In November 1664, rumours began winding their way through crowded, filthy, stinking alleyways about the death of two Frenchmen from the Plague at Long Acre. The plague had raged in Amsterdam with incredible violence the year before, as some still remembered, and it appeared to have its made to London by boat. At first, the family with whom the Frenchmen were staying, and then those who had caught the invisible contagion, attempted to conceal it, but soon enough the deaths began to mount, and the cat was out of the bag. Along with the disgusting buboes, the dead carts, and the secret mass graves, peoples fervid imagination snowballed too, conjuring all manner of horrorsabout the symptoms, about the disease, about pestilential houses filled with rotting corpsessweeping the city with a foul wave of paranoia and terror. Who had it? Was it in the air? Was it divine punishment? Whither could one flee? Defoe, who lived through these events during infancy, and apparently basing his narrative on his uncles diary, plus a variety documents, tells the story in the manner of a witness account. Its frightening immediacy makes it far superior, and vastly more engrossing, than Hodges formal, medicallyfocused volume on the same subject. In the end, the plague claimed over 68,000 lives, about a quarter of the citys population. Sociologically and in terms of the official response, astonishing, sometimes tragicomical parallels, emerge in the mind of the modern reader, between what became...
Binding: Hardcover;376 pages; Publisher: Spradabach Publishing; Classification: N/A; Weight: 746.41 g; Dimensions: N/A
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In November 1664, rumours began winding their way through crowded, filthy, stinking alleyways about the death of two Frenchmen from the Plague at Long Acre. The plague had raged in Amsterdam with incredible violence the year before, as some still remembered, and it appeared to have its made to London by boat. At first, the family with whom the Frenchmen were staying, and then those who had caught the invisible contagion, attempted to conceal it, but soon enough the deaths began to mount, and the cat was out of the bag. Along with the disgusting buboes, the dead carts, and the secret mass graves, peoples fervid imagination snowballed too, conjuring all manner of horrorsabout the symptoms, about the disease, about pestilential houses filled with rotting corpsessweeping the city with a foul wave of paranoia and terror. Who had it? Was it in the air? Was it divine punishment? Whither could one flee? Defoe, who lived through these events during infancy, and apparently basing his narrative on his uncles diary, plus a variety documents, tells the story in the manner of a witness account. Its frightening immediacy makes it far superior, and vastly more engrossing, than Hodges formal, medicallyfocused volume on the same subject. In the end, the plague claimed over 68,000 lives, about a quarter of the citys population. Sociologically and in terms of the official response, astonishing, sometimes tragicomical parallels, emerge in the mind of the modern reader, between what became...
Binding: Hardcover;376 pages; Publisher: Spradabach Publishing; Classification: N/A; Weight: 746.41 g; Dimensions: N/A
Free Delivery For A Year With Unlimited Delivery For £14.99
Super Saver Delivery
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Evri ParcelShop | Next Day Delivery
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Premium DPD Next Day Delivery
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Bulky Item Delivery
£4.99
Northern Ireland Super Saver Delivery
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Northern Ireland Standard Delivery
£4.99
Northern Ireland Express Delivery
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Unlimited Delivery
£14.99
Please note, some delivery methods are not available for products delivered by our brand partners & they may have longer delivery times.
Something not quite right? You have 21 days from the day you receive it, to send something back.
Please note, we cannot offer refunds on fashion face masks, cosmetics, pierced jewellery, adult toys, and swimwear or lingerie if the hygiene seal is not in place or has been broken.
Items of footwear and/or clothing must be unworn and unwashed with the original labels attached. Also, footwear must be tried on indoors. Items of homeware including bedlinen, mattresses, and toppers, and pillows must be unused and in their original unopened packaging. This does not affect your statutory rights.
Click here to view our full Returns Policy.
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