Author(s): Defoe, Daniel
Reader(s): Cullum, Andrew
Label: Naxos AudioBooks
Genre: Classic Fiction
Catalogue No: NA0330
Barcode: 9781781981764
Release Date: 11/2018

DEFOE, D.: Journal of the Plague Year (A) (Unabridged)

First published in March 1722, 57 years after the event that struck more than 100,000 people, Journal of the Plague Year is a compelling portrait of life during London’s horrific bubonic plague. Through the eyes of H.F. (speculated to be Defoe’s uncle, Henry Foe, from whose journals the book was supposedly adapted) we witness great grief, depravity and despair: crazed sufferers roam the streets, unearthly screams resound across the city, death carts dump their grisly loads into mass graves, and quackery and skullduggery feed on fear. But there is kindness and courage too, as mutual support and caring are upheld through the worst of days. Defoe’s Journal is considered one of the most accurate accounts of the plague, and includes many contemporary theories about the disease, along with rolls of the dead and a literary mapping of London, street by street, parish by parish. It is a fascinating and intimate account from one of the earliest proponents of the novel.

Tracklist

Disc 1
Defoe, Daniel - Author
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
1A Journal of the Plague Year10:44
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2This was the beginning of May…09:10
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3I had an elder brother at the same time…11:45
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4I scarce need tell the listener…09:39
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5One day, being at that part of the town…12:06
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
6Next to these public things were the dreams…08:11
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
7Some endeavours were used to suppress…10:39
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
Disc 2
1But even those wholesome reflections…10:17
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2Indeed, the poor people were to be pitied…11:24
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3The Examiner's Office.09:30
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4No Person to be conveyed out of any infected…11:10
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5This shutting up of houses was at first…10:58
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
6I could give a great many such stories…08:42
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
7But I come back to the case of families infected…10:03
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
Disc 3
1They had supposed this pit would have supplied…09:09
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2Innumerable stories also went about…11:44
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3I went home, indeed, grieved and afflicted…09:15
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4The next morning, seeing no appearance…09:50
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5I had in family only an ancient woman…11:34
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
6In these walks I had many dismal scenes…09:32
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
7They did tell me, indeed, of a nurse in one place…10:24
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
Disc 4
1This brings these two men to a further…11:07
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2Certain it is, the greatest part of the poor…08:53
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3Two things besides this contributed to…12:39
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4One of the worst days we had in the whole time…10:19
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5Much about the same time I walked out…11:34
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
6I then asked the poor man if the distemper…06:03
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
7And here I cannot but take notice…10:15
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
Disc 5
1Take the weeks in which the plague…10:10
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2I have heard also of some who, on the death…12:13
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3This was about the beginning of July…10:47
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4But to return to my travellers.09:21
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5This was much the fate of our three travellers…12:50
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
6Accordingly they sent to the place…08:35
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
7John answered that what other people…08:36
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
Disc 6
1On this they called a new council…10:58
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2I have given an account already of what I found…09:44
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3It is true there is something to be said…10:10
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4I had about this time a little hardship…10:25
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5This running of distempered people…09:52
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
6Seeing then that we could come at the certainty….09:33
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
7But I must still speak of the plague…10:31
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
Disc 7
1Here we may observe and I hope…09:09
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2This was a prodigious number of itself…12:09
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3These things re-established the minds…10:05
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4Here is a strange change of things indeed…08:44
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5This I take to be the reason…11:12
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
6Now let any man judge from a case like this…08:44
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
7And here I must observe also that the plague…09:58
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
Disc 8
1It is true there was, as I observed at first…11:10
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2Indeed nothing was more strange than to see…11:01
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3It must not be forgot here to take some notice…09:31
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4It is to be observed that while the plague…09:33
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5The public fires which were made…10:44
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
6Such is the precipitant disposition of our people…10:11
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
7Some parts of England were now infected…10:18
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
Disc 9
1I should have mentioned that the Quakers…08:10
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
2I was once making a list of all such…09:06
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
3There were, indeed, several little hurries…06:57
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
4I should have taken notice here that…07:31
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)
5If I should say that this is a visible summons…04:17
Cullum, Andrew (Reader)

Total Playing Time: 10:08:51