Book Description
Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year is a first-individual, generally nonlinear story told by hero H.F., an unmarried saddler whose name is just uncovered by his mark toward the finish of the work. The Journal is a story of his encounters during the plague that beset London in 1665; the work is subsequently fiction however is peppered with insights, information, diagrams, and government reports. H.F. starts by relating gossipy tidbits that the plague had come to Holland, and intently follows the bills of mortality. Certain areas are influenced, yet chilly climate appears to fight off the most exceedingly awful of the plague throughout the winter. Be that as it may, in May and June the quantities of dead start to swing upwards and H.F. begins to ponder whether he should leave the city. After some discussion to and fro, he concludes that God needs him to remain. H.F. sees that the rich are leaving the city and poor people are in effect unequivocally influenced by the distemper. He relates how they surrendered to the wiles of quack specialists, seers, charlatans, and celestial prophets in their dread and tension of the up and coming sickness.