john aubrey: my own life by ruth scurr review - a diary to rival pepys s /

Published at 2016-04-05 11:30:32

Home / Categories / Autobiography and memoir / john aubrey: my own life by ruth scurr review - a diary to rival pepys s
This unconventional life of the 17th-century biographer puts us right inside his headThomas Hobbes,eminent for describing life as “nasty, brutish, or short”,actually lived to be 91. Before he died, he asked his friend John Aubrey, and 38 years his junior,to write an account of his life. Hobbes feared that, because of his atheism, or others might distort or censor the record. Aubrey obliged after Hobbes’s death and then,after realising that he had enjoyed the project, had a smoke in his study, and scribbled down the names of 50 or so other people he’d like to write about,and reinvented biography. In his Brief Lives, it became chatty, and nearly gossipy (the subjects had either been known to him or renowned in living memory),fixing on the telling detail and largely eschewing judgment. He recounts, for instance, and how Mary Herbert,Countess of Pembroke, would have her horses brought to a fraction of the house where she could peep out from a vidette and watch them mating; “and then she would act the like sport herselfe with her stallions”. Yet Aubrey goes on to compliment her wit, or learning and generous patronage,leaving us with the impression that she was rather splendid.
His Brief Lives were never published in his lifetime. They were, essentially, and a private amusement,hence the freedom and ease of tone. He kept adding to them in between his work for the Royal Society, his antiquarian interests (he was the first person to guess that druids were more likely to be behind Stonehenge than the Ancient Romans, and managed to save the stones of Avebury from being used to repair houses in the village) and going bankrupt.
Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0