What We Owe the Dead
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What We Owe the Dead

16:20 Jan 29, 2026
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Send a textGEORGE:The Bills of Mortality—weekly printed tallies—turned death into public information, something people watched like weather. (pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)WILL:And once death is printed, it becomes “real” in a new way.But it also becomes… manageable.A column of numbers fits neatly on a page.A grave does not.GEORGE:That’s the paradox: a bill can keep the dead visible—and it can also teach the city to normalize loss.WILL:Yes.A repeated tragedy becomes background noise unless the heart fights it.GEORGE:And then there’s the other “memorial space” in your era: the theatre itself.After major plague closures, theatres reopened—like after the 1603 outbreak, with reopening in April 1604.WILL:And the crowd that returned was not innocent.They returned carrying private funerals.GEORGE:So the playhouse becomes a communal ritual of memory—without calling itself a memorial.Support the showThank you for experiencing Celebrate Creativity.
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