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Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

The Strange History of Samuel Pepys's Diary

Folger Shakespeare Library: Shakespeare Unlimited

Folger Shakespeare Library

Arts

4.7 • 837 Ratings

🗓️ 29 December 2025

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Why does Samuel Pepys’s diary still matter 200 years after it was first published? In her new book, The Strange History of Samuel Pepys’s Diary, historian Kate Loveman examines how Pepys’s extraordinary consistency as a diarist has made his writing one of the richest records of everyday life in Restoration England. Writing almost daily for nearly a decade, Pepys’s diary documents everything from politics and scientific discoveries to theater and fashion. Even in times of crisis, Pepys reveals life’s ordinary concerns, from worrying about the source of hair for wigs during the Great Plague to safeguarding a wheel of expensive Parmesan cheese during the Great Fire of London. He also offers a rare glimpse into contemporary theatergoing, recording audience reactions and his own opinions, including Shakespeare. He famously dismissed A Midsummer Night’s Dream. In this episode, Loveman explores how Pepys’s diary has been edited, published, censored, and rediscovered over centuries, entertaining readers from the Victorian era to the COVID-19 pandemic in the 21st century. Pepys’s daily observations show how careful, habitual record-keeping can transform ordinary life into an invaluable historical resource. From the Shakespeare Unlimited podcast. Published December 30, 2025. © Folger Shakespeare Library. All rights reserved. This episode was produced by Matt Frassica. Garland Scott is the executive producer. It was edited by Gail Kern Paster. We had help with web production from Paola García Acuña. Leonor Fernandez edits our transcripts. We had technical help from Hamish Brown in Stirling, Scotland, and Voice Trax West in Studio City, California. Final mixing services provided by Clean Cuts at Three Seas, Inc. Kate Loveman is Professor of Early Modern Literature and Culture at the University of Leicester and an internationally recognized expert on Pepys and Restoration literature. She is the author of Reading Fictions, 1660–1740: Deception in English Literary and Political Culture; Samuel Pepys and his Books: Reading, Newsgathering, and Sociability, 1660–1703; and The Strange History of Samuel Pepys’s Diary; and the editor of The Diary of Samuel Pepys for Everyman.

Transcript

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0:00.0

From the Folger Shakespeare Library, this is Shakespeare Unlimited. I'm Farah Kareem Cooper,

0:09.3

the Folger Director. These days, pretty much everything you do leaves a trace. Your watch

0:16.4

tracks your heart rate. Your phone sees where you go. Your calendar will tell you every appointment you've

0:23.0

had. And Netflix knows exactly how many episodes of Love is Blind you've watched. But historians

0:29.7

don't have this kind of rich data for many people in the past. When it comes to 17th century

0:35.7

England, one person springs to mind. For nine years during the

0:40.6

1660s, a naval bureaucrat, an avid theatergoer named Samuel Pepys, recorded everything

0:47.4

about his life, and I do mean everything, including his unvarnished, often harsh opinions about Shakespeare.

0:57.1

Pepys' diary went on to become a crucial historical record of many details about the restoration,

1:03.8

including the Great Fire of London itself.

1:07.0

But it was also a literary scandal.

1:10.2

It wouldn't be published in full until the 1980s.

1:15.0

Professor Kate Loveman of the University of Leicester is a Peep scholar. Her new book is called The Strange History of Samuel Peeps' Diary.

1:24.5

It follows the centuries-long journey of the diary and the meanings it's had for readers.

1:30.5

Here's Kate Loveman in conversation with Barbara Bogave.

1:36.2

So I woke up this morning and I looked up entries throughout the 1660s for this day in Peep's Diary.

1:45.3

And the first one I opened was perfect because it began in bed all morning thinking to take physique,

1:52.5

but it being a frost, my wife would not have it.

1:56.0

So perfect, right?

1:58.1

Because one, he wakes up thinking about taking medicine. Does that mean a purge? Because he was so obsessed with his bowels?

2:07.4

Yes, that was probably some kind of emetic. I think his wife's objection might have been that she thought the weather was too cold rather than...

2:15.6

Too cold for a...

...

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