|
|
|
December
1st. Up and to the office, where we sat all the morning. At noon
I home to dinner with my poor wife, with whom now-a-days I enjoy great
pleasure in her company and learning of Arithmetique. After dinner I to
Guild Hall to hear a tryall at King's Bench, before Lord Chief Justice
Hide, about the insurance of a ship, the same I mention in my yesterday's
journall, where everything was proved how money was so taken up upon bottomary
and insurance, and the ship left by the master and seamen upon rocks,
where, when the sea fell at the ebb, she must perish. The master was offered
helpe, and he did give the pilotts 20 sols to drink to bid them go about
their business, saying that the rocks were old, but his ship was new,
and that she was repaired for L6 and less all the damage that she received,
and is now brought by one, sent for on purpose by the insurers, into the
Thames, with her cargo, vessels of tallow daubed over with butter, instead
of all butter, the whole not worth above L500, ship and all, and they
had took up, as appeared, above L2,400.
He had given his men money to content them;
and yet, for all this, he did bring some of them to swear that it was
very stormy weather, and [they] did all they could to save her, and that
she was seven feete deep water in hold, and were fain to cut her main
and foremast, that the master was the last man that went out, and they
were fain to force [him] out when she was ready to sink; and her rudder
broke off, and she was drawn into the harbour after they were gone, as
wrecke all broken, and goods lost: that she could not be carried out again
without new building, and many other things so contrary as is not imaginable
more. There was all the great counsel in the kingdom in the cause; but
after one witnesse or two for the plaintiff, it was cried down as a most
notorious cheate; and so the jury, without going out, found it for the
plaintiff. But it was pleasant to see what mad sort of testimonys the
seamen did give, and could not be got to speak in order: and then their
terms such as the judge could not understand; and to hear how sillily
the Counsel and judge would speak as to the terms necessary in the matter,
would make one laugh: and above all, a Frenchman that was forced to speak
in French, and took an English oathe he did not understand, and had an
interpreter sworn to tell us what he said, which was the best testimony
of all.
So home well satisfied with this afternoon's
work, purposing to spend an afternoon or two every term so, and so to
my office a while and then home to supper, arithmetique with my wife,
and to bed. I heard other causes, and saw the course of pleading by being
at this trial, and heard and learnt two things: one is that every man
has a right of passage in, but not a title to, any highway. The next,
that the judge would not suffer Mr. Crow, who hath fined for Alderman,
to be called so, but only Mister, and did eight or nine times fret at
it, and stop every man that called him so.
2nd. My wife troubled all
last night with the toothache and this morning. I up and to my office,
where busy, and so home to dinner with my wife, who is better of her tooth
than she was, and in the afternoon by agreement called on by Mr. Bland,
and with him to the Ship a neighbour tavern and there met his antagonist
Mr. Custos and his referee Mr. Clarke a merchant also, and begun the dispute
about the freight of a ship hired by Mr. Bland to carry provisions to
Tangier, and the freight is now demanded, whereas he says that the goods
were some spoiled, some not delivered, and upon the whole demands L1300
of the other, and their minds are both so high, their demands so distant,
and their words so many and hot against one another that I fear we shall
bring it to nothing. But however I am glad to see myself so capable of
understanding the business as I find I do, and shall endeavour to do Mr.
Bland all the just service I can therein. Here we were in a bad room,
which vexed me most, but we. meet at another house next. So at noon I
home and to my office till 9 o'clock, and so home to my wife to keep her
company, arithmetique, then to supper, and to bed, she being well of her
tooth again.
3rd. Up and to the office,
where all the forenoon, and then (by Mr. Coventry's coach) to the 'Change,
and so home to dinner, very pleasant with my poor wife. Somebody from
Portsmouth, I know not who, has this day sent me a Runlett of Tent. So
to my office all the afternoon, where much business till late at night,
and so home to my wife, and then to supper and to bed. This day Sir G.
Carteret did tell us at the table, that the Navy (excepting what is due
to the Yards upon the quarter now going on, and what few bills he hath
not heard of) is quite out of debt; which is extraordinary good newes,
and upon the 'Change to hear how our creditt goes as good as any merchant's
upon the 'Change is a joyfull thing to consider, which God continue! I
am sure the King will have the benefit of it, as well as we some peace
and creditt.
4th. Up pretty betimes,
that is about 7 o'clock, it being now dark then, and so got me ready,
with my clothes, breeches and warm stockings, and by water with Henry
Russell, cold and wet and windy to Woolwich, to a hempe ship there, and
staid looking upon it and giving direction as to the getting it ashore,
and so back again very cold, and at home without going on shore anywhere
about 12 o'clock, being fearful of taking cold, and so dined at home and
shifted myself, and so all the afternoon at my office till night, and
then home to keep my poor wife company, and so to supper and to bed.
5th. Up and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, and then with the whole board, viz., Sir
J. Minnes, Sir W. Batten, and myself along with Captain Allen home to
dinner, where he lives hard by in Mark Lane, where we had a very good
plain dinner and good welcome, in a pretty little house but so smoky that
it was troublesome to us all till they put out the fire, and made one
of charcoale. I was much pleased with this dinner for the many excellent
stories told by Mr. Coventry, which I have put down in my book of tales
and so shall not mention them here. We staid till night, and then Mr.
Coventry away, and by and by I home to my office till 9 or 10 at night,
and so home to supper and to bed after some talke and Arithmetique with
my poor wife, with whom now-a-days I live with great content, out of all
trouble of mind by jealousy (for which God forgive me), or any other distraction
more than my fear of my Lord Sandwich's displeasure.
6th (Lord's day). Lay long
in bed, and then up and to church alone, which is the greatest trouble
that I have by not having a man or, boy to wait on me, and so home to
dinner, my wife, it being a cold day, and it begun to snow (the first
snow we have seen this year) kept her bed till after dinner, and I below
by myself looking over my arithmetique books and timber rule. So my wife
rose anon, and she and I all the afternoon at arithmetique, and she is
come to do Addition, Subtraction, and Multiplicacion very well, and so
I purpose not to trouble her yet with Division, but to begin with the
Globes to her now. At night came Captain Grove to discourse with me about
Field's business and of other matters, and so, he being gone, I to my
office, and spent an houre or two reading Rushworth, and so to supper
home, and to prayers and bed, finding myself by cold to have some pain
begin with me, which God defend should increase.
7th. Up betimes, and, it
being a frosty morning, walked on foot to White Hall, but not without
some fear of my pain coming. At White Hall I hear and find that there
was the last night the greatest tide that ever was remembered in England
to have been in this river: all White Hall having been drowned, of which
there was great discourse. Anon we all met, and up with the Duke and did
our business, and by and by my Lord of Sandwich came in, but whether it
be my doubt or no I cannot tell, but I do not find that he made any sign
of kindnesse or respect to me, which troubles me more than any thing in
the world. After done there Sir W. Batten and Captain Allen and I by coach
to the Temple, where I 'light, they going home, and indeed it being my
trouble of mind to try whether I could meet with my Lord Sandwich and
try him to see how he will receive me. I took coach and back again to
Whitehall, but there could not find him. But here I met Dr. Clerke, and
did tell him my story of my health; how my pain comes to me now-a-days.
He did write something for me which I shall take when there is occasion.
I then fell to other discourse of Dr. Knapp, who tells me he is the King's
physician, and is become a solicitor for places for people, and I am mightily
troubled with him. He tells me he is the most impudent fellow in the world,
that gives himself out to be the King's physician, but it is not so, but
is cast out of the Court. From thence I may learn what impudence there
is in the world, and how a man may be deceived in persons: Anon the King
and Duke and Duchesse came to dinner in the Vane-roome, where I never
saw them before; but it seems since the tables are done, he dines there
all together. The Queene is pretty well, and goes out of her chamber to
her little chappell in the house. The King of France, they say, is hiring
of sixty sail of ships of the Dutch, but it is not said for what design.
By and by, not hoping to see my Lord, I went to the King's Head ordinary,
where a good dinner but no discourse almost, and after dinner by coach,
home, and found my wife this cold day not yet out of bed, and after a
little good talk with her to my office, and there spent my time till late.
Sir W. Warren two or three hours with me talking of trade, and other very
good discourse, which did please me very, well, and so, after reading
in Rushworth, home to supper and to bed.
8th. Lay long in bed, and
then up and to the office, where we sat all the morning, and among other
things my Lord Barkely called in question his clerk Mr. Davy for something
which Sir W. Batten and I did tell him yesterday, but I endeavoured to
make the least of it, and so all was put up. At noon to the 'Change, and
among other businesses did discourse with Captain Taylor, and I think
I shall safely get L20 by his ship's freight at present, besides what
it may be I may get hereafter. So home to dinner, and thence by coach
to White Hall, where a great while walked with my Lord Tiviott, whom I
find a most carefull, thoughtfull, and cunning man, as I also ever took
him to be. He is this day bringing in an account where he makes the King
debtor to him L10,000 already on the garrison of Tangier account; but
yet demands not ready money to pay it, but offers such ways of paying
it out of the sale of old decayed provisions as will enrich him finely.
Anon came my Lord Sandwich, and then we fell to our business at the Committee
about my Lord Tiviott's accounts, wherein I took occasion to speak now
and then, so as my Lord Sandwich did well seem to like of it, and after
we were up did bid me good night in a tone that, methinks, he is not so
displeased with me as I did doubt he is; however, I will take a course
to know whether he be or no. The Committee done, I took coach and home
to my office, and there late, and so to supper at home, and to bed, being
doubtful of my pain through the very cold weather which we have, but I
will take all the care I can to prevent it.
9th. Lay very long in bed
for fear of my pain, and then rose and went to stool (after my wife's
way, who by all means would have me sit long and upright) very well, and
being ready to the office. From thence I was called by and by to my wife,
she not being well. So to her, and found her in great pain. . . . . .
So by and by to my office again, and then abroad to look out a cradle
to burn charcoal in at my office, and I found one to my mind in Newgate
Market, and so meeting Hoby's man in the street, I spoke to him to serve
it in to the office for the King. So home to dinner, and after talk with
my wife, she in bed and pain all day, I to my office most of the evening,
and then home to my wife. This day Mrs. Russell did give my wife a very
fine St. George, in alabaster, which will set out my wife's closett mightily.
This evening at the office, after I had wrote my day's passages, there
came to me my cozen Angier of Cambridge, poor man, making his moan, and
obtained of me that I would send his son to sea as a Reformado, which
I will take care to do. But to see how apt every man is to forget friendship
in time of adversity. How glad was I when he was gone, for fear he should
ask me to be bond for him, or to borrow money of me.
10th. Up, pretty well,
the weather being become pretty warm again, and to the office, where we
sat all the morning, and I confess having received so lately a token from
Mrs. Russell, I did find myself concerned for our not buying some tallow
of her (which she bought on purpose yesterday most unadvisedly to her
great losse upon confidence of putting it off to us). So hard it is for
a man not to be warped against his duty and master's interest that receives
any bribe or present, though not as a bribe, from any body else. But she
must be contented, and I to do her a good turn when I can without wrong
to the King's service. Then home to dinner (and did drink a glass of wine
and beer, the more for joy that this is the shortest day in the year,--[Old
Style]--which is a pleasant consideration) with my wife. She in
bed but pretty well, and having a messenger from my brother, that he is
not well nor stirs out of doors, I went forth to see him, and found him
below, he has not been well, but is not ill. I found him taking order
for the distribution of Mrs. Ramsey's coals, a thing my father for many
years did, and now he after him, which I was glad to see, as also to hear
that Mr. Wheatly begins to look after him. I hope it is about his daughter.
Thence to St. Paul's Church Yard, to my bookseller's, and having gained
this day in the office by my stationer's bill to the King about 40s. or
L3, I did here sit two or three hours calling for twenty books to lay
this money out upon, and found myself at a great losse where to choose,
and do see how my nature would gladly return to laying out money in this
trade. I could not tell whether to lay out my money for books of pleasure,
as plays, which my nature was most earnest in; but at last, after seeing
Chaucer, Dugdale's History of Paul's, Stows London, Gesner, History of
Trent, besides Shakespeare, Jonson, and Beaumont's plays, I at last chose
Dr. Fuller's Worthys, the Cabbala or Collections of Letters of State,
and a little book, Delices de Hollande, with another little book or two,
all of good use or serious pleasure: and Hudibras, both parts, the book
now in greatest fashion for drollery, though I cannot, I confess, see
enough where the wit lies. My mind being thus settled, I went by linke
home, and so to my office, and to read in Rushworth; and so home to supper
and to bed. Calling at Wotton's, my shoemaker's, today, he tells me that
Sir H. Wright is dying; and that Harris is come to the Duke's house again;
and of a rare play to be acted this week of Sir William Davenant's: the
story of Henry the Eighth with all his wives.
11th. Up and abroad toward
the Wardrobe, and going out Mr. Clerke met me to tell me that Field has
a writ against me in this last business of L30 10s., and that he believes
he will get an execution against me this morning, and though he told me
it could not be well before noon, and that he would stop it at the Sheriff's,
yet it is hard to believe with what fear I did walk and how I did doubt
at every man I saw and do start at the hearing of one man cough behind
my neck. I to, the Wardrobe and there missed Mr. Moore. So to Mr. Holden's
and evened all reckonings there for hats, and then walked to Paul's Churchyard
and after a little at my bookseller's and bought at a shop Cardinall Mazarin's
Will in French. I to the Coffeehouse and there among others had good discourse
with an Iron Merchant, who tells me the great evil of discouraging our
natural manufacture of England in that commodity by suffering the Swede
to bring in three times more than ever they did and our owne Ironworks
be lost, as almost half of them, he says, are already. Then I went and
sat by Mr. Harrington, and some East country merchants, and talking of
the country about Quinsborough, and thereabouts, he told us himself that
for fish, none there, the poorest body, will buy a dead fish, but must
be alive, unless it be in winter; and then they told us the manner of
putting their nets into the water. Through holes made in the thick ice,
they will spread a net of half a mile long; and he hath known a hundred
and thirty and a hundred and seventy barrels of fish taken at one draught.
And then the people come with sledges upon the ice, with snow at the bottome,
and lay the fish in and cover them with snow, and so carry them to market.
And he hath seen when the said fish have been frozen in the sledge, so
as that he hath taken a fish and broke a-pieces, so hard it hath been;
and yet the same fishes taken out of the snow, and brought into a hot
room, will be alive and leap up and down. Swallows are often brought up
in their nets out of the mudd from under water, hanging together to some
twigg or other, dead in ropes, and brought to the fire will come to life.
Fowl killed in December. (Alderman Barker said) he did buy, and putting
into the box under his sledge, did forget to take them out to eate till
Aprill next, and they then were found there, and were through the frost
as sweet and fresh and eat as well as at first killed. Young beares are
there; their flesh sold in market as ordinarily as beef here, and is excellent
sweet meat. They tell us that beares there do never hurt any body, but
fly away from you, unless you pursue and set upon them; but wolves do
much mischief. Mr. Harrington told us how they do to get so much honey
as they send abroad. They make hollow a great fir-tree, leaving only a
small slitt down straight in one place, and this they close up again,
only leave a little hole, and there the bees go in and fill the bodys
of those trees as full of wax and honey as they can hold; and the inhabitants
at times go and open the slit, and take what they please without killing
the bees, and so let them live there still and make more. Fir trees are
always planted close together, because of keeping one another from the
violence of the windes; and when a fell is made, they leave here and there
a grown tree to preserve the young ones coming up.
The great entertainment and sport of the Duke of Corland,
and the princes thereabouts, is hunting; which is not with dogs as we,
but he appoints such a day, and summons all the country-people as to a
campagnia; and by several companies gives every one their circuit, and
they agree upon a place where the toyle is to be set; and so making fires
every company as they go, they drive all the wild beasts, whether bears,
wolves, foxes, swine, and stags, and roes, into the toyle; and there the
great men have their stands in such and such places, and shoot at what
they have a mind to, and that is their hunting. They are not very populous
there, by reason that people marry women seldom till they are towards
or above thirty; and men thirty or forty years old, or more oftentimes.
Against a publique hunting the Duke sends that no wolves be killed by
the people; and whatever harm they do, the Duke makes it good to the person
that suffers it: as Mr. Harrington instanced in a house where he lodged,
where a wolfe broke into a hog-stye, and bit three or four great pieces
off the back of the hog, before the house could come to helpe it (it calling,
and that did give notice to the people of the house); and the man of the
house told him that there were three or four wolves thereabouts that did
them great hurt; but it was no matter, for the Duke was to make it good
to him, otherwise he would kill them.
Hence home and upstairs, my wife keeping her bed, and
had a very good dinner, and after dinner to my office, and there till
late busy. Among other things Captain Taylor came to me about his bill
for freight, and besides that I found him contented that I have the L30
I got, he do offer me to give me L6 to take the getting of the bill paid
upon me, which I am ready to do, but I am loath to have it said that I
ever did it. However, I will do him the service to get it paid if I can
and stand to his courtesy what he will give me. Late to supper home, and
to my great joy I have by my wife's good advice almost brought myself
by going often and leisurely to the stool that I am come almost to have
my natural course of stool as well as ever, which I pray God continue
to me.
12th. Up and to the office
where all the morning, and among other things got Sir G. Carteret to put
his letters to Captain Taylor's bill by which I am in hopes to get L5,
which joys my heart. We had this morning a great dispute between Mr. Gauden,
Victualler of the Navy, and Sir J. Lawson, and the rest of the Commanders
going against Argier, about their fish and keeping of Lent; which Mr.
Gauden so much insists upon to have it observed, as being the only thing
that makes up the loss of his dear bargain all the rest of the year. At
noon went home and there I found that one Abrahall, who strikes in for
the serving of the King with Ship chandlery ware, has sent my wife a Japan
gowne, which pleases her very well and me also, it coming very opportune,
but I know not how to carry myself to him, I being already obliged so
far to Mrs. Russell, so that I am in both their pays. To the Exchange,
where I had sent Luellin word I would come to him, and thence brought
him home to dinner with me. He tells me that W. Symon's wife is dead,
for which I am sorry, she being a good woman, and tells me an odde story
of her saying before her death, being in good sense, that there stood
her uncle Scobell. Then he began to tell me that Mr. Deering had been
with him to desire him to speak to me that if I would get him off with
these goods upon his hands, he would give me 50 pieces, and further that
if I would stand his friend to helpe him to the benefit of his patent
as the King's merchant, he could spare me L200 per annum out of his profits.
I was glad to hear both of these, but answered him no further than that
as I would not by any thing be bribed to be unjust in my dealings, so
I was not so squeamish as not to take people's acknowledgment where I
had the good fortune by my pains to do them good and just offices, and
so I would not come to be at any agreement with him, but I would labour
to do him this service and to expect his consideration thereof afterwards
as he thought fit. So I expect to hear more of it. I did make very much
of Luellin in hopes to have some good by this business, and in the evening
received some money from Mr. Moore, and so went and settled accounts in
my books between him and me, and I do hope at Christmas not only to find
myself as rich or more than ever I was yet, but also my accounts in less
compass, fewer reckonings either of debts or moneys due to me, than ever
I have been for some years, and indeed do so, the goodness of God bringing
me from better to a better expectation and hopes of doing well.
This day I heard my Lord Barkeley tell Sir G. Carteret
that he hath letters from France that the King hath unduked twelve Dukes,
only to show his power and to crush his nobility, who he said he did see
had heretofore laboured to cross him. And this my Lord Barkeley did mightily
magnify, as a sign of a brave and vigorous mind, that what he saw fit
to be done he dares do. At night, after business done at my office, home
to supper and to bed. I have forgot to set down a very remarkable passage
that, Lewellen being gone, and I going into the office, and it begun to
be dark, I found nobody there, my clerks being at the burial of a child
of W. Griffin's, and so I spent a little time till they came, walking
in the garden, and in the mean time, while I was walking Mrs. Pen's pretty
maid came by my side, and went into the office, but finding nobody there
I went in to her, being glad of the occasion. She told me as she was going
out again that there was nobody there, and that she came for a sheet of
paper. So I told her I would supply her, and left her in the office and
went into my office and opened my garden door, thinking to have got her
in, and there to have caressed her, and seeming looking for paper, I told
her this way was as near a way for her, but she told me she had left the
door open and so did not come to me. So I carried her some paper and kissed
her, leading her by the hand to the garden door and there let her go.
But, Lord! to see how much I was put out of order by this surprisal, and
how much I could have subjected my mind to have treated and been found
with this wench, and how afterwards I was troubled to think what if she
should tell this and whether I had spoke or done any thing that might
be unfit for her to tell. But I think there was nothing more passed than
just what I here write.
13th (Lord's day). Up and
made me ready for Church, but my wife and I had a difference about her
old folly that she would fasten lies upon her mayds, and now upon Jane,
which I did not see enough to confirm me in it, and so would not consent
to her. To church, where after sermon home, and to my office, before dinner,
reading my vowes, and so home to dinner, where Tom came to me and he and
I dined together, my wife not rising all day, and after dinner I made
even accounts with him, and spent all the afternoon in my chamber talking
of many things with him, and about Wheately's daughter for a wife for
him, and then about the Joyces and their father Fenner, how they are sometimes
all honey one with another and then all turd, and a strange rude life
there is among them. In the evening, he gone, I to my office to read Rushworth
upon the charge and answer of the Duke of Buckingham, which is very fine,
and then to do a little business against to-morrow, and so home to supper
to my wife, and then to bed.
14th. Up by candlelight,
which I do not use to do, though it be very late, that is to say almost
8 o'clock, and out by coach to White Hall, where we all met and to the
Duke, where I heard a large discourse between one that goes over an agent
from the King to Legorne and thereabouts, to remove the inconveniences
his ships are put to by denial of pratique; which is a thing that is now-a-days
made use of only as a cheat, for a man may buy a bill of health for a
piece of eight, and my enemy may agree with the Intendent of the Sante
for ten pieces of eight or so; that he shall not give me a bill of health,
and so spoil me in my design, whatever it be. This the King will not endure,
and so resolves either to have it removed, or to keep all ships from coming
in, or going out there, so long as his ships are stayed for want hereof.
Then, my Lord Sandwich being there, we all went into the Duke's closet
and did our business. But among other things, Lord! what an account did
Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten make of the pulling down and burning of
the head of the Charles, where Cromwell was placed with people under his
horse, and Peter, as the Duke called him, is praying to him; and Sir J.
Minnes would needs infer the temper of the people from their joy at the
doing of this and their building a gibbet for the hanging of his head
up, when God knows, it is even the flinging away of L100 out of the King's
purse, to the building of another, which it seems must be a Neptune.
Thence I through White Hall only to see what was doing,
but meeting none that I knew I went through the garden to my Lord Sandwich's
lodging, where I found my Lord got before me (which I did not intend or
expect) and was there trying some musique, which he intends for an anthem
of three parts, I know not whether for the King's chapel or no, but he
seems mighty intent upon it. But it did trouble me to hear him swear before
God and other oathes, as he did now and then without any occasion, which
methinks did so ill become him, and I hope will be a caution for me, it
being so ill a thing in him. The musique being done, without showing me
any good or ill countenance, he did give me his hat and so adieu, and
went down to his coach without saying anything to me. He being gone I
and Mr. Howe talked a good while. He tells me that my Lord, it is true,
for a while after my letter, was displeased, and did shew many slightings
of me when he had occasion of mentioning me to his Lordship, but that
now my Lord is in good temper and he do believe will shew me as much respect
as ever, and would have me not to refrain to come to him. This news I
confess did much trouble me, but when I did hear how he is come to himself,
and hath wholly left Chelsy, and the slut, and that I see he do follow
his business, and becomes in better repute than before, I am rejoiced
to see it, though it do cost me some disfavour for a time, for if not
his good nature and ingenuity, yet I believe his memory will not bear
it always in his mind. But it is my comfort that this is the thing that
after so many years good service that has made him my enemy.
Thence to the King's Head ordinary, and there dined
among a company of fine gentlemen; some of them discoursed of the King
of France's greatness, and how he is come to make the Princes of the Blood
to take place of all foreign Embassadors, which it seems is granted by
them of Venice and other States, and expected from my Lord. Hollis, our
King's Embassador there; and that either upon that score or something
else he hath not had his entry yet in Paris, but hath received several
affronts, and among others his harnesse cut, and his gentlemen of his
horse killed, which will breed bad blood if true. They say also that the
King of France hath hired threescore ships of Holland, and forty of the
Swede, but nobody knows what to do; but some great designs he hath on
foot against the next year. Thence by coach home and to my office, where
I spent all the evening till night with Captain Taylor discoursing about
keeping of masts, and when he was gone, with Sir W. Warren, who did give
me excellent discourse about the same thing, which I have committed to
paper, and then fell to other talk of his being at Chatham lately and
there discoursing of his masts. Commissioner Pett did let fall several
scurvy words concerning my pretending to know masts as well as any body,
which I know proceeds ever since I told him I could measure a piece of
timber as well as anybody employed by the King. But, however, I shall
remember him for a black sheep again a good while, with all his fair words
to me, and perhaps may let him know that my ignorance does the King as
much good as all his knowledge, which would do more it is true if it were
well used. Then we fell to talk of Sir J. Minnes's and Sir W. Batten's
burning of Oliver's head, while he was there; which was done with so much
insulting and folly as I never heard of, and had the Trayned Band of Rochester
to come to the solemnity, which when all comes to all, Commissioner Pett
says it never was made for him; but it troubles me the King should suffer
L100 losse in his purse, to make a new one after it was forgot whose it
was, or any words spoke of it. He being gone I mightily pleased with his
discourse, by which I always learn something, I to read a little in Rushworth,
and so home to supper to my wife, it having been washing day, and so to
bed, my mind I confess a little troubled for my Lord Sandwich's displeasure.
But God will give me patience to bear since it rises from so good an occasion.
15th. Before I was up,
my brother's man came to tell me that my cozen, Edward Pepys, was dead,
died at Mrs. Turner's, for which my wife and I are very sorry, and the
more for that his wife was the only handsome woman of our name. So up
and to the office, where the greatest business was Sir J. Minnes and Sir
W. Batten against me for Sir W. Warren's contract for masts, to which
I may go to my memorandum book to see what past, but came off with conquest,
and my Lord Barkely and Mr. Coventry well convinced that we are well used.
So home to dinner, and thither came to me Mr. Mount and Mr. Luellin, I
think almost foxed, and there dined with me and very merry as I could
be, my mind being troubled to see things so ordered at the Board, though
with no disparagement to me at all. At dinner comes a messenger from the
Counter with an execution against me for the L30 10s., given the last
verdict to Field. The man's name is Thomas, of the Poultry Counter. I
sent Griffin with him to the Dolphin, where Sir W. Batten was at dinner,
and he being satisfied that I should pay the money, I did cause the money
to be paid him, and Griffin to tell it out to him in the office. He offered
to go along with me to Sir R. Ford, but I thought it not necessary, but
let him go with it, he also telling me that there is never any receipt
for it given, but I have good witness of the payment of it.
They being gone, Luellin having again told me by myself
that Deering is content to give me L50 if I can sell his deals for him
to the King, not that I did ever offer to take it, or bid Luellin bargain
for me with him, but did tacitly seem to be willing to do him what service
I could in it, and expect his thanks, what he thought good. Thence to
White Hall by coach, by the way overtaking Mr. Moore, and took him into
the coach to me, and there he could tell me nothing of my Lord, how he
stands as to his thoughts or respect to me, but concludes that though
at present he may be angry yet he will come to be pleased again with me
no doubt, and says that he do mind his business well, and keeps at Court.
So to White Hall, and there by order found some of the Commissioners of
Tangier met, and my Lord Sandwich among the rest, to whom I bowed, but
he shewed me very little if any countenance at all, which troubles me
mightily. Having soon done there, I took up Mr. Moore again and set him
down at Pauls, by the way he proposed to me of a way of profit which perhaps
may shortly be made by money by fines upon houses at the Wardrobe, but
how I did not understand but left it to another discourse. So homeward,
calling upon Mr. Fen, by Sir G. Carteret's desire, and did there shew
him the bill of Captain Taylor's whereby I hope to get something justly.
Home and to my office, and there very late with Sir
W. Warren upon very serious discourse, telling him how matters passed
to-day, and in the close he and I did fall to talk very openly of the
business of this office, and (if I was not a little too open to tell him
my interest, which is my fault) he did give me most admirable advice,
and such as do speak him a most able and worthy man, and understanding
seven times more than ever I thought to be in him. He did particularly
run over every one of the officers and commanders, and shewed me how I
had reason to mistrust every one of them, either for their falsenesse
or their over-great power, being too high to fasten a real friendship
in, and did give me a common but a most excellent saying to observe in
all my life. He did give it in rhyme, but the sense was this, that a man
should treat every friend in his discourse and opening his mind to him
as of one that may hereafter be his foe. He did also advise me how I should
take occasion to make known to the world my case, and the pains that I
take in my business, and above all to be sure to get a thorough knowledge
in my employment, and to that add all the interest at Court that I can,
which I hope I shall do. He staid talking with me till almost 12 at night,
and so good night, being sorry to part with him, and more sorry that he
should have as far as Wapping to walk to-night. So I to my Journall and
so home, to supper and to bed.
16th. Up, and with my head
and heart full of my business, I to my office, and there all the morning,
where among other things to my great content Captain Taylor brought me
L40, the greater part of which I shall gain to myself after much care
and pains out of his bill of freight, as I have at large set down in my
book of Memorandums. At noon to the 'Change and there met with Mr. Wood
by design, and got out of him to my advantage a condition which I shall
make good use of against Sir W. Batten (vide my book of Memorandums touching
the contract of masts of Sir W. Warren about which I have had so much
trouble). So home to dinner and then to the Star Tavern hard by to our
arbitration of Mr. Bland's business, and at it a great while, but I found
no order like to be kept in our inquiry, and Mr. Clerke, the other arbitrator,
one so far from being fit (though able as to his trade of a merchant)
to inquire and to take pains in searching out the truth on both sides,
that we parted without doing anything, nor do I believe we shall at all
ever attain to anything in it. Then home and till 12 at night making up
my accounts with great account of this day's receipt of Captain Taylor's
money and some money reimbursed me which I have laid out on Field's business.
So home with my mind in pretty good quiet, and to Supper and to bed.
17th. Up and to the office,
where we sat all the morning. At noon home to my poor wife and dined,
and then by coach abroad to Mrs. Turner's where I have not been for many
a day, and there I found her and her sister Dike very sad for the death
of their brother. After a little common expression of sorrow, Mrs. Turner
told me that the trouble she would put me to was, to consult about getting
an achievement prepared, scutcheons were done already, to set over the
door. So I did go out to Mr. Smith's, where my brother tells me the scutcheons
are made, but he not being within, I went to the Temple, and there spent
my time in a Bookseller's shop, reading in a book of some Embassages into
Moscovia, &c., where was very good reading, and then to Mrs. Turner's,
and thither came Smith to me, with whom I did agree for L4 to make a handsome
one, ell square within the frame. After he was gone I sat an houre talking
of the suddennesse of his death within 7 days, and how by little and little
death came upon him, neither he nor they thinking it would come to that.
He died after a day's raveing, through lightness in his head for want
of sleep. His lady did not know of his sickness, nor do they hear yet
how she takes it. Hence home, taking some books by the way in Paul's Churchyard
by coach to my office, where late doing business, and so home to supper
and to bed.
18th. Up, and after being
ready and done several businesses with people, I took water (taking a
dram of the bottle at the waterside) with a gaily, the first that ever
I had yet, and down to Woolwich, calling at Ham Creeke, where I met Mr.
Deane, and had a great deal of talke with him about business, and so to
the Ropeyarde and Docke, discoursing several things, and so back again
and did the like at Deptford, and I find that it is absolutely necessary
for me to do thus once a weeke at least all the yeare round, which will
do me great good, and so home with great ease and content, especially
out of the content which I met with in a book I bought yesterday, being
a discourse of the state of Rome under the present Pope, Alexander the
7th, it being a very excellent piece. After eating something at home,
then to my office, where till night about business to dispatch. Among
other people came Mr. Primate, the leather seller, in Fleete Streete,
to see me, he says, coming this way; and he tells me that he is upon a
proposal to the King, whereby, by a law already in being, he will supply
the King, without wrong to any man, or charge to the people in general,
so much as it is now, above L200,000 per annum, and God knows what, and
that the King do like the proposal, and hath directed that the Duke of
Monmouth, with their consent, be made privy, and go along with him and
his fellow proposer in the business, God knows what it is; for I neither
can guess nor believe there is any such thing in his head. At night made
an end of the discourse I read this morning, and so home to supper and
to bed.
19th. Up and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, and I laboured hard at Deering's business
of his deals more than I would if I did not think to get something, though
I do really believe that I did what is to the King's advantage in it,
and yet, God knows, the expectation of profit will have its force and
make a man the more earnest. Dined at home, and then with Mr. Bland to
another meeting upon his arbitration, and seeing we were likely to do
no good I even put them upon it, and they chose Sir W. Rider alone to
end the matter, and so I am rid of it. Thence by coach to my shoemaker's
and paid all there, and gave something to the boys' box against Christmas.
To Mrs. Turner's, whom I find busy with Sir W. Turner, about advising
upon going down to Norfolke with the corps, and I find him in talke a
sober, considering man. So home to my office late, and then home to supper
and to bed. My head full of business, but pretty good content.
20th (Lord's day). Up and
alone to church, where a common sermon of Mr. Mills, and so home to dinner
in our parler, my wife being clean, and the first time we have dined here
a great while together, and in the afternoon went to church with me also,
and there begun to take her place above Mrs. Pen, which heretofore out
of a humour she was wont to give her as an affront to my Lady Batten.
After a dull sermon of the Scotchman, home, and there I found my brother
Tom and my two cozens Scotts, he and she, the first time they were ever
here. And by and by in comes my uncle. Wight and Mr. Norbury, and they
sat with us a while drinking, of wine, of which I did give them plenty.
But the two would not stay supper, but the other two did. And we were
as merry as I could be with people that I do wish well to, but know not
what discourse either to give them or find from them. We showed them our
house from top to bottom, and had a good Turkey roasted for our supper,
and store of wine, and after supper sent them home on foot, and so we
to prayers and to bed.
21st. Up betimes, my wife
having a mind to have gone abroad with me, but I had not because of troubling
me, and so left her, though against my will, to go and see her father
and mother by herself, and I straight to my Lord Sandwich's, and there
I had a pretty kind salute from my Lord, and went on to the Duke's, where
my fellow officers by and by came, and so in with him to his closet, and
did our business, and so broke up, and I with Sir W. Batten by coach to
Salisbury Court, and there spoke with Clerk our Solicitor about Field's
business, and so parted, and I to Mrs. Turner's, and there saw the achievement
pretty well set up, and it is well done. Thence I on foot to Charing Crosse
to the ordinary, and there, dined, meeting Mr. Gauden and Creed. Here
variety of talk but to no great purpose. After dinner won a wager of a
payre of gloves of a crowne of Mr. Gauden upon some words in his contract
for victualling. There parted in the street with them, and I to my Lord's,
but he not being within, took coach, and, being directed by sight of bills
upon the walls, I did go to Shoe Lane to see a cocke-fighting at a new
pit there, a sport I was never at in my life; but, Lord! to see the strange
variety of people, from Parliament-man (by name Wildes, that was Deputy
Governor of the Tower when Robinson was Lord Mayor) to the poorest 'prentices,
bakers, brewers, butchers, draymen, and what not; and all these fellows
one with another in swearing, cursing, and betting. I soon had enough
of it, and yet I would not but have seen it once, it being strange to
observe the nature of these poor creatures, how they will fight till they
drop down dead upon the table, and strike after they are ready to give
up the ghost, not offering to run away when they are weary or wounded
past doing further, whereas where a dunghill brood comes he will, after
a sharp stroke that pricks him, run off the stage, and then they wring
off his neck without more ado, whereas the other they preserve, though
their eyes be both out, for breed only of a true cock of the game. Sometimes
a cock that has had ten to one against him will by chance give an unlucky
blow, will strike the other starke dead in a moment, that he never stirs
more; but the common rule is, that though a cock neither runs nor dies,
yet if any man will bet L10 to a crowne, and nobody take the bet, the
game is given over, and not sooner. One thing more it is strange to see
how people of this poor rank, that look as if they had not bread to put
in their mouths, shall bet three or four pounds at one bet, and lose it,
and yet bet as much the next battle (so they call every match of two cocks),
so that one of them will lose L10 or L20 at a meeting.
Thence, having enough of it, by coach to my Lord Sandwich's,
where I find him within with Captain Cooke and his boys, Dr. Childe, Mr.
Madge, and Mallard, playing and singing over my Lord's anthem which he
hath made to sing in the King's Chappell: my Lord saluted me kindly and
took me into the withdrawing-room, to hear it at a distance, and indeed
it sounds very finely, and is a good thing, I believe, to be made by him,
and they all commend it. And after that was done Captain Cooke and his
two boys did sing some Italian songs, which I must in a word say I think
was fully the best musique that I ever yet heard in all my life, and it
was to me a very great pleasure to hear them. After all musique ended,
my Lord going to White Hall, I went along with him, and made a desire
for to have his coach to go along with my cozen Edward Pepys's hearse
through the City on Wednesday next, which he granted me presently, though
he cannot yet come to speak to me in the familiar stile that he did use
to do, nor can I expect it. But I was the willinger of this occasion to
see whether he would deny me or no, which he would I believe had he been
at open defyance against me. Being not a little pleased with all this,
though I yet see my Lord is not right yet, I thanked his Lordship and
parted with him in White Hall.
I back to my Lord's, and there took up W. Howe in a
coach, and carried him as far as the Half Moone, and there set him down.
By the way, talking of my Lord, who is come another and a better man than
he was lately, and God be praised for it, and he says that I shall find
my Lord as he used to be to me, of which I have good hopes, but I shall
beware of him, I mean W. Howe, how I trust him, for I perceive he is not
so discreet as I took him for, for he has told Captain Ferrers (as Mr.
Moore tells me) of my letter to my Lord, which troubles me, for fear my
Lord should think that I might have told him. So called with my coach
at my wife's brother's lodging, but she was gone newly in a coach homewards,
and so I drove hard and overtook her at Temple Bar, and there paid off
mine, and went home with her in her coach. She tells me how there is a
sad house among her friends. Her brother's wife proves very unquiet, and
so her mother is, gone back to be with her husband and leave the young
couple to themselves, and great trouble, and I fear great want, will be
among them, I pray keep me from being troubled with them.
At home to put on my gowne and to my office, and there
set down this day's Journall, and by and by comes Mrs. Owen, Captain Allen's
daughter, and causes me to stay while the papers relating to her husband's
place, bought of his father, be copied out because of her going by this
morning's tide home to Chatham. Which vexes me, but there is no help for
it. I home to supper while a young [man] that she brought with her did
copy out the things, and then I to the office again and dispatched her,
and so home to bed.
22nd. Up and there comes
my she cozen Angier, of Cambridge, to me to speak about her son. But though
I love them, and have reason so to do, yet, Lord! to consider how cold
I am to speak to her, for fear of giving her too much hopes of expecting
either money or anything else from me besides my care of her son. I let
her go without drinking, though that was against my will, being forced
to hasten to the office, where we sat all the morning, and at noon I to
Sir R. Ford's, where Sir R. Browne (a dull but it seems upon action a
hot man), and he and I met upon setting a price upon the freight of a
barge sent to France to the Duchess of Orleans. And here by discourse
I find them greatly crying out against the choice of Sir J. Cutler to
be Treasurer for Paul's upon condition that he give L1500 towards it,
and it seems he did give it upon condition that he might be Treasurer
for the work, which they say will be worth three times as much money,
and talk as if his being chosen to the office will make people backward
to give, but I think him as likely a man as either of them, or better.
The business being done we parted, Sir R. Ford never inviting me to dine
with him at all, and I was not sorry for it.
Home and dined. I had a letter from W. Howe that my
Lord hath ordered his coach and six horses for me to-morrow, which pleases
me mightily to think that my Lord should do so much, hoping thereby that
his anger is a little over. After dinner abroad with my wife by coach
to Westminster, and set her at Mrs. Hunt's while I about my business,
having in our way met with Captain Ferrers luckily to speak to him about
my coach, who was going in all haste thither, and I perceive the King
and Duke and all the Court was going to the Duke's playhouse to see "Henry
VIII." acted, which is said to be an admirable play. But, Lord! to
see how near I was to have broken my oathe, or run the hazard of 20s.
losse, so much my nature was hot to have gone thither; but I did not go,
but having spoke with W. Howe and known how my Lord did do this kindly
as I would have it, I did go to Westminster Hall, and there met Hawley,
and walked a great while with him. Among other discourse encouraging him
to pursue his love to Mrs. Lane, while God knows I had a roguish meaning
in it. Thence calling my wife home by coach, calling at several places,
and to my office, where late, and so home to supper and to bed. This day
I hear for certain that my Lady Castlemaine is turned Papist, which the
Queene for all do not much like, thinking that she do it not for conscience
sake. I heard to-day of a great fray lately between Sir H. Finch's coachman,
who struck with his whip a coachman of the King's to the losse of one
of his eyes; at which the people of the Exchange seeming to laugh and
make sport with some words of contempt to him, my Lord Chamberlin did
come from the King to shut up the 'Change, and by the help of a justice,
did it; but upon petition to the King it was opened again.
23rd. Up betimes and my
wife; and being in as mourning a dress as we could, at present, without
cost, put ourselves into, we by Sir W. Pen's coach to Mrs. Turner's, at
Salisbury Court, where I find my Lord's coach and six horses. We staid
till almost eleven o'clock, and much company came, and anon, the corps
being put into the hearse, and the scutcheons set upon it, we all took
coach, and I and my wife and Auditor Beale in my Lord Sandwich's coach,
and went next to Mrs. Turner's mourning coach, and so through all the
City and Shoreditch, I believe about twenty coaches, and four or five
with six and four horses. Being come thither, I made up to the mourners,
and bidding them a good journey, I took leave and back again, and setting
my wife into a hackney out of Bishopsgate Street, I sent her home, and
I to the 'Change and Auditor Beale about his business. Did much business
at the 'Change, and so home to dinner, and then to my office, and there
late doing business also to my great content to see God bless me in my
place and opening honest ways, I hope to get a little money to lay up
and yet to live handsomely. So to supper and to bed. My wife having strange
fits of the toothache, some times on this, and by and by on that side
of her tooth, which is not common.
24th. Up betimes; and though
it was a most foggy morning, and cold, yet with a gally down to Eriffe,
several times being at a loss whither we went. There I mustered two ships
of the King's, lent by him to the Guiny Company, which are manned better
than ours at far less wages. Thence on board two of the King's, one of
them the "Leopard," Captain Beech, who I find an able and serious
man. He received me civilly, and his wife was there, a very well bred
and knowing woman, born at Antwerp, but speaks as good English as myself,
and an ingenious woman. Here was also Sir G. Carteret's son, who I find
a pretty, but very talking man, but good humour. Thence back again, entertaining
myself upon my sliding rule with great content, and called at Woolwich,
where Mr. Chr. Pett having an opportunity of being alone did tell me his
mind about several things he thought I was offended with him in, and told
me of my kindness to his assistant. I did give him such an answer as I
thought was fit and left him well satisfied, he offering to do me all
the service, either by draughts or modells that I should desire. Thence
straight home, being very cold, but yet well, I thank God, and at home
found my wife making mince pies, and by and by comes in Captain Ferrers
to see us, and, among other talke, tells us of the goodness of the new
play of "Henry VIII.," which makes me think [it] long till my
time is out; but I hope before I go I shall set myself such a stint as
I may not forget myself as I have hitherto done till I was forced for
these months last past wholly to forbid myself the seeing of one. He gone
I to my office and there late writing and reading, and so home to bed.
25th (Christmas day). Lay
long talking pleasantly with my wife, but among other things she begun,
I know not whether by design or chance, to enquire what she should do
if I should by any accident die, to which I did give her some slight answer;
but shall make good use of it to bring myself to some settlement for her
sake, by making a will as soon as I can. Up and to church, where Mr. Mills
made an ordinary sermon, and so home and dined with great pleasure with
my wife, and all the afternoon first looking out at window and seeing
the boys playing at many several sports in our back yard by Sir W. Pen's,
which reminded me of my own former times, and then I began to read to
my wife upon the globes with great pleasure and to good purpose, for it
will be pleasant to her and to me to have her understand these things.
In the evening at the office, where I staid late reading Rushworth, which
is a most excellent collection of the beginning of the late quarrels in
this kingdom, and so home to supper and to bed, with good content of mind.
26th. Up and walked forth
first to the Minerys to Brown's, and there with great pleasure saw and
bespoke several instruments, and so to Cornhill to Mr. Cades, and there
went up into his warehouse to look for a map or two, and there finding
great plenty of good pictures, God forgive me! how my mind run upon them,
and bought a little one for my wife's closett presently, and concluded
presently of buying L10 worth, upon condition he would give me the buying
of them. Now it is true I did still within me resolve to make the King
one way or other pay for them, though I saved it to him another way, yet
I find myself too forward to fix upon the expense, and came away with
a resolution of buying them, but do hope that I shall not upon second
thoughts do it without a way made out before I buy them to myself how
to do [it] without charge to my main stock. Thence to the Coffee-house,
and sat long in good discourse with some gentlemen concerning the Roman
Empire. So home and found Mr. Hollyard there, and he stayed and dined
with us, we having a pheasant to dinner. He gone, I all the afternoon
with my wife to cards, and, God forgive me! to see how the very discourse
of plays, which I shall be at liberty to see after New Year's Day next,
do set my mind upon them, but I must be forced to stint myself very strictly
before I begin, or else I fear I shall spoil all. In the evening came
my aunt Wight's kinswoman to see how my wife do, with a compliment from
my aunt, which I take kindly as it is unusual for her to do it, but I
do perceive my uncle is very kind to me of late. So to my office writing
letters, and then to read and make an end of Rushworth, which I did, and
do say that it is a book the most worth reading for a man of my condition
or any man that hopes to come to any publique condition in the world that
I do know. So home to supper and to bed.
27th. Up and to church
alone and so home to dinner with my wife very pleasant and pleased with
one another's company, and in our general enjoyment one of another, better
we think than most other couples do. So after dinner to the French church,
but came too late, and so back to our owne church, where I slept all the
sermon the Scott preaching, and so home, and in the evening Sir J. Minnes
and I met at Sir W. Pen's about ordering some business of the Navy, and
so I home to supper, discourse, prayers, and bed.
28th. Up and by coach to
my Lord's lodgings, but he was gone abroad, so I lost my pains, but, however,
walking through White Hall I heard the King was gone to play at Tennis,
so I down to the new Tennis Court; and saw him and Sir Arthur Slingsby
play against my Lord of Suffolke and my Lord Chesterfield. The King beat
three, and lost two sets, they all, and he particularly playing well,
I thought. Thence went and spoke with the Duke of Albemarle about his
wound at Newhall, but I find him a heavy dull man, methinks, by his answers
to me. Thence to the King's Head ordinary. and there dined, and found
Creed there, but we met and dined and parted without any thing more than
"How do you?" After dinner straight on foot to Mr. Hollyard's,
and there paid him L3 in full for his physic and work to my wife . . .
. but whether it is cured for ever or no I cannot tell, but he says it
will never come to anything, though it may be it may ooze now and then
a little. So home and found my wife gone out with Will (whom she sent
for as she do now a days upon occasion) to have a tooth drawn, she having
it seems been in great pain all day, and at night came home with it drawn,
and pretty well. This evening I had a stove brought me to the office to
try, but it being an old one it smokes as much as if there was nothing
but a hearth as I had before, but it may be great new ones do not, and
therefore I must enquire further. So at night home to supper and to bed.
The Duchesse of York is fallen sicke of the meazles.
29th. Up and to the office,
where all the morning sitting, at noon to the 'change, and there I found
and brought home Mr. Pierse the surgeon to dinner. Where I found also
Mr. Luellin and Mount, and merry at dinner, but their discourse so free
. . . . that I was weary of them. But after dinner Luellin took me up
to my chamber to give me L50 for the service I did him, though not so
great as he expected and I intended. But I told him that I would not sell
my liberty to any man. If he would give me any thing by another's hand
I would endeavour to deserve it, but I will never give him himself thanks
for it, not acknowledging the receiving of any, which he told me was reasonable.
I did also tell him that neither this nor any thing should make me to
do any thing that should not be for the King's service besides. So we
parted and left them three at home with my wife going to cards, and I
to my office and there staid late. Sir W. Pen came like a cunning rogue
to sit and talk with me about office business and freely about the Comptroller's
business of the office, to which I did give him free answers and let him
make the best of them. But I know him to be a knave, and do say nothing
that I fear to have said again. Anon came Sir W. Warren, and after talking
of his business of the masts and helping me to understand some foul dealing
in the business of Woods we fell to other talk, and particularly to speak
of some means how to part this great familiarity between Sir W. Batten
and Sir J. Minnes, and it is easy to do by any good friend of Sir J. Minnes
to whom it will be a good service, and he thinks that Sir J. Denham will
be a proper man for it, and so do I. So after other discourse we parted,
and I home and to bed.
30th. Up betimes and by
coach to my Lord Sandwich, who I met going out, and he did aske me how
his cozen, my wife; did, the first time he hath done so since his being
offended, and, in my conscience, he would be glad to be free with me again,
but he knows not how to begin. So he went out, and I through the garden
to Mr. Coventry, where I saw Mr. Ch. Pett bringing him a modell, and indeed
it is a pretty one, for a New Year's gift; but I think the work not better
done than mine. With him by coach to London, with good and friendly discourse
of business and against Sir W. Batten and his foul dealings. So leaving
him at the Guiny House I to the Coffee House, whither came Mr. Grant and
Sir W. Petty, with whom I talked, and so did many, almost all the house
there, about his new vessel, wherein he did give me such satisfaction
in every point that I am almost confident she will prove an admirable
invention. So home to dinner, and after being upon the 'Change awhile
I dined with my wife, who took physique to-day, and so to my office, and
there all the afternoon till late at night about office business, and
so to supper and to bed.
31st. Up and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, and among other things Sir W. Warren came
about some contract, and there did at the open table, Sir W. Batten not
being there; openly defy him, and insisted how Sir W. Batten did endeavour
to oppose him in everything that he offered. Sir W. Pen took him up for
it, like a counterfeit rogue, though I know he was as much pleased to
hear him talk so as any man there. But upon his speaking no more was said
but to the business. At noon we broke up and I to the 'Change awhile,
and so home again to dinner, my head aching mightily with being overcharged
with business. We had to dinner, my wife and I, a fine turkey and a mince
pie, and dined in state, poor wretch, she and I, and have thus kept our
Christmas together all alone almost, having not once been out, but to-morrow
my vowes are all out as to plays and wine, but I hope I shall not be long
before I come to new ones, so much good, and God's blessing, I find to
have attended them.
Thence to the office and did several businesses and
answered several people, but my head aching and it being my great night
of accounts, I went forth, took coach, and to my brother's, but he was
not within, and so I back again and sat an hour or two at the Coffee [house],
hearing some simple discourse about Quakers being charmed by a string
about their wrists, and so home, and after a little while at my office,
I home and supped, and so had a good fire in my chamber and there sat
till 4 o'clock in the morning making up my accounts and writing this last
Journall of the year.
And first I bless God I do, after a large expense, even
this month, by reason of Christmas, and some payments to my father, and
other things extraordinary, find that I am worth in money, besides all
my household stuff, or any thing of Brampton, above L800, whereof in my
Lord Sandwich's hand, L700, and the rest in my hand. So that there is
not above L5 of all my estate in money at this minute out of my hands
and my Lord's. For which the good God be pleased to give me a thankful
heart and a mind careful to preserve this and increase it. I do live at
my lodgings in the Navy Office, my family being, besides my wife and I,
Jane Gentleman, Besse, our excellent, good-natured cookmayde, and Susan,
a little girle, having neither man nor boy, nor like to have again a good
while, living now in most perfect content and quiett, and very frugally
also; my health pretty good, but only that I have been much troubled with
a costiveness which I am labouring to get away, and have hopes of doing
it. At the office I am well, though envied to the devil by Sir William
Batten, who hates me to death, but cannot hurt me. The rest either love
me, or at least do not show otherwise, though I know Sir W. Pen to be
a false knave touching me, though he seems fair. My father and mother
well in the country; and at this time the young ladies of Hinchingbroke
with them, their house having the small-pox in it. The Queene after a
long and sore sicknesse is become well again; and the King minds his mistresse
a little too much, if it pleased God! but I hope all things will go well,
and in the Navy particularly, wherein I shall do my duty whatever comes
of it. The great talke is the designs of the King of France, whether against
the Pope or King of Spayne nobody knows; but a great and a most promising
Prince he is, and all the Princes of Europe have their eye upon him. My
wife's brother come to great unhappiness by the ill- disposition, my wife
says, of his wife, and her poverty, which she now professes, after all
her husband's pretence of a great fortune, but I see none of them, at
least they come not to trouble me. At present I am concerned for my cozen
Angier, of Cambridge, lately broke in his trade, and this day am sending
his son John, a very rogue, to sea. My brother Tom I know not what to
think of, for I cannot hear whether he minds his business or not; and
my brother John at Cambridge, with as little hopes of doing good there,
for when he was here he did give me great cause of dissatisfaction with
his manner of life. Pall with my father, and God knows what she do there,
or what will become of her, for I have not anything yet to spare her,
and she grows now old, and must be disposed of one way or other. The Duchesse
of York, at this time, sicke of the meazles, but is growing well again.
The Turke very far entered into Germany, and all that part of the world
at a losse what to expect from his proceedings. Myself, blessed be God!
in a good way, and design and resolution of sticking to my business to
get a little money with doing the best service I can to the King also;
which God continue! So ends the old year.
January
1664
|

|
|