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April
1st. All the morning very busy at the office preparing a last half-year's
account for my Lord Treasurer. At noon eat a bit and stepped to Sir Ph.
Warwicke, by coach to my Lord Treasurer's, and after some private conference
and examining of my papers with him I did return into the City and to
Sir G. Carteret, whom I found with the Commissioners of Prizes dining
at Captain Cocke's, in Broad Streete, very merry. Among other tricks,
there did come a blind fiddler to the doore, and Sir G. Carteret did go
to the doore and lead the blind fiddler by the hand in. Thence with Sir
G. Carteret to my Lord Treasurer, and by and by come Sir W. Batten and
Sir J. Minnes, and anon we come to my Lord, and there did lay open the
expence for the six months past, and an estimate of the seven months to
come, to November next: the first arising to above L500,000, and the latter
will, as we judge, come to above L1,000,000. But to see how my Lord Treasurer
did bless himself, crying he could do no more than he could, nor give
more money than he had, if the occasion and expence were never so great,
which is but a sad story. And then to hear how like a passionate and ignorant
asse Sir G. Carteret did harangue upon the abuse of Tickets did make me
mad almost and yet was fain to hold my tongue. Thence home, vexed mightily
to see how simply our greatest ministers do content themselves to understand
and do things, while the King's service in the meantime lies a-bleeding.
At my office late writing letters till ready to drop down asleep with
my late sitting up of late, and running up and down a-days. So to bed.
2nd (Lord's day). At my
office all the morning, renewing my vowes in writing and then home to
dinner. All the afternoon, Mr. Tasborough, one of Mr. Povy's clerks, with
me about his master's accounts. In the evening Mr. Andrews and Hill sang,
but supped not with me, then after supper to bed.
3rd. Up and to the Duke
of Albemarle and White Hall, where much business. Thence home and to dinner,
and then with Creed, my wife, and Mercer to a play at the Duke's, of my
Lord Orrery's, called "Mustapha," which being not good, made
Betterton's part and Ianthe's but ordinary too, so that we were not contented
with it at all. Thence home and to the office a while, and then home to
supper and to bed. All the pleasure of the play was, the King and my Lady
Castlemayne were there; and pretty witty Nell,--[Nell
Gwynne]--at the King's house, and the younger Marshall sat next
us; which pleased me mightily.
4th. All the morning at
the office busy, at noon to the 'Change, and then went up to the 'Change
to buy a pair of cotton stockings, which I did at the husband's shop of
the most pretty woman there, who did also invite me to buy some linnen
of her, and I was glad of the occasion, and bespoke some bands of her,
intending to make her my seamstress, she being one of the prettiest and
most modest looked women that ever I did see. Dined at home and to the
office, where very late till I was ready to fall down asleep, and did
several times nod in the middle of my letters.
5th. This day was kept
publiquely by the King's command, as a fast day against the Dutch warr,
and I betimes with Mr. Tooker, whom I have brought into the Navy to serve
us as a husband to see goods timely shipped off from hence to the Fleete
and other places, and took him with me to Woolwich and Deptford, where
by business I have been hindered a great while of going, did a very great
deale of business, and home, and there by promise find Creed, and he and
my wife, Mercer and I by coach to take the ayre; and, where we had formerly
been, at Hackney, did there eat some pullets we carried with us, and some
things of the house; and after a game or two at shuffle-board, home, and
Creed lay with me; but, being sleepy, he had no mind to talk about business,
which indeed I intended, by inviting him to lie with me, but I would not
force it on him, and so to bed, he and I, and to sleep, being the first
time I have been so much at my ease and taken so much fresh ayre these
many weeks or months.
6th. At the office sat
all the morning, where, in the absence of Sir W. Batten, Sir G. Carteret
being angry about the business of tickets, spoke of Sir W. Batten for
speaking some words about the signing of tickets, and called Sir W. Batten
in his discourse at the table to us (the clerks being withdrawn) "shitten
foole," which vexed me. At noon to the 'Change, and there set my
business of lighters' buying for the King, to Sir W. Warren, and I think
he will do it for me to very great advantage, at which I am mightily rejoiced.
Home and after a mouthfull of dinner to the office, where till 6 o'clock,
and then to White Hall, and there with Sir G. Carteret and my Lord Brunkerd
attended the Duke of Albemarle about the business of money. I also went
to Jervas's, my barber, for my periwigg that was mending there, and there
do hear that Jane is quite undone, taking the idle fellow for her husband
yet not married, and lay with him several weeks that had another wife
and child, and she is now going into Ireland. So called my wife at the
'Change and home, and at my office writing letters till one o'clock in
the morning, that I was ready to fall down asleep again. Great talke of
a new Comett; and it is certain one do now appear as bright as the late
one at the best; but I have not seen it myself.
7th. Up betimes to the
Duke of Albemarle about money to be got for the Navy, or else we must
shut up shop. Thence to Westminster Hall and up and down, doing not much;
then to London, but to prevent Povy's dining with me (who I see is at
the 'Change) I went back again and to Herbert's at Westminster, there
sent for a bit of meat and dined, and then to my Lord Treasurer's, and
there with Sir Philip Warwicke, and thence to White Hall in my Lord Treasurer's
chamber with Sir Philip Warwicke till dark night, about fower hours talking
of the business of the Navy Charge, and how Sir G. Carteret do order business,
keeping us in ignorance what he do with his money, and also Sir Philip
did shew me nakedly the King's condition for money for the Navy; and he
do assure me, unless the King can get some noblemen or rich money-gentlemen
to lend him money, or to get the City to do it, it is impossible to find
money: we having already, as he says, spent one year's share of the three-years'
tax, which comes to L2,500,000. Being very glad of this day's discourse
in all but that I fear I shall quite lose Sir G. Carteret, who knows that
I have been privately here all this day with Sir Ph. Warwicke. However,
I will order it so as to give him as little offence as I can. So home
to my office, and then to supper and to bed.
8th. Up, and all the morning
full of business at the office. At noon dined with Mr. Povy, and then
to the getting some business looked over of his, and then I to my Lord
Chancellor's, where to have spoke with the Duke of Albemarle, but the
King and Council busy, I could not; then to the Old Exchange and there
of my new pretty seamstress bought four bands, and so home, where I found
my house mighty neat and clean. Then to my office late, till past 12,
and so home to bed. The French Embassadors are come incognito before their
train, which will hereafter be very pompous. It is thought they come to
get our King to joyne with the King of France in helping him against Flanders,
and they to do the like to us against Holland. We have laine a good while
with a good fleete at Harwich. The Dutch not said yet to be out. We, as
high as we make our shew, I am sure, are unable to set out another small
fleete, if this should be worsted. Wherefore, God send us peace! I cry.
9th (Lord's day). To church
with my wife in the morning, in her new light-coloured silk gowne, which
is, with her new point, very noble. Dined at home, and in the afternoon
to Fanchurch, the little church in the middle of Fanchurch Streete, where
a very few people and few of any rank. Thence, after sermon, home, and
in the evening walking in the garden, my Lady Pen and her daughter walked
with my wife and I, and so to my house to eat with us, and very merry,
and so broke up and to bed.
10th. Up, and to the Duke
of Albemarle's, and thence to White Hall to a Committee for Tangier, where
new disorder about Mr. Povy's accounts, that I think I shall never be
settled in my business of Treasurer for him. Here Captain Cooke met me,
and did seem discontented about my boy Tom's having no time to mind his
singing nor lute, which I answered him fully in, that he desired me that
I would baste his coate. So home and to the 'Change, and thence to the
"Old James" to dine with Sir W. Rider, Cutler, and Mr. Deering,
upon the business of hemp, and so hence to White Hall to have attended
the King and Lord Chancellor about the debts of the navy and to get some
money, but the meeting failed. So my Lord Brunkard took me and Sir Thomas
Harvy in his coach to the Parke, which is very troublesome with the dust;
and ne'er a great beauty there to-day but Mrs. Middleton, and so home
to my office, where Mr. Warren proposed my getting of L100 to get him
a protection for a ship to go out, which I think I shall do. So home to
supper and to bed.
11th. Up and betimes to
Alderman Cheverton to treat with him about hempe, and so back to the office.
At noon dined at the Sun, behind the 'Change, with Sir Edward Deering
and his brother and Commissioner Pett, we having made a contract with
Sir Edward this day about timber. Thence to the office, where late very
busy, but with some trouble have also some hopes of profit too. So home
to supper and to bed.
12th. Up, and to White
Hall to a Committee of Tangier, where, contrary to all expectation, my
Lord Ashly, being vexed with Povy's accounts, did propose it as necessary
that Povy should be still continued Treasurer of Tangier till he had made
up his accounts; and with such arguments as, I confess, I was not prepared
to answer, but by putting off of the discourse, and so, I think, brought
it right again; but it troubled me so all the day after, and night too,
that I was not quiet, though I think it doubtfull whether I shall be much
the worse for it or no, if it should come to be so. Dined at home and
thence to White Hall again (where I lose most of my time now-a-days to
my great trouble, charge, and loss of time and benefit), and there, after
the Council rose, Sir G. Carteret, my Lord Brunkard, Sir Thomas Harvy,
and myself, down to my Lord Treasurer's chamber to him and the Chancellor,
and the Duke of Albemarle; and there I did give them a large account of
the charge of the Navy, and want of money. But strange to see how they
held up their hands crying, "What shall we do?" Says my Lord
Treasurer, "Why, what means all this, Mr. Pepys? This is true, you
say; but what would you have me to do? I have given all I can for my life.
Why will not people lend their money? Why will they not trust the King
as well as Oliver? Why do our prizes come to nothing, that yielded so
much heretofore?" And this was all we could get, and went away without
other answer, which is one of the saddest things that, at such a time
as this, with the greatest action on foot that ever was in England, nothing
should be minded, but let things go on of themselves do as well as they
can. So home, vexed, and going to my Lady Batten's, there found a great
many women with her, in her chamber merry, my Lady Pen and her daughter,
among others; where my Lady Pen flung me down upon the bed, and herself
and others, one after another, upon me, and very merry we were, and thence
I home and called my wife with my Lady Pen to supper, and very merry as
I could be, being vexed as I was. So home to bed.
13th. Lay long in bed,
troubled a little with wind, but not much. So to the office, and there
all the morning. At noon to Sheriff Waterman's ' to dinner, all of us
men of the office in towne, and our wives, my Lady Carteret and daughters,
and Ladies Batten, Pen, and my wife, &c., and very good cheer we had
and merry; musique at and after dinner, and a fellow danced a jigg; but
when the company begun to dance, I came away lest I should be taken out;
and God knows how my wife carried herself, but I left her to try her fortune.
So home, and late at the office, and then home to supper and to bed.
14th. Up, and betimes to
Mr. Povy, being desirous to have an end of my trouble of mind touching
my Tangier business, whether he hath any desire of accepting what my Lord
Ashly offered, of his becoming Treasurer again; and there I did, with
a seeming most generous spirit, offer him to take it back again upon his
owne terms; but he did answer to me that he would not above all things
in the world, at which I was for the present satisfied; but, going away
thence and speaking with Creed, he puts me in doubt that the very nature
of the thing will require that he be put in again; and did give me the
reasons of the auditors, which, I confess, are so plain, that I know not
how to withstand them. But he did give me most ingenious advice what to
do in it, and anon, my Lord Barkeley and some of the Commissioners coming
together, though not in a meeting, I did procure that they should order
Povy's payment of his remain of accounts to me; which order if it do pass
will put a good stop to the fastening of the thing upon me. At noon Creed
and I to a cook's shop at Charing Cross, and there dined and had much
discourse, and his very good upon my business, and upon other things,
among the rest upon Will Howe's dissembling with us, we discovering one
to another his carriage to us, present and absent, being a very false
fellow. Thence to White Hall again, and there spent the afternoon, and
then home to fetch a letter for the Council, and so back to White Hall,
where walked an hour with Mr. Wren, of my Lord Chancellor's, and Mr. Ager,
and then to Unthanke's and called my wife, and with her through the city
to Mile-End Greene, and eat some creame and cakes and so back home, and
I a little at the office, and so home to supper and to bed. This morning
I was saluted with newes that the fleetes, ours and the Dutch, were engaged,
and that the guns were heard at Walthamstow to play all yesterday, and
that Captain Teddiman's legs were shot off in the Royall Katherine. But
before night I hear the contrary, both by letters of my owne and messengers
thence, that they were all well of our side and no enemy appears yet,
and that the Royall Katherine is come to the fleete, and likely to prove
as good a ship as any the King hath, of which I am heartily glad, both
for Christopher Pett's sake and Captain Teddiman that is in her.
15th. Up, and to White
Hall about several businesses, but chiefly to see the proposals of my
warrants about Tangier under Creed, but to my trouble found them not finished.
So back to the office, where all the morning, busy, then home to dinner,
and then all the afternoon till very late at my office, and then home
to supper and to bed, weary.
16th (Lord's day). Lay
long in bed, then up and to my chamber and my office, looking over some
plates which I find necessary for me to understand pretty well, because
of the Dutch warr. Then home to dinner, where Creed dined with us, and
so after dinner he and I walked to the Rolls' Chappell, expecting to hear
the great Stillingfleete preach, but he did not; but a very sorry fellow,
which vexed me. The sermon done, we parted, and I home, where I find Mr.
Andrews, and by and by comes Captain Taylor, my old acquaintance at Westminster,
that understands musique very well and composes mighty bravely; he brought
us some things of two parts to sing, very hard; but that that is the worst,
he is very conceited of them, and that though they are good makes them
troublesome to one, to see him every note commend and admire them. He
supped with me, and a good understanding man he is and a good scholler,
and, among other things, a great antiquary, and among other things he
can, as he says, show the very originall Charter to Worcester, of King
Edgar's, wherein he stiles himself, Rex Marium Brittanniae, &c.; which
is the great text that Mr. Selden and others do quote, but imperfectly
and upon trust. But he hath the very originall, which he says he will
shew me. He gone we to bed. This night I am told that newes is come of
our taking of three Dutch men- of-warr, with the loss of one of our Captains.
17th. Up and to the Duke
of Albemarle's, where he shewed me Mr. Coventry's letters, how three Dutch
privateers are taken, in one whereof Everson's' son is captaine. But they
have killed poor Captaine Golding in The Diamond. Two of them, one of
32 and the other of 20 odd guns, did stand stoutly up against her, which
hath 46, and the Yarmouth that hath 52 guns, and as many more men as they.
So that they did more than we could expect, not yielding till many of
their men were killed. And Everson, when he was brought before the Duke
of Yorke, and was observed to be shot through the hat, answered, that
he wished it had gone through his head, rather than been taken. One thing
more is written: that two of our ships the other day appearing upon the
coast of Holland, they presently fired their beacons round the country
to give notice. And newes is brought the King, that the Dutch Smyrna fleete
is seen upon the back of Scotland; and thereupon the King hath wrote to
the Duke, that he do appoint a fleete to go to the Northward to try to
meet them coming home round: which God send! Thence to White Hall; where
the King seeing me, did come to me, and calling me by name, did discourse
with me about the ships in the River: and this is the first time that
ever I knew the King did know me personally; so that hereafter I must
not go thither, but with expectation to be questioned, and to be ready
to give good answers. So home, and thence with Creed, who come to dine
with me, to the Old James, where we dined with Sir W. Rider and Cutler,
and, by and by, being called by my wife, we all to a play, "The Ghosts,"
at the Duke's house, but a very simple play. Thence up and down, with
my wife with me, to look [for] Sir Ph. Warwicke (Mr. Creed going from
me), but missed of him and so home, and late and busy at my office. So
home to supper and to bed. This day was left at my house a very neat silver
watch, by one Briggs, a scrivener and sollicitor, at which I was angry
with my wife for receiving, or, at least, for opening the box wherein
it was, and so far witnessing our receipt of it, as to give the messenger
5s. for bringing it; but it can't be helped, and I will endeavour to do
the man a kindnesse, he being a friend of my uncle Wight's.
18th. Up and to Sir Philip
Warwicke, and walked with him an houre with great delight in the Parke
about Sir G. Carteret's accounts, and the endeavours that he hath made
to bring Sir G. Carteret to show his accounts and let the world see what
he receives and what he pays. Thence home to the office, where I find
Sir J. Minnes come home from Chatham, and Sir W. Batten both this morning
from Harwich, where they have been these 7 or 8 days. At noon with my
wife and Mr. Moore by water to Chelsey about my Privy Seale for Tangier,
but my Lord Privy Seale was gone abroad, and so we, without going out
of the boat, forced to return, and found him not at White Hall. So I to
Sir Philip Warwicke and with him to my Lord Treasurer, who signed my commission
for Tangier-Treasurer and the docquet of my Privy Seale, for the monies
to be paid to me. Thence to White Hall to Mr. Moore again, and not finding
my Lord I home, taking my wife and woman up at Unthanke's. Late at my
office, then to supper and to bed.
19th. Up by five o'clock,
and by water to White Hall; and there took coach, and with Mr. Moore to
Chelsy; where, after all my fears what doubts and difficulties my Lord
Privy Seale would make at my Tangier Privy Seale, he did pass it at first
reading, without my speaking with him. And then called me in, and was
very civil to me. I passed my time in contemplating (before I was called
in) the picture of my Lord's son's lady, a most beautiful woman, and most
like to Mrs. Butler. Thence very much joyed to London back again, and
found out Mr. Povy; told him this; and then went and left my Privy Seale
at my Lord Treasurer's; and so to the 'Change, and thence to Trinity-House;
where a great dinner of Captain Crisp, who is made an Elder Brother. And
so, being very pleasant at dinner, away home, Creed with me; and there
met Povy; and we to Gresham College, where we saw some experiments upon
a hen, a dogg, and a cat, of the Florence poyson. The first it made for
a time drunk, but it come to itself again quickly; the second it made
vomitt mightily, but no other hurt. The third I did not stay to see the
effect of it, being taken out by Povy. He and I walked below together,
he giving me most exceeding discouragements in the getting of money (whether
by design or no I know not, for I am now come to think him a most cunning
fellow in most things he do, but his accounts), and made it plain to me
that money will be hard to get, and that it is to be feared Backewell
hath a design in it to get the thing forced upon himself. This put me
into a cruel melancholy to think I may lose what I have had so near my
hand; but yet something may be hoped for which to-morrow will shew. He
gone, Creed and I together a great while consulting what to do in this
case, and after all I left him to do what he thought fit in his discourse
to-morrow with my Lord Ashly. So home, and in my way met with Mr. Warren,
from whom my hopes I fear will fail of what I hoped for, by my getting
him a protection. But all these troubles will if not be over, yet we shall
see the worst of there in a day or two. So to my office, and thence to
supper, and my head akeing, betimes, that is by 10 or 11 o'clock, to bed.
20th. Up, and all the morning
busy at the office. At noon dined, and Mr. Povy by agreement with me (where
his boldness with Mercer, poor innocent wench, did make both her and me
blush, to think how he were able to debauch a poor girl if he had opportunity)
at a dish or two of plain meat of his own choice. After dinner comes Creed
and then Andrews, where want of money to Andrews the main discourse, and
at last in confidence of Creed's judgement I am resolved to spare him
4 or L500 of what lies by me upon the security of some Tallys. This went
against my heart to begin, but when obtaining Mr. Creed to joyne with
me we do resolve to assist Mr. Andrews. Then anon we parted, and I to
my office, where late, and then home to supper and to bed. This night
I am told the first play is played in White Hall noon-hall, which is now
turned to a house of playing. I had a great mind, but could not go to
see it.
21st. Up and to my office
about business. Anon comes Creed and Povy, and we treat about the business
of our lending money, Creed and I, upon a tally for the satisfying of
Andrews, and did conclude it as in papers is expressed, and as I am glad
to have an opportunity of having 10 per cent. for my money, so I am as
glad that the sum I begin this trade with is no more than L350. We all
dined at Andrews' charge at the Sun behind the 'Change, a good dinner
the worst dressed that ever I eat any, then home, and there found Kate
Joyce and Harman come to see us. With them, after long talk, abroad by
coach, a tour in the fields, and drunk at Islington, it being very pleasant,
the dust being laid by a little rain, and so home very well pleased with
this day's work. So after a while at my office to supper and to bed. This
day we hear that the Duke and the fleete are sailed yesterday. Pray God
go along with them, that they have good speed in the beginning of their
worke.
22nd. Up, and Mr. Caesar,
my boy's lute-master, being come betimes to teach him, I did speak with
him seriously about the boy, what my mind was, if he did not look after
his lute and singing that I would turn him away; which I hope will do
some good upon the boy. All the morning busy at the office. At noon dined
at home, and then to the office again very busy till very late, and so
home to supper and to bed. My wife making great preparation to go to Court
to Chappell to-morrow. This day I have newes from Mr. Coventry that the
fleete is sailed yesterday from Harwich to the coast of Holland to see
what the Dutch will do. God go along with them!
23rd (Lord's day). Mr.
Povy, according to promise, sent his coach betimes, and I carried my wife
and her woman to White Hall Chappell and set them in the Organ Loft, and
I having left to untruss went to the Harp and Ball and there drank also,
and entertained myself in talke with the mayde of the house, a pretty
mayde and very modest. Thence to the Chappell and heard the famous young
Stillingfleete, whom I knew at Cambridge, and is now newly admitted one
of the King's chaplains; and was presented, they say, to my Lord Treasurer
for St. Andrew's, Holborne, where he is now minister, with these words:
that they (the Bishops of Canterbury, London, and another) believed he
is the ablest young man to preach the Gospel of any since the Apostles.
He did make the most plain, honest, good, grave sermon, in the most unconcerned
and easy yet substantial manner, that ever I heard in my life, upon the
words of Samuell to the people, "Fear the Lord in truth with all
your heart, and remember the great things that he hath done for you."
It being proper to this day, the day of the King's Coronation. Thence
to Mr. Povy's, where mightily treated, and Creed with us. But Lord! to
see how Povy overdoes every thing in commending it, do make it nauseous
to me, and was not (by reason of my large praise of his house) over acceptable
to my wife. Thence after dinner Creed and we by coach took the ayre in
the fields beyond St. Pancras, it raining now and then, which it seems
is most welcome weather, and then all to my house, where comes Mr. Hill,
Andrews, and Captain Taylor, and good musique, but at supper to hear the
arguments we had against Taylor concerning a Corant, he saying that the
law of a dancing Corant is to have every barr to end in a pricked crochet
and quaver, which I did deny, was very strange. It proceeded till I vexed
him, but all parted friends, for Creed and I to laugh at when he was gone.
After supper, Creed and I together to bed, in Mercer's bed, and so to
sleep.
24th. Up and with Creed
in Sir W. Batten's coach to White Hall. Sir W. Batten and I to the Duke
of Albemarle, where very busy. Then I to Creed's chamber, where I received
with much ado my two orders about receiving Povy's monies and answering
his credits, and it is strange how he will preserve his constant humour
of delaying all business that comes before him. Thence he and I to London
to my office, and back again to my Lady Sandwich's to dinner, where my
wife by agreement. After dinner alone, my Lady told me, with the prettiest
kind of doubtfullnesse, whether it would be fit for her with respect to
Creed to do it, that is, in the world, that Creed had broke his desire
to her of being a servant to Mrs. Betty Pickering, and placed it upon
encouragement which he had from some discourse of her ladyship, commending
of her virtues to him, which, poor lady, she meant most innocently. She
did give him a cold answer, but not so severe as it ought to have been;
and, it seems, as the lady since to my Lady confesses, he had wrote a
letter to her, which she answered slightly, and was resolved to contemn
any motion of his therein. My Lady takes the thing very ill, as it is
fit she should; but I advise her to stop all future occasions of the world's
taking notice of his coming thither so often as of late he hath done.
But to think that he should have this devilish presumption to aime at
a lady so near to my Lord is strange, both for his modesty and discretion.
Thence to the Cockepitt, and there walked an houre with my Lord Duke of
Albemarle alone in his garden, where he expressed in great words his opinion
of me; that I was the right hand of the Navy here, nobody but I taking
any care of any thing therein; so that he should not know what could be
done without me. At which I was (from him) not a little proud. Thence
to a Committee of Tangier, where because not a quorum little was done,
and so away to my wife (Creed with me) at Mrs. Pierce's, who continues
very pretty and is now great with child. I had not seen her a great while.
Thence by coach to my Lord Treasurer's, but could not speak with Sir Ph.
Warwicke. So by coach with my wife and Mercer to the Parke; but the King
being there, and I now-a-days being doubtfull of being seen in any pleasure,
did part from the tour, and away out of the Parke to Knightsbridge, and
there eat and drank in the coach, and so home, and after a while at my
office, home to supper and to bed, having got a great cold I think by
my pulling off my periwigg so often.
25th. At the office all
the morning, and the like after dinner, at home all the afternoon till
very late, and then to bed, being very hoarse with a cold I did lately
get with leaving off my periwigg. This afternoon W. Pen, lately come from
his father in the fleete, did give me an account how the fleete did sayle,
about 103 in all, besides small catches, they being in sight of six or
seven Dutch scouts, and sent ships in chase of them.
26th. Up very betimes,
my cold continuing and my stomach sick with the buttered ale that I did
drink the last night in bed, which did lie upon me till I did this morning
vomitt it up. So walked to Povy's, where Creed met me, and there I did
receive the first parcel of money as Treasurer of Tangier, and did give
him my receipt for it, which was about L2,800 value in Tallys; we did
also examine and settle several other things, and then I away to White
Hall, talking, with Povy alone, about my opinion of Creed's indiscretion
in looking after Mrs. Pickering, desiring him to make no more a sport
of it, but to correct him, if he finds that he continues to owne any such
thing. This I did by my Lady's desire, and do intend to pursue the stop
of it. So to the Carrier's by Cripplegate, to see whether my mother be
come to towne or no, I expecting her to-day, but she is not come. So to
dinner to my Lady Sandwich's, and there after dinner above in the diningroom
did spend an houre or two with her talking again about Creed's folly;
but strange it is that he should dare to propose this business himself
of Mrs. Pickering to my Lady, and to tell my Lady that he did it for her
virtue sake, not minding her money, for he could have a wife with more,
but, for that, he did intend to depend upon her Ladyshipp to get as much
of her father and mother for her as she could; and that, what he did,
was by encouragement from discourse of her Ladyshipp's: he also had wrote
to Mrs. Pickering, but she did give him a slighting answer back again.
But I do very much fear that Mrs. Pickering's honour, if the world comes
to take notice of it, may be wronged by it. Thence home, and all the afternoon
till night at my office, then home to supper and to bed.
27th. Up, and to my office,
where all the morning, at noon Creed dined with me; and, after dinner,
walked in the garden, he telling me that my Lord Treasurer now begins
to be scrupulous, and will know what becomes of the L26,000 saved by my
Lord Peterborough, before he parts with any more money, which puts us
into new doubts, and me into a great fear, that all my cake will be doe
still. [An obsolete proverb, signifying to lose one's
hopes, a cake coming out of the oven in a state of dough being considered
spoiled.] But I am well prepared for it to bear it, being not clear
whether it will be more for my profit to have it, or go without it, as
my profits of the Navy are likely now to be. All the afternoon till late
hard at the office. Then to supper and to bed. This night William Hewer
is returned from Harwich, where he hath been paying off of some ships
this fortnight, and went to sea a good way with the fleete, which was
96 in company then, men of warr, besides some come in, and following them
since, which makes now above 100, whom God bless!
28th. Up by 5 o'clock,
and by appointment with Creed by 6 at his chamber, expecting Povy, who
come not. Thence he and I out to Sir Philip Warwicke's, but being not
up we took a turn in the garden hard by, and thither comes Povy to us.
After some discourse of the reason of the difficulty that Sir Philip Warwicke
makes in issuing a warrant for my striking of tallys, namely, the having
a clear account of the L26,000 saved by my Lord of Peterborough, we parted,
and I to Sir P. Warwicke, who did give me an account of his demurr, which
I applied myself to remove by taking Creed with me to my Lord Ashly, from
whom, contrary to all expectation, I received a very kind answer, just
as we could have wished it, that he would satisfy my Lord Treasurer. Thence
very well satisfied I home, and down the River to visit the victualling-ships,
where I find all out of order. And come home to dinner, and then to write
a letter to the Duke of Albemarle about the victualling-ships, and carried
it myself to the Council-chamber, where it was read; and when they rose,
my Lord Chancellor passing by stroked me on the head, and told me that
the Board had read my letter, and taken order for the punishing of the
watermen for not appearing on board the ships. And so did the King afterwards,
who do now know me so well, that he never sees me but he speaks to me
about our Navy business. Thence got my Lord Ashly to my Lord Treasurer
below in his chamber, and there removed the scruple, and by and by brought
Mr. Sherwin to Sir Philip Warwicke and did the like, and so home, and
after a while at my office, to bed.
29th. All the morning busy
at the office. In the afternoon to my Lord Treasurer's, and there got
my Lord Treasurer to sign the warrant for my striking of tallys, and so
doing many jobbs in my way home, and there late writeing letters, being
troubled in my mind to hear that Sir W. Batten and Sir J. Minnes do take
notice that I am now-a-days much from the office upon no office business,
which vexes me, and will make me mind my business the better, I hope in
God; but what troubles me more is, that I do omit to write, as I should
do, to Mr. Coventry, which I must not do, though this night I minded it
so little as to sleep in the middle of my letter to him, and committed
forty blotts and blurrs in my letter to him, but of this I hope never
more to be guilty, if I have not already given him sufficient offence.
So, late home, and to bed.
30th (Lord's day). Up and
to my office alone all the morning, making up my monthly accounts, which
though it hath been very intricate, and very great disbursements and receipts
and odd reckonings, yet I differed not from the truth; viz.: between my
first computing what my profit ought to be and then what my cash and debts
do really make me worth, not above 10s., which is very much, and I do
much value myself upon the account, and herein I with great joy find myself
to have gained this month above L100 clear, and in the whole to be worth
above L1400, the greatest sum I ever yet was worth. Thence home to dinner,
and there find poor Mr. Spong walking at my door, where he had knocked,
and being told I was at the office staid modestly there walking because
of disturbing me, which methinks was one of the most modest acts (of a
man that hath no need of being so to me) that ever I knew in my life.
He dined with me, and then after dinner to my closet, where abundance
of mighty pretty discourse, wherein, in a word, I find him the man of
the world that hath of his own ingenuity obtained the most in most things,
being withall no scholler. He gone, I took boat and down to Woolwich and
Deptford, and made it late home, and so to supper and to bed. Thus I end
this month in great content as to my estate and gettings: in much trouble
as to the pains I have taken, and the rubs I expect yet to meet with,
about the business of Tangier. The fleete, with about 106 ships upon the
coast of Holland, in sight of the Dutch, within the Texel. Great fears
of the sickenesse here in the City, it being said that two or three houses
are already shut up. God preserve as all!
May
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