Not Andy Naylor
Well-known member
I’m sure you do, but you know it’s a novel (a terrific one) and not an actual journal, don’t you? De Foe was five when the plague raged so he would’ve been fairly aware of it, and probably heard lots of stories that he fictionalised too. But it is fiction primarily and our hero is a character.
There are certainly parallels with how people reacted to a virus, then and now, although of course the plague was way deadlier. Catch it and 99% of the time it’s a death sentence.
Yes indeed (which I now realise my post admittedly didn't make clear), and his uncle, who probably had a closer first-hand knowledge, was supposedly a major source. The watchmen paid to guard infected houses (sometimes people who had lost jobs elsewhere) were real and were perhaps an early equivalent of an attempt to redeploy furloughed workers. Mind you. I'd rather pick fruit than force people to stay in buildings with plague-hit relatives..