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January
1st.
Went to bed between 4 and 5 in the morning with my mind in good temper
of satisfaction and slept till about 8, that many people came to speak
with me. Among others one came with the best New Year's gift that ever
I had, namely from Mr. Deering, with a bill of exchange drawn upon himself
for the payment of L50 to Mr. Luellin. It being for my use with a letter
of compliment. I am not resolved what or how to do in this business, but
I conclude it is an extraordinary good new year's gift, though I do not
take the whole, or if I do then give some of it to Luellin. By and by
comes Captain Allen and his son Jowles and his wife, who continues pretty
still. They would have had me set my hand to a certificate for his loyalty,
and I know not what his ability for any employment. But I did not think
it fit, but did give them a pleasing denial, and after sitting with me
an hour they went away.
Several others came to me about business, and then being
to dine at my uncle Wight's I went to the Coffee-house, sending my wife
by Will, and there staid talking an hour with Coll. Middleton, and others,
and among other things about a very rich widow, young and handsome, of
one Sir Nicholas Gold's, a merchant, lately fallen, and of great courtiers
that already look after her: her husband not dead a week yet. She is reckoned
worth L80,000.
Thence to my uncle Wight's, where Dr. of -----, among
others, dined, and his wife, a seeming proud conceited woman, I know not
what to make of her, but the Dr's. discourse did please me very well about
the disease of the stone, above all things extolling Turpentine, which
he told me how it may be taken in pills with great ease. There was brought
to table a hot pie made of a swan I sent them yesterday, given me by Mr.
Howe, but we did not eat any of it. But my wife and I rose from table,
pretending business, and went to the Duke's house, the first play I have
been at these six months, according to my last vowe, and here saw the
so much cried-up play of "Henry the Eighth;" which, though I
went with resolution to like it, is so simple a thing made up of a great
many patches, that, besides the shows and processions in it, there is
nothing in the world good or well done. Thence mightily dissatisfied back
at night to my uncle Wight's, and supped with them, but against my stomach
out of the offence the sight of my aunt's hands gives me, and ending supper
with a mighty laugh, the greatest I have had these many months, at my
uncle's being out in his grace after meat, we rose and broke up, and my
wife and I home and to bed, being sleepy since last night.
2nd. Up and to the office,
and there sitting all the morning, and at noon to the 'Change, in my going
met with Luellin and told him how I had received a letter and bill for
L50 from Mr. Deering, and delivered it to him, which he told me he would
receive for me. To which I consented, though professed not to desire it
if he do not consider himself sufficiently able by the service I have
done, and that it is rather my desire to have nothing till he be further
sensible of my service. From the 'Change I brought him home and dined
with us, and after dinner I took my wife out, for I do find that I am
not able to conquer myself as to going to plays till I come to some new
vowe concerning it, and that I am now come, that is to say, that I will
not see above one in a month at any of the publique theatres till the
sum of 50s. be spent, and then none before New Year's Day next, unless
that I do become worth L1000 sooner than then, and then am free to come
to some other terms, and so leaving him in Lombard Street I took her to
the King's house, and there met Mr. Nicholson, my old colleague, and saw
"The Usurper," which is no good play, though better than what
I saw yesterday. However, we rose unsatisfied, and took coach and home,
and I to the office late writing letters, and so to supper and to bed.
3rd (Lord's day). Lay long
in bed, and then rose and with a fire in my chamber staid within all day,
looking over and settling my accounts in good order, by examining all
my books, and the kitchen books, and I find that though the proper profit
of my last year was but L305, yet I did by other gain make it up L444.,
which in every part of it was unforeseen of me, and therefore it was a
strange oversight for lack of examining my expenses that I should spend
L690 this year, but for the time to come I have so distinctly settled
all my accounts in writing and the particulars of all my several layings
out, that I do hope I shall hereafter make a better judgment of my spendings
than ever. I dined with my wife in her chamber, she in bed, and then down
again and till 11 at night, and broke up and to bed with great content,
but could not make an end of writing over my vows as I purposed, but I
am agreed in every thing how to order myself for the year to come, which
I trust in God will be much for my good. So up to prayers and to bed.
This evening Sir W. Pen came to invite me against next Wednesday, being
Twelfth day, to his usual feast, his wedding day.
4th. Up betimes, and my
wife being ready, and her mayd Besse and the girl, I carried them by coach
and set them all down in Covent Garden and there left them, and I to my
Lord Sandwich's lodgings, but he not being up, I to the Duke's chamber,
and there by and by to his closett, where since his lady was ill, a little
red bed of velvet is brought for him to lie alone, which is a very pretty
one. After doing business here, I to my Lord's again, and there spoke
with him, and he seems now almost friends again as he used to be. Here
meeting Mr. Pierce, the chyrurgeon, he told me among other Court newes,
how the Queene is very well again, and the King lay with her on Saturday
night last; and that she speaks now very pretty English, and makes her
sense out now and then with pretty phrazes: as among others this is mightily
cried up; that, meaning to say that she did not like such a horse so well
as the rest, he being too prancing and full of tricks, she said he did
make too much vanity. Thence to the Tennis Court, after I had spent a
little time in Westminster Hall, thinking to have met with Mrs. Lane,
but I could not and am glad of it, and there saw the King play at Tennis
and others: but to see how the King's play was extolled without any cause
at all, was a loathsome sight, though sometimes, indeed, he did play very
well and deserved to be commended; but such open flattery is beastly.
Afterwards to St. James's Parke, being unwilling to go to spend money
at the ordinary, and there spent an hour or two, it being a pleasant day,
seeing people play at Pell Mell; where it pleased me mightily to hear
a gallant, lately come from France, swear at one of his companions for
suffering his man (a spruce blade) to be so saucy as to strike a ball
while his master was playing on the Mall. Thence took coach at White Hall
and took up my wife, who is mighty sad to think of her father, who is
going into Germany against the Turkes; but what will become of her brother
I know not. He is so idle, and out of all capacity, I think, to earn his
bread. Home and at my office till is at night making my solemn vowes for
the next year, which I trust in the Lord I shall keep, but I fear I have
a little too severely bound myself in some things and in too many, for
I fear I may forget some. But however, I know the worst, and shall by
the blessing of God observe to perform or pay my forfeits punctually.
So home and to bed with my mind at rest.
5th. Up and to our office,
where we sat all the morning, where my head being willing to take in all
business whatever, I am afraid I shall over clogg myself with it. But
however, it is my desire to do my duty and shall the willinger bear it.
At noon home and to the 'Change, where I met with Luellin, who went off
with me and parted to meet again at the Coffeehouse, but missed. So home
and found him there, and Mr. Barrow came to speak with me, so they both
dined with me alone, my wife not being ready, and after dinner I up in
my chamber with Barrow to discourse about matters of the yard with him,
and his design of leaving the place, which I am sorry for, and will prevent
if I can. He being gone then Luellin did give me the L50 from Mr. Deering,
which he do give me for my pains in his business and what I may hereafter
take for him, though there is not the least word or deed I have yet been
guilty of in his behalf but what I am sure has been to the King's advantage
and the profit of the service, nor ever will. And for this money I never
did condition with him or expected a farthing at the time when I did do
him the service, nor have given any receipt for it, it being brought me
by Luellin, nor do purpose to give him any thanks for it, but will wherein
I can faithfully endeavour to see him have the privilege of his Patent
as the King's merchant. I did give Luellin two pieces in gold for a pair
of gloves for his kindness herein. Then he being gone, I to my office,
where busy till late at night, that through my room being over confounded
in business I could stay there no longer, but went home, and after a little
supper to bed.
6th (Twelfth day). Up and
to my office, where very busy all the morning, being indeed over loaded
with it through my own desire of doing all I can. At noon to the 'Change,
but did little, and so home to dinner with my poor wife, and after dinner
read a lecture to her in Geography, which she takes very prettily and
with great pleasure to her and me to teach her, and so to the office again,
where as busy as ever in my life, one thing after another, and answering
people's business, particularly drawing up things about Mr. Wood's masts,
which I expect to have a quarrel about with Sir W. Batten before it be
ended, but I care not. At night home to my wife, to supper, discourse,
prayers, and to bed. This morning I began a practice which I find by the
ease I do it with that I shall continue, it saving me money and time;
that is, to trimme myself with a razer: which pleases me mightily.
7th. Up, putting on my
best clothes and to the office, where all the morning we sat busy, among
other things upon Mr. Wood's performance of his contract for masts, wherein
I was mightily concerned, but I think was found all along in the right,
and shall have my desire in it to the King's advantage. At noon, all of
us to dinner to Sir W. Pen's, where a very handsome dinner, Sir J. Lawson
among others, and his lady and his daughter, a very pretty lady and of
good deportment, with looking upon whom I was greatly pleased, the rest
of the company of the women were all of our own house, of no satisfaction
or pleasure at all. My wife was not there, being not well enough, nor
had any great mind. But to see how Sir W. Pen imitates me in everything,
even in his having his chimney piece in his dining room the same with
that in my wife's closett, and in every thing else I perceive wherein
he can. But to see again how he was out in one compliment: he lets alone
drinking any of the ladies' healths that were there, my Lady Batten and
Lawson, till he had begun with my Lady Carteret, who was absent, and that
was well enough, and then Mr. Coventry's mistresse, at which he was ashamed,
and would not have had him have drunk it, at least before the ladies present,
but his policy, as he thought, was such that he would do it. After dinner
by coach with Sir G. Carteret and Sir J. Minnes by appointment to Auditor
Beale's in Salisbury Court, and there we did with great content look over
some old ledgers to see in what manner they were kept, and indeed it was
in an extraordinary good method, and such as (at least out of design to
keep them employed) I do persuade Sir J. Minnes to go upon, which will
at least do as much good it may be to keep them for want of something
to do from envying those that do something. Thence calling to see whether
Mrs. Turner was returned, which she is, and I spoke one word only to her,
and away again by coach home and to my office, where late, and then home
to supper and bed.
8th. Up and all the morning
at my office and with Sir J. Minnes, directing him and Mr. Turner about
keeping of their books according to yesterday's work, wherein I shall
make them work enough. At noon to the 'Change, and there long, and from
thence by appointment took Luellin, Mount, and W. Symons, and Mr. Pierce,
the chirurgeon, home to dinner with me and were merry. But, Lord! to hear
how W. Symons do commend and look sadly and then talk bawdily and merrily,
though his wife was dead but the other day, would make a dogg laugh. After
dinner I did go in further part of kindness to Luellin for his kindness
about Deering's L50 which he procured me the other day of him. We spent
all the afternoon together and then they to cards with my wife, who this
day put on her Indian blue gowne which is very pretty, where I left them
for an hour, and to my office, and then to them again, and by and by they
went away at night, and so I again to my office to perfect a letter to
Mr. Coventry about Department Treasurers, wherein I please myself and
hope to give him content and do the King service therein. So having done,
I home and to teach my wife a new lesson in the globes, and to supper,
and to bed. We had great pleasure this afternoon; among other things,
to talk of our old passages together in Cromwell's time; and how W. Symons
did make me laugh and wonder to-day when he told me how he had made shift
to keep in, in good esteem and employment, through eight governments in
one year (the dear 1659, which were indeed, and he did name them all),
and then failed unhappy in the ninth, viz. that of the King's coming in.
He made good to me the story which Luellin did tell me the other day,
of his wife upon her death-bed; how she dreamt of her uncle Scobell, and
did foretell, from some discourse she had with him, that she should die
four days thence, and not sooner, and did all along say so, and did so.
Upon the 'Change a great talke there was of one Mr. Tryan, an old man,
a merchant in Lyme-Streete, robbed last night (his man and mayde being
gone out after he was a-bed), and gagged and robbed of L1050 in money
and about L4000 in jewells, which he had in his house as security for
money. It is believed by many circumstances that his man is guilty of
confederacy, by their ready going to his secret till in his desk, wherein
the key of his cash-chest lay.
9th. Up (my underlip being
mightily swelled, I know not how but by overrubbing it, it itching) and
to the office, where we sat all the morning, and at noon I home to dinner,
and by discourse with my wife thought upon inviting my Lord Sandwich to
a dinner shortly. It will cost me at least ten or twelve pounds; but,
however, some arguments of prudence I have, which however I shall think
again upon before I proceed to that expence. After dinner by coach I carried
my wife and Jane to Westminster, leaving her at Mr. Hunt's, and I to Westminster
Hall, and there visited Mrs. Lane, and by appointment went out and met
her at the Trumpet, Mrs. Hare's, but the room being damp we went to the
Bell tavern, and there I had her company, but could not do as I used to
do (yet nothing but what was honest) . . . . . So I to talk about her
having Hawley, she told me flatly no, she could not love him. I took occasion
to enquire of Howlett's daughter, with whom I have a mind to meet a little
to see what mettle the young wench is made of, being very pretty, but
she tells me she is already betrothed to Mrs. Michell's son, and she in
discourse tells me more, that Mrs. Michell herself had a daughter before
marriage, which is now near thirty years old, a thing I could not have
believed. Thence leading her to the Hall, I took coach and called my wife
and her mayd, and so to the New Exchange, where we bought several things
of our pretty Mrs. Dorothy Stacy, a pretty woman, and has the modestest
look that ever I saw in my life and manner of speech. Thence called at
Tom's and saw him pretty well again, but has not been currant. So homeward,
and called at Ludgate, at Ashwell's uncle's, but she was not within, to
have spoke to her to have come to dress my wife at the time my Lord dines
here. So straight home, calling for Walsingham's Manuals at my bookseller's
to read but not to buy, recommended for a pretty book by Sir W. Warren,
whose warrant however I do not much take till I do read it. So home to
supper and to bed, my wife not being very well since she came home, being
troubled with a fainting fit, which she never yet had before since she
was my wife.
10th (Lord's day). Lay
in bed with my wife till 10 or 11 o'clock, having been very sleepy all
night. So up, and my brother Tom being come to see me, we to dinner, he
telling me how Mrs. Turner found herself discontented with her late bad
journey, and not well taken by them in the country, they not desiring
her coming down, nor the burials of Mr. Edward Pepys's corps there. After
dinner I to the office, where all the afternoon, and at night my wife
and I to my uncle Wight's, and there eat some of their swan pie, which
was good, and I invited them to my house to eat a roasted swan on Tuesday
next, which after I was come home did make a quarrels between my wife
and I, because she had appointed a wish to-morrow. But, however, we were
friends again quickly. So to bed. All our discourse to-night was Mr. Tryan's
late being robbed; and that Collonell Turner (a mad, swearing, confident
fellow, well known by all, and by me), one much indebted to this man for
his very livelihood, was the man that either did or plotted it; and the
money and things are found in his hand, and he and his wife now in Newgate
for it; of which we are all glad, so very a known rogue he was.
11th. Waked this morning
by 4 o'clock by my wife to call the mayds to their wash, and what through
my sleeping so long last night and vexation for the lazy sluts lying so
long again and their great wash, neither my wife nor I could sleep one
winke after that time till day, and then I rose and by coach (taking Captain
Grove with me and three bottles of Tent, which I sent to Mrs. Lane by
my promise on Saturday night last) to White Hall, and there with the rest
of our company to the Duke and did our business, and thence to the Tennis
Court till noon, and there saw several great matches played, and so by
invitation to St. James's; where, at Mr. Coventry's chamber, I dined with
my Lord Barkeley, Sir G. Carteret, Sir Edward Turner, Sir Ellis Layton,
and one Mr. Seymour, a fine gentleman; were admirable good discourse of
all sorts, pleasant and serious. Thence after dinner to White Hall, where
the Duke being busy at the Guinny business, the Duke of Albemarle, Sir
W. Rider, Povy, Sir J. Lawson and I to the Duke of Albemarle's lodgings,
and there did some business, and so to the Court again, and I to the Duke
of York's lodgings, where the Guinny company are choosing their assistants
for the next year by ballotting. Thence by coach with Sir J. Robinson,
Lieutenant of the Tower, he set me down at Cornhill, but, Lord! the simple
discourse that all the way we had, he magnifying his great undertakings
and cares that have been upon him for these last two years, and how he
commanded the city to the content of all parties, when the loggerhead
knows nothing almost that is sense.
Thence to the Coffee- house, whither comes Sir W. Petty
and Captain Grant, and we fell in talke (besides a young gentleman, I
suppose a merchant, his name Mr. Hill, that has travelled and I perceive
is a master in most sorts of musique and other things) of musique; the
universal character; art of memory; Granger's counterfeiting of hands
and other most excellent discourses to my great content, having not been
in so good company a great while, and had I time I should covet the acquaintance
of that Mr. Hill. This morning I stood by the King arguing with a pretty
Quaker woman, that delivered to him a desire of hers in writing. The King
showed her Sir J. Minnes, as a man the fittest for her quaking religion,
saying that his beard was the stiffest thing about him, and again merrily
said, looking upon the length of her paper, that if all she desired was
of that length she might lose her desires; she modestly saying nothing
till he begun seriously to discourse with her, arguing the truth of his
spirit against hers; she replying still with these words, "O King!"
and thou'd him all along. The general talke of the towne still is of Collonell
Turner, about the robbery; who, it is thought, will be hanged. I heard
the Duke of York tell to-night, how letters are come that fifteen are
condemned for the late plot by the judges at York; and, among others,
Captain Oates, against whom it was proved that he drew his sword at his
going out, and flinging away the scabbard, said that he would either return
victor or be hanged.
So home, where I found the house full of the washing
and my wife mighty angry about Will's being here to-day talking with her
mayds, which she overheard, idling of their time, and he telling what
a good mayd my old Jane was, and that she would never have her like again.
At which I was angry, and after directing her to beat at least the little
girl, I went to the office and there reproved Will, who told me that he
went thither by my wife's order, she having commanded him to come thither
on Monday morning. Now God forgive me! how apt I am to be jealous of her
as to this fellow, and that she must needs take this time, when she knows
I must be gone out to the Duke, though methinks had she that mind she
would never think it discretion to tell me this story of him, to let me
know that he was there, much less to make me offended with him, to forbid
him coming again. But this cursed humour I cannot cool in myself by all
the reason I have, which God forgive me for, and convince me of the folly
of it, and the disquiet it brings me. So home, where, God be thanked,
when I came to speak to my wife my trouble of mind soon vanished, and
to bed. The house foul with the washing and quite out of order against
to-morrow's dinner.
12th. Up and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, and at noon to the 'Change awhile, and so
home, getting things against dinner ready, and anon comes my uncle Wight
and my aunt, with their cozens Mary and Robert, and by chance my uncle
Thomas Pepys. We had a good dinner, the chief dish a swan roasted, and
that excellent meate. At, dinner and all day very merry. After dinner
to cards, where till evening, then to the office a little, and to cards
again with them, and lost half-a-crowne. They being gone, my wife did
tell me how my uncle did this day accost her alone, and spoke of his hoping
she was with child, and kissing her earnestly told her he should be very
glad of it, and from all circumstances methinks he do seem to have some
intention of good to us, which I shall endeavour to continue more than
ever I did yet. So to my office till late, and then home to bed, after
being at prayers, which is the first time after my late vowe to say prayers
in my family twice in every week.
13th. Up and to my office
a little, and then abroad to many several places about business, among
others to the geometrical instrument makers, and through Bedlam (calling
by the way at an old bookseller's and there fell into looking over Spanish
books and pitched upon some, till I thought of my oathe when I was going
to agree for them, and so with much ado got myself out of the shop glad
at my heart and so away) to the African House to look upon their book
of contracts for several commodities for my information in the prices
we give in the Navy. So to the Coffee [house] where extraordinary good
discourse of Dr. Whistler's' upon my question concerning the keeping of
masts, he arguing against keeping them dry, by showing the nature of corruption
in bodies and the several ways thereof. So to the 'Change, and thence
with Sir W. Rider to the Trinity House to dinner, and then home and to
my office till night, and then with Mr. Bland to Sir T. Viner's about
pieces of eight for Sir J. Lawson, and so back to my office, and there
late upon business, and so home to supper and to bed.
14th. Up and to the office,
where all the morning, and at noon all of us, viz., Sir G. Carteret and
Sir W. Batten at one end, and Mr. Coventry, Sir J. Minnes and I (in the
middle at the other end, being taught how to sit there all three by my
sitting so much the backwarder) at the other end, to Sir G. Carteret's,
and there dined well. Here I saw Mr. Scott, the bastard that married his
youngest daughter. Much pleasant talk at table, and then up and to the
office, where we sat long upon our design of dividing the Controller's
work into some of the rest of our hands for the better doing of it, but
he would not yield to it, though the simple man knows in his heart that
he do not do one part of it. So he taking upon him to do it all we rose,
I vexed at the heart to see the King's service run after this manner,
but it cannot be helped. Thence to the Old James to the reference about
Mr. Bland's business. Sir W. Rider being now added to us, and I believe
we shall soon come to some determination in it. So home and to my office,
did business, and then up to Sir W. Pen and did express my trouble about
this day's business, he not being there, and plainly told him what I thought
of it, and though I know him a false fellow yet I adventured, as I have
done often, to tell him clearly my opinion of Sir W. Batten and his design
in this business, which is very bad. Hence home, and after a lecture to
my wife in her globes, to prayers and to bed.
15th. Up and to my office,
where all the morning, and among other things Mr. Turner with me, and
I did tell him my mind about the Controller his master and all the office,
and my mind touching himself too, as he did carry himself either well
or ill to me and my clerks, which I doubt not but it will operate well.
Thence to the 'Change, and there met my uncle Wight, who was very kind
to me, and would have had me home with him, and so kind that I begin to
wonder and think something of it of good to me. Thence home to dinner,
and after dinner with Mr. Hater by water, and walked thither and back
again from Deptford, where I did do something checking the iron business,
but my chief business was my discourse with Mr. Hater about what had passed
last night and to-day about the office business, and my resolution to
do him all the good I can therein. So home, and my wife tells me that
my uncle Wight hath been with her, and played at cards with her, and is
mighty inquisitive to know whether she is with child or no, which makes
me wonder what his meaning is, and after all my thoughts, I cannot think,
unless it be in order to the making his will, that he might know how to
do by me, and I would to God my wife had told him that she was.
16th. Up, and having paid
some money in the morning to my uncle Thomas on his yearly annuity, to
the office, where we sat all the morning. At noon I to the 'Change about
some pieces of eight for Sir J. Lawson. There I hear that Collonell Turner
is found guilty of felony at the Sessions in Mr. Tryan's business, which
will save his life. So home and met there J. Hasper come to see his kinswoman
our Jane. I made much of him and made him dine with us, he talking after
the old simple manner that he used to do. He being gone, I by water to
Westminster Hall, and there did see Mrs. Lane. . . . . So by coach home
and to my office, where Browne of the Minerys brought me an Instrument
made of a Spyral line very pretty for all questions in Arithmetique almost,
but it must be some use that must make me perfect in it. So home to supper
and to bed, with my mind 'un peu troubled pour ce que fait' to-day, but
I hope it will be 'la dernier de toute ma vie.'
17th (Lord's day). Up,
and I and my wife to church, where Pembleton appeared, which, God forgive
me, did vex me, but I made nothing of it. So home to dinner, and betimes
my wife and I to the French church and there heard a good sermon, the
first time my wife and I were there ever together. We sat by three sisters,
all pretty women. It was pleasant to hear the reader give notice to them,
that the children to be catechized next Sunday were them of Hounsditch
and Blanche Chapiton. Thence home, and there found Ashwell come to see
my wife (we having called at her lodging the other, day to speak with
her about dressing my wife when my Lord Sandwich dines here), and is as
merry as ever, and speaks as disconcerned for any difference between us
on her going away as ever. She being gone, my wife and I to see Sir W.
Pen and there supped with him much against my stomach, for the dishes
were so deadly foule that I could not endure to look upon them. So after
supper home to prayers and to bed.
18th. Up, being troubled
to find my wife so ready to have me go out of doors. God forgive me for
my jealousy! but I cannot forbear, though God knows I have no reason to
do so, or to expect her being so true to me as I would have her. I abroad
to White Hall, where the Court all in mourning for the Duchesse of Savoy.
We did our business with the Duke, and so I to W. Howe at my Lord's lodgings,
not seeing my Lord, he being abroad, and there I advised with W. Howe
about my having my Lord to dinner at my house, who likes it well, though
it troubles me that I should come to need the advice of such a boy, but
for the present it is necessary. Here I found Mr. Mallard, and had from
him a common tune set by my desire to the Lyra Vyall, which goes most
admirably. Thence home by coach to the 'Change, after having been at the
Coffee-house, where I hear Turner is found guilty of felony and burglary;
and strange stories of his confidence at the barr, but yet great indiscretion
in his argueing. All desirous of his being hanged. So home and found that
Will had been with my wife. But, Lord! why should I think any evil of
that; and yet I cannot forbear it. But upon enquiry, though I found no
reason of doubtfulness, yet I could not bring my nature to any quiet or
content in my wife all day and night, nor though I went with her to divert
myself at my uncle Wight's, and there we played at cards till 12 at night
and went home in a great shower of rain, it having not rained a great
while before. Here was one Mr. Benson, a Dutchman, played and supped with
us, that pretends to sing well, and I expected great matters but found
nothing to be pleased with at all. So home and to bed, yet troubled in
my mind.
19th. Up, without any kindness
to my wife, and so to the office, where we sat all the morning, and at
noon I to the 'Change, and thence to Mr. Cutler's with Sir W. Rider to
dinner, and after dinner with him to the Old James upon our reference
of Mr. Bland's, and, having sat there upon the business half an hour,
broke up, and I home and there found Madame Turner and her sister Dike
come to see us, and staid chatting till night, and so away, and I to my
office till very late, and my eyes began to fail me, and be in pain which
I never felt to now-a-days, which I impute to sitting up late writing
and reading by candle-light. So home to supper and to bed.
20th. Up and by coach to
my Lord Sandwich's, and after long staying till his coming down (he not
sending for me up, but it may be he did not know I was there), he came
down, and I walked with him to the Tennis Court, and there left him, seeing
the King play. At his lodgings this morning there came to him Mr. W. Montague's
fine lady, which occasioned my Lord's calling me to her about some business
for a friend of hers preferred to be a midshipman at sea. My Lord recommended
the whole matter to me. She is a fine confident lady, I think, but not
so pretty as I once thought her. My Lord did also seal a lease for the
house he is now taking in Lincoln's Inn Fields, which stands him in 250
per annum rent. Thence by water to my brother's, whom I find not well
in bed, sicke, they think, of a consumption, and I fear he is not well,
but do not complain, nor desire to take anything. From him I visited Mr.
Honiwood, who is lame, and to thank him for his visit to me the other
day, but we were both abroad.
So to Mr. Commander's in Warwicke Lane, to speak to
him about drawing up my will, which he will meet me about in a day or
two. So to the 'Change and walked home, thence with Sir Richard Ford,
who told me that Turner is to be hanged to-morrow, and with what impudence
he hath carried out his trial; but that last night, when he brought him
newes of his death, he began to be sober and shed some tears, and he hopes
will die a penitent; he having already confessed all the thing, but says
it was partly done for a joke, and partly to get an occasion of obliging
the old man by his care in getting him his things again, he having some
hopes of being the better by him in his estate at his death. Home to dinner,
and after dinner my wife and I by water, which we have not done together
many a day, that is not since last summer, but the weather is now very
warm, and left her at Axe Yard, and I to White Hall, and meeting Mr. Pierce
walked with him an hour in the Matted Gallery; among other things he tells
me that my Lady Castlemaine is not at all set by by the King, but that
he do doat upon Mrs. Stewart only; and that to the leaving of all business
in the world, and to the open slighting of the Queene; that he values
not who sees him or stands by him while he dallies with her openly; and
then privately in her chamber below, where the very sentrys observe his
going in and out; and that so commonly, that the Duke or any of the nobles,
when they would ask where the King is, they will ordinarily say, "Is
the King above, or below?" meaning with Mrs. Stewart: that the King
do not openly disown my Lady Castlemaine, but that she comes to Court;
but that my Lord FitzHarding and the Hambletons, [The
three brothers, George Hamilton, James Hamilton, and the Count Antoine
Hamilton, author of the "Memoires de Grammont"
] and sometimes my Lord Sandwich, they say, have their snaps at
her. But he says my Lord Sandwich will lead her from her lodgings in the
darkest and obscurest manner, and leave her at the entrance into the Queene's
lodgings, that he might be the least observed; that the Duke of Monmouth
the King do still doat on beyond measure, insomuch that the King only,
the Duke of York, and Prince Rupert, and the Duke of Monmouth, do now
wear deep mourning, that is, long cloaks, for the Duchesse of Savoy; so
that he mourns as a Prince of the Blood, while the Duke of York do no
more, and all the nobles of the land not so much; which gives great offence,
and he says the Duke of York do consider. But that the Duke of York do
give himself up to business, and is like to prove a noble Prince; and
so indeed I do from my heart think he will. He says that it is believed,
as well as hoped, that care is taken to lay up a hidden treasure of money
by the King against a bad day. pray God it be so! but I should be more
glad that the King himself would look after business, which it seems he
do not in the least. By and by came by Mr. Coventry, and so we broke off;
and he and I took a turn or two and so parted, and then my Lord Sandwich
came upon me, to speak with whom my business of coming again to-night
to this ende of the town chiefly was, in order to the seeing in what manner
he received me, in order to my inviting him to dinner to my house, but
as well in the morning as now, though I did wait upon him home and there
offered occasion of talk with him, yet he treated me, though with respect,
yet as a stranger, without any of the intimacy or friendship which he
used to do, and which I fear he will never, through his consciousness
of his faults, ever do again. Which I must confess do trouble me above
anything in the world almost, though I neither do need at present nor
fear to need to be so troubled, nay, and more, though I do not think that
he would deny me any friendship now if I did need it, but only that he
has not the face to be free with me, but do look upon me as a remembrancer
of his former vanity, and an espy upon his present practices, for I perceive
that Pickering to-day is great with him again, and that he has done a
great courtesy for Mr. Pierce, the chirurgeon, to a good value, though
both these and none but these did I mention by name to my Lord in the
business which has caused all this difference between my Lord and me.
However, I am resolved to forbear my laying out my money upon a dinner
till I see him in a better posture, and by grave and humble, though high
deportment, to make him think I do not want him, and that will make him
the readier to admit me to his friendship again, I believe the soonest
of anything but downright impudence, and thrusting myself, as others do,
upon him, which yet I cannot do, not [nor] will not endeavour.
So home, calling with my wife to see my brother again,
who was up, and walks up and down the house pretty well, but I do think
he is in a consumption. Home, troubled in mind for these passages with
my Lord, but am resolved to better my case in my business to make my stand
upon my owne legs the better and to lay up as well as to get money, and
among other ways I will have a good fleece out of Creed's coat ere it
be long, or I will have a fall. So to my office and did some business,
and then home to supper and to bed, after I had by candlelight shaved
myself and cut off all my beard clear, which will make my worke a great
deal the less in shaving.
21st. Up, and after sending
my wife to my aunt Wight's to get a place to see Turner hanged, I to the
office, where we sat all the morning, and at noon going to the 'Change;
and seeing people flock in the City, I enquired, and found that Turner
was not yet hanged. And so I went among them to Leadenhall Street, at
the end of Lyme Street, near where the robbery was done; and to St. Mary
Axe, where he lived. And there I got for a shilling to stand upon the
wheel of a cart, in great pain, above an houre before the execution was
done; he delaying the time by long discourses and prayers one after another,
in hopes of a reprieve; but none came, and at last was flung off the ladder
in his cloake. A comely- looked man he was, and kept his countenance to
the end: I was sorry to see him. It was believed there were at least 12
or 14,000 people in the street. So I home all in a sweat, and dined by
myself, and after dinner to the Old James, and there found Sir W. Rider
and Mr. Cutler at dinner, and made a second dinner with them, and anon
came Mr. Bland and Custos, and Clerke, and so we fell to the business
of reference, and upon a letter from Mr. Povy to Sir W. Rider and I telling
us that the King is concerned in it, we took occasion to fling off the
business from off our shoulders and would have nothing to do with it,
unless we had power from the King or Commissioners of Tangier, and I think
it will be best for us to continue of that mind, and to have no hand,
it being likely to go against the King. Thence to the Coffee-house, and
heard the full of Turner's discourse on the cart, which was chiefly to
clear himself of all things laid to his charge but this fault, for which
he now suffers, which he confesses. He deplored the condition of his family,
but his chief design was to lengthen time, believing still a reprieve
would come, though the sheriff advised him to expect no such thing, for
the King was resolved to grant none. After that I had good discourse with
a pretty young merchant with mighty content. So to my office and did a
little business, and then to my aunt Wight's to fetch my wife home, where
Dr. Burnett did tell me how poorly the sheriffs did endeavour to get one
jewell returned by Turner, after he was convicted, as a due to them, and
not to give it to Mr. Tryan, the true owner, but ruled against them, to
their great dishonour. Though they plead it might be another jewell for
ought they know and not Tryan's. After supper home, and my wife tells
me mighty stories of my uncle's fond and kind discourses to her to-day,
which makes me confident that he has thoughts of kindness for us, he repeating
his desire for her to be with child, for it cannot enter into my head
that he should have any unworthy thoughts concerning her. After doing
some business at my office, I home to supper, prayers, and to bed.
22nd. Up, and it being
a brave morning, with a gaily to Woolwich, and there both at the Ropeyarde
and the other yarde did much business, and thence to Greenwich to see
Mr. Pett and others value the carved work of the "Henrietta"
(God knows in an ill manner for the King), and so to Deptford, and there
viewed Sir W. Petty's vessel; which hath an odd appearance, but not such
as people do make of it, for I am of the opinion that he would never have
discoursed so much of it, if it were not better than other vessels, and
so I believe that he was abused the other day, as he is now, by tongues
that I am sure speak before they know anything good or bad of her. I am
sorry to find his ingenuity discouraged so. So home, reading all the way
a good book, and so home to dinner, and after dinner a lesson on the globes
to my wife, and so to my office till 10 or 11 o'clock at night, and so
home to supper and to bed.
23rd. Up, and to the office,
where we sat all the morning. At noon home to dinner, where Mr. Hawly
came to see us and dined with us, and after we had dined came Mr. Mallard,
and after he had eat something, I brought down my vyall which he played
on, the first maister that ever touched her yet, and she proves very well
and will be, I think, an admirable instrument. He played some very fine
things of his owne, but I was afeard to enter too far in their commendation
for fear he should offer to copy them for me out, and so I be forced to
give or lend him something. So to the office in the evening, whither Mr.
Commander came to me, and we discoursed about my will, which I am resolved
to perfect the next week by the grace of God. He being gone, I to write
letters and other business late, and so home to supper and to bed.
24th (Lord's day). Lay
long in bed, and then up, and being desirous to perform my vowes that
I lately made, among others, to be performed this month, I did go to my
office, and there fell on entering, out of a bye- book, part of my second
journall-book, which hath lain these two years and more unentered. Upon
this work till dinner, and after dinner to it again till night, and then
home to supper, and after supper to read a lecture to my wife upon the
globes, and so to prayers and to bed. This evening also I drew up a rough
draught of my last will to my mind.
25th. Up and by coach to
Whitehall to my Lord's lodgings, and seeing that knowing that I was in
the house, my Lord did not nevertheless send for me up, I did go to the
Duke's lodgings, and there staid while he was making ready, in which time
my Lord Sandwich came, and so all into his closet and did our common business,
and so broke up, and I homeward by coach with Sir W. Batten, and staid
at Warwicke Lane and there called upon Mr. Commander and did give him
my last will and testament to write over in form, and so to the 'Change,
where I did several businesses. So home to dinner, and after I had dined
Luellin came and we set him something to eat, and I left him there with
my wife, and to the office upon a particular meeting of the East India
Company, where I think I did the King good service against the Company
in the business of their sending our ships home empty from the Indies
contrary to their contract, and yet, God forgive me! I found that I could
be willing to receive a bribe if it were offered me to conceal my arguments
that I found against them, in consideration that none of my fellow officers,
whose duty it is more than mine, had ever studied the case, or at this
hour do understand it, and myself alone must do it. That being done Mr.
Povy and Bland came to speak with me about their business of the reference,
wherein I shall have some more trouble, but cannot help it, besides I
hope to make some good use of Mr. Povy to my advantage. So home after
business done at my office, to supper, and then to the globes with my
wife, and so to bed. Troubled a little in mind that my Lord Sandwich should
continue this strangeness to me that methinks he shows me now a days more
than while the thing was fresh.
26th. Up and to the office,
where we sat all the morning. At noon to the 'Change, after being at the
Coffee-house, where I sat by Tom Killigrew, who told us of a fire last
night in my Lady Castlemaine's lodging, where she bid L40 for one to adventure
the fetching of a cabinet out, which at last was got to be done; and the
fire at last quenched without doing much wrong. To 'Change and there did
much business, so home to dinner, and then to the office all the afternoon.
And so at night my aunt Wight and Mrs. Buggin came to sit with my wife,
and I in to them all the evening, my uncle coming afterward, and after
him Mr. Benson the Dutchman, a frank, merry man. We were very merry and
played at cards till late and so broke up and to bed in good hopes that
this my friendship with my uncle and aunt will end well.
27th. Up and to the office,
and at noon to the Coffeehouse, where I sat with Sir G. Ascue [Sir
George Ayscue or Askew. After his return from his imprisonment he declined
to go to sea again]and Sir William Petty, who in discourse is,
methinks, one of the most rational men that ever I heard speak with a
tongue, having all his notions the most distinct and clear, and, among
other things (saying, that in all his life these three books were the
most esteemed and generally cried up for wit in the world "Religio
Medici," "Osborne's Advice to a Son," and "Hudibras
"), did say that in these--in the two first principally--the wit
lies, and confirming some pretty sayings, which are generally like paradoxes,
by some argument smartly and pleasantly urged, which takes with people
who do not trouble themselves to examine the force of an argument, which
pleases them in the delivery, upon a subject which they like; whereas,
as by many particular instances of mine, and others, out of Osborne, he
did really find fault and weaken the strength of many of Osborne's arguments,
so as that in downright disputation they would not bear weight; at least,
so far, but that they might be weakened, and better found in their rooms
to confirm what is there said. He shewed finely whence it happens that
good writers are not admired by the present age; because there are but
few in any age that do mind anything that is abstruse and curious; and
so longer before any body do put the true praise, and set it on foot in
the world, the generality of mankind pleasing themselves in the easy delights
of the world, as eating, drinking, dancing, hunting, fencing, which we
see the meanest men do the best, those that profess it. A gentleman never
dances so well as the dancing master, and an ordinary fiddler makes better
musique for a shilling than a gentleman will do after spending forty,
and so in all the delights of the world almost.
Thence to the 'Change, and after doing much business,
home, taking Commissioner Pett with me, and all alone dined together.
He told me many stories of the yard, but I do know him so well, and had
his character given me this morning by Hempson, as well as my own too
of him before, that I shall know how to value any thing he says either
of friendship or other business. He was mighty serious with me in discourse
about the consequence of Sir W. Petty's boat, as the most dangerous thing
in the world, if it should be practised by endangering our losse of the
command of the seas and our trade, while the Turkes and others shall get
the use of them, which, without doubt, by bearing more sayle will go faster
than any other ships, and, not being of burden, our merchants cannot have
the use of them and so will be at the mercy of their enemies. So that
I perceive he is afeard that the honour of his trade will down, though
(which is a truth) he pretends this consideration to hinder the growth
of this invention. He being gone my wife and I took coach and to Covent
Garden, to buy a maske at the French House, Madame Charett's, for my wife;
in the way observing the streete full of coaches at the new play, "The
Indian Queene;" which for show, they say, exceeds "Henry the
Eighth." Thence back to Mrs. Turner's and sat a while with them talking
of plays and I know not what, and so called to see Tom, but not at home,
though they say he is in a deep consumption, and Mrs. Turner and Dike
and they say he will not live two months to an end. So home and to the
office, and then to supper and to bed.
28th. Up and to the office,
where all the morning sitting, and at noon upon several things to the
'Change, and thence to Sir G. Carteret's to dinner of my own accord, and
after dinner with Mr. Wayth down to Deptford doing several businesses,
and by land back again, it being very cold, the boat meeting me after
my staying a while for him at an alehouse by Redriffe stairs. So home,
and took Will coming out of my doors, at which I was a little moved, and
told my wife of her keeping him from the office (though God knows my base
jealous head was the cause of it), which she seemed troubled at, and that
it was only to discourse with her about finding a place for her brother.
So I to my office late, Mr. Commander coming to read over my will in order
to the engrossing it, and so he being gone I to other business, among
others chiefly upon preparing matters against Creed for my profit, and
so home to supper and bed, being mightily troubled with my left eye all
this evening from some dirt that is got into it.
29th. Up, and after shaving
myself (wherein twice now, one after another, I have cut myself much,
but I think it is from the bluntness of the razor) there came Mr. Deane
to me and staid with me a while talking about masts, wherein he prepared
me in several things against Mr. Wood, and also about Sir W. Petty's boat,
which he says must needs prove a folly, though I do not think so unless
it be that the King will not have it encouraged. At noon, by appointment,
comes Mr. Hartlibb and his wife, and a little before them Messrs. Langley
and Bostocke (old acquaintances of mine at Westminster, clerks), and after
shewing them my house and drinking they set out by water, my wife and
I with them down to Wapping on board the "Crowne," a merchantman,
Captain Floyd, a civil person. Here was Vice-Admiral Goodson, whom the
more I know the more I value for a serious man and staunch. Here was Whistler
the flagmaker, which vexed me, but it mattered not. Here was other sorry
company and the discourse poor, so that we had no pleasure there at all,
but only to see and bless God to find the difference that is now between
our condition and that heretofore, when we were not only much below Hartlibb
in all respects, but even these two fellows above named, of whom I am
now quite ashamed that ever my education should lead me to such low company,
but it is God's goodness only, for which let him be praised. After dinner
I. broke up and with my wife home, and thence to the Fleece in Cornhill,
by appointment, to meet my Lord Marlborough, a serious and worthy gentleman,
who, after doing our business, about the company, he and they began to
talk of the state of the Dutch in India, which is like to be in a little
time without any controll; for we are lost there, and the Portuguese as.
bad. Thence to the Coffee-house, where good discourse, specially of Lt.-
Coll. Baron touching the manners of the Turkes' Government, among whom
he lived long. So to my uncle Wight's, where late playing at cards, and
so home.
30th. Up, and a sorry sermon
of a young fellow I knew at Cambridge; but the day kept solemnly for the
King's murder, and all day within doors making up my Brampton papers,
and in the evening Mr. Commander came and we made perfect and signed and
sealed my last will and testament, which is so to my mind, and I hope
to the liking of God Almighty, that I take great joy in myself that it
is done, and by that means my mind in a good condition of quiett. At night
to supper and to bed. This evening, being in a humour of making all things
even and clear in the world, I tore some old papers; among others, a romance
which (under the title of "Love a Cheate ") I begun ten years
ago at Cambridge; and at this time reading it over to-night I liked it
very well, and wondered a little at myself at my vein at that time when
I wrote it, doubting that I cannot do so well now if I would try.
31st (Lord's day). Up,
and in my chamber all day long (but a little at dinner) settling all my
Brampton accounts to this day in very good order, I having obliged myself
by oathe to do that and some other things within this month, and did also
perfectly prepare a state of my estate and annexed it to my last will
and testament, which now is perfect, and, lastly, I did make up my monthly
accounts, and find that I have gained above L50 this month clear, and
so am worth L858 clear, which is the greatest sum I ever yet was master
of, and also read over my usual vowes, as I do every Lord's day, but with
greater seriousness than ordinary, and I do hope that every day I shall
see more and more the pleasure of looking after my business and laying
up of money, and blessed be God for what I have already been enabled by
his grace to do. So to supper and to bed with my mind in mighty great
ease and content, but my head very full of thoughts and business to dispatch
this next month also, and among others to provide for answering to the
Exchequer for my uncle's being Generall-Receiver in the year 1647, which
I am at present wholly unable to do, but I must find time to look over
all his papers.
February
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