"Writing is, among things, the place where we can help ourselves cope
with the dark parts of our living." --John Aubrey
Brief Lives--Chiefly of Contemporaries, set down by John Aubrey,
between the Years 1669 & 1696 is a collection of short, colorful,
gossipy biographies written by John Aubrey in the last part of the 17th
century. It took two centuries, however, before Aubrey received real
recognition as a great biographer. It was in 1898 that Reverend Andrew
Clark (1856-1922), a minister and editor, edited the transcript of
Brief Lives that established Aubrey's name as the man who invented
biography.
Clark's edition was published in two volumes: Volume I from letters A to
H and Volume II from I to V, with biographies of distinguished
17th-century Englishmen such as Francis Bacon, Robert Boyle, Thomas
Browne, Walter Harvey, Thomas Hobbes, Robert Hooke, Sir Walter Raleigh
and William Shakespeare.