Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Bills of mortality [London]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The Royal College of Surgeons of England. The original may be consulted at The Royal College of Surgeons of England.
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![6- %'.t ' i [Death and the O’d Man. From ITolhein’s Dance of Death.] CXL.—BILLS OF MORTALITY. In the week ending the 18th of November, 1843, the number of deaths in the mctiopolis exceeded the average mortality by upwards of three hundred. There was once a time when a fact like this would have produced a panic among tlie citizens, and have arrested the gaieties of the West End; for an increase in the fatality of ordinary diseases was generally regarded as a precursor of the Plague : but, excepting members of the medical profession, undertakers, and sextons (whom it must not be considered ungracious thus to link together), this increase of one-fourth in the number of deaths is unknown to nearly all the world besides a sure sign of the little interest uhich it excites, when scarcely common gossip adopts it as a “ topic of the day.” It was with the view of communicating to the inhabitants of London, to the Court, and the constituted authorities of the City accurate information respecting the increase or decrease in the number of deaths, and the casualties of mortality occurring amongst them, that the Bills of Morta- lity were first commenced. London was then seldom entirely free from the Plague, and the publication of the Bills was calculated to calm exaggerated lumours; and to n^arn those who could do so conveniently to leave London whenever the pestilence became more fatal than usual. The Bills were first com- menced in 1592, during a time when the Plague was busy with its ravages, but they were not continued uninterruptedly until the occurrence of another Plague, in 1603, from which period up to the present time they have been continued from week to week, excepting during the Great Fire, when the deaths of two or three weeks were given in one Bill. In 1662, Captain John Graunt, a citizen of London, who appears to have lived in Birchin Lane, published a work entitled ‘Natural and Political Observations VOL. VI. Q](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b22474432_0003.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)