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April
1st.
Up, and with Sir J. Minnes in his coach, set him down at the Treasurer's
Office in Broad-streete, and I in his coach to White Hall, and there had
the good fortune to walk with Sir W. Coventry into the garden, and there
read our melancholy letter to the Duke of York, which he likes. And so
to talk: and he flatly owns that we must have a peace, for we cannot set
out a fleete; and, to use his own words, he fears that we shall soon have
enough of fighting in this new way, which we have thought on for this
year. He bemoans the want of money, and discovers himself jealous that
Sir G. Carteret do not look after, or concern himself for getting, money
as he used to do, and did say it is true if Sir G. Carteret would only
do his work, and my Lord Treasurer would do his own, Sir G. Carteret hath
nothing to do to look after money, but if he will undertake my Lord Treasurer's
work to raise money of the Bankers, then people must expect that he will
do it, and did further say, that he [Carteret]
and my Lord Chancellor do at this very day labour all they can to villify
this new way of raising money, and making it payable, as it now is, into
the Exchequer; and expressly said that in pursuance hereof, my Lord Chancellor
hath prevailed with the King, in the close of his last speech to the House,
to say, that he did hope to see them come to give money as it used to
be given, without so many provisos, meaning, as Sir W. Coventry says,
this new method of the Act. While we were talking, there come Sir Thomas
Allen with two ladies; one of which was Mrs. Rebecca Allen, that I knew
heretofore, the clerk of the rope-yard's daughter at Chatham, who, poor
heart! come to desire favour for her husband, who is clapt up, being a
Lieutenant [Jowles],
for sending a challenge to his Captain, in the most saucy, base language
that could be writ. I perceive [Sir]
W. Coventry is wholly resolved to bring him to punishment; for, "bear
with this," says he, "and no discipline shall ever be expected."
She in this sad condition took no notice of me, nor I of her. So away
we to the Duke of York, and there in his closett [Sir]
W. Coventry and I delivered the letter, which the Duke of York made not
much of, I thought, as to laying it to heart, as the matter deserved,
but did promise to look after the getting of money for us, and I believe
Sir W. Coventry will add what force he can to it. I did speak to [Sir]
W. Coventry about Balty's warrant, which is ready, and about being Deputy
Treasurer, which he very readily and friendlily agreed to, at which I
was glad, and so away and by coach back to Broad-streete to Sir G. Carteret's,
and there found my brother passing his accounts, which I helped till dinner,
and dined there, and many good stories at dinner, among others about discoveries
of murder, and Sir J. Minnes did tell of the discovery of his own great-grandfather's
murder, fifteen years after he was murdered.
Thence, after dinner, home and by water to Redriffe, and walked (fine
weather) to Deptford, and there did business and so back again, walked,
and pleased with a jolly femme that I saw going and coming in the way,
which je could avoir been contented pour avoir staid with if I could have
gained acquaintance con elle, but at such times as these I am at a great
loss, having not confidence, no alcune ready wit. So home and to the office,
where late, and then home to supper and bed. This evening Mrs. Turner
come to my office, and did walk an hour with me in the garden, telling
me stories how Sir Edward Spragge hath lately made love to our neighbour,
a widow, Mrs. Hollworthy, who is a woman of estate, and wit and spirit,
and do contemn him the most, and sent him away with the greatest scorn
in the world; she tells me also odd stories how the parish talks of Sir
W. Pen's family, how poorly they clothe their daughter so soon after marriage,
and do say that Mr. Lowther was married once before, and some such thing
there hath been, whatever the bottom of it is. But to think of the clatter
they make with his coach, and his owne fine cloathes, and yet how meanly
they live within doors, and nastily, and borrowing everything of neighbours
is a most shitten thing.
2nd. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning sitting, and much troubled, but little business
done for want of money, which makes me mighty melancholy. At noon home
to dinner, and Mr. Deane with me, who hath promised me a very fine draught
of the Rupert, which he will make purposely for me with great perfection,
which I will make one of the beautifullest things that ever was seen of
the kind in the world, she being a ship that will deserve it. Then to
the office, where all the afternoon very busy, and in the evening weary
home and there to sing, but vexed with the unreadiness of the girle's
voice to learn the latter part of my song, though I confess it is very
hard, half notes. So to supper and to bed.
3rd. Up, and with Sir W.
Batten to White Hall to Sir W. Coventry's chamber, and there did receive
the Duke's order for Balty's receiving of the contingent money to be paymaster
of it, and it pleases me the more for that it is but L1500, which will
be but a little sum for to try his ability and honesty in the disposing
of, and so I am the willinger to trust and pass my word for him therein.
By and by up to the Duke of York, where our usual business, and among
other things I read two most dismal letters of the straits we are in (from
Collonell Middleton and Commissioner Taylor) that ever were writ in the
world, so as the Duke of York would have them to shew the King, and to
every demand of money, whereof we proposed many and very pressing ones,
Sir G. Carteret could make no answer but no money, which I confess made
me almost ready to cry for sorrow and vexation, but that which was the
most considerable was when Sir G. Carteret did say that he had no funds
to raise money on; and being asked by Sir W. Coventry whether the eleven
months' tax was not a fund, and he answered, "No, that the bankers
would not lend money upon it." Then Sir W. Coventry burst out and
said he did supplicate his Royal Highness, and would do the same to the
King, that he would remember who they were that did persuade the King
from parting with the Chimney-money to the Parliament, and taking that
in lieu which they would certainly have given, and which would have raised
infallibly ready money; meaning the bankers and the farmers of the Chimney-money,
whereof Sir, G. Carteret, I think, is one; saying plainly, that whoever
did advise the King to that, did, as much as in them lay, cut the King's
throat, and did wholly betray him; to which the Duke of York did assent;
and remembered that the King did say again and again at the time, that
he was assured, and did fully believe, the money would be raised presently
upon a land- tax. This put as all into a stound; and Sir W. Coventry went
on to declare, that he was glad he was come to have so lately concern
in the Navy as he hath, for he cannot now give any good account of the
Navy business; and that all his work now was to be able to provide such
orders as would justify his Royal Highness in the business, when it shall
be called to account; and that he do do, not concerning himself whether
they are or can be performed, or no; and that when it comes to be examined,
and falls on my Lord Treasurer, he cannot help it, whatever the issue
of it shall be. Hereupon Sir W. Batten did pray him to keep also by him
all our letters that come from the office that may justify us, which he
says he do do, and, God knows, it is an ill sign when we are once to come
to study how to excuse ourselves. It is a sad consideration, and therewith
we broke up, all in a sad posture, the most that ever I saw in my life.
One thing more Sir W. Coventry did say to the Duke
of York, when I moved again, that of about L9000 debt to Lanyon, at Plymouth,
he might pay L3700 worth of prize-goods, that he bought lately at the
candle, out of this debt due to him from the King; and the Duke of York,
and Sir G: Carteret, and Lord Barkeley, saying, all of them, that my Lord
Ashly would not be got to yield to it, who is Treasurer of the Prizes,
Sir W. Coventry did plainly desire that it might be declared whether the
proceeds of the prizes were to go to the helping on of the war, or no;
and, if it were, how then could this be denied? which put them all into
another stound; and it is true, God forgive us!
Thence to the chappell, and there, by chance, hear
that Dr. Crew is to preach; and so into the organ-loft, where I met Mr.
Carteret, and my Lady Jemimah, and Sir Thomas Crew's two daughters, and
Dr. Childe played; and Dr. Crew did make a very pretty, neat, sober, honest
sermon; and delivered it very readily, decently, and gravely, beyond his
years: so as I was exceedingly taken with it, and I believe the whole
chappell, he being but young; but his manner of his delivery I do like
exceedingly. His text was, "But seeke ye first the kingdom of God,
and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you."
Thence with my Lady to Sir G. Carteret's lodgings, and so up into the
house, and there do hear that the Dutch letters are come, and say that
the Dutch have ordered a passe to be sent for our Commissioners, and that
it is now upon the way, coming with a trumpeter blinded, as is usual.
But I perceive every body begins to doubt the success of the treaty, all
their hopes being only that if it can be had on any terms, the Chancellor
will have it; for he dare not come before a Parliament, nor a great many
more of the courtiers, and the King himself do declare he do not desire
it, nor intend it but on a strait; which God defend him from! Here I hear
how the King is not so well pleased of this marriage between the Duke
of Richmond and Mrs. Stewart, as is talked; and that he [the Duke] by
a wile did fetch her to the Beare, at the Bridge-foot, where a coach was
ready, and they are stole away into Kent, without the King's leave; and
that the King hath said he will never see her more; but people do think
that it is only a trick.
This day I saw Prince Rupert abroad in the Vane-room,
pretty well as he used to be, and looks as well, only something appears
to be under his periwigg on the crown of his head. So home by water, and
there find my wife gone abroad to her tailor's, and I dined alone with
W. Hewer, and then to the office to draw up a memorial for the Duke of
York this afternoon at the Council about Lanyon's business. By and by
we met by appointment at the office upon a reference to Carcasses business
to us again from the Duke of York, but a very confident cunning rogue
we have found him at length. He carried himself very uncivilly to Sir
W. Batten this afternoon, as heretofore, and his silly Lord [Bruncker]
pleaded for him, but all will not nor shall not do for ought he shall
give, though I love the man as a man of great parts and ability. Thence
to White Hall by water (only asking Betty Michell by the way how she did),
and there come too late to do any thing at the Council. So by coach to
my periwigg maker's and tailor's, and so home, where I find my wife with
her flageolet master, which I wish she would practise, and so to the office,
and then to Sir W. Batten's, and then to Sir W. Pen's, talking and spending
time in vain a little while, and then home up to my chamber, and so to
supper and to bed, vexed at two or three things, viz. that my wife's watch
proves so bad as it do; the ill state of the office; and Kingdom's business;
at the charge which my mother's death for mourning will bring me when
all paid.
4th. Up, and going down
found Jervas the barber with a periwigg which I had the other day cheapened
at Westminster, but it being full of nits, as heretofore his work used
to be, I did now refuse it, having bought elsewhere. So to the office
till noon, busy, and then (which I think I have not done three times in
my life) left the board upon occasion of a letter of Sir W. Coventry,
and meeting Balty at my house I took him with me by water, and to the
Duke of Albemarle to give him an account of the business, which was the
escaping of some soldiers for the manning of a few ships now going out
with Harman to the West Indies, which is a sad consideration that at the
very beginning of the year and few ships abroad we should be in such want
of men that they do hide themselves, and swear they will not go to be
killed and have no pay. I find the Duke of Albemarle at dinner with sorry
company, some of his officers of the Army; dirty dishes, and a nasty wife
at table, and bad meat, of which I made but an ill dinner. Pretty to hear
how she talked against Captain Du Tell, the Frenchman, that the Prince
and her husband put out the last year; and how, says she, the Duke of
York hath made him, for his good services, his Cupbearer; yet he fired
more shot into the Prince's ship, and others of the King's ships, than
of the enemy. And the Duke of Albemarle did confirm it, and that somebody
in the fight did cry out that a little Dutchman, by his ship, did plague
him more than any other; upon which they were going to order him to be
sunk, when they looked and found it was Du Tell, who, as the Duke of Albemarle
says, had killed several men in several of our ships. He said, but for
his interest, which he knew he had at Court, he had hanged him at the
yard's-arm, without staying for a Court-martiall. One Colonel Howard,
at the table, magnified the Duke of Albemarle's fight in June last, as
being a greater action than ever was done by Caesar. The Duke of Albemarle,
did say it had been no great action, had all his number fought, as they
should have done, to have beat the Dutch; but of his 55 ships, not above
25 fought. He did give an account that it was a fight he was forced to:
the Dutch being come in his way, and he being ordered to the buoy of the
Nore, he could not pass by them without fighting, nor avoid them without
great disadvantage and dishonour; and this Sir G. Carteret, I afterwards
giving him an account of what he said, says that it is true, that he was
ordered up to the Nore. But I remember he said, had all his captains fought,
he would no more have doubted to have beat the Dutch, with all their number,
than to eat the apple that lay on his trencher. My Lady Duchesse, among
other things, discoursed of the wisdom of dividing the fleete; which the
General said nothing to, though he knows well that it come from themselves
in the fleete, and was brought up hither by Sir Edward Spragge. Colonel
Howard, asking how the prince did, the Duke of Albemarle answering, "Pretty
well;" the other replied, "But not so well as to go to sea again."--"
How!" says the Duchess, "what should he go for, if he were well,
for there are no ships for him to command? And so you have brought your
hogs to a fair market," said she. [It was pretty to hear the Duke
of Albemarle himself to wish that they would come on our ground, meaning
the French, for that he would pay them, so as to make them glad to go
back to France again; which was like a general, but not like an admiral.]
One at the table told an odd passage in this late plague: that at Petersfield,
I think, he said, one side of the street had every house almost infected
through the town, and the other, not one shut up.
Dinner being done, I brought Balty to the Duke of Albemarle
to kiss his hand and thank him far his kindness the last year to him,
and take leave of him, and then Balty and I to walk in the Park, and,
out of pity to his father, told him what I had in my thoughts to do for
him about the money--that is, to make him Deputy Treasurer of the fleete,
which I have done by getting Sir G. Carteret's consent, and an order from
the Duke of York for L1500 to be paid to him. He promises the whole profit
to be paid to my wife, for to be disposed of as she sees fit, for her
father and mother's relief. So mightily pleased with our walk, it being
mighty pleasant weather, I back to Sir G. Carteret's, and there he had
newly dined, and talked, and find that he do give every thing over for
lost, declaring no money to be raised, and let Sir W. Coventry name the
man that persuaded the King to take the Land Tax on promise, of raising
present money upon it. He will, he says, be able to clear himself enough
of it. I made him merry, with telling him how many land-admirals we are
to have this year: Allen at Plymouth, Holmes at Portsmouth, Spragge for
Medway, Teddiman at Dover, Smith to the Northward, and Harman to the Southward.
He did defend to me Sir W. Coventry as not guilty of the dividing of the
fleete the last year, and blesses God, as I do, for my Lord Sandwich's
absence, and tells me how the King did lately observe to him how they
have been particularly punished that were enemies to my Lord Sandwich.
Mightily pleased I am with his family, and my Lady Carteret was on the
bed to-day, having been let blood, and tells me of my Lady Jemimah's being
big-bellied. Thence with him to my Lord Treasurer's, and there walked
during Council sitting with Sir Stephen Fox, talking of the sad condition
of the King's purse, and affairs thereby; and how sad the King's life
must be, to pass by his officers every hour, that are four years behind-hand
unpaid. My Lord Barkeley [of Stratton] I met
with there, and fell into talk with him on the same thing, wishing to
God that it might be remedied, to which he answered, with an oath, that
it was as easy to remedy it as anything in the world; saying, that there
is himself and three more would venture their carcasses upon it to pay
all the King's debts in three years, had they the managing his revenue,
and putting L300,000 in his purse, as a stock. But, Lord! what a thing
is this to me, that do know how likely a man my Lord Barkeley of all the
world is, to do such a thing as this. Here I spoke with Sir W. Coventry,
who tells me plainly that to all future complaints of lack of money he
will answer but with the shrug of his shoulder; which methought did come
to my heart, to see him to begin to abandon the King's affairs, and let
them sink or swim, so he do his owne part, which I confess I believe he
do beyond any officer the King hath, but unless he do endeavour to make
others do theirs, nothing will be done. The consideration here do make
me go away very sad, and so home by coach, and there took up my wife and
Mercer, who had been to-day at White Hall to the Maundy,
[The practice of giving alms on Maundy Thursday to
poor men and women equal in number to the years of the sovereign's age
is a curious survival in an altered form of an old custom. The original
custom was for the king to wash the feet of twelve poor persons, and to
give them a supper in imitation of Christ's last supper and his washing
of the Apostles' feet. James II. was the last sovereign to perform the
ceremony in person, but it was performed by deputy so late as 1731. The
Archbishop of York was the king's deputy on that occasion. The institution
has passed through the various stages of feet washing with a supper, the
discontinuance of the feet washing, the substitution of a gift of provisions
for the supper, and finally the substitution of a gift of money for the
provisions. The ceremony took place at the Chapel Royal, Whitehall; but
it is now held at Westminster Abbey. Maundy is derived from the Latin
word 'maudatum', which commences the original anthem sung during the ceremony,
in reference to Christ's command]
it being Maundy Thursday; but the King did not wash the poor people's
feet himself, but the Bishop of London did it for him, but I did not see
it, and with them took up Mrs. Anne Jones at her mother's door, and so
to take the ayre to Hackney, where good neat's tongue, and things to eat
and drink, and very merry, the weather being mighty pleasant; and here
I was told that at their church they have a fair pair of organs, which
play while the people sing, which I am mighty glad of, wishing the like
at our church at London, and would give L50 towards it. So very pleasant,
and hugging of Mercer in our going home, we home, and then to the office
to do a little business, and so to supper at home and to bed.
5th. Up, and troubled with
Mr. Carcasse's coming to speak with me, which made me give him occasion
to fall into a heat, and he began to be ill- mannered to me, which made
me angry. He gone, I to Sir W. Pen about the business of Mrs. Turner's
son to keep his ship in employment, but so false a fellow as Sir W. Pen
is I never did nor hope shall ever know again. So to the office, and there
did business, till dinnertime, and then home to dinner, wife and I alone,
and then down to the Old Swan, and drank with Betty and her husband, but
no opportunity para baiser la. So to White Hall to the Council chamber,
where I find no Council held till after the holidays. So to Westminster
Hall, and there bought a pair of snuffers, and saw Mrs. Howlett after
her sickness come to the Hall again. So by coach to the New Exchange and
Mercer's and other places to take up bills for what I owe them, and to
Mrs. Pierce, to invite her to dinner with us on Monday, but staid not
with her. In the street met with Mr. Sanchy, my old acquaintance at Cambridge,
reckoned a great minister here in the City; and by Sir Richard Ford particularly,
which I wonder at; for methinks, in his talk, he is but a mean man. I
set him down in Holborne, and I to the Old Exchange, and there to Sir
Robert Viner's, and made up my accounts there, to my great content; but
I find they do not keep them so regularly as, to be able to do it easily,
and truly, and readily, nor would it have been easily stated by any body
on my behalf but myself, several things being to be recalled to memory,
which nobody else could have done, and therefore it is fully necessary
for me to even accounts with these people as often as I can.
So to the 'Change, and there met with Mr. James Houblon,
but no hopes, as he sees, of peace whatever we pretend, but we shall be
abused by the King of France. Then home to the office, and busy late,
and then to Sir W. Batten's, where Mr. Young was talking about the building
of the City again; and he told me that those few churches that are to
be new built are plainly not chosen with regard to the convenience of
the City; they stand a great many in a cluster about Cornhill; but that
all of them are either in the gift of the Lord Archbishop, or Bishop of
London, or Lord Chancellor, or gift of the City. Thus all things, even
to the building of churches, are done in this world! And then he says,
which I wonder at, that I should not in all this time see, that Moorefields
have houses two stories high in them, and paved streets, the City having
let leases for seven years, which he do conclude will be very much to
the hindering the building of the City; but it was considered that the
streets cannot be passable in London till a whole street be built; and
several that had got ground of the City for charity, to build sheds on,
had got the trick presently to sell that for L60, which did not cost them
L20 to put up; and so the City, being very poor in stock, thought it as
good to do it themselves, and therefore let leases for seven years of
the ground in Moorefields; and a good deal of this money, thus advanced,
hath been employed for the enabling them to find some money for Commissioner
Taylor, and Sir W. Batten, towards the charge of "The Loyall London,"
or else, it is feared, it had never been paid. And Taylor having a bill
to pay wherein Alderman Hooker was concerned it was his invention to find
out this way of raising money, or else this had not been thought on. So
home to supper and to bed.
This morning come to me the Collectors for my Pollmoney;
for which I paid for my title as Esquire and place of Clerk of Acts, and
my head and wife's, and servants' and their wages, L40 17s; and though
this be a great deal, yet it is a shame I should pay no more; that is,
that I should not be assessed for my pay, as in the Victualling business
and Tangier; and for my money, which, of my own accord, I had determined
to charge myself with L1000 money, till coming to the Vestry, and seeing
nobody of our ablest merchants, as Sir Andrew Rickard, to do it, I thought
it not decent for me to do it, nor would it be thought wisdom to do it
unnecessarily, but vain glory.
6th. Up, and betimes in
the morning down to the Tower wharfe, there to attend the shipping of
soldiers, to go down to man some ships going out, and pretty to see how
merrily some, and most go, and how sad others--the leave they take of
their friends, and the terms that some wives, and other wenches asked
to part with them: a pretty mixture. So to the office, having staid as
long as I could, and there sat all the morning, and then home at noon
to dinner, and then abroad, Balty with me, and to White Hall, by water,
to Sir G. Carteret, about Balty's L1500 contingent money for the fleete
to the West Indys, and so away with him to the Exchange, and mercers and
drapers, up and down, to pay all my scores occasioned by this mourning
for my mother; and emptied a L50 bag, and it was a joy to me to see that
I am able to part with such a sum, without much inconvenience; at least,
without any trouble of mind. So to Captain Cocke's to meet Fenn, to talk
about this money for Balty, and there Cocke tells me that he is confident
there will be a peace, whatever terms be asked us, and he confides that
it will take because the French and Dutch will be jealous one of another
which shall give the best terms, lest the other should make the peace
with us alone, to the ruin of the third, which is our best defence, this
jealousy, for ought I at present see. So home and there very late, very
busy, and then home to supper and to bed, the people having got their
house very clean against Monday's dinner.
7th (Easter day). Up, and
when dressed with my wife (in mourning for my mother) to church both,
where Mr. Mills, a lazy sermon. Home to dinner, wife and I and W. Hewer,
and after dinner I by water to White Hall to Sir G. Carteret's, there
to talk about Balty's money, and did present Balty to him to kiss his
hand, and then to walk in the Parke, and heard the Italian musique at
the Queen's chapel, whose composition is fine, but yet the voices of eunuchs
I do not like like our women, nor am more pleased with it at all than
with English voices, but that they do jump most excellently with themselves
and their instrument, which is wonderful pleasant; but I am convinced
more and more, that, as every nation has a particular accent and tone
in discourse, so as the tone of one not to agree with or please the other,
no more can the fashion of singing to words, for that the better the words
are set, the more they take in of the ordinary tone of the country whose
language the song speaks, so that a song well composed by an Englishman
must be better to an Englishman than it can be to a stranger, or than
if set by a stranger in foreign words. Thence back to White Hall, and
there saw the King come out of chapel after prayers in the afternoon,
which he is never at but after having received the Sacrament: and the
Court, I perceive, is quite out of mourning; and some very fine; among
others, my Lord Gerard, in a very rich vest and coat. Here I met with
my Lord Bellasses: and it is pretty to see what a formal story he tells
me of his leaving, his place upon the death of my Lord Cleveland, by which
he is become Captain of the Pensioners; and that the King did leave it
to him to keep the other or take this; whereas, I know the contrary, that
they had a mind to have him away from Tangier. He tells me he is commanded
by the King to go down to the Northward to satisfy the Deputy Lieutenants
of Yorkshire, who have desired to lay down their commissions upon pretence
of having no profit by their places but charge, but indeed is upon the
Duke of Buckingham's being under a cloud (of whom there is yet nothing
heard), so that the King is apprehensive of their discontent, and sends
him to pacify them, and I think he is as good a dissembler as any man
else, and a fine person he is for person, and proper to lead the Pensioners,
but a man of no honour nor faith I doubt.
So to Sir G. Carteret's again to talk with him about
Balty's money, and wrote a letter to Portsmouth about part of it, and
then in his coach, with his little daughter Porpot (as he used to nickname
her), and saw her at home, and her maid, and another little gentlewoman,
and so I walked into Moore Fields, and, as is said, did find houses built
two stories high, and like to stand; and it must become a place of great
trade, till the City be built; and the street is already paved as London
streets used to be, which is a strange, and to mean unpleasing sight.
So home and to my chamber about sending an express to Portsmouth about
Balty's money, and then comes Mrs. Turner to enquire after her son's business,
which goes but bad, which led me to show her how false Sir W. Pen is to
her, whereupon she told me his obligations to her, and promises to her,
and how a while since he did show himself dissatisfied in her son's coming
to the table and applying himself to me, which is a good nut, and a nut
I will make use of. She gone I to other business in my chamber, and then
to supper and to bed. The Swede's Embassadors and our Commissioners are
making all the haste they can over to the treaty for peace, and I find
at Court, and particularly Lord Bellasses, says there will be a peace,
and it is worth remembering what Sir W. Coventry did tell me (as a secret
though) that whereas we are afeard Harman's fleete to the West Indys will
not be got out before the Dutch come and block us up, we shall have a
happy pretext to get out our ships under pretence of attending the Embassadors
and Commissioners, which is a very good, but yet a poor shift.
8th. Up, and having dressed
myself, to the office a little, and out, expecting to have seen the pretty
daughter of the Ship taverne at the hither end of Billiter Lane (whom
I never yet have opportunity to speak to). I in there to drink my morning
draught of half a pint of Rhenish wine; but a ma doleur elle and their
family are going away thence, and a new man come to the house. So I away
to the Temple, to my new. bookseller's; and there I did agree for Rycaut's
late History of the Turkish Policy, which costs me 55s.; whereas it was
sold plain before the late fire for 8s., and bound and coloured as this
is for 20s.; for I have bought it finely bound and truly coloured, all
the figures, of which there was but six books done so, whereof the King
and Duke of York, and Duke of Monmouth, and Lord Arlington, had four.
The fifth was sold, and I have bought the sixth. So to enquire out Mrs.
Knipp's new lodging, but could not, but do hear of her at the Playhouse,
where she was practising, and I sent for her out by a porter, and the
jade come to me all undressed, so cannot go home to my house to dinner,
as I had invited her, which I was not much troubled at, because I think
there is a distance between her and Mrs. Pierce, and so our company would
not be so pleasant. So home, and there find all things in good readiness
for a good dinner, and here unexpectedly I find little Mis. Tooker, whom
my wife loves not from the report of her being already naught; however,
I do shew her countenance, and by and by come my guests, Dr. Clerke and
his wife, and Mrs. Worshipp, and her daughter; and then Mr. Pierce and
his wife, and boy, and Betty; and then I sent for Mercer; so that we had,
with my wife and I, twelve at table, and very good and pleasant company,
and a most neat and excellent, but dear dinner; but, Lord! to see with
what envy they looked upon all my fine plate was pleasant; for I made
the best shew I could, to let them understand me and my condition, to
take down the pride of Mrs. Clerke, who thinks herself very great. We
sat long, and very merry, and all things agreeable; and, after dinner,
went out by coaches, thinking to have seen a play, but come too late to
both houses, and then they had thoughts of going abroad somewhere; but
I thought all the charge ought not to be mine, and therefore I endeavoured
to part the company, and so ordered it to set them all down at Mrs. Pierces;
and there my wife and I and Mercer left them in good humour, and we three
to the King's house, and saw the latter end of the "Surprisall,"
a wherein was no great matter, I thought, by what I saw there. Thence
away to Polichinello, and there had three times more sport than at the
play, and so home, and there the first night we have been this year in
the garden late, we three and our Barker singing very well, and then home
to supper, and so broke up, and to bed mightily pleased with this day's
pleasure.
9th. Up. and to the office
a while, none of my fellow officers coming to sit, it being holiday, and
so towards noon I to the Exchange, and there do hear mighty cries for
peace, and that otherwise we shall be undone; and yet I do suspect the
badness of the peace we shall make. Several do complain of abundance of
land flung up by tenants out of their hands for want of ability to pay
their rents; and by name, that the Duke of Buckingham hath L6000 so flung
up. And my father writes, that Jasper Trice, upon this pretence of his
tenants' dealing with him, is broke up housekeeping, and gone to board
with his brother, Naylor, at Offord; which is very sad. So home to dinner,
and after dinner I took coach and to the King's house, and by and by comes
after me my wife with W. Hewer and his mother and Barker, and there we
saw "The Tameing of a Shrew," which hath some very good pieces
in it, but generally is but a mean play; and the best part, "Sawny,"
[This play was entitled "Sawney the Scot, or
the Taming of a Shrew," and consisted of an alteration of Shakespeare's
play by John Lacy. Although it had long been popular it was not printed
until 1698. In the old "Taming of a Shrew" (1594), reprinted
by Thomas Amyot for the Shakespeare Society in 1844, the hero's servant
is named Sander, and this seems to have given the hint to Lacy, when altering
Shakespeare's "Taming of the Shrew," to foist a 'Scotsman into
the action. Sawney was one of Lacy's favourite characters, and occupies
a prominent position in Michael Wright's picture at Hampton Court. Evelyn,
on October 3rd, 1662, "visited Mr. Wright, a Scotsman, who had liv'd
long at Rome, and was esteem'd a good painter," and he singles out
as his best picture, "Lacy, the famous Roscius, or comedian, whom
he has painted in three dresses, as a gallant, a Presbyterian minister,
and a Scotch Highlander in his plaid." Langbaine and Aubrey both
make the mistake of ascribing the third figure to Teague in "The
Committee;" and in spite of Evelyn's clear statement, his editor
in a note follows them in their blunder. Planche has reproduced the picture
in his "History of Costume" (Vol. ii., p. 243).]
done by Lacy, hath not half its life, by reason of the words, I suppose,
not being understood, at least by me. After the play was done, as I come
so I went away alone, and had a mind to have taken out Knipp to have taken
the ayre with her, and to that end sent a porter in to her that she should
take a coach and come to me to the Piatza in Covent Garden, where I waited
for her, but was doubtful I might have done ill in doing it if we should
be visti ensemble, sed elle was gone out, and so I was eased of my care,
and therefore away to Westminster to the Swan, and there did baiser la
little missa . . . . and drank, and then by water to the Old Swan, and
there found Betty Michell sitting at the door, it being darkish. I staid
and talked a little with her, but no once baiser la, though she was to
my thinking at this time une de plus pretty mohers that ever I did voir
in my vida, and God forgive me my mind did run sobre elle all the vespre
and night and la day suivante. So home and to the office a little, and
then to Sir W. Batten's, where he tells me how he hath found his lady's
jewels again, which have been so long lost, and a servant imprisoned and
arraigned, and they were in her closet under a china cup, where he hath
servants will swear they did look in searching the house; but Mrs. Turner
and I, and others, do believe that they were only disposed of by my Lady,
in case she had died, to some friends of hers, and now laid there again.
So home to supper, and to read the book I bought yesterday of the Turkish
policy, which is a good book, well writ, and so owned by Dr. Clerke yesterday
to me, commending it mightily to me for my reading as the only book of
the subject that ever was writ, yet so designedly. So to bed.
10th. Up, and to my office
a little, and then, in the garden, find Sir W. Pen; and he and I to Sir
W. Batten, where he tells us news of the new disorders of Hogg and his
men in taking out of 30 tons of wine out of a prize of ours, which makes
us mad; and that, added to the unwillingness of the men to go longer abroad
without money, do lead us to conclude not to keep her abroad any longer,
of which I am very glad, for I do not like our doings with what we have
already got, Sir W. Batten ordering the disposal of our wines and goods,
and he leaves it to Morrice the cooper, who I take to be a cunning proud
knave, so that I am very desirous to adventure no further. So away by
water from the Old Swan to White Hall, and there to Sir W. Coventry's,
with whom I staid a great while longer than I have done these many months,
and had opportunity of talking with him, and he do declare himself troubled
that he hath any thing left him to do in the Navy, and would be glad to
part with his whole profits and concernments in it, his pains and care
being wholly ineffectual during this lack of money; the expense growing
infinite, the service not to be done, and discipline and order not to
be kept, only from want of money. I begun to discourse with him the business
of Tangier, which by the removal of my Lord Bellasses, is now to have
a new Governor; and did move him, that at this season all the business
of reforming the garrison might be considered, while nobody was to be
offended; and I told him it is plain that we do overspend our revenue:
that the place is of no more profit to the King than it was the first
day, nor in itself of better credit; no more people of condition willing
to live there, nor any thing like a place likely to turn his Majesty to
account: that it hath been hitherto, and, for aught I see, likely only
to be used as a job to do a kindness to some Lord, or he that can get
to be Governor. Sir W. Coventry agreed with me, so as to say, that unless
the King hath the wealth of the Mogul, he would be a beggar to have his
businesses ordered in the manner they now are: that his garrisons must
be made places only of convenience to particular persons that he hath
moved the Duke of York in it; and that it was resolved to send no Governor
thither till there had been Commissioners sent to put the garrison in
order, so as that he that goes may go with limitations and rules to follow,
and not to do as he please, as the rest have hitherto done. That he is
not afeard to speak his mind, though to the displeasure of any man; and
that I know well enough; but that, when it is come, as it is now, that
to speak the truth in behalf of the King plainly do no good, but all things
bore down by other measures than by what is best for the King, he hath
no temptation to be perpetually fighting of battles, it being more easy
to him do those terms to suffer things to go on without giving any man
offence, than to have the same thing done, and he contract the displeasure
of all the world, as he must do, that will be for the King. I did offer
him to draw up my thoughts in this matter to present to the Duke of York,
which he approved of, and I do think to do it. So away, and by coach going
home saw Sir G. Carteret going towards White Hall. So 'light and by water
met him, and with him to the King's little chapel; and afterwards to see
the King heal the King's Evil, wherein no pleasure, I having seen it before;
and then to see him and the Queene and Duke of York and his wife, at dinner
in the Queene's lodgings; and so with Sir G. Carteret to his lodgings
to dinner; where very good company; and after dinner he and I to talk
alone how things are managed, and to what ruin we must come if we have
not a peace. He did tell me one occasion, how Sir Thomas Allen, which
I took for a man of known courage and service on the King's side, was
tried for his life in Prince Rupert's fleete, in the late times, for cowardice,
and condemned to be hanged, and fled to Jersey; where Sir G. Carteret
received him, not knowing the reason of his coming thither: and that thereupon
Prince Rupert wrote to the Queen- Mother his dislike of Sir G. Carteret's
receiving a person that stood condemned; and so Sir G. Carteret was forced
to bid him betake himself to some other place. This was strange to me.
Our Commissioners are preparing to go to Bredah to the treaty, and do
design to be going the next week. So away by coach home, where there should
have been a meeting about Carcasse's business, but only my Lord and I
met, and so broke up, Carcasse having only read his answer to his charge,
which is well writ, but I think will not prove to his advantage, for I
believe him to be a very rogue. So home, and Balty and I to look Mr. Fenn
at Sir G. Carteret's office in Broad Streete, and there missing him and
at the banker's hard by, we home, and I down by water to Deptford Dockyard,
and there did a little business, and so home back again all the way reading
a little piece I lately bought, called "The Virtuoso, or the Stoicke,"
proposing many things paradoxical to our common opinions, wherein in some
places he speaks well, but generally is but a sorry man. So home and to
my chamber to enter my two last days' journall, and this, and then to
supper and to bed. Blessed be God! I hear that my father is better and
better, and will, I hope, live to enjoy some cheerful days more; but it
is strange what he writes me, that Mr. Weaver, of Huntingdon, who was
a lusty, likely, and but a youngish man, should be dead.
11th. Up, and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, and (which is now rare, he having not been
with us twice I think these six months) Sir G. Carteret come to us upon
some particular business of his office, and went away again. At noon I
to the 'Change, and there hear by Mr. Hublon of the loss of a little East
Indiaman, valued at about L20,000, coming home alone, and safe to within
ten leagues of Scilly, and there snapt by a French Caper. Our merchants
do much pray for peace; and he tells me that letters are come that the
Dutch have stopped the fitting of their great ships, and the coming out
of a fleete of theirs of 50 sayle, that was ready to come out; but I doubt
the truth of it yet. Thence to Sir G. Carteret, by his invitation to his
office, where my Lady was, and dined with him, and very merry and good
people they are, when pleased, as any I know. After dinner I to the office,
where busy till evening, and then with Balty to Sir G. Carteret's office,
and there with Mr. Fenn despatched the business of Balty's L1500 he received
for the contingencies of the fleete, whereof he received about L253 in
pieces of eight at a goldsmith's there hard by, which did puzzle me and
him to tell; for I could not tell the difference by sight, only by bigness,
and that is not always discernible, between a whole and half-piece and
quarterpiece. Having received this money I home with Balty and it, and
then abroad by coach with my wife and set her down at her father's, and
I to White Hall, thinking there to have seen the Duchess of Newcastle's
coming this night to Court, to make a visit to the Queene, the King having
been with her yesterday, to make her a visit since her coming to town.
The whole story of this lady is a romance, and all she do is romantick.
Her footmen in velvet coats, and herself in an antique dress, as they
say; and was the other day at her own play, "The Humourous Lovers;"
the most ridiculous thing that ever was wrote, but yet she and her Lord
mightily pleased with it; and she, at the end, made her respects to the
players from her box, and did give them thanks. There is as much expectation
of her coming to Court, that so people may come to see her, as if it were
the Queen of Sheba; but I lost my labour, for she did not come this night.
So, meeting Mr. Brisband, he took me up to my Lady Jemimah's chamber,
who is let blood to-day, and so there we sat and talked an hour, I think,
very merry and one odd thing or other, and so away, and I took up my wife
at her tailor's (whose wife is brought to bed, and my wife must be godmother),
and so with much ado got a coach to carry us home, it being late, and
so to my chamber, having little left to do at my office, my eyes being
a little sore by reason of my reading a small printed book the other day
after it was dark, and so to supper and to bed. It comes in my head to
set down that there have been two fires in the City, as I am told for
certain, and it is so, within this week.
12th. Up, and when ready,
and to my office, to do a little business, and, coming homeward again,
saw my door and hatch open, left so by Luce, our cookmayde, which so vexed
me, that I did give her a kick in our entry, and offered a blow at her,
and was seen doing so by Sir W. Pen's footboy, which did vex me to the
heart, because I know he will be telling their family of it; though I
did put on presently a very pleasant face to the boy, and spoke kindly
to him, as one without passion, so as it may be he might not think I was
angry, but yet I was troubled at it. So away by water to White Hall, and
there did our usual business before the Duke of York; but it fell out
that, discoursing of matters of money, it rose to a mighty heat, very
high words arising between Sir G. Carteret and [Sir] W. Coventry, the
former in his passion saying that the other should have helped things
if they were so bad; and the other answered, so he would, and things should
have been better had he been Treasurer of the Navy. I was mightily troubled
at this heat, and it will breed ill blood, I fear; but things are in that
bad condition that I do daily expect when we shall all fly in one another's
faces, when we shall be reduced, every one, to answer for himself. We
broke up; and I soon after to Sir G. Carteret's chamber, where I find
the poor man telling his lady privately, and she weeping. I went into
them, and did seem, as indeed I was, troubled for this; and did give the
best advice I could, which, I think, did please them: and they do apprehend
me their friend, as indeed I am, for I do take the Vice-chamberlain for
a most honest man. He did assure me that he was not, all expences and
things paid, clear in estate L15,000 better than he was when the King
come in; and that the King and Lord Chancellor did know that he was worth,
with the debt the King owed him, L50,000, I think, he said, when the King
come into England. I did pacify all I could, and then away by water home,
there to write letters and things for the dispatch of Balty away this
day to sea; and after dinner he did go, I having given him much good counsell;
and I have great hopes that he will make good use of it, and be a good
man, for I find him willing to take pains and very sober.
He being gone, I close at my office all the afternoon
getting off of hand my papers, which, by the late holidays and my laziness,
were grown too many upon my hands, to my great trouble, and therefore
at it as late as my eyes would give me leave, and then by water down to
Redriffe, meaning to meet my wife, who is gone with Mercer, Barker, and
the boy (it being most sweet weather) to walk, and I did meet with them,
and walked back, and then by the time we got home it was dark, and we
staid singing in the garden till supper was ready, and there with great
pleasure. But I tried my girles Mercer and Barker singly one after another,
a single song, "At dead low ebb," etc., and I do clearly find
that as to manner of singing the latter do much the better, the other
thinking herself as I do myself above taking pains for a manner of singing,
contenting ourselves with the judgment and goodness of eare. So to supper,
and then parted and to bed.
13th. Up, and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, and strange how the false fellow Commissioner.
Pett was eager to have had Carcasses business brought on to-day that he
might give my Lord Bruncker (who hates him, I am sure, and hath spoke
as much against him to the King in my hearing as any man) a cast of his
office in pleading for his man Carcasse, but I did prevent its being brought
on to-day, and so broke up, and I home to dinner, and after dinner with
a little singing with some pleasure alone with my poor wife, and then
to the office, where sat all the afternoon till late at night, and then
home to supper and to bed, my eyes troubling me still after candle-light,
which troubles me. Wrote to my father, who, I am glad to hear, is at some
ease again, and I long to have him in town, that I may see what can be
done for him here; for I would fain do all I can that I may have him live,
and take pleasure in my doing well in the world. This afternoon come Mrs.
Lowther to me to the office, and there je did toker ses mammailles and
did baiser them and su bocca, which she took fort willingly . . . .
14th (Lord's day). Up,
and to read a little in my new History of Turkey, and so with my wife
to church, and then home, where is little Michell and my pretty Betty
and also Mercer, and very merry. A good dinner of roast beef. After dinner
I away to take water at the Tower, and thence to Westminster, where Mrs.
Martin was not at home. So to White Hall, and there walked up and down,
and among other things visited Sir G. Carteret, and much talk with him,
who is discontented, as he hath reason, to see how things are like to
come all to naught, and it is very much that this resolution of having
of country Admirals should not come to his eares till I told him the other
day, so that I doubt who manages things. From him to Margaret's Church,
and there spied Martin, and home with her . . . . . but fell out to see
her expensefullness, having bought Turkey work, chairs, &c. By and
by away home, and there took out my wife, and the two Mercers, and two
of our mayds, Barker and Jane, and over the water to the Jamaica House,
where I never was before, and there the girls did run for wagers over
the bowling-green; and there, with much pleasure, spent little, and so
home, and they home, and I to read with satisfaction in my book of Turkey,
and so to bed.
15th. Lay long in bed,
and by and by called up by Sir H. Cholmly, who tells me that my Lord Middleton
is for certain chosen Governor of Tangier; a man of moderate understanding,
not covetous, but a soldier of fortune, and poor. Here comes Mr. Sanchy
with an impertinent business to me of a ticket, which I put off. But by
and by comes Dr. Childe by appointment, and sat with me all the morning
making me bases and inward parts to several songs that I desired of him,
to my great content. Then dined, and then abroad by coach, and I set him
down at Hatton Garden, and I to the King's house by chance, where a new
play: so full as I never saw it; I forced to stand all the while close
to the very door till I took cold, and many people went away for want
of room. The King, and Queene, and Duke of York and Duchesse there, and
all the Court, and Sir W. Coventry. The play called "The Change of
Crownes;" a play of Ned Howard's, the best that ever I saw at that
house, being a great play and serious; only Lacy did act the country-gentleman
come up to Court, who do abuse the Court with all the imaginable wit and
plainness about selling of places, and doing every thing for money. The
play took very much. Thence I to my new bookseller's, and there bought
"Hooker's Polity," the new edition, and "Dugdale's History
of the Inns of Court," of which there was but a few saved out of
the fire, and Playford's new Catch-book, that hath a great many new fooleries
in it. Then home, a little at the office, and then to supper and to bed,
mightily pleased with the new play.
16th. Up, and to the office,
where sat all the morning, at noon home to dinner, and thence in haste
to carry my wife to see the new play I saw yesterday, she not knowing
it. But there, contrary to expectation, find "The Silent Woman."
However, in; and there Knipp come into the pit. I took her by me, and
here we met with Mrs. Horsley, the pretty woman--an acquaintance of Mercer's,
whose house is burnt. Knipp tells me the King was so angry at the liberty
taken by Lacy's, part to abuse him to his face, that he commanded they
should act no more, till Moone went and got leave for them to act again,
but not this play. The King mighty angry; and it was bitter indeed, but
very true and witty. I never was more taken with a play than I am with
this "Silent Woman," as old as it is, and as often as I have
seen it. There is more wit in it than goes to ten new plays. Thence with
my wife and Knipp to Mrs. Pierce's, and saw her closet again, and liked
her picture. Thence took them all to the Cake- house, in Southampton Market-place,
where Pierce told us the story how, in good earnest, [the King] is offended
with the Duke of Richmond's marrying, and Mrs. Stewart's sending the King
his jewels again. As she tells it, it is the noblest romance and example
of a brave lady that ever I read in my life. Pretty to hear them talk
of yesterday's play, and I durst not own to my wife to have seen it. Thence
home and to [Sir] W. Batten!'s, where we have made a bargain for the ending
of some of the trouble about some of our prizes for L1400. So home to
look on my new books that I have lately bought, and then to supper and
to bed.
17th. Up, and with the
two Sir Williams by coach to the Duke of York, who is come to St. James's,
the first time we have attended him there this year. In our way, in Tower
Street, we saw Desbrough walking on foot: who is now no more a prisoner,
and looks well, and just as he used to do heretofore. When we come to
the Duke of York's I was spoke to by Mr. Bruncker on behalf of Carcasse.
Thence by coach to Sir G. Carteret's, in London, there to pass some accounts
of his, and at it till dinner, and then to work again a little, and then
go away, and my wife being sent for by me to the New Exchange I took her
up, and there to the King's playhouse (at the door met with W. Joyce in
the street, who come to our coach side, but we in haste took no notice
of him, for which I was sorry afterwards, though I love not the fellow,
yet for his wife's sake), and saw a piece of "Rollo," a play
I like not much, but much good acting in it: the house very empty. So
away home, and I a little to the office, and then to Sir Robert Viner's,
and so back, and find my wife gone down by water to take a little ayre,
and I to my chamber and there spent the night in reading my new book,
"Origines Juridiciales," which pleases me. So to supper and
to bed.
18th. Up, and to read more
in the "Origines," and then to the office, where the news is
strong that not only the Dutch cannot set out a fleete this year, but
that the French will not, and that he hath given the answer to the Dutch
Embassador, saying that he is for the King of England's, having an honourable
peace, which, if true, is the best news we have had a good while. At the
office all the morning, and there pleased with the little pretty Deptford
woman I have wished for long, and she hath occasion given her to come
again to me. After office I to the 'Change a little, and then home and
to dinner, and then by coach with my wife to the Duke of York's house,
and there saw "The Wits," a play I formerly loved, and is now
corrected and enlarged: but, though I like the acting, yet I like not
much in the play now. The Duke of York and [Sir] W. Coventry gone to Portsmouth,
makes me thus to go to plays. So home, and to the office a little and
then home, where I find Goodgroome, and he and I did sing several things
over, and tried two or three grace parts in Playford's new book, my wife
pleasing me in singing her part of the things she knew, which is a comfort
to my very heart. So he being gone we to supper and to bed.
19th. Up, and to the office
all the morning, doing a great deal of business. At noon to dinner betimes,
and then my wife and I by coach to the Duke's house, calling at Lovett's,
where I find my Lady Castlemayne's picture not yet done, which has lain
so many months there, which vexes me, but I mean not to trouble them more
after this is done. So to the playhouse, not much company come, which
I impute to the heat of the weather, it being very hot. Here we saw "Macbeth,"
[See November 5th, 1664. Downes wrote: "The Tragedy
of Macbeth, alter'd by Sir William Davenant; being drest in all it's finery,
as new cloaths, new scenes, machines as flyings for the Witches; with
all the singing and dancing in it. The first compos'd by Mr. Lock, the
other by Mr. Channell and Mr. Joseph Preist; it being all excellently
perform'd, being in the nature of an opera, it recompenc'd double the
expence; it proves still a lasting play."]
which, though I have seen it often, yet is it one of the best plays for
a stage, and variety of dancing and musique, that ever I saw. So being
very much pleased, thence home by coach with young Goodyer and his own
sister, who offered us to go in their coach. A good-natured youth I believe
he is, but I fear will mind his pleasures too much. She is pretty, and
a modest, brown girle. Set us down, so my wife and I into the garden,
a fine moonshine evening, and there talking, and among other things she
tells me that she finds by W. Hewer that my people do observe my minding
my pleasure more than usual, which I confess, and am ashamed of, and so
from this day take upon me to leave it till Whit-Sunday. While we were
sitting in the garden comes Mrs. Turner to advise about her son, the Captain,
when I did give her the best advice I could, to look out for some land
employment for him, a peace being at hand, when few ships will be employed
and very many, and these old Captains, to be provided for. Then to other
talk, and among the rest about Sir W. Pen's being to buy Wansted House
of Sir Robert Brookes, but has put him off again, and left him the other
day to pay for a dinner at a tavern, which she says our parishioner, Mrs.
Hollworthy, talks of; and I dare be hanged if ever he could mean to buy
that great house, that knows not how to furnish one that is not the tenth
part so big. Thence I to my chamber to write a little, and then to bed,
having got a mighty cold in my right eare and side of my throat, and in
much trouble with it almost all the night.
20th. Up, with much pain
in my eare and palate. To the office out of humour all the morning. At
noon dined, and with my wife to the King's house, but there found the
bill torn down and no play acted, and so being in the humour to see one,
went to the Duke of York's house, and there saw "The Witts"
again, which likes me better than it did the other day, having much wit
in it. Here met with Mr. Rolt, who tells me the reason of no play to-day
at the King's house. That Lacy had been committed to the porter's lodge
for his acting his part in the late new play, and that being thence released
he come to the King's house, there met with Ned Howard, the poet of the
play, who congratulated his release; upon which Lacy cursed him as that
it was the fault of his nonsensical play that was the cause of his ill
usage. Mr. Howard did give him some reply; to which Lacy [answered] him,
that he was more a fool than a poet; upon which Howard did give him a
blow on the face with his glove; on which Lacy, having a cane in his hand,
did give him a blow over the pate. Here Rolt and others that discoursed
of it in the pit this afternoon did wonder that Howard did not run him
through, he being too mean a fellow to fight with. But Howard did not
do any thing but complain to the King of it; so the whole house is silenced,
and the gentry seem to rejoice much at it, the house being become too
insolent. Here were many fine ladies this afternoon at this house as I
have at any time seen, and so after the play home and there wrote to my
father, and then to walk in the garden with my wife, resolving by the
grace of God to see no more plays till Whitsuntide, I having now seen
a play every day this week till I have neglected my business, and that
I am ashamed of, being found so much absent; the Duke of York and Sir
W. Coventry having been out of town at Portsmouth did the more embolden
me thereto. So home, and having brought home with me from Fenchurch Street
a hundred of sparrowgrass,--[A form once so commonly
used for asparagus that it has found its way into dictionaries.]--cost
18d. We had them and a little bit of salmon, which my wife had a mind
to, cost 3s. So to supper, and my pain being somewhat better in my throat,
we to bed.
21st (Lord's day). Up,
and John, a hackney coachman whom of late I have much used, as being formerly
Sir W. Pen's coachman, coming to me by my direction to see whether I would
use him to-day or no, I took him to our backgate to look upon the ground
which is to be let there, where I have a mind to buy enough to build a
coach-house and stable; for I have had it much in my thoughts lately that
it is not too much for me now, in degree or cost, to keep a coach, but
contrarily, that I am almost ashamed to be seen in a hackney, and therefore
if I can have the conveniency, I will secure the ground at least till
peace comes, that I do receive encouragement to keep a coach, or else
that I may part with the ground again. The place I like very well, being
close to my owne house, and so resolve to go about it, and so home and
with my wife to church, and then to dinner, Mercer with us, with design
to go to Hackney to church in the afternoon. So after dinner she and I
sung "Suo Moro," which is one of the best pieces of musique
to my thinking that ever I did hear in my life; then took coach and to
Hackney church, where very full, and found much difficulty to get pews,
I offering the sexton money, and he could not help me. So my wife and
Mercer ventured into a pew, and I into another. A knight and his lady
very civil to me when they come, and the like to my wife in hers, being
Sir G. Viner and his lady--rich in jewells, but most in beauty--almost
the finest woman that ever I saw. That which we went chiefly to see was
the young ladies of the schools, --[Hackney was long
famous for its boarding schools.]-- whereof there is great store,
very pretty; and also the organ, which is handsome, and tunes the psalm,
and plays with the people; which is mighty pretty, and makes me mighty
earnest to have a pair at our church, I having almost a mind to give them
a pair, if they would settle a maintenance on them for it. I am mightily
taken with them. So, church done, we to coach and away to Kingsland and
Islington, and there eat and drank at the Old House, and so back, it raining
a little, which is mighty welcome, it having not rained in many weeks,
so that they say it makes the fields just now mighty sweet. So with great
pleasure home by night. Set down Mercer, and I to my chamber, and there
read a great deal in Rycaut's Turkey book with great pleasure, and so
eat and to bed. My sore throat still troubling me, but not so much. This
night I do come to full resolution of diligence for a good while, and
I hope God will give me the grace and wisdom to perform it.
22nd. Up pretty betimes,
my throat better, and so drest me, and to White Hall to see Sir W. Coventry,
returned from Portsmouth, whom I am almost ashamed to see for fear he
should have been told how often I have been at plays, but it is better
to see him at first than afterward. So walked to the Old Swan and drank
at Michell's, and then to White Hall and over the Park to St. James's
to [Sir] W. Coventry, where well received, and good discourse. He seems
to be sure of a peace; that the King of France do not intend to set out
a fleete, for that he do design Flanders. Our Embassadors set out this
week. Thence I over the Park to Sir G. Carteret, and after him by coach
to the Lord Chancellor's house, the first time I have been therein; and
it is very noble, and brave pictures of the ancient and present nobility,
never saw better. Thence with him to London, mighty merry in the way.
Thence home, and find the boy out of the house and office, and by and
by comes in and hath been to Mercer's. I did pay his coat for him. Then
to my chamber, my wife comes home with linen she hath been buying of.
I then to dinner, and then down the river to Greenwich, and the watermen
would go no further. So I turned them off, giving them nothing, and walked
to Woolwich; there did some business, and met with Captain Cocke and back
with him. He tells me our peace is agreed on; we are not to assist the
Spanyard against the French for this year, and no restitution, and we
are likely to lose Poleroone.
[Among the State Papers is a document dated July 8th,
1667, in which we read: "At Breda, the business is so far advanced
that the English have relinquished their pretensions to the ships Henry
Bonaventure and Good Hope. The matter sticks only at Poleron; the States
have resolved not to part with it, though the English should have a right
to it" ("Calendar," 1667, p. 278).]
I know not whether this be true or no, but I am for peace on any terms.
He tells me how the King was vexed the other day for having no paper laid
him at the Council-table, as was usual; and Sir Richard Browne did tell
his Majesty he would call the person whose work it was to provide it:
who being come, did tell his Majesty that he was but a poor man, and was
out L400 or L500 for it, which was as much as he is worth; and that he
cannot provide it any longer without money, having not received a penny
since the King's coming in. So the King spoke to my Lord Chamberlain;
and many such mementos the King do now-a-days meet withall, enough to
make an ingenuous man mad. I to Deptford, and there scolded with a master
for his ship's not being gone, and so home to the office and did business
till my eyes are sore again, and so home to sing, and then to bed, my
eyes failing me mightily:
23rd (St. George's-day).
The feast being kept at White Hall, out of design, as it is thought, to
make the best countenance we can to the Swede's Embassadors, before their
leaving us to go to the treaty abroad, to shew some jollity. We sat at
the office all the morning. Word is brought me that young Michell is come
to call my wife to his wife's labour, and she went, and I at the office
full of expectation what to hear from poor Betty Michell. This morning
much to do with Sir W. Warren, all whose applications now are to Lord
Bruncker, and I am against him now, not professedly, but apparently in
discourse, and will be. At noon home to dinner, where alone, and after
dinner to my musique papers, and by and by comes in my wife, who gives
me the good news that the midwife and she alone have delivered poor Betty
of a pretty girl, which I am mighty glad of, and she in good condition,
my wife as well as I mightily pleased with it. Then to the office to do
things towards the post, and then my wife and I set down at her mother's,
and I up and down to do business, but did little; and so to Mrs. Martin's,
and there did hazer what I would con her, and then called my wife and
to little Michell's, where we saw the little child, which I like mightily,
being I allow very pretty, and asked her how she did, being mighty glad
of her doing well, and so home to the office, and then to my chamber,
and so to bed.
24th. Up, and with [Sir]
W. Pen to St. James's, and there the Duke of York was preparing to go
to some further ceremonies about the Garter, that he could give us no
audience. Thence to Westminster Hall, the first day of the Term, and there
joyed Mrs. Michell, who is mightily pleased with my wife's work yesterday,
and so away to my barber's about my periwigg, and then to the Exchange,
there to meet Fenn about some money to be borrowed of the office of the
Ordnance to answer a great pinch. So home to dinner, and in the afternoon
met by agreement (being put on it by Harry Bruncker's frighting us into
a despatch of Carcasse's business) [Lord] Bruncker, T. Harvey, [Sir] J.
Minnes, [Sir] W. Batten, and I (Sir W. Pen keeping out of the way still),
where a great many high words from Bruncker, and as many from me and others
to him, and to better purpose, for I think we have fortified ourselves
to overthrow his man Carcasse, and to do no honour to him. We rose with
little done but great heat, not to be reconciled I doubt, and I care not,
for I will be on the right side, and that shall keep me: Thence by coach
to Sir John Duncomb's' lodging in the Pell Mell,--[See November 8th, 1664]--
in order to the money spoken of in the morning; and there awhile sat and
discoursed.: and I find him that he is a very proper man for business,
being very resolute and proud, and industrious. He told me what reformation
they had made in the office of the Ordnance, taking away Legg's fees:
[William Legge, eldest son of Edward Legge, sometime
Vice-President of Munster, born 1609(?). He served under Maurice of Nassau
and Gustavus Adolphus, and held the rank of colonel in the Royalist army.
He closely attached himself to Prince Rupert, and was an active agent
in affecting the reconciliation between that prince and his uncle Charles
I. Colonel Legge distinguished himself in several actions, and was wounded
and taken prisoner at the battle of Worcester; it was said that he would
have "been executed if his wife had not contrived his escape from
Coventry gaol in her own clothes." He was Groom of the Bedchamber
to Charles I., and also to Charles II.; he held the offices of Master
of the Armories and Lieutenant- General of the Ordnance. He refused honours
(a knighthood from Charles I. and an earldom from Charles II.), but his
eldest son George was created Baron Dartmouth in 1682. He died October
13th, 1672, at his house in the Minories]
and have got an order that no Treasurer after him shall ever sit at the
Board; and it is a good one: that no master of the Ordnance here shall
ever sell a place. He tells me they have not paid any increase of price
for any thing during this war, but in most have paid less; and at this
day have greater stores than they know where to lay, if there should be
peace, and than ever was any time this war. That they pay every man in
course, and have notice of the disposal of every farthing. Every man that
they owe money to has his share of every sum they receive; never borrowed
all this war but L30,000 by the King's express command, but do usually
stay till their assignments become payable in their own course, which
is the whole mystery, that they have had assignments for a fifth part
of whatever was assigned to the Navy. They have power of putting out and
in of all officers; are going upon a building that will cost them L12,000;
that they out of their stock of tallies have been forced to help the Treasurer
of the Navy at this great pinch. Then to talk of newes: that he thinks
the want of money hath undone the King, for the Parliament will never
give the King more money without calling all people to account, nor, as
he believes, will ever make war again, but they will manage it themselves:
unless, which I proposed, he would visibly become a severer inspector
into his own business and accounts, and that would gain upon the Parliament
yet: which he confesses and confirms as the only lift to set him upon
his legs, but says that it is not in his nature ever to do. He says that
he believes but four men (such as he could name) would do the business
of both offices, his and ours, and if ever the war were to be again it
should be so, he believes. He told me to my face that I was a very good
clerk, and did understand the business and do it very well, and that he
would never desire a better. He do believe that the Parliament, if ever
they meet, will offer some alterations to the King, and will turn some
of us out, and I protest I think he is in the right that either they or
the King will be advised to some regulations, and therefore I ought to
beware, as it is easy for me to keep myself up if I will. He thinks that
much of our misfortune hath been for want of an active Lord Treasurer,
and that such a man as Sir W. Coventry would do the business thoroughly.
This talk being over, comes his boy and tells us [Sir] W. Coventry is
come in, and so he and I to him, and there told the difficulty of getting
this money, and they did play hard upon Sir G. Carteret as a man moped
and stunned, not knowing which way to turn himself. Sir W. Coventry cried
that he was disheartened, and I do think that there is much in it, but
Sir J. Duncomb do charge him with mighty neglect in the pursuing of his
business, and that he do not look after it himself, but leaves it to Fenn,
so that I do perceive that they are resolved to scheme at bringing the
business into a better way of execution, and I think it needs, that is
the truth of it.
So I away to Sir G. Carteret's lodgings about this
money, and contrary to expectation I find he hath prevailed with Legg
on his own bond to lend him L2000, which I am glad of, but, poor man,
he little sees what observations people do make upon his management, and
he is not a man fit to be told what one hears. Thence by water at 10 at
night from Westminster Bridge, having kissed little Frank, and so to the
Old Swan, and walked home by moonshine, and there to my chamber a while,
and supper and to bed.
25th. Received a writ from
the Exchequer this morning of distrain for L70,000, which troubled me,
though it be but, matter of form. To the office, where sat all the morning.
At noon my wife being to Unthanke's christening, I to Sir W. Batten's
to dinner, where merry, and the rather because we are like to come to
some good end in another of our prizes. Thence by coach to my Lord Treasurer's,
and there being come too soon to the New Exchange, but did nothing, and
back again, and there found my Lord Bruncker and T. Harvy, and walked
in a room very merrily discoursing. By and by comes my Lord Ashly and
tells us my Lord Treasurer is ill and cannot speak with us now. Thence
away, Sir W. Pen and I and Mr. Lewes, who come hither after us, and Mr.
Gawden in the last man's coach. Set me down by the Poultry, and I to Sir
Robert Viner's, and there had my account stated and took it home to review.
So home to the office, and there late writing out something, having been
a little at Sir W. Batten's to talk, and there vexed to see them give
order for Hogg's further abroad, and so home and to bed.
26th. Up, and by coach
with Sir W. Batten and [Sir] W. Pen to White Hall, and there saw the Duke
of Albemarle, who is not well, and do grow crazy. Thence I to St. James's,
to meet Sir G. Carteret, and did, and Lord Berkely, to get them (as we
would have done the Duke of Albemarle) to the meeting of the Lords of
Appeale in the business of one of our prizes. With them to the meeting
of the Guinny Company, and there staid, and went with Lord Berkely. While
I was waiting for him in the Matted Gallery, a young man was most finely
working in Indian inke the great picture of the King and Queen sitting,--[Charles
I. and Henrietta Maria.]--by Van Dyke; and did it very finely.
Thence to Westminster Hall to hear our cause, but [it] did not come before
them to-day, so went down and walked below in the Hall, and there met
with Ned Pickering, who tells me the ill newes of his nephew Gilbert,
who is turned a very rogue, and then I took a turn with Mr. Evelyn, with
whom I walked two hours, till almost one of the clock: talking of the
badness of the Government, where nothing but wickedness, and wicked men
and women command the King: that it is not in his nature to gainsay any
thing that relates to his pleasures; that much of it arises from the sickliness
of our Ministers of State, who cannot be about him as the idle companions
are, and therefore he gives way to the young rogues; and then, from the
negligence of the Clergy, that a Bishop shall never be seen about him,
as the King of France hath always: that the King would fain have some
of the same gang to be Lord Treasurer, which would be yet worse, for now
some delays are put to the getting gifts of the King, as that whore my
Lady Byron,
[Eleanor, daughter of Robert Needham, Viscount Kilmurrey,
and widow of Peter Warburton, became in 1644 the second wife of John Byron,
first Lord Byron. Died 1663.--B.]
who had been, as he called it, the King's seventeenth whore abroad, did
not leave him till she had got him to give her an order for L4000 worth
of plate to be made for her; but by delays, thanks be to God! she died
before she had it. He tells me mighty stories of the King of France, how
great a prince he is. He hath made a code to shorten the law; he hath
put out all the ancient commanders of castles that were become hereditary;
he hath made all the fryers subject to the bishops, which before were
only subject to Rome, and so were hardly the King's subjects, and that
none shall become 'religieux' but at such an age, which he thinks will
in a few, years ruin the Pope, and bring France into a patriarchate. He
confirmed to me the business of the want of paper at the Council-table
the other day, which I have observed; Wooly being to have found it, and
did, being called, tell the King to his face the reason of it; and Mr.
Evelyn tells me several of the menial servants of the Court lacking bread,
that have not received a farthing wages since the King's coming in. He
tells me the King of France hath his mistresses, but laughs at the foolery
of our King, that makes his bastards princes,
[Louis made his own bastards dukes and princes, and
legitimatized them as much as he could, connecting them also by marriage
with the real blood-royal.--B.]
and loses his revenue upon them, and makes his mistresses his masters
and the King of France did never grant Lavalliere
[Louise Francoise de la Baume le Blanc de la Valliere
had four children by Louis XIV., of whom only two survived-Marie Anne
Bourbon, called Mademoiselle de Blois, born in 1666, afterwards married
to the Prince de Conti, and the Comte de Vermandois, born in 1667. In
that year (the very year in which Evelyn was giving this account to Pepys),
the Duchy of Vaujour and two baronies were created in favour of La Valliere,
and her daughter, who, in the deed of creation, was legitimatized, and
styled princess.--B.]
any thing to bestow on others, and gives a little subsistence, but no
more, to his bastards. He told me the whole story of Mrs. Stewart's going
away from Court, he knowing her well; and believes her, up to her leaving
the Court, to be as virtuous as any woman in the world: and told me, from
a Lord that she told it to but yesterday, with her own mouth, and a sober
man, that when the Duke of Richmond did make love to her, she did ask
the King, and he did the like also; and that the King did not deny it,
and [she] told this Lord that she was come to that pass as to resolve
to have married any gentleman of L1500 a-year that would have had her
in honour; for it was come to that pass, that she could not longer continue
at Court without prostituting herself to the King,
[Even at a much later time Mrs. Godolphin well resolved
"not to talk foolishly to men, more especially THE KING,"--"
be sure never to talk to THE KING" ("Life," by Evelyn).
These expressions speak volumes as to Charles's character.--B.]
whom she had so long kept off, though he had liberty more than any other
had, or he ought to have, as to dalliance.
[Evelyn evidently believed the Duchess of Richmond
to be innocent; and his testimony, coupled with her own declaration, ought
to weigh down all the scandal which Pepys reports from other sources.--B.]
She told this Lord that she had reflected upon the occasion she had given
the world to think her a bad woman, and that she had no way but to marry
and leave the Court, rather in this way of discontent than otherwise,
that the world might see that she sought not any thing but her honour;
and that she will never come to live at Court more than when she comes
to town to come to kiss the Queene her Mistress's hand: and hopes, though
she hath little reason to hope, she can please her Lord so as to reclaim
him, that they may yet live comfortably in the country on his estate.
She told this Lord that all the jewells she ever had given her at Court,
or any other presents, more than the King's allowance of L700 per annum
out of the Privypurse for her clothes, were, at her first coming the King
did give her a necklace of pearl of about L1100 and afterwards, about
seven months since, when the King had hopes to have obtained some courtesy
of her, the King did give her some jewells, I have forgot what, and I
think a pair of pendants. The Duke of York, being once her Valentine,
did give her a jewell of about L800; and my Lord Mandeville, her Valentine
this year, a ring of about L300; and the King of France would have had
her mother, who, he says, is one of the most cunning women in the world,
to have let her stay in France, saying that he loved her not as a mistress,
but as one that he could marry as well as any lady in France; and that,
if she might stay, for the honour of his Court he would take care she
should not repent. But her mother, by command of the Queen-mother, thought
rather to bring her into England; and the King of France did give her
a jewell: so that Mr. Evelyn believes she may be worth in jewells about
L6000, and that that is all that she hath in the world: and a worthy woman;
and in this hath done as great an act of honour as ever was done by woman.
That now the Countesse Castlemayne do carry all before her: and among
other arguments to prove Mrs. Stewart to have been honest to the last,
he says that the King's keeping in still with my Lady Castlemayne do show
it; for he never was known to keep two mistresses in his life, and would
never have kept to her had he prevailed any thing with Mrs. Stewart. She
is gone yesterday with her Lord to Cobham. He did tell me of the ridiculous
humour of our King and Knights of the Garter the other day, who, whereas
heretofore their robes were only to be worn during their ceremonies and
service, these, as proud of their coats, did wear them all day till night,
and then rode into the Parke with them on. Nay, and he tells me he did
see my Lord Oxford and the Duke of Monmouth in a hackney-coach with two
footmen in the Parke, with their robes on; which is a most scandalous
thing, so as all gravity may be said to be lost among us.
By and by we discoursed of Sir Thomas Clifford, whom
I took for a very rich and learned man, and of the great family of that
name. He tells me he is only a man of about seven-score pounds a-year,
of little learning more than the law of a justice of peace, which he knows
well: a parson's son, got to be burgess in a little borough in the West,
and here fell into the acquaintance of my Lord Arlington, whose creature
he is, and never from him; a man of virtue, and comely, and good parts
enough; and hath come into his place with a great grace, though with a
great skip over the heads of a great many, as Chichly and Duncum, and
some Lords that did expect it. By the way, he tells me, that of all the
great men of England there is none that endeavours more to raise those
that he takes into favour than my Lord Arlington; and that, on that score,
he is much more to be made one's patron than my Lord Chancellor, who never
did, nor never will do, any thing, but for money! After having this long
discourse we parted, about one of the clock, and so away by water home,
calling upon Michell, whose wife and girle are pretty well, and I home
to dinner, and after dinner with Sir W. Batten to White Hall, there to
attend the Duke of York before council, where we all met at his closet
and did the little business we had, and here he did tell us how the King
of France is intent upon his design against Flanders, and hath drawn up
a remonstrance of the cause of the war, and appointed the 20th of the
next month for his rendezvous, and himself to prepare for the campaign
the 30th, so that this, we are in hopes, will keep him in employment.
Turenne is to be his general. Here was Carcasses business unexpectedly
moved by him, but what was done therein appears in my account of his case
in writing by itself. Certain newes of the Dutch being abroad on our coast
with twenty-four great ships.
This done Sir W. Batten and I back again to London,
and in the way met my Lady Newcastle going with her coaches and footmen
all in velvet: herself, whom I never saw before, as I have heard her often
described, for all the town-talk is now-a-days of her extravagancies,
with her velvetcap, her hair about her ears; many black patches, because
of pimples about her mouth; naked-necked, without any thing about it,
and a black just-au-corps. She seemed to me a very comely woman: but I
hope to see more of her on Mayday. My mind is mightily of late upon a
coach. At home, to the office, where late spending all the evening upon
entering in long hand our late passages with Carcasse for memory sake,
and so home in great pain in my back by the uneasiness of Sir W. Batten's
coach driving hard this afternoon over the stones to prevent coming too
late. So at night to supper in great pain, and to bed, where lay in great
pain, not able to turn myself all night.
27th. Up with much pain,
and to the office, where all the morning. At noon home to dinner, W. Hewer
with us. This noon I got in some coals at 23s. per chaldron, a good hearing,
I thank God-having not been put to buy a coal all this dear time, that
during this war poor people have been forced to give 45s. and 50s., and
L3. In the afternoon (my wife and people busy these late days, and will
be for some time, making of shirts and smocks) to the office, where late,
and then home, after letters, and so to supper and to bed, with much pleasure
of mind, after having dispatched business. This afternoon I spent some
time walking with Mr. Moore, in the garden, among other things discoursing
of my Lord Sandwich's family, which he tells me is in a very bad condition,
for want of money and management, my Lord's charging them with bills,
and nobody, nor any thing provided to answer them. He did discourse of
his hopes of being supplied with L1900 against a present bill from me,
but I took no notice of it, nor will do it. It seems Mr. Sheply doubts
his accounts are ill kept, and every thing else in the family out of order,
which I am grieved to hear of.
28th (Lord's day). Lay
long, my pain in my back being still great, though not so great as it
was. However, up and to church, where a lazy sermon, and then home and
to dinner, my wife and I alone and Barker. After dinner, by water--the
day being mighty pleasant, and the tide serving finely, I up (reading
in Boyle's book of colours), as high as Barne Elmes, and there took one
turn alone, and then back to Putney Church, where I saw the girls of the
schools, few of which pretty; and there I come into a pew, and met with
little James Pierce, which I was much pleased at, the little rogue being
very glad to see me: his master, Reader to the Church. Here was a good
sermon and much company, but I sleepy, and a little out of order, for
my hat falling down through a hole underneath the pulpit, which, however,
after sermon, by a stick, and the helpe of the clerke, I got up again,
and then walked out of the church with the boy, and then left him, promising
him to get him a play another time. And so by water, the tide being with
me again, down to Deptford, and there I walked down the Yard, Shish and
Cox with me, and discoursed about cleaning of the wet docke, and heard,
which I had before, how, when the docke was made, a ship of near 500 tons
was there found; a ship supposed of Queene Elizabeth's time, and well
wrought, with a great deal of stoneshot in her, of eighteen inches diameter,
which was shot then in use: and afterwards meeting with Captain Perriman
and Mr. Castle at Half- way Tree, they tell me of stoneshot of thirty-six
inches diameter, which they shot out of mortarpieces. Thence walked to
Half-way Tree, and there stopt and talk with Mr. Castle and Captain Perriman,
and so to Redriffe and took boat again, and so home, and there to write
down my Journall, and so to supper and to read, and so to bed, mightily
pleased with my reading of Boyle's book of colours to-day, only troubled
that some part of it, indeed the greatest part, I am not able to understand
for want of study. My wife this night troubled at my leaving her alone
so much and keeping her within doors, which indeed I do not well nor wisely
in.
29th. Up, being visited
very early by Creed newly come from Hinchingbrooke, who went thither without
my knowledge, and I believe only to save his being taxed by the Poll Bill.
I did give him no very good countenance nor welcome, but took occasion
to go forth and walked (he with me) to St. Dunstan's, and thence I to
Sir W. Coventry's, where a good while with him, and I think he pretty
kind, but that the nature of our present condition affords not matter
for either of us to be pleased with any thing. We discoursed of Carcasse,
whose Lord, he tells me, do make complaints that his clerk should be singled
out, and my Lord Berkeley do take his part. So he advises we would sum
up all we have against him and lay it before the Duke of York; he condemned
my Lord Bruncker. Thence to Sir G. Carteret, and there talked a little
while about office business, and thence by coach home, in several places
paying my debts in order to my evening my accounts this month, and thence
by and by to White Hall again to Sir G. Carteret to dinner, where very
good company and discourse, and I think it my part to keep in there now
more than ordinary because of the probability of my Lord's coming soon
home. Our Commissioners for the treaty set out this morning betimes down
the river. Here I hear that the Duke of Cambridge, the Duke of York's
son, is very sick; and my Lord Treasurer very bad of the stone, and hath
been so some days. After dinner Sir G. Carteret and I alone in his closet
an hour or more talking of my Lord Sandwich's coming home, which, the
peace being likely to be made here, he expects, both for my Lord's sake
and his own (whose interest he wants) it will be best for him to be at
home, where he will be well received by the King; he is sure of his service
well accepted, though the business of Spain do fall by this peace. He
tells me my Lord Arlington hath done like a gentleman by him in all things.
He says, if my Lord [Sandwich] were here, he were the fittest man to be
Lord Treasurer of any man in England; and he thinks it might be compassed;
for he confesses that the King's matters do suffer through the inability
of this man, who is likely to die, and he will propound him to the King.
It will remove him from his place at sea, and the King will have a good
place to bestow. He says to me, that he could wish, when my Lord comes,
that he would think fit to forbear playing, as a thing below him, and
which will lessen him, as it do my Lord St. Albans, in the King's esteem:
and as a great secret tells me that he hath made a match for my Lord Hinchingbroke
to a daughter of my Lord Burlington's, where there is a great alliance,
L10,000 portion; a civil family, and relation to my Lord Chancellor, whose
son hath married one of the daughters; and that my Lord Chancellor do
take it with very great kindness, so that he do hold himself obliged by
it. My Lord Sandwich hath referred it to my Lord Crew, Sir G. Carteret,
and Mr. Montagu, to end it. My Lord Hinchingbroke and the lady know nothing
yet of it. It will, I think, be very happy. Very glad of this discourse,
I away mightily pleased with the confidence I have in this family, and
so away, took up my wife, who was at her mother's, and so home, where
I settled to my chamber about my accounts, both Tangier and private, and
up at it till twelve at night, with good success, when news is brought
me that there is a great fire in Southwarke: so we up to the leads, and
then I and the boy down to the end of our, lane, and there saw it, it
seeming pretty great, but nothing to the fire of London, that it made
me think little of it. We could at that distance see an engine play--that
is, the water go out, it being moonlight. By and by, it begun to slacken,
and then I home and to bed.
30th. Up, and Mr. Madden
come to speak with me, whom my people not knowing have made to wait long
without doors, which vexed me. Then comes Sir John Winter to discourse
with me about the forest of Deane, and then about my Lord Treasurer, and
asking me whether, as he had heard, I had not been cut for the stone,
I took him to my closet, and there shewed it to him, of which he took
the dimensions and had some discourse of it, and I believe will shew my
Lord Treasurer it. Thence to the office, where we sat all the morning,
but little to do, and then to the 'Change, where for certain I hear, and
the News book declares, a peace between France and Portugal. Met here
with Mr. Pierce, and he tells me the Duke of Cambridge is very ill and
full of spots about his body, that Dr. Frazier knows not what to think
of it. Then home and to dinner, and then to the office, where all the
afternoon; we met about Sir W. Warren's business and accounts, wherein
I do rather oppose than forward him, but not in declared terms, for I
will not be at, enmity with him, but I will not have him find any friendship
so good as mine. By and by rose and by water to White Hall, and then called
my wife at Unthanke's. So home and to my chamber, to my accounts, and
finished them to my heart's wishes and admiration, they being grown very
intricate, being let alone for two months, but I brought them together
all naturally, within a few shillings, but to my sorrow the Poll money
I paid this month and mourning have made me L80 a worse man than at my
last balance, so that I am worth now but L6700, which is yet an infinite
mercy to me, for which God make me thankful. So late to supper, with a
glad heart for the evening of my accounts so well, and so to bed.
May 1667
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