"In the quiet village of , men still talk about the as though it happened last week. Eyam is the last place in England with a vivid memory of the . Eyam is a mile-long street of fortress-like stone houses set in a cosy cleft of the wild moors. There is a church, a manor-house behind a wall, and the remains of the village stocks. I went into the church, where the elderly caretaker began to talk, as they all do in Eyam, of the Plague ... (She might have been talking about that year's influenza!)"
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Essayists from EnglandNon-fiction authors from EnglandJournalists from EnglandColumnists from EnglandFellows of the Royal Society of Literature
Original Language: English
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(206 pages; 1st edition 1928)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/H._V._Morton
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H. V. Morton
(published as H. V. Morton; 26 July 1892 – 18 June 1979) was a British journalist and famous . He first achieved fame in 1923 as an employee of the ' when he reported on Howard Carter's of the .
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