Necromander
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February 2nd, 1932 It is late in the night as I write this entry. I have spent my day attending the various religious ceremonies that acompany The Great Day of Mourning. First, I had to don my Mourning Clothe and spend an hour praying for the souls of the dead, as each citizen of London was required to do. After the hour of prayer, you are expected to take breakfast and then attend Church ceremonies. I was forced to skip my breakfast so that I might arrive to the chapel on time. It is quite hard to focus on mourning hundreds of lost lives on an empty stomach, I can now say with certainty. I fought my way through the intense pangs of hunger, and made it through the three-hour long mass without a word of complaint. The mass is long to accomodate the epic tale of the Black Plague, when a vile punishment was brought to Europe by God. He sent vermin from the east to spread a wretched disease among our ancestors. The priest told this tale in his booming voice, filling every chasm of the chapel with the tale of the Plague. He concluded his eulogy for the Plague victims with the line, "And so the disease spread. Until the man now known as Blessed Phillip uttered a single prayer, and changed England forever." At that line, we ceremoniously threw off our Mourning Clothes, in celebration of the end of death. Tomorrow we celebrated life. October 7th, 1933 How odd it is that I should come to this page under my circumstances. I am running out of paper in this journal, and I search desperately for another place to scrawl my thoughts. This journal has become my anchor in a world of madness. I hear them at night. They are in the ship, below deck, wailing in agony. Their screams come through the boards, and I mourn them, just as I mourned the victims of the Plague in the entry above. I hear their screams, and I can only wonder what God has wrought.
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