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- Tag 67
- Donnerstag, 7. Mai 2020 um 20:12
- ⛅ 17 °C
- Höhe über NN: 17 m
AustralienInverloch38°37’41” S 145°43’18” E
Thursday in Lockdown

According to our 2020 calendar, today should have been spent riding the Warby Trail with the rest of the Ghostriders. We should have been sharing stories and jokes while we lunched at the Carriage Cafe, Gordon would probably have picked up a couple of punctures, David would have bolted off the front within the first few minutes and we could have shared plans for future rides and adventures. Those halcyon days seem a long time ago.
Instead of riding the trail, we spent another grey day in isolation. I practised picking the same few locks that I have now opened hundreds of times before. Although I have ordered some harder ones from Canada, they seem to have somehow got lost in transit. In the meantime we watch the news for any updates on the restrictions. The Premier Dan Andrews seems to be enjoying his new role of harsh schoolmaster and insists that there will be no relaxation of restrictions in his lifetime.
A few days ago I started reading Daniel Defoe's account of the 1665 Plague Year in London. It certainly has made for interesting reading, and the parallels with the pandemic of 2020 are uncanny. I have now reached the part of the story where the plague is starting to abate. As soon as the daily death tolls (the "bills") started to reduce, it is worth noting that the population suddenly thought that it was safe to return to their old ways of life. The shops reopened and people filled the streets and churches. Unfortunately it did not end well, as a new surge of infections followed. They had to learn the lesson a second time.
It was also worth noting that the mortality of the plague reduced as it neared the end of its course. A much larger proportion of infected people actually made full recoveries. In spite of the abatement of the plague in London, England's trading partners were still unconvinced that the danger had passed and were reluctant to accept goods that had originated there. Some exported goods were soaked in vinegar in an attempt to kill the plague that they might have been carrying.
A final note that I found interesting was the fact that people's generosity to the poor dried up as the plague finished. While the plague was in full flight, the rich were extremely generous in making sure that the poor were looked after. Perhaps they thought that they would be rewarded for their good deeds. Whatever the reason for their generosity, the flow of funds dried up as quickly as the plague disipated. Defoe also makes the point that the people quickly returned to their wicked and promiscuous behaviour, apparently having learnt little from the suffering they had endured.Weiterlesen