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February
1st.
Up, and to the office, where I was all the morning doing business, at
noon home to dinner, and after dinner down by water, though it was a thick
misty and rainy day, and walked to Deptford from Redriffe, and there to
Bagwell's by appointment, where the 'mulier etoit within expecting me
venir . . . . By and by 'su marido' come in, and there without any notice
taken by him we discoursed of our business of getting him the new ship
building by Mr. Deane, which I shall do for him. Thence by and by after
a little talk I to the yard, and spoke with some of the officers, but
staid but little, and the new clerk of the 'Chequer, Fownes, did walk
to Redriffe back with me. I perceive he is a very child, and is led by
the nose by Cowly and his kinsman that was his clerk, but I did make him
understand his duty, and put both understanding and spirit into him, so
that I hope he will do well. [Much surprised to hear this day at Deptford
that Mrs. Batters is going already to be married to him, that is now the
Captain of her husband's ship. She seemed the most passionate mourner
in the world. But I believe it cannot be true.]--(The
passage between brackets is written in the margin of the MS.)--Thence
by water to Billingsgate; thence to the Old Swan, and there took boat,
it being now night, to Westminster Hall, there to the Hall, and find Doll
Lane, and 'con elle' I went to the Bell Taverne, and 'ibi je' did do what
I would 'con elle' as well as I could, she 'sedendo sobre' thus far and
making some little resistance. But all with much content, and 'je tenai'
much pleasure 'cum ista'. There parted, and I by coach home, and to the
office, where pretty late doing business, and then home, and merry with
my wife, and to supper. My brother and I did play with the base, and I
upon my viallin, which I have not seen out of the case now I think these
three years, or more, having lost the key, and now forced to find an expedient
to open it. Then to bed.
2nd. Up, and to the office.
This day I hear that Prince Rupert is to be trepanned. God give good issue
to it. Sir W. Pen looks upon me, and I on him, and speak about business
together at the table well enough, but no friendship or intimacy since
our late difference about his closet, nor do I desire to have any. At
noon dined well, and my brother and I to write over once more with my
own hand my catalogue of books, while he reads to me. After something
of that done, and dined, I to the office, where all the afternoon till
night busy. At night, having done all my office matters, I home, and my
brother and I to go on with my catalogue, and so to supper. Mrs. Turner
come to me this night again to condole her condition and the ill usage
she receives from my Lord Bruncker, which I could never have expected
from him, and shall be a good caution to me while I live. She gone, I
to supper, and then to read a little, and to bed. This night comes home
my new silver snuffe-dish, which I do give myself for my closet, which
is all I purpose to bestow in plate of myself, or shall need, many a day,
if I can keep what I have. So to bed. I am very well pleased this night
with reading a poem I brought home with me last night from Westminster
Hall, of Dryden's' upon the present war; a very good poem.
3rd (Lord's day). Up, and
with Sir W. Batten and [Sir] W. Pen to White Hall, and there to Sir W.
Coventry's chamber, and there staid till he was ready, talking, and among
other things of the Prince's being trepanned, which was in doing just
as we passed through the Stone Gallery, we asking at the door of his lodgings,
and were told so. We are all full of wishes for the good success; though
I dare say but few do really concern ourselves for him in our hearts.
Up to the Duke of York, and with him did our business we come about, and
among other things resolve upon a meeting at the office to-morrow morning,
Sir W. Coventry to be there to determine of all things necessary for the
setting of Sir W. Pen to work in his Victualling business. This did awake
in me some thoughts of what might in discourse fall out touching my imployment,
and did give me some apprehension of trouble. Having done here, and after
our laying our necessities for money open to the Duke of York, but nothing
obtained concerning it, we parted, and I with others into the House, and
there hear that the work is done to the Prince in a few minutes without
any pain at all to him, he not knowing when it was done. It was performed
by Moulins. Having cut the outward table, as they call it, they find the
inner all corrupted, so as it come out without any force; and their fear
is, that the whole inside of his head is corrupted like that, which do
yet make them afeard of him; but no ill accident appeared in the doing
of the thing, but all with all imaginable success, as Sir Alexander Frazier
did tell me himself, I asking him, who is very kind to me. I to the Chapel
a little, but hearing nothing did take a turn into the Park, and then
back to Chapel and heard a very good Anthem to my heart's delight, and
then to Sir G. Carteret's to dinner, and before dinner did walk with him
alone a good while, and from him hear our case likely for all these acts
to be bad for money, which troubles me, the year speeding so fast, and
he tells me that he believes the Duke of York will go to sea with the
fleete, which I am sorry for in respect to his person, but yet there is
no person in condition to command the fleete, now the Captains are grown
so great, but him, it being impossible for anybody else but him to command
any order or discipline among them. He tells me there is nothing at all
in the late discourse about my Lord Sandwich and the French Embassador
meeting and contending for the way, which I wonder at, to see the confidence
of report without any ground. By and by to dinner, where very good company.
Among other discourse, we talked much of Nostradamus
[Michael Nostradamus, a physician and astrologer,
born in the diocese of Avignon, 1503. Amongst other predictions, one was
interpreted as foreshowing the singular death of Hen. II. of France, by
which his reputation was increased.]
his prophecy of these times, and the burning of the City of London, some
of whose verses are put into Booker's' Almanack this year; and Sir G.
Carteret did tell a story, how at his death he did make the town swear
that he should never be dug up, or his tomb opened, after he was buried;
but they did after sixty years do it, and upon his breast they found a
plate of brasse, saying what a wicked and unfaithful people the people
of that place were, who after so many vows should disturb and open him
such a day and year and hour; which, if true, is very strange. Then we
fell to talking of the burning of the City; and my Lady Carteret herself
did tell us how abundance of pieces of burnt papers were cast by the wind
as far as Cranborne; and among others she took up one, or had one brought
her to see, which was a little bit of paper that had been printed, whereon
there remained no more nor less than these words: "Time is, it is
done." After dinner I went and took a turn into the Park, and then
took boat and away home, and there to my chamber and to read, but did
receive some letters from Sir W. Coventry, touching the want of victuals
to Kempthorne's' fleete going to the Streights and now in the Downes:
which did trouble me, he saying that this disappointment might prove fatal;
and the more, because Sir W. Coventry do intend to come to the office
upon business to-morrow morning, and I shall not know what answer to give
him. This did mightily trouble my mind; however, I fell to read a little
in Hakewill's Apology, and did satisfy myself mighty fair in the truth
of the saying that the world do not grow old at all, but is in as good
condition in all respects as ever it was as to nature. I continued reading
this book with great pleasure till supper, and then to bed sooner than
ordinary, for rising betimes in the morning to-morrow. So after reading
my usual vows to bed, my mind full of trouble against to-morrow, and did
not sleep any good time of the night for thoughts of to-morrow morning's
trouble.
4th. I up, with my head
troubled to think of the issue of this morning, so made ready and to the
office, where Mr. Gawden comes, and he and I discoursed the business well,
and thinks I shall get off well enough; but I do by Sir W. Coventry's
silence conclude that he is not satisfied in my management of my place
and the charge it puts the King to, which I confess I am not in present
condition through my late laziness to give any good answer to. But here
do D. Gawden give me a good cordiall this morning, by telling me that
he do give me five of the eight hundred pounds on his account remaining
in my hands to myself, for the service I do him in my victualling business,
and L100 for my particular share of the profits of my Tangier imployment
as Treasurer. This do begin to make my heart glad, and I did dissemble
it the better, so when Sir W. Coventry did come, and the rest met, I did
appear unconcerned, and did give him answer pretty satisfactory what he
asked me; so that I did get off this meeting without any ground lost,
but rather a great deal gained by interposing that which did belong to
my duty to do, and neither [Sir] W. Coventry nor (Sir) W. Yen did oppose
anything thereunto, which did make my heart very glad. All the morning
at this work, Sir W. Pen making a great deal of do for the fitting him
in his setting out in his employment, and I do yield to any trouble that
he gives me without any contradiction. Sir W. Coventry being gone, we
at noon to dinner to Sir W. Pen's, he inviting me and my wife, and there
a pretty good dinner, intended indeed for Sir W. Coventry, but he would
not stay. So here I was mighty merry and all our differences seemingly
blown over, though he knows, if he be not a fool, that I love him not,
and I do the like that he hates me.
Soon as dined, my wife and I out to the Duke's playhouse,
and there saw "Heraclius," an excellent play, to my extraordinary
content; and the more from the house being very full, and great company;
among others, Mrs. Steward, very fine, with her locks done up with puffes,
as my wife calls them: and several other great ladies had their hair so,
though I do not like it; but my wife do mightily--but it is only because
she sees it is the fashion. Here I saw my Lord Rochester and his lady,
Mrs. Mallet, who hath after all this ado married him; and, as I hear some
say in the pit, it is a great act of charity, for he hath no estate. But
it was pleasant to see how every body rose up when my Lord John Butler,
the Duke of Ormond's son, come into the pit towards the end of the play,
who was a servant--[lover]--to Mrs. Mallet,
and now smiled upon her, and she on him. I had sitting next to me a woman,
the likest my Lady Castlemayne that ever I saw anybody like another; but
she is a whore, I believe, for she is acquainted with every fine fellow,
and called them by their name, Jacke, and Tom, and before the end of the
play frisked to another place. Mightily pleased with the play, we home
by coach, and there a little to the office, and then to my chamber, and
there finished my Catalogue of my books with my own hand, and so to supper
and to bed, and had a good night's rest, the last night's being troublesome,
but now my heart light and full of resolution of standing close to my
business.
5th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning doing business, and then home to dinner. Heard this
morning that the Prince is much better, and hath good rest. All the talk
is that my Lord Sandwich hath perfected the peace with Spayne, which is
very good, if true. Sir H. Cholmly was with me this morning, and told
me of my Lord Bellasses's base dealings with him by getting him to give
him great gratuities to near L2000 for his friendship in the business
of the Mole, and hath been lately underhand endeavouring to bring another
man into his place as Governor, so as to receive his money of Sir H. Cholmly
for nothing. Dined at home, and after dinner come Mrs. Daniel and her
sister and staid and talked a little, and then I to the office, and after
setting my things in order at the office I abroad with my wife and little
Betty Michell, and took them against my vowes, but I will make good my
forfeit, to the King's house, to show them a play, "The Chances."
A good play I find it, and the actors most good in it; and pretty to hear
Knipp sing in the play very properly, "All night I weepe;" and
sung it admirably. The whole play pleases me well: and most of all, the
sight of many fine ladies--among others, my Lady Castlemayne and Mrs.
Middleton: the latter of the two hath also a very excellent face and body,
I think.
Thence by coach to the New Exchange, and there laid
out money, and I did give Betty Michell two pair of gloves and a dressing-box;
and so home in the dark, over the ruins, with a link. I was troubled with
my pain, having got a bruise on my right testicle, I know not how. But
this I did make good use of to make my wife shift sides with me, and I
did come to sit 'avec' Betty Michell, and there had her 'main', which
'elle' did give me very frankly now, and did hazer whatever I 'voudrais
avec la', which did 'plaisir' me 'grandement', and so set her at home
with my mind mighty glad of what I have prevailed for so far; and so home,
and to the office, and did my business there, and then home to supper,
and after to set some things right in my chamber, and so to bed. This
morning, before I went to the office, there come to me Mr. Young and Whistler,
flaggmakers, and with mighty earnestness did present me with, and press
me to take a box, wherein I could not guess there was less than L100 in
gold: but I do wholly refuse it, and did not at last take it. The truth
is, not thinking them safe men to receive such a gratuity from, nor knowing
any considerable courtesy that ever I did do them, but desirous to keep
myself free from their reports, and to have it in my power to say I had
refused their offer.
6th. Up, lying a little
long in bed, and by water to White Hall, and there find the Duke of York
gone out, he being in haste to go to the Parliament, and so all my Brethren
were gone to the office too. So I to Sir Ph. Warwicke's about my Tangier
business, and then to Westminster Hall, and walked up and down, and hear
that the Prince do still rest well by day and night, and out of pain;
so as great hopes are conceived of him: though I did meet Dr. Clerke and
Mr. Pierce, and they do say they believe he will not recover it, they
supposing that his whole head within is eaten by this corruption, which
appeared in this piece of the inner table. Up to the Parliament door,
and there discoursed with Roger Pepys, who goes out of town this week,
the Parliament rising this week also. So down to the Hall and there spied
Betty Michell, and so I sent for burnt wine to Mrs. Michell's, and there
did drink with the two mothers, and by that means with Betty, poor girle,
whom I love with all my heart. And God forgive me, it did make me stay
longer and hover all the morning up and down the Hall to 'busquer occasions
para ambulare con elle. But ego ne pouvoir'.
So home by water and to dinner, and then to the office,
where we sat upon Denis Gawden's accounts, and before night I rose and
by water to White Hall, to attend the Council; but they sat not to-day.
So to Sir W. Coventry's chamber, and find him within, and with a letter
from the Downes in his hands, telling the loss of the St. Patricke coming
from Harwich in her way to Portsmouth; and would needs chase two ships
(she having the Malago fire-ship in company) which from English colours
put up Dutch, and he would clap on board the Vice-Admirall; and after
long dispute the Admirall comes on the other side of him, and both together
took him. Our fire-ship (Seely) not coming in to fire all three, but come
away, leaving her in their possession, and carried away by them: a ship
built at Bristoll the last year, of fifty guns and upwards, and a most
excellent good ship. This made him very melancholy. I to talk of our wants
of money, but I do find that he is not pleased with that discourse, but
grieves to hear it, and do seem to think that Sir G. Carteret do not mind
the getting of money with the same good cheer that he did heretofore,
nor do I think he hath the same reason. Thence to Westminster Hall, thinking
to see Betty Michell, she staying there all night, and had hopes to get
her out alone, but missed, and so away by coach home, and to Sir W. Batten's,
to tell him my bad news, and then to the office, and home to supper, where
Mrs. Hewer was, and after supper and she gone, W. Hewer talking with me
very late of the ill manner of Sir G. Carteret's accounts being kept,
and in what a sad condition he would be if either Fenn or Wayth should
break or die, and am resolved to take some time to tell Sir G. Carteret
or my Lady of it, I do love them so well and their family. So to bed,
my pain pretty well gone.
7th. Lay long with pleasure
with my wife, and then up and to the office, where all the morning, and
then home to dinner, and before dinner I went into my green dining room,
and there talking with my brother upon matters relating to his journey
to Brampton to-morrow, and giving him good counsel about spending the
time when he shall stay in the country with my father, I looking another
way heard him fall down, and turned my head, and he was fallen down all
along upon the ground dead, which did put me into a great fright; and,
to see my brotherly love! I did presently lift him up from the ground,
he being as pale as death; and, being upon his legs, he did presently
come to himself, and said he had something come into his stomach very
hot. He knew not what it was, nor ever had such a fit before. I never
was so frighted but once, when my wife was ill at Ware upon the road,
and I did continue trembling a good while and ready to weepe to see him,
he continuing mighty pale all dinner and melancholy, that I was loth to
let him take his journey tomorrow; but he began to be pretty well, and
after dinner my wife and Barker fell to singing, which pleased me pretty
well, my wife taking mighty pains and proud that she shall come to trill,
and indeed I think she will. So to the office, and there all the afternoon
late doing business, and then home, and find my brother pretty well. So
to write a letter to my Lady Sandwich for him to carry, I having not writ
to her a great while. Then to supper and so to bed. I did this night give
him 20s. for books, and as much for his pocket, and 15s. to carry him
down, and so to bed. Poor fellow! he is so melancholy, and withal, my
wife says, harmless, that I begin to love him, and would be loth he should
not do well.
8th. This morning my brother
John come up to my bedside, and took his leave of us, going this day to
Brampton. My wife loves him mightily as one that is pretty harmless, and
I do begin to fancy him from yesterday's accident, it troubling me to
think I should be left without a brother or sister, which is the first
time that ever I had thoughts of that kind in my life. He gone, I up,
and to the office, where we sat upon the Victuallers' accounts all the
morning. At noon Lord Bruncker, Sir W. Batten, [Sir] W. Pen, and myself
to the Swan in Leadenhall Street to dinner, where an exceedingly good
dinner and good discourse. Sir W. Batten come this morning from the House,
where the King hath prorogued this Parliament to October next. I am glad
they are up. The Bill for Accounts was not offered, the party being willing
to let it fall; but the King did tell them he expected it. They are parted
with great heartburnings, one party against the other. Pray God bring
them hereafter together in better temper! It is said that the King do
intend himself in this interval to take away Lord Mordaunt's government,
so as to do something to appease the House against they come together,
and let them see he will do that of his own accord which is fit, without
their forcing him; and that he will have his Commission for Accounts go
on which will be good things. At dinner we talked much of Cromwell; all
saying he was a brave fellow, and did owe his crowne he got to himself
as much as any man that ever got one. Thence to the office, and there
begun the account which Sir W. Pen by his late employment hath examined,
but begun to examine it in the old manner, a clerk to read the Petty warrants,
my Lord Bruncker upon very good ground did except against it, and would
not suffer him to go on. This being Sir W. Pen's clerk he took it in snuff,
and so hot they grew upon it that my Lord Bruncker left the office. He
gone (Sir) W. Pen ranted like a devil, saying that nothing but ignorance
could do this. I was pleased at heart all this while. At last moved to
have Lord Bruncker desired to return, which he did, and I read the petty
warrants all the day till late at night, that I was very weary, and troubled
to have my private business of my office stopped to attend this, but mightily
pleased at this falling out, and the truth is [Sir] W. Pen do make so
much noise in this business of his, and do it so little and so ill, that
I think the King will be little the better by changing the hand. So up
and to my office a little, but being at it all day I could not do much
there. So home and to supper, to teach Barker to sing another piece of
my song, and then to bed.
9th. To the office, where
we sat all the morning busy. At noon home to dinner, and then to my office
again, where also busy, very busy late, and then went home and read a
piece of a play, "Every Man in his Humour,"--
[Ben Jonson's well-known play.]--wherein is the greatest propriety
of speech that ever I read in my life: and so to bed. This noon come my
wife's watchmaker, and received L12 of me for her watch; but Captain Rolt
coming to speak with me about a little business, he did judge of the work
to be very good work, and so I am well contented, and he hath made very
good, that I knew, to Sir W. Pen and Lady Batten.
10th (Lord's day). Up and
with my wife to church, where Mr. Mills made an unnecessary sermon upon
Original Sin, neither understood by himself nor the people. Home, where
Michell and his wife, and also there come Mr. Carter, my old acquaintance
of Magdalene College, who hath not been here of many years. He hath spent
his time in the North with the Bishop of Carlisle much. He is grown a
very comely person, and of good discourse, and one that I like very much.
We had much talk of our old acquaintance of the College, concerning their
various fortunes; wherein, to my joy, I met not with any that have sped
better than myself. After dinner he went away, and awhile after them Michell
and his wife, whom I love mightily, and then I to my chamber there to
my Tangier accounts, which I had let run a little behind hand, but did
settle them very well to my satisfaction, but it cost me sitting up till
two in the morning, and the longer by reason that our neighbour, Mrs.
Turner, poor woman, did come to take her leave of us, she being to quit
her house to-morrow to my Lord Bruncker, who hath used her very unhandsomely.
She is going to lodgings, and do tell me very odde stories how Mrs. Williams
do receive the applications of people, and hath presents, and she is the
hand that receives all, while my Lord Bruncker do the business, which
will shortly come to be loud talk if she continues here, I do foresee,
and bring my Lord no great credit. So having done all my business, to
bed.
11th. Up, and by water
to the Temple, and thence to Sir Ph. Warwicke's about my Tangier warrant
for tallies, and there met my Lord Bellasses and Creed, and discoursed
about our business of money, but we are defeated as to any hopes of getting
[any] thing upon the Poll Bill, which I seem but not much troubled at,
it not concerning me much. Thence with Creed to Westminster Hall, and
there up and down, and heard that Prince Rupert is still better and better;
and that he did tell Dr. Troutbecke expressly that my Lord Sandwich is
ordered home. I hear, too, that Prince Rupert hath begged the having of
all the stolen prize-goods which he can find, and that he is looking out
anew after them, which at first troubled me; but I do see it cannot come
to anything, but is done by Hayes, or some of his little people about
him. Here, among other newes, I bought the King's speech at proroguing
the House the other day, wherein are some words which cannot but import
some prospect of a peace, which God send us!
After walking a good while in the Hall, it being Term
time, I home by water, calling at Michell's and giving him a fair occasion
to send his wife to the New Exchange to meet my wife and me this afternoon.
So home to dinner, and after dinner by coach to Lord Bellasses, and with
him to Povy's house, whom we find with Auditor Beale and Vernatty about
their accounts still, which is never likely to have end. Our business
was to speak with Vernatty, who is certainly a most cunning knave as ever
was born. Having done what we had to do there, my Lord carried me and
set me down at the New Exchange, where I staid at Pottle's shop till Betty
Michell come, which she did about five o'clock, and was surprised not
to 'trouver my muger' I there; but I did make an excuse good enough, and
so I took 'elle' down, and over the water to the cabinet-maker's, and
there bought a dressing-box for her for 20s., but would require an hour's
time to make fit. This I was glad of, thinking to have got 'elle' to enter
to a 'casa de biber', but 'elle' would not, so I did not much press it,
but suffered 'elle' to enter 'a la casa de uno de sus hermanos', and so
I past my time walking up and down, and among other places, to one Drumbleby,
a maker of flageolets, the best in towne. He not within, my design to
bespeak a pair of flageolets of the same tune, ordered him to come to
me in a day or two, and so I back to the cabinet-maker's and there staid;
and by and by Betty comes, and here we staid in the shop and above seeing
the workmen work, which was pretty, and some exceeding good work, and
very pleasant to see them do it, till it was late quite dark, and the
mistresse of the shop took us into the kitchen and there talked and used
us very prettily, and took her for my wife, which I owned and her big
belly, and there very merry, till my thing done, and then took coach and
home . . . . But now comes our trouble, I did begin to fear that 'su marido'
might go to my house to 'enquire pour elle', and there, 'trouvant' my
'muger'--[wife in Spanish.]-- at home, would
not only think himself, but give my 'femme' occasion to think strange
things. This did trouble me mightily, so though 'elle' would not seem
to have me trouble myself about it, yet did agree to the stopping the
coach at the streete's end, and 'je allois con elle' home, and there presently
hear by him that he had newly sent 'su mayde' to my house to see for her
mistresse. This do much perplex me, and I did go presently home Betty
whispering me behind the 'tergo de her mari', that if I would say that
we did come home by water, 'elle' could make up 'la cose well satis',
and there in a sweat did walk in the entry ante my door, thinking what
I should say a my 'femme', and as God would have it, while I was in this
case (the worst in reference a my 'femme' that ever I was in in my life),
a little woman comes stumbling to the entry steps in the dark; whom asking
who she was, she enquired for my house. So knowing her voice, and telling
her 'su donna' is come home she went away. But, Lord! in what a trouble
was I, when she was gone, to recollect whether this was not the second
time of her coming, but at last concluding that she had not been here
before, I did bless myself in my good fortune in getting home before her,
and do verily believe she had loitered some time by the way, which was
my great good fortune, and so I in a-doors and there find all well. So
my heart full of joy, I to the office awhile, and then home, and after
supper and doing a little business in my chamber I to bed, after teaching
Barker a little of my song.
12th. Up, and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, with several things (among others) discoursed
relating to our two new assistant controllers, but especially Sir W. Pen,
who is mighty troublesome in it. At noon home to dinner, and then to the
office again, and there did much business, and by and by comes Mr. Moore,
who in discourse did almost convince me that it is necessary for my Lord
Sandwich to come home end take his command at sea this year, for that
a peace is like to be. Many considerations he did give me hereupon, which
were very good both in reference to the publick arid his private condition.
By and by with Lord Bruncker by coach to his house, there to hear some
Italian musique: and here we met Tom Killigrew, Sir Robert Murray, and
the Italian Signor Baptista, who hath composed a play in Italian for the
Opera, which T. Killigrew do intend to have up; and here he did sing one
of the acts. He himself is the poet as well as the musician; which is
very much, and did sing the whole from the words without any musique prickt,
and played all along upon a harpsicon most admirably, and the composition
most excellent. The words I did not understand, and so know not how they
are fitted, but believe very well, and all in the recitativo very fine.
But I perceive there is a proper accent in every country's discourse,
and that do reach in their setting of notes to words, which, therefore,
cannot be natural to any body else but them; so that I am not so much
smitten with it as, it may be, I should be, if I were acquainted with
their accent. But the whole composition is certainly most excellent; and
the poetry, T. Killigrew and Sir R. Murray, who understood the words,
did say was excellent. I confess I was mightily pleased with the musique.
He pretends not to voice, though it be good, but not excellent. This done,
T. Killigrew and I to talk: and he tells me how the audience at his house
is not above half so much as it used to be before the late fire. That
Knipp is like to make the best actor that ever come upon the stage, she
understanding so well: that they are going to give her L30 a-year more.
That the stage is now by his pains a thousand times better and more glorious
than ever heretofore. Now, wax-candles, and many of them; then, not above
3 lbs. of tallow: now, all things civil, no rudeness anywhere; then, as
in a bear-garden then, two or three fiddlers; now, nine or ten of the
best then, nothing but rushes upon the ground, and every thing else mean;
and now, all otherwise: then, the Queen seldom and the King never would
come; now, not the King only for state, but all civil people do think
they may come as well as any. He tells me that he hath gone several times,
eight or ten times, he tells me, hence to Rome to hear good musique; so
much he loves it, though he never did sing or play a note. That he hath
ever endeavoured in the late King's time, and in this, to introduce good
musique, but he never could do it, there never having been any musique
here better than ballads. Nay, says, "Hermitt poore" and "Chevy
Chese"
["Like hermit poor in pensive place obscure"
is found in "The Phoenix Nest," 1593, and in Harl. MS. No. 6910,
written soon after 1596. It was set to music by Alfonso Ferrabosco, and
published in his "Ayres," 1609. The song was a favourite with
Izaak Walton, and is alluded to in "Hudibras" (Part I., canto
ii., line 1169). See Rimbault's "Little Book of Songs and Ballads,"
1851, p. 98. Both versions of the famous ballad of "Chevy Chase"
are printed in Percy's "Reliques."]
was all the musique we had; and yet no ordinary fiddlers get so much money
as ours do here, which speaks our rudenesse still. That he hath gathered
our Italians from several Courts in Christendome, to come to make a concert
for the King, which he do give L200 a-year a-piece to: but badly paid,
and do come in the room of keeping four ridiculous gundilows,
[The gondolas mentioned before, as sent by the Doge
of Venice. See September 12th, 1661]
he having got, the King to put them away, and lay out money this way;
and indeed I do commend him for it, for I think it is a very noble undertaking.
He do intend to have some times of the year these operas to be performed
at the two present theatres, since he is defeated in what he intended
in Moorefields on purpose for it; and he tells me plainly that the City
audience was as good as the Court, but now they are most gone. Baptista
tells me that Giacomo Charissimi is still alive at Rome, who was master
to Vinnecotio, who is one of the Italians that the King hath here, and
the chief composer of them. My great wonder is, how this man do to keep
in memory so perfectly the musique of the whole act, both for the voice
and the instrument too. I confess I do admire it: but in recitativo the
sense much helps him, for there is but one proper way of discoursing and
giving the accents. Having done our discourse, we all took coaches, my
Lord's and T. Killigrew's, and to Mrs. Knipp's chamber, where this Italian
is to teach her to sing her part. And so we all thither, and there she
did sing an Italian song or two very fine, while he played the bass upon
a harpsicon there; and exceedingly taken I am with her singing, and believe
that she will do miracles at that and acting. Her little girl is mighty
pretty and witty. After being there an hour, and I mightily pleased with
this evening's work, we all parted, and I took coach and home, where late
at my office, and then home to enter my last three days' Journall; and
so to supper and to bed, troubled at nothing, but that these pleasures
do hinder me in my business, and the more by reason of our being to dine
abroad to-morrow, and then Saturday next is appointed to meet again at
my Lord Bruncker's lodgings, and there to have the whole quire of Italians;
but then I do consider that this is all the pleasure I live for in the
world, and the greatest I can ever expect in the best of my life, and
one thing more, that by hearing this man to-night, and I think Captain
Cooke to-morrow, and the quire of Italians on Saturday, I shall be truly
able to distinguish which of them pleases me truly best, which I do much
desire to know and have good reason and fresh occasion of judging.
13th. Up, and by water
to White Hall, where to the Duke of York, and there did our usual business;
but troubled to see that, at this time, after our declaring a debt to
the Parliament of L900,000, and nothing paid since, but the debt increased,
and now the fleete to set out; to hear that the King hath ordered but
L35,000 for the setting out of the fleete, out of the Poll Bill, to buy
all provisions, when five times as much had been little enough to have
done any thing to purpose. They have, indeed, ordered more for paying
off of seamen and the Yards to some time, but not enough for that neither.
Another thing is, the acquainting the Duke of York with the case of Mr.
Lanyon, our agent at Plymouth, who has trusted us to L8000 out of purse;
we are not in condition, after so many promises, to obtain him a farthing,
nor though a message was carried by Sir G. Carteret and Sir W. Coventry
to the Commissioners for Prizes, that he might have L3000 out of L20,000
worth of prizes to be shortly sold there, that he might buy at the candle
and pay for the goods out of bills, and all would [not] do any thing,
but that money must go all another way, while the King's service is undone,
and those that trust him perish. These things grieve me to the heart.
The Prince, I hear, is every day better and better. So away by water home,
stopping at Michell's, where Mrs. Martin was, and I there drank with them
and whispered with Betty, who tells me all is well, but was prevented
in something she would have said, her 'marido venant' just then, a news
which did trouble me, and so drank and parted and home, and there took
up my wife by coach, and to Mrs. Pierce's, there to take her up, and with
them to Dr. Clerke's, by invitation, where we have not been a great while,
nor had any mind to go now, but that the Dr., whom I love, would have
us choose a day. Here was his wife, painted, and her sister Worshipp,
a widow now and mighty pretty in her mourning. Here was also Mr. Pierce
and Mr. Floyd, Secretary to the Lords Commissioners of Prizes, and Captain
Cooke, to dinner, an ill and little mean one, with foul cloth and dishes,
and everything poor. Discoursed most about plays and the Opera, where,
among other vanities, Captain Cooke had the arrogance to say that he was
fain to direct Sir W. Davenant in the breaking of his verses into such
and such lengths, according as would be fit for musick, and how he used
to swear at Davenant, and command him that way, when W. Davenant would
be angry, and find fault with this or that note--but a vain coxcomb I
perceive he is, though he sings and composes so well. But what I wondered
at, Dr. Clerke did say that Sir W. Davenant is no good judge of a dramatick
poem, finding fault with his choice of Henry the 5th, and others, for
the stage, when I do think, and he confesses, "The Siege of Rhodes"
as good as ever was writ. After dinner Captain Cooke and two of his boys
to sing, but it was indeed both in performance and composition most plainly
below what I heard last night, which I could not have believed. Besides
overlooking the words which he sung, I find them not at all humoured as
they ought to be, and as I believed he had done all he had sett. Though
he himself do indeed sing in a manner as to voice and manner the best
I ever heard yet, and a strange mastery he hath in making of extraordinary
surprising closes, that are mighty pretty, but his bragging that he do
understand tones and sounds as well as any man in the world, and better
than Sir W. Davenant or any body else, I do not like by no means, but
was sick of it and of him for it. He gone, Dr. Clerke fell to reading
a new play, newly writ, of a friend's of his; but, by his discourse and
confession afterwards, it was his own. Some things, but very few, moderately
good; but infinitely far from the conceit, wit, design, and language of
very many plays that I know; so that, but for compliment, I was quite
tired with hearing it. It being done, and commending the play, but against
my judgment, only the prologue magnifying the happiness of our former
poets when such sorry things did please the world as was then acted, was
very good. So set Mrs. Pierce at home, and away ourselves home, and there
to my office, and then my chamber till my eyes were sore at writing and
making ready my letter and accounts for the Commissioners of Tangier to-morrow,
which being done, to bed, hearing that there was a very great disorder
this day at the Ticket Office, to the beating and bruising of the face
of Carcasse very much. A foul evening this was to-night, and I mightily
troubled to get a coach home; and, which is now my common practice, going
over the ruins in the night, I rid with my sword drawn in the coach.
14th. Up and to the office,
where Carcasse comes with his plaistered face, and called himself Sir
W. Batten's martyr, which made W. Batten mad almost, and mighty quarrelling
there was. We spent the morning almost wholly upon considering some way
of keeping the peace at the Ticket Office; but it is plain that the care
of that office is nobody's work, and that is it that makes it stand in
the ill condition it do. At noon home to dinner, and after dinner by coach
to my Lord Chancellor's, and there a meeting: the Duke of York, Duke of
Albemarle, and several other Lords of the Commission of Tangier. And there
I did present a state of my accounts, and managed them well; and my Lord
Chancellor did say, though he was, in other things, in an ill humour,
that no man in England was of more method, nor made himself better understood
than myself. But going, after the business of money was over, to other
businesses, of settling the garrison, he did fling out, and so did the
Duke of York, two or three severe words touching my Lord Bellasses: that
he would have no Governor come away from thence in less than three years;
no, though his lady were with child. "And," says the Duke of
York, "there should be no Governor continue so, longer than three
years." "Nor," says Lord Arlington, "when our rules
are once set, and upon good judgment declared, no Governor should offer
to alter them."--" We must correct the many things that are
amiss there; for," says the Lord Chancellor, "you must think
we do hear of more things amisse than we are willing to speak before our
friends' faces." My Lord Bellasses would not take notice of their
reflecting on him, and did wisely, but there were also many reflections
on him.
Thence away by coach to Sir H. Cholmly and Fitzgerald
and Creed, setting down the two latter at the New Exchange. And Sir H.
Cholmly and I to the Temple, and there walked in the dark in the walks
talking of newes; and he surprises me with the certain newes that the
King did last night in Council declare his being in treaty with the Dutch:
that they had sent him a very civil letter, declaring that, if nobody
but themselves were concerned, they would not dispute the place of treaty,
but leave it to his choice; but that, being obliged to satisfy therein
a Prince of equal quality with himself, they must except any place in
England or Spayne. And so the King hath chosen the Hague, and thither
hath chose my Lord Hollis and Harry Coventry to go Embassadors to treat;
which is so mean a thing, as all the world will believe, that we do go
to beg a peace of them, whatever we pretend. And it seems all our Court
are mightily for a peace, taking this to be the time to make one, while
the King hath money, that he may save something of what the Parliament
hath given him to put him out of debt, so as he may need the help of no
more Parliaments, as to the point of money: but our debt is so great,
and expence daily so encreased, that I believe little of the money will
be saved between this and the making of the peace up. But that which troubles
me most is, that we have chosen a son of Secretary Morris, a boy never
used to any business, to go Embassador [Secretary] to the Embassy, which
shows how, little we are sensible of the weight of the business upon us.
God therefore give a good end to it, for I doubt it, and yet do much more
doubt the issue of our continuing the war, for we are in no wise fit for
it, and yet it troubles me to think what Sir H. Cholmly says, that he
believes they will not give us any reparation for what we have suffered
by the war, nor put us into any better condition than what we were in
before the war, for that will be shamefull for us. Thence parted with
him and home through the dark over the ruins by coach, with my sword drawn,
to the office, where dispatched some business; and so home to my chamber
and to supper and to bed. This morning come up to my wife's bedside, I
being up dressing myself, little Will Mercer to be her Valentine; and
brought her name writ upon blue paper in gold letters, done by himself,
very pretty; and we were both well pleased with it. But I am also this
year my wife's Valentine, and it will cost me L5; but that I must have
laid out if we had not been Valentines. So to bed.
15th. Up and with Sir W.
Batten and [Sir] J. Minnes by coach to White Hall, where we attended upon
the Duke of York to complain of the disorders the other day among the
seamen at the Pay at the Ticket Office, and that it arises from lack of
money, and that we desire, unless better provided for with money, to have
nothing more to do with the payment of tickets, it being not our duty;
and the Duke of York and [Sir] W. Coventry did agree to it, so that I
hope we shall be rid of that trouble. This done, I moved for allowance
for a house for Mr. Turner, and got it granted. Then away to Westminster
Hall, and there to the Exchequer about my tallies, and so back to White
Hall, and so with Lord Bellasses to the Excise Office, where met by Sir
H. Cholmly to consider about our business of money there, and that done,
home and to dinner, where I hear Pegg Pen is married this day privately;
no friends, but two or three relations on his side and hers. Borrowed
many things of my kitchen for dressing their dinner. So after dinner to
the office, and there busy and did much business, and late at it. Mrs.
Turner come to me to hear how matters went; I told her of our getting
rent for a house for her. She did give me account of this wedding to-day,
its being private being imputed to its being just before Lent, and so
in vain to make new clothes till Easter, that they might see the fashions
as they are like to be this summer; which is reason good enough. Mrs.
Turner tells me she hears [Sir W. Pen] gives
L4500 or 4000 with her. They are gone to bed, so I wish them much sport,
and home to supper and to bed. They own the treaty for a peace publickly
at Court, and the Commissioners providing themselves to go over as soon
as a passe comes for them.
16th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning. Among other things great heat we were all in on
one side or other in the examining witnesses against Mr. Carcasse about
his buying of tickets, and a cunning knave I do believe he is, and will
appear, though I have thought otherwise heretofore. At noon home to dinner,
and there find Mr. Andrews, and Pierce and Hollyard, and they dined with
us and merry, but we did rise soon for saving of my wife's seeing a new
play this afternoon, and so away by coach, and left her at Mrs. Pierces,
myself to the Excise Office about business, and thence to the Temple to
walk a little only, and then to Westminster to pass away time till anon,
and here I went to Mrs. Martin's to thank her for her oysters . . . .
Thence away to my Lord Bruncker's, and there was Sir Robert Murray, whom
I never understood so well as now by this opportunity of discourse with
him, a most excellent man of reason and learning, and understands the
doctrine of musique, and everything else I could discourse of, very finely.
Here come Mr. Hooke, Sir George Ent, Dr. Wren, and many others; and by
and by the musique, that is to say, Signor Vincentio, who is the master-composer,
and six more, whereof two eunuches, so tall, that Sir T. Harvey said well
that he believes they do grow large by being gelt as our oxen do, and
one woman very well dressed and handsome enough, but would not be kissed,
as Mr. Killigrew, who brought the company in, did acquaint us. They sent
two harpsicons before; and by and by, after tuning them, they begun; and,
I confess, very good musique they made; that is, the composition exceeding
good, but yet not at all more pleasing to me than what I have heard in
English by Mrs. Knipp, Captain Cooke, and others. Nor do I dote on the
eunuches; they sing, indeed, pretty high, and have a mellow kind of sound,
but yet I have been as well satisfied with several women's voices and
men also, as Crispe of the Wardrobe. The women sung well, but that which
distinguishes all is this, that in singing, the words are to be considered,
and how they are fitted with notes, and then the common accent of the
country is to be known and understood by the hearer, or he will never
be a good judge of the vocal musique of another country. So that I was
not taken with this at all, neither understanding the first, nor by practice
reconciled to the latter, so that their motions, and risings and fallings,
though it may be pleasing to an Italian, or one that understands the tongue,
yet to me it did not, but do from my heart believe that I could set words
in English, and make musique of them more agreeable to any Englishman's
eare (the most judicious) than any Italian musique set for the voice,
and performed before the same man, unless he be acquainted with the Italian
accent of speech. The composition as to the musique part was exceeding
good, and their justness in keeping time by practice much before any that
we have, unless it be a good band of practised fiddlers.
So away, here being Captain Cocke, who is stole away,
leaving them at it, in his coach, and to Mrs. Pierce's, where I took up
my wife, and there I find Mrs. Pierce's little girl is my Valentine, she
having drawn me; which I was not sorry for, it easing me of something
more that I must have given to others. But here I do first observe the
fashion of drawing of mottos as well as names; so that Pierce, who drew
my wife, did draw also a motto, and this girl drew another for me. What
mine was I have forgot; but my wife's was, "Most virtuous and most
fair;" which, as it may be used, or an anagram made upon each name,
might be very pretty. Thence with Cocke and my wife, set him at home,
and then we home. To the office, and there did a little business, troubled
that I have so much been hindered by matters of pleasure from my business,
but I shall recover it I hope in a little time. So home and to supper,
not at all smitten with the musique to- night, which I did expect should
have been so extraordinary, Tom Killigrew crying it up, and so all the
world, above all things in the world, and so to bed. One wonder I observed
to-day, that there was no musique in the morning to call up our new-married
people, which is very mean, methinks, and is as if they had married like
dog and bitch.
17th (Lord's day). Up,
and called at Michell's, and took him and his wife and carried them to
Westminster, I landing at White Hall, and having no pleasure in the way
'con elle'; and so to the Duke's, where we all met and had a hot encounter
before the Duke of York about the business of our payments at the Ticket
Office, where we urged that we had nothing to do to be troubled with the
pay, having examined the tickets. Besides, we are neglected, having not
money sent us in time, but to see the baseness of my brethren, not a man
almost put in a word but Sir W. Coventry, though at the office like very
devils in this point. But I did plainly declare that, without money, no
fleete could be expected, and desired the Duke of York to take notice
of it, and notice was taken of it, but I doubt will do no good. But I
desire to remember it as a most prodigious thing that to this day my Lord
Treasurer hath not consulted counsel, which Sir W. Coventry and I and
others do think is necessary, about the late Poll act, enough to put the
same into such order as that any body dare lend money upon it, though
we have from this office under our hands related the necessity thereof
to the Duke of York, nor is like to be determined in, for ought I see,
a good while had not Sir W. Coventry plainly said that he did believe
it would be a better work for the King than going to church this morning,
to send for the Atturney Generall to meet at the Lord Treasurer's this
afternoon and to bring the thing to an issue, saying that himself, were
he going to the Sacrament, would not think he should offend God to leave
it and go to the ending this work, so much it is of moment to the King
and Kingdom. Hereupon the Duke of York said he would presently speak to
the King, and cause it to be done this afternoon.
Having done here we broke up; having done nothing almost
though for all this, and by and by I met Sir G. Carteret, and he is stark
mad at what has passed this morning, and I believe is heartily vexed with
me: I said little, but I am sure the King will suffer if some better care
be not taken than he takes to look after this business of money. So parted,
and I by water home and to dinner, W. Hewer with us, a good dinner and-very
merry, my wife and I, and after dinner to my chamber, to fit some things
against: the Council anon, and that being done away to White Hall by water,
and thence to my Lord Chancellor's, where I met with, and had much pretty
discourse with, one of the Progers's that knows me; and it was pretty
to hear him tell me, of his own accord, as a matter of no shame, that
in Spayne he had a pretty woman, his mistress, whom, when money grew scarce
with him, he was forced to leave, and afterwards heard how she and her
husband lived well, she being kept by an old fryer who used her as his
whore; but this, says he, is better than as our ministers do, who have
wives that lay up their estates, and do no good nor relieve any poor--no,
not our greatest prelates, and I think he is in the right for my part.
Staid till the Council was up, and attended the King and Duke of York
round the Park, and was asked several questions by both; but I was in
pain, lest they should ask me what I could not answer; as the Duke of
York did the value of the hull of the St. Patrick lately lost, which I
told him I could not presently answer; though I might have easily furnished
myself to answer all those questions. They stood a good while to see the
ganders and geese tread one another in the water, the goose being all
the while kept for a great while: quite under water, which was new to
me, but they did make mighty sport of it, saying (as the King did often)
"Now you shall see a marriage, between this and that," which
did not please me.
They gone, by coach to my Lord Treasurer's, as the Duke
of York told me, to settle the business of money for the navy, I walked
into the Court to and again till night, and there met Colonell Reames,
and he and I walked together a great while complaining of the ill-management
of things, whereof he is as full as I am. We ran over many persons and
things, and see nothing done like men like to do well while the King minds
his pleasures so much. We did bemoan it that nobody would or had authority
enough with the King to tell him how all things go to rack and will be
lost. Then he and I parted, and I to Westminster to the Swan, and there
staid till Michell and his wife come. Old Michell and his wife come to
see me, and there we drank and laughed a little, and then the young ones
and I took boat, it being fine moonshine. I did to my trouble see all
the way that 'elle' did get as close 'a su marido' as 'elle' could, and
turn her 'mains' away 'quand je' did endeavour to take one. . . . So that
I had no pleasure at all 'con elle ce' night. When we landed I did take
occasion to send him back a the bateau while I did get a 'baiser' or two,
and would have taken 'la' by 'la' hand, but 'elle' did turn away, and
'quand' I said shall I not 'toucher' to answered 'ego' no love touching,
in a slight mood. I seemed not to take notice of it, but parted kindly;
'su marido' did alter with me almost a my case, and there we parted, and
so I home troubled at this, but I think I shall make good use of it and
mind my business more.
At home, by appointment, comes Captain Cocke to me,
to talk of State matters, and about the peace; who told me that the whole
business is managed between Kevet, Burgomaster of Amsterdam, and my Lord
Arlington, who hath, by the interest of his wife there, some interest.
We have proposed the Hague, but know not yet whether the Dutch will like
it; or; if they do, whether the French will. We think we shall have the
help of the information of their affairs and state, and the helps of the
Prince of Orange his faction; but above all, that De Witt, who hath all
this while said he cannot get peace, his mouth will now be stopped, so
that he will be forced to offer fit terms for fear of the people; and,
lastly, if France or Spayne do not please us, we are in a way presently
to clap up a peace with the Dutch, and secure them. But we are also in
treaty with France, as he says: but it must be to the excluding our alliance
with the King of Spayne or House of Austria; which we do not know presently
what will be determined in. He tells me the Vice-Chamberlaine is so great
with the King, that, let the Duke of York, and Sir W. Coventry, and this
office, do or say what they will, while the King lives, Sir G. Carteret
will do what he will; and advises me to be often with him, and eat and
drink with him.; and tells me that he doubts he is jealous of me, and
was mighty mad to-day at our discourse to him before the Duke of York.
But I did give him my reasons that the office is concerned to declare
that, without money, the King's work cannot go on. From that discourse
we ran to others, and among the others he assures me that Henry Bruncker
is one of the shrewdest fellows for parts in England, and a dangerous
man; that if ever the Parliament comes again Sir W. Coventry cannot stand,
but in this I believe him not; that, while we want money so much in the
Navy, the Officers of the Ordnance have at this day L300,000 good in tallys,
which they can command money upon, got by their over-estimating their
charge in getting it reckoned as a fifth part of the expense of the Navy;
that Harry Coventry, who is to go upon this treaty with Lord Hollis (who
he confesses to be a very wise man) into Holland, is a mighty quick, ready
man, but not so weighty as he should be, he knowing him so well in his
drink as he do; that, unless the King do do something against my Lord
Mordaunt and the Patent for the Canary Company, before the Parliament
next meets, he do believe there will be a civil war before there will
be any more money given, unless it may be at their perfect disposal; and
that all things are now ordered to the provoking of the Parliament against
they come next, and the spending the King's money, so as to put him into
a necessity of having it at the time it is prorogued for, or sooner.
Having discoursed all this and much more, he away, and
I to supper and to read my vows, and to bed. My mind troubled about Betty
Michell, 'pour sa carriage' this night 'envers moy', but do hope it will
put me upon doing my business. This evening, going to the Queen's side
to see the ladies, I did find the Queene, the Duchesse of York, and another
or two, at cards, with the room full of great ladies and men; which I
was amazed at to see on a Sunday, having not believed it; but, contrarily,
flatly denied the same a little while since to my cozen Roger Pepys? I
did this day, going by water, read the answer to "The Apology for
Papists," which did like me mightily, it being a thing as well writ
as I think most things that ever I read in my life, and glad I am that
I read it.
18th. Up, and to my bookbinder's,
and there mightily pleased to see some papers of the account we did give
the Parliament of the expense of the Navy sewed together, which I could
not have conceived before how prettily it was done. Then by coach to the
Exchequer about some tallies, and thence back again home, by the way meeting
Mr. Weaver, of Huntingdon, and did discourse our business of law together,
which did ease my mind, for I was afeard I have omitted doing what I in
prudence ought to have done. So home and to dinner, and after dinner to
the office, where je had Mrs. Burrows all sola a my closet, and did there
'baiser and toucher ses mamelles' . . . . Thence away, and with my wife
by coach to the Duke of York's play-house, expecting a new play, and so
stayed not no more than other people, but to the King's house, to "The
Mayd's Tragedy;" but vexed all the while with two talking ladies
and Sir Charles Sedley; yet pleased to hear their discourse, he being
a stranger. And one of the ladies would, and did sit with her mask on,
all the play, and, being exceeding witty as ever I heard woman, did talk
most pleasantly with him; but was, I believe, a virtuous woman, and of
quality. He would fain know who she was, but she would not tell; yet did
give him many pleasant hints of her knowledge of him, by that means setting
his brains at work to find, out who she was, and did give him leave to
use all means to find out who she was, but pulling off her mask. He was
mighty witty, and she also making sport with him very inoffensively, that
a more pleasant 'rencontre' I never heard. But by that means lost the
pleasure of the play wholly, to which now and then Sir Charles Sedley's
exceptions against both words and pronouncing were very pretty. So home
and to the office, did much business, then home, to supper, and to bed.
19th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning doing little business, our want of money being so
infinite great. At noon home, and there find old Mr. Michell and Howlett
come to desire mine and my wife's company to dinner to their son's, and
so away by coach with them, it being Betty's wedding-day a year, as also
Shrove Tuesday. Here I made myself mighty merry, the two old women being
there also, and a mighty pretty dinner we had in this little house, to
my exceeding great content, and my wife's, and my heart pleased to see
Betty. But I have not been so merry a very great while as with them, every
thing pleasing me there as much as among so mean company I could be pleased.
After dinner I fell to read the Acts about the building of the City again;
[Burnet wrote ("History of his Own Time,"
book ii.): "An act passed in this session for rebuilding the city
of London, which gave Lord Chief Justice Hale a great reputation, for
it was drawn with so true a judgment, and so great foresight, that the
whole city was raised out of its ashes without any suits of law."]
and indeed the laws seem to be very good, and I pray God I may live to
see it built in that manner! Anon with much content home, walking with
my wife and her woman, and there to my office, where late doing much business,
and then home to supper and to bed. This morning I hear that our discourse
of peace is all in the dirt; for the Dutch will not like of the place,
or at least the French will not agree to it; so that I do wonder what
we shall do, for carry on the war we cannot. I long to hear the truth
of it to-morrow at Court.
20th. Up, with Sir W. Batten
and Sir W. Pen by coach to White Hall, by the way observing Sir W. Pen's
carrying a favour to Sir W. Coventry, for his daughter's wedding, and
saying that there was others for us, when we will fetch them, which vexed
me, and I am resolved not to wear it when he orders me one. His wedding
hath been so poorly kept, that I am ashamed of it; for a fellow that makes
such a flutter as he do. When we come to the Duke of York here, I heard
discourse how Harris of his play-house is sick, and everybody commends
him, and, above all things, for acting the Cardinall. Here they talk also
how the King's viallin,--[violin]-- Bannister,
is mad that the King hath a Frenchman come to be chief of some part of
the King's musique, at which the Duke of York made great mirth. Then withdrew
to his closett, all our business, lack of money and prospect of the effects
of it, such as made Sir W. Coventry say publickly before us all, that
he do heartily wish that his Royal Highness had nothing to do in the Navy,
whatever become of him; so much dishonour, he says, is likely to fall
under the management of it. The Duke of York was angry, as much as he
could be, or ever I saw him, with Sir G. Carteret, for not paying the
masters of some ships on Monday last, according to his promise, and I
do think Sir G. Carteret will make himself unhappy by not taking some
course either to borrow more money or wholly lay aside his pretence to
the charge of raising money, when he hath nothing to do to trouble himself
with. Thence to the Exchequer, and there find the people in readiness
to dispatch my tallies to-day, though Ash Wednesday.
So I back by coach to London to Sir Robt. Viner's and
there got L100, and come away with it and pay my fees round, and so away
with the 'Chequer men to the Leg in King Street, and there had wine for
them; and here was one in company with them, that was the man that got
the vessel to carry over the King from Bredhemson, who hath a pension
of 200 per annum, but ill paid, and the man is looking after getting of
a prizeship to live by; but the trouble is, that this poor man, who hath
received no part of his money these four years, and is ready to starve
almost, must yet pay to the Poll Bill for this pension. He told me several
particulars of the King's coming thither, which was mighty pleasant, and
shews how mean a thing a king is, how subject to fall, and how like other
men he is in his afflictions. Thence with my tallies home, and a little
dinner, and then with my wife by coach to Lincoln's Inn Fields, sent her
to her brother's, and I with Lord Bellasses to the Lord Chancellor's.
Lord Bellasses tells me how the King of France hath caused the stop to
be made to our proposition of treating in The Hague; that he being greater
than they, we may better come and treat at Paris: so that God knows what
will become of the peace! He tells me, too, as a grand secret, that he
do believe the peace offensive and defensive between Spayne and us is
quite finished, but must not be known, to prevent the King of France's
present falling upon Flanders. He do believe the Duke of York will be
made General of the Spanish armies there, and Governor of Flanders, if
the French should come against it, and we assist the Spaniard: that we
have done the Spaniard abundance of mischief in the West Indys, by our
privateers at Jamaica, which they lament mightily, and I am sorry for
it to have it done at this time. By and by, come to my Lord Chancellor,
who heard mighty quietly my complaints for lack of money, and spoke mighty
kind to me, but little hopes of help therein, only his good word. He do
prettily cry upon Povy's account with sometimes seeming friendship and
pity, and this day quite the contrary. He do confess our streights here
and every where else arise from our outspending our revenue. I mean that
the King do do so.
Thence away, took up my wife; who tells me her brother
hath laid out much money upon himself and wife for clothes, which I am
sorry to hear, it requiring great expense. So home and to the office a
while, and then home to supper, where Mrs. Turner come to us, and sat
and talked. Poor woman, I pity her, but she is very cunning. She concurs
with me in the falseness of Sir W. Pen's friendship, and she tells pretty
storms of my Lord Bruncker since he come to our end of the town, of people's
applications to Mrs. Williams. So, she gone, I back to my accounts of
Tangier, which I am settling, having my new tallies from the Exchequer
this day, and having set all right as I could wish, then to bed.
21st. Up, and to the Office,
where sat all the morning, and there a most furious conflict between Sir
W. Pen and I, in few words, and on a sudden occasion, of no great moment,
but very bitter, and stared on one another, and so broke off; and to our
business, my heart as full of spite as it could hold, for which God forgive
me and him! At the end of the day come witnesses on behalf of Mr. Carcasse;
but, instead of clearing him, I find they were brought to recriminate
Sir W. Batten, and did it by oath very highly, that made the old man mad,
and, I confess, me ashamed, so that I caused all but ourselves to withdraw;
being sorry to have such things declared in the open office, before 100
people. But it was done home, and I do believe true, though (Sir) W. Batten
denies all, but is cruel mad, and swore one of them, he or Carcasse, should
not continue in the Office, which is said like a fool. He gone, for he
would not stay, and [Sir] W. Pen gone a good while before, Lord Bruncker,
Sir T. Harvy, and I, staid and examined the witnesses, though amounting
to little more than a reproaching of Sir W. Batten. I home, my head and
mind vexed about the conflict between Sir W. Pen and I, though I have
got, nor lost any ground by it. At home was Mr. Daniel and wife and sister,
and dined with us, and I disturbed at dinner, Colonell Fitzgerald coming
to me about tallies, which I did go and give him, and then to the office,
where did much business and walked an hour or two with Lord Bruncker,
who is mightily concerned in this business for Carcasse and against Sir
W. Batten, and I do hope it will come to a good height, for I think it
will be good for the King as well as for me, that they two do not agree,
though I do, for ought I see yet, think that my Lord is for the most part
in the right. He gone, I to the office again to dispatch business, and
late at night comes in Sir W. Batten, [Sir] W. Pen, and [Sir] J. Minnes
to the office, and what was it but to examine one Jones, a young merchant,
who was said to have spoke the worst against Sir W. Batten, but he do
deny it wholly, yet I do believe Carcasse will go near to prove all that
was sworn in the morning, and so it be true I wish it may. That done,
I to end my letters, and then home to supper, and set right some accounts
of Tangier, and then to bed.
22nd. Up, and to the office,
where I awhile, and then home with Sir H. Cholmly to give him some tallies
upon the business of the Mole at Tangier, and then out with him by coach
to the Excise Office, there to enter them, and so back again with him
to the Exchange, and there I took another coach, and home to the office,
and to my business till dinner, the rest of our officers having been this
morning upon the Victuallers' accounts. At dinner all of us, that is to
say, Lord Bruncker, [Sir] J. Minnes, [Sir] W. Batten, [Sir] T. Harvy,
and myself, to Sir W. Pen's house, where some other company. It is instead
of a wedding dinner for his daughter, whom I saw in palterly clothes,
nothing new but a bracelet that her servant had given her, and ugly she
is, as heart can wish. A sorry dinner, not any thing handsome or clean,
but some silver plates they borrowed of me. My wife was here too. So a
great deal of talk, and I seemingly merry, but took no pleasure at all.
We had favours given us all, and we put them in our hats, I against my
will, but that my Lord and the rest did, I being displeased that he did
carry Sir W. Coventry's himself several days ago, and the people up and
down the town long since, and we must have them but to-day. After dinner
to talk a little, and then I away to my office, to draw up a letter of
the state of the Office and Navy for the Duke of York against Sunday next,
and at it late, and then home to supper and to bed, talking with my wife
of the poorness and meanness of all that Sir W. Pen and the people about
us do, compared with what we do.
23rd. This day I am, by
the blessing of God, 34 years old, in very good health and mind's content,
and in condition of estate much beyond whatever my friends could expect
of a child of theirs, this day 34 years. The Lord's name be praised! and
may I be ever thankful for it. Up betimes to the office, in order to my
letter to the Duke of York to-morrow, and then the office met and spent
the greatest part about this letter. At noon home to dinner, and then
to the office again very close at it all the day till midnight, making
an end and writing fair this great letter and other things to my full
content, it abundantly providing for the vindication of this office, whatever
the success be of our wants of money. This evening Sir W. Batten come
to me to the office on purpose, out of spleen (of which he is full to
Carcasse !), to tell me that he is now informed of many double tickets
now found of Carcasses making which quite overthrows him. It is strange
to see how, though I do believe this fellow to be a rogue, and could be
contented to have him removed, yet to see him persecuted by Sir W. Batten,
who is as bad himself, and that with so much rancour, I am almost the
fellow's friend. But this good I shall have from it, that the differences
between Sir W. Batten and my Lord Bruncker will do me no hurt.
24th (Lord's day). Up,
and with [Sir] W. Batten, by coach; he set me down at my Lord Bruncker's
(his feud there not suffering him to 'light himself), and I with my Lord
by and by when ready to White Hall, and by and by up to the Duke of York,
and there presented our great letter and other papers, and among the rest
my report of the victualling, which is good, I think, and will continue
my pretence to the place, which I am still afeard Sir W. Coventry's employment
may extinguish. We have discharged ourselves in this letter fully from
blame in the bad success of the Navy, if money do not come soon to us,
and so my heart is at pretty good rest in this point. Having done here,
Sir W. Batten and I home by coach, and though the sermon at our church
was begun, yet he would 'light to go home and eat a slice of roast beef
off the spit, and did, and then he and I to church in the middle of the
sermon. My Lady Pen there saluted me with great content to tell me that
her daughter and husband are still in bed, as if the silly woman thought
it a great matter of honour, and did, going out of the church, ask me
whether we did not make a great show at Court today, with all our favours
in our hats.
After sermon home, and alone with my wife dined. Among
other things my wife told me how ill a report our Mercer hath got by her
keeping of company, so that she will not send for her to dine with us
or be with us as heretofore; and, what is more strange, tells me that
little Mis. Tooker hath got a clap as young as she is, being brought up
loosely by her mother . . . . In the afternoon away to White Hall by water,
and took a turn or two in the Park, and then back to White Hall, and there
meeting my Lord Arlington, he, by I know not what kindness, offered to
carry me along with him to my Lord Treasurer's, whither, I told him, I
was going. I believe he had a mind to discourse of some Navy businesses,
but Sir Thomas Clifford coming into the coach to us, we were prevented;
which I was sorry for, for I had a mind to begin an acquaintance with
him. He speaks well, and hath pretty slight superficial parts, I believe.
He, in our going, talked much of the plain habit of the Spaniards; how
the King and Lords themselves wear but a cloak of Colchester bayze, and
the ladies mantles, in cold weather, of white flannell: and that the endeavours
frequently of setting up the manufacture of making these stuffs there
have only been prevented by the Inquisition: the English and Dutchmen
that have been sent for to work, being taken with a Psalmbook or Testament,
and so clapped up, and the house pulled down by the Inquisitors; and the
greatest Lord in Spayne dare not say a word against it, if the word Inquisition
be but mentioned. At my Lord Treasurer's 'light and parted with them,
they going into Council, and I walked with Captain Cocke, who takes mighty
notice of the differences growing in our office between Lord Bruncker
and [Sir] W. Batten, and among others also, and I fear it may do us hurt,
but I will keep out of them. By and by comes Sir S. Fox, and he and I
walked and talked together on many things, but chiefly want of money,
and the straits the King brings himself and affairs into for want of it.
Captain Cocke did tell me what I must not forget: that the answer of the
Dutch, refusing The Hague for a place of treaty, and proposing the Boysse,
Bredah, Bergen-op-Zoome, or Mastricht, was seemingly stopped by the Swede's
Embassador (though he did show it to the King, but the King would take
no notice of it, nor does not) from being delivered to the King; and he
hath wrote to desire them to consider better of it: so that, though we
know their refusal of the place, yet they know not that we know it, nor
is the King obliged to show his sense of the affront. That the Dutch are
in very great straits, so as to be said to be not able to set out their
fleete this year. By and by comes Sir Robert Viner and my Lord Mayor to
ask the King's directions about measuring out the streets according to
the new Act for building of the City, wherein the King is to be pleased.
[See Sir Christopher Wren's "Proposals for rebuilding
the City of London after the great fire, with an engraved Plan of the
principal Streets and Public Buildings," in Elmes's "Memoirs
of Sir Christopher Wren," Appendix, p.61. The originals are in All
Souls' College Library, Oxford.--B.]
But he says that the way proposed in Parliament, by Colonel Birch, would
have been the best, to have chosen some persons in trust, and sold the
whole ground, and let it be sold again by them, with preference to the
old owner, which would have certainly caused the City to be built where
these Trustees pleased; whereas now, great differences will be, and the
streets built by fits, and not entire till all differences be decided.
This, as he tells it, I think would have been the best way. I enquired
about the Frenchman
["One Hubert, a French papist, was seized in
Essex, as he was getting out of the way in great confusion. He confessed
he had begun the fire, and persisted in his confession to his death, for
he was hanged upon no other evidence but that of his own confession. It
is true he gave so broken an account of the whole matter that he was thought
mad. Yet he was blindfolded, and carried to several places of the city,
and then his eyes being opened, he was asked if that was the place, and
he being carried to wrong places, after he looked round about for some
time, he said that was not the place, but when he was brought to the place
where it first broke out, he affirmed that was the true place. "Burnet's
Own Time, book ii. Archbishop Tillotson, according to Burnet, believed
that London was burnt by design.]
that was said to fire the City, and was hanged for it, by his own confession,
that he was hired for it by a Frenchman of Roane, and that he did with
a stick reach in a fire-ball in at a window of the house: whereas the
master of the house, who is the King's baker, and his son, and daughter,
do all swear there was no such window, and that the fire did not begin
thereabouts. Yet the fellow, who, though a mopish besotted fellow, did
not speak like a madman, did swear that he did fire it: and did not this
like a madman; for, being tried on purpose, and landed with his keeper
at the Tower Wharf, he could carry the keeper to the very house. Asking
Sir R. Viner what he thought was the cause of the fire, he tells me, that
the baker, son, and his daughter, did all swear again and again, that
their oven was drawn by ten o'clock at night; that, having occasion to
light a candle about twelve, there was not so much fire in the bakehouse
as to light a match for a candle, so that they were fain to go into another
place to light it; that about two in the morning they felt themselves
almost choked with smoke, and rising, did find the fire coming upstairs;
so they rose to save themselves; but that, at that time, the bavins--[brushwood,
or faggots used for lighting fires]-- were not on fire in the yard.
So that they are, as they swear, in absolute ignorance how this fire should
come; which is a strange thing, that so horrid an effect should have so
mean and uncertain a beginning. By and by called in to the King and Cabinet,
and there had a few insipid words about money for Tangier, but to no purpose.
Thence away walked to my boat at White Hall, and so home and to supper,
and then to talk with W. Hewer about business of the differences at present
among the people of our office, and so to my journall and to bed. This
night going through bridge by water, my waterman told me how the mistress
of the Beare tavern, at the bridge-foot, did lately fling herself into
the Thames, and drowned herself; which did trouble me the more, when they
tell me it was she that did live at the White Horse tavern in Lumbard
Streete, which was a most beautiful woman, as most I have seen. It seems
she hath had long melancholy upon her, and hath endeavoured to make away
with herself often.
25th. Lay long in bed,
talking with pleasure with my poor wife, how she used to make coal fires,
and wash my foul clothes with her own hand for me, poor wretch! in our
little room at my Lord Sandwich's; for which I ought for ever to love
and admire her, and do; and persuade myself she would do the same thing
again, if God should reduce us to it. So up and by coach abroad to the
Duke of Albemarle's about sending soldiers down to some ships, and so
home, calling at a belt-maker's to mend my belt, and so home and to dinner,
where pleasant with my wife, and then to the office, where mighty busy
all the day, saving going forth to the 'Change to pay for some things,
and on other occasions, and at my goldsmith's did observe the King's new
medall, where, in little, there is Mrs. Steward's face as well done as
ever I saw anything in my whole life, I think: and a pretty thing it is,
that he should choose her face to represent Britannia by. So at the office
late very busy and much business with great joy dispatched, and so home
to supper and to bed.
26th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning. And here did receive another reference from Sir
W. Coventry about the business of some of the Muster-Masters, concerning
whom I had returned their small performances, which do give me a little
more trouble for fear [Sir] W. Coventry should think I had a design to
favour my brother Balty, and to that end to disparage all the rest. But
I shall clear all very well, only it do exercise my thoughts more than
I am at leisure for. At home find Balty and his wife very fine, which
I did not like, for fear he do spend too much of his money that way, and
lay [not] up anything. After dinner to the office again, where by and
by Lord Bruncker, [Sir] W. Batten, [Sir] J. Minnes and I met about receiving
Carcasses answers to the depositions against him. Wherein I did see so
much favour from my Lord to him that I do again begin to see that my Lord
is not right at the bottom, and did make me the more earnest against him,
though said little. My Lord rising, declaring his judgement in his behalf,
and going away, I did hinder our arguing it by ourselves, and so broke
up the meeting, and myself went full of trouble to my office, there to
write over the deposition and his answers side by side, and then home
to supper and to bed with some trouble of mind to think of the issue of
this, how it will breed ill blood among us here.
27th. Up by candle-light,
about six o'clock, it being bitter cold weather again, after all our warm
weather, and by water down to Woolwich rope-yard, I being this day at
a leisure, the King and Duke of York being gone down to Sheerenesse this
morning to lay out the design for a fortification there to the river Medway;
and so we do not attend the Duke of York as we should otherwise have done,
and there to the Dock Yard to enquire of the state of things, and went
into Mr. Pett's; and there, beyond expectation, he did present me with
a Japan cane, with a silver head, and his wife sent me by him a ring,
with a Woolwich stone;
[Woolwich stones, still collected in that locality,
are simply waterworn pebbles of flint, which, when broken with a hammer,
exhibit on the smooth surface some resemblance to the human face; and
their possessors are thus enabled to trace likenesses of friends, or eminent
public characters. The late Mr. Tennant, the geologist, of the Strand,
had a collection of such stones. In the British Museum is a nodule of
globular or Egyptian jasper, which, in its fracture, bears a striking
resemblance to the well-known portrait of Chaucer. It is engraved in Rymsdyk's
"Museum Britannicum," tab. xxviii. A flint, showing Mr. Pitt's
face, used once to be exhibited at the meetings of the Pitt Club.--B.]
now much in request; which I accepted, the values not being great, and
knowing that I had done them courtesies, which he did own in very high
terms; and then, at my asking, did give me an old draught of an ancient-
built ship, given him by his father, of the Beare, in Queen Elizabeth's
time. This did much please me, it being a thing I much desired to have,
to shew the difference in the build of ships now and heretofore. Being
much taken with this kindness, I away to Blackwall and Deptford, to satisfy
myself there about the King's business, and then walked to Redriffe, and
so home about noon; there find Mr. Hunt, newly come out of the country,
who tells me the country is much impoverished by the greatness of taxes:
the farmers do break every day almost, and L1000 a- year become not worth
L500. [A tax rate of approximately that of New York
State in the year 2000. D.W.] He dined with us, and we had good
discourse of the general ill state of things, and, by the way, he told
me some ridiculous pieces of thrift of Sir G. Downing's, who is his countryman,
in inviting some poor people, at Christmas last, to charm the country
people's mouths; but did give them nothing but beef, porridge, pudding,
and pork, and nothing said all dinner, but only his mother would say,
"It's good broth, son." He would answer, "Yes, it is good
broth." Then, says his lady, Confirm all, and say, "Yes, very
good broth." By and by she would begin and say, "Good pork:"--"Yes,"
says the mother, "good pork." Then he cries, "Yes, very
good pork." And so they said of all things; to which nobody made
any answer, they going there not out of love or esteem of them, but to
eat his victuals, knowing him to be a niggardly fellow; and with this
he is jeered now all over the country. This day just before dinner comes
Captain Story, of Cambridge, to me to the office, about a bill for prest
money,
[Money paid to men who enlist into the public service;
press money. So called because those who receive it are to be prest or
ready when called on ("Encyclopaedic Dictionary ").]
for men sent out of the country and the countries about him to the fleete
the last year; but, Lord! to see the natures of men; how this man, hearing
of my name, did ask me of my country, and told me of my cozen Roger, that
he was not so wise a man as his father; for that he do not agree in Parliament
with his fellow burgesses and knights of the shire, whereas I know very
well the reason; for he is not so high a flyer as Mr. Chichley and others,
but loves the King better than any of them, and to better purpose. But
yet, he says that he is a very honest gentleman, and thence runs into
a hundred stories of his own services to the King, and how he at this
day brings in the taxes before anybody here thinks they are collected:
discourse very absurd to entertain a stranger with. He being gone, and
I glad of it, I home then to dinner. After dinner with my wife by coach
abroad, andset Mr. Hunt down at the Temple and her at her brother's, and
I to White Hall to meet [Sir] W. Coventry, but found him not, but met
Mr. Cooling, who tells me of my Lord Duke of Buckingham's being sent for
last night, by a Serjeant at Armes, to the Tower, for treasonable practices,
and that the King is infinitely angry with him, and declared him no longer
one of his Council. I know not the reason of it, or occasion. To Westminster
Hall, and there paid what I owed for books, and so by coach, took up my
wife to the Exchange, and there bought things for Mrs. Pierces little
daughter, my Valentine, and so to their house, where we find Knipp, who
also challengeth me for her Valentine. She looks well, sang well, and
very merry we were for half an hour. Tells me Harris is well again, having
been very ill, and so we home, and I to the office; then, at night, to
Sir W. Pen's, and sat with my Lady, and the young couple (Sir William
out of town) talking merrily; but they make a very sorry couple, methinks,
though rich. So late home and to bed.
28th. Up, and there comes
to me Drumbleby with a flageolet, made to suit with my former and brings
me one Greeting, a master, to teach my wife. I agree by the whole with
him to teach her to take out any lesson of herself for L4. She was not
ready to begin to-day, but do to-morrow. So I to the office, where my
Lord Bruncker and I only all the morning, and did business. At noon to
the Exchange and to Sir Rob. Viner's about settling my accounts there.
So back home and to dinner, where Mr. Holliard dined with us, and pleasant
company he is. I love his company, and he secures me against ever having
the stone again. He gives it me, as his opinion, that the City will never
be built again together, as is expected, while any restraint is laid upon
them. He hath been a great loser, and would be a builder again, but, he
says, he knows not what restrictions there will be, so as it is unsafe
for him to begin. He gone, I to the office, and there busy till night
doing much business, then home and to my accounts, wherein, beyond expectation,
I succeeded so well as to settle them very clear and plain, though by
borrowing of monies this month to pay D. Gawden, and chopping and changing
with my Tangier money, they were become somewhat intricate, and, blessed
be God; upon the evening my accounts, I do appear L6800 creditor:
This done, I to supper about 12 at night, and so to
bed. The weather for three or four days being come to be exceeding cold
again as any time this year. I did within these six days see smoke still
remaining of the late fire in the City; and it is strange to think how,
to this very day, I cannot sleep at night without great terrors of fire,
and this very night I could not sleep till almost two in the morning through
thoughts of fire. Thus this month is ended with great content of mind
to me, thriving in my estate, and the affairs in my offices going pretty
well as to myself. This afternoon Mr. Gawden was with me and tells me
more than I knew before-- that he hath orders to get all the victuals
he can to Plymouth, and the Western ports, and other outports, and some
to Scotland, so that we do intend to keep but a flying fleete this year;
which, it may be, may preserve us a year longer, but the end of it must
be ruin. Sir J. Minnes this night tells me, that he hears for certain,
that ballads are made of us in Holland for begging of a peace; which I
expected, but am vexed at. So ends this month, with nothing of weight
upon my mind, but for my father and mother, who are both very ill, and
have been so for some weeks: whom God help! but I do fear my poor father
will hardly be ever thoroughly well again.
March 1667
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