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September
1st. Up, and to visit my Lady Pen and her daughter at the Ropeyarde
where I did breakfast with them and sat chatting a good while. Then to
my lodging at Mr. Shelden's, where I met Captain Cocke and eat a little
bit of dinner, and with him to Greenwich by water, having good discourse
with him by the way. After being at Greenwich a little while, I to London,
to my house, there put many more things in order for my totall remove,
sending away my girle Susan and other goods down to Woolwich, and I by
water to the Duke of Albemarle, and thence home late by water. At the
Duke of Albemarle's I overheard some examinations of the late plot that
is discoursed of and a great deale of do there is about it. Among other
discourses, I heard read, in the presence of the Duke, an examination
and discourse of Sir Philip Howard's, with one of the plotting party.
In many places these words being, "Then," said Sir P. Howard,
"if you so come over to the King, and be faithfull to him, you shall
be maintained, and be set up with a horse and armes," and I know
not what. And then said such a one, "Yes, I will be true to the King."
"But, damn me," said Sir Philip, "will you so and so?"
And thus I believe twelve times Sir P. Howard answered him a "damn
me," which was a fine way of rhetorique to persuade a Quaker or Anabaptist
from his persuasion. And this was read in the hearing of Sir P. Howard,
before the Duke and twenty more officers, and they make sport of it, only
without any reproach, or he being anything ashamed of it!
[This republican plot was described by the Lord Chancellor
in a speech delivered on October 9th, when parliament met at Oxford.]
But it ended, I remember, at last, "But such a one (the plotter)
did at last bid them remember that he had not told them what King he would
be faithfull to."
2nd. This morning I wrote
letters to Mr. Hill and Andrews to come to dine with me to-morrow, and
then I to the office, where busy, and thence to dine with Sir J. Minnes,
where merry, but only that Sir J. Minnes who hath lately lost two coach
horses, dead in the stable, has a third now a dying. After dinner I to
Deptford, and there took occasion to 'entrar a la casa de la gunaica de
ma Minusier', and did what I had a mind . . . To Greenwich, where wrote
some letters, and home in pretty good time.
3rd (Lord's day). Up; and
put on my coloured silk suit very fine, and my new periwigg, bought a
good while since, but durst not wear, because the plague was in Westminster
when I bought it; and it is a wonder what will be the fashion after the
plague is done, as to periwiggs, for nobody will dare to buy any haire,
for fear of the infection, that it had been cut off of the heads of people
dead of the plague. Before church time comes Mr. Hill (Mr. Andrews failing
because he was to receive the Sacrament), and to church, where a sorry
dull parson, and so home and most excellent company with Mr. Hill and
discourse of musique. I took my Lady Pen home, and her daughter Pegg,
and merry we were; and after dinner I made my wife show them her pictures,
which did mad Pegg Pen, who learns of the same man and cannot do so well.
After dinner left them and I by water to Greenwich, where much ado to
be suffered to come into the towne because of the sicknesse, for fear
I should come from London, till I told them who I was. So up to the church,
where at the door I find Captain Cocke in my Lord Brunker's coach, and
he come out and walked with me in the church-yarde till the church was
done, talking of the ill government of our Kingdom, nobody setting to
heart the business of the Kingdom, but every body minding their particular
profit or pleasures, the King himself minding nothing but his ease, and
so we let things go to wracke. This arose upon considering what we shall
do for money when the fleete comes in, and more if the fleete should not
meet with the Dutch, which will put a disgrace upon the King's actions,
so as the Parliament and Kingdom will have the less mind to give more
money, besides so bad an account of the last money, we fear, will be given,
not half of it being spent, as it ought to be, upon the Navy. Besides,
it is said that at this day our Lord Treasurer cannot tell what the profit
of Chimney money is, what it comes to per annum, nor looks whether that
or any other part of the revenue be duly gathered as it ought; the very
money that should pay the City the L200,000 they lent the King, being
all gathered and in the hands of the Receiver and hath been long and yet
not brought up to pay the City, whereas we are coming to borrow 4 or L500,000
more of the City, which will never be lent as is to be feared. Church
being done, my Lord Bruncker, Sir J. Minnes, and I up to the Vestry at
the desire of the justices of the Peace, Sir Theo. Biddulph and Sir W.
Boreman and Alderman Hooker, in order to the doing something for the keeping
of the plague from growing; but Lord! to consider the madness of the people
of the town, who will (because they are forbid) come in crowds along with
the dead corps to see them buried; but we agreed on some orders for the
prevention thereof. Among other stories, one was very passionate, methought,
of a complaint brought against a man in the towne for taking a child from
London from an infected house. Alderman Hooker told us it was the child
of a very able citizen in Gracious Street, a saddler, who had buried all
the rest of his children of the plague, and himself and wife now being
shut up and in despair of escaping, did desire only to save the life of
this little child; and so prevailed to have it received stark- naked into
the arms of a friend, who brought it (having put it into new fresh clothes)
to Greenwich; where upon hearing the story, we did agree it should be
permitted to be received and kept in the towne. Thence with my Lord Bruncker
to Captain Cocke's, where we mighty merry and supped, and very late I
by water to Woolwich, in great apprehensions of an ague. Here was my Lord
Bruncker's lady of pleasure, who, I perceive, goes every where with him;
and he, I find, is obliged to carry her, and make all the courtship to
her that can be.
4th. Writing letters all
the morning, among others to my Lady Carteret, the first I have wrote
to her, telling her the state of the city as to health and other sorrowfull
stories, and thence after dinner to Greenwich, to Sir J. Minnes, where
I found my Lord Bruncker, and having staid our hour for the justices by
agreement, the time being past we to walk in the Park with Mr. Hammond
and Turner, and there eat some fruit out of the King's garden and walked
in the Parke, and so back to Sir J. Minnes, and thence walked home, my
Lord Bruncker giving me a very neat cane to walk with; but it troubled
me to pass by Coome farme where about twenty-one people have died of the
plague, and three or four days since I saw a dead corps in a coffin lie
in the Close unburied, and a watch is constantly kept there night and
day to keep the people in, the plague making us cruel, as doggs, one to
another.
5th. Up, and walked with
some Captains and others talking to me to Greenwich, they crying out upon
Captain Teddiman's management of the business of Bergen, that he staid
treating too long while he saw the Dutch fitting themselves, and that
at first he might have taken every ship, and done what he would with them.
How true I cannot tell. Here we sat very late and for want of money, which
lies heavy upon us, did nothing of business almost. Thence home with my
Lord Bruncker to dinner where very merry with him and his doxy. After
dinner comes Colonell Blunt in his new chariot made with springs; as that
was of wicker, wherein a while since we rode at his house. And he hath
rode, he says, now this journey, many miles in it with one horse, and
out-drives any coach, and out-goes any horse, and so easy, he says. So
for curiosity I went into it to try it, and up the hill to the heath,
and over the cart- rutts and found it pretty well, but not so easy as
he pretends, and so back again, and took leave of my Lord and drove myself
in the chariot to the office, and there ended my letters and home pretty
betimes and there found W. Pen, and he staid supper with us and mighty
merry talking of his travells and the French humours, etc., and so parted
and to bed.
6th. Busy all the morning
writing letters to several, so to dinner, to London, to pack up more things
thence; and there I looked into the street and saw fires burning in the
street, as it is through the whole City, by the Lord Mayor's order. Thence
by water to the Duke of Albemarle's: all the way fires on each side of
the Thames, and strange to see in broad daylight two or three burials
upon the Bankeside, one at the very heels of another: doubtless all of
the plague; and yet at least forty or fifty people going along with every
one of them. The Duke mighty pleasant with me; telling me that he is certainly
informed that the Dutch were not come home upon the 1st instant, and so
he hopes our fleete may meet with them, and here to my great joy I got
him to sign bills for the several sums I have paid on Tangier business
by his single letter, and so now I can get more hands to them. This was
a great joy to me: Home to Woolwich late by water, found wife in bed,
and yet late as [it] was to write letters in order to my rising betimes
to go to Povy to-morrow. So to bed, my wife asking me to-night about a
letter of hers I should find, which indeed Mary did the other day give
me as if she had found it in my bed, thinking it had been mine, brought
to her from a man without name owning great kindness to her and I know
not what. But looking it over seriously, and seeing it bad sense and ill
writ, I did believe it to be her brother's and so had flung it away, but
finding her now concerned at it and vexed with Mary about it, it did trouble
me, but I would take no notice of it to-night, but fell to sleep as if
angry.
7th. Up by 5 of the clock,
mighty full of fear of an ague, but was obliged to go, and so by water,
wrapping myself up warm, to the Tower, and there sent for the Weekely
Bill, and find 8,252 dead in all, and of them 6,878 of the plague; which
is a most dreadfull number, and shows reason to fear that the plague hath
got that hold that it will yet continue among us. Thence to Brainford,
reading "The Villaine," a pretty good play, all the way. There
a coach of Mr. Povy's stood ready for me, and he at his house ready to
come in, and so we together merrily to Swakely, Sir R. Viner's. A very
pleasant place, bought by him of Sir James Harrington's lady. He took
us up and down with great respect, and showed us all his house and grounds;
and it is a place not very moderne in the garden nor house, but the most
uniforme in all that ever I saw; and some things to excess. Pretty to
see over the screene of the hall (put up by Sir J. Harrington, a Long
Parliamentman) the King's head, and my Lord of Essex on one side, and
Fairfax on the other; and upon the other side of the screene, the parson
of the parish, and the lord of the manor and his sisters. The window-cases,
door-cases, and chimnys of all the house are marble. He showed me a black
boy that he had, that died of a consumption, and being dead, he caused
him to be dried in an oven, and lies there entire in a box. By and by
to dinner, where his lady I find yet handsome, but hath been a very handsome
woman; now is old. Hath brought him near L100,000 and now he lives, no
man in England in greater plenty, and commands both King and Council with
his credit he gives them. Here was a fine lady a merchant's wife at dinner
with us, and who should be here in the quality of a woman but Mrs. Worship's
daughter, Dr. Clerke's niece, and after dinner Sir Robert led us up to
his long gallery, very fine, above stairs (and better, or such, furniture
I never did see), and there Mrs. Worship did give us three or four very
good songs, and sings very neatly, to my great delight. After all this,
and ending the chief business to my content about getting a promise of
some money of him, we took leave, being exceedingly well treated here,
and a most pleasant journey we had back, Povy and I, and his company most
excellent in anything but business, he here giving me an account of as
many persons at Court as I had a mind or thought of enquiring after. He
tells me by a letter he showed me, that the King is not, nor hath been
of late, very well, but quite out of humour; and, as some think, in a
consumption, and weary of every thing. He showed me my Lord Arlington's
house that he was born in, in a towne called Harlington: and so carried
me through a most pleasant country to Brainford, and there put me into
my boat, and good night. So I wrapt myself warm, and by water got to Woolwich
about one in the morning, my wife and all in bed.
8th. Waked, and fell in
talk with my wife about the letter, and she satisfied me that she did
not know from whence it come, but believed it might be from her cozen
Franke Moore lately come out of France. The truth is the thing I think
cannot have much in it, and being unwilling (being in other things so
much at ease) to vex myself in a strange place at a melancholy time, passed
all by and were presently friends. Up, and several with me about business.
Anon comes my Lord Bruncker, as I expected, and we to the enquiring into
the business of the late desertion of the Shipwrights from worke, who
had left us for three days together for want of money, and upon this all
the morning, and brought it to a pretty good issue, that they, we believe,
will come to-morrow to work. To dinner, having but a mean one, yet sufficient
for him, and he well enough pleased, besides that I do not desire to vye
entertainments with him or any else. Here was Captain Cocke also, and
Mr. Wayth. We staid together talking upon one business or other all the
afternoon. In the evening my Lord Bruncker hearing that Mr. Ackeworth's
clerke, the Dutchman who writes and draws so well, was transcribing a
book of Rates and our ships for Captain Millet a gallant of his mistress's,
we sent for him for it. He would not deliver it, but said it was his mistress's
and had delivered it to her. At last we were forced to send to her for
it; she would come herself, and indeed the book was a very neat one and
worth keeping as a rarity, but we did think fit, and though much against
my will, to cancell all that he had finished of it, and did give her the
rest, which vexed her, and she bore it discreetly enough, but with a cruel
deal of malicious rancour in her looks. I must confess I would have persuaded
her to have let us have it to the office, and it may be the board would
not have censured too hardly of it, but my intent was to have had it as
a Record for the office, but she foresaw what would be the end of it and
so desired it might rather be cancelled, which was a plaguy deal of spite.
My Lord Bruncker being gone and company, and she also, afterwards I took
my wife and people and walked into the fields about a while till night,
and then home, and so to sing a little and then to bed. I was in great
trouble all this day for my boy Tom who went to Greenwich yesterday by
my order and come not home till to-night for fear of the plague, but he
did come home to-night, saying he staid last night by Mr. Hater's advice
hoping to have me called as I come home with my boat to come along with
me.
9th. Up and walked to Greenwich,
and there we sat and dispatched a good deal of business I had a mind to.
At noon, by invitation, to my Lord Bruncker's, all of us, to dinner, where
a good venison pasty, and mighty merry. Here was Sir W. Doyly, lately
come from Ipswich about the sicke and wounded, and Mr. Evelyn and Captain
Cocke. My wife also was sent for by my Lord Bruncker, by Cocke, and was
here. After dinner, my Lord and his mistress would see her home again,
it being a most cursed rainy afternoon, having had none a great while
before, and I, forced to go to the office on foot through all the rain,
was almost wet to my skin, and spoiled my silke breeches almost. Rained
all the afternoon and evening, so as my letters being done, I was forced
to get a bed at Captain Cocke's, where I find Sir W. Doyly, and he, and
Evelyn at supper; and I with them full of discourse of the neglect of
our masters, the great officers of State, about all business, and especially
that of money: having now some thousands prisoners, kept to no purpose
at a great charge, and no money provided almost for the doing of it. We
fell to talk largely of the want of some persons understanding to look
after businesses, but all goes to rack. "For," says Captain
Cocke, "my Lord Treasurer, he minds his ease, and lets things go
how they will: if he can have his L8000 per annum, and a game at l'ombre,--[Spanish
card game]-- he is well. My Lord Chancellor he minds getting of
money and nothing else; and my Lord Ashly will rob the Devil and the Alter,
but he will get money if it be to be got." But that that put us into
this great melancholy, was newes brought to-day, which Captain Cocke reports
as a certain truth, that all the Dutch fleete, men-of-war and merchant
East India ships, are got every one in from Bergen the 3d of this month,
Sunday last; which will make us all ridiculous. The fleete come home with
shame to require a great deale of money, which is not to be had, to discharge
many men that must get the plague then or continue at greater charge on
shipboard, nothing done by them to encourage the Parliament to give money,
nor the Kingdom able to spare any money, if they would, at this time of
the plague, so that, as things look at present, the whole state must come
to ruine. Full of these melancholy thoughts, to bed; where, though I lay
the softest I ever did in my life, with a downe bed, after the Danish
manner, upon me, yet I slept very ill, chiefly through the thoughts of
my Lord Sandwich's concernment in all this ill successe at sea.
10th (Lord's day). Walked
home; being forced thereto by one of my watermen falling sick yesterday,
and it was God's great mercy I did not go by water with them yesterday,
for he fell sick on Saturday night, and it is to be feared of the plague.
So I sent him away to London with his fellow; but another boat come to
me this morning, whom I sent to Blackewall for Mr. Andrews. I walked to
Woolwich, and there find Mr. Hill, and he and I all the morning at musique
and a song he hath set of three parts, methinks, very good. Anon comes
Mr. Andrews, though it be a very ill day, and so after dinner we to musique
and sang till about 4 or 5 o'clock, it blowing very hard, and now and
then raining, and wind and tide being against us, Andrews and I took leave
and walked to Greenwich. My wife before I come out telling me the ill
news that she hears that her father is very ill, and then I told her I
feared of the plague, for that the house is shut up. And so she much troubled
she did desire me to send them something; and I said I would, and will
do so. But before I come out there happened newes to come to the by an
expresse from Mr. Coventry, telling me the most happy news of my Lord
Sandwich's meeting with part of the Dutch; his taking two of their East
India ships, and six or seven others, and very good prizes and that he
is in search of the rest of the fleet, which he hopes to find upon the
Wellbancke, with the loss only of the Hector, poor Captain Cuttle. This
newes do so overjoy me that I know not what to say enough to express it,
but the better to do it I did walk to Greenwich, and there sending away
Mr. Andrews, I to Captain Cocke's, where I find my Lord Bruncker and his
mistress, and Sir J. Minnes. Where we supped (there was also Sir W. Doyly
and Mr. Evelyn); but the receipt of this newes did put us all into such
an extacy of joy, that it inspired into Sir J. Minnes and Mr. Evelyn such
a spirit of mirth, that in all my life I never met with so merry a two
hours as our company this night was. Among other humours, Mr. Evelyn's
repeating of some verses made up of nothing but the various acceptations
of may and can, and doing it so aptly upon occasion of something of that
nature, and so fast, did make us all die almost with laughing, and did
so stop the mouth of Sir J. Minnes in the middle of all his mirth (and
in a thing agreeing with his own manner of genius), that I never saw any
man so out-done in all my life; and Sir J. Minnes's mirth too to see himself
out-done, was the crown of all our mirth. In this humour we sat till about
ten at night, and so my Lord and his mistress home, and we to bed, it
being one of the times of my life wherein I was the fullest of true sense
of joy.
11th. Up and walked to
the office, there to do some business till ten of the clock, and then
by agreement my Lord, Sir J. Minnes, Sir W. Doyly, and I took boat and
over to the ferry, where Sir W. Batten's coach was ready for us, and to
Walthamstow drove merrily, excellent merry discourse in the way, and most
upon our last night's revells; there come we were very merry, and a good
plain venison dinner. After dinner to billiards, where I won an angel,
[A gold coin, so called because it bore the image
of an angel, varying in value from six shillings and eightpence to ten
shillings.] and among other sports we were merry with my pretending
to have a warrant to Sir W. Hickes (who was there, and was out of humour
with Sir W. Doyly's having lately got a warrant for a leash of buckes,
of which we were now eating one) which vexed him, and at last would compound
with me to give my Lord Bruncker half a buck now, and me a Doe for it
a while hence when the season comes in, which we agreed to and had held,
but that we fear Sir W. Doyly did betray our design, which spoiled all;
however, my Lady Batten invited herself to dine with him this week, and
she invited us all to dine with her there, which we agreed to, only to
vex him, he being the most niggardly fellow, it seems, in the world. Full
of good victuals and mirth we set homeward in the evening, and very merry
all the way. So to Greenwich, where when come I find my Lord Rutherford
and Creed come from Court, and among other things have brought me several
orders for money to pay for Tangier; and, among the rest L7000 and more,
to this Lord, which is an excellent thing to consider, that, though they
can do nothing else, they can give away the King's money upon their progresse.
I did give him the best answer I could to pay him with tallys, and that
is all they could get from me. I was not in humour to spend much time
with them, but walked a little before Sir J. Minnes's door and then took
leave, and I by water to Woolwich, where with my wife to a game at tables,
[The old name for backgammon, used by Shakespeare
and others. The following lines are from an epitaph entirely made up of
puns on backgammon
"Man's life's a game at tables, and he may Mend his bad fortune by
his wiser play."
Wit's Recre., i. 250, reprint, 1817.] and to bed.
12th. Up, and walked to
the office, where we sat late, and thence to dinner home with Sir J. Minnes,
and so to the office, where writing letters, and home in the evening,
where my wife shews me a letter from her brother speaking of their father's
being ill, like to die, which, God forgive me! did not trouble me so much
as it should, though I was indeed sorry for it. I did presently resolve
to send him something in a letter from my wife, viz. 20s. So to bed.
13th. Up, and walked to
Greenwich, taking pleasure to walk with my minute watch in my hand, by
which I am come now to see the distances of my way from Woolwich to Greenwich,
and do find myself to come within two minutes constantly to the same place
at the end of each quarter of an houre. Here we rendezvoused at Captain
Cocke's, and there eat oysters, and so my Lord Bruncker, Sir J. Minnes,
and I took boat, and in my Lord's coach to Sir W. Hickes's, whither by
and by my Lady Batten and Sir William comes. It is a good seat, with a
fair grove of trees by it, and the remains of a good garden; but so let
to run to ruine, both house and every thing in and about it, so ill furnished
and miserably looked after, I never did see in all my life. Not so much
as a latch to his dining- room door; which saved him nothing, for the
wind blowing into the room for want thereof, flung down a great bow pott
that stood upon the side- table, and that fell upon some Venice glasses,
and did him a crown's worth of hurt. He did give us the meanest dinner
(of beef, shoulder and umbles of venison [Dr. Johnson
was puzzled by the following passage in "The Merry Wives of Windsor,"
act v., sc. 3: "Divide me like a bribe-buck, each a haunch. I will
keep the sides to myself; my shoulders for the fellow of this walk."
If he could have read the account of Sir William Hickes's dinner, he would
at once have understood the allusion to the keeper's perquisites of the
shoulders of all deer killed in his walk.--B.] which he takes away
from the keeper of the Forest, and a few pigeons, and all in the meanest
manner) that ever I did see, to the basest degree. After dinner we officers
of the Navy stepped aside to read some letters and consider some business,
and so in again. I was only pleased at a very fine picture of the Queene-Mother,
when she was young, by Van-Dike; a very good picture, and a lovely sweet
face. Thence in the afternoon home, and landing at Greenwich I saw Mr.
Pen walking my way, so we walked together, and for discourse I put him
into talk of France, when he took delight to tell me of his observations,
some good, some impertinent, and all ill told, but it served for want
of better, and so to my house, where I find my wife abroad, and hath been
all this day, nobody knows where, which troubled me, it being late and
a cold evening. So being invited to his mother's to supper, we took Mrs.
Barbara, who was mighty finely dressed, and in my Lady's coach, which
we met going for my wife, we thither, and there after some discourse went
to supper. By and by comes my wife and Mercer, and had been with Captain
Cocke all day, he coming and taking her out to go see his boy at school
at Brumly [Bromley], and brought her home again with great respect. Here
pretty merry, only I had no stomach, having dined late, to eat. After
supper Mr. Pen and I fell to discourse about some words in a French song
my wife was saying, "D'un air tout interdict," wherein I laid
twenty to one against him which he would not agree with me, though I know
myself in the right as to the sense of the word, and almost angry we were,
and were an houre and more upon the dispute, till at last broke up not
satisfied, and so home in their coach and so to bed. H. Russell did this
day deliver my 20s. to my wife's father or mother, but has not yet told
us how they do.
14th. Up, and walked to
Greenwich, and there fitted myself in several businesses to go to London,
where I have not been now a pretty while. But before I went from the office
newes is brought by word of mouth that letters are now just now brought
from the fleete of our taking a great many more of the Dutch fleete, in
which I did never more plainly see my command of my temper in my not admitting
myself to receive any kind of joy from it till I had heard the certainty
of it, and therefore went by water directly to the Duke of Albemarle,
where I find a letter of the Lath from Solebay, from my Lord Sandwich,
of the fleete's meeting with about eighteen more of the Dutch fleete,
and his taking of most of them; and the messenger says, they had taken
three after the letter was wrote and sealed; which being twenty-one, and
the fourteen took the other day, is forty-five sail; some of which are
good, and others rich ships, which is so great a cause of joy in us all
that my Lord and everybody is highly joyed thereat. And having taken a
copy of my Lord's letter, I away back again to the Beare at the Bridge
foot, being full of wind and out of order, and there called for a biscuit
and a piece of cheese and gill of sacke, being forced to walk over the
Bridge, toward the 'Change, and the plague being all thereabouts. Here
my news was highly welcome, and I did wonder to see the 'Change so full,
I believe 200 people; but not a man or merchant of any fashion, but plain
men all. And Lord! to see how I did endeavour all I could to talk with
as few as I could, there being now no observation of shutting up of houses
infected, that to be sure we do converse and meet with people that have
the plague upon them. I to Sir Robert Viner's, where my main business
was about settling the business of Debusty's L5000 tallys, which I did
for the present to enable me to have some money, and so home, buying some
things for my wife in the way.
So home, and put up several things to carry to Woolwich,
and upon serious thoughts I am advised by W. Griffin to let my money and
plate rest there, as being as safe as any place, nobody imagining that
people would leave money in their houses now, when all their families
are gone. So for the present that being my opinion, I did leave them there
still. But, Lord! to see the trouble that it puts a man to, to keep safe
what with pain a man hath been getting together, and there is good reason
for it. Down to the office, and there wrote letters to and again about
this good newes of our victory, and so by water home late. Where, when
I come home I spent some thoughts upon the occurrences of this day, giving
matter for as much content on one hand and melancholy on another, as any
day in all my life. For the first; the finding of my money and plate,
and all safe at London, and speeding in my business of money this day.
The hearing of this good news to such excess, after so great a despair
of my Lord's doing anything this year; adding to that, the decrease of
500 and more, which is the first decrease we have yet had in the sickness
since it begun: and great hopes that the next week it will be greater.
Then, on the other side, my finding that though the Bill in general is
abated, yet the City within the walls is encreased, and likely to continue
so, and is close to our house there. My meeting dead corpses of the plague,
carried to be buried close to me at noon-day through the City in Fanchurch-street.
To see a person sick of the sores, carried close by me by Gracechurch
in a hackney-coach. My finding the Angell tavern, at the lower end of
Tower- hill, shut up, and more than that, the alehouse at the Tower-stairs,
and more than that, the person was then dying of the plague when I was
last there, a little while ago, at night, to write a short letter there,
and I overheard the mistresse of the house sadly saying to her husband
somebody was very ill, but did not think it was of the plague. To hear
that poor Payne, my waiter, hath buried a child, and is dying himself.
To hear that a labourer I sent but the other day to Dagenhams, to know
how they did there, is dead of the plague; and that one of my own watermen,
that carried me daily, fell sick as soon as he had landed me on Friday
morning last, when I had been all night upon the water (and I believe
he did get his infection that day at Brainford), and is now dead of the
plague. To hear that Captain Lambert and Cuttle are killed in the taking
these ships; and that Mr. Sidney Montague is sick of a desperate fever
at my Lady Carteret's, at Scott's-hall. To hear that Mr. Lewes hath another
daughter sick. And, lastly, that both my servants, W. Hewer and Tom Edwards,
have lost their fathers, both in St. Sepulchre's parish, of the plague
this week, do put me into great apprehensions of melancholy, and with
good reason. But I put off the thoughts of sadness as much as I can, and
the rather to keep my wife in good heart and family also. After supper
(having eat nothing all this day) upon a fine tench--[??
D.W.]-- of Mr. Shelden's taking, we to bed.
15th. Up, it being a cold
misting morning, and so by water to the office, where very busy upon several
businesses. At noon got the messenger, Marlow, to get me a piece of bread
and butter and cheese and a bottle of beer and ale, and so I went not
out of the office but dined off that, and my boy Tom, but the rest of
my clerks went home to dinner. Then to my business again, and by and by
sent my waterman to see how Sir W. Warren do, who is sicke, and for which
I have reason to be very sorry, he being the friend I have got most by
of most friends in England but the King: who returns me that he is pretty
well again, his disease being an ague. I by water to Deptford, thinking
to have seen my valentine, but I could not, and so come back again, and
to the office, where a little business, and thence with Captain Cocke,
and there drank a cup of good drink, which I am fain to allow myself during
this plague time, by advice of all, and not contrary to my oathe, my physician
being dead, and chyrurgeon out of the way, whose advice I am obliged to
take, and so by water home and eat my supper, and to bed, being in much
pain to think what I shall do this winter time; for go every day to Woolwich
I cannot, without endangering my life; and staying from my wife at Greenwich
is not handsome.
16th. Up, and walked to
Greenwich reading a play, and to the office, where I find Sir J. Minnes
gone to the fleete, like a doating foole, to do no good, but proclaim
himself an asse; for no service he can do there, nor inform my Lord, who
is come in thither to the buoy of the Nore, in anything worth his knowledge.
At noon to dinner to my Lord Bruncker, where Sir W. Batten and his Lady
come, by invitation, and very merry we were, only that the discourse of
the likelihood of the increase of the plague this weeke makes us a little
sad, but then again the thoughts of the late prizes make us glad. After
dinner, by appointment, comes Mr. Andrews, and he and I walking alone
in the garden talking of our Tangier business, and I endeavoured by the
by to offer some encouragements for their continuing in the business,
which he seemed to take hold of, and the truth is my profit is so much
concerned that I could wish they would, and would take pains to ease them
in the business of money as much as was possible. He being gone (after
I had ordered him L2000, and he paid me my quantum out of it) I also walked
to the office, and there to my business; but find myself, through the
unfitness of my place to write in, and my coming from great dinners, and
drinking wine, that I am not in the good temper of doing business now
a days that I used to be and ought still to be. At night to Captain Cocke's,
meaning to lie there, it being late, and he not being at home, I walked
to him to my Lord Bruncker's, and there staid a while, they being at tables;
and so by and by parted, and walked to his house; and, after a mess of
good broth, to bed, in great pleasure, his company being most excellent.
17th (Lord's day). Up,
and before I went out of my chamber did draw a musique scale, in order
to my having it at any time ready in my hand to turn to for exercise,
for I have a great mind in this Vacation to perfect myself in my scale,
in order to my practising of composition, and so that being done I down
stairs, and there find Captain Cocke under the barber's hands, the barber
that did heretofore trim Commissioner Pett, and with whom I have been.
He offered to come this day after dinner with his violin to play me a
set of Lyra-ayres upon it, which I was glad of, hoping to be merry thereby.
Being ready we to church, where a company of fine people to church, and
a fine Church, and very good sermon, Mr. Plume' being a very excellent
scholler and preacher. Coming out of the church I met Mrs. Pierce, whom
I was ashamed to see, having not been with her since my coming to town,
but promised to visit her. Thence with Captain Cocke, in his coach, home
to dinner, whither comes by invitation my Lord Bruncker and his mistresse
and very good company we were, but in dinner time comes Sir J. Minnes
from the fleete, like a simple weak man, having nothing to say of what
he hath done there, but tells of what value he imagines the prizes to
be, and that my Lord Sandwich is well, and mightily concerned to hear
that I was well. But this did put me upon a desire of going thither; and,
moving of it to my Lord, we presently agreed upon it to go this very tide,
we two and Captain Cocke. So every body prepared to fit himself for his
journey, and I walked to Woolwich to trim and shift myself, and by the
time I was ready they come down in the Bezan yacht, and so I aboard and
my boy Tom, and there very merrily we sailed to below Gravesend, and there
come to anchor for all night, and supped and talked, and with much pleasure
at last settled ourselves to sleep having very good lodging upon cushions
in the cabbin.
18th. By break of day we
come to within sight of the fleete, which was a very fine thing to behold,
being above 100 ships, great and small; with the flag-ships of each squadron,
distinguished by their several flags on their main, fore, or mizen masts.
Among others, the Soveraigne, Charles, and Prince; in the last of which
my Lord Sandwich was. When we called by her side his Lordshipp was not
stirring, so we come to anchor a little below his ship, thinking to have
rowed on board him, but the wind and tide was so strong against us that
we could not get up to him, no, though rowed by a boat of the Prince's
that come to us to tow us up; at last however he brought us within a little
way, and then they flung out a rope to us from the Prince and so come
on board, but with great trouble and tune and patience, it being very
cold; we find my Lord newly up in his night-gown very well. He received
us kindly; telling us the state of the fleet, lacking provisions, having
no beer at all, nor have had most of them these three weeks or month,
and but few days' dry provisions. And indeed he tells us that he believes
no fleete was ever set to sea in so ill condition of provision, as this
was when it went out last. He did inform us in the business of Bergen,
[Lord Sandwich was not so successful in convincing
other people as to the propriety of his conduct at Bergen as he was with
Pepys.] so as to let us see how the judgment of the world is not
to be depended on in things they know not; it being a place just wide
enough, and not so much hardly, for ships to go through to it, the yardarmes
sticking in the very rocks. He do not, upon his best enquiry, find reason
to except against any part of the management of the business by Teddiman;
he having staid treating no longer than during the night, whiles he was
fitting himself to fight, bringing his ship a-breast, and not a quarter
of an hour longer (as is said); nor could more ships have been brought
to play, as is thought. Nor could men be landed, there being 10,000 men
effectively always in armes of the Danes; nor, says he, could we expect
more from the Dane than he did, it being impossible to set fire on the
ships but it must burn the towne. But that wherein the Dane did amisse
is, that he did assist them, the Dutch, all the while, while he was treating
with us, while he should have been neutrall to us both. But, however,
he did demand but the treaty of us; which is, that we should not come
with more than five ships. A flag of truce is said, and confessed by my
Lord, that he believes it was hung out; but while they did hang it out,
they did shoot at us; so that it was not either seen perhaps, or fit to
cease upon sight of it, while they continued actually in action against
us.
But the main thing my Lord wonders at, and condemns
the Dane for, is, that the blockhead, who is so much in debt to the Hollander,
having now a treasure more by much than all his Crowne was worth, and
that which would for ever have beggared the Hollanders, should not take
this time to break with the Hollander, and, thereby paid his debt which
must have been forgiven him, and got the greatest treasure into his hands
that ever was together in the world. By and by my Lord took me aside to
discourse of his private matters, who was very free with me touching the
ill condition of the fleete that it hath been in, and the good fortune
that he hath had, and nothing else that these prizes are to be imputed
to. He also talked with me about Mr. Coventry's dealing with him in sending
Sir W. Pen away before him, which was not fair nor kind; but that he hath
mastered and cajoled Sir W. Pen, that he hath been able to do, nothing
in the fleete, but been obedient to him; but withal tells me he is a man
that is but of very mean parts, and a fellow not to be lived with, so
false and base he is; which I know well enough to be very true, and did,
as I had formerly done, give my Lord my knowledge of him.
By and by was called a Council of Warr on board, when
come Sir W. Pen there, and Sir Christopher Mings, Sir Edward Spragg, Sir
Jos. Jordan, Sir Thomas Teddiman, and Sir Roger Cuttance, and so the necessity
of the fleete for victuals, clothes, and money was discoursed, but by
the discourse there of all but my Lord, that is to say, the counterfeit
grave nonsense of Sir W. Pen and the poor mean discourse of the rest,
methinks I saw how the government and management of the greatest business
of the three nations is committed to very ordinary heads, saving my Lord,
and in effect is only upon him, who is able to do what he pleases with
them, they not having the meanest degree of reason to be able to oppose
anything that he says, and so I fear it is ordered but like all the rest
of the King's publique affayres. The council being up they most of them
went away, only Sir W. Pen who staid to dine there and did so, but the
wind being high the ship (though the motion of it was hardly discernible
to the eye) did make me sick, so as I could not eat any thing almost.
After dinner Cocke did pray me to helpe him to L500 of W. How, who is
deputy Treasurer, wherein my Lord Bruncker and I am to be concerned and
I did aske it my Lord, and he did consent to have us furnished with L500,
and I did get it paid to Sir Roger Cuttance and Mr. Pierce in part for
above L1000 worth of goods, Mace, Nutmegs, Cynamon, and Cloves, and he
tells us we may hope to get L1500 by it, which God send! Great spoil,
I hear, there hath been of the two East India ships, and that yet they
will come in to the King very rich: so that I hope this journey will be
worth L100 to me.
[There is a shorthand journal of proceedings relating
to Pepys's purchase of some East India prize goods among the Rawlinson
MSS. in the Bodleian Library.]
After having paid this money, we took leave of my Lord and so to our Yacht
again, having seen many of my friends there. Among others I hear that
W. Howe will grow very rich by this last business and grows very proud
and insolent by it; but it is what I ever expected. I hear by every body
how much my poor Lord of Sandwich was concerned for me during my silence
a while, lest I had been dead of the plague in this sickly time. No sooner
come into the yacht, though overjoyed with the good work we have done
to-day, but I was overcome with sea sickness so that I begun to spue soundly,
and so continued a good while, till at last I went into the cabbin and
shutting my eyes my trouble did cease that I fell asleep, which continued
till we come into Chatham river where the water was smooth, and then I
rose and was very well, and the tide coming to be against us we did land
before we come to Chatham and walked a mile, having very good discourse
by the way, it being dark and it beginning to rain just as we got thither.
At Commissioner Pett's we did eat and drink very well and very merry we
were, and about 10 at night, it being moonshine and very cold, we set
out, his coach carrying us, and so all night travelled to Greenwich, we
sometimes sleeping a little and then talking and laughing by the way,
and with much pleasure, but that it was very horrible cold, that I was
afeard of an ague. A pretty passage was that the coach stood of a sudden
and the coachman come down and the horses stirring, he cried, Hold! which
waked me, and the coach[man] standing at the boote to [do] something or
other and crying, Hold! I did wake of a sudden and not knowing who he
was, nor thinking of the coachman between sleeping and waking I did take
up the heart to take him by the shoulder, thinking verily he had been
a thief. But when I waked I found my cowardly heart to discover a fear
within me and that I should never have done it if I had been awake.
19th. About 4 or 5 of the
clock we come to Greenwich, and, having first set down my Lord Bruncker,
Cocke and I went to his house, it being light, and there to our great
trouble, we being sleepy and cold, we met with the ill newes that his
boy Jacke was gone to bed sicke, which put Captain Cocke and me also into
much trouble, the boy, as they told us, complaining of his head most,
which is a bad sign it seems. So they presently betook themselves to consult
whither and how to remove him. However I thought it not fit for me to
discover too much fear to go away, nor had I any place to go to. So to
bed I went and slept till 10 of the clock and then comes Captain Cocke
to wake me and tell me that his boy was well again. With great joy I heard
the newes and he told it, so I up and to the office where we did a little,
and but a little business. At noon by invitation to my Lord Bruncker's
where we staid till four of the clock for my Lady Batten and she not then
coming we to dinner and pretty merry but disordered by her making us stay
so long. After dinner I to the office, and there wrote letters and did
business till night and then to Sir J. Minnes's, where I find my Lady
Batten come, and she and my Lord Bruncker and his mistresse, and the whole
house-full there at cards. But by and by my Lord Bruncker goes away and
others of the company, and when I expected Sir J. Minnes and his sister
should have staid to have made Sir W. Batten and Lady sup, I find they
go up in snuffe to bed without taking any manner of leave of them, but
left them with Mr. Boreman. The reason of this I could not presently learn,
but anon I hear it is that Sir J. Minnes did expect and intend them a
supper, but they without respect to him did first apply themselves to
Boreman, which makes all this great feude. However I staid and there supped,
all of us being in great disorder from this, and more from Cocke's boy's
being ill, where my Lady Batten and Sir W. Batten did come to town with
an intent to lodge, and I was forced to go seek a lodging which my W.
Hewer did get me, viz., his own chamber in the towne, whither I went and
found it a very fine room, and there lay most excellently.
20th. Called up by Captain
Cocke (who was last night put into great trouble upon his boy's being
rather worse than better, upon which he removed him out of his house to
his stable), who told me that to my comfort his boy was now as well as
ever he was in his life. So I up, and after being trimmed, the first time
I have been touched by a barber these twelvemonths, I think, and more,
went to Sir J. Minnes's, where I find all out of order still, they having
not seen one another till by and by Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten met,
to go into my Lord Bruncker's coach, and so we four to Lambeth, and thence
to the Duke of Albemarle, to inform him what we have done as to the fleete,
which is very little, and to receive his direction. But, Lord! what a
sad time it is to see no boats upon the River; and grass grows all up
and down White Hall court, and nobody but poor wretches in the streets!
And, which is worst of all, the Duke showed us the number of the plague
this week, brought in the last night from the Lord Mayor; that it is encreased
about 600 more than the last, which is quite contrary to all our hopes
and expectations, from the coldness of the late season. For the whole
general number is 8,297, and of them the plague 7,165; which is more in
the whole by above 50, than the biggest Bill yet; which is very grievous
to us all. I find here a design in my Lord Bruncker and Captain Cocke
to have had my Lord Bruncker chosen as one of us to have been sent aboard
one of the East Indiamen, and Captain Cocke as a merchant to be joined
with him, and Sir J. Minnes for the other, and Sir G. Smith to be joined
with him. But I did order it so that my Lord Bruncker and Sir J. Minnes
were ordered, but I did stop the merchants to be added, which would have
been a most pernicious thing to the King I am sure. In this I did, I think,
a very good office, though I cannot acquit myself from some envy of mine
in the business to have the profitable business done by another hand while
I lay wholly imployed in the trouble of the office. Thence back again
by my Lord's coach to my Lord Bruncker's house, where I find my Lady Batten,
who is become very great with Mrs. Williams (my Lord Bruncker's whore),
and there we dined and were mighty merry. After dinner I to the office
there to write letters, to fit myself for a journey to-morrow to Nonsuch
to the Exchequer by appointment. That being done I to Sir J. Minnes where
I find Sir W. Batten and his Lady gone home to Walthamstow in great snuffe
as to Sir J. Minnes, but yet with some necessity, hearing that a mayde-
servant of theirs is taken ill. Here I staid and resolved of my going
in my Lord Bruncker's coach which he would have me to take, though himself
cannot go with me as he intended, and so to my last night's lodging to
bed very weary.
21st. Up between five and
six o'clock; and by the time I was ready, my Lord's coach comes for me;
and taking Will Hewer with me, who is all in mourning for his father,
who is lately dead of the plague, as my boy Tom's is also, I set out,
and took about L100 with me to pay the fees there, and so rode in some
fear of robbing. When I come thither, I find only Mr. Ward, who led me
to Burgess's bedside, and Spicer's, who, watching of the house, as it
is their turns every night, did lie long in bed to-day, and I find nothing
at all done in my business, which vexed me. But not seeing how to helpe
it I did walk up and down with Mr. Ward to see the house; and by and by
Spicer and Mr. Falconbrige come to me and he and I to a towne near by,
Yowell, there drink and set up my horses and also bespoke a dinner, and
while that is dressing went with Spicer and walked up and down the house
and park; and a fine place it hath heretofore been, and a fine prospect
about the house. A great walk of an elme and a walnutt set one after another
in order. And all the house on the outside filled with figures of stories,
and good painting of Rubens' or Holben's doing. And one great thing is,
that most of the house is covered, I mean the posts, and quarters in the
walls; covered with lead, and gilded. I walked into the ruined garden,
and there found a plain little girle, kinswoman of Mr. Falconbridge, to
sing very finely by the eare only, but a fine way of singing, and if I
come ever to lacke a girle again I shall think of getting her. Thence
to the towne, and there Spicer, Woodruffe, and W. Bowyer and I dined together
and a friend of Spicer's; and a good dinner I had for them. Falconbrige
dined somewhere else, by appointment. Strange to see how young W. Bowyer
looks at 41 years; one would not take him for 24 or more, and is one of
the greatest wonders I ever did see. After dinner, about 4 of the clock
we broke up, and I took coach and home (in fear for the money I had with
me, but that this friend of Spicer's, one of the Duke's guard did ride
along the best part of the way with us). I got to my Lord Bruncker's before
night, and there I sat and supped with him and his mistresse, and Cocke
whose boy is yet ill. Thence, after losing a crowne betting at Tables--[Cribbage]--,
we walked home, Cocke seeing me at my new lodging, where I went to bed.
All my worke this day in the coach going and coming was to refresh myself
in my musique scale, which I would fain have perfecter than ever I had
yet.
22nd. Up betimes and to
the office, meaning to have entered my last 5 or 6 days' Journall, but
was called away by my Lord Bruncker and Sir J. Minnes, and to Blackwall,
there to look after the storehouses in order to the laying of goods out
of the East India ships when they shall be unloaden. That being done,
we into Johnson's house, and were much made of, eating and drinking. But
here it is observable what he tells us, that in digging his late Docke,
he did 12 foot under ground find perfect trees over-covered with earth.
Nut trees, with the branches and the very nuts upon them; some of whose
nuts he showed us. Their shells black with age, and their kernell, upon
opening, decayed, but their shell perfectly hard as ever. And a yew tree
he showed us (upon which, he says, the very ivy was taken up whole about
it), which upon cutting with an addes [adze], we found to be rather harder
than the living tree usually is. They say, very much, but I do not know
how hard a yew tree naturally is.
[The same discovery was made in 1789, in digging the
Brunswick Dock, also at Blackwall, and elsewhere in the neighbourhood.]
The armes, they say, were taken up at first whole, about the body, which
is very strange. Thence away by water, and I walked with my Lord Bruncker
home, and there at dinner comes a letter from my Lord Sandwich to tell
me that he would this day be at Woolwich, and desired me to meet him.
Which fearing might have lain in Sir J. Minnes' pocket a while, he sending
it me, did give my Lord Bruncker, his mistress, and I occasion to talk
of him as the most unfit man for business in the world. Though at last
afterwards I found that he was not in this faulty, but hereby I have got
a clear evidence of my Lord Bruncker's opinion of him. My Lord Bruncker
presently ordered his coach to be ready and we to Woolwich, and my Lord
Sandwich not being come, we took a boat and about a mile off met him in
his Catch, and boarded him, and come up with him; and, after making a
little halt at my house, which I ordered, to have my wife see him, we
all together by coach to Mr. Boreman's, where Sir J. Minnes did receive
him very handsomely, and there he is to lie; and Sir J. Minnes did give
him on the sudden, a very handsome supper and brave discourse, my Lord
Bruncker, and Captain Cocke, and Captain Herbert being there, with myself.
Here my Lord did witness great respect to me, and very kind expressions,
and by other occasions, from one thing to another did take notice how
I was overjoyed at first to see the King's letter to his Lordship, and
told them how I did kiss it, and that, whatever he was, I did always love
the King. This my Lord Bruncker did take such notice [of] as that he could
not forbear kissing me before my Lord, professing his finding occasion
every day more and more to love me, and Captain Cocke has since of himself
taken notice of that speech of my Lord then concerning me, and may be
of good use to me. Among other discourse concerning long life, Sir J.
Minnes saying that his great-grandfather was alive in Edward the Vth's
time; my Lord Sandwich did tell us how few there have been of his family
since King Harry the VIIIth; that is to say, the then Chiefe Justice,
and his son the Lord Montagu, who was father to Sir Sidney,
[These are the words in the MS., and not "his
son and the Lord Montagu," as in some former editions. Pepys seems
to have written Lord Montagu by mistake for Sir Edward Montagu.]
who was his father. And yet, what is more wonderfull, he did assure us
from the mouth of my Lord Montagu himself, that in King James's time ([when
he] had a mind to get the King to cut off the entayle of some land which
was given in Harry the VIIIth's time to the family, with the remainder
in the Crowne); he did answer the King in showing how unlikely it was
that ever it could revert to the Crown, but that it would be a present
convenience to him; and did show that at that time there were 4,000 persons
derived from the very body of the Chiefe Justice. It seems the number
of daughters in the family having been very great, and they too had most
of them many children, and grandchildren, and great- grandchildren. This
he tells as a most known and certain truth. After supper, my Lord Bruncker
took his leave, and I also did mine, taking Captain Herbert home to my
lodging to lie with me, who did mighty seriously inquire after who was
that in the black dress with my wife yesterday, and would not believe
that it was my wife's mayde, Mercer, but it was she.
23rd. Up, and to my Lord
Sandwich, who did advise alone with me how far he might trust Captain
Cocke in the business of the prize-goods, my Lord telling me that he hath
taken into his hands 2 or L3000 value of them: it being a good way, he
says, to get money, and afterwards to get the King's allowance thereof,
it being easier, he observes, to keepe money when got of the King than
to get it when it is too late. I advised him not to trust Cocke too far,
and did therefore offer him ready money for a L1000 or two, which he listens
to and do agree to, which is great joy to me, hoping thereby to get something!
Thence by coach to Lambeth, his Lordship, and all our office, and Mr.
Evelyn, to the Duke of Albemarle, where, after the compliment with my
Lord very kind, we sat down to consult of the disposing and supporting
of the fleete with victuals and money, and for the sicke men and prisoners;
and I did propose the taking out some goods out of the prizes, to the
value of L10,000, which was accorded to, and an order, drawn up and signed
by the Duke and my Lord, done in the best manner I can, and referred to
my Lord Bruncker and Sir J. Minnes, but what inconveniences may arise
from it I do not yet see, but fear there may be many. Here we dined, and
I did hear my Lord Craven whisper, as he is mightily possessed with a
good opinion of me, much to my advantage, which my good Lord did second,
and anon my Lord Craven did speak publiquely of me to the Duke, in the
hearing of all the rest; and the Duke did say something of the like advantage
to me; I believe, not much to the satisfaction of my brethren; but I was
mightily joyed at it. Thence took leave, leaving my Lord Sandwich to go
visit the Bishop of Canterbury, and I and Sir W. Batten down to the Tower,
where he went further by water, and I home, and among other things took
out all my gold to carry along with me to-night with Captain Cocke downe
to the fleete, being L180 and more, hoping to lay out that and a great
deal more to good advantage. Thence down to Greenwich to the office, and
there wrote several letters, and so to my Lord Sandwich, and mighty merry
and he mighty kind to me in the face of all, saying much in my favour,
and after supper I took leave and with Captain Cocke set out in the yacht
about ten o'clock at night, and after some discourse, and drinking a little,
my mind full of what we are going about and jealous of Cocke's outdoing
me. So to sleep upon beds brought by Cocke on board mighty handsome, and
never slept better than upon this bed upon the floor in the Cabbin.
24th (Lord's day). Waked,
and up and drank, and then to discourse; and then being about Grayes,
and a very calme, curious morning, we took our wherry, and to the fishermen,
and bought a great deal of fine fish, and to Gravesend to White's, and
had part of it dressed; and, in the meantime, we to walk about a mile
from the towne, and so back again; and there, after breakfast, one of
our watermen told us he had heard of a bargain of cloves for us, and we
went to a blind alehouse at the further end wretched dirty seamen, who,
of the towne to a couple of poor wretches, had got together about 37 lb.
of cloves and to 10 of nutmeggs, and we bought them of them, the first
at 5s. 6d. per lb. and the latter at 4s.; and paid them in gold; but,
Lord! to see how silly these men are in the selling of it, and easily
to be persuaded almost to anything, offering a bag to us to pass as 20
lbs. of cloves, which upon weighing proved 25 lbs. But it would never
have been allowed by my conscience to have wronged the poor wretches,
who told us how dangerously they had got some, and dearly paid for the
rest of these goods. This being done we with great content herein on board
again and there Captain Cocke and I to discourse of our business, but
he will not yet be open to me, nor am I to him till I hear what he will
say and do with Sir Roger Cuttance. However, this discourse did do me
good, and got me a copy of the agreement made the other day on board for
the parcel of Mr. Pierce and Sir Roger Cuttance, but this great parcel
is of my Lord Sandwich's. By and by to dinner about 3 o'clock and then
I in the cabbin to writing down my journall for these last seven days
to my, great content, it having pleased God that in this sad time of the
plague every thing else has conspired to my happiness and pleasure more
for these last three months than in all my, life before in so little time.
God long preserve it and make me thankful) for it! After finishing my
Journal), then to discourse and to read, and then to supper and to bed,
my mind not being at full ease, having not fully satisfied myself how
Captain Cocke will deal with me as to the share of the profits.
25th. Found ourselves come
to the fleete, and so aboard the Prince; and there, after a good while
in discourse, we did agree a bargain of L5,000 with Sir Roger Cuttance
for my Lord Sandwich for silk, cinnamon, nutmeggs, and indigo. And I was
near signing to an undertaking for the payment of the whole sum; but I
did by chance escape it; having since, upon second thoughts, great cause
to be glad of it, reflecting upon the craft and not good condition, it
may be, of Captain Cocke. I could get no trifles for my wife. Anon to
dinner and thence in great haste to make a short visit to Sir W. Pen,
where I found them and his lady and daughter and many commanders at dinner.
Among others Sir G. Askue, of whom whatever the matter is, the world is
silent altogether. But a very pretty dinner there was, and after dinner
Sir W. Pen made a bargain with Cocke for ten bales of silke, at 16s. per
lb., which, as Cocke says, will be a good pennyworth, and so away to the
Prince and presently comes my Lord on board from Greenwich, with whom,
after a little discourse about his trusting of Cocke, we parted and to
our yacht; but it being calme, we to make haste, took our wherry toward
Chatham; but, it growing darke, we were put to great difficultys, our
simple, yet confident waterman, not knowing a step of the way; and we
found ourselves to go backward and forward, which, in the darke night
and a wild place, did vex us mightily. At last we got a fisher boy by
chance, and took him into the boat, and being an odde kind of boy, did
vex us too; for he would not answer us aloud when we spoke to him, but
did carry us safe thither, though with a mistake or two; but I wonder
they were not more. In our way I was [surprised] and so were we all, at
the strange nature of the sea-water in a darke night, that it seemed like
fire upon every stroke of the oare, and, they say, is a sign of winde.
We went to the Crowne Inne, at Rochester, and there to supper, and made
ourselves merry with our poor fisher-boy, who told us he had not been
in a bed in the whole seven years since he came to 'prentice, and hath
two or three more years to serve. After eating something, we in our clothes
to bed.
26th. Up by five o'clock
and got post horses and so set out for Greenwich, calling and drinking
at Dartford. Being come to Greenwich and shifting myself I to the office,
from whence by and by my Lord Bruncker and Sir J. Minnes set out toward
Erith to take charge of the two East India shipps, which I had a hand
in contriving for the King's service and may do myself a good office too
thereby. I to dinner with Mr. Wright to his father-in-law in Greenwich,
one of the most silly, harmless, prating old men that ever I heard in
my life. Creed dined with me, and among other discourses got of me a promise
of half that he could get my Lord Rutherford to give me upon clearing
his business, which should not be less, he says, than L50 for my half,
which is a good thing, though cunningly got of him. By and by Luellin
comes, and I hope to get something of Deering shortly. They being gone,
Mr. Wright and I went into the garden to discourse with much trouble for
fear of losing all the profit and principal of what we have laid out in
buying of prize goods, and therefore puts me upon thoughts of flinging
up my interest, but yet I shall take good advice first. Thence to the
office, and after some letters down to Woolwich, where I have not lain
with my wife these eight days I think, or more. After supper, and telling
her my mind in my trouble in what I have done as to buying' of these goods,
we to bed.
27th. Up, and saw and admired
my wife's picture of our Saviour, now finished, which is very pretty.
So by water to Greenwich, where with Creed and Lord Rutherford, and there
my Lord told me that he would give me L100 for my pains, which pleased
me well, though Creed, like a cunning rogue, hath got a promise of half
of it from me. We to the King's Head, the great musique house, the first
time I was ever there, and had a good breakfast, and thence parted, I
being much troubled to hear from Creed, that he was told at Salsbury that
I am come to be a great swearer and drinker, though I know the contrary;
but, Lord! to see how my late little drinking of wine is taken notice
of by envious men to my disadvantage. I thence to Captain Cocke's, [and]
(he not yet come from town) to Mr. Evelyn's, where much company; and thence
in his coach with him to the Duke of Albemarle by Lambeth, who was in
a mighty pleasant humour; there the Duke tells us that the Dutch do stay
abroad, and our fleet must go out again, or to be ready to do so. Here
we got several things ordered as we desired for the relief of the prisoners,
and sick and wounded men. Here I saw this week's Bill of Mortality, wherein,
blessed be God! there is above 1800 decrease, being the first considerable
decrease we have had. Back again the same way and had most excellent discourse
of Mr. Evelyn touching all manner of learning; wherein I find him a very
fine gentleman, and particularly of paynting, in which he tells me the
beautifull Mrs. Middleton is rare, and his own wife do brave things. He
brought me to the office, whither comes unexpectedly Captain Cocke, who
hath brought one parcel of our goods by waggons, and at first resolved
to have lodged them at our office; but then the thoughts of its being
the King's house altered our resolution, and so put them at his friend's,
Mr. Glanvill's, and there they are safe. Would the rest of them were so
too! In discourse, we come to mention my profit, and he offers me L500
clear, and I demand L600 for my certain profit. We part to-night, and
I lie there at Mr. Glanvill's house, there being none there but a maydeservant
and a young man; being in some pain, partly from not knowing what to do
in this business, having a mind to be at a certainty in my profit, and
partly through his having Jacke sicke still, and his blackemore now also
fallen sicke. So he being gone, I to bed.
28th. Up, and being mightily
pleased with my night's lodging, drank a cup of beer, and went out to
my office, and there did some business, and so took boat and down to Woolwich
(having first made a visit to Madam Williams, who is going down to my
Lord Bruncker) and there dined, and then fitted my papers and money and
every thing else for a journey to Nonsuch to-morrow. That being done I
walked to Greenwich, and there to the office pretty late expecting Captain
Cocke's coming, which he did, and so with me to my new lodging (and there
I chose rather to lie because of my interest in the goods that we have
brought there to lie), but the people were abed, so we knocked them up,
and so I to bed, and in the night was mightily troubled with a looseness
(I suppose from some fresh damp linen that I put on this night), and feeling
for a chamber-pott, there was none, I having called the mayde up out of
her bed, she had forgot I suppose to put one there; so I was forced in
this strange house to rise and shit in the chimney twice; and so to bed
and was very well again, and
29th. To sleep till 5 o'clock,
when it is now very dark, and then rose, being called up by order by Mr.
Marlow, and so up and dressed myself, and by and by comes Mr. Lashmore
on horseback, and I had my horse I borrowed of Mr. Gillthropp, Sir W.
Batten's clerke, brought to me, and so we set out and rode hard and was
at Nonsuch by about eight o'clock, a very fine journey and a fine day.
There I come just about chappell time and so I went to chappell with them
and thence to the several offices about my tallys, which I find done,
but strung for sums not to my purpose, and so was forced to get them to
promise me to have them cut into other sums. But, Lord! what ado I had
to persuade the dull fellows to it, especially Mr. Warder, Master of the
Pells, and yet without any manner of reason for their scruple. But at
last I did, and so left my tallies there against another day, and so walked
to Yowell, and there did spend a peece upon them, having a whole house
full, and much mirth by a sister of the mistresse of the house, an old
mayde lately married to a lieutenant of a company that quarters there,
and much pleasant discourse we had and, dinner being done, we to horse
again and come to Greenwich before night, and so to my lodging, and there
being a little weary sat down and fell to order some of my pocket papers,
and then comes Captain Cocke, and after a great deal of discourse with
him seriously upon the disorders of our state through lack of men to mind
the public business and to understand it, we broke up, sitting up talking
very late. We spoke a little of my late business propounded of taking
profit for my money laid out for these goods, but he finds I rise in my
demand, he offering me still L500 certain. So we did give it over, and
I to bed. I hear for certain this night upon the road that Sir Martin
Noell is this day dead of the plague in London, where he hath lain sick
of it these eight days.
30th. Up and to the office,
where busy all the morning, and at noon with Sir W. Batten to Coll. Cleggat
to dinner, being invited, where a very pretty dinner to my full content
and very merry. The great burden we have upon us at this time at the office,
is the providing for prisoners and sicke men that are recovered, they
lying before our office doors all night and all day, poor wretches. Having
been on shore, the captains won't receive them on board, and other ships
we have not to put them on, nor money to pay them off, or provide for
them. God remove this difficulty! This made us followed all the way to
this gentleman's house and there are waited for our coming out after dinner.
Hither come Luellin to me and would force me to take Mr. Deering's 20
pieces in gold he did offer me a good while since, which I did, yet really
and sincerely against my will and content, I seeing him a man not likely
to do well in his business, nor I to reap any comfort in having to do
with, and be beholden to, a man that minds more his pleasure and company
than his business. Thence mighty merry and much pleased with the dinner
and company and they with me I parted and there was set upon by the poor
wretches, whom I did give good words and some little money to, and the
poor people went away like lambs, and in good earnest are not to be censured
if their necessities drive them to bad courses of stealing or the like,
while they lacke wherewith to live. Thence to the office, and there wrote
a letter or two and dispatched a little business, and then to Captain
Cocke's, where I find Mr. Temple, the fat blade, Sir Robert. Viner's chief
man. And we three and two companions of his in the evening by agreement
took ship in the Bezan and the tide carried us no further than Woolwich
about 8 at night, and so I on shore to my wife, and there to my great
trouble find my wife out of order, and she took me downstairs and there
alone did tell me her falling out with both her mayds and particularly
Mary, and how Mary had to her teeth told her she would tell me of something
that should stop her mouth and words of that sense. Which I suspect may
be about Brown, but my wife prays me to call it to examination, and this,
I being of myself jealous, do make me mightily out of temper, and seeing
it not fit to enter into the dispute did passionately go away, thinking
to go on board again. But when I come to the stairs I considered the Bezan
would not go till the next ebb, and it was best to lie in a good bed and,
it may be, get myself into a better humour by being with my wife. So I
back again and to bed and having otherwise so many reasons to rejoice
and hopes of good profit, besides considering the ill that trouble of
mind and melancholly may in this sickly time bring a family into, and
that if the difference were never so great, it is not a time to put away
servants, I was resolved to salve up the business rather than stir in
it, and so become pleasant with my wife and to bed, minding nothing of
this difference. So to sleep with a good deal of content, and saving only
this night and a day or two about the same business a month or six weeks
ago, I do end this month with the greatest content, and may say that these
last three months, for joy, health, and profit, have been much the greatest
that ever I received in all my life in any twelve months almost in my
life, having nothing upon me but the consideration of the sicklinesse
of the season during this great plague to mortify mee. For all which the
Lord God be praised!
October
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