Death came a reaping to the town.
This first week were entered upon the roles
three new deaths, with all the tokens coming on
each one suffering liken mortality.
The second week,
being hot, and the air vapid,
the mortality was delivered
twenty-eight people dead.
The third week the canker was spread
all up the hither parts of the borough,
where divers of the dispossessed
have habitually aboded themselves,
it being ancient and much warraned about
with alleys and stenchfull places,
very like a rustic dunghill,
too rich with piss and doings to warrant salvage.
The distemper coming quick on them,
so that one infected in a household,
however unbeknown,
came as the reaper of death
to all within the walls of the house-
though they be father to that house
or mother
to the children of the house.
They had only to live five days together
that the distemper was rooted, like a black vine,
yielding not wine, but canker and winding sheets
till all were pocked and dead by it.
The fourth week a great fear encompassed the city.
Those persons qualified to execute their estate,
by the quality of blood or state office,
took them passports and certificates of good health,
which they obtained by bribes and the bartering of baubles.
These baubles being of great worth, from which exchange
they obtained leave to fly, out of the gate
before it was shut fast, and the town shut up.
Thus, was the town passed from the offices of civic man
to God’s care a charnel house and a pestilential place.
These baubles being later cast down and dropped
out of the very hands of those that now possessed them,
they being dead and puked out their last.
so that the baubles
lay glittering
amidst the top of dunghills and of puke
The fifth week saw most of the doctors who remained,
being laid under.
There being none left to tend to the sick but searcher
and wise women and the bone-and-scab-men.
On the sixth week the cats and dogs,
which formerly had feared of nothing
were by the end of it
dead by Sabbath to the last one.
And the fowl of the air struck down
and falling out of the sky.
When opened they were all of them black and rotted
as though a blight had consumed them.
The sixth week saw a frenzy of pillage.
A great mobile of brigandish,
piratical and disaffected persons,
all assembled in outlandish garb,
did parade about the streets at night
breaking in and robbing the dead and dying
and the empty houses of the quality.
There being only a partial mustering of those regiments
which were formerly want to stand to the order of the town,
they being so thinned out in the ranks by
distemper and death.
Some officers being still on the role
and not above four tenths
of the soldiers
that were formerly enrolled.
It was charged them to stand the public watch,
shooting any that might break houses;
commit rapine; run over the walls
or any acts unkindly to the public good.
Which they did drunkenly at night
With sundry blasphemies
And breaking of houses.
But many of the soldiers
Took it upon them
Much afeared
to fly.
The seventh week.
So afeared were the cities and country hereabouts
that the plague might break out of our walls
that they had sent each some regiments to contain us
establishing some batteries of cannon covering our gates.
One story I heard being that a girl of about twenty had been caught by them trying to escape
and so, they had hanged her despite the protestations of her poor father who afterwards fell into a grief and died of it.
Week eight.
Night and awakened
by a cannonade
and great expenditure of powder
with flashes in the night.
Seeming that our gunners on the wall had
taken a drunken disputation with the containing batteries
and, in a revelry of drink and laughing
put them to execution.
It being evident that they were replied to
as some shot came over shooting through the roof tops of houses.
As was testified to by the glowing in the thatch
Though none caught fire.
Morning saw everybody gone from the batteries.
Only two dead men remaining
taken away by the pestilence.
The countryside beyond being wonderfully empty of all persons.
Week nine.
Then came prophets;
all of fire and howling
who promised many wonders,
and revealed apocalypses.
Though many said they were mad
and were only out
as those who formerly did care for them
were now dead.
For pestilence had danced through the streets.
Whole family now lay dead and rotten in their house.
And others saw only that they alone now live
being bereft of their families,
and all friends and acquaintance died away also.
So the people who now remained took to public frenzy,
and debauch, going in a body to dance in the public square
knocking down the doors of dead houses,
and taking the cellars to liberty,
dragging out any wine, sac or beer,
cakes, cheeses and sundries;
and making great ceremony
of licentious and fornicating acts
in the said square.
Though the streets were empty
and only the cries and laminations
of the poor afflicted in their house
was heard to contend their revelry.
One or two churches only
still offered themselves to service
Week ten.
Some houses that were fat with corpse
were seen to be fast ablaze with fire.
It being supposed that either some
plunder was practised there and
the buildings put to incendiary,
else the very bloating of the dead
had flared to roaring.
As is the want if the putrefaction
is not arrested by fire or earth.
This fire spread to many streets
and burned up above one fifth share
of all the buildings.
A storm put paid to it.
Whether this was a mercy or not
I can not tell.
By winter the distemper flared out
There are not over two thousand souls surviving.
Week eleven
August and a company of our people
With some mariners
Fearing death
designed on taking a ship at the quaysisde
Thinking to break the boom and escape down river.
She being the Constance St. Agatha of six guns.
They flew the gideon of the Horse Company
At the jackstaff of the ship
And sailed on the 26th instance.
Where upon we heard divers cannonading after they had gone and a great fire some twenty miles off
It being supposed that they had got a hot fight of it and that they had their ship all burned up.
September Mr. --- accosted me in confession that he had obtained the deeds to many of the houses which stood empty and bereft of proprietor,
That he had it that a prominent Jew
Taken away by the plague
Was found to have many plundered deeds
Taken from the houses of his Christian neighbours.
TheM being happy to prosper
On the misfortunes God has sent to deliver upon us
But this Crimes not going unnoticed by god
Was sorely punished by him.
Some saying that it was the Modinites who had
Ignited the contamination
For the express purpose of sizing the deeds of the town.
They doing this by some science known only to them
Or by some black art concocted by the devil’s aid.
I argued that I had dealt with them in matters of the law and had known them to be trustworthy in their business
Though others said that this was only that they might better be about the Devil’s designs
That any town that suffered Modinites to live unmolested as we had done
Earned the express wrathfulness’ of God
His punishment and castigation.
reasoning that should God see fit we should live
We must inevitably see some Duke, prelate or scandalous person come to obtain himself of the title of these properties
Though he were never known in the city before.
I agreeing that we should collect as many deeds as we might obtain and
Grant ourselves what office we may to grant over that such titles to the fathers and alderman of the city
Which, they being dead should be us.
Some of the mobile latterly taken
At their pillage.
They being put to several means of persuasion.
Fire and the boot and wedge
By means of which the marrow was quite squeezed out of the bone
And screaming with just justice he saw bit off his tongue after which he was silent
Whereupon they put him to fire.
Divulged a house commandeered by them,
Where the poor dead
Were tipped out of the windows,
Filled like a cornucopia with the treasure
Of their hoarding.
These --- were summarily brought before
The magistrates
Which comprised of Mr – the clerk
And my self
Being now foremost learned in the law
The others being currently in the care of Hell.
And an assortment of the Godly remaining.
The – quickly sentenced to the rage of the city
Punished accordingly.
Breaking upon the wheels
The black badge of nightmares
The two-ing and froing of tomorrow’s.
You must sign up or log in to submit a comment.
0 comments