English novelist Arnold Bennet drank a glass of water in a Paris Hotel to prove it was safe. He died two months later of Typhoid!
The Writer Who Died Proving Paris Water Was Safe
In January 1931, celebrated English novelist Arnold Bennett sat down for dinner at a Paris restaurant with friends James and Nora Joyce. When the waiter warned him not to drink the tap water, Bennett did what any overconfident traveler might do: he insisted on drinking it anyway. According to some accounts, he was specifically trying to prove to skeptics that Parisian water was perfectly safe.
Within 24 hours, Bennett fell ill. What seemed like the flu was actually typhoid fever, a bacterial infection spread through contaminated food and water that was still dangerously common in 1930s Europe.
A Novelist's Last Chapter
Arnold Bennett wasn't just any tourist—he was one of Britain's most successful writers, known for novels like The Old Wives' Tale and Clayhanger. At 63, he'd lived through the height of the British literary scene, hobnobbed with the likes of H.G. Wells and Virginia Woolf, and built a reputation as a sharp observer of working-class life in England's industrial heartland.
But none of that literary brilliance could save him from bacteria. By February 3, the diagnosis was confirmed: typhoid. Bennett became bedridden, suffering through weeks of fever, gall bladder infection, and relentless hiccups—a symptom that sounds almost comically cruel for someone in his condition.
The Irony of Proof
Bennett died at his London flat on March 27, 1931—roughly three months after that fateful glass of water. The irony is brutal: he drank the water to prove it was safe, and instead proved exactly the opposite.
This wasn't just bad luck. In the 1930s, typhoid was a well-known hazard in parts of Europe where water sanitation lagged behind modern standards. The waiter's warning wasn't paranoia—it was common sense. But Bennett, perhaps too proud or too stubborn, ignored it.
Lessons from a Glass of Water
Today, typhoid is rare in developed countries thanks to improved sanitation and vaccines, but it still infects millions worldwide each year, mostly in regions with unsafe water supplies. Bennett's death is a reminder that overconfidence can be fatal, especially when it comes to public health warnings.
It's also a cautionary tale about the limits of personal conviction. You can believe something is safe all you want—but bacteria don't care about your confidence.