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At Day's Close

Page 60

by A. Roger Ekirch

Thompson, E. P., 158

  Thomson, James, 8

  Thomson, John, 160

  Thoreau, Henry David, 129, 130, 135

  Thoresby, Ralph, 115, 264

  “Thresher Labour, The” (Duck), 163

  time divisions, 137–40, 339

  ancient Roman, 137, 138

  cried by nightwatch, 77–78, 79, 138, 293

  dead of night in, 138–40

  early bedtime and, 264

  “first sleep” as, 302, 303

  nature in telling of, 90–91, 138, 236

  Timms, Ann, 164

  Tiv people, 303

  toads, 30

  Togoland, 4

  torches, 5, 40, 51, 67, 74, 108, 127, 129, 131, 210, 211

  construction of, 124

  touch, sense of, 110, 133–34, 192

  Touching the Rock (Hull), 132

  Towers, Anne, 92

  Traitè de l’Education des Filles (Fénelon), 120–21

  traveling, see excursions, nocturnal

  Travers, Joshua, 236

  treasure hunting, 238, 239

  Treatise of Ghosts, A (Taillepied), 301

  Trenchard, John, 100

  trial nights, 202

  trolls, 18

  Tryon, Thomas, xxv, 312, 314

  Trzecieski, Andrzej, 15

  tuberculosis, 14

  Tucker, George, 236

  Tucker, Josiah, 173

  Turner, Nat, 257

  Turner, Thomas, 146, 186, 198, 266, 271

  Turpin, Dick, 34

  Tusser, Thomas, 52, 106, 163, 165, 266, 297

  Twelve Tables, 84, 87

  Twenty-third Psalm, 4

  twilight rest, 109

  Two Queens of Brentford, The (D’Urfey), 211

  Ufficiali di Notte, 85

  Unfortunate Lovers, The, 302

  United Irishmen, 257

  Universal Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure, 130

  Universal Passion, The (Miller), 262

  upper classes, 45, 156, 210–26

  assemblies of, 212–13, 328

  banquets of, 210, 212

  broken sleep and, 304

  carriage promenades of, 212

  carrying weapons as privilege of, 66

  ceremonious conduct of, 214, 215, 220

  communal sleep as viewed by, 280, 281

  as courtiers, 211, 214, 217, 226

  drinking by, 210

  elegance of, 212

  “late hours” of, 304

  lower classes envied by, 214, 216, 218–19

  nocturnal funerals of, 213

  pleasure gardens of, 212, 222, 328, 329

  poaching on lands of, 33, 241–42, 243–44, 306, 336

  solitary sleep of, 297

  theaters of, 211, 328–29

  see also libertines, aristocratic; masquerades

  urinals, 296–97

  fireplaces as, 297, 305

  vagabonds, 54–55, 150

  beds of, 278

  social ties of, 252

  vagrants, 36, 63, 65, 79, 80, 231, 234, 241

  beds of, 278

  magical invisibility desired by, 151

  punishment of, 151

  “valley of the shadow of death,” 4

  vampires, 19

  Vanbrugh, Sir John, 297

  vandalism, 74, 224, 329, 336, 337

  of youth gangs, 246–47, 248

  van der Heyden, Jan, 72

  van der Neer, Aert, 118

  van der Poel, Egbert, 50

  van der Vinne, Vincent, 121

  van de Velde, Essaias, 39

  van Honthorst, Gerrit, 114, 295

  van Ostade, Adriaen, 190

  Vaughan, William, 263

  Vauxhall Gardens, 212, 222

  Venice, 8, 72

  burglaries in, 39

  codeghe in, 125

  Council of Ten of, 67

  filthy streets of, 27

  Grand Canal of, 26, 43

  Jewish ghettos in, 65

  market days of, 172

  murders in, 43

  night courts of, 85

  nocturnal labor in, 160

  pilfering in, 175

  prostitution in, 244

  strangers in, 65

  watchmen of, 70

  Venner, Tobias, 305

  Venus and Adonis (Shakespeare), 127

  Verbeecq, Hermanus, 112

  veterinarians, 64

  Vienna, 34, 65, 73

  Vieuxville, abbé de la, 230

  Vikings, 5

  villages:

  demonic beings in, 16–18, 140

  family treasure buried in, 94

  fires in, 50–51, 54

  nightwatch of, 76

  pilfering in, 240

  walls of, 62

  watchdogs of, 95

  young people of, 196

  youth gangs’ vandalism of, 246–47

  Villon, François, 92, 278

  violence, 33, 42–47, 66, 79, 142, 180, 329

  against anonymous foes, 46

  of bakers, 175

  in burglaries, 37, 38, 40

  domestic, in communal sleep, 282, 283–84

  in dreams, 316, 319–20

  at festivals, 152

  impulsive, 44–47

  of libertines, 223–26

  night as safety valve for, 80, 254–55, 256

  organized, of insurgents, 256–58

  of prostitutes, 245

  of street mobs, 254

  tavern brawls, 46–47, 220, 223

  see also murder, murderers; youth gangs

  Virgil, 168, 303

  Virgin Mary, 71–72, 143

  Vlack, Gerard, 53

  Wade, John, 311

  wafts, 18

  Waite, Thomas, 192

  Wales, 18

  bundling in, 197, 199, 200–201

  candle coal from, 102–3

  collieries of, 24

  cyfarwydd in, 180

  livestock brought indoors in, 279

  squatters in, 238

  y noswaith weu in, 178

  Walpole, Horace, 106, 216

  Waltham Blacks, 256–57

  Ward, Ned, 80, 277

  Ward, Seth, 305

  Washington, George, 241, 256, 271

  watch-bills, 77

  watch coats, 136

  watchdogs, 95–97

  poisoning of, 97

  proper qualities of, 96

  watch-houses, 77, 80, 83

  “Watching Unto God in the Night Season” (Cowper), 308

  watchmen, see nightwatch

  “Watch-mens Song,” 82–83

  Watson, Elkanah, 143

  Watt, James, 329

  Watts, Isaac, 24, 33

  Wauch, Mansie, 319–20

  weapons, 34, 43, 66, 77, 94–95, 142, 172

  weather forecasting, 170–71

  weaving, 160, 164, 173

  Weber, Max, 325

  Webster, John, 23

  Wedgwood, Josiah, 329

  Wehr, Dr. Thomas, 303–4, 323

  Weinsberg, Herman, 138

  Welch Heiress, The (Jernigham), 283

  “welcome nights,” 202

  wells, drownings in, 28

  werewolves, 19, 143, 246

  West, William, 255

  West Indies, 176–77, 257–58

  Westminster Magazine, 150, 267

>   Weyer, Johann, 23

  whale oil, 104–6, 330–31

  Whaley, John, 322

  Wheatcroft, Leonard, 197, 198

  whistling in the dark, 143

  White, Gilbert, 107, 133

  White Boys, 258

  Whole Duty of Man, The, 264

  Wife of Bath, 163

  Wiggers, Dean Henri, 220

  wild animals, 28–30

  as farm predators, 171–72

  Satan’s links to, 30

  sleep of, 290, 303

  Wilkinson, James, 24–25

  Wilkinson, John, 190

  Wilkinson, Richard, 255

  Wilks, John, 243

  Willett, Deb, 193

  William the Conqueror, 63

  will-o’-the-wisps, 18, 22, 23, 180

  wills, 84

  beds in, 274

  Wilton dog, 19

  windows, 17, 99, 158, 246, 293

  barred, 93

  burglaries and, 37

  curtained, 150, 270

  glazed, 93, 274, 292

  illuminated, 29, 63–64, 68–69, 199, 254

  shut, illness and, 14–15

  shuttered, 93

  wine, 25, 187, 188, 191, 235

  Winthrop, John, 313

  Wirsung, Christof, 286

  witch-bottles, 99

  witches, 16, 19–22, 48, 120, 121, 122, 140, 238, 239–40, 325

  African, 4

  benandanti and, 319

  broken sleep and, 307

  crimes attributed to, 21–22

  hunts for, 19–20, 22, 240

  magical protection against, 143

  magic of, 21, 307

  Roman strix, 4

  sabbaths of, 21, 22, 183

  Satan’s covenant with, 21

  sleep disturbed by, 292

  white, 98

  witch-steeans, 100

  Wither, George, 301

  Withey, James, 18–19

  Wodrow, Robert, 262

  wolves, 30, 171–72, 229

  “Woman’s Labour, The” (Collier), 306

  “Woman’s Work is Never Done, A,” 163

  women:

  abusive husbands of, 183, 282, 284

  adulterous, 193

  as alehouse patrons, 190, 192

  boulster lectures delivered by, 283, 283

  clothing of, 67, 136

  in communal sleep, 278–79, 281–84

  curfews of, 65–66

  genteel, illicit conduct of, 220–22

  husbands murdered by, 283–84

  libertines’ abuse of, 217, 223, 224, 225

  literacy of, 203

  magic and, 143, 183

  at masquerades, 216, 221, 221

  mishaps of, 26, 28

  mutual support of, 183

  as nightwatch members, 81

  nightwatch’s arrest of, 80

  nocturnal labor of, 160, 163–64, 173–74, 175, 177, 178–84, 305–6

  unborn infants extracted from, 42

  as vulnerable to lunacy, 12, 13

  see also sexual activity; witches

  wood:

  as fuel, 102, 103

  pilfering of, 240–41

  Wood, Anthony, 44

  Wood, Esay, 175

  Wood, William, 5

  Woodforde, Nancy, 129

  Woodforde, Rev. James, 106, 113, 186

  beer brewed by, 173–74

  cold temperatures suffered by, 294

  dreams of, 317

  medications of, 112

  nocturnal excursions of, 129, 131, 137

  smuggled goods received by, 242–43

  Woodlanders, The (Hardy), 91

  Woodmash, Francis, 222

  Woodward, George, 293

  “works of darkness,” 4

  Wright, Joseph, of Derby, 162, 206

  Wright, Thomas, 207

  Wrightson, Keith, 149

  writing, 207–8

  of nocturnal reflections, 310–11

  Yalden, Thomas, 192, 282

  Yates, Mary, 128

  Yoruba people, 4

  Young, Arthur, 134, 240

  Young, Edward, 97, 153, 207

  young people, 105, 192, 194–202, 232–35, 241–42

  as nightwatch, 81

  as poachers, 241–42

  see also apprentices; courtship; youth gangs

  youth dances, 196

  youth gangs, 222, 245–52, 256

  assaults by, 247–49, 250

  gang rapes by, 247–48

  middle-class targets of, 248

  nightwatch and, 249–50, 252, 253

  noisiness of, 245–46

  power of, 249–50

  social control exerted by, 253–54

  social ties of, 252

  vandalism of, 246–47, 248

  Zompini, Gaetano, 160

  Paul Bril, Fantastic Landscape, n.d.

  Hieronymous Francken, Witches’ Kitchen, 1610

  Philip James de Loutherbourg, Attack by Robbers at Night, ca. 1770

  Egbert van der Poel, Fire in a Village at Night, 1655

  Jacopo Bassano, Workshop of Weavers, sixteenth century

  Anon., Ferry by Moonlight, n.d.

  Gerrit van Honthorst, The Matchmaker, 1625

  Cornelis Troost, Those Who Could Walk Did; the Others Fell, 1739

  Leandro Bassano, Camp at Night, n.d.

  Thomas Luny, Teignmouth by Moonlight, eighteenth century

  David Teniers the Younger, The Invocation, seventeenth century

  Giulio Carponi, The Kingdom of Hypnos, seventeenth century

  Praise for At Day’s Close

  A Discover Magazine Top Science Book of the Year, 2005

  An Observer Book of the Year, 2005

  “Professor Ekirch has produced a book of exceptional range and originality. His investigation of nocturnes in pre-modern civilization spans literature and social history, psychology and the history of thought. This is a pioneering achievement of a rare order. It truly casts light on absolutely vital spheres of darkness.”

  —George Steiner

  “What happened at night in times past? Who did what at night? How did people cope with darkness and the perils of violence and fire? What were the rhythms of sleep and the forms of nighttime sociability and intimacy? Ekirch illuminates the world of darkness in early modern Europe and America with clarity and rich documentation. At Day’s Close is the result of years of study, and it’s a revelation.”

  —Bernard Bailyn, Harvard University,

  Adams University Professor Emeritus

  “For Ekirch, the night has been a hubbub of activity, a sequence of comings and goings, a bustling fiefdom with its own distinct customs and rituals. . . . To a remarkable degree, he has reclaimed that portion of the circadian cycle which historians have traditionally neglected. Ekirch has emptied night’s pockets, and laid the contents out before us. . . . At Day’s Close serves to remind us of night’s ancient mystery.”

  —Arthur Krystal, The New Yorker

  “An enthralling anthropology of the shadow realms of Western Europe from the late Middle Ages to the Industrial Revolution. . . . [Ekirch] weaves his own Bayeux tapestry, but instead of stories of warrior bishops and court dwarfs, he wants to tell us about privacy and police power, torture and summary courts, the physiology of sleep, the sociology of prostitution, and political and religious heresies. . . . An informed and passionate case against too much artificial light.”

  —John Leonard, Harper’s
/>   “A book that anybody with any imagination will find fascinating, but one that is the mirror image of conventional popular history. . . . Wonderful, for Ekirch spares no pains to rediscover the lost world of the dark. . . . [It is] a book that can’t be summarized but must be experienced.”

  —David Wootton, London Review of Books

  “Absorbing . . . fascinating. . . . [Ekirch] has plundered an extraordinary range of cross-cultural sources for his material, and he tells us about everything from witches to firefighting, architecture to domestic violence. . . . [A] monumental study.”

  —Terry Eagleton, The Nation

  “Engrossing, leisurely paced, and richly researched. . . . He provides fascinating insight into nocturnal labor. . . . A rich weave of citation and archival evidence, Ekirch’s narrative is rooted in the material realities of the past, evoking a bygone world of extreme physicality and pre-industrial survival stratagems.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “A tour de force. Throwing shafts of light onto nocturnal life—its dangers, intimacies, rituals, rhythms, laboring patterns, class affiliations, and gradual transformation—reveals a whole new world only dimly seen before. Thanks to this pathbreaking and compelling work, pre-industrial nighttime now has a history.”

  —Philip Morgan, Harry C. Black Professor of History,

  Johns Hopkins University

  “Delightful details fill Ekirch’s narrative of the night.”

  —Discover

  “To us today, nightfall is a time to turn on the lights. But of course it was not always so. Ekirch’s richly researched and entertaining study, At Day’s Close, reclaims for history the half of past lives that was lived at night: in partial or total darkness, at work and at play, in stillness and in motion, in solitude or in shared reflection. Perfect reading for insomniacs and star-gazers alike.”

  —Jonathan Spence, Sterling Professor of History, Yale University

  “Night and day Ekirch’s history of darkness is the one—massive, original, and completely enlightening.”

  —Steven Ozment, McLean Professor of Ancient

  and Modern History, Harvard University

  “A fresh and thought-provoking cultural inquiry. . . . Maintaining throughout an infectious sense of wonder, Ekirch ignites the reader’s imagination. . . . [He] vividly evokes the old magic of true night.”

  —Donna Seaman, Booklist, starred review

  “A wonderfully monomaniacal undertaking: a study of how night affected (mainly) European societies before the advent of street and, in certain instances, domestic lighting. Ekirch is folklorist, criminologist, psychologist. The mass of graphic detail is gripping.”

  —Jonathan Meades, The Observer

 

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