Rating: Not rated
Tags: History, Biography, Lang:en
Summary
The historical value and interest of diaries is not so much
in their accounts of great historical events but in their
ability to convey the quality - the sights, smells and textures
- of everyday life that would otherwise be lost to us. It is
everyday life that abounds in the diaries of Richard Hall, a
sometimes pious Baptist haberdasher who kept shop at Number
OneLondon Bridge through much of the late eighteenth century.
He recorded what he ate, what he purchased, how he slept and
above all what the weather was like in near obsessive detail.
He charts the hurly-burly of family life - he had two marriages
and numerous children - his sometimes tumultuous relationship
with his church, and his boundless curiousity about almost
everything - from astronomy to the latest fashions. His great-great-great-great grandson, Mike Rendell, has
meticulously sifted through the rich treasure trove of
Richard's papers to present us with an engaging portrait of a
flawed but thoroughly likeable 'Georgian gentleman'. It isn't
just diaries - it is the shopping lists, the packing lists, the
accounts, all the ephemera of everyday life in Georgian England
which he brings to life. **