The Works of Samuel Pepys: Passages from The Diary of Samuel Pepys

by Samuel Pepys

Other authorsRichard Le Gallienne (Introduction)
Hardcover, 1950

Status

Available

Call number

941.066092

Collection

Publication

Black's Readers Service (1950), 332 pages

Description

The diary of Samuel Pepys is like no other book in the world. One reason is that its writer had no idea of making a book at all. He never dreamed of human eyes falling upon his blessedly frank and naked page. The record was a secret between himself and his own soul. To those who love humanity and vivid, unconscious writing, it is infinitely delightful and precious.

User reviews

LibraryThing member philipjohn
One of the most honest, perceptive and vivid first person accounts of a fascinating period.Teeming with life and directly connecting the major and minor players of seventeenth century England to the present with his eye for human vanities, joys of life and the motivations of power and class.
LibraryThing member Cecrow
The full version of this diary deserves five stars, a wonderful first-hand account of events worthy of historical note. It combines Pepys' penetrating objective observation of his own quirks and contradictions - the two facets of the public and private man, honestly divulged as a whole for
Show More
posterity to chew over and wonder at. Naturally the diary has been subjected to numerous versions since first transcribed from Pepys' original shorthand in 1822, as it contains all sorts of indecencies that weren't believed fit to print. You will need a 1976 version or later (William Matthew's transcription) of the diary to read the original in full, or else visit pepysdiary.com

This volume, Modern Library's "Passages" (editor Richard Le Gallienne), is one eighth of the Bright transcription of the 1890s that was already holding back some objectionable content. Consequently it is not only censored but it is also abridged to an almost unbelievable degree, to the extent that I have to laugh when its introduction supposes I should be satisfied that I will know Pepys just as well as if I'd read the diary in full. Pepys wrote every day, almost always at length. "Passages" gives no indication of this, skipping days at a time and shortening the majority of entries it does provide. Also aggravating (in my edition at least), it doesn't note the month/year on every page and I was often having to flip back/forth to remind myself.

If you desire nothing more than highlights of historical significance with a sprinkling of some personal bits, perhaps you could say it does a serviceable job. Those highlights include ubiquitous music, the first introduction of women actors onto the stage, weather observations that may (unknown to Pepys) hint at the global effects of volcanic activity, a treasure hunt in the Tower of London, first-hand accounts of living through the last gasp of the Black Plague, and witnessing the Great Fire of London. Sam's wife Elizabeth also deserves the reader's attention, for always standing up for herself. Sam loved her and feared her in equal measure, and well he ought to have.

Not everything was wonderful in jolly old England. Public executions included being drawn and quartered, and Cromwell was dug out of his grave so he could be hung too. Folks were accustomed to spitting in the theatre or being accidentally spat on, bloodletting was part of a casual doctor's check-up, and press-gangs forced able-bodied men onto the ships to fight the war with the Dutch. Sam was liable to commit acts of domestic violence, and his callous objectification of women is beyond the pale with some pedophilia thrown in for good measure. Women and girl victims had no recourse but to find other benefactors if they could - only to encounter the same thing everywhere, I'd hardly doubt.

The single most interesting aspect of Sam's diary is the clear-eyed capturing of his own hypocrisy. He simultaneously pledges himself to be above bribery while taking bribes, devoted to his wife while cheating on her, etc. It is remarkable how equally well he records his pledges and personal code as well as all of the ways he contravenes them. While occasionally he chastises himself for poor behaviour, and sometimes corrects it, he just as openly slips back into bad paths again. He does not pause his diary to explore this hypocritical dichotomy (at least not in these stripped-down excerpts), though there's no question that he's aware of it. His diary paints him as a kind of disinterested observer of himself, as if his own contradictions were a source of fascination to him rather than something needing to be resolved.

While Pepys may not have written with an audience in mind, he had enough inkling of his diary's value after its completion to make it a secured part of the library he left to posterity. It is not the only surviving diary from this period, but his is special for sheer readability and for its uniquely objective, naked reporting of a man both public and private as told from the inside.
Show Less
LibraryThing member amerynth
If you look for lists of great non-fiction books, Samuel Pepys' diary nearly always can be found someplace on the list, so I thought I would check it out.

Pepys lived at an interesting time and kept a dairy faithfully for about 10 years, detailing is money troubles, his awful relationship with his
Show More
wife, his numerous affairs as well as some big historical events of the 1660's including the arrival of the plague and the Great Fire of London.

He was generally an awful, lecherous human being -- even though he was much younger, I kept picturing him as the creepy Benjamin Franklin actor on an episode of the "The Office."

I generally found his dairy entries interesting but I'm glad I read an abridged version -- his job with the Navy bored me but his descriptions of historical events were particularly interesting. Overall, I'm glad I decided to read this.
Show Less
LibraryThing member hemlokgang
Basically, I skimmed this book. The diary of Samuel Pepys is just that, a daily notation of his activities. As a person, he was a flagrant and frequent adulterer, a financially astute man of letters, and apparently a good representation of an upper class man of the 1660s. He lived to see Charles II
Show More
crowned and to survive the plague. I think this book would be of more interest to an historian.
Show Less

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1660-1669

Physical description

332 p.
Page: 0.5444 seconds