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April
1st. Up and to my office, where busy till noon, and then to the
'Change, where I found all the merchants concerned with the presenting
their complaints to the Committee of Parliament appointed to receive them
this afternoon against the Dutch. So home to dinner, and thence by coach,
setting my wife down at the New Exchange, I to White Hall; and coming
too soon for the Tangier Committee walked to Mr. Blagrave for a song.
I left long ago there, and here I spoke with his kinswoman, he not being
within, but did not hear her sing, being not enough acquainted with her,
but would be glad to have her, to come and be at my house a week now and
then. Back to White Hall, and in the Gallery met the Duke of Yorke (I
also saw the Queene going to the Parke, and her Mayds of Honour: she herself
looks ill, and methinks Mrs. Stewart is grown fatter, and not so fair
as she was); and he called me to him, and discoursed a good while with
me; and after he was gone, twice or thrice staid and called me again to
him, the whole length of the house: and at last talked of the Dutch; and
I perceive do much wish that the Parliament will find reason to fall out
with them.
He gone, I by and by found that the Committee
of Tangier met at the Duke of Albemarle's, and so I have lost my labour.
So with Creed to the 'Change, and there took up my wife and left him,
and we two home, and I to walk in the garden with W. Howe, whom we took
up, he having been to see us, he tells me how Creed has been questioned
before the Council about a letter that has been met with, wherein he is
mentioned by some fanatiques as a serviceable friend to them, but he says
he acquitted himself well in it, but, however, something sticks against
him, he says, with my Lord, at which I am not very sorry, for I believe
he is a false fellow. I walked with him to Paul's, he telling me how my
Lord is little at home, minds his carding and little else, takes little
notice of any body; but that he do not think he is displeased, as I fear,
with me, but is strange to all, which makes me the less troubled. So walked
back home, and late at the office. So home and to bed. This day Mrs. Turner
did lend me, as a rarity, a manuscript of one Mr. Wells, writ long ago,
teaching the method of building a ship, which pleases me mightily. I was
at it to-night, but durst not stay long at it, I being come to have a
great pain and water in my eyes after candle-light.
2nd. Up and to my office,
and afterwards sat, where great contest with Sir W. Batten and Mr. Wood,
and that doating fool Sir J. Minnes, that says whatever Sir W. Batten
says, though never minding whether to the King's profit or not. At noon
to the Coffee-house, where excellent discourse with Sir W. Petty, who
proposed it as a thing that is truly questionable, whether there really
be any difference between waking and dreaming, that it is hard not only
to tell how we know when we do a thing really or in a dream, but also
to know what the difference [is] between one and the other. Thence to
the 'Change, but having at this discourse long afterwards with Sir Thomas
Chamberlin, who tells me what I heard from others, that the complaints
of most Companies were yesterday presented to the Committee of Parliament
against the Dutch, excepting that of the East India, which he tells me
was because they would not be said to be the first and only cause of a
warr with Holland, and that it is very probable, as well as most necessary,
that we fall out with that people. I went to the 'Change, and there found
most people gone, and so home to dinner, and thence to Sir W. Warren's,
and with him past the whole afternoon, first looking over two ships' of
Captain Taylor's and Phin. Pett's now in building, and am resolved to
learn something of the art, for I find it is not hard and very usefull,
and thence to Woolwich, and after seeing Mr. Falconer, who is very ill,
I to the yard, and there heard Mr. Pett tell me several things of Sir
W. Batten's ill managements, and so with Sir W. Warren walked to Greenwich,
having good discourse, and thence by water, it being now moonshine and
9 or 10 o'clock at night, and landed at Wapping, and by him and his man
safely brought to my door, and so he home, having spent the day with him
very well. So home and eat something, and then to my office a while, and
so home to prayers and to bed.
3d. Being weary last night
lay long, and called up by W. Joyce. So I rose, and his business was to
ask advice of me, he being summonsed to the House of Lords to-morrow,
for endeavouring to arrest my Lady Peters [Elizabeth,
daughter of John Savage, second Earl Rivers, and first wife to William,
fourth Lord Petre, who was, in 1678, impeached by the Commons of high
treason, and died under confinement in the Tower, January 5th, 1683, s.
p.--B.] for a debt. I did give him advice, and will assist him.
He staid all the morning, but would not dine with me. So to my office
and did business. At noon home to dinner, and being set with my wife in
the kitchen my father comes and sat down there and dined with us. After
dinner gives me an account of what he had done in his business of his
house and goods, which is almost finished, and he the next week expects
to be going down to Brampton again, which I am glad of because I fear
the children of my Lord that are there for fear of any discontent. He
being gone I to my office, and there very busy setting papers in order
till late at night, only in the afternoon my wife sent for me home, to
see her new laced gowne, that is her gown that is new laced; and indeed
it becomes her very nobly, and is well made. I am much pleased with it.
At night to supper, prayers, and to bed.
4th. Up, and walked to
my Lord Sandwich's; and there spoke with him about W. Joyce, who told
me he would do what was fit in so tender a point. I can yet discern a
coldness in him to admit me to any discourse with him. Thence to Westminster,
to the Painted Chamber, and there met the two Joyces. Will in a very melancholy
taking. After a little discourse I to the Lords' House before they sat;
and stood within it a good while, while the Duke of York came to me and
spoke to me a good while about the new ship' at Woolwich. Afterwards I
spoke with my Lord Barkeley and my Lord Peterborough about it. And so
staid without a good while, and saw my Lady Peters, an impudent jade,
soliciting all the Lords on her behalf. And at last W. Joyce was called
in; and by the consequences, and what my Lord Peterborough told me, I
find that he did speak all he said to his disadvantage, and so was committed
to the Black Rod: which is very hard, he doing what he did by the advice
of my Lord Peters' own steward. But the Sergeant of the Black Rod did
direct one of his messengers to take him in custody, and so he was peaceably
conducted to the Swan with two Necks, in Tuttle Street, to a handsome
dining-room; and there was most civilly used, my uncle Fenner, and his
brother Anthony, and some other friends being with him. But who would
have thought that the fellow that I should have sworn could have spoken
before all the world should in this be so daunted, as not to know what
he said, and now to cry like a child. I protest, it is very strange to
observe. I left them providing for his stay there to-night and getting
a petition against tomorrow, and so away to Westminster Hall, and meeting
Mr. Coventry, he took me to his chamber, with Sir William Hickeman, a
member of their House, and a very civill gentleman. Here we dined very
plentifully, and thence to White Hall to the Duke's, where we all met,
and after some discourse of the condition of the Fleete, in order to a
Dutch warr, for that, I perceive, the Duke hath a mind it should come
to, we away to the office, where we sat, and I took care to rise betimes,
and so by water to Halfway House, talking all the way good discourse with
Mr. Wayth, and there found my wife, who was gone with her mayd Besse to
have a walk. But, Lord! how my jealous mind did make me suspect that she
might have some appointment to meet somebody. But I found the poor souls
coming away thence, so I took them back, and eat and drank, and then home,
and after at the office a while, I home to supper and to bed. It was a
sad sight, me thought, to-day to see my Lord Peters coming out of the
House fall out with his lady (from whom he is parted) about this business;
saying that she disgraced him. But she hath been a handsome woman, and
is, it seems, not only a lewd woman, but very high-spirited.
5th. Up very betimes, and
walked to my cozen Anthony Joyce's, and thence with him to his brother
Will, in Tuttle Street, where I find him pretty cheery over [what] he
was yesterday (like a coxcomb), his wife being come to him, and having
had his boy with him last night. Here I staid an hour or two and wrote
over a fresh petition, that which was drawn by their solicitor not pleasing
me, and thence to the Painted chamber, and by and by away by coach to
my Lord Peterborough's, and there delivered the petition into his hand,
which he promised most readily to deliver to the House today. Thence back,
and there spoke to several Lords, and so did his solicitor (one that W.
Joyce hath promised L5 to if he be released). Lord Peterborough presented
a petition to the House from W. Joyce: and a great dispute, we hear, there
was in the House for and against it. At last it was carried that he should
be bayled till the House meets again after Easter, he giving bond for
his appearance. This was not so good as we hoped, but as good as we could
well expect. Anon comes the King and passed the Bill for repealing the
Triennial Act, and another about Writs of Errour. I crowded in and heard
the King's speech to them; but he speaks the worst that ever I heard man
in my life worse than if he read it all, and he had it in writing in his
hand. Thence, after the House was up, and I inquired what the order of
the House was, I to W. Joyce,' with his brother, and told them all. Here
was Kate come, and is a comely fat woman.
I would not stay dinner, thinking to go home to dinner,
and did go by water as far as the bridge, but thinking that they would
take it kindly my being there, to be bayled for him if there was need,
I returned, but finding them gone out to look after it, only Will and
his wife and sister left and some friends that came to visit him, I to
Westminster Hall, and by and by by agreement to Mrs. Lane's lodging, whither
I sent for a lobster, and with Mr. Swayne and his wife eat it, and argued
before them mightily for Hawly, but all would not do, although I made
her angry by calling her old, and making her know what herself is. Her
body was out of temper for any dalliance, and so after staying there 3
or 4 hours, but yet taking care to have my oath safe of not staying a
quarter of an hour together with her, I went to W. Joyce, where I find
the order come, and bayle (his father and brother) given; and he paying
his fees, which come to above L2, besides L5 he is to give one man, and
his charges of eating and drinking here, and 10s. a-day as many days as
he stands under bayle: which, I hope, will teach him hereafter to hold
his tongue better than he used to do. Thence with Anth. Joyce's wife alone
home talking of Will's folly, and having set her down, home myself, where
I find my wife dressed as if she had been abroad, but I think she was
not, but she answering me some way that I did not like I pulled her by
the nose, indeed to offend her, though afterwards to appease her I denied
it, but only it was done in haste. The poor wretch took it mighty ill,
and I believe besides wringing her nose she did feel pain, and so cried
a great while, but by and by I made her friends, and so after supper to
my office a while, and then home to bed. This day great numbers of merchants
came to a Grand Committee of the House to bring in their claims against
the Dutch. I pray God guide the issue to our good!
6th. Up and to my office,
whither by and by came John Noble, my father's old servant, to speake
with me. I smelling the business, took him home; and there, all alone,
he told me how he had been serviceable to my brother Tom, in the business
of his getting his servant, an ugly jade, Margaret, with child. She was
brought to bed in St. Sepulchre's parish of two children; one is dead,
the other is alive; her name Elizabeth, and goes by the name of Taylor,
daughter to John Taylor. It seems Tom did a great while trust one Crawly
with the business, who daily got money of him; and at last, finding himself
abused, he broke the matter to J. Noble, upon a vowe of secresy. Tom's
first plott was to go on the other side the water and give a beggar woman
something to take the child. They did once go, but did nothing, J. Noble
saying that seven years hence the mother might come to demand the child
and force him to produce it, or to be suspected of murder. Then I think
it was that they consulted, and got one Cave, a poor pensioner in St.
Bride's parish to take it, giving him L5, he thereby promising to keepe
it for ever without more charge to them. The parish hereupon indite the
man Cave for bringing this child upon the parish, and by Sir Richard Browne
he is sent to the Counter. Cave thence writes to Tom to get him out. Tom
answers him in a letter of his owne hand, which J. Noble shewed me, but
not signed by him, wherein he speaks of freeing him and getting security
for him, but nothing as to the business of the child, or anything like
it: so that forasmuch as I could guess, there is nothing therein to my
brother's prejudice as to the main point, and therefore I did not labour
to tear or take away the paper. Cave being released, demands L5 more to
secure my brother for ever against the child; and he was forced to give
it him and took bond of Cave in L100, made at a scrivener's, one Hudson,
I think, in the Old Bayly, to secure John Taylor, and his assigns, &c.
(in consideration of L10 paid him), from all trouble, or charge of meat,
drink, clothes, and breeding of Elizabeth Taylor; and it seems, in the
doing of it, J. Noble was looked upon as the assignee of this John Taylor.
Noble says that he furnished Tom with this money, and is also bound by
another bond to pay him 20s. more this next Easter Monday; but nothing
for either sum appears under Tom's hand. I told him how I am like to lose
a great sum by his death, and would not pay any more myself, but I would
speake to my father about it against the afternoon.
So away he went, and I all the morning in my office
busy, and at noon home to dinner mightily oppressed with wind, and after
dinner took coach and to Paternoster Row, and there bought a pretty silke
for a petticoate for my wife, and thence set her down at the New Exchange,
and I leaving the coat at Unthanke's, went to White Hall, but the Councell
meeting at Worcester House I went thither, and there delivered to the
Duke of Albemarle a paper touching some Tangier business, and thence to
the 'Change for my wife, and walked to my father's, who was packing up
some things for the country. I took him up and told him this business
of Tom, at which the poor wretch was much troubled, and desired me that
I would speak with J. Noble, and do what I could and thought fit in it
without concerning him in it. So I went to Noble, and saw the bond that
Cave did give and also Tom's letter that I mentioned above, and upon the
whole I think some shame may come, but that it will be hard from any thing
I see there to prove the child to be his. Thence to my father and told
what I had done, and how I had quieted Noble by telling him that, though
we are resolved to part with no more money out of our own purses, yet
if he can make it appear a true debt that it may be justifiable for us
to pay it, we will do our part to get it paid, and said that I would have
it paid before my own debt. So my father and I both a little satisfied,
though vexed to think what a rogue my brother was in all respects. I took
my wife by coach home, and to my office, where late with Sir W. Warren,
and so home to supper and to bed. I heard to-day that the Dutch have begun
with us by granting letters of marke against us; but I believe it not.
7th. Up and to my office,
where busy, and by and by comes Sir W. Warren and old Mr. Bond in order
to the resolving me some questions about masts and their proportions,
but he could say little to me to my satisfaction, and so I held him not
long but parted. So to my office busy till noon and then to the 'Change,
where high talke of the Dutch's protest against our Royall Company in
Guinny, and their granting letters of marke against us there, and every
body expects a warr, but I hope it will not yet be so, nor that this is
true. Thence to dinner, where my wife got me a pleasant French fricassee
of veal for dinner, and thence to the office, where vexed to see how Sir
W. Batten ordered things this afternoon (vide my office book, for about
this time I have begun, my notions and informations encreasing now greatly
every day, to enter all occurrences extraordinary in my office in a book
by themselves), and so in the evening after long discourse and eased my
mind by discourse with Sir W. Warren, I to my business late, and so home
to supper and to bed.
8th. Up betimes and to
the office, and anon, it begunn to be fair after a great shower this morning,
Sir W. Batten and I by water (calling his son Castle by the way, between
whom and I no notice at all of his letter the other day to me) to Deptford,
and after a turn in the yard, I went with him to the Almes'-house to see
the new building which he, with some ambition, is building of there, during
his being Master of Trinity House; and a good worke it is, but to see
how simply he answered somebody concerning setting up the arms of the
corporation upon the door, that and any thing else he did not deny it,
but said he would leave that to the master that comes after him. There
I left him and to the King's yard again, and there made good inquiry into
the business of the poop lanterns, wherein I found occasion to correct
myself mightily for what I have done in the contract with the platerer,
and am resolved, though I know not how, to make them to alter it, though
they signed it last night, and so I took Stane [Among
the State Papers is a petition of Thomas Staine to the Navy Commissioners
"for employment as plateworker in one or two dockyards. Has incurred
ill-will by discovering abuses in the great rates given by the king for
several things in the said trade. Begs the appointment, whereby it will
be seen who does the work best and cheapest, otherwise he and all others
will be discouraged from discovering abuses in future, with order thereon
for a share of the work to be given to him" ("Calendar,"
Domestic, 1663-64, p. 395)] home with me by boat and discoursed
it, and he will come to reason when I can make him to understand it. No
sooner landed but it fell a mighty storm of rain and hail, so I put into
a cane shop and bought one to walk with, cost me 4s. 6d., all of one joint.
So home to dinner, and had an excellent Good Friday dinner of peas porridge
and apple pye. So to the office all the afternoon preparing a new book
for my contracts, and this afternoon come home the office globes done
to my great content. In the evening a little to visit Sir W. Pen, who
hath a feeling this day or two of his old pain. Then to walk in the garden
with my wife, and so to my office a while, and then home to the only Lenten
supper I have had of wiggs--[Buns or teacakes.]-- and ale, and so to bed.
This morning betimes came to my office to me boatswain Smith of Woolwich,
telling me a notable piece of knavery of the officers of the yard and
Mr. Gold in behalf of a contract made for some old ropes by Mr. Wood,
and I believe I shall find Sir W. Batten of the plot (vide my office daybook).
[These note-books referred to in the Diary are not
known to exist now.]
9th. The last night, whether
it was from cold I got to-day upon the water I know not, or whether it
was from my mind being over concerned with Stanes's business of the platery
of the navy, for my minds was mighty troubled with the business all night
long, I did wake about one o'clock in the morning, a thing I most rarely
do, and pissed a little with great pain, continued sleepy, but in a high
fever all night, fiery hot, and in some pain. Towards morning I slept
a little and waking found myself better, but . . . . --[After
what was just allowed print above, what could have required censorship
here? D.W.]--with some pain, and rose I confess with my clothes
sweating, and it was somewhat cold too, which I believe might do me more
hurt, for I continued cold and apt to shake all the morning, but that
some trouble with Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten kept me warm. At noon
home to dinner upon tripes, and so though not well abroad with my wife
by coach to her Tailor's and the New Exchange, and thence to my father's
and spoke one word with him, and thence home, where I found myself sick
in my stomach and vomited, which I do not use to do. Then I drank a glass
or two of Hypocras, and to the office to dispatch some business, necessary,
and so home and to bed, and by the help of Mithrydate--[An
opiate?? D.W.]--slept very well.
10th (Lord's day). Lay
long in bed, and then up and my wife dressed herself, it being Easter
day, but I not being so well as to go out, she, though much against her
will, staid at home with me; for she had put on her new best gowns, which
indeed is very fine now with the lace; and this morning her taylor brought
home her other new laced silks gowns with a smaller lace, and new petticoats,
I bought the other day both very pretty. We spent the day in pleasant
talks and company one with another, reading in Dr. Fuller's book what
he says of the family of the Cliffords and Kingsmills, and at night being
myself better than I was by taking a glyster,--[an
enema.]--which did carry away a great deal of wind, I after supper
at night went to bed and slept well.
11th. Lay long talking
with my wife, then up and to my chamber preparing papers against my father
comes to lie here for discourse about country business. Dined well with
my wife at home, being myself not yet thorough well, making water with
some pain, but better than I was, and all my fear of an ague gone away.
In the afternoon my father came to see us, and he gone I up to my morning's
work again, and so in the evening a little to the office and to see Sir
W. Batten, who is ill again, and so home to supper and to bed.
12th. Up, and after my
wife had dressed herself very fine in her new laced gown, and very handsome
indeed, W. Howe also coming to see us, I carried her by coach to my uncle
Wight's and set her down there, and W. Howe and I to the Coffee-house,
where we sat talking about getting of him some place under my Lord of
advantage if he should go to sea, and I would be glad to get him secretary
and to out Creed if I can, for he is a crafty and false rogue. Thence
a little to the 'Change, and thence took him to my uncle Wight's, where
dined my father, poor melancholy man, that used to be as full of life
as anybody, and also my aunt's brother, Mr. Sutton, a merchant in Flanders,
a very sober, fine man, and Mr. Cole and his lady; but, Lord! how I used
to adore that man's talke, and now methinks he is but an ordinary man,
his son a pretty boy indeed, but his nose unhappily awry. Other good company
and an indifferent, and but indifferent dinner for so much company, and
after dinner got a coach, very dear, it being Easter time and very foul
weather, to my Lord's, and there visited my Lady, and leaving my wife
there I and W. Howe to Mr. Pagett's, and there heard some musique not
very good, but only one Dr. Walgrave, an Englishman bred at Rome, who
plays the best upon the lute that I ever heard man. Here I also met Mr.
Hill [Thomas Hill, a man whose taste for music caused
him to be a very acceptable companion to Pepys. In January, 1664-65, he
became assistant to the secretary of the Prize Office.] the little
merchant, and after all was done we sung. I did well enough a Psalm or
two of Lawes; he I perceive has good skill and sings well, and a friend
of his sings a good base. Thence late walked with them two as far as my
Lord's, thinking to take up my wife and carry them home, but there being
no coach to be got away they went, and I staid a great while, it being
very late, about 10 o'clock, before a coach could be got. I found my Lord
and ladies and my wife at supper. My Lord seems very kind. But I am apt
to think still the worst, and that it is only in show, my wife and Lady
being there. So home, and find my father come to lie at our house; and
so supped, and saw him, poor man, to bed, my heart never being fuller
of love to him, nor admiration of his prudence and pains heretofore in
the world than now, to see how Tom hath carried himself in his trade;
and how the poor man hath his thoughts going to provide for his younger
children and my mother. But I hope they shall never want. So myself and
wife to bed.
13th. Though late, past
12, before we went to bed, yet I heard my poor father up, and so I rang
up my people, and I rose and got something to eat and drink for him, and
so abroad, it being a mighty foul day, by coach, setting my father down
in Fleet Streete and I to St. James's, where I found Mr. Coventry (the
Duke being now come thither for the summer) with a goldsmith, sorting
out his old plate to change for new; but, Lord! what a deale he hath!
I staid and had two or three hours discourse with him, talking about the
disorders of our office, and I largely to tell him how things are carried
by Sir W. Batten and Sir J. Minnes to my great grief. He seems much concerned
also, and for all the King's matters that are done after the same rate
every where else, and even the Duke's household matters too, generally
with corruption, but most indeed with neglect and indifferency. I spoke
very loud and clear to him my thoughts of Sir J. Minnes and the other,
and trust him with the using of them. Then to talk of our business with
the Dutch; he tells me fully that he believes it will not come to a warr;
for first, he showed me a letter from Sir George Downing, his own hand,
where he assures him that the Dutch themselves do not desire, but above
all things fear it, and that they neither have given letters of marke
against our shipps in Guinny, nor do De Ruyter [Michael
De Ruyter, the Dutch admiral, 1607-1676] stay at home with his
fleet with an eye to any such thing, but for want of a wind, and is now
come out and is going to the Streights. He tells me also that the most
he expects is that upon the merchants' complaints, the Parliament will
represent them to the King, desiring his securing of his subjects against
them, and though perhaps they may not directly see fit, yet even this
will be enough to let the Dutch know that the Parliament do not oppose
the King, and by that means take away their hopes, which was that the
King of England could not get money or do anything towards a warr with
them, and so thought themselves free from making any restitution, which
by this they will be deceived in. He tells me also that the Dutch states
are in no good condition themselves, differing one with another, and that
for certain none but the states of Holland and Zealand will contribute
towards a warr, the others reckoning themselves, being inland, not concerned
in the profits of warr or peace. But it is pretty to see what he says,
that those here that are forward for a warr at Court, they are reported
in the world to be only designers of getting money into the King's hands,
they that elsewhere are for it have a design to trouble the kingdom and
to give the Fanatiques an opportunity of doing hurt, and lastly those
that are against it (as he himself for one is very cold therein) are said
to be bribed by the Dutch. After all this discourse he carried me in his
coach, it raining still, to, Charing Cross, and there put me into another,
and I calling my father and brother carried them to my house to dinner,
my wife keeping bed all day . . . . . All the afternoon at the office
with W. Boddam looking over his particulars about the Chest of Chatham,
which shows enough what a knave Commissioner Pett hath been all along,
and how Sir W. Batten hath gone on in getting good allowance to himself
and others out of the poors' money. Time will show all. So in the evening
to see Sir W. Pen, and then home to my father to keep him company, he
being to go out of town, and up late with him and my brother John till
past 12 at night to make up papers of Tom's accounts fit to leave with
my cozen Scott. At last we did make an end of them, and so after supper
all to bed.
14th. Up betimes, and after
my father's eating something, I walked out with him as far as Milk Streete,
he turning down to Cripplegate to take coach; and at the end of the streete
I took leave, being much afeard I shall not see him here any more, he
do decay so much every day, and so I walked on, there being never a coach
to be had till I came to Charing Cross, and there Col. Froud took me up
and carried me to St. James's, where with Mr. Coventry and Povy, &c.,
about my Lord Peterborough's accounts, but, Lord! to see still what a
puppy that Povy is with all his show is very strange. Thence to Whitehall
and W. C[oventry] and I and Sir W. Rider resolved upon a day to meet and
make an end of all the. business. Thence walked with Creed to the Coffee-house
in Covent Garden, where no company, but he told me many fine experiments
at Gresham College; and some demonstration that the heat and cold of the
weather do rarify and condense the very body of glasse, as in a bolt head'
with cold water in it put into hot water, shall first by rarifying the
glasse make the water sink, and then when the heat comes to the water
makes that rise again, and then put into cold water makes the water by
condensing the glass to rise, and then when the cold comes to the water
makes it sink, which is very pretty and true, he saw it tried. Thence
by coach home, and dined above with my wife by her bedside, she keeping
her bed . . . . . So to the office, where a great conflict with Wood and
Castle about their New England masts? So in the evening my mind a little
vexed, but yet without reason, for I shall prevail, I hope, for the King's
profit, and so home to supper and to bed.
15th. Up and all the morning
with Captain Taylor at my house talking about things of the Navy, and
among other things I showed him my letters to Mr. Coventry, wherein he
acknowledges that nobody to this day did ever understand so much as I
have done, and I believe him, for I perceive he did very much listen to
every article as things new to him, and is contented to abide by my opinion
therein in his great contest with us about his and Mr. Wood's masts. At
noon to the 'Change, where I met with Mr. Hill, the little merchant, with
whom, I perceive, I shall contract a musical acquaintance; but I will
make it as little troublesome as I can. Home and dined, and then with
my wife by coach to the Duke's house, and there saw "The German Princess"
acted, by the woman herself; but never was any thing so well done in earnest,
worse performed in jest upon the stage; and indeed the whole play, abating
the drollery of him that acts her husband, is very simple, unless here
and there a witty sprinkle or two. We met and sat by Dr. Clerke. Thence
homewards, calling at Madam Turner's, and thence set my wife down at my
aunt Wight's and I to my office till late, and then at to at night fetched
her home, and so again to my office a little, and then to supper and to
bed.
16th. Up and to the office,
where all the morning upon the dispute of Mr. Wood's masts, and at noon
with Mr. Coventry to the African House; and after a good and pleasant
dinner, up with him, Sir W. Rider, the simple Povy, of all the most ridiculous
foole that ever I knew to attend to business, and Creed and Vernatty,
about my Lord Peterborough's accounts; but the more we look into them,
the more we see of them that makes dispute, which made us break off, and
so I home, and there found my wife and Besse gone over the water to Half-way
house, and after them, thinking to have gone to Woolwich, but it was too
late, so eat a cake and home, and thence by coach to have spoke with Tom
Trice about a letter I met with this afternoon from my cozen Scott, wherein
he seems to deny proceeding as my father's attorney in administering for
him in my brother Tom's estate, but I find him gone out of town, and so
returned vexed home and to the office, where late writing a letter to
him, and so home and to bed.
17th (Lord's day). Up,
and I put on my best cloth black suit and my velvet cloake, and with my
wife in her best laced suit to church, where we have not been these nine
or ten weeks. The truth is, my jealousy hath hindered it, for fear she
should see Pembleton. He was here to-day, but I think sat so as he could
not see her, which did please me, God help me! mightily, though I know
well enough that in reason this is nothing but my ridiculous folly. Home
to dinner, and in the afternoon, after long consulting whether to go to
Woolwich or no to see Mr. Falconer, but indeed to prevent my wife going
to church, I did however go to church with her, where a young simple fellow
did preach: I slept soundly all the sermon, and thence to Sir W. Pen's,
my wife and I, there she talking with him and his daughter, and thence
with my wife walked to my uncle Wight's and there supped, where very merry,
but I vexed to see what charges the vanity of my aunt puts her husband
to among her friends and nothing at all among ours. Home and to bed. Our
parson, Mr. Mills, his owne mistake in reading of the service was very
remarkable, that instead of saying, "We beseech thee to preserve
to our use the kindly fruits of the earth," he cries, "Preserve
to our use our gracious Queen Katherine."
18th. Up and by coach to
Westminster, and there solicited W. Joyce's business again; and did speake
to the Duke of Yorke about it, who did understand it very well. I afterwards
did without the House fall in company with my Lady Peters, and endeavoured
to mollify her; but she told me she would not, to redeem her from hell,
do any thing to release him; but would be revenged while she lived, if
she lived the age of Methusalem. I made many friends, and so did others.
At last it was ordered by the Lords that it should be referred to the
Committee of Privileges to consider. So I, after discoursing with the
Joyces, away by coach to the 'Change; and there, among other things, do
hear that a Jew hath put in a policy of four per cent. to any man, to
insure him against a Dutch warr for four months; I could find in my heart
to take him at this offer, but however will advise first, and to that
end took coach to St. James's, but Mr. Coventry was gone forth, and I
thence to Westminster Hall, where Mrs. Lane was gone forth, and so I missed
of my intent to be with her this afternoon, and therefore meeting Mr.
Blagrave, went home with him, and there he and his kinswoman sang, but
I was not pleased with it, they singing methought very ill, or else I
am grown worse to please than heretofore. Thence to the Hall again, and
after meeting with several persons, and talking there, I to Mrs. Hunt's
(where I knew my wife and my aunt Wight were about business), and they
being gone to walk in the parke I went after them with Mrs. Hunt, who
staid at home for me, and finding them did by coach, which I had agreed
to wait for me, go with them all and Mrs. Hunt and a kinswoman of theirs,
Mrs. Steward, to Hide Parke, where I have not been since last year; where
I saw the King with his periwigg, but not altered at all; and my Lady
Castlemayne in a coach by herself, in yellow satin and a pinner on; and
many brave persons. And myself being in a hackney and full of people,
was ashamed to be seen by the world, many of them knowing me. Thence in
the evening home, setting my aunt at home, and thence we sent for a joynt
of meat to supper, and thence to the office at 11 o'clock at night, and
so home to bed.
19th. Up and to St. James's,
where long with Mr. Coventry, Povy, &c., in their Tangier accounts,
but such the folly of that coxcomb Povy that we could do little in it,
and so parted for the time, and I to walk with Creed and Vernaty in the
Physique Garden in St. James's Parke; where I first saw orange-trees,
and other fine trees. So to Westminster Hall, and thence by water to the
Temple, and so walked to the 'Change, and there find the 'Change full
of news from Guinny, some say the Dutch have sunk our ships and taken
our fort, and others say we have done the same to them. But I find by
our merchants that something is done, but is yet a secret among them.
So home to dinner, and then to the office, and at night with Captain Tayler
consulting how to get a little money by letting him the Elias to fetch
masts from New England. So home to supper and to bed.
20th. Up and by coach to
Westminster, and there solicited W. Joyce's business all the morning,
and meeting in the Hall with Mr. Coventry, he told me how the Committee
for Trade have received now all the complaints of the merchants against
the Dutch, and were resolved to report very highly the wrongs they have
done us (when, God knows! it is only our owne negligence and laziness
that hath done us the wrong) and this to be made to the House to-morrow.
I went also out of the Hall with Mrs. Lane to the Swan at Mrs. Herbert's
in the Palace Yard to try a couple of bands, and did (though I had a mind
to be playing the fool with her) purposely stay but a little while, and
kept the door open, and called the master and mistress of the house one
after another to drink and talk with me, and showed them both my old and
new bands. So that as I did nothing so they are able to bear witness that
I had no opportunity there to do anything. Thence by coach with Sir W.
Pen home, calling at the Temple for Lawes's Psalms, which I did not so
much (by being against my oath) buy as only lay down money till others
be bound better for me, and by that time I hope to get money of the Treasurer
of the Navy by bills, which, according to my oath, shall make me able
to do it. At home dined, and all the afternoon at a Committee of the Chest,
and at night comes my aunt and uncle Wight and Nan Ferrers and supped
merrily with me, my uncle coming in an hour after them almost foxed. Great
pleasure by discourse with them, and so, they gone, late to bed.
21st. Up pretty betimes
and to my office, and thither came by and by Mr. Vernaty and staid two
hours with me, but Mr. Gauden did not come, and so he went away to meet
again anon. Then comes Mr. Creed, and, after some discourse, he and I
and my wife by coach to Westminster (leaving her at Unthanke's, her tailor's)
Hall, and there at the Lords' House heard that it is ordered, that, upon
submission upon the knee both to the House and my Lady Peters, W. Joyce
shall be released. I forthwith made him submit, and aske pardon upon his
knees; which he did before several Lords. But my Lady would not hear it;
but swore she would post the Lords, that the world might know what pitifull
Lords the King hath; and that revenge was sweeter to her than milk; and
that she would never be satisfied unless he stood in a pillory, and demand
pardon there. But I perceive the Lords are ashamed of her, and so I away
calling with my wife at a place or two to inquire after a couple of mayds
recommended to us, but we found both of them bad. So set my wife at my
uncle Wight's and I home, and presently to the 'Change, where I did some
business, and thence to my uncle's and there dined very well, and so to
the office, we sat all the afternoon, but no sooner sat but news comes
my Lady Sandwich was come to see us, so I went out, and running up (her
friend however before me) I perceive by my dear Lady blushing that in
my dining-room she was doing something upon the pott, which I also was
ashamed of, and so fell to some discourse, but without pleasure through
very pity to my Lady. She tells me, and I find true since, that the House
this day have voted that the King be desired to demand right for the wrong
done us by the Dutch, and that they will stand by him with their lives
fortunes: which is a very high vote, and more than I expected. What the
issue will be, God knows! My Lady, my wife not being at home, did not
stay, but, poor, good woman, went away, I being mightily taken with her
dear visitt, and so to the office, where all the afternoon till late,
and so to my office, and then to supper and to bed, thinking to rise betimes
tomorrow.
22nd. Having directed it
last night, I was called up this morning before four o'clock. It was full
light enough to dress myself, and so by water against tide, it being a
little coole, to Greenwich; and thence, only that it was somewhat foggy
till the sun got to some height, walked with great pleasure to Woolwich,
in my way staying several times to listen to the nightingales. I did much
business both at the Ropeyarde and the other, and on floate I discovered
a plain cheat which in time I shall publish of Mr. Ackworth's. Thence,
having visited Mr. Falconer also, who lies still sick, but hopes to be
better, I walked to Greenwich, Mr. Deane with me. Much good discourse,
and I think him a very just man, only a little conceited, but yet very
able in his way, and so he by water also with me also to towne. I home,
and immediately dressing myself, by coach with my wife to my Lord Sandwich's,
but they having dined we would not 'light but went to Mrs. Turner's, and
there got something to eat, and thence after reading part of a good play,
Mrs. The., my wife and I, in their coach to Hide Parke, where great plenty
of gallants, and pleasant it was, only for the dust. Here I saw Mrs. Bendy,
my Lady Spillman's faire daughter that was, who continues yet very handsome.
Many others I saw with great content, and so back again to Mrs. Turner's,
and then took a coach and home. I did also carry them into St. James's
Park and shewed them the garden. To my office awhile while supper was
making ready, and so home to supper and to bed.
23rd (Coronation
day). Up, and after doing something at my office, and, it being
a holiday, no sitting likely to be, I down by water to Sir W. Warren's,
who hath been ill, and there talked long with him good discourse, especially
about Sir W. Batten's knavery and his son Castle's ill language of me
behind my back, saying that I favour my fellow traytours, but I shall
be even with him. So home and to the 'Change, where I met with Mr. Coventry,
who himself is now full of talke of a Dutch warr; for it seems the Lords
have concurred in the Commons' vote about it; and so the next week it
will be presented to the King, insomuch that he do desire we would look
about to see what stores we lack, and buy what we can. Home to dinner,
where I and my wife much troubled about my money that is in my Lord Sandwich's
hand, for fear of his going to sea and be killed; but I will get what
of it out I can. All the afternoon, not being well, at my office, and
there doing much business, my thoughts still running upon a warr and my
money. At night home to supper and to bed.
24th (Lord's day). Up,
and all the morning in my chamber setting some of my private papers in
order, for I perceive that now publique business takes up so much of my
time that I must get time a-Sundays or a-nights to look after my owne
matters. Dined and spent all the afternoon talking with my wife, at night
a little to the office, and so home to supper and to bed.
25th. Up, and with Sir
W. Pen by coach to St. James's and there up to the Duke, and after he
was ready to his closet, where most of our talke about a Dutch warr, and
discoursing of things indeed now for it. The Duke, which gives me great
good hopes, do talk of setting up a good discipline in the fleete. In
the Duke's chamber there is a bird, given him by Mr. Pierce, the surgeon,
comes from the East Indys, black the greatest part, with the finest collar
of white about the neck; but talks many things and neyes like the horse,
and other things, the best almost that ever I heard bird in my life. Thence
down with Mr. Coventry and Sir W. Rider, who was there (going along with
us from the East Indya house to-day) to discourse of my Lord Peterborough's
accounts, and then walked over the Parke, and in Mr. Cutler's coach with
him and Rider as far as the Strand, and thence I walked to my Lord Sandwich's,
where by agreement I met my wife, and there dined with the young ladies;
my Lady, being not well, kept her chamber. Much simple discourse at table
among the young ladies. After dinner walked in the garden, talking, with
Mr. Moore about my Lord's business. He told me my Lord runs in debt every
day more and more, and takes little care how to come out of it. He counted
to me how my Lord pays use now for above L9000, which is a sad thing,
especially considering the probability of his going to sea, in great danger
of his life, and his children, many of them, to provide for. Thence, the
young ladies going out to visit, I took my wife by coach out through the
city, discoursing how to spend the afternoon; and conquered, with much
ado, a desire of going to a play; but took her out at White Chapel, and
to Bednal Green; so to Hackney, where I have not been many a year, since
a little child I boarded there. Thence to Kingsland, by my nurse's house,
Goody Lawrence, where my brother Tom and I was kept when young. Then to
Newington Green, and saw the outside of Mrs. Herbert's house, where she
lived, and my Aunt Ellen with her; but, Lord! how in every point I find
myself to over-value things when a child. Thence to Islington, and so
to St. John's to the Red Bull, and there: saw the latter part of a rude
prize fought, but with good pleasure enough; and thence back to Islington,
and at the King's Head, where Pitts lived, we 'light and eat and drunk
for remembrance of the old house sake, and so through Kingsland again,
and so to Bishopsgate, and so home with great pleasure. The country mighty
pleasant, and we with great content home, and after supper to bed, only
a little troubled at the young ladies leaving my wife so to-day, and from
some passages fearing my Lady might be offended. But I hope the best.
26th. Up, and to my Lord
Sandwich's, and coming a little too early, I went and saw W. Joyce, and
by and by comes in Anthony, they both owning a great deal of kindness
received from me in their late business, and indeed I did what I could,
and yet less I could not do. It has cost the poor man above L40; besides,
he is likely to lose his debt. Thence to my Lord's, and by and by he comes
down, and with him (Creed with us) I rode in his coach to St. James's,
talking about W. Joyce's business mighty merry, and my Lady Peters, he
says, is a drunken jade, he himself having seen her drunk in the lobby
of their House. I went up with him to the Duke, where methought the Duke
did not shew him any so great fondness as he was wont; and methought my
Lord was not pleased that I should see the Duke made no more of him, not
that I know any thing of any unkindnesse, but I think verily he is not
as he was with him in his esteem. By and by the Duke went out and we with
him through the Parke, and there I left him going into White Hall, and
Creed and I walked round the Parke, a pleasant walk, observing the birds,
which is very pleasant; and so walked to the New Exchange, and there had
a most delicate dish of curds and creame, and discourse with the good
woman of the house, a discreet well-bred woman, and a place with great
delight I shall make it now and then to go thither. Thence up, and after
a turn or two in the 'Change, home to the Old Exchange by coach, where
great newes and true, I saw by written letters, of strange fires seen
at Amsterdam in the ayre, and not only there, but in other places thereabout.
The talke of a Dutch warr is not so hot, but yet I fear it will come to
it at last. So home and to the office, where we sat late. My wife gone
this afternoon to the buriall of my she-cozen Scott, a good woman; and
it is a sad consideration how the Pepys's decay, and nobody almost that
I know in a present way of encreasing them. At night late at my office,
and so home to my wife to supper and to bed.
27th. Up, and all the morning
very busy with multitude of clients, till my head began to be overloaded.
Towards noon I took coach and to the Parliament house door, and there
staid the rising of the House, and with Sir G. Carteret and Mr. Coventry
discoursed of some tarr that I have been endeavouring to buy, for the
market begins apace to rise upon us, and I would be glad first to serve
the King well, and next if I could I find myself now begin to cast how
to get a penny myself. Home by coach with Alderman Backewell in his coach,
whose opinion is that the Dutch will not give over the business without
putting us to some trouble to set out a fleete; and then, if they see
we go on well, will seek to salve up the matter. Upon the 'Change busy.
Thence home to dinner, and thence to the office till my head was ready
to burst with business, and so with my wife by coach, I sent her to my
Lady Sandwich and myself to my cozen Roger Pepys's chamber, and there
he did advise me about our Exchequer business, and also about my brother
John, he is put by my father upon interceding for him, but I will not
yet seem the least to pardon him nor can I in my heart. However, he and
I did talk how to get him a mandamus for a fellowship, which I will endeavour.
Thence to my Lady's, and in my way met Mr. Sanchy, of Cambridge, whom
I have not met a great while. He seems a simple fellow, and tells me their
master, Dr. Rainbow, is newly made Bishop of Carlisle. To my Lady's, and
she not being well did not see her, but straight home with my wife, and
late to my office, concluding in the business of Wood's masts, which I
have now done and I believe taken more pains in it than ever any Principall
officer in this world ever did in any thing to no profit to this day.
So, weary, sleepy, and hungry, home and to bed. This day the Houses attended
the King, and delivered their votes to him: upon the business of the Dutch;
and he thanks them, and promises an answer in writing.
28th. Up and close at my
office all the morning. To the 'Change busy at noon, and so home to dinner,
and then in the afternoon at the office till night, and so late home quite
tired with business, and without joy in myself otherwise than that I am
by God's grace enabled to go through it and one day, hope to have benefit
by it. So home to supper and to bed.
29th. Up betimes, and with
Sir W. Rider and Cutler to White Hall. Rider and I to St. James's, and
there with Mr. Coventry did proceed strictly upon some fooleries of Mr.
Povy's in my Lord Peterborough's accounts, which will touch him home,
and I am glad of it, for he is the most troublesome impertinent man that
ever I met with. Thence to the 'Change, and there, after some business,
home to dinner, where Luellin and Mount came to me and dined, and after
dinner my wife and I by coach to see my Lady Sandwich, where we find all
the children and my Lord removed, and the house so melancholy that I thought
my Lady had been dead, knowing that she was not well; but it seems she
hath the meazles, and I fear the small pox, poor lady. It grieves me mightily;
for it will be a sad houre to the family should she miscarry. Thence straight
home and to the office, and in the evening comes Mr. Hill the merchant
and another with him that sings well, and we sung some things, and good
musique it seemed to me, only my mind too full of business to have much
pleasure in it. But I will have more of it. They gone, and I having paid
Mr. Moxon for the work he has done for the office upon the King's globes,
I to my office, where very late busy upon Captain Tayler's bills for his
masts, which I think will never off my hand. Home to supper and to bed.
30th. Up and all the morning
at the office. At noon to the 'Change, where, after business done, Sir
W. Rider and Cutler took me to the Old James and there did give me a good
dish of mackerell, the first I have seen this year, very good, and good
discourse. After dinner we fell to business about their contract for tarr,
in which and in another business of Sir W. Rider's, canvas, wherein I
got him to contract with me, I held them to some terms against their wills,
to the King's advantage, which I believe they will take notice of to my
credit. Thence home, and by water by a gally down to Woolwich, and there
a good while with Mr. Pett upon the new ship discoursing and learning
of him. Thence with Mr. Deane to see Mr: Falconer, and there find him
in a way to be well. So to the water (after much discourse with great
content with Mr. Deane) and home late, and so to the office, wrote to,
my father among other things my continued displeasure against my brother
John, so that I will give him nothing more out of my own purse, which
will trouble the poor man, but however it is fit that I should take notice
of my brother's ill carriage to me. Then home and till 12 at night about
my month's accounts, wherein I have just kept within compass, this having
been a spending month. So my people being all abed I put myself to bed
very sleepy. All the newes now is what will become of the Dutch business,
whether warr or peace. We all seem to desire it, as thinking ourselves
to have advantages at present over them; for my part I dread it. The Parliament
promises to assist the King with lives and fortunes, and he receives it
with thanks and promises to demand satisfaction of the Dutch. My poor
Lady Sandwich is fallen sick three days since of the meazles. My Lord
Digby's business is hushed up, and nothing made of it; he is gone, and
the discourse quite ended. Never more quiet in my family all the days
of my life than now, there being only my wife and I and Besse and the
little girl Susan, the best wenches to our content that we can ever expect.
May
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