 💚
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Thank you for understanding, Robbie.
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There are two dates I have always remembered from English history lessons at junior school, 1665 and 1666, the Great Plague and The Great fire of London, a dramatic decade. This does sound an interesting book and in some ways city leadership was well organised considering the difficulties!
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Hi Janet, given the circumstances, the leadership was excellent. I was interested in the fact that scientists don’t credit the great fire for ending the plague which is what I always thought.
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I have read a lot about the plague — the earliest one and later ones. Have you read Connie Willis’ “Doomsday Book”? If not, it’s really excellent but also more than a little bit of a downer. I’ve read it once, listened to it once and I think that does it for me and the plague.
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Hi Marilyn, that you for that recommendation. I haven’t read Doomsday book but I will. I have not read a fictional book about the Black Death of the 14th century but I’ve read a lot of non-fiction.
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It sounds interesting, Robbie. Thanks for diving into Journal of the Plague Year.
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Hi Vera, I have read this book before. I found it even more interesting this time around with the pandemic hindsight.
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I’m not sure if I ever read this in its entirety, but I’ve at least read excerpts. Thank you for your thorough review, Robbie. I’ve researched some plagues in history, but mostly the yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia in 1793.
Two wonderful novels that deal with the plague,
Geraldine Brooks, A Year of Wonders, which deals with the true story of the plague village in England that did close itself off to the world in 1665. One of the saddest books I’ve ever read. My friend was so taken with it, that she planned a trip to see the village in Derbyshire
And Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell, which covers the death of Shakespeare’s son, Hamnet from one of the earlier waves of plague that swept through London and the countryside. There’s a brilliant passage that traces how the plague arrived (conjecture of course.)
Sorry for going on and on. 🙂
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Hi Merril, thank you for your interesting comment. I am pleased this article interested you. The Great Plague and the Black Death have always fascinated me. I do know about Geraldine Brooks’ book, I read an article about it and the village it centred around. I haven’t read it though. Hamnet sounds very interesting. I went to see Shakespeare’s houses and those of his relations during one of our trips to the UK. I also saw the Globe theatre in London. It was great!
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You’re welcome, Robbie.
It must have been cool to see those places!
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It was, I am lucky 🤗
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I found this article quite helpful. Looking forward to more content like this.
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