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December
1st. This morning, observing some things to be laid up not as they
should be by the girl, I took a broom and basted her till she cried extremely,
which made me vexed, but before I went out I left her appeased. So to
Whitehall, where I found Mr. Moore attending for me at the Privy Seal,
but nothing to do to-day. I went to my Lord St. Albans lodgings, and found
him in bed, talking to a priest (he looked like one) that leaned along
over the side of the bed, and there I desired to know his mind about making
the catch stay longer, which I got ready for him the other day. He seems
to be a fine civil gentleman. To my Lord's, and did give up my audit of
his accounts, which I had been then two days about, and was well received
by my Lord. I dined with my Lord and Lady, and we had a venison pasty.
Mr. Shepley and I went into London, and calling upon Mr. Pinkney, the
goldsmith, he took us to the tavern, and gave us a pint of wine, and there
fell into our company old Mr. Flower and another gentleman; who tell us
how a Scotch knight was killed basely the other day at the Fleece in Covent
Garden, where there had been a great many formerly killed. So to Paul's
Churchyard, and there I took the little man at Mr. Kirton's and Mr. Shepley
to Ringstead's at the Star, and after a pint of wine I went home, my brains
somewhat troubled with so much wine, and after a letter or two by the
post I went to bed.
2d
(Lord's day). My head not very well, and my body out of order by
last night's drinking, which is my great folly. To church, and Mr. Mills
made a good sermon; so home to dinner. My wife and I all alone to a leg
of mutton, the sawce of which being made sweet, I was angry at it, and
eat none, but only dined upon the marrow bone that we had beside. To church
in the afternoon, and after sermon took Tom Fuller's Church History and
read over Henry the 8th's life in it, and so to supper and to bed.
3rd. This morning I took
a resolution to rise early in the morning, and so I rose by candle, which
I have not done all this winter, and spent my morning in fiddling till
time to go to the office, where Sir G. Carteret did begin again discourse
on Mr. Holland's [The 'tickets' which were individual notes at interest.
D.W.] proposition, which the King do take very ill, and so Sir George
in lieu of that do propose that the seamen should have half in ready money
and tickets for the other half, to be paid in three months after, which
we judge to be very practicable. After office home to dinner, where come
in my cozen Snow by chance, and I had a very good capon to dinner. So
to the office till night, and so home, and then come Mr. Davis, of Deptford
(the first time that ever he was at my house), and after him Mons. L'Impertinent,
who is to go to Ireland to- morrow, and so came to take his leave of me.
They both found me under the barber's hand; but I had a bottle of good
sack in the house, and so made them very welcome. Mr. Davis sat with me
a good while after the other was gone, talking of his hard usage and of
the endeavour to put him out of his place in the time of the late Commissioners,
and he do speak very highly of their corruption. After he was gone I fell
a reading 'Cornelianum dolium' till 11 o'clock at night with great pleasure,
and after that to bed.
4th. To Whitehall to Sir
G. Carteret's chamber, where all the officers met, and so we went up to
the Duke of York, and he took us into his closet, and we did open to him
our project of stopping the growing charge of the fleet by paying them
in hand one moyety, and the other four months hence. This he do like,
and we returned by his order to Sir G. Carteret's chamber, and there we
did draw up this design in order to be presented to the Parliament. From
thence I to my Lord's, and dined with him and told him what we had done
to-day. Sir Tho. Crew dined with my Lord to-day, and we were very merry
with Mrs. Borfett, who dined there still as she has always done lately.
After dinner Sir Tho. and my Lady to the Playhouse to see "The Silent
Woman." I home by water, and with Mr. Hater in my chamber all alone
he and I did put this morning's design into order, which being done I
did carry it to Sir W. Batten, where I found some gentlemen with him (Sir
W. Pen among the rest pretty merry with drink) playing at cards, and there
I staid looking upon them till one o'clock in the morning, and so Sir
W. Pen and I went away, and I to bed. This day the Parliament voted that
the bodies of Oliver, Ireton, Bradshaw, &c., should be taken up out
of their graves in the Abbey, and drawn to the gallows, and there hanged
and buried under it: which (methinks) do trouble me that a man of so great
courage as he was, should have that dishonour, though otherwise he might
deserve it enough.
5th. This morning the Proposal
which I wrote the last night I showed to the officers this morning, and
was well liked of, and I wrote it fair for Sir. G. Carteret to show to
the King, and so it is to go to the Parliament. I dined at home, and after
dinner I went to the new Theatre and there I saw "The Merry Wives
of Windsor" acted, the humours of the country gentleman and the French
doctor very well done, but the rest but very poorly, and Sir J. Falstaffe
t as bad as any. From thence to Mr. Will. Montagu's chamber to have sealed
some writings tonight between Sir R. Parkhurst and myself about my Lord's
L2000, but he not coming, I went to my father's and there found my mother
still ill of the stone, and had just newly voided one, which she had let
drop into the chimney, and looked and found it to shew it me. From thence
home and to bed.
6th. This morning some
of the Commissioners of Parliament and Sir W. Batten went to Sir G. Carteret's
office here in town, and paid off the Chesnut.[?? D.W.] I carried my wife
to White Friars and landed her there, and myself to Whitehall to the Privy
Seal, where abundance of pardons to seal, but I was much troubled for
it because that there are no fees now coming for them to me. Thence Mr.
Moore and I alone to the Leg in King Street, and dined together on a neat's
tongue and udder. From thence by coach to Mr. Crew's to my Lord, who told
me of his going out of town to-morrow to settle the militia in Huntingdonshire,
and did desire me to lay up a box of some rich jewels and things that
there are in it, which I promised to do. After much free discourse with
my Lord, who tells me his mind as to his enlarging his family, &c.,
and desiring me to look him out a Master of the Horse and other servants,
we parted. From thence I walked to Greatorex (he was not within), but
there I met with Mr. Jonas Moore, and took him to the Five Bells,' and
drank a glass of wine and left him. To the Temple, when Sir R. Parkhurst
(as was intended the last night) did seal the writings, and is to have
the L2000 told to-morrow. From, thence by water to Parliament Stairs,
and there at an alehouse to Doling (who is suddenly to go into Ireland
to venture his fortune); Simonds (who is at a great loss for L200 present
money, which I was loth to let him have, though I could now do it, and
do love him and think him honest and sufficient, yet lothness to part
with money did dissuade me from it); Luellin (who was very drowsy from
a dose that he had got the last night), Mr. Mount and several others,
among the rest one Mr. Pierce, an army man, who did make us the best sport
for songs and stories in a Scotch tone (which he do very well) that ever
I heard in my life. I never knew so good a companion in all my observation.
From thence to the bridge by water, it being a most pleasant moonshine
night, with a waterman who did tell such a company of bawdy stories, how
once he carried a lady from Putney in such a night as this, and she bade
him lie down by her, which he did, and did give her content, and a great
deal more roguery. Home and found my girl knocking at the door (it being
11 o'clock at night), her mistress having sent her out for some trivial
business, which did vex me when I came in, and so I took occasion to go
up and to bed in a pet. Before I went forth this morning, one came to
me to give me notice that the justices of Middlesex do meet to-morrow
at Hicks Hall, and that I as one am desired to be there, but I fear I
cannot be there though I much desire it.
7th. This morning the judge
Advocate Fowler came to see me, and he and I sat talking till it was time
to go to the office. To the office and there staid till past 12 o'clock,
and so I left the Comptroller and Surveyor and went to Whitehall to my
Lord's, where I found my Lord gone this morning to Huntingdon, as he told
me yesterday he would. I staid and dined with my Lady, there being Laud
the page's mother' there, and dined also with us, and seemed to have been
a very pretty woman and of good discourse. Before dinner I examined Laud
in his Latin and found him a very pretty boy and gone a great way in Latin.
After dinner I took a box of some things of value that my Lord had left
for me to carry to the Exchequer, which I did, and left them with my Brother
Spicer, who also had this morning paid L1000 for me by appointment to
Sir R. Parkhurst. So to the Privy Seal, where I signed a deadly number
of pardons, which do trouble me to get nothing by. Home by water, and
there was much pleased to see that my little room is likely to come to
be finished soon. I fell a-reading Fuller's History of Abbys, and my wife
in Great Cyrus till twelve at night, and so to bed.
8th. To Whitehall to the
Privy Seal, and thence to Mr. Pierces the Surgeon to tell them that I
would call by and by to go to dinner. But I going into Westminster Hall
met with Sir G. Carteret and Sir W. Pen (who were in a great fear that
we had committed a great error of L100,000 in our late account gone into
the Parliament in making it too little), and so I was fain to send order
to Mr. Pierces to come to my house; and also to leave the key of the chest
with Mr. Spicer; wherein my Lord's money is, and went along with Sir W.
Pen by water to the office, and there with Mr. Huchinson we did find that
we were in no mistake. And so I went to dinner with my wife and Mr. and
Mrs. Pierce the Surgeon to Mr. Pierce, the Purser (the first time that
ever I was at his house) who does live very plentifully and finely. We
had a lovely chine of beef and other good things very complete and drank
a great deal of wine, and her daughter played after dinner upon the virginals,
and at night by lanthorn home again, and Mr. Pierce and his wife being
gone home I went to bed, having drunk so much wine that my head was troubled
and was not very well all night, and the wind I observed was rose exceedingly
before I went to bed.
9th (Lord's day). Being
called up early by Sir W. Batten I rose and went to his house and he told
me the ill news that he had this morning from Woolwich, that the Assurance
(formerly Captain Holland's ship, and now Captain Stoakes's, designed
for Guiny and manned and victualled), was by a gust of wind sunk down
to the bottom. Twenty men drowned. Sir Williams both went by barge thither
to see how things are, and I am sent to the Duke of York to tell him,
and by boat with some other company going to Whitehall from the Old Swan.
I went to the Duke. And first calling upon Mr. Coventry at his chamber,
I went to the Duke's bed-side, who had sat up late last night, and lay
long this morning, who was much surprised, therewith. This being done
I went to chappell, and sat in Mr. Blagrave's pew, and there did sing
my part along with another before the King, and with much ease. From thence
going to my Lady I met with a letter from my Lord (which Andrew had been
at my house to bring me and missed me), commanding me to go to Mr. Denham,
to get a man to go to him to-morrow to Hinchinbroke, to contrive with
him about some alterations in his house, which I did and got Mr. Kennard.
Dined with my Lady and staid all the afternoon with her, and had infinite
of talk of all kind of things, especially of beauty of men and women,
with which she seems to be much pleased to talk of. From thence at night
to Mr. Kennard and took him to Mr. Denham, the Surveyor's. Where, while
we could not speak with him, his chief man (Mr. Cooper) did give us a
cup of good sack.
From thence with Mr. Kennard to my Lady who is much
pleased with him, and after a glass of sack there; we parted, having taken
order for a horse or two for him and his servant to be gone to-morrow.
So to my father's, where I sat while they were at supper, and I found
my mother below, stairs and pretty well. Thence home, where I hear that
the Comptroller had some business with me, and (with Giffin's lanthorn)
I went to him and there staid in discourse an hour 'till late, and among
other things he showed me a design of his, by the King's making an Order
of Knights of the Seal to give an encouragement for persons of honour
to undertake the service of the sea, and he had done it with great pains
and very ingeniously. So home and to prayers and to bed.
10th. Up exceedingly early
to go to the Comptroller, but he not being up and it being a very fine,
bright, moonshine morning I went and walked all alone twenty turns in
Cornhill, from Gracious Street corner to the Stockes and back again, from
6 o'clock till past 7, so long that I was weary, and going to the Comptroller's
thinking to find him ready, I found him gone, at which I was troubled,
and being weary went home, and from thence with my wife by water to Westminster,
and put her to my father Bowyer's (they being newly come out of the country),
but I could not stay there, but left her there. I to the Hall and there
met with Col. Slingsby. So hearing that the Duke of York is gone down
this morning, to see the ship sunk yesterday at Woolwich, he and I returned
by his coach to the office, and after that to dinner. After dinner he
came to me again and sat with me at my house, ands among other discourse
he told me that it is expected that the Duke will marry the Lord Chancellor's
daughter at last which is likely to be the ruin of Mr. Davis and my Lord
Barkley, who have carried themselves so high against the Chancellor; Sir
Chas. Barkley swearing that he and others had lain with her often, which
all believe to be a lie.
He and I in the evening to the Coffee House in Cornhill,
the first time that ever I was there, and I found much pleasure in it,
through the diversity of company and discourse. Home and found my wife
at my Lady Batten's, and have made a bargain to go see the ship sunk at
Woolwich, where both the Sir Williams are still since yesterday, and I
do resolve to go along with them. From thence home and up to bed, having
first been into my study, and to ease my mind did go to cast up how my
cash stands, and I do find as near as I can that I am worth in money clear
L240, for which God be praised. This afternoon there was a couple of men
with me with a book in each of their hands, demanding money for pollmoney,
and I overlooked the book and saw myself set down Samuel Pepys, gent.
10s. for himself and for his servants 2s., which I did presently pay without
any dispute, but I fear I have not escaped so, and therefore I have long
ago laid by L10 for them, but I think I am not bound to discover myself.
11th. My wife and I up
very early this day, and though the weather was very bad and the wind
high, yet my Lady Batten and her maid and we two did go by our barge to
Woolwich (my Lady being very fearfull) where we found both Sir Williams
and much other company, expecting the weather to be better, that they
might go about weighing up the Assurance, which lies there (poor ship,
that I have been twice merry in, in Captn. Holland's time,) under water,
only the upper deck may be seen and the masts. Captain Stoakes is very
melancholy, and being in search for some clothes and money of his, which
he says he hath lost out of his cabin. I did the first office of a justice
of Peace to examine a seaman thereupon, but could find no reason to commit
him. This last tide the Kingsale was also run aboard and lost her mainmast,
by another ship, which makes us think it ominous to the Guiny voyage,
to have two of her ships spoilt before they go out. After dinner, my Lady
being very fearfull she staid and kept my wife there, and I and another
gentleman, a friend of Sir W. Pen's, went back in the barge, very merry
by the way, as far as Whitehall in her. To the Privy Seal, where I signed
many pardons and some few things else. From thence Mr. Moore and I into
London to a tavern near my house, and there we drank and discoursed of
ways how to put out a little money to the best advantage, and at present
he has persuaded me to put out L250 for L50 per annum for eight years,
and I think I shall do it. Thence home, where I found the wench washing,
and I up to my study, and there did make up an even L100, and sealed it
to lie by. After that to bed.
12th. Troubled with the
absence of my wife. This morning I went (after the Comptroller and I had
sat an hour at the office) to Whitehall to dine with my Lady, and after
dinner to the Privy Seal and sealed abundance of pardons and little else.
From thence to the Exchequer and did give my mother Bowyer a visit and
her daughters, the first time that I have seen them since I went last
to sea. From thence up with J. Spicer to his office and took L100, and
by coach with it as far as my father's, where I called to see them, and
my father did offer me six pieces of gold, in lieu of six pounds that
he borrowed of me the other day, but it went against me to take it of
him and therefore did not, though I was afterwards a little troubled that
I did not. Thence home, and took out this L100 and sealed it up with the
other last night, it being the first L200 that ever I saw together of
my own in my life. For which God be praised. So to my Lady Batten, and
sat an hour or two, and talked with her daughter and people in the absence
of her father and mother and my wife to pass away the time. After that
home and to bed, reading myself asleep, while the wench sat mending my
breeches by my bedside.
13th. All the day long
looking upon my workmen who this day began to paint my parlour. Only at
noon my Lady Batten and my wife came home, and so I stepped to my Lady's,
where were Sir John Lawson and Captain Holmes, and there we dined and
had very good red wine of my Lady's own making in England.
14th. Also all this day
looking upon my workmen. Only met with the Comptroller at the office a
little both forenoon and afternoon, and at night step a little with him
to the Coffee House where we light upon very good company and had very
good discourse concerning insects and their having a generative faculty
as well as other creatures. This night in discourse the Comptroller told
me among other persons that were heretofore the principal officers of
the Navy, there was one Sir Peter Buck, a Clerk of the Acts, of which
to myself I was not a little proud.
15th. All day at home looking
upon my workmen, only at noon Mr. Moore came and brought me some things
to sign for the Privy Seal and dined with me. We had three eels that my
wife and I bought this morning of a man, that cried them about, for our
dinner, and that was all I did to-day.
16th. In the morning to
church, and then dined at home. In the afternoon I to White Hall, where
I was surprised with the news of a plot against the King's person and
my Lord Monk's; and that since last night there are about forty taken
up on suspicion; and, amongst others, it was my lot to meet with Simon
Beale, the Trumpeter, who took me and Tom Doling into the Guard in Scotland
Yard, and showed us Major-General Overton, where I heard him deny that
he is guilty of any such things; but that whereas it is said that he is
found to have brought many arms to town, he says it is only to sell them,
as he will prove by oath. From thence with Tom Doling and Boston and D.
Vines (whom we met by the way) to Price's, and there we drank, and in
discourse I learnt a pretty trick to try whether a woman be a maid or
no, by a string going round her head to meet at the end of her nose, which
if she be not will come a great way beyond. Thence to my Lady's and staid
with her an hour or two talking of the Duke of York and his lady, the
Chancellor's daughter, between whom, she tells me, that all is agreed
and he will marry her. But I know not how true yet. It rained hard, and
my Lady would have had me have the coach, but I would not, but to my father's,
where I met my wife, and there supped, and after supper by link home and
to bed.
17th. All day looking after
my workmen, only in the afternoon to the office where both Sir Williams
were come from Woolwich, and tell us that, contrary to their expectations,
the Assurance is got up, without much damage to her body, only to the
goods that she hath within her, which argues her to be a strong, good
ship. This day my parlour is gilded, which do please me well.
18th. All day at home,
without stirring at all, looking after my workmen.
19th. At noon I went and
dined with my Lady at Whitehall, and so back again to the office, and
after that home to my workmen. This night Mr. Gauden sent me a great chine
of beef and half a dozen of tongues.
20th. All day at home with
my workmen, that I may get all done before Christmas. This day I hear
that the Princess Royal has the small pox.
21st. By water to Whitehall
(leaving my wife at Whitefriars going to my father's to buy her a muff
and mantle), there I signed many things at the Privy Seal, and carried
L200 from thence to the Exchequer, and laid it up with Mr. Hales, and
afterwards took him and W. Bowyer to the Swan and drank with them. They
told me that this is St. Thomas's [day], and that by an old custom, this
day the Exchequer men had formerly, and do intend this night to have a
supper; which if I could I promised to come to, but did not. To my Lady's,
and dined with her: she told me how dangerously ill the Princess Royal
is and that this morning she was said to be dead. But she hears that she
hath married herself to young Jermyn, which is worse than the Duke of
York's marrying the Chancellor's daughter, which is now publicly owned.
After dinner to the office all the afternoon. At seven at night I walked
through the dirt to Whitehall to see whether my Lord be come to town,
and I found him come and at supper, and I supped with him. He tells me
that my aunt at Brampton has voided a great stone (the first time that
ever I heard she was troubled therewith) and cannot possibly live long,
that my uncle is pretty well, but full of pain still. After supper home
and to bed.
22nd. All the morning with
my painters, who will make an end of all this day I hope. At noon I went
to the Sun tavern; on Fish Street hill, to a dinner of Captn. Teddimans,
where was my Lord Inchiquin (who seems to be a very fine person), Sir
W. Pen, Captn. Cuttance, and one Mr. Lawrence (a fine gentleman now going
to Algiers), and other good company, where we had a very fine dinner,
good musique, and a great deal of wine. We staid here very late, at last
Sir W. Pen and I home together, he so overcome with wine that he could
hardly go; I was forced to lead him through the streets and he was in
a very merry and kind mood. I home (found my house clear of the workmen
and their work ended), my head troubled with wine, and I very merry went
to bed, my head akeing all night.
23rd (Lord's day). In the
morning to Church, where our pew all covered with rosemary and baize.
A stranger made a dull sermon. Home and found my wife and maid with much
ado had made shift to spit a great turkey sent me this week from Charles
Carter, my old colleague, now minister in Huntingdonshire, but not at
all roasted, and so I was fain to stay till two o'clock, and after that
to church with my wife, and a good sermon there was, and so home. All
the evening at my book, and so to supper and to bed.
24th. In the morning to
the office and Commissioner Pett (who seldom comes there) told me that
he had lately presented a piece of plate (being a couple of flaggons)
to Mr. Coventry, but he did not receive them, which also put me upon doing
the same too; and so after dinner I went and chose a payre of candlesticks
to be made ready for me at Alderman Backwell's. To the office again in
the afternoon till night, and so home, and with the painters till 10 at
night, making an end of my house and the arch before my door, and so this
night I was rid of them and all other work, and my house was made ready
against to-morrow being Christmas day. This day the Princess Royal died
at Whitehall.
25th (Christmas day). In
the morning very much pleased to see my house once more clear of workmen
and to be clean, and indeed it is so, far better than it was that I do
not repent of my trouble that I have been at. In the morning to church,
where Mr. Mills made a very good sermon. After that home to dinner, where
my wife and I and my brother Tom (who this morning came to see my wife's
new mantle put on, which do please me very well), to a good shoulder of
mutton and a chicken. After dinner to church again, my wife and I, where
we had a dull sermon of a stranger, which made me sleep, and so home,
and I, before and after supper, to my lute and Fuller's History, at which
I staid all alone in my chamber till 12 at night, and so to bed.
26th. In the morning to
Alderman Backwell's for the candlesticks for Mr. Coventry, but they being
not done I went away, and so by coach to Mr. Crew's, and there took some
money of Mr. Moore's for my Lord, and so to my Lord's, where I found Sir
Thomas Bond (whom I never saw before) with a message from the Queen about
vessells for the carrying over of her goods, and so with him to Mr. Coventry,
and thence to the office (being soundly washed going through the bridge)
to Sir Wm. Batten and Pen (the last of whom took physic to-day), and so
I went up to his chamber, and there having made an end of the business
I returned to White Hall by water, and dined with my Lady Sandwich, who
at table did tell me how much fault was laid upon Dr. Frazer and the rest
of the Doctors, for the death of the Princess! My Lord did dine this day
with Sir Henry Wright, in order to his going to sea with the Queen. Thence
to my father Bowyer's where I met my wife, and with her home by water.
27th. In the morning to
Alderman Backwell's again, where I found the candlesticks done, and went
along with him in his coach to my Lord's and left the candlesticks with
Mr. Shepley. I staid in the garden talking much with my Lord, who do show
me much of his love and do communicate his mind in most things to me,
which is my great content. Home and with my wife to Sir W. Batten's to
dinner, where much and good company. My wife not very well went home,
I staid late there seeing them play at cards, and so home to bed. This
afternoon there came in a strange lord to Sir William Batten's by a mistake
and enters discourse with him, so that we could not be rid of him till
Sir Arn. Breames and Mr. Bens and Sir W. Pen fell a-drinking to him till
he was drunk, and so sent him away. About the middle of the night I was
very ill--I think with eating and drinking too much--and so I was forced
to call the maid, who pleased my wife and I in her running up and down
so innocently in her smock, and vomited in the bason, and so to sleep,
and in the morning was pretty well, only got cold, and so had pain . .
. . as I used to have.
28th. Office day. There
all the morning. Dined at home alone with my wife, and so staid within
all the afternoon and evening; at my lute, with great pleasure, and so
to bed with great content.
29th. Within all the morning.
Several people to speak with me; Mr. Shepley for L100; Mr. Kennard and
Warren, the merchant, about deals for my Lord. Captain Robert Blake lately
come from the Straights about some Florence Wine for my Lord, and with
him I went to Sir W. Pen, who offering me a barrel of oysters I took them
both home to my house (having by chance a good piece of roast beef at
the fire for dinner), and there they dined with me, and sat talking all
the afternoon-good company. Thence to Alderman Backwell's and took a brave
state-plate and cupp in lieu of the candlesticks that I had the other
day and carried them by coach to my Lord's and left them there. And so
back to my father's and saw my mother, and so to my uncle Fenner's, whither
my father came to me, and there we talked and drank, and so away; I home
with my father, he telling me what bad wives both my cozen Joyces make
to their husbands, which I much wondered at. After talking of my sister's
coming to me next week, I went home and to bed.
30th (Lord's day). Lay
long in bed, and being up, I went with Will to my Lord's, calling in at
many churches in my way. There I found Mr. Shepley, in his Venetian cap,
taking physique in his chamber, and with him I sat till dinner. My Lord
dined abroad and my Lady in her chamber, so Mr. Hetly, Child and I dined
together, and after dinner Mr. Child and I spent some time at the lute,
and so promising to prick me some lessons to my theorbo he went away to
see Henry Laws, who lies very sick. I to the Abby and walked there, seeing
the great confusion of people that come there to hear the organs. So home,
calling in at my father's, but staid not, my father and mother being both
forth. At home I fell a-reading of Fuller's Church History till it was
late, and so to bed.
31st. At the office all
the morning and after that home, and not staying to dine I went out, and
in Paul's Church-yard I bought the play of "Henry the Fourth,"
and so went to the new Theatre (only calling at Mr. Crew's and eat a bit
with the people there at dinner) and saw it acted; but my expectation
being too great, it did not please me, as otherwise I believe it would;
and my having a book, I believe did spoil it a little. That being done
I went to my Lord's, where I found him private at cards with my Lord Lauderdale
and some persons of honour. So Mr. Shepley and I over to Harper's, and
there drank a pot or two, and so parted. My boy taking a cat home with
him from my Lord's, which Sarah had given him for my wife, we being much
troubled with mice. At Whitehall inquiring for a coach, there was a Frenchman
with one eye that was going my way, so he and I hired the coach between
us and he set me down in Fenchurch Street. Strange how the fellow, without
asking, did tell me all what he was, and how he had ran away from his
father and come into England to serve the King, and now going back again.
Home and to bed.
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