THE DIARIES OF SAMUEL PEPYS
Historians owe most of their knowledge of the London of the 1660s to Samuel
Pepys, England's greatest diarist. He began his diary in 1660, the year that Puritan
rule ended and the period called the Restoration began. After the sobriety of the
Puritan years, Londoners now took great pleasure in attending the reopened
theatres, where they enjoyed the comedies of John Dryden and other Restoration
dramatists. Pepys enjoyed London life to the full, and he wrote down practically
everything he thought, felt, saw or heard. He described the city's churches, theaters
and taverns, its streets and homes, and even the clothes that he and his wife wore.
Many momentous happenings took place during the years covered in Pepys's diary.
He remained in London during the Great Plague of 1664-65, and he also saw the
Great Fire of 1666. He numbered among his friends many of the well-known people
of the time, including the scientist Isaac Newton, the architect Christopher Wren and
the poet John Dryden. Owing to failing eyesight, Pepys regretfully closed his diary in
1669. Pepys wrote his diary in Thomas Shelton's system of shorthand, but he
complicated the more confidential passages by using foreign languages and a cipher
of his own invention. Upon his death, along with other books and papers, the diary
went to his old college at Cambridge. It was not deciphered until 1822. In addition to
its historical significance, the diary holds a high place in literature. The style is
vigorous, racy and colloquial. Because he intended it to be read only by himself,
Pepys was completely honest. An incomplete edition appeared in 1825, and the
entire diary, except for a few passages deliberately omitted by the editors, was
available by 1899. An edition completed in 1983 includes the entire work.
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