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October
1st. Up and betimes to my office, and then to sit, where Sir G.
Carteret, Sir W. Batten, Sir W. Pen, Sir J. Minnes, Mr. Coventry and myself,
a fuller board than by the King's progresse and the late pays and my absence
has been a great while. Sat late, and then home to dinner. After dinner
I by water to Deptford about a little business, and so back again, buying
a couple of good eeles by the way, and after writing by the post, home
to see the painter at work, late, in my wife's closet, and so to supper
and to bed, having been very merry with the painter, late, while he was
doing his work. This day the King and Court returned from their progress.
2nd. Up betimes and by
water to St. James's, and there visited Mr. Coventry as a compliment after
his new coming to town, but had no great talk with him, he being full
of business. So back by foot through London, doing several errands, and
at the 'Change met with Mr. Cutler, and he and I to a coffee-house, and
there discoursed, and he do assure me that there is great likelyhood of
a war with Holland, but I hope we shall be in good condition before it
comes to break out. I like his company, and will make much of his acquaintance.
So home to dinner with my wife, who is over head and eares in getting
her house up, and so to the office, and with Mr. Lewes, late, upon some
of the old victuallers' accounts, and so home to supper and to bed, up
to our red chamber, where we purpose always to lie. This day I received
a letter from Mr. Barlow, with a Terella,[a spherical
loadstone, on account of its acting as a model, magnetically, of the earth;
compass-needles pointing to its. poles, as mariners' compasses do to the
poles of the earth.] which I had hoped he had sent me, but to my
trouble I find it is to present from him to my Lord Sandwich, but I will
make a little use of it first, and then give it him.
3rd. Up, being well pleased
with my new lodging and the convenience of having our mayds and none else
about us, Will lying below. So to the office, and there we sat full of
business all the morning. At noon I home to dinner, and then abroad to
buy a bell to hang by our chamber door to call the mayds. Then to the
office, and met Mr. Blackburne, who came to know the reason of his kinsman
(my Will) his being observed by his friends of late to droop much. I told
him my great displeasure against him and the reasons of it, to his great
trouble yet satisfaction, for my care over him, and how every thing I
said was for the good of the fellow, and he will take time to examine
the fellow about all, and to desire my pleasure concerning him, which
I told him was either that he should became a better servant or that we
would not have him under my roof to be a trouble. He tells me in a few
days he will come to me again and we shall agree what to do therein. I
home and told my wife all, and am troubled to see that my servants and
others should be the greatest trouble I have in the world, more than for
myself. We then to set up our bell with a smith very well, and then I
late at the office. So home to supper and to bed.
4th (Lord's day). Up and
to church, my house being miserably overflooded with rayne last night,
which makes me almost mad. At home to dinner with my wife, and so to talk,
and to church again, and so home, and all the evening most pleasantly
passed the time in good discourse of our fortune and family till supper,
and so to bed, in some pain below, through cold got.
5th. Up with pain, and
with Sir J. Minnes by coach to the Temple, and then I to my brother's,
and up and down on business, and so to the New Exchange, and there met
Creed, and he and I walked two or three hours, talking of many businesses,
especially about Tangier, and my Lord Tiviot's bringing in of high accounts,
and yet if they were higher are like to pass without exception, and then
of my Lord Sandwich sending a messenger to know whether the King intends
to come to Newmarket, as is talked, that he may be ready to entertain
him at Hinchingbroke. Thence home and dined, and my wife all day putting
up her hangings in her closett, which she do very prettily herself with
her own hand, to my great content. So I to the office till night, about
several businesses, and then went and sat an hour or two with Sir W. Pen,
talking very largely of Sir J. Minnes's simplicity and unsteadiness, and
of Sir W. Batten's suspicious dealings, wherein I was open, and he sufficiently,
so that I do not care for his telling of tales, for he said as much, but
whether that were so or no I said nothing but what is my certain knowledge
and belief concerning him. Thence home to bed in great pain.
6th. Slept pretty well,
and my wife waked to ring the bell to call up our mayds to the washing
about 4 o'clock, and I was and she angry that our bell did not wake them
sooner, but I will get a bigger bell. So we to sleep again till 8 o'clock,
and then I up in some ease to the office, where we had a full board, where
we examined Cocke's second account, when Mr. Turner had drawn a bill directly
to be paid the balance thereof, as Mr. Cocke demanded, and Sir J. Minnes
did boldly assert the truth of it, and that he had examined it, when there
is no such thing, but many vouchers, upon examination, missing, and we
saw reason to strike off several of his demands, and to bring down his
5 per cent. commission to 3 per cent. So we shall save the King some money,
which both the Comptroller and his clerke had absolutely given away. There
was also two occasions more of difference at the table; the one being
to make out a bill to Captain Smith for his salary abroad as commander-in-chief
in the Streights. Sir J. Minnes did demand an increase of salary for his
being Vice-Admiral in the Downes, he having received but 40s. without
an increase, when Sir J. Lawson, in the same voyage, had L3, and others
have also had increase, only he, because he was an officer of the board,
was worse used than any body else, and particularly told Sir W. Batten
that he was the opposer formerly of his having an increase, which I did
wonder to hear him so boldly lay it to him. So we hushed up the dispute,
and offered, if he would, to examine precedents, and report them, if there
was any thing to his advantage to be found, to the Duke. The next was,
Mr. Chr. Pett and Deane were summoned to give an account of some knees
["Naturally grown timber or bars of iron bent
to a right angle or to fit the surfaces and to secure bodies firmly together
as hanging knees secure the deck beams to the sides."--Smyth's Sailor's
Word- Book. There are several kinds of knees.] which Pett reported
bad, that were to be served in by Sir W. Warren, we having contracted
that none should be served but such as were to be approved of by our officers.
So that if they were bad they were to be blamed for receiving them. Thence
we fell to talk of Warren's other goods, which Pett had said were generally
bad, and falling to this contract again, I did say it was the most cautious
and as good a contract as had been made here, and the only [one] that
had been in such terms. Sir J. Minnes told me angrily that Winter's timber,
bought for 33s. per load, was as good and in the same terms. I told him
that it was not so, but that he and Sir W. Batten were both abused, and
I would prove it was as dear a bargain as had been made this half year,
which occasioned high words between them and me, but I am able to prove
it and will. That also was so ended, and so to other business.
At noon Lewellin coming to me I took him and Deane,
and there met my uncle Thomas, and we dined together, but was vexed that,
it being washing-day, we had no meat dressed, but sent to the Cook's,
and my people had so little witt to send in our meat from abroad in that
Cook's dishes, which were marked with the name of the Cook upon them,
by which, if they observed anything, they might know it was not my own
dinner. After dinner we broke up, and I by coach, setting down Luellin
in Cheapside. So to White Hall, where at the Committee of Tangier, but,
Lord! how I was troubled to see my Lord Tiviott's accounts of L10,000
paid in that manner, and wish 1000 times I had not been there. Thence
rose with Sir G. Carteret and to his lodgings, and there discoursed of
our frays at the table to-day, and particularly of that of the contract,
and the contract of masts the other day, declaring my fair dealing, and
so needing not any man's good report of it, or word for it, and that I
would make it so appear to him, if he desired it, which he did, and I
will do it. Thence home by water in great pain, and at my office a while,
and thence a little to Sir W. Pen, and so home to bed, and finding myself
beginning to be troubled with wind as I used to be, and in pain in making
water, I took a couple of pills that I had by me of Mr. Hollyard's.
7th. They wrought in the
morning, and I did keep my bed, and my pain continued on me mightily that
I kept within all day in great pain, and could break no wind nor have
any stool after my physic had done working. So in the evening I took coach
and to Mr. Holliard's, but he was not at home, and so home again, and
whether the coach did me good or no I know not . . . . So to bed and lay
in good ease all night, and . . . . pretty well to the morning . . . .
.
[Pepys's prescription for the colic:
"Balsom of Sulphur, 3 or 4 drops in a spoonfull of Syrrup of Colts
foote, not eating or drinking two hours before or after.
"The making of this Balsom:
"2/3ds of fine Oyle, and 1/3d of fine Brimstone, sett 13 or 14
houres upon yt fire, simpring till a thicke Stufte lyes at ye Bottome,
and ye Balsom at ye topp. Take this off &c.
"Sir Rob. Parkhurst for ye Collique."--M. B.]
8th. So, keeping myself
warm, to the office, and at noon home to dinner, my pain coming again
by breaking no wind nor having any stool. So to Mr. Holliard, and by his
direction, he assuring me that it is nothing of the stone, but only my
constitution being costive, and that, and cold from without, breeding
and keeping the wind, I took some powder that he did give me in white
wine, and sat late up, till past eleven at night, with my wife in my chamber
till it had done working, which was so weakly that I could hardly tell
whether it did work or no. My mayds being at this time in great dirt towards
getting of all my house clean, and weary and having a great deal of work
to do therein to-morrow and next day, were gone to bed before my wife
and I, who also do lie in our room more like beasts than Christians, but
that is only in order to having of the house shortly in a cleaner, or
rather very clean condition. Some ease I had so long as this did keep
my body loose, and I slept well.
9th. And did keep my bed
most of this morning, my body I find being still bound and little wind,
and so my pain returned again, though not so bad, but keeping my body
with warm clothes very hot I made shift to endure it, and at noon sent
word to Mr. Hollyard of my condition, that I could neither have a natural
stool nor break wind, and by that means still in pain and frequent offering
to make water. So he sent me two bottles of drink and some syrup, one
bottle to take now and the other to- morrow morning. So in the evening,
after Commissioner Pett, who came to visit me, and was going to Chatham,
but methinks do talk to me in quite another manner, doubtfully and shyly,
and like a stranger, to what he did heretofore. After I saw he was gone
I did drink one of them, but it was a most loathsome draught, and did
keep myself warm after it, and had that afternoon still a stool or two,
but in no plenty, nor any wind almost carried away, and so to bed. In
no great pain, but do not think myself likely to be well till I have a
freedom of stool and wind. Most of this day and afternoon my wife and
I did spend together in setting things now up and in order in her closet,
which indeed is, and will be, when I can get her some more things to put
in it, a very pleasant place, and is at present very pretty, and such
as she, I hope, will find great content in. So to bed.
10th. Up, and not in any
good ease yet, but had pain in making water, and some course. I see I
must take besides keeping myself warm to make myself break wind and go
freely to stool before I can be well, neither of which I can do yet, though
I have drank the other bottle of Mr. Hollyard's against my stomach this
morning. I did, however, make shift to go to the office, where we sat,
and there Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten did advise me to take some juniper
water, and Sir W. Batten sent to his Lady for some for me, strong water
made of juniper. Whether that or anything else of my draught this morning
did it I cannot tell, but I had a couple of stools forced after it . .
. . but whether I shall grow better upon it I cannot tell. Dined at home
at noon, my wife and house in the dirtiest pickle that ever she and it
was in almost, but in order, I hope, this night to be very clean. To the
office all the afternoon upon victualling business, and late at it, so
after I wrote by the post to my father, I home. This evening Mr. Hollyard
sends me an electuary to take (a walnut quantity of it) going to bed,
which I did. 'Tis true I slept well, and rose in a little ease in the
morning.
11th (Lord's day). And
was mightily pleased to see my house clean and in good condition, but
something coming into my wife's head, and mine, to be done more about
bringing the green bed into our chamber, which is handsomer than the red
one, though not of the colour of our hangings, my wife forebore to make
herself clean to-day, but continued in a sluttish condition till to-morrow.
I after the old passe, all the day within doors, . . . . the effect of
my electuary last night, and the greatest of my pain I find to come by
my straining . . . . For all this I eat with a very good stomach, and
as much as I use to do, and so I did this noon, and staid at home discoursing
and doing things in my chamber, altering chairs in my chamber, and set
them above in the red room, they being Turkey work, and so put their green
covers upon those that were above, not so handsome. At night fell to reading
in the Church History of Fuller's, and particularly Cranmer's letter to
Queen Elizabeth, which pleases me mightily for his zeal, obedience, and
boldness in a cause of religion. After supper to bed as I use to be, in
pain . . . . .
12th. Up (though slept
well) and made some water in the morning [as] I used to do, and a little
pain returned to me, and some fears, but being forced to go to the Duke
at St. James's, I took coach and in my way called upon Mr. Hollyard and
had his advice to take a glyster. At St. James's we attended the Duke
all of us. And there, after my discourse, Mr. Coventry of his own accord
begun to tell the Duke how he found that discourse abroad did run to his
prejudice about the fees that he took, and how he sold places and other
things; wherein he desired to appeal to his Highness, whether he did any
thing more than what his predecessors did, and appealed to us all. So
Sir G. Carteret did answer that some fees were heretofore taken, but what
he knows not; only that selling of places never was nor ought to be countenanced.
So Mr. Coventry very hotly answered to Sir G. Carteret, and appealed to
himself whether he was not one of the first that put him upon looking
after this taking of fees, and that he told him that Mr. Smith should
say that he made L5000 the first year, and he believed he made L7000.
This Sir G. Carteret denied, and said, that if he did say so he told a
lie, for he could not, nor did know, that ever he did make that profit
of his place; but that he believes he might say L2500 the first year.
Mr. Coventry instanced in another thing, particularly wherein Sir G. Carteret
did advise with him about the selling of the Auditor's place of the stores,
when in the beginning there was an intention of creating such an office.
This he confessed, but with some lessening of the tale Mr. Coventry told,
it being only for a respect to my Lord Fitz-Harding. In fine, Mr. Coventry
did put into the Duke's hand a list of above 250 places that he did give
without receiving one farthing, so much as his ordinary fees for them,
upon his life and oath; and that since the Duke's establishment of fees
he had never received one token more of any man; and that in his whole
life he never conditioned or discoursed of any consideration from any
commanders since he came to the Navy.
And afterwards, my Lord Barkeley merrily discoursing
that he wished his profit greater than it was, and that he did believe
that he had got L50,000 since he came in, Mr. Coventry did openly declare
that his Lordship, or any of us, should have not only all he had got,
but all that he had in the world (and yet he did not come a beggar into
the Navy, nor would yet be thought to speak in any contempt of his Royall
Highness's bounty), and should have a year to consider of it too, for
L25,000. The Duke's answer was, that he wished we all had made more profit
than he had of our places, and that we had all of us got as much as one
man below stayres in the Court, which he presently named, and it was Sir
George Lane! This being ended, and the list left in the Duke's hand, we
parted, and I with Sir G. Carteret, Sir J. Minnes, and Sir W. Batten by
coach to the Exchange, and there a while, and so home, and whether it
be the jogging, or by having my mind more employed (which I believe is
a great matter) I know not, but . . . . I begin to be suddenly well, at
least better than I was. So home and to dinner, and thence by coach to
the Old Exchange, and there cheapened some laces for my wife, and then
to Mr.----- the great laceman in Cheapside, and bought one cost me L4.
more by 20s. than I intended, but when I came to see them I was resolved
to buy one worth wearing with credit, and so to the New Exchange, and
there put it to making, and so to my Lord's lodgings and left my wife,
and so I to the Committee of Tangier, and then late home with my wife
again by coach, beginning to be very well, and yet when I came home .
. . . the little straining which I thought was no strain at all at the
present did by and by bring me some pain for a good while. Anon, about
8 o'clock, my wife did give me a clyster which Mr. Hollyard directed,
viz., a pint of strong ale, 4 oz. of sugar, and 2 oz. of butter. It lay
while I lay upon the bed above an hour, if not two, and then thinking
it quite lost I rose, and by and by it began with my walking to work,
and gave me three or four most excellent stools and carried away wind,
put me in excellent ease, and taking my usual walnut quantity of electuary
at my going into bed I had about two stools in the night . . . . .
13th. And so rose in the
morning in perfect good ease . . . . continued all the morning well, and
in the afternoon had a natural easily and dry stoole, the first I have
had these five days or six, for which God be praised, and so am likely
to continue well, observing for the time to come when any of this pain
comes again
(1) To begin to keep myself as warm
as I can.
(2) Strain as little as ever I can backwards, remembering
that my pain will come by and by, though in the very straining I do
not feel it.
(3) Either by physic forward or by clyster backward
or both ways to get an easy and plentiful going to stool and breaking
of wind.
(4) To begin to suspect my health immediately when
I begin to become costive and bound, and by all means to keep my body
loose, and that to obtain presently after I find myself going the contrary.
This morning at the office, and at noon with Creed to
the Exchange, where much business, but, Lord! how my heart, though I know
not reason for it, began to doubt myself, after I saw Stint, Field's one-eyed
solicitor, though I know not any thing that they are doing, or that they
endeavour any thing further against us in the business till the terme.
Home, and Creed with me to dinner, and after dinner John Cole, my old
friend, came to see and speak with me about a friend. I find him ingenious,
but more and more discern his city pedantry; but however, I will endeavour
to have his company now and then, for that he knows much of the temper
of the City, and is able to acquaint therein as much as most young men,
being of large acquaintance, and himself, I think, somewhat unsatisfied
with the present state of things at Court and in the Church. Then to the
office, and there busy till late, and so home to my wife, with some ease
and pleasure that I hope to be able to follow my business again, which
by God's leave I am resolved to return to with more and more eagerness.
I find at Court, that either the King is doubtfull of some disturbance,
or else would seem so (and I have reason to hope it is no worse), by his
commanding all commanders of castles, &c., to repair to their charges;
and mustering the Guards the other day himself, where he found reason
to dislike their condition to my Lord Gerard, finding so many absent men,
or dead pays.[This is probably an allusion to the
practice of not reporting the deaths of soldiers, that the officers might
continue to draw their pay.--B.]
My Lady Castlemaine, I hear, is in as great favour as ever, and the King
supped with her the very first night he came from Bath: and last night
and the night before supped with her; when there being a chine of beef
to roast, and the tide rising into their kitchen that it could not be
roasted there, and the cook telling her of it, she answered, "Zounds!
she must set the house on fire but it should be roasted!" So it was
carried to Mrs. Sarah's husband's, and there it was roasted. So home to
supper and to bed, being mightily pleased with all my house and my red
chamber, where my wife and I intend constantly to lie, and the having
of our dressing room and mayds close by us without any interfering or
trouble.
14th. Up and to my office,
where all the morning, and part of it Sir J. Minnes spent, as he do every
thing else, like a fool, reading the Anatomy of the body to me, but so
sillily as to the making of me understand any thing that I was weary of
him, and so I toward the 'Change and met with Mr. Grant, and he and I
to the Coffee-house, where I understand by him that Sir W. Petty and his
vessel are coming, and the King intends to go to Portsmouth to meet it.
Thence home and after dinner my wife and I, by Mr. Rawlinson's conduct,
to the Jewish Synagogue: where the men and boys in their vayles, and the
women behind a lattice out of sight; and some things stand up, which I
believe is their Law, in a press to which all coming in do bow; and at
the putting on their vayles do say something, to which others that hear
him do cry Amen, and the party do kiss his vayle. Their service all in
a singing way, and in Hebrew. And anon their Laws that they take out of
the press are carried by several men, four or five several burthens in
all, and they do relieve one another; and whether it is that every one
desires to have the carrying of it, I cannot tell, thus they carried it
round about the room while such a service is singing. And in the end they
had a prayer for the King, which they pronounced his name in Portugall;
but the prayer, like the rest, in Hebrew. But, Lord! to see the disorder,
laughing, sporting, and no attention, but confusion in all their service,
more like brutes than people knowing the true God, would make a man forswear
ever seeing them more and indeed I never did see so much, or could have
imagined there had been any religion in the whole world so absurdly performed
as this. Away thence with my mind strongly disturbed with them, by coach
and set down my wife in Westminster Hall, and I to White Hall, and there
the Tangier Committee met, but the Duke and the Africa Committee meeting
in our room, Sir G. Carteret; Sir W. Compton, Mr. Coventry, Sir W. Rider,
Cuttance and myself met in another room, with chairs set in form but no
table, and there we had very fine discourses of the business of the fitness
to keep Sally, and also of the terms of our King's paying the Portugees
that deserted their house at Tangier, which did much please me, and so
to fetch my wife, and so to the New Exchange about her things, and called
at Thomas Pepys the turner's and bought something there, an so home to
supper and to bed, after I had been a good while with Sir W. Pen, railing
and speaking freely our minds against Sir W. Batten and Sir J. Minnes,
but no more than the folly of one and the knavery of the other do deserve.
15th. Up, I bless God being
now in pretty good condition, but cannot come to make natural stools yet
. . . . . So up and to the office, where we sat all the morning, and at
noon dined at home, my head full of business, and after stepping abroad
to buy a thing or two, compasses and snuffers for my wife, I returned
to my office and there mighty busy till it was late, and so home well
contented with the business that I had done this afternoon, and so to
supper and to bed.
16th. Up and to my office,
where all the morning doing business, and at noon home to dinner, and
then up to remove my chest and clothes up stairs to my new wardrobe, that
I may have all my things above where I lie, and so by coach abroad with
my wife, leaving her at my Lord's till I went to the Tangier Committee,
where very good discourse concerning the Articles of peace to be continued
with Guyland, and thence took up my wife, and with her to her tailor's,
and then to the Exchange and to several places, and so home and to my
office, where doing some business, and then home to supper and to bed.
17th. Up and to my office,
and there we sat a very full board all the morning upon some accounts
of Mr. Gauden's. Here happened something concerning my Will which Sir
W. Batten would fain charge upon him, and I heard him mutter something
against him of complaint for his often receiving people's money to Sir
G. Carteret, which displeased me much, but I will be even with him. Thence
to the Dolphin Tavern, and there Mr. Gauden did give us a great dinner.
Here we had some discourse of the Queen's being very sick, if not dead,
the Duke and Duchess of York being sent for betimes this morning to come
to White Hall to her. So to my office and there late doing business, and
so home to supper, my house being got mighty clean to my great content
from top to toe, and so to bed, myself beginning to be in good condition
of health also, but only my laying out so much money upon clothes for
myself and wife and her closet troubles me.
18th (Lord's day). Up,
and troubled at a distaste my wife took at a small thing that Jane did,
and to see that she should be so vexed that I took part with Jane, wherein
I had reason; but by and by well again, and so my wife in her best gown
and new poynt that I bought her the other day, to church with me, where
she has not been these many weeks, and her mayde Jane with her. I was
troubled to see Pembleton there, but I thought it prudence to take notice
myself first of it and show my wife him, and so by little and little considering
that it mattered not much his being there I grew less concerned and so
mattered it not much, and the less when, anon, my wife showed me his wife,
a pretty little woman, and well dressed, with a good jewel at her breast.
The parson, Mr. Mills, I perceive, did not know whether to pray for the
Queen or no, and so said nothing about her; which makes me fear she is
dead. But enquiring of Sir J. Minnes, he told me that he heard she was
better last night. So home to dinner, and Tom came and dined with me,
and so, anon, to church again, and there a simple coxcomb preached worse
than the Scot, and no Pembleton nor his wife there, which pleased me not
a little, and then home and spent most of the evening at Sir W. Pen's
in complaisance, seeing him though he deserves no respect from me. This
evening came my uncle Wight to speak with me about my uncle Thomas's business,
and Mr. Moore came, 4 or 5 days out of the country and not come to see
me before, though I desired by two or three messengers that he would come
to me as soon as he came to town. Which do trouble me to think he should
so soon forget my kindness to him, which I am afraid he do. After walking
a good while in the garden with these, I went up again to Sir W. Pen,
and took my wife home, and after supper to prayers, and read very seriously
my vowes, which I am fearful of forgetting by my late great expenses,
but I hope in God I do not, and so to bed.
19th. Waked with a very
high wind, and said to my wife, "I pray God I hear not of the death
of any great person, this wind is so high!" fearing that the Queen
might be dead. So up; and going by coach with Sir W. Batten and Sir J.
Minnes to St. James's, they tell me that Sir W. Compton, who it is true
had been a little sickly for a week or fortnight, but was very well upon
Friday at night last at the Tangier Committee with us, was dead--died
yesterday: at which I was most exceedingly surprised, he being, and so
all the world saying that he was, one of the worthyest men and best officers
of State now in England; and so in my conscience he was: of the best temper,
valour, abilities of mind, integrity, birth, fine person, and diligence
of any one man he hath left behind him in the three kingdoms; and yet
not forty years old, or if so, that is all.
I find the sober men of the Court troubled for him; and yet not so as
to hinder or lessen their mirth, talking, laughing, and eating, drinking,
and doing every thing else, just as if there was no such thing, which
is as good an instance for me hereafter to judge of death, both as to
the unavoidableness, suddenness, and little effect of it upon the spirits
of others, let a man be never so high, or rich, or good; but that all
die alike, no more matter being made of the death of one than another,
and that even to die well, the praise of it is not considerable in the
world, compared to the many in the world that know not nor make anything
of it, nor perhaps to them (unless to one that like this poor gentleman,
who is one of a thousand, there nobody speaking ill of him) that will
speak ill of a man. Coming to St. James's, I hear that the Queen did sleep
five hours pretty well to-night, and that she waked and gargled her mouth,
and to sleep again; but that her pulse beats fast, beating twenty to the
King's or my Lady Suffolk's eleven; but not so strong as it was. It seems
she was so ill as to be shaved and pidgeons put to her feet, and to have
the extreme unction given her by the priests, who were so long about it
that the doctors were angry. The King, they all say; is most fondly disconsolate
for her, and weeps by her, which makes her weep; which one this day told
me he reckons a good sign, for that it carries away some rheume from the
head. This morning Captain Allen tells me how the famous Ned Mullins,
by a slight fall, broke his leg at the ancle, which festered; and he had
his leg cut off on Saturday, but so ill done, notwithstanding all the
great chyrurgeons about the town at the doing of it, that they fear he
will not live with it, which is very strange, besides the torment he was
put to with it. After being a little with the Duke, and being invited
to dinner to my Lord Barkeley's, and so, not knowing how to spend our
time till noon, Sir W. Batten and I took coach, and to the Coffee-house
in Cornhill; where much talk about the Turk's proceedings, and that the
plague is got to Amsterdam, brought by a ship from Argier; and it is also
carried to Hambrough. The Duke says the King purposes to forbid any of
their ships coming into the river. The Duke also told us of several Christian
commanders (French) gone over to the Turks to serve them; and upon inquiry
I find that the King of France do by this aspire to the Empire, and so
to get the Crown of Spayne also upon the death of the King, which is very
probable, it seems. Back to St. James's, and there dined with my Lord
Barkeley and his lady, where Sir G. Carteret, Sir W. Batten, and myself,
with two gentlemen more; my Lady, and one of the ladies of honour to the
Duchesse (no handsome woman, but a most excellent hand).
A fine French dinner, and so we after dinner broke up
and to Creed's new lodgings in Axe-yard, which I like very well and so
with him to White Hall and walked up and down in the galleries with good
discourse, and anon Mr. Coventry and Povy, sad for the loss of one of
our number we sat down as a Committee for Tangier and did some business
and so broke up, and I down with Mr. Coventry and in his chamber discoursing
of business of the office and Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten's carriage,
when he most ingeniously tells me how they have carried themselves to
him in forbearing to speak the other day to the Duke what they know they
have so largely at other times said to him, and I told him what I am put
to about the bargain for masts. I perceive he thinks of it all and will
remember it. Thence took up my wife at Mrs. Harper's where she and Jane
were, and so called at the New Exchange for some things for her, and then
at Tom's went up and saw his house now it is finished, and indeed it is
very handsome, but he not within and so home and to my office; and then
to supper and to bed.
20th. Up and to the office,
where we sat; and at noon Sir G. Carteret, Sir J. Minnes, and I to dinner
to my Lord Mayor's, being invited, where was the Farmers of the Customes,
my Lord Chancellor's three sons, and other great and much company, and
a very great noble dinner, as this Mayor--[Sir John
Robinson.]--is good for nothing else. No extraordinary discourse
of any thing, every man being intent upon his dinner, and myself willing
to have drunk some wine to have warmed my belly, but I did for my oath's
sake willingly refrain it, but am so well pleased and satisfied afterwards
thereby, for it do keep me always in so good a frame of mind that I hope
I shall not ever leave this practice. Thence home, and took my wife by
coach to White Hall, and she set down at my Lord's lodgings, I to a Committee
of Tangier, and thence with her homeward, calling at several places by
the way. Among others at Paul's Churchyard, and while I was in Kirton's
shop, a fellow came to offer kindness or force to my wife in the coach,
but she refusing, he went away, after the coachman had struck him, and
he the coachman. So I being called, went thither, and the fellow coming
out again of a shop, I did give him a good cuff or two on the chops, and
seeing him not oppose me, I did give him another; at last found him drunk,
of which I was glad, and so left him, and home, and so to my office awhile,
and so home to supper and to bed. This evening, at my Lord's lodgings,
Mrs. Sarah talking with my wife and I how the Queen do, and how the King
tends her being so ill. She tells us that the Queen's sickness is the
spotted fever; that she was as full of the spots as a leopard which is
very strange that it should be no more known; but perhaps it is not so.
And that the King do seem to take it much to heart, for that he hath wept
before her; but, for all that; that he hath not missed one night since
she was sick, of supping with my Lady Castlemaine; which I believe is
true, for she [Sarah] says that her husband hath dressed the suppers every
night; and I confess I saw him myself coming through the street dressing
of a great supper to-night, which Sarah says is also for the King and
her; which is a very strange thing.
21st. Up, and by and by
comes my brother Tom to me, though late (which do vex me to the blood
that I could never get him to come time enough to me, though I have spoke
a hundred times; but he is very sluggish, and too negligent ever to do
well at his trade I doubt), and having lately considered with my wife
very much of the inconvenience of my going in no better plight, we did
resolve of putting me into a better garb, and, among other things, to
have a good velvet cloake; that is, of cloth lined with velvet and other
things modish, and a perruque, and so I sent him and her out to buy me
velvet, and I to the Exchange, and so to Trinity House, and there dined
with Sir W. Batten, having some business to speak with him, and Sir W.
Rider. Thence, having my belly full, away on foot to my brother's, all
along Thames Streete, and my belly being full of small beer, I did all
alone, for health's sake, drink half a pint of Rhenish wine at the Still-yard,
mixed with beer. From my brother's with my wife to the Exchange, to buy
things for her and myself, I being in a humour of laying out money, but
not prodigally, but only in clothes, which I every day see that I suffer
for want of, I so home, and after a little at my office, home to supper
and to bed. Memorandum: This morning one Mr. Commander, a scrivener, came
to me from Mr. Moore with a deed of which. Mr. Moore had told me, that
my Lord had made use of my name, and that I was desired by my Lord to
sign it. Remembering this very well, though understanding little of the
particulars, I read it over, and found it concern Sir Robt. Bernard and
Duckinford, their interest in the manor of Brampton. So I did sign it,
declaring to Mr. Commander that I am only concerned in having my name
at my Lord Sandwich's desire used therein, and so I sealed it up after
I had signed and sealed the deed, and desired him to give it so sealed
to Mr. Moore. I did also call at the Wardrobe this afternoon to have told
Mr. Moore of it, but he was not within, but knowing Mr. Commander to have
the esteem of a good and honest man with my Lord Crew, I did not doubt
to intrust him with the deed after I had signed it. This evening after
I came home I begun to enter my wife in arithmetique, in order to her
studying of the globes, and she takes it very well, and, I hope, with
great pleasure, I shall bring her to understand many fine things.
22nd. Up to the office,
where we sat till noon and then I home to dinner, and after dinner with
my wife to her study and there read some more arithmetique, which she
takes with great ease and pleasure. This morning, hearing that the Queen
grows worse again, I sent to stop the making of my velvet cloake, till
I see whether she lives or dies. So a little abroad about several businesses,
and then home and to my office till night, and then home to supper, teach
my wife, and so to bed.
23rd. Up, and this morning
comes Mr. Clerke, and tells me that the Injunction against Trice is dismissed
again, which troubles me much. So I am to look after it in the afternoon.
There comes also by appointment my uncle Thomas, to receive the first
payment of his daughter's money. But showing of me the original of the
deed by which his daughter gives her right to her legacy to him, and the
copy of it attested by the Scrivener, for me to keep by me, I did find
some difference, and thereupon did look more into it, and at last did
find the whole thing a forgery; yet he maintained it again and again,
upon oath, that it had been signed and sealed by my cozen Mary ever since
before her marriage. So I told him to his teeth he did like a knave, and
so he did, and went with him to the Scrivener at Bedlam, and there found
how it came to pass, viz., that he had lost, or pretends to have lost,
the true original, and that so he was forced to take this course; but
a knave, at least a man that values not what he swears to, I perceive
he is. But however I am now better able to see myself fully secured before
I part with the money, for I find that his son Charles has right to this
legacy till the first L100 of his daughter's portion be paid, he being
bond for it. So I put him upon getting both his sons to be bound for my
security, and so left him and so home, and then abroad to my brother's,
but found him abroad at the young couple that was married yesterday, and
he one of the Br[ide's] men, a kinswoman (Brumfield) of the Joyces married
to an upholster. Thence walked to the King's Head at Charing Cross and
there dined, and hear that the Queen slept pretty well last night, but
her fever continues upon her still. It seems she hath never a Portuguese
doctor here. Thence by appointment to the Six Clerks' office to meet Mr.
Clerke, which I did and there waited all the afternoon for Wilkinson my
attorney, but he came not, and so vexed and weary we parted, and I endeavoured
but in vain to have found Dr. Williams, of whom I shall have use in Trice's
business, but I could not find him. So weary walked home; in my way bought
a large kitchen knife and half dozen oyster knives. Thence to Mr. Holliard,
who tells me that Mullins is dead of his leg cut off the other day, but
most basely done. He tells me that there is no doubt but that all my slyme
do come away in my water, and therefore no fear of the stone; but that
my water being so slymy is a good sign. He would have me now and then
to take a clyster, the same I did the other day, though I feel no pain,
only to keep me loose, and instead of butter, which he would have to be
salt butter, he would have me sometimes use two or three ounces of honey,
at other times two or three ounces of Linseed oil. Thence to Mr. Rawlinson's
and saw some of my new bottles made, with my crest upon them, filled with
wine, about five or six dozen. So home and to my office a little, and
thence home to prepare myself against T. Trice, and also to draw a bond
fit for my uncle and his sons to enter into before I pay them the money.
That done to bed.
24th. Up and to my office,
where busy all the morning about Mr. Gauden's account, and at noon to
dinner with him at the Dolphin, where mighty merry by pleasant stories
of Mr. Coventry's and Sir J. Minnes's, which I have put down some of in
my book of tales. Just as I was going out my uncle Thomas came to the
with a draught of a bond for him and his sons to sign to me about the
payment of the L20 legacy, which I agreed to, but he would fain have had
from me the copy of the deed, which he had forged and did bring me yesterday,
but I would not give him it. Says [he] I perceive then you will keep it
to defame me with, and desired me not to speak of it, for he did it innocently.
Now I confess I do not find any great hurt in the thing, but only to keep
from me a sight of the true original deed, wherein perhaps there was something
else that may touch this business of the legacy which he would keep from
me, or it may be, it is really lost as he says it is. But then he need
not have used such a slight, but confess it without danger. Thence by
coach with Mr. Coventry to the Temple, and thence I to the Six Clerks'
office, and discoursed with my Attorney and Solicitor, and he and I to
Mr. Turner, who puts me in great fear that I shall not get retayned again
against Tom Trice; which troubles me. Thence, it being night, homewards,
and called at Wotton's and tried some shoes, but he had none to fit me.
He tells me that by the Duke of York's persuasion Harris is come again
to Sir W. Davenant upon his terms that he demanded, which will make him
very high and proud. Thence to another shop, and there bought me a pair
of shoes, and so walked home and to my office, and dispatch letters by
the post, and so home to supper and to bed, where to my trouble I find
my wife begin to talk of her being alone all day, which is nothing but
her lack of something to do, for while she was busy she never, or seldom,
complained . . . . . The Queen is in a good way of recovery; and Sir Francis
Pridgeon hath got great honour by it, it being all imputed to his cordiall,
which in her dispaire did give her rest and brought her to some hopes
of recovery. It seems that, after the much talk of troubles and a plot,
something is found in the North that a party was to rise, and some persons
that were to command it are found, as I find in a letter that Mr. Coventry
read to-day about it from those parts.[This refers
to a rising in the West Riding of Yorkshire, which took place on October
12th, and was known as the Farneley Wood Plot. The rising was easily put
down, and several prisoners were taken. A special commission of oyer and
terminer was sent down to York to try the prisoners in January, 1663-64,
when twenty-one were convicted and executed.]
25th (Lord's day). Up,
and my wife and I to church, where it is strange to see how the use and
seeing Pembleton come with his wife thither to church, I begin now to
make too great matter of it, which before was so terrible to me. Dined
at home, my wife and I alone, a good dinner, and so in the afternoon to
church again, where the Scot preached, and I slept most of the afternoon.
So home, and my wife and I together all the evening discoursing, and then
after reading my vowes to myself, and my wife with her mayds (who are
mighty busy to get it dispatched because of their mistress's promise,
that when it is done they shall have leave all to go see their friends
at Westminster, whither my wife will carry them) preparing for their washing
to-morrow, we hastened to supper and to bed.
26th. Waked about one o'clock
in the morning . . . . My wife being waked rung her bell, and the mayds
rose and went to washing, we to sleep again till 7 o'clock, and then up,
and I abroad to look out Dr. Williams, but being gone out I went to Westminster,
and there seeing my Lord Sandwich's footman knew he was come to town,
and so I went in and saw him, and received a kind salute from him, but
hear that my father is very ill still. Thence to Westminster Hall with
Creed, and spent the morning walking there, where, it being Terme time,
I met several persons, and talked with them, among others Dr. Pierce,
who tells me that the Queen is in a way to be pretty well again, but that
her delirium in her head continues still; that she talks idle, not by
fits, but always, which in some lasts a week after so high a fever, in
some more, and in some for ever; that this morning she talked mightily
that she was brought to bed, and that she wondered that she should be
delivered without pain and without spueing or being sicke, and that she
was troubled that her boy was but an ugly boy. But the King being by,
said, "No, it is a very pretty boy."--"Nay," says
she, "if it be like you it is a fine boy indeed, and I would be very
well pleased with it." The other day she talked mightily of Sir H.
Wood's lady's great belly, and said if she should miscarry he would never
get another, and that she never saw such a man as this Sir H. Wood in
her life, and seeing of Dr. Pridgeon, she said, "Nay, Doctor, you
need not scratch your head, there is hair little enough already in the
place." But methinks it was not handsome for the weaknesses of Princes
to be talked of thus.
Thence Creed and I to the King's Head ordinary, where
much and very good company, among others one very talking man, but a scholler,
that would needs put in his discourse and philosophy upon every occasion,
and though he did well enough, yet his readiness to speak spoilt all.
Here they say that the Turkes go on apace, and that my Lord Castlehaven
is going to raise 10,000 men here for to go against him; that the King
of France do offer to assist the Empire upon condition that he may be
their Generalissimo, and the Dolphin chosen King of the Romans: and it
is said that the King of France do occasion this difference among the
Christian Princes of the Empire, which gives the Turke such advantages.
They say also that the King of Spayne is making all imaginable force against
Portugall again. Thence Creed and I to one or two periwigg shops about
the Temple, having been very much displeased with one that we saw, a head
of greasy and old woman's haire, at Jervas's in the morning; and there
I think I shall fit myself of one very handsomely made.
Thence by coach, my mind being troubled for not meeting
with Dr. Williams, to St. Catharine's to look at a Dutch ship or two for
some good handsome maps, but met none, and so back to Cornhill to Moxon's,
but it being dark we staid not to see any, then to coach again, and presently
spying Sir W. Batten; I 'light and took him in and to the Globe in Fleete
Streete, by appointment, where by and by he and I with our solicitor to
Sir F. Turner about Field's business, and back to the Globe, and thither
I sent for Dr. Williams, and he is willing to swear in my behalf against
T. Trice, viz., that at T. Trice's desire we have met to treat about our
business. Thence (I drinking no wine) after an hour's stay Sir W. Batten
and another, and he drinking, we home by coach, and so to my office and
set down my Journall, and then home to supper and to bed, my washing being
in a good condition over. I did give Dr. Williams 20s. tonight, but it
was after he had answered me well to what I had to ask him about this
business, and it was only what I had long ago in my petty bag book allotted
for him besides the bill of near L4 which I paid him a good while since
by my brother Tom for physique for my wife, without any consideration
to this business that he is to do for me, as God shall save me. Among
the rest, talking of the Emperor at table to- day one young gentleman,
a pretty man, and it seems a Parliament man, did say that he was a sot;
[Leopold I, the Holy Roman Emperor, was born June
9th, 1640. He became King of Hungary in 1655, and King of Bohemia in 1658,
in which year he received the imperial crown. The Princes of the German
Empire watched for some time the progress of his struggle with the Turks
with indifference, but in 1663 they were induced to grant aid to Leopold
after he had made a personal appeal to them in the diet at Ratisbon.]
for he minded nothing of the Government, but was led by the Jesuites.
Several at table took him up, some for saying that he was a sot in being
led by the Jesuites, [who] are the best counsel he can take. Another commander,
a Scott[ish] Collonell, who I believe had several under him, that he was
a man that had thus long kept out the Turke till now, and did many other
great things, and lastly Mr. Progers, one of our courtiers, who told him
that it was not a thing to be said of any Soveraigne Prince, be his weaknesses
what they will, to be called a sot, which methinks was very prettily said.
27th. Up, and my uncle
Thomas and his scrivener bringing me a bond and affidavit to my mind,
I paid him his L20 for his daughter's legacy, and L5 more for a Quarter's
annuity, in the manner expressed in each acquittance, to which I must
be referred on any future occasion, and to the bond and affidavit. Thence
to the office and there sat till noon, and then home to dinner, and after
dinner (it being a foul house to-day among my maids, making up their clothes)
abroad with my Will with me by coach to Dr, Williams, and with him to
the Six Clerks's office, and there, by advice of his acquaintance, I find
that my case, through my neglect and the neglect of my lawyers, is come
to be very bad, so as that it will be very hard to get my bill retayned
again. However, I got him to sign and swear an affidavit that there was
treaties between T. Trice and me with as much advantage as I could for
me, but I will say that for him he was most exact as ever I saw man in
my life, word by word what it was that he swore to, and though, God forgive
me, I could have been almost naturally willing to have let him ignorantly
have sworn to something that was not of itself very certain, either or
no, yet out of his own conscience and care he altered the words himself
so as to make them very safe for him to swear. This I carrying to my clerk
Wilkinson, and telling him how I heard matters to stand, he, like a conceited
fellow, made nothing of it but advised me to offer Trice's clerks the
cost of the dismission, viz., 46s. 8d., which I did, but they would not
take it without his client. Immediately thereupon we parted, and met T.
Trice coming into the room, and he came to me and served me with a subpoena
for these very costs, so I paid it him, but Lord! to see his resolution,
and indeed discretion, in the wording of his receipt, he would have it
most express to my greatest disadvantage that could be, yet so as I could
not deny to give it him.
That being paid, my clerke, and then his began to ask
why we could not think, being friends, of referring it, or stating it,
first ourselves, and then put it to some good lawyer to judge in it. From
one word to more we were resolved to try, and to that end to step to the
Pope's Head Taverne, and there he and his Clerke and Attorney and I and
my Clerke, and sent for Mr. Smallwood, and by and by comes Mr. Clerke,
my Solicitor, and after I had privately discoursed with my men and seen
how doubtfully they talked, and what future certain charge and trouble
it would be, with a doubtful victory, I resolved to condescend very low,
and after some talke all together Trice and I retired, and he came to
L150 the lowest, and I bid him L80. So broke off and then went to our
company, and they putting us to a second private discourse, at last I
was contented to give him L100, he to spend 40s. of it among this good
company that was with us. So we went to our company, both seeming well
pleased that we were come to an end, and indeed I am in the respects above
said, though it be a great sum for us to part with. I am to pay him by
giving him leave to buy about L40 worth of Piggott's land and to strike
off so much of Piggott's debt, and the other to give him bond to pay him
in 12 months after without interest, only giving him a power to buy more
land of Piggott and paying him that way as he did for the other, which
I am well enough contented with, or at least to take the land at that
price and give him the money. This last I did not tell him, but I shall
order it so. Having agreed upon to-morrow come se'nnight for the spending
of the 40s. at Mr. Rawlinson's, we parted, and I set T. Trice down in
Paul's Churchyard and I by coach home and to my office, and there set
down this day's passages, and so home to supper and to bed. Mr. Coventry
tells me to-day that the Queen had a very good night last night; but yet
it is strange that still she raves and talks of little more than of her
having of children, and fancys now that she hath three children, and that
the girle is very like the King. And this morning about five o'clock waked
(the physician feeling her pulse, thinking to be better able to judge,
she being still and asleep, waked her) and the first word she said was,
"How do the children?"
28th. Up and at my office
all the morning, and at noon Mr. Creed came to me and dined with me, and
after dinner Murford came to me and he and I discoursed wholly upon his
breach of contract with us. After that Mr. Creed and I abroad, I doing
several errands, and with him at last to the great coffee-house, and there
after some common discourse we parted and I home, paying what I owed at
the Mitre in my way, and at home Sympson the joyner coming he set up my
press for my cloaks and other small things, and so to my office a little,
and to supper, and to bed. This morning Mr. Blackburne came to me, and
telling me what complaints Will made of the usage he had from my wife
and other discouragements, and, I seeing. him, instead of advising, rather
favouring his kinsman, I told him freely my mind, but friendlily, and
so we have concluded to have him have a lodging elsewhere, and that I
will spare him L15 of his salary, and if I do not need to keep another
L20.
29th. Up, it being my Lord
Mayor's day, Sir Anthony Bateman. This morning was brought home my new
velvet cloake, that is, lined with velvet, a good cloth the outside, the
first that ever I had in my life, and I pray God it may not be too soon
now that I begin to wear it. I had it this day brought, thinking to have
worn it to dinner, but I thought it would be better to go without it because
of the crowde, and so I did not wear it. We met a little at the office,
and then home again and got me ready to go forth, my wife being gone forth
by my consent before to see her father and mother, and taken her cooke
mayde and little girle to Westminster with her for them to see their friends.
This morning in dressing myself and wanting a band, [The
band succeeded the ruff as the ordinary civil costume. The lawyers, who
now retain bands, and the clergy, who have only lately left them off,
formerly wore ruffs.] I found all my bands that were newly made
clean so ill smoothed that I crumpled them, and flung them all on the
ground, and was angry with Jane, which made the poor girle mighty sad,
so that I were troubled for it afterwards. At noon I went forth, and by
coach to Guild Hall (by the way calling at Mr. Rawlinson's), and there
was admitted, and meeting with Mr. Proby (Sir R. Ford's son), and Lieutenant-Colonel
Baron, a City commander, we went up and down to see the tables; where
under every salt there was a bill of fare, and at the end of the table
the persons proper for the table. Many were the tables, but none in the
Hall but the Mayor's and the Lords of the Privy Council that had napkins
[As the practice of eating with forks gradually was
introduced from Italy into England, napkins were not so generally used,
but considered more as an ornament than a necessary. The guests probably
brought their own knife and fork with them in a case.--M.B.] or
knives, which was very strange. We went into the Buttry, and there stayed
and talked, and then into the Hall again: and there wine was offered and
they drunk, I only drinking some hypocras, which do not break my vowe,
it being, to the best of my present judgement, only a mixed compound drink,
and not any wine. [A drink, composed usually of red
wine, but sometimes of white, with the addition of sugar and spices.]
If I am mistaken, God forgive me! but I hope and do think I am not. By
and by met with Creed; and we, with the others, went within the several
Courts, and there saw the tables prepared for the Ladies and Judges and
Bishopps: all great sign of a great dinner to come.
By and by about one o'clock, before the Lord Mayor came,
come into the Hall, from the room where they were first led into, the
Lord Chancellor (Archbishopp before him), with the Lords of the Council,
and other Bishopps, and they to dinner. Anon comes the Lord Mayor, who
went up to the lords, and then to the other tables to bid wellcome; and
so all to dinner. I sat near Proby, Baron, and Creed at the Merchant Strangers'
table; where ten good dishes to a messe, with plenty of wine of all sorts,
of which I drunk none; but it was very unpleasing that we had no napkins
nor change of trenchers, and drunk out of earthen pitchers and wooden
dishes.--[The City plate was probably melted during
the Civil War.-M.B.]--It happened that after the lords had half
dined, came the French Embassador, up to the lords' table, where he was
to have sat; but finding the table set, he would not sit down nor dine
with the Lord Mayor, who was not yet come, nor have a table to himself,
which was offered; but in a discontent went away again.
After I had dined, I and Creed rose and went up and
down the house, and up to the lady's room, and there stayed gazing upon
them. But though there were many and fine, both young and old, yet I could
not discern one handsome face there; which was very strange, nor did I
find the lady that young Dawes married so pretty as I took her for, I
having here an opportunity of looking much upon her very near. I expected
musique, but there was none but only trumpets and drums, which displeased
me. The dinner, it seems, is made by the Mayor and two Sheriffs for the
time being, the Lord Mayor paying one half, and they the other. And the
whole, Proby says, is reckoned to come to about 7 or L800 at most. Being
wearied with looking upon a company of ugly women, Creed and I went away,
and took coach and through Cheapside, and there saw the pageants, which
were very silly, and thence to the Temple, where meeting Greatorex, he
and we to Hercules Pillars, there to show me the manner of his going about
of draining of fenns, which I desired much to know, but it did not appear
very satisfactory to me, as he discoursed it, and I doubt he will faile
in it. Thence I by coach home, and there found my wife come home, and
by and by came my brother Tom, with whom I was very angry for not sending
me a bill with my things, so as that I think never to have more work done
by him if ever he serves me so again, and so I told him. The consideration
of laying out L32 12s. this very month in his very work troubles me also,
and one thing more, that is to say, that Will having been at home all
the day, I doubt is the occasion that Jane has spoken to her mistress
tonight that she sees she cannot please us and will look out to provide
herself elsewhere, which do trouble both of us, and we wonder also at
her, but yet when the rogue is gone I do not fear but the wench will do
well. To the office a little, to set down my Journall, and so home late
to supper and to bed. The Queen mends apace, they say; but yet talks idle
still.
30th. Lay long in bed with
my wife, and then up and a while at my office, and so to the Change, and
so [home] again, and there I found my wife in a great passion with her
mayds. I upstairs to set some things in order in our chamber and wardrobe,
and so to dinner upon a good dish of stewed beef, then up again about
my business. Then by coach with my wife to the New Exchange, and there
bought and paid for several things, and then back, calling at my periwigg-makers,
and there showed my wife the periwigg made for me, and she likes it very
well, and so to my brother's, and to buy a pair of boddice for her, and
so home, and to my office late, and then home to my wife, purposing to
go on to a new lesson in arithmetique with her. So to supper and to bed.
The Queen mends apace, but her head still light. My mind very heavy thinking
of my great layings out lately, and what they must still be for clothes,
but I hope it is in order to getting of something the more by it, for
I perceive how I have hitherto suffered for lack of going as becomes my
place. After a little discourse with my wife upon arithmetique, to bed.
31st. Up and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, and at noon home to dinner, where Creed
came and dined with me, and after dinner he and I upstairs, and I showed
him my velvet cloake and other things of clothes, that I have lately bought,
which he likes very well, and I took his opinion as to some things of
clothes, which I purpose to wear, being resolved to go a little handsomer
than I have hitherto. Thence to the office; where busy till night, and
then to prepare my monthly account, about which I staid till 10 or 11
o'clock at night, and to my great sorrow find myself L43 worse than I
was the last month, which was then L760, and now it is but L717. But it
hath chiefly arisen from my layings-out in clothes for myself and wife;
viz., for her about L12, and for myself L55, or thereabouts; having made
myself a velvet cloake, two new cloth suits, black, plain both; a new
shagg [Shag was a stuff similar to plush. In 1703
a youth who was missing is described in an advertisement as wearing "red
shag breeches, striped with black stripes." (Planche's "Cyclopxdia
of Costume ").] gowne, trimmed with gold buttons and twist,
with a new hat, and, silk tops for my legs, and many other things, being
resolved henceforward to go like myself. And also two perriwiggs, one
whereof costs me L3, and the other 40s.--I have worn neither yet, but
will begin next week, God willing. So that I hope I shall not need now
to lay out more money a great while, I having laid out in clothes for
myself and wife, and for her closett and other things without, these two
months, this and the last, besides household expenses of victuals, &c.,
above L110. But I hope I shall with more comfort labour to get more, and
with better successe than when, for want of clothes, I was forced to sneake
like a beggar. Having done this I went home, and after supper to bed,
my mind being eased in knowing my condition, though troubled to think
that I have been forced to spend so much.
Thus I end this month worth L717, or thereabouts, with
a good deal of good goods more than I had, and a great deal of new and
good clothes. My greatest trouble and my wife's is our family, mighty
out of order by this fellow Will's corrupting the mayds by his idle talke
and carriage, which we are going to remove by hastening him out of the
house, which his uncle Blackburne is upon doing, and I am to give him
L20 per annum toward his maintenance. The Queene continues lightheaded,
but in hopes to recover. The plague is much in Amsterdam, and we in fears
of it here, which God defend.[Defend is used in the
sense of forbid. It is a Gallicism from the French "defendre."]
The Turke goes on mightily in the Emperor's dominions, and the Princes
cannot agree among themselves how to go against him. Myself in pretty
good health now, after being ill this month for a week together, but cannot
yet come to . . . . well, being so costive, but for this month almost
I have not had a good natural stool, but to this hour am forced to take
physic every night, which brings me neither but one stool, and that in
the morning as soon as I am up, all the rest of the day very costive.
My father has been very ill in the country, but I hope better again now.
I am lately come to a conclusion with Tom Trice to pay him L100, which
is a great deale of money, but I hope it will save a great deale more.
But thus everything lessens, which I have and am like to have, and therefore
I must look about me to get something more than just my salary, or else
I may resolve to live well and die a beggar.
November
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