A Journal of the Plague
Year
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
This increase of the bills stood
thus: the usual number of burials in a week, in the parishes of St
Giles-in-the-Fields and St Andrew's, Holborn, were from twelve to
seventeen or nineteen each, few more or less; but from the time
that the plague first began in St Giles's parish, it was observed
that the ordinary burials increased in number considerably. For
example:—
From December 27 to January 3 {
St Giles's
16 "
{ St Andrew's
17
"
January 3 " " 10 { St
Giles's
12 "
{ St Andrew's
25
"
January 10 " " 17 { St
Giles's
18 "
{ St Andrew's
28
"
January 17 " " 24 { St
Giles's
23 "
{ St Andrew's
16
"
January 24 " " 31 { St
Giles's
24 "
{ St Andrew's
15
"
January 30 " February 7 { St
Giles's
21
"
{ St Andrew's
23
"
February 7 "
" 14 { St Giles's
24
The like increase of the bills
was observed in the parishes of St Bride's, adjoining on one side
of Holborn parish, and in the parish of St James, Clerkenwell,
adjoining on the other side of Holborn; in both which parishes the
usual numbers that died weekly were from four to six or eight,
whereas at that time they were increased as follows:—
From December 20 to December 27 {
St Bride's
0 "
{ St James's
8
" December 27 to January 3 {
St Bride's
6 "
{ St James's
9
" January 3 " "
10 { St Bride's
11 "
{ St James's
7
" January 10 " " 17 { St
Bride's 12 "
{ St James's
9
" January 17 " " 24 { St
Bride's
9 "
{ St James's 15
" January 24 " " 31 { St
Bride's
8 "
{ St James's 12
" January 31 " February 7 {
St Bride's 13 "
{ St James's
5
" February 7 " " 14 { St
Bride's
12 "
{ St James's
6
Besides this, it was observed
with great uneasiness by the people that the weekly bills in
general increased very much during these weeks, although it was at
a time of the year when usually the bills are very moderate.
The usual number of burials
within the bills of mortality for a week was from about 240 or
thereabouts to 300. The last was esteemed a pretty high bill; but
after this we found the bills successively increasing as
follows:—
Buried. Increased.
December the 20th to the 27th
291
...
"
" 27th "
3rd January
349
58
January the 3rd " 10th "
394
45
"
" 10th " 17th "
415
21
"
" 17th " 24th "
474
59
This last bill was really
frightful, being a higher number than had been known to have been
buried in one week since the preceding visitation of 1656.
However, all this went off again,
and the weather proving cold, and the frost, which began in
December, still continuing very severe even till near the end of
February, attended with sharp though moderate winds, the bills
decreased again, and the city grew healthy, and everybody began to
look upon the danger as good as over; only that still the burials
in St Giles's continued high. From the beginning of April
especially they stood at twenty-five each week, till the week from
the 18th to the 25th, when there was buried in St Giles's parish
thirty, whereof two of the plague and eight of the spotted-fever,
which was
looked upon as the same thing;
likewise the number that died of the spotted- fever in the whole
increased, being eight the week before, and twelve the week
above-named.
This alarmed us all again, and
terrible apprehensions were among the people, especially the
weather being now changed and growing warm, and the summer being at
hand. However, the next week there seemed to be some hopes again;
the bills were low, the number of the dead in all was but 388,
there was none of the plague, and but four of the
spotted-fever.
But the following week it
returned again, and the distemper was spread into two or three
other parishes, viz., St Andrew's, Holborn; St Clement Danes; and,
to the great affliction of the city, one died within the walls, in
the parish of St Mary Woolchurch, that is to say, in Bearbinder
Lane, near Stocks Market; in all there were nine of the plague and
six of the spotted-fever. It was, however, upon inquiry found that
this Frenchman who died in Bearbinder Lane was one who, having
lived in Long Acre, near the infected houses, had removed for fear
of the distemper, not knowing that he was already infected.
This was the beginning of May,
yet the weather was temperate, variable, and cool enough, and
people had still some hopes. That which encouraged them was that
the city was healthy: the whole ninety-seven parishes buried but
fifty- four, and we began to hope that, as it was chiefly among the
people at that end of the town, it might go no farther; and the
rather, because the next week, which was from the 9th of May to the
16th, there died but three, of which not one within the whole city
or liberties; and St Andrew's buried but fifteen, which was very
low. 'Tis true St Giles's buried two-and-thirty, but still, as
there was but one of the plague, people began to be easy. The whole
bill also was very low, for the week before the bill was but 347,
and the week above mentioned but 343. We continued in these hopes
for a few days, but it was but for a few, for the people were no
more to be deceived thus; they searched the houses and found that
the plague was really spread every way, and that many died of it
every day. So that now all our extenuations abated, and it was no
more to be concealed; nay, it quickly appeared that the infection
had spread itself beyond all hopes of abatement. That in the parish
of St Giles it was gotten into several streets, and several
families lay all sick together; and, accordingly, in the weekly
bill for the next week the thing began to show itself. There was
indeed but fourteen set down of the plague, but this was all
knavery and collusion, for in St Giles's parish they buried forty
in all, whereof it was certain most of them died of the plague,
though they were set down of other distempers; and though the
number of all the burials were not increased above thirty-two, and
the whole bill being but 385, yet there was fourteen of the
spotted-fever, as well as fourteen of the plague; and we took it
for granted upon the whole that there were fifty died that week of
the plague.
The next bill was from the 23rd
of May to the 30th, when the number of the
plague was seventeen. But the
burials in St Giles's were fifty-three—a frightful number!—of whom
they set down but nine of the plague; but on an examination more
strictly by the justices of peace, and at the Lord Mayor's request,
it was found there were twenty more who were really dead of the
plague in that parish, but had been set down of the spotted-fever
or other distempers, besides others concealed.
But those were trifling things to
what followed immediately after; for now the weather set in hot,
and from the first week in June the infection spread in a dreadful
manner, and the bills rose high; the articles of the fever,
spotted-fever, and teeth began to swell; for all that could conceal
their distempers did it, to prevent their neighbours shunning and
refusing to converse with them, and also to prevent authority
shutting up their houses; which, though it was not yet practised,
yet was threatened, and people were extremely terrified at the
thoughts of it.
The second week in June, the
parish of St Giles, where still the weight of the infection lay,
buried 120, whereof though the bills said but sixty-eight of the
plague, everybody said there had been 100 at least, calculating it
from the usual number of funerals in that parish, as above.
Till this week the city continued
free, there having never any died, except that one Frenchman whom I
mentioned before, within the whole ninety-seven parishes. Now there
died four within the city, one in Wood Street, one in Fenchurch
Street, and two in Crooked Lane. Southwark was entirely free,
having not one yet died on that side of the water.
I lived without Aldgate, about
midway between Aldgate Church and Whitechappel Bars, on the left
hand or north side of the street; and as the distemper had not
reached to that side of the city, our neighbourhood continued very
easy. But at the other end of the town their consternation was very
great: and the richer sort of people, especially the nobility and
gentry from the west part of the city, thronged out of town with
their families and servants in an unusual manner; and this was more
particularly seen in Whitechappel; that is to say, the Broad Street
where I lived; indeed, nothing was to be seen but waggons and
carts, with goods, women, servants, children, &c.; coaches
filled with people of the better sort and horsemen attending them,
and all hurrying away; then empty waggons and carts appeared, and
spare horses with servants, who, it was apparent, were returning or
sent from the countries to fetch more people; besides innumerable
numbers of men on horseback, some alone, others with servants, and,
generally speaking, all loaded with baggage and fitted out for
travelling, as anyone might perceive by their appearance.
This was a very terrible and
melancholy thing to see, and as it was a sight which I could not
but look on from morning to night (for indeed there was nothing
else of moment to be seen), it filled me with very serious thoughts
of
the misery that was coming upon
the city, and the unhappy condition of those that would be left in
it.
This hurry of the people was such
for some weeks that there was no getting at the Lord Mayor's door
without exceeding difficulty; there were such pressing and crowding
there to get passes and certificates of health for such as
travelled abroad, for without these there was no being admitted to
pass through the towns upon the road, or to lodge in any inn. Now,
as there had none died in the city for all this time, my Lord Mayor
gave certificates of health without any difficulty to all those who
lived in the ninety-seven parishes, and to those within the
liberties too for a while.
This hurry, I say, continued some
weeks, that is to say, all the month of May and June, and the more
because it was rumoured that an order of the Government was to be
issued out to place turnpikes and barriers on the road to prevent
people travelling, and that the towns on the road would not suffer
people from London to pass for fear of bringing the infection along
with them, though neither of these rumours had any foundation but
in the imagination, especially at-first.
I now began to consider seriously
with myself concerning my own case, and how I should dispose of
myself; that is to say, whether I should resolve to stay in London
or shut up my house and flee, as many of my neighbours did. I have
set this particular down so fully, because I know not but it may be
of moment to those who come after me, if they come to be brought to
the same distress, and to the same manner of making their choice;
and therefore I desire this account may pass with them rather for a
direction to themselves to act by than a history of my actings,
seeing it may not be of one farthing value to them to note what
became of me.
I had two important things before
me: the one was the carrying on my business and shop, which was
considerable, and in which was embarked all my effects in the
world; and the other was the preservation of my life in so dismal a
calamity as I saw apparently was coming upon the whole city, and
which, however great it was, my fears perhaps, as well as other
people's, represented to be much greater than it could be.
The first consideration was of
great moment to me; my trade was a saddler, and as my dealings were
chiefly not by a shop or chance trade, but among the merchants
trading to the English colonies in America, so my effects lay very
much in the hands of such. I was a single man, 'tis true, but I had
a family of servants whom I kept at my business; had a house, shop,
and warehouses filled with goods; and, in short, to leave them all
as things in such a case must be left (that is to say, without any
overseer or person fit to be trusted with them), had been to hazard
the loss not only of my trade, but of my goods, and indeed of all I
had in the world.
I had an elder brother at the
same time in London, and not many years before come over from
Portugal: and advising with him, his answer was in three words, the
same that was given in another case quite different, viz., 'Master,
save thyself.' In a word, he was for my retiring into the country,
as he resolved to do himself with his family; telling me what he
had, it seems, heard abroad, that the best preparation for the
plague was to run away from it. As to my argument of losing my
trade, my goods, or debts, he quite confuted me. He told me the
same thing which I argued for my staying, viz., that I would trust
God with my safety and health, was the strongest repulse to my
pretensions of losing my trade and my goods; 'for', says he, 'is it
not as reasonable that you should trust God with the chance or risk
of losing your trade, as that you should stay in so eminent a point
of danger, and trust Him with your life?'
I could not argue that I was in
any strait as to a place where to go, having several friends and
relations in Northamptonshire, whence our family first came from;
and particularly, I had an only sister in Lincolnshire, very
willing to receive and entertain me.
My brother, who had already sent
his wife and two children into Bedfordshire, and resolved to follow
them, pressed my going very earnestly; and I had once resolved to
comply with his desires, but at that time could get no horse; for
though it is true all the people did not go out of the city of
London, yet I may venture to say that in a manner all the horses
did; for there was hardly a horse to be bought or hired in the
whole city for some weeks. Once I resolved to travel on foot with
one servant, and, as many did, lie at no inn, but carry a soldier's
tent with us, and so lie in the fields, the weather being very
warm, and no danger from taking cold. I say, as many did, because
several did so at last, especially those who had been in the armies
in the war which had not been many years past; and I must needs say
that, speaking of second causes, had most of the people that
travelled done so, the plague had not been carried into so many
country towns and houses as it was, to the great damage, and indeed
to the ruin, of abundance of people.
But then my servant, whom I had
intended to take down with me, deceived me; and being frighted at
the increase of the distemper, and not knowing when I should go, he
took other measures, and left me, so I was put off for that time;
and, one way or other, I always found that to appoint to go away
was always crossed by some accident or other, so as to disappoint
and put it off again; and this brings in a story which otherwise
might be thought a needless digression, viz., about these
disappointments being from Heaven.
I mention this story also as the
best method I can advise any person to take in such a case,
especially if he be one that makes conscience of his duty, and
would be directed what to do in it, namely, that he should keep his
eye upon the particular providences which occur at that time, and
look upon them complexly, as they regard one another, and as all
together regard the question
before him: and then, I think, he
may safely take them for intimations from Heaven of what is his
unquestioned duty to do in such a case; I mean as to going away
from or staying in the place where we dwell, when visited with an
infectious distemper.
It came very warmly into my mind
one morning, as I was musing on this particular thing, that as
nothing attended us without the direction or permission of Divine
Power, so these disappointments must have something in them
extraordinary; and I ought to consider whether it did not evidently
point out, or intimate to me, that it was the will of Heaven I
should not go. It immediately followed in my thoughts, that if it
really was from God that I should stay, He was able effectually to
preserve me in the midst of all the death and danger that would
surround me; and that if I attempted to secure myself by fleeing
from my habitation, and acted contrary to these intimations, which
I believe to be Divine, it was a kind of flying from God, and that
He could cause His justice to overtake me when and where He thought
fit.
These thoughts quite turned my
resolutions again, and when I came to discourse with my brother
again I told him that I inclined to stay and take my lot in that
station in which God had placed me, and that it seemed to be made
more especially my duty, on the account of what I have said.
My brother, though a very
religious man himself, laughed at all I had suggested about its
being an intimation from Heaven, and told me several stories of
such foolhardy people, as he called them, as I was; that I ought
indeed to submit to it as a work of Heaven if I had been any way
disabled by distempers or diseases, and that then not being able to
go, I ought to acquiesce in the direction of Him, who, having been
my Maker, had an undisputed right of sovereignty in disposing of
me, and that then there had been no difficulty to determine which
was the call of His providence and which was not; but that I should
take it as an intimation from Heaven that I should not go out of
town, only because I could not hire a horse to go, or my fellow was
run away that was to attend me, was ridiculous, since at the time I
had my health and limbs, and other servants, and might with ease
travel a day or two on foot, and having a good certificate of being
in perfect health, might either hire a horse or take post on the
road, as I thought fit.
Then he proceeded to tell me of
the mischievous consequences which attended the presumption of the
Turks and Mahometans in Asia and in other places where he had been
(for my brother, being a merchant, was a few years before, as I
have already observed, returned from abroad, coming last from
Lisbon), and how, presuming upon their professed predestinating
notions, and of every man's end being predetermined and unalterably
beforehand decreed, they would go unconcerned into infected places
and converse with infected persons, by which means they died at the
rate of ten or fifteen thousand a week, whereas the Europeans or
Christian merchants, who kept themselves
retired and reserved, generally
escaped the contagion.
Upon these arguments my brother
changed my resolutions again, and I began to resolve to go, and
accordingly made all things ready; for, in short, the infection
increased round me, and the bills were risen to almost seven
hundred a week, and my brother told me he would venture to stay no
longer. I desired him to let me consider of it but till the next
day, and I would resolve: and as I had already prepared everything
as well as I could as to MY business, and whom to entrust my
affairs with, I had little to do but to resolve.
I went home that evening greatly
oppressed in my mind, irresolute, and not knowing what to do. I had
set the evening wholly—apart to consider seriously about it, and
was all alone; for already people had, as it were by a general
consent, taken up the custom of not going out of doors after
sunset; the reasons I shall have occasion to say more of
by-and-by.
In the retirement of this evening
I endeavoured to resolve, first, what was my duty to do, and I
stated the arguments with which my brother had pressed me to go
into the country, and I set, against them the strong impressions
which I had on my mind for staying; the visible call I seemed to
have from the particular circumstance of my calling, and the care
due from me for the preservation of my effects, which were, as I
might say, my estate; also the intimations which I thought I had
from Heaven, that to me signified a kind of direction to venture;
and it occurred to me that if I had what I might call a direction
to stay, I ought to suppose it contained a promise of being
preserved if I obeyed.
This lay close to me, and my mind
seemed more and more encouraged to stay than ever, and supported
with a secret satisfaction that I should be kept. Add to this,
that, turning over the Bible which lay before me, and while my
thoughts were more than ordinarily serious upon the question, I
cried out, 'Well, I know not what to do; Lord, direct me I' and the
like; and at that juncture I happened to stop turning over the book
at the gist Psalm, and casting my eye on the second verse, I read
on to the seventh verse exclusive, and after that included the
tenth, as follows: 'I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my
fortress: my God, in Him will I trust. Surely He shall deliver thee
from the snare of the fowler, and from the noisome pestilence. He
shall cover thee with His feathers, and under His wings shalt thou
trust: His truth shall be thy shield and buckler. Thou shalt not be
afraid for the terror by night; nor for the arrow that flieth by
day; nor for the pestilence that walketh in darkness; nor for the
destruction that wasteth at noonday. A thousand shall fall at thy
side, and ten thousand at thy right hand; but it shall not come
nigh thee. Only with thine eyes shalt thou behold and see the
reward of the wicked. Because thou hast made the Lord, which is my
refuge, even the most High, thy habitation; there shall no evil
befall thee, neither shall any plague come nigh thy dwelling,'
&C.
I scarce need tell the reader
that from that moment I resolved that I would stay
in the town, and casting myself
entirely upon the goodness and protection of the Almighty, would
not seek any other shelter whatever; and that, as my times were in
His hands, He was as able to keep me in a time of the infection as
in a time of health; and if He did not think fit to deliver me,
still I was in His hands, and it was meet He should do with me as
should seem good to Him.
With this resolution I went to
bed; and I was further confirmed in it the next day by the woman
being taken ill with whom I had intended to entrust my house and
all my affairs. But I had a further obligation laid on me on the
same side, for the next day I found myself very much out of order
also, so that if I would have gone away, I could not, and I
continued ill three or four days, and this entirely determined my
stay; so I took my leave of my brother, who went away to Dorking,
in Surrey, and afterwards fetched a round farther into
Buckinghamshire or Bedfordshire, to a retreat he had found out
there for his family.
It was a very ill time to be sick
in, for if any one complained, it was immediately said he had the
plague; and though I had indeed no symptom of that distemper, yet
being very ill, both in my head and in my stomach, I was not
without apprehension that I really was infected; but in about three
days I grew better; the third night I rested well, sweated a
little, and was much refreshed. The apprehensions of its being the
infection went also quite away with my illness, and I went about my
business as usual.
These things, however, put off
all my thoughts of going into the country; and my brother also
being gone, I had no more debate either with him or with myself on
that subject.
It was now mid-July, and the
plague, which had chiefly raged at the other end of the town, and,
as I said before, in the parishes of St Giles, St Andrew's,
Holborn, and towards Westminster, began to now come eastward
towards the part where I lived. It was to be observed, indeed, that
it did not come straight on towards us; for the city, that is to
say, within the walls, was indifferently healthy still; nor was it
got then very much over the water into Southwark; for though there
died that week 1268 of all distempers, whereof it might be supposed
above 600 died of the plague, yet there was but twenty-eight in the
whole city, within the walls, and but nineteen in Southwark,
Lambeth parish included; whereas in the parishes of St Giles and St
Martin-in-the-Fields alone there died 421.
But we perceived the infection
kept chiefly in the out-parishes, which being very populous, and
fuller also of poor, the distemper found more to prey upon than in
the city, as I shall observe afterwards. We perceived, I say, the
distemper to draw our way, viz., by the parishes of Clarkenwell,
Cripplegate, Shoreditch, and Bishopsgate; which last two parishes
joining to Aldgate, Whitechappel, and Stepney, the infection came
at length to spread its utmost
rage and violence in those parts,
even when it abated at the western parishes where it began.
It was very strange to observe
that in this particular week, from the 4th to the 11th of July,
when, as I have observed, there died near 400 of the plague in the
two parishes of St Martin and St Giles-in-the-Fields only, there
died in the parish of Aldgate but four, in the parish of
Whitechappel three, in the parish of Stepney but one.
Likewise in the next week, from
the 11th of July to the 18th, when the week's bill was 1761, yet
there died no more of the plague, on the whole Southwark side of
the water, than sixteen. But this face of things soon changed, and
it began to thicken in Cripplegate parish especially, and in
Clarkenwell; so that by the second week in August, Cripplegate
parish alone buried 886, and Clarkenwell 155. Of the first, 850
might well be reckoned to die of the plague; and of the last, the
bill itself said 145 were of the plague.
During the month of July, and
while, as I have observed, our part of the town seemed to be spared
in comparison of the west part, I went ordinarily about the
streets, as my business required, and particularly went generally
once in a day, or in two days, into the city, to my brother's
house, which he had given me charge of, and to see if it was safe;
and having the key in my pocket, I used to go into the house, and
over most of the rooms, to see that all was well; for though it be
something wonderful to tell, that any should have hearts so
hardened in the midst of such a calamity as to rob and steal, yet
certain it is that all sorts of villainies, and even levities and
debaucheries, were then practised in the town as openly as ever—I
will not say quite as frequently, because the numbers of people
were many ways lessened.
But the city itself began now to
be visited too, I mean within the walls; but the number of people
there were indeed extremely lessened by so great a multitude having
been gone into the country; and even all this month of July they
continued to flee, though not in such multitudes as formerly. In
August, indeed, they fled in such a manner that I began to think
there would be really none but magistrates and servants left in the
city.
As they fled now out of the city,
so I should observe that the Court removed early, viz., in the
month of June, and went to Oxford, where it pleased God to preserve
them; and the distemper did not, as I heard of, so much as touch
them, for which I cannot say that I ever saw they showed any great
token of thankfulness, and hardly anything of reformation, though
they did not want being told that their crying vices might without
breach of charity be said to have gone far in bringing that
terrible judgement upon the whole nation.
The face of London was—now indeed
strangely altered: I mean the whole mass of buildings, city,
liberties, suburbs, Westminster, Southwark, and altogether; for as
to the particular part called the city, or within the walls,
that
was not yet much infected. But in
the whole the face of things, I say, was much altered; sorrow and
sadness sat upon every face; and though some parts were not yet
overwhelmed, yet all looked deeply concerned; and, as we saw it
apparently coming on, so every one looked on himself and his family
as in the utmost danger. Were it possible to represent those times
exactly to those that did not see them, and give the reader due
ideas of the horror 'that everywhere presented itself, it must make
just impressions upon their minds and fill them with surprise.
London might well be said to be all in tears; the mourners did not
go about the streets indeed, for nobody put on black or made a
formal dress of mourning for their nearest friends; but the voice
of mourners was truly heard in the streets. The shrieks of women
and children at the windows and doors of their houses, where their
dearest relations were perhaps dying, or just dead, were so
frequent to be heard as we passed the streets, that it was enough
to pierce the stoutest heart in the world to hear them. Tears and
lamentations were seen almost in every house, especially in the
first part of the visitation; for towards the latter end men's
hearts were hardened, and death was so always before their eyes,
that they did not so much concern themselves for the loss of their
friends, expecting that themselves should be summoned the next
hour.
Business led me out sometimes to
the other end of the town, even when the sickness was chiefly
there; and as the thing was new to me, as well as to everybody
else, it was a most surprising thing to see those streets which
were usually so thronged now grown desolate, and so few people to
be seen in them, that if I had been a stranger and at a loss for my
way, I might sometimes have gone the length of a whole street (I
mean of the by-streets), and seen nobody to direct me except
watchmen set at the doors of such houses as were shut up, of which
I shall speak presently.
One day, being at that part of
the town on some special business, curiosity led me to observe
things more than usually, and indeed I walked a great way where I
had no business. I went up Holborn, and there the street was full
of people, but they walked in the middle of the great street,
neither on one side or other, because, as I suppose, they would not
mingle with anybody that came out of houses, or meet with smells
and scent from houses that might be infected.
The Inns of Court were all shut
up; nor were very many of the lawyers in the Temple, or Lincoln's
Inn, or Gray's Inn, to be seen there. Everybody was at peace; there
was no occasion for lawyers; besides, it being in the time of the
vacation too, they were generally gone into the country. Whole rows
of houses in some places were shut close up, the inhabitants all
fled, and only a watchman or two left.
When I speak of rows of houses
being shut up, I do not mean shut up by the magistrates, but that
great numbers of persons followed the Court, by the
necessity of their employments
and other dependences; and as others retired, really frighted with
the distemper, it was a mere desolating of some of the streets. But
the fright was not yet near so great in the city, abstractly so
called, and particularly because, though they were at first in a
most inexpressible consternation, yet as I have observed that the
distemper intermitted often at first, so they were, as it were,
alarmed and unalarmed again, and this several times, till it began
to be familiar to them; and that even when it appeared violent, yet
seeing it did not presently spread into the city, or the east and
south parts, the people began to take courage, and to be, as I may
say, a little hardened. It is true a vast many people fled, as I
have observed, yet they were chiefly from the west end of the town,
and from that we call the heart of the city: that is to say, among
the wealthiest of the people, and such people as were unencumbered
with trades and business. But of the rest, the generality stayed,
and seemed to abide the worst; so that in the place we calf the
Liberties, and in the suburbs, in Southwark, and in the east part,
such as Wapping, Ratcliff, Stepney, Rotherhithe, and the like, the
people generally stayed, except here and there a few wealthy
families, who, as above, did not depend upon their business.
It must not be forgot here that
the city and suburbs were prodigiously full of people at the time
of this visitation, I mean at the time that it began; for though I
have lived to see a further increase, and mighty throngs of people
settling in London more than ever, yet we had always a notion that
the numbers of people which, the wars being over, the armies
disbanded, and the royal family and the monarchy being restored,
had flocked to London to settle in business, or to depend upon and
attend the Court for rewards of services, preferments, and the
like, was such that the town was computed to have in it above a
hundred thousand people more than ever it held before; nay, some
took upon them to say it had twice as many, because all the ruined
families of the royal party flocked hither. All the old soldiers
set up trades here, and abundance of families settled here. Again,
the Court brought with them a great flux of pride, and new
fashions. All people were grown gay and luxurious, and the joy of
the Restoration had brought a vast many families to London.
I often thought that as Jerusalem
was besieged by the Romans when the Jews were assembled together to
celebrate the Passover—by which means an incredible number of
people were surprised there who would otherwise have been in other
countries—so the plague entered London when an incredible increase
of people had happened occasionally, by the particular
circumstances above-named. As this conflux of the people to a
youthful and gay Court made a great trade in the city, especially
in everything that belonged to fashion and finery, so it drew by
consequence a great number of workmen, manufacturers, and the like,
being mostly poor people who depended upon their labour. And I
remember in particular that in a representation to my Lord Mayor of
the
condition of the poor, it was
estimated that there were no less than an hundred thousand
riband-weavers in and about the city, the chiefest number of whom
lived then in the parishes of Shoreditch, Stepney, Whitechappel,
and Bishopsgate, that, namely, about Spitalfields; that is to say,
as Spitalfields was then, for it was not so large as now by one
fifth part.
By this, however, the number of
people in the whole may be judged of; and, indeed, I often wondered
that, after the prodigious numbers of people that went away at
first, there was yet so great a multitude left as it appeared there
was.
But I must go back again to the
beginning of this surprising time. While the fears of the people
were young, they were increased strangely by several odd accidents
which, put altogether, it was really a wonder the whole body of the
people did not rise as one man and abandon their dwellings, leaving
the place as a space of ground designed by Heaven for an Akeldama,
doomed to be destroyed from the face of the earth, and that all
that would be found in it would perish with it. I shall name but a
few of these things; but sure they were so many, and so many
wizards and cunning people propagating them, that I have often
wondered there was any (women especially) left behind.
In the first place, a blazing
star or comet appeared for several months before the plague, as
there did the year after another, a little before the fire. The old
women and the phlegmatic hypochondriac part of the other sex, whom
I could almost call old women too, remarked (especially afterward,
though not till both those judgements were over) that those two
comets passed directly over the city, and that so very near the
houses that it was plain they imported something peculiar to the
city alone; that the comet before the pestilence was of a faint,
dull, languid colour, and its motion very heavy, Solemn, and slow;
but that the comet before the fire was bright and sparkling, or, as
others said, flaming, and its motion swift and furious; and that,
accordingly, one foretold a heavy judgement, slow but severe,
terrible and frightful, as was the plague; but the other foretold a
stroke, sudden, swift, and fiery as the conflagration. Nay, so
particular some people were, that as they looked upon that comet
preceding the fire, they fancied that they not only saw it pass
swiftly and fiercely, and could perceive the motion with their eye,
but even they heard it; that it made a rushing, mighty noise,
fierce and terrible, though at a distance, and but just
perceivable.
I saw both these stars, and, I
must confess, had so much of the common notion of such things in my
head, that I was apt to look upon them as the forerunners and
warnings of God's judgements; and especially when, after the plague
had followed the first, I yet saw another of the like kind, I could
not but say God had not yet sufficiently scourged the city.
But I could not at the same time
carry these things to the height that others did, knowing, too,
that natural causes are assigned by the astronomers for such
things, and that their motions
and even their revolutions are calculated, or pretended to be
calculated, so that they cannot be so perfectly called the
forerunners or foretellers, much less the procurers, of such events
as pestilence, war, fire, and the like.
But let my thoughts and the
thoughts of the philosophers be, or have been, what they will,
these things had a more than ordinary influence upon the minds of
the common people, and they had almost universal melancholy
apprehensions of some dreadful calamity and judgement coming upon
the city; and this principally from the sight of this comet, and
the little alarm that was given in December by two people dying at
St Giles's, as above.
The apprehensions of the people
were likewise strangely increased by the error of the times; in
which, I think, the people, from what principle I cannot imagine,
were more addicted to prophecies and astrological conjurations,
dreams, and old wives' tales than ever they were before or since.
Whether this unhappy temper was originally raised by the follies of
some people who got money by it—that is to say, by printing
predictions and prognostications—I know not; but certain it is,
books frighted them terribly, such as Lilly's Almanack, Gadbury's
Astrological Predictions, Poor Robin's Almanack, and the like; also
several pretended religious books, one entitled, Come out of her,
my People, lest you be Partaker of her Plagues; another called,
Fair Warning; another, Britain's Remembrancer; and many such, all,
or most part of which, foretold, directly or covertly, the ruin of
the city. Nay, some were so enthusiastically bold as to run about
the streets with their oral predictions, pretending they were sent
to preach to the city; and one in particular, who, like Jonah to
Nineveh, cried in the streets, 'Yet forty days, and London shall be
destroyed.' I will not be positive whether he said yet forty days
or yet a few days. Another ran about naked, except a pair of
drawers about his waist, crying day and night, like a man that
Josephus mentions, who cried, 'Woe to Jerusalem!' a little before
the destruction of that city. So this poor naked creature cried,
'Oh, the great and the dreadful God!' and said no more, but
repeated those words continually, with a voice and countenance full
of horror, a swift pace; and nobody could ever find him to stop or
rest, or take any sustenance, at least that ever I could hear of. I
met this poor creature several times in the streets, and would have
spoken to him, but he would not enter into speech with me or any
one else, but held on his dismal cries continually.
These things terrified the people
to the last degree, and especially when two or three times, as I
have mentioned already, they found one or two in the bills dead of
the plague at St Giles's.
Next to these public things were
the dreams of old women, or, I should say, the interpretation of
old women upon other people's dreams; and these put abundance of
people even out of their wits. Some heard voices warning them to be
gone, for that there would be such a plague in London, so that the
living
would not be able to bury the
dead. Others saw apparitions in the air; and I must be allowed to
say of both, I hope without breach of charity, that they heard
voices that never spake, and saw sights that never appeared; but
the imagination of the people was really turned wayward and
possessed. And no wonder, if they who were poring continually at
the clouds saw shapes and figures, representations and appearances,
which had nothing in them but air, and vapour. Here they told us
they saw a flaming sword held in a hand coming out of a cloud, with
a point hanging directly over the city; there they saw hearses and
coffins in the air carrying to be buried; and there again, heaps of
dead bodies lying unburied, and the like, just as the imagination
of the poor terrified people furnished them with matter to work
upon. So hypochondriac fancies represent Ships, armies, battles in
the firmament; Till steady eyes the exhalations solve, And all to
its first matter, cloud, resolve.
I could fill this account with
the strange relations such people gave every day of what they had
seen; and every one was so positive of their having seen what they
pretended to see, that there was no contradicting them without
breach of friendship, or being accounted rude and unmannerly on the
one hand, and profane and impenetrable on the other. One time
before the plague was begun (otherwise than as I have said in St
Giles's), I think it was in March, seeing a crowd of people in the
street, I joined with them to satisfy my curiosity, and found them
all staring up into the air to see what a woman told them appeared
plain to her, which was an angel clothed in white, with a fiery
sword in his hand, waving it or brandishing it over his head. She
described every part of the figure to the life, showed them the
motion and the form, and the poor people came into it so eagerly,
and with so much readiness; 'Yes, I see it all plainly,' says one;
'there's the sword as plain as can be.' Another saw the angel. One
saw his very face, and cried out what a glorious creature he was!
One saw one thing, and one another. I looked as earnestly as the
rest, but perhaps not with so much willingness to be imposed upon;
and I said, indeed, that I could see nothing but a white cloud,
bright on one side by the shining of the sun upon the other part.
The woman endeavoured to show it me, but could not make me confess
that I saw it, which, indeed, if I had I must have lied. But the
woman, turning upon me, looked in my face, and fancied I laughed,
in which her imagination deceived her too, for I really did not
laugh, but was very seriously reflecting how the poor people were
terrified by the force of their own imagination. However, she
turned from me, called me profane fellow, and a scoffer; told me
that it was a time of God's anger, and dreadful judgements were
approaching, and that despisers such as I should wander and
perish.
The people about her seemed
disgusted as well as she; and I found there was no persuading them
that I did not laugh at them, and that I should be rather mobbed by
them than be able to undeceive them. So I left them; and this
appearance passed for as real as the blazing star itself.