Read At Day's Close: Night in Times Past Online
Authors: A. Roger Ekirch
Discoverie of Witchcraft, The
(Scot), 23
disguises, nocturnal, 66–67, 243
of burglars, 41, 243
of Carnival, 152
ghost impersonations as, 41, 243, 256
of libertines, 219–20, 222, 226
of Satan, 15
of thieves, 40
Displaying of Supposed Witchcraft, The
(Webster), 23
ditches, 24, 146, 170
as fortifications, 62
as street sewers, 27
dobbies, 18
Dobson, John, 197
doctors, 64, 65, 113, 123, 129, 305
Dogberry, 82
dogs, 270, 293
barks of, as nocturnal guidance, 133
black, 15, 96
as excursion guards, 142
ghosts of, 19
as lantern carriers, 126
rabid, 316
of slaves, 241
wild predators repelled by, 171, 172
see also
mastiffs; watchdogs
dog sleep, 267–68
dominos, 216
Domostroi,
46
Don Quixote
(Cervantes), 286
Doré, Gustave, 336
Dorrington, Charles, 39
Dou, Gerrit,
204
down-lanterns, 132
dream-books, 313
dreams, xxvii, 9, 262, 267, 311–23,
315,
318,
321,
335, 339
communication of, 320
evil combated in, 319
freedom of, 314, 317–20
interpretations of, 312–13, 316
and interval of wakefulness, 322–23, 334–35
lasting influence of, 320–22
magic and, 320
in non-Western cultures, 320
personal insights from, 313–14
physical health and, 313
physiology of, 261
pleasant, 317, 320
recording of, 314–16
in REM sleep, 322–23
sexual activity in, 314
of shamans, 317
of sleepwalkers, 319–20
spiritual themes in, 316
unpleasant, 316–17
violence in, 316, 319–20
see also
nightmares
dress, 135–37, 199, 215, 216, 270–71
Drinker, Elizabeth, 112, 130, 166, 177, 196, 281, 293, 316, 324
drinking, 178, 186, 187, 188, 189–90, 210
in bedtime rituals, 271
fires and, 52
in mishaps, 25, 28, 146, 235
in murder, 46
night vision improved by, 124
drinking houses, 25, 46–47, 72, 187–90, 220, 236–37, 244
see also
alehouses; night-cellars; taverns
“drop night,” 12
drownings, 23, 25–26, 28, 146, 246
Drummer, The
(Addison), 109–10
Drummond, Daniel, 243
Drummond of Hawthornden, William, 149
Dryden, John, 98, 322, 338–39
Dublin, 74, 76, 86
Duck, Stephen, 163, 254–5
duergars, 18
Du Laurens, André, 290
dung, 179, 182, 284
as cleanser, 164
as fertilizer, 160, 166
as fuel, 103
as gnat repellent, 270
of livestock boarded indoors, 279
Dunton, John, 51
Dursley Lanterns, 196
Dyer, William, 101
Earley, John, 35
earthen banks, as fortifications, 62
Easy Way to Prolong Life, An
(Trusler), 263–64
Eaton, Daniel, 161
Eckles, John, 115
Edinburgh, 27–28
Edison, Thomas, 338
Edward I, King of England, 31
Egypt, ancient, xxxi
darkness equated with death in, 4
oil lamps of, 5
Eibeschütz, Rabbi Jonathan, 206–7
electric lighting, 6, 104, 110, 337
elevated bedsteads, 274,
275,
276
Eliot, John, 283
Ellwood, Thomas, 94, 144
elves, 18
Elyot, Thomas, 265
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 334
Emile
(Rousseau), xxv, 110, 143
Endimion
(Gombauld), 301
England:
ale consumption in, 25
almanacs published in, 129
arson in, 54, 55
bad roads in, 24
bundling in, 198
burglaries in, 36–39, 87
carrying weapons banned in, 66
Civil War of, 229, 319
coal as fuel in, 102–3
collieries of, 24
demonic beings in, 16–23
dung as fuel in, 103
fires in, 48, 49, 51
folk magic in, 99–100
fortified towns of, 62
impulsive violence in, 45–46
lantern lighting mandated in, 67–68
legal system of, 21, 37, 38, 85, 87
magical protection in, 143
murder rate in, 42
national curfew set in, 63
nightmen of, 165–66
nightwalkers in, 31–32
nightwatch in, 75
nightwatch’s verses in, 78
nocturnal disguises prohibited in, 66–67
Parliament of, 67
personal vendettas in, 44
political dissenters in, 228
public celebrations of, 69
robberies in, 34–35
rural poverty in, 33
rushlights in, 107
squatters in, 238
Statute of Winchester of, 31, 75, 76
taxation in, 106
trained police force resisted in, 80, 331
Tudor, 87
urbanization of, 26
watchdogs of, 95–96
white witchcraft in, 98
wild animals in, 30
witches in, 21–22
witch hunts in, 20
English Rogue, The,
281
Enlightenment, xxxii, 325
Epsom-Wells
(Shadwell), 292–93
Ervarene Huyshoudster,
52
Essay Concerning Human Understanding, An
(Locke), 3
Essenes, 4
Essex, James, 327
État de Servitude, L’,
298
Évangiles des Quenouilles, Les,
183
Evans, Thomas, 35
Evelyn, John, 49, 247, 296
Everard, William, 319
Everie Woman in Her Humor,
310
evil spirits, 5, 9, 15, 23, 56, 99, 114, 120, 325
church bells as deterrent of, 70
dead of night favored by, 139–40
in dreams, 316–17
magical protection against, 143
prayers against, 142, 144–45
shrines as wards against, 72
treasure hunting aided by, 238
Ewe people, 4
excrement, human, 246, 296–97, 305
in chamberpots, 27–28, 271, 296–97, 305
emptied into streets, 27–28, 165
as fertilizer, 166
in magic, 41
removed by nightmen, 165–67
see also
dung
excursions, nocturnal, 118–46,
131,
179, 220, 324–25
of apprentices, 234–35
artificial illumination of, 124–27, 131
barred city gates and, 63, 145
by boat, 137
of children, 118, 119–22, 123–24
clothing for, 135–37
on cloudy nights, 130–31
in courtship, 196–97
encounters with other travelers in, 143–44
on foot, 137
gibbets encountered in, 141–42
giving thanks for safe return from, 146
group travel in, 142
gunshots as distress signals in, 145
head coverings for, 136
hearing in, 132
linkboys in, 125–26
magic charms as protection of, 142–43
mental map as guide for, 123
moon and, 127–29, 138, 144, 146, 329
night vision and, 124
in pitch-darkness, 130–34
resourcefulness in, 126, 131–32
robberies and, 118–19, 137, 139, 141–42, 144
of servants, 234–35
sinister locations in, 140–42
of slaves, 233–34, 235, 236, 255–56
smells in, 133
social class and, 125, 126–27, 136–37
stars and, 129–30, 138,
139,
234
supernatural encounters in, 139–42, 144–45, 180
time divisions and, 137–40
touch in, 133–34
valuables protected in, 136–37
weapons carried in, 142, 144
see also
mishaps, nocturnal; pedestrians; streets
Eyre, Adam, 118, 170
Fabre, Daniel, 253
faggot and storm, 38
fairies, 17, 22, 100, 258, 326, 336
nocturnal malevolence of, 18
fallen angels, 18
Falstaff, 226
Famile de Guet,
75, 76
farmers, 158, 168–74
corn huskings of, 177–78
harvest of, 169–70,
169,
171
harvest suppers of, 254–55
tenant, 176
thefts from, 169, 172, 240
see also
livestock
Farquhar, George, 301–2
faubourges,
63
Feast of Fools, 152, 254
Feast of Saint-Denis, 210
Feddon, Anne, 93–94
Feltham, Owen, 13, 314
Fénelon, François, 120–21
fertility, reproductive, 308–10
festivals:
ancient Greek, 5
Carnival, 152, 249, 254
Church, 70–71,
70,
71,
152, 187–88
as safety valve, 152, 254–55
sexual activity at, 194
Ficino, Marsilio, 24
Fielding, Henry, 193, 215, 254, 329
Fielding, Sir John, 93, 250
Fiennes, Celia, 103, 161
Fifteen Joys of Marriage, The,
283
Finch, Anne, 231
firedogs, 102
fire-fighting, 79, 331
by neighbors, 68, 114–15, 117
tools for, 49
fire-hunting, 241
fireplaces, 63, 101–4, 179
accidentally falling into, 28
banking of, 59, 63, 270
chimneys of, 51, 99–100, 101–2, 274, 293
fuels for, 102–3, 169, 178, 265
kindling for, 102
lighting fires in, 102
as light sources, 103–4
magical protection of, 99–100, 270
open central, 101–2
stoves vs., 102
urination into, 297, 305
fire-priggers, 55–56
fireraising, 54–55
fires, 7, 9,
29,
32, 38, 48–56, 59, 74, 79, 81, 110, 155, 333
candles and, 51–52
chimney, 51
in clothing, 51
cries of “Fire” at, 117
fireplaces and, 51
Great Fire of 1666, 10, 49, 62
in houses, 51, 55
local economies damaged by, 48
lookouts and, 77
nightwatch in prevention of, 79, 85
rats and mice as cause of, 52
and reading in bed, 52
rural, 50–51, 54
smoking and, 79
in thatch roofs, 48, 50, 51
in urban areas, 48–50
winds and, 48, 49
in workplaces, 52
see also
arson
fireworks, 69, 211
“first sleep,” 300–302, 303, 305, 308, 311–12, 320,
321,
322–23, 335, 337
fishing, 160, 171, 177, 241
Fitch, John, 114
Fithian, Philip, 297–98
Flandrin, Jean-Louis, 278
fleas, 269–70, 294–95,
295
Fletcher, John, xxxi, 15
flock mattresses, 274, 276
Florence, 44
aristocratic gangs in, 224
carrying weapons banned in, 66
death penalty in, 86
filthy streets of, 27
homosexuals in, 230
night courts of, 85
operas in, 211
plague in, 230
private guards in, 165
public celebrations in, 69
foliots, 18
Fontaine, John, 35
foot-pads, 34
Forbes, Betty, 116
Forman, Simon, 281
fortified cities and towns, 61–89
carrying lights mandated in, 67, 129
carrying weaponry prohibited in, 66, 142, 152
fixed street barriers in, 64, 65, 75
gates of, 61, 62–63, 145, 172, 328
nocturnal disguises prohibited in, 66–67
toll gates of, 63
walls of, 61–63, 76, 327–28
see also
criminal justice; curfews; nightwatch; street lighting
Foxton, Thomas, 59
Fragonard, Jean-Honoré,
318
France:
ar cannerez
of, 19
armed peasants in, 142
arson by burglars in, 54
barred windows in, 93
cabarets of, 187
charivaris
in, 253–54
chauffeurs
in, 38
coureurs de nuit
in, 245
courtship in, 195
day-laborers of, 157
Demoiselles
as insurgents in, 258
dormitoires
in, 271
écreignes
in, 182
falots
in, 125–26
Famile de Guet
in, 75, 76
fire-fighting in, 79
fires in, 49
Huguenot Protestants of, 228
magic charms of, 143
millers of, 161
nightwatch in, 75, 79
Paleolithic lamps found in, 5
porte-flambeaux
in, 125
public celebrations of, 69
punishments for nocturnal offenses in, 87
rushlights in, 108
servants’ beds in, 277
smugglers of, 243
spinning and knitting bees in, 178, 182, 184
supernatural encounters in, 144–45
thefts in, 33
veillées
in, 178, 184
walled towns of, 63
watchdogs in, 95
werewolves of, 19, 143
witch hunts of, 20
wolves in, 171–72
youth gangs in, 245, 248, 251, 252
Francis, Duke of Milan, 226
Francis I, King of France, 226
Franklin, Benjamin, 264, 320
cold air baths of, 306
on fires, 51, 115
two beds advised by, 297
Frappe-d’abord,
190
Freke, Elizabeth, 51, 288
Freud, Sigmund, 313, 316
Frye, Thomas,
105
Fuller, Thomas, 268
fulmars, oil from, 107
funerals, nocturnal, 213
funeral wakes, 194
Fuseli, Henry,
291,
321
Gaelic, xxxii
Gallathea,
323
Gallo, Augustin, 172
gallows (gibbets), 41, 141–42
game laws, 241
games of chance, 72, 186, 189,
189,
221, 235, 328