• An Introduction to The Visitation: Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year
    Apr 9 2020
    Welcome to The Visitation! This podcast is a reading of Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year, an account of the plague that afflicted London in 1665. Published in 1722, the work represents itself as the testimony of an eyewitness living in London at the time of the plague, but it is actually a work of fiction, based on exhaustive historical research. Many of the topics related in the novel will have an immediate resonance with our own experiences, particularly as we are now facing a pandemic of our own (granted that COVID-19 is nearly so devastating). They include the author’s indecision about whether to stay in the city or to flee to the countryside, the relaxing of sectarian religious affiliations in a population united by terror, the role class distinctions played in determining who lived and who died, and the proliferation of quacks, faith healers, fortune tellers, and others, who profited from the general misery. To make the work accessible to modern readers, we have
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    9 mins
  • Episode 1: Terrible Apprehensions Were Among the People
    Apr 9 2020
    Defoe begins his story with an account of the discovery of a few cases of the plague in St. Giles parish in the winter of 1664-65.  The slow and close-grained way in which he describes the alternating terror and relief caused by the reporting of new cases followed by periods of abatement builds dramatic tension very effectively.  One of the highlights of this episode is the little editorializing he does about the ability of the media to both report rumors and to embellish them for effect.   This, along with his remarks about the speed at which news traveled in the author’s day—"instantly over the whole nation,”—lend a faint irony to the account, as they are pretty much how we would describe our situation today.  Defoe concludes the episode with descriptions of the mass exodus from the city of those who were wealthy enough and of rumors of restrictions on travel soon to come. For an account of a modern-day exodus, see https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/05/15/upshot/who-left-n
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    14 mins
  • Episode 2: Should I Stay or Should I Go?
    Apr 14 2020
    With the plague now beginning to spread and intensify, and having witnessed so many of his neighbors fleeing the city, the author realizes that he must soon decide whether to stay or go himself, and he offers his reflections and decision-making process as a guide to others who might find themselves in similar circumstances.  Like many of us would be, he is torn between the desire to protect his belongings and property or to flee and perhaps save his life.  In a particularly interesting conversation with his more well-traveled brother, he considers whether his fate is foreordained and thus not affected at all by any decision he might make.  In the end, after a series of incidents prevents him from leaving, he settles on considering what we might call the “preponderance of the evidence” as a method for making such a decision.  By this he means that we should look upon the entirety of opportunities and obstacles that present themselves, to view them “complexly” as
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    17 mins
  • Episode 3: Sorrow and Sadness Sat Upon Every Face
    Apr 21 2020
    As much as anything, this episode is a meditation on the mood of the city as the plague swept over it.  His mind made up to stay, the author now settles into the daily routine of his business, helped in part by the fact that the plague still spared his part of town from the worst of its virulence.  Meanwhile, however, further to the west, the death toll mounted steadily through the summer of 1665.  As the impact of the plague began to affect a larger area, the author notes that the face of the city was much altered—“sorrow and sadness sat upon every face,” he says—and that the city seemed to be all in tears.  In walks through the city, he remarks on how deserted the streets had become, and how frequent the cries and screams coming from the houses of the sick.  And he observes that the restoration of the monarchy a scant five years earlier had led to a rapid increase in the population of London, which in turn meant that many more died than might have even a few years before. [For no
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    15 mins
  • Episode 4: Signs and Wonders
    Apr 24 2020
    The most important element in dealing with the terrible and the inexplicable is to be able to put an interpretative framework around it, to give it meaning.  Giving things meaning makes them comprehensible and perhaps even manageable, and if that doesn’t reduce our fears it at least gives us reason to hope.  It’s tempting to think that our attempts at explaining natural phenomena are better and more scientific than those of the 17th century, but while it’s certainly true that we have developed powerful mathematical and experimental tools for understanding the world, we are no less prone than our forebears to create comprehensive systems of meanings that are not dependent on empirical evidence alone.  In this chapter the author speaks of the attempts of his contemporaries to see in the heavens or in clouds, or through the interpretation of dreams, confirmation of what everyone believes, that the plague is a visitation by God and a judgement on the city. The author believes this as well
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    17 mins
  • Episode 5: Death was Before Their Eyes
    Apr 28 2020
    Resuming his comments from the last episode, the author here mounts a spirited criticism of fortune-tellers, cunning men, astrologers, conjurers, witches, and deceivers, but he doesn’t spare their audiences and followers, either, whose ignorance leads them into “a thousand weak, foolish, and wicked things.”  He’s particularly keen in observing how, despite the restoration of the Church of England, a multitude of sects continued to attract devotees and how, in their terror, the people flocked to religious leaders of all types, ignoring sectarian divisions in their overwhelming need for consolation. But when the plague abated and the terror had passed, the usual sectarian barriers were re-erected.   A significant portion of this episode is devoted to quacks, faith-healers, and purveyors of useless and sometimes poisonous remedies against the plague, a practice that continues even today. In these matters, Defoe displays a dry sense of humor.  In one of his accounts, a woman
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    18 mins
  • Episode 6: And None Durst Come Near to Comfort Them
    Apr 30 2020
    In this episode the author graphically describes the tenor of the moment, saying that death no longer seemed to be hovering overhead but was now entering into homes and staring directly into people’s faces, and he notes the spirit of repentance and confession its presence provoked.  He also continues his diatribe against quacks, pretenders, and deceivers, here mentioning what he considers an even greater madness than those previously described, the resort to magic, in the form of things like charms, amulets, and exorcisms.  “As if,” he says, “the plague was not the hand of God but a kind of possession of an evil spirit.” He concludes this portion of his narrative by describing how the Lord Mayor, seeing the way the poor, especially, were being victimized, appointed physicians and surgeons for their relief.  Of course, there was little medically that could be done for them, given the level of understanding of the disease at that time.  But there was another, deeper reason so little cou
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    12 mins
  • Episode 7: The Shutting Up of Houses
    May 2 2020
    In this episode Defoe includes the text of orders issued by the Lord Mayor concerning the shutting up of houses, notification of the authorities, the appointment of watchers and guards, disposition of the bodies of the dead, public sanitation, and what we now refer to as “social distancing,” with bans on "loose persons and idle assemblies."  It’s a grim catalogue.  What is perhaps most noticeable about this account, apart from the evident terror the shutting up of houses provoked, was the careful insistence of the authorities on the gathering of accurate information about the number and location of all those infected, mirroring our own contemporary concern for testing and accurate reporting, or the lack thereof. I have to say, the recitation of these orders makes for some tedious listening, but the comparison of the steps taken then with our own is really quite instructive. For an index of contemporary issues surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic and their historical precursors in the
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    24 mins