
In this vivid slice of mid‑17th‑century London, the diarist records his bustling mornings at the Admiralty, the petty frustrations of office life, and the tangled dynamics of his household. He navigates a strained conversation with his brother over his wife’s temper, offering counsel on marital harmony while juggling the demands of his position. The entries also reveal the city’s public pulse: a riot among seamen, the Lord Mayor’s insistence on maintaining order, and a courtroom spectacle involving a bold thief and a condemned woman.
Beyond the official business, the diary captures the sensory details of daily existence—fine shells presented as gifts, a lavish venison dinner that tests his restraint, and the impressive waterworks that pride the capital. Through candid observations and occasional humor, the writer paints a portrait of a man striving to balance personal ambition, civic duty, and the ordinary pleasures and irritations of his age.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (122K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-11-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1633–1703
Best known for the diary that captures everyday life in Restoration London, this lively observer recorded everything from the Great Fire to the small dramas of his own household. His pages feel unusually modern: curious, candid, funny, and full of detail.
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