Jack London: The Scarlet Plague
Edgar Allan Poe published a short work titled "The Masque of the Red Death" (aka "The Mask of the Red Death) in 1842 about a virulent plague that caused instant bleeding from the pores and immediate death. In 1912, some 70 years later, Jack London published a novella, The Scarlet Death in which he depicted a plague that caused a bright reddening of the skin and almost instantaneous death. Did London borrow the idea from Poe? I don't know as I've never read anything that suggests such a possibility. Aside from the symptoms and the high mortality rate, the two tales are very different in time and place. Poe's tale takes place in Renaissance Italy (or so I guess) while London's is set in the San Francisco Bay area in 2013.
Poe's story focused on a small group of people who fled the city for an isolated "castellated abbey," hoping to escape the plague. It had a high wall and an iron door. They sealed the door in an attempt to keep the plague or plague bearers out. However, as those who have read the tale know, they were unsuccessful What happened after the plague appeared and apparently killed all in the abbey is not told.
London's tale, however, is a flashback, a reminiscence of one of the few survivors, called Granser by the boys, told to the next generation, a small group of young males who are the descendants of those few who were immune to the plague. While the story was written in 1912, London set it in 2013, in the San Francisco Bay area.
The frame tells us what life is like several decades after the plague. Granser's audience consists of teen-aged boys, whose language consists mostly of a very basic vocabulary and they see no reason why there should be more than one word for something. They deride the old man for referring to something as "scarlet" when "red" is a perfectly good word. While we never really get a close look at the way the people live then, London does provide sufficient information to suggest that humanity has reverted back to the hunting and gathering stage, a period of savagery, as Granser complains. But, this is all part of the cycle, for the old man tells the boys:
"You are true savages. Already has begun the custom of wearing human
teeth. In another generation you will be perforating your nose and ears
and wearing ornaments of bone and shell. I know. The human race is
doomed to sink back farther and farther into the primitive night ere
again it begins its bloody climb upward to civilization. When we
increase and feel the lack of room, we will proceed to kill one
another."
Most of the tale, though, consists of the horrors experienced during the outbreak of the plague and the breakdown of society, the rioting, looting, and killing that occurred as the terrified population thought only of their own survival at any cost. What's intriguing is that Granser, a literature professor at the University of California, and numerous colleagues in the university community attempted to barricade themselves in the Chemistry Building, bringing in supplies and weapons and prepared to do whatever they had to do to keep the plague and plague bearers out, just as the Prince and his friends had done in Poe's tale. And, they were just an unsuccessful. At the end, the few survivors fled the building.
London doesn't go into any great detail about what had happened during the sixty years that had passed since the outbreak. He is most concerned with the breakdown of society at the time of the plague and some depiction of life today.
Interwoven though is London's socialist philosophy as the old man tells of society in 2013 as consisting of Masters and Slaves (capitalist owners and workers). He, in speaking of the events of 2013, tells us "(t)hat was the year that Morgan the Fifth was appointed President of the United States by the Board of Magnates."
London also makes the point, over a century ago, that he was aware of what we today are only too aware of--the relationship of a large population and the appearance of new diseases and the role of rapid global transportation in the spread of these diseases. Improved methods of food production led to an increase in population. "The easier it was to get food, the more men there were; the more men there were, the more thickly were they packed together on the earth; and the more thickly were they packed, the more new kinds of germs became diseases."
We are certainly well aware of the problem today, especially when we consider the onset of AIDS, Ebola, and most recently the Zika virus. So far we've been lucky as rapid transmission of information has allowed us to stay ahead of the threat, even though several countries were placed under quarantine during the last Ebola outbreak.
London's tale is a disquieting one, even though it is considered science fiction. It is not an highly improbable invasion by aliens that poses the threat but invaders from Earth itself. We see examples of it perhaps every decade or so.
At one time I had considered calling this post "The Three Plagues." I had planned to write about three plague stories--the two mentioned above and George R. Stewart's great novel, The Earth Abides. However, the length of this commentary on the first two is long enough, so I will post on Stewart's work separately.
I would recommend, if you have the time, to read all three stories: first Poe, then London, and then Stewart's novel, for together they provide an thorough exploration of the theme--the plague and its aftermath. .