DANIEL DEFOE. A JOURNAL OF THE PLAGUE YEAR

leave of the house before it was really known that the family was any

way touched.

This might be sufficient to convince any reasonable person that as it

was not in the power of the magistrates or of any human methods of

policy, to prevent the spreading the infection, so that this way of

shutting up of houses was perfectly insufficient for that end. Indeed it

seemed to have no manner of public good in it, equal or

proportionable to the grievous burden that it was to the particular

families that were so shut up; and, as far as I was employed by the

public in directing that severity, I frequently found occasion to see

that it was incapable of answering the end. For example, as I was

desired, as a visitor or examiner, to inquire into the particulars of

several families which were infected, we scarce came to any house

where the plague had visibly appeared in the family but that some of

the family were fled and gone. The magistrates would resent this, and

charge the examiners with being remiss in their examination or

inspection. But by that means houses were long infected before it was

known. Now, as I was in this dangerous office but half the appointed

time, which was two months, it was long enough to inform myself that

we were no way capable of coming at the knowledge of the true state

of any family but by inquiring at the door or of the neighbours. As for

going into every house to search, that was a part no authority would

offer to impose on the inhabitants, or any citizen would undertake: for

it would have been exposing us to certain infection and death, and to

the ruin of our own families as well as of ourselves; nor would any

citizen of probity, and that could be depended upon, have stayed in the

town if they had been made liable to such a severity.

Seeing then that we could come at the certainty of things by no

method but that of inquiry of the neighbours or of the family, and on

that we could not justly depend, it was not possible but that the

uncertainty of this matter would remain as above.

It is true masters of families were bound by the order to give notice

to the examiner of the place wherein he lived, within two hours after

he should discover it, of any person being sick in his house (that is to

say, having signs of the infection)- but they found so many ways to

evade this and excuse their negligence that they seldom gave that

notice till they had taken measures to have every one escape out of the

house who had a mind to escape, whether they were sick or sound;

and while this was so, it is easy to see that the shutting up of houses

was no way to be depended upon as a sufficient method for putting a

stop to the infection because, as I have said elsewhere, many of those

that so went out of those infected houses had the plague really upon

them, though they might really think themselves sound. And some of

these were the people that walked the streets till they fell down dead,

not that they were suddenly struck with the distemper as with a

bullet that killed with the stroke, but that they really had the infection

in their blood long before; only, that as it preyed secretly on the vitals,

it appeared not till it seized the heart with a mortal power, and the

patient died in a moment, as with a sudden fainting or an apoplectic fit.

I know that some even of our physicians thought for a time that

those people that so died in the streets were seized but that moment

they fell, as if they had been touched by a stroke from heaven as men

are killed by a flash of lightning – but they found reason to alter their

opinion afterward; for upon examining the bodies of such after they

were dead, they always either had tokens upon them or other evident

proofs of the distemper having been longer upon them than they had

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