
A day‑by‑day record of December 1666 offers a vivid glimpse of a city still smoldering from the Great Fire. The diarist walks past charred cellars on Tower Street, watches the lingering flames and hears the clamor of officials scrambling to rebuild. Amid the wreckage he notes the uneasy chatter of a former Lord Mayor, whose promises of sacrifice for the crown ring hollow against the backdrop of widespread desperation.
The entries then turn to the more intimate rhythms of London life. He attends a christening as godfather, mingles with friends at taverns, and shares light‑hearted moments with his wife and neighbours. Yet even in these social scenes, the diary records the era’s anxieties: a suppressed Catholic pamphlet, the battered New England fleet battered by storm, and the lingering uncertainty about the nation’s future. Together, the observations paint a nuanced portrait of resilience, gossip, and the everyday concerns of a metropolis trying to rise from ash.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (61K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-12-01
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.
View all books