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February
1st.
This morning within till 11 o'clock, and then with Commissioner Pett to
the office; and he staid there writing, while I and Sir W. Pen walked
in the garden talking about his business of putting his son to Cambridge;
and to that end I intend to write to-night to Dr. Fairebrother, to give
me an account of Mr. Burton of Magdalene. Thence with Mr. Pett to the
Paynter's; and he likes our pictures very well, and so do I. Thence he
and I to the Countess of Sandwich, to lead him to her to kiss her hands:
and dined with her, and told her the news (which Sir W. Pen told me to-day)
that express is come from my Lord with letters, that by a great storm
and tempest the mole of Argier is broken down, and many of their ships
sunk into the mole. So that God Almighty hath now ended that unlucky business
for us; which is very good news. After dinner to the office, where we
staid late, and so I home, and late writing letters to my father and Dr.
Fairebrother, and an angry letter to my brother John for not writing to
me, and so to bed.
2nd (Lord's day). To church
in the morning, and then home and dined with my wife, and so both of us
to church again, where we had an Oxford man give us a most impertinent
sermon upon "Cast your bread upon the waters, &c. So home to
read, supper, and to prayers, and then to bed.
3rd. After musique practice
I went to the office, and there with the two Sir Williams all the morning
about business,, and at noon I dined with Sir W. Batten with many friends
more, it being his wedding-day, and among other froliques, it being their
third year, they had three pyes, whereof the middlemost was made of an
ovall form, in an ovall hole within the other two, which made much mirth,
and was called the middle piece; and above all the rest, we had great
striving to steal a spooneful out of it; and I remember Mrs. Mills, the
minister's wife, did steal one for me and did give it me; and to end all,
Mrs. Shippman did fill the pye full of white wine, it holding at least
a pint and a half, and did drink it off for a health to Sir William and
my Lady, it being the greatest draft that ever I did see a woman drink
in my life. Before we had dined came Sir G. Carteret, and we went all
three to the office and did business there till night, and then to Sir
W. Batten again, and I went along with my lady and the rest of the gentlewomen
to Major Holmes's, and there we had a fine supper, among others, excellent
lobsters, which I never eat at this time of the year before. The Major
bath good lodgings at the Trinity House. Here we staid, and at last home,
and, being in my chamber, we do hear great noise of mirth at Sir William
Batten's, tearing the ribbands from my Lady and him.--[As
if they were a newly-married couple.]--So I to bed.
4th. To Westminster Hall,
where it was full term. Here all the morning, and at noon to my Lord Crew's,
where one Mr. Tempter (an ingenious man and a person of honour he seems
to be) dined; and, discoursing of the nature of serpents, he told us some
that in the waste places of Lancashire do grow to a great bigness, and
that do feed upon larks, which they take thus: They observe when the lark
is soared to the highest, and do crawl till they come to be just underneath
them; and there they place themselves with their mouths uppermost, and
there, as is conceived, they do eject poyson up to the bird; for the bird
do suddenly come down again in its course of a circle, and falls directly
into the mouth of the serpent; which is very strange. He is a great traveller;
and, speaking of the tarantula, he says that all the harvest long (about
which times they are most busy) there are fidlers go up and down the fields
every where, in expectation of being hired by those that are stung. Thence
to the office, where late, and so to my chamber and then to bed, my mind
a little troubled how to put things in order to my advantage in the office
in readiness to the Duke's orders lately sent to us, and of which we are
to treat at the office to-morrow morning. This afternoon, going into the
office, one met me and did serve a subpoena upon me for one Field, whom
we did commit to prison the other day for some ill words he did give the
office. The like he had for others, but we shall scour him for it.
5th. Early at the office.
Sir G. Carteret, the two Sir Williams and myself all alone reading of
the Duke's institutions for the settlement of our office, whereof we read
as much as concerns our own duties, and left the other officers for another
time. I did move several things for my purpose, and did ease my mind.
At noon Sir W. Pen dined with me, and after dinner he and I and my wife
to the Theatre, and went in, but being very early we went out again to
the next door, and drank some Rhenish wine and sugar, and so to the House
again, and there saw "Rule a Wife and have a Wife" very well
done. And here also I did look long upon my Lady Castlemaine, who, notwithstanding
her late sickness, continues a great beauty. Home and supped with Sir
W. Pen and played at cards with him, and so home and to bed, putting some
cataplasm to my . . . . which begins to swell again.
6th. At my musique practice,
and so into my cellar to my workmen, and I am very much pleased with my
alteracon there. About noon comes my uncle Thomas to me to ask for his
annuity, and I did tell him my mind freely. We had some high words, but
I was willing to end all in peace, and so I made him' dine with me, and
I have hopes to work my end upon him. After dinner the barber trimmed
me, and so to the office, where I do begin to be exact in my duty there
and exacting my privileges, and shall continue to do so. None but Sir
W. Batten and me here to-night, and so we broke up early, and I home and
to my chamber to put things in order, and so to bed. My swelling I think
do begin to go away again.
7th. Among my workmen this
morning. By and by by water to Westminster with Commissioner Pett (landing
my wife at Black Friars) where I hear the prisoners in the Tower that
are to die are come to the Parliament-house this morning. To the Wardrobe
to dinner with my Lady; where a civitt cat, parrot, apes, and many other
things are come from my Lord by Captain Hill, who dined with my Lady with
us to-day. Thence to the Paynter's, and am well pleased with our pictures.
So by coach home, where I found the joyners putting up my chimney-piece
in the dining-room, which pleases me well, only the frame for a picture
they have made so massy and heavy that I cannot tell what to do with it.
This evening came my she cozen Porter to see us (the first time that we
had seen her since we came to this end of the town) and after her Mr.
Hart, who both staid with us a pretty while and so went away. By and by,
hearing that Mr. Turner was much troubled at what I do in the office,
and do give ill words to Sir W. Pen and others of me, I am much troubled
in my mind, and so went to bed; not that I fear him at all, but the natural
aptness I have to be troubled at any thing that crosses me.
8th. All the morning in
the cellar with the colliers, removing the coles out of the old cole hole
into the new one, which cost me 8s. the doing; but now the cellar is done
and made clean, it do please me exceedingly, as much as any thing that
was ever yet done to my house. I pray God keep me from setting my mind
too much upon it. About 3 o'clock the colliers having done I went up to
dinner (my wife having often urged me to come, but my mind is so set upon
these things that I cannot but be with the workmen to see things done
to my mind, which if I am not there is seldom done), and so to the office,
and thence to talk with Sir W. Pen, walking in the dark in the garden
some turns, he telling me of the ill management of our office, and how
Wood the timber merchant and others were very knaves, which I am apt to
believe. Home and wrote letters to my father and my brother John, and
so to bed. Being a little chillish, intending to take physique to-morrow
morning.
9th (Lord's day). I took
physique this day, and was all day in my chamber, talking with my wife
about her laying out of L20, which I had long since promised her to lay
out in clothes against Easter for herself, and composing some ayres, God
forgive me! At night to prayers and to bed.
10th. Musique practice
a good while, then to Paul's Churchyard, and there I met with Dr. Fuller's
"England's Worthys," the first time that I ever saw it; and
so I sat down reading in it, till it was two o'clock before I, thought
of the time going, and so I rose and went home to dinner, being much troubled
that (though he had some discourse with me about my family and arms) he
says nothing at all, nor mentions us either in Cambridgeshire or Norfolk.
But I believe, indeed, our family were never considerable. At home all
the afternoon, and at night to bed.
11th. Musique, then my
brother Tom came, and spoke to him about selling of Sturtlow, he consents
to, and I think will be the best for him, considering that he needs money,
and has no mind to marry. Dined at home, and at the office in the afternoon.
So home to musique, my mind being full of our alteracons in the garden,
and my getting of things in the office settled to the advantage of my
clerks, which I found Mr. Turner much troubled at, and myself am not quiet
in mind. But I hope by degrees to bring it to it. At night begun to compose
songs, and begin with "Gaze not on Swans." So to bed.
12th. This morning, till
four in the afternoon, I spent abroad, doing of many and considerable
businesses at Mr. Phillips the lawyer, with Prior, Westminster, my Lord
Crew's, Wardrobe, &c., and so home about the time of day to dinner
with my mind very highly contented with my day's work, wishing I could
do so every day. Then to my chamber drawing up writings, in expectation
of my uncle Thomas corning. So to my musique and then to bed. This night
I had half a 100 poor Jack--[The "poor john" is a hake salted
and dried.]--sent me by Mr. Adis.
13th. After musique comes
my cozen Tom Pepys the executor, and he did stay with me above two hours
discoursing about the difference between my uncle Thomas and me, and what
way there may be to make it up, and I have hopes we may do good of it
for all this. Then to dinner, and then came Mr. Kennard, and he and I
and Sir W. Pen went up and down his house to view what may be the contrivance
and alterations there to the best advantage. So home, where Mr. Blackburne
(whom I have not seen a long time) was come to speak with me, and among
other discourse he do tell me plain of the corruption of all our Treasurer's
officers, and that they hardly pay any money under ten per cent.; and
that the other day, for a mere assignation of L200 to some counties, they
took L15 which is very strange. So to the office till night, and then
home and to write by the post about many businesses, and so to bed. Last
night died the Queen of Bohemia.
14th (Valentine's day).
I did this day purposely shun to be seen at Sir W. Batten's, because I
would not have his daughter to be my Valentine, as she was the last year,
there being no great friendship between us now, as formerly. This morning
in comes W. Bowyer, who was my wife's Valentine, she having, at which
I made good sport to myself, held her hands all the morning, that she
might not see the paynters that were at work in gilding my chimney-piece
and pictures in my diningroom. By and by she and I by coach with him to
Westminster, by the way leaving at Tom's and my wife's father's lodgings
each of them some poor Jack, and some she carried to my father Bowyer's,
where she staid while I walked in the Hall, and there among others met
with Serj'. Pierce, and I took him aside to drink a cup of ale, and he
told me the basest thing of Mr. Montagu's and his man Eschar's going away
in debt, that I am troubled and ashamed, but glad to be informed of. He
thinks he has left L1000 for my Lord to pay, and that he has not laid
out L3,000 Out of the L5,000 for my Lord's use, and is not able to make
an account of any of the money. My wife and I to dinner to the Wardrobe,
and then to talk with my Lady, and so by coach, it raining hard, home,
and so to do business and to bed.
15th. With the two Sir
Williams to the Trinity-house; and there in their society had the business
debated of Sir Nicholas Crisp's sasse at Deptford. Then to dinner, and
after dinner I was sworn a Younger Brother; Sir W. Rider being Deputy
Master for my Lord of Sandwich; and after I was sworn, all the Elder Brothers
shake me by the hand: it is their custom, it seems. Hence to the office,
and so to Sir Wm. Batten's all three, and there we staid till late talking
together in complaint of the Treasurer's instruments. Above all Mr. Waith,
at whose child's christening our wives and we should have been to-day,
but none of them went and I am glad of it, for he is a very rogue, So
home, and drew up our report for Sir N. Crispe's sasse, and so to bed.
No news yet of our fleet gone to Tangier, which we now begin to think
long.
16th (Lord's day). To church
this morning, and so home and to dinner. In the afternoon I walked to
St. Bride's to church, to hear Dr. Jacomb preach upon the recovery, and
at the request of Mrs. Turner, who came abroad this day, the first time
since her long sickness. He preached upon David's words, "I shall
not die, but live, and declare the works of the Lord," and made a
pretty good sermon, though not extraordinary. After sermon I led her home,
and sat with her, and there was the Dr. got before us; but strange what
a command he hath got over Mrs. Turner, who was so carefull to get him
what he would, after his preaching, to drink, and he, with a cunning gravity,
knows how to command, and had it, and among other things told us that
he heard more of the Common Prayer this afternoon (while he stood in the
vestry, before he went up into the pulpitt) than he had heard this twenty
years. Thence to my uncle Wight to meet my wife, and with other friends
of hers and his met by chance we were very merry, and supped, and so home,
not being very well through my usual pain got by cold. So to prayers and
to bed, and there had a good draft of mulled ale brought me.
17th. This morning, both
Sir Williams, myself, and Captain Cocke and Captain Tinker of the Convertine,
which we are going to look upon (being intended to go with these ships
fitting for the East Indys), down to Deptford; and thence, after being
on shipboard, to Woolwich, and there eat something. The Sir Williams being
unwilling to eat flesh, [it being Lent] Captain Cocke and I had
a breast of veal roasted. And here I drank wine upon necessity, being
ill for want of it, and I find reason to fear that by my too sudden leaving
off wine, I do contract many evils upon myself. Going and coming we played
at gleeke, and I won 9s. 6d. clear, the most that ever I won in my life.
I pray God it may not tempt me to play again. Being come home again we
went to the Dolphin, where Mr. Alcock and my Lady and Mrs. Martha Batten
came to us, and after them many others (as it always is where Sir W. Batten
goes), and there we had some pullets to supper. I eat though I was not
very well, and after that left them, and so home and to bed.
18th. Lay long in bed,
then up to the office (we having changed our days to Tuesday and Saturday
in the morning and Thursday at night), and by and by with Sir W. Pen,
Mr. Kennard, and others to survey his house again, and to contrive for
the alterations there, which will be handsome I think. After we had done
at the office, I walked to the Wardrobe, where with Mr. Moore and Mr.
Lewis Phillips after dinner we did agree upon the agreement between us
and Prior and I did seal and sign it. Having agreed with Sir Wm. Pen and
my wife to meet them at the Opera, and finding by my walking in the streets,
which were every where full of brick-battes and tyles flung down by the
extraordinary wind the last night (such as hath not been in memory before,
unless at the death of the late Protector), that it was dangerous to go
out of doors; and hearing how several persons had been killed to-day by
the fall of things in the streets, and that the pageant in Fleetstreet
is most of it blown down, and hath broke down part of several houses,
among others Dick Brigden's; and that one Lady Sanderson, a person of
quality in Covent Garden, was killed by the fall of the house, in her
bed, last night; I sent my boy home to forbid them to go forth. But he
bringing me word that they are gone, I went thither and there saw "The
Law against Lovers," a good play and well performed, especially the
little girl's (whom I never saw act before) dancing and singing; and were
it not for her, the loss of Roxalana would spoil the house. So home and
to musique, and so to bed.
19th. Musique practice:
thence to the Trinity House to conclude upon our report of Sir N. Crisp's
project, who came to us to answer objections, but we did give him no ear,
but are resolved to stand to our report; though I could wish we had shewn
him more justice and had heard him. Thence to the Wardrobe and dined with
my Lady, and talked after dinner as I used to do, and so home and up to
my chamber to put things in order to my good content, and so to musique
practice.
20th. This morning came
Mr. Child to see me, and set me something to my Theorbo, and by and by
come letters from Tangier from my Lord, telling me how, upon a great defete
given to the Portuguese there by the Moors, he had put in 300 men into
the town, and so he is in possession, of which we are very glad, because
now the Spaniard's designs of hindering our getting the place are frustrated.
I went with the letter inclosed to my Lord Chancellor to the House of
Lords, and did give it him in the House. And thence to the Wardrobe with
my Lady's, and there could not stay dinner, but went by promise to Mr.
Savill's, and there sat the first time for my picture in little, which
pleaseth me well. So to the office till night and then home.
21st. All the morning putting
things in my house in order, and packing up glass to send into the country
to my father, and books to my brother John, and then to my Lord Crew's
to dinner; and thence to Mr. Lewes Philip's chamber, and there at noon
with him for business, and received L80 upon Jaspar Trice's account, and
so home with it, and so to my chamber for all this evening, and then to
bed.
22nd. At the office busy
all the morning, and thence to dinner to my Lady Sandwich's, and thence
with Mr. Moore to our Attorney, Wellpoole's, and there found that Godfry
has basely taken out a judgment against us for the L40, for which I am
vexed. And thence to buy a pair of stands and a hanging shelf for my wife's
chamber, and so home, and thither came Mr. Savill with the pictures, and
we hung them up in our dining-room. It comes now to appear very handsome
with all my pictures. This evening I wrote letters to my father; among
other things acquainting him with the unhappy accident which hath happened
lately to my Lord of Dorset's two oldest sons, who, with two Belasses
and one Squire Wentworth, were lately apprehended for killing and robbing
of a tanner about Newington' on Wednesday last, and are all now in Newgate.
I am much troubled for it, and for the grief and disgrace it brings to
their familys and friends. After this, having got a very great cold, I
got something warm to-night, and so to bed.
23rd (Lord's day). My cold
being increased, I staid at home all day, pleasing myself with my dining-room,
now graced with pictures, and reading of Dr. Fuller's "Worthys."
So I spent the day, and at night comes Sir W. Pen and supped and talked
with me. This day by God's mercy I am 29 years of age, and in very good
health, and like to live and get an estate; and if I have a heart to be
contented, I think I may reckon myself as happy a man as any is in the
world, for which God be praised. So to prayers and to bed.
24th. Long with Mr. Berkenshaw
in the morning at my musique practice; finishing my song of "Gaze
not on Swans," in two parts, which pleases me well, and I did give
him L5 for this month or five weeks that he hath taught me, which is a
great deal of money and troubled me to part with it. Thence to the Paynter
s, and set again for my picture in little, and thence over the water to
Southwark to Mr. Berkenshaw's house, and there sat with him all the afternoon,
he showing me his great card of the body of musique, which he cries up
for a rare thing, and I do believe it cost much pains, but is not so useful
as he would have it. Then we sat down and set "Nulla, nulla sit formido,"
and he has set it very finely. So home and to supper, and then called
Will up, and chid him before my wife for refusing to go to church with
the maids yesterday, and telling his mistress that he would not be made
a slave of, which vexes me. So to bed.
25th. All the morning at
the office. At noon with Mr. Moore to the Coffee-house, where among other
things the great talk was of the effects of this late great wind; and
I heard one say that he had five great trees standing together blown down;
and, beginning to lop them, one of them, as soon as the lops were cut
off, did, by the weight of the root, rise again and fasten. We have letters
from the forest of Deane, that above 1000 Oakes and as many beeches are
blown down in one walk there. And letters from my father tell me of L20
hurt done to us at Brampton. This day in the news-book I find that my
Lord Buckhurst and his fellows have printed their case as they did give
it in upon examination to a justice of Peace, wherein they make themselves
a very good tale that they were in pursuit of thieves, and that they took
this man for one of them, and so killed him; and that he himself confessed
it was the first time of his robbing; and that he did pay dearly for it,
for he was a dead man. But I doubt things will be proved otherwise, as
they say. Home to dinner, and by and by comes Mr. Hunt and his wife to
see us and staid a good, while with us. Then parted, and I to my study
in the office. The first time since the alteracon that I have begun to
do business myself there, and I think I shall be well pleased with it.
At night home to supper and to bed.
26th. Mr. Berkenshaw with
me all the morning composing of musique to "This cursed jealousy,
what is it," a song of Sir W. Davenant's. After dinner I went to
my Bookseller's, W. Joyce's, and several other places to pay my debts
and do business, I being resolved to cast up my accounts within a day
or two, for I fear I have run out too far. In coming home I met with a
face I knew and challenged him, thinking it had been one of the Theatre
musicians, and did enquire for a song of him, but finding it a mistake,
and that it was a gentleman that comes sometimes to the office, I was
much ashamed, but made a pretty good excuse that I took him for a gentleman
of Gray's Inn who sings well, and so parted. Home for all night and set
things in order and so to bed.
27th. This morning came
Mr. Berkenshaw to me and in our discourse I, finding that he cries up
his rules for most perfect (though I do grant them to be very good, and
the best I believe that ever yet were made), and that I could not persuade
him to grant wherein they were somewhat lame, we fell to angry words,
so that in a pet he flung out of my chamber and I never stopped him, having
intended to put him off today, whether this had happened or no, because
I think I have all the rules that he hath to give. And so there remains
not the practice now to do me good, and it is not for me to continue with
him at; L5 per month. So I settled to put all his rules in fair order
in a book, which was my work all the morning till dinner. After dinner
to the office till late at night, and so home to write by the post, and
so to bed.
28th. The boy failing to
call us up as I commanded, I was angry, and resolved to whip him for that
and many other faults, to-day. Early with Sir W. Pen by coach to Whitehall,
to the Duke of York's chamber, and there I presented him from my Lord
a fine map of Tangier, done by one Captain Beckman, a Swede, that is with
my Lord. We staid looking it over a great while with the Duke after he
was ready. Thence I by water to the Painter's, and there sat again for
my face in little, and thence home to dinner, and so at home all the afternoon.
Then came Mr. Moore and staid and talked with me, and then I to the office,
there being all the Admiralty papers brought hither this afternoon from
Mr. Blackburne's, where they have lain all this while ever since my coming
into this office. This afternoon Mr. Hater received half a year's salary
for me, so that now there is not owing me but this quarter, which will
be out the next month. Home, and to be as good as my word, I bade Will
get me a rod, and he and I called the boy up to one of the upper rooms
of the Comptroller's house towards the garden, and there I reckoned all
his faults, and whipped him soundly, but the rods were so small that I
fear they did not much hurt to him, but only to my arm, which I am already,
within a quarter of an hour, not able to stir almost. After supper to
bed.
March
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