With an Introduction by
Stuart Sim
Samuel Pepys(1633-1703) began his celebrated diary on 1st January 1660
immediately prior to the Restoration of Charles II to the throne and
the subsequent loosening of the rigid moral and social code enforced
during the Puritan Commonwealth. As variously Clerk to the Council,
a Member of Parliament, a prisoner in the Tower of London, twice Secretary
to the Admiralty and President of the Royal Soiciety, Pepys was in
a unique position to observe and record in detail a fascinating ten-year
period of English history which included not only the Restoration,
but the Great Plague of 1665 and the Fire of London the following year.
However it was not only the affairs of State which took up the great
diarist's interest, for he was a regular attendant at the King's Theatre,
was a hearty eater and drinker and delighted in recording his fondness
for women, especially his own and his friends' young servant girls.