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March
1st.
Up, it being very cold weather again after a good deal of warm summer
weather, and to the office, where I settled to do much business to-day.
By and by sent for to Sir G. Carteret to discourse of the business of
the Navy, and our wants, and the best way of bestowing the little money
we have, which is about L30,000, but, God knows, we have need of ten times
as much, which do make my life uncomfortable, I confess, on the King's
behalf, though it is well enough as to my own particular, but the King's
service is undone by it. Having done with him, back again to the office,
and in the streets, in Mark Lane, I do observe, it being St. David's day,
the picture of a man dressed like a Welchman, hanging by the neck upon
one of the poles that stand out at the top of one of the merchants' houses,
in full proportion, and very handsomely done; which is one of the oddest
sights I have seen a good while, for it was so like a man that one would
have thought it was indeed a man.
[From "Poor Robin's Almanack" for
1757 it appears that, in former times in England, a Welshman was burnt
in effigy on this anniversary. Mr. W. C. Hazlitt, in his edition of Brand's
"Popular Antiquities," adds "The practice to which Pepys
refers . . . was very common at one time; and till very lately bakers
made gingerbread Welshmen, called taffies, on St. David's day, which were
made to represent a man skewered" (vol. i., pp. 60,61).]
Being returned home, I find Greeting, the flageolet-master, come, and
teaching my wife; and I do think my wife will take pleasure in it, and
it will be easy for her, and pleasant. So I, as I am well content with
the charge it will occasion me. So to the office till dinner-time, and
then home to dinner, and before dinner making my wife to sing. Poor wretch!
her ear is so bad that it made me angry, till the poor wretch cried to
see me so vexed at her, that I think I shall not discourage her so much
again, but will endeavour to make her understand sounds, and do her good
that way; for she hath a great mind to learn, only to please me; and,
therefore, I am mighty unjust to her in discouraging her so much, but
we were good friends, and to dinner, and had she not been ill with those
and that it were not Friday (on which in Lent there are no plays) I had
carried her to a play, but she not being fit to go abroad, I to the office,
where all the afternoon close examining the collection of my papers of
the accounts of the Navy since this war to my great content, and so at
night home to talk and sing with my-wife, and then to supper and so to
bed with great pleasure. But I cannot but remember that just before dinner
one of my people come up to me, and told me a man come from Huntingdon
would speak with me, how my heart come into my mouth doubting that my
father, who has been long sicke, was dead. It put me into a trembling,
but, blessed be [God]! it was no such thing, but a countryman come about
ordinary business to me, to receive L50 paid to my father in the country
for the Perkins's for their legacy, upon the death of their mother, by
my uncle's will. So though I get nothing at present, at least by the estate,
I am fain to pay this money rather than rob my father, and much good may
it do them that I may have no more further trouble from them. I hear to-day
that Tom Woodall, the known chyrurgeon, is killed at Somerset House by
a Frenchman, but the occasion Sir W. Batten could not tell me.
2nd. Up, and to the office,
where sitting all the morning, and among other things did agree upon a
distribution of L30,000 and odd, which is the only sum we hear of like
to come out of all the Poll Bill for the use of this office for buying
of goods. I did herein some few courtesies for particular friends I wished
well to, and for the King's service also, and was therefore well pleased
with what was done. Sir W. Pen this day did bring an order from the Duke
of York for our receiving from him a small vessel for a fireship, and
taking away a better of the King's for it, it being expressed for his
great service to the King. This I am glad of, not for his sake, but that
it will give me a better ground, I believe, to ask something for myself
of this kind, which I was fearful to begin. This do make Sir W. Pen the
most kind to me that can be. I suppose it is this, lest it should find
any opposition from me, but I will not oppose, but promote it. After dinner,
with my wife, to the King's house to see "The Mayden Queene,"
a new play of Dryden's, mightily commended for the regularity of it, and
the strain and wit; and, the truth is, there is a comical part done by
Nell,
["Her skill increasing with her years, other
poets sought to obtain recommendations of her wit and beauty to the success
of their writings. I have said that Dryden was one of the principal supporters
of the King's house, and ere long in one of his new plays a principal
character was set apart for the popular comedian. The drama was a tragi-comedy
called 'Secret Love, or the Maiden Queen,' and an additional interest
was attached to its production from the king having suggested the plot
to its author, and calling it `his play.'"--Cunningham's Story of
Nell Gwyn, ed: 1892, pp. 38,39.]
which is Florimell, that I never can hope ever to see the like done again,
by man or woman. The King and Duke of York were at the play. But so great
performance of a comical part was never, I believe, in the world before
as Nell do this, both as a mad girle, then most and best of all when she
comes in like a young gallant; and hath the notions and carriage of a
spark the most that ever I saw any man have. It makes me, I confess, admire
her. Thence home and to the office, where busy a while, and then home
to read the lives of Henry 5th and 6th, very fine, in Speede, and to bed.
This day I did pay a bill of L50 from my father, being so much out of
my own purse gone to pay my uncle Robert's legacy to my aunt Perkins's
child.
3rd (Lord's day). Lay long,
merrily talking with my wife, and then up and to church, where a dull
sermon of Mr. Mills touching Original Sin, and then home, and there find
little Michell and his wife, whom I love mightily. Mightily contented
I was in their company, for I love her much; and so after dinner I left
them and by water from the Old Swan to White Hall, where, walking in the
galleries, I in the first place met Mr. Pierce, who tells me the story
of Tom Woodall, the surgeon, killed in a drunken quarrel, and how the
Duke of York hath a mind to get him [Pierce] one of his places in St.
Thomas's Hospitall. Then comes Mr. Hayward, the Duke of York's servant,
and tells us that the Swede's Embassador hath been here to-day with news
that it is believed that the Dutch will yield to have the treaty at London
or Dover, neither of which will get our King any credit, we having already
consented to have it at The Hague; which, it seems, De Witt opposed, as
a thing wherein the King of England must needs have some profound design,
which in my conscience he hath not. They do also tell me that newes is
this day come to the King, that the King of France is come with his army
to the frontiers of Flanders, demanding leave to pass through their country
towards Poland, but is denied, and thereupon that he is gone into the
country. How true this is I dare not believe till I hear more. From them
I walked into the Parke, it being a fine but very cold day; and there
took two or three turns the length of the Pell Mell: and there I met Serjeant
Bearcroft, who was sent for the Duke of Buckingham, to have brought him
prisoner to the Tower. He come to towne this day, and brings word that,
being overtaken and outrid by the Duchesse of Buckingham within a few
miles of the Duke's house of Westhorp, he believes she got thither about
a quarter of an hour before him, and so had time to consider; so that,
when he come, the doors were kept shut against him. The next day, coming
with officers of the neighbour market-town to force open the doors, they
were open for him, but the Duke gone; so he took horse presently, and
heard upon the road that the Duke of Buckingham was gone before him for
London: so that he believes he is this day also come to towne before him;
but no newes is yet heard of him. This is all he brings. Thence to my
Lord Chancellor's, and there, meeting Sir H. Cholmly, he and I walked
in my Lord's garden, and talked; among other things, of the treaty: and
he says there will certainly be a peace, but I cannot believe it. He tells
me that the Duke of Buckingham his crimes, as far as he knows, are his
being of a caball with some discontented persons of the late House of
Commons, and opposing the desires of the King in all his matters in that
House; and endeavouring to become popular, and advising how the Commons'
House should proceed, and how he would order the House of Lords. And that
he hath been endeavouring to have the King's nativity calculated; which
was done, and the fellow now in the Tower about it; which itself hath
heretofore, as he says, been held treason, and people died for it; but
by the Statute of Treasons, in Queen Mary's times and since, it hath been
left out. He tells me that this silly Lord hath provoked, by his ill-
carriage, the Duke of York, my Lord Chancellor, and all the great persons;
and therefore, most likely, will die. He tells me, too, many practices
of treachery against this King; as betraying him in Scotland, and giving
Oliver an account of the King's private councils; which the King knows
very well, and hath yet pardoned him.
[Two of our greatest poets have drawn the character
of the Duke of Buckingham in brilliant verse, and both have condemned
him to infamy. There is enough in Pepys's reports to corroborate the main
features of Dryden's magnificent portrait of Zimri in "Absolom and
Achitophel":
"In the first rank of these did Zimri stand; A man so various that
he seemed to be Not one, but all mankind's epitome; Stiff in opinions,
always in the wrong; Was everything by starts, and nothing long,
But, in the course of one revolving moon, Was chymist, fiddler, statesman,
and buffoon; Then all for women, painting, rhyming, drinking, Besides
ten thousand freaks that died in thinking, * * * * * * * He laughed himself
from Court, then sought relief By forming parties, but could ne'er be
chief."
Pope's facts are not correct, and hence the effect of his picture is impaired.
In spite of the duke's constant visits to the Tower, Charles II. still
continued his friend; but on the death of the king, expecting little from
James, he retired to his estate at Helmsley, in Yorkshire, to nurse his
property and to restore his constitution. He died on April 16th, 1687,
at Kirkby Moorside, after a few days' illness, caused by sitting on the
damp grass when heated from a fox chase. The scene of his death was the
house of a tenant, not "the worst inn's worst room" (Moral Essays,"
epist. iii.). He was buried in Westminster Abbey.]
Here I passed away a little time more talking with him and Creed, whom
I met there, and so away, Creed walking with me to White Hall, and there
I took water and stayed at Michell's to drink. I home, and there to read
very good things in Fuller's "Church History," and "Worthies,"
and so to supper, and after supper had much good discourse with W. Hewer,
who supped with us, about the ticket office and the knaveries and extortions
every day used there, and particularly of the business of Mr. Carcasse,
whom I fear I shall find a very rogue. So parted with him, and then to
bed.
4th. Up, and with Sir J.
Minnes and [Sir] W. Batten by barge to Deptford by eight in the morning,
where to the King's yard a little to look after business there, and then
to a private storehouse to look upon some cordage of Sir W. Batten's,
and there being a hole formerly made for a drain for tarr to run into,
wherein the barrel stood still, full of stinking water, Sir W. Batten
did fall with one leg into it, which might have been very bad to him by
breaking a leg or other hurt, but, thanks be to God, he only sprained
his foot a little. So after his shifting his stockings at a strong water
shop close by, we took barge again, and so to Woolwich, where our business
was chiefly to look upon the ballast wharfe there, which is offered us
for the King's use to hire, but we do not think it worth the laying out
much money upon, unless we could buy the fee-simple of it, which cannot
be sold us, so we wholly flung it off: So to the Dockyard, and there staid
a while talking about business of the yard, and thence to the Rope-yard,
and so to the White Hart and there dined, and Captain Cocke with us, whom
we found at the Rope-yard, and very merry at dinner, and many pretty tales
of Sir J. Minnes, which I have entered in my tale book. But by this time
Sir W. Batten was come to be in much pain in his foot, so as he was forced
to be carried down in a chair to the barge again, and so away to Deptford,
and there I a little in the yard, and then to Bagwell's, where I find
his wife washing, and also I did 'hazer tout que je voudrais con' her,
and then sent for her husband, and discoursed of his going to Harwich
this week to his charge of the new ship building there, which I have got
him, and so away, walked to Redriffe, and there took boat and away home,
and upon Tower Hill, near the ticket office, meeting with my old acquaintance
Mr. Chaplin, the cheesemonger, and there fell to talk of news, and he
tells me that for certain the King of France is denied passage with his
army through Flanders, and that he hears that the Dutch do stand upon
high terms with us, and will have a promise of not being obliged to strike
the flag to us before they will treat with us, and other high things,
which I am ashamed of and do hope will never be yielded to. That they
do make all imaginable preparations, but that he believes they will be
in mighty want of men; that the King of France do court us mightily. He
tells me too that our Lord-Treasurer is going to lay down, and that Lord
Arlington is to be Lord Treasurer, but I believe nothing of it, for he
is not yet of estate visible enough to have the charge I suppose upon
him. So being parted from him I home to the office, and after having done
business there I home to supper, and there mightily pleased with my wife's
beginning the flagellette, believing that she will come to very well thereon.
This day in the barge I took Berckenshaw's translation of Alsted his Templum,
but the most ridiculous book, as he has translated it, that ever I saw
in my life, I declaring that I understood not three lines together from
one end of the book to the other.
5th. Up, and to the office,
where met and sat all the morning, doing little for want of money, but
only bear the countenance of an office. At noon home to dinner, and then
to the office again, and there comes Martin my purser, and I walked with
him awhile in the garden, I giving him good advice to beware of coming
any more with high demands for supernumeraries or other things, for now
Sir W. Pen is come to mind the business, the passing of his accounts will
not be so easy as the last. He tells me he will never need it again, it
being as easy, and to as much purpose to do the same thing otherwise,
and how he do keep his Captain's table, and by that means hath the command
of his Captains, and do not fear in a 5th- rate ship constantly employed
to get a L1000 in five years time, and this year, besides all his spendings,
which are I fear high, he hath got at this day clear above L150 in a voyage
of about five or six months, which is a brave trade. He gone I to the
office, and there all the afternoon late doing much business, and then
to see Sir W. Batten, whose leg is all but better than it was, and like
to do well. I by discourse do perceive he and his Lady are to their hearts
out with my Lord Bruncker and Mrs. Williams, to which I added something,
but, I think, did not venture too far with them. But, Lord! to see to
what a poor content any acquaintance among these people, or the people
of the world, as they now-adays go, is worth; for my part I and my wife
will keep to one another and let the world go hang, for there is nothing
but falseness in it. So home to supper and hear my wife and girle sing
a little, and then to bed with much content of mind.
6th. Up, and with [Sir]
W. Pen to White Hall by coach, and by the way agreed to acquaint [Sir]
W. Coventry with the business of Mr. Carcasse, and he and I spoke to Sir
W. Coventry that we might move it to the Duke of York, which I did in
a very indifferent, that is, impartial manner, but vexed I believe Lord
Bruncker. Here the Duke of York did acquaint us, and the King did the
like also, afterwards coming in, with his resolution of altering the manner
of the war this year; that is, we shall keep what fleete we have abroad
in several squadrons: so that now all is come out; but we are to keep
it as close as we can, without hindering the work that is to be done in
preparation to this. Great preparations there are to fortify Sheernesse
and the yard at Portsmouth, and forces are drawing down to both those
places, and elsewhere by the seaside; so that we have some fear of an
invasion; and the Duke of York himself did declare his expectation of
the enemy's blocking us up here in the River, and therefore directed that
we should send away all the ships that we have to fit out hence. Sir W.
Pen told me, going with me this morning to White Hall, that for certain
the Duke of Buckingham is brought into the Tower, and that he hath had
an hour's private conference with the King before he was sent thither.
To Westminster Hall. There bought some news books, and,
as every where else, hear every body complain of the dearness of coals,
being at L4 per chaldron, the weather, too, being become most bitter cold,
the King saying to-day that it was the coldest day he ever knew in England.
Thence by coach to my Lord Crew's, where very welcome. Here I find they
are in doubt where the Duke of Buckingham is; which makes me mightily
reflect on the uncertainty of all history, when, in a business of this
moment, and of this day's growth, we cannot tell the truth. Here dined
my old acquaintance, Mr. Borfett, that was my Lord Sandwich's chaplain,
and my Lady Wright and Dr. Boreman, who is preacher at St. Gyles's in
the Fields, who, after dinner, did give my Lord an account of two papist
women lately converted, whereof one wrote her recantation, which he shewed
under her own hand mighty well drawn, so as my Lord desired a copy of
it, after he had satisfied himself from the Doctor, that to his knowledge
she was not a woman under any necessity. Thence by coach home and staid
a very little, and then by water to Redriffe, and walked to Bagwell's,
where 'la moher' was 'defro, sed' would not have me 'demeurer' there 'parce
que' Mrs. Batters and one of my 'ancillas', I believe Jane (for she was
gone abroad to-day), was in the town, and coming thither; so I away presently,
esteeming it a great escape. So to the yard and spoke a word or two, and
then by water home, wondrous cold, and reading a ridiculous ballad made
in praise of the Duke of Albemarle, to the tune of St. George, the tune
being printed, too; and I observe that people have some great encouragement
to make ballads of him of this kind. There are so many, that hereafter
he will sound like Guy of Warwicke. Then abroad with my wife, leaving
her at the 'Change, while I to Sir H. Cholmly's, a pretty house, and a
fine, worthy, well- disposed gentleman he is. He and I to Sir Ph. Warwicke's,
about money for Tangier, but to little purpose. H. Cholmley tells me,
among other things, that he hears of little hopes of a peace, their demands
being so high as we shall never grant, and could tell me that we shall
keep no fleete abroad this year, but only squadrons. And, among other
things, that my Lord Bellasses, he believes, will lose his command of
Tangier by his corrupt covetous ways of .endeavouring to sell his command,
which I am glad [of], for he is a man of no worth in the world but compliment.
So to the 'Change, and there bought 32s. worth of things for Mrs. Knipp,
my Valentine, which is pretty to see how my wife is come to convention
with me, that, whatever I do give to anybody else, I shall give her as
much, which I am not much displeased with. So home and to the office and
Sir W. Batten, to tell him what I had done to-day about Carcasse's business,
and God forgive me I am not without design to give a blow to Sir W. Batten
by it. So home, where Mr. Batelier supped with us and talked away the
evening pretty late, and so he gone and we to bed.
7th. So up, and to the
office, my head full of Carcasse's business; then hearing that Knipp is
at my house, I home, and it was about a ticket for a friend of hers. I
do love the humour of the jade very well. So to the office again, not
being able to stay, and there about noon my Lord Bruncker did begin to
talk of Carcasse's business. Only Commissioner Pett, my Lord, and I there,
and it was pretty to see how Pett hugged the occasion of having anything
against Sir W. Batten, which I am not much troubled at, for I love him
not neither. Though I did really endeavour to quash it all I could, because
I would prevent their malice taking effect. My Lord I see is fully resolved
to vindicate Carcasse, though to the undoing of Sir W. Batten, but I believe
he will find himself in a mistake, and do himself no good, and that I
shall be glad of, for though I love the treason I hate the traitor. But
he is vexed at my moving it to the Duke of York yesterday, which I answered
well, so as I think he could not answer. But, Lord! it is pretty to see
how Pett hugs this business, and how he favours my Lord Bruncker; who
to my knowledge hates him, and has said more to his disadvantage, in my
presence, to the King and Duke of York than any man in England, and so
let them thrive one with another by cheating one another, for that is
all I observe among them. Thence home late, and find my wife hath dined,
and she and Mrs. Hewer going to a play. Here was Creed, and he and I to
Devonshire House, to a burial of a kinsman of Sir R. Viner's; and there
I received a ring, and so away presently to Creed, who staid for me at
an alehouse hard by, and thence to the Duke's playhouse, where he parted,
and I in and find my wife and Mrs. Hewer, and sat by them and saw "The
English Princesse, or Richard the Third;" a most sad, melancholy
play, and pretty good; but nothing eminent in it, as some tragedys are;
only little Mis. Davis did dance a jig after the end of the play, and
there telling the next day's play; so that it come in by force only to
please the company to see her dance in boy's 'clothes; and, the truth
is, there is no comparison between Nell's dancing the other day at the
King's house in boy's clothes and this, this being infinitely beyond the
other. Mere was Mr. Clerke and Pierce, to whom one word only of "How
do you," and so away home, Mrs: Hewer with us, and I to the office
and so to [Sir] W. Batten's, and there talked privately with him and [Sir]
W. Pen about business of Carcasse against tomorrow, wherein I think I
did give them proof enough of my ability as well as friendship to [Sir]
W. Batten, and the honour of the office, in my sense of the rogue's business.
So back to finish my office business, and then home to supper, and to
bed. This day, Commissioner Taylor come to me for advice, and would force
me to take ten pieces in gold of him, which I had no mind to, he being
become one of our number at the Board. This day was reckoned by all people
the coldest day that ever was remembered in England; and, God knows! coals
at a very great price.
8th. Up, and to the Old
Swan, where drank at Michell's, but not seeing her whom I love I by water
to White Hall, and there acquainted Sir G. Carteret betimes what I had
to say this day before the Duke of York in the business of Carcasse, which
he likes well of, being a great enemy to him, and then I being too early
here to go to Sir W. Coventry's chamber, having nothing to say to him,
and being able to give him but a bad account of the business of the office
(which is a shame to me, and that which I shall rue if I do not recover),
to the Exchequer about getting a certificate of Mr. Lanyon's entered at
Sir R. Longs office, and strange it is to see what horrid delays there
are at this day in the business of money, there being nothing yet come
from my Lord Treasurer to set the business of money in action since the
Parliament broke off, notwithstanding the greatness and number of the
King's occasions for it. So to the Swan, and there had three or four baisers
of the little ancilla there, and so to Westminster Hall, where I saw Mr.
Martin, the purser, come through with a picture in his hand, which he
had bought, and observed how all the people of the Hall did fleer and
laugh upon him, crying, "There is plenty grown upon a sudden;"
and, the truth is, I was a little troubled that my favour should fall
on so vain a fellow as he, and the more because, methought, the people
do gaze upon me as the man that had raised him, and as if they guessed
whence my kindness to him springs. So thence to White Hall, where I find
all met at the Duke of York's chamber; and, by and by, the Duke of York
comes, and Carcasse is called in, and I read the depositions and his answers,
and he added with great confidence and good words, even almost to persuasion,
what to say; and my Lord Bruncker, like a very silly solicitor, argued
against me and us all for him; and, being asked first by the Duke of York
his opinion, did give it for his being excused. I next did answer the
contrary very plainly, and had, in this dispute, which vexed and will
never be forgot by my Lord, many occasions of speaking severely, and did,
against his bad practices. Commissioner Pett, like a fawning rogue, sided
with my Lord, but to no purpose; and [Sir] W. Pen, like a cunning rogue,
spoke mighty indifferently, and said nothing in all the fray, like a knave
as he is. But [Sir] W. Batten spoke out, and did come off himself by the
Duke's kindness very well; and then Sir G. Carteret, and Sir W. Coventry,
and the Duke of York himself, flatly as I said; and so he was declared
unfit to continue in, and therefore to be presently discharged the office;
which, among other good effects, I hope, will make my Lord Bruncker not
'alloquer' so high, when he shall consider he hath had such a publick
foyle as this is. So home with [Sir] W. Batten, and [Sir] W. Pen, by coach,
and there met at the office, and my Lord Bruncker presently after us,
and there did give order to Mr. Stevens for securing the tickets in Carcasses
hands, which my Lord against his will could not refuse to sign, and then
home to dinner, and so away with my wife by coach, she to Mrs. Pierce's
and I to my Lord Bellasses, and with him to [my] Lord Treasurer's, where
by agreement we met with Sir H. Cholmly, and there sat and talked all
the afternoon almost about one thing or other, expecting Sir Philip Warwicke's
coming, but he come not, so we away towards night, Sir H. Cholmly and
I to the Temple, and there parted, telling me of my Lord Bellasses's want
of generosity, and that he [Bellasses] will certainly be turned out of
his government, and he thinks himself stands fair for it. So home, and
there found, as I expected, Mrs. Pierce and Mr. Batelier; he went for
Mrs. Jones, but no Mrs. Knipp come, which vexed me, nor any other company.
So with one fidler we danced away the evening, but I was not well contented
with the littleness of the room, and my wife's want of preparing things
ready, as they should be, for supper, and bad. So not very merry, though
very well pleased. So after supper to bed, my wife and Mrs. Pierce, and
her boy James and I. Yesterday I began to make this mark (V) stand instead
of three pricks, which therefore I must observe every where, it being
a mark more easy to make.
9th. Up, and to the office,
where sat all the morning busy. At noon home to dinner, where Mrs. Pierce
did continue with us and her boy (who I still find every day more and
more witty beyond his age), and did dine with us, and by and by comes
in her husband and a brother-in-law of his, a parson, one of the tallest
biggest men that ever I saw in my life. So to the office, where a meeting
extraordinary about settling the number and wages of my Lord Bruncker's
clerks for his new work upon the Treasurer's accounts, but this did put
us upon running into the business of yesterday about Carcasse, wherein
I perceive he is most dissatisfied with me, and I am not sorry for it,
having all the world but him of my side therein, for it will let him know
another time that he is not to expect our submitting to him in every thing,
as I think he did heretofore expect. He did speak many severe words to
me, and I returned as many to him, so that I do think there cannot for
a great while, be, any right peace between us, and I care not a fart for
it; but however, I must look about me and mind my business, for I perceive
by his threats and enquiries he is and will endeavour to find out something
against me or mine. Breaking up here somewhat brokenly I home, and carried
Mrs. Pierce and wife to the New Exchange, and there did give her and myself
a pair of gloves, and then set her down at home, and so back again straight
home and thereto do business, and then to Sir W. Batten's, where [Sir]
W. Pen and others, and mighty merry, only I have got a great cold, and
the scolding this day at the office with my Lord Bruncker hath made it
worse, that I am not able to speak. But, Lord! to see how kind Sir W.
Batten and his Lady are to me upon this business of my standing by [Sir]
W. Batten against Carcasse, and I am glad of it. Captain Cocke, who was
here to-night, did tell us that he is certain that yesterday a proclamation
was voted at the Council, touching the proclaiming of my Lord Duke of
Buckingham a traytor, and that it will be out on Monday. So home late,
and drank some buttered ale, and so to bed and to sleep. This cold did
most certainly come by my staying a little too long bare- legged yesterday
morning when I rose while I looked out fresh socks and thread stockings,
yesterday's having in the night, lying near the window, been covered with
snow within the window, which made me I durst not put them on.
10th (Lord's day). Having
my cold still grown more upon me, so as I am not able to speak, I lay
in bed till noon, and then up and to my chamber with a good fire, and
there spent an hour on Morly's Introduction to Musique, a very good but
unmethodical book. Then to dinner, my wife and I, and then all the afternoon
alone in my chamber preparing a letter for Commissioner Taylor to the
City about getting his accounts for The Loyal London,
[The "Loyal London" was the ship given to
the king by the City. It was launched at Deptford on June loth, 1666]
by him built for them, stated and discharged, they owing him still about
L4000. Towards the evening comes Mr. Spong to see me, whose discourse
about several things I proposed to him was very good, better than I have
had with any body a good while. He gone, I to my business again, and anon
comes my Lady Pen and her son-in law and daughter, and there we talked
all the evening away, and then to supper; and after supper comes Sir W.
Pen, and there we talked together, and then broke up, and so to bed. He
tells me that our Mr. Turner has seen the proclamation against the Duke
of Buckingham, and that therefore it is true what we heard last night.
Yesterday and to-day I have been troubled with a hoarseness through cold
that I could not almost speak.
11th. Up, and with my cold
still upon me and hoarseness, but I was forced to rise and to the office,
where all the morning busy, and among other things Sir W. Warren come
to me, to whom of late I have been very strange, partly from my indifference
how more than heretofore to get money, but most from my finding that he
is become great with my Lord Bruncker, and so I dare not trust him as
I used to do, for I will not be inward with him that is open to another.
By and by comes Sir H. Cholmly to me about Tangier business, and then
talking of news he tells me how yesterday the King did publiquely talk
of the King of France's dealing with all the Princes of Christendome.
As to the States of Holland, he [the King of France] hath advised them,
on good grounds, to refuse to treat with us at the Hague, because of having
opportunity of spies, by reason of our interest in the House of Orange;
and then, it being a town in one particular province, it would not be
fit to have it, but in a town wherein the provinces have equal interest,
as at Mastricht, and other places named. That he advises them to offer
no terms, nor accept of any, without his privity and consent, according
to agreement; and tells them, if not so, he hath in his power to be even
with them, the King of England being come to offer him any terms he pleases;
and that my Lord St. Albans is now at Paris, Plenipotentiary, to make
what peace he pleases; and so he can make it, and exclude them, the Dutch,
if he sees fit. A copy of this letter of the King of France's the Spanish
Ambassador here gets, and comes and tells all to our King; which our King
denies, and says the King of France only uses his power of saying anything.
At the same time, the King of France writes to the Emperor, that he is
resolved to do all things to express affection to the Emperor, having
it now in his power to make what peace he pleases between the King of
England and him, and the States of the United Provinces; and, therefore,
that he would not have him to concern himself in a friendship with us;
and assures him that, on that regard, he will not offer anything to his
disturbance, in his interest in Flanders, or elsewhere. He writes, at
the same time, to Spayne, to tell him that he wonders to hear of a league
almost ended between the Crown of Spayne and England, by my Lord Sandwich,
and all without his privity, while he was making a peace upon what terms
he pleased with England: that he is a great lover of the Crown of Spayne,
and would take the King and his affairs, during his minority, into his
protection, nor would offer to set his foot in Flanders, or any where
else, to disturb him; and, therefore, would not have him to trouble himself
to make peace with any body; only he hath a desire to offer an exchange,
which he thinks may be of moment to both sides: that is, that he [France]
will enstate the King of Spayne in the kingdom of Portugall, and he and
the Dutch will put him into possession of Lisbon; and, that being done,
he [France] may have Flanders: and this, they say; do mightily take in
Spayne, which is sensible of the fruitless expence Flanders, so far off,
gives them; and how much better it would be for them to be master of Portugall;
and the King of France offers, for security herein, that the King of England
shall be bond for him, and that he will countersecure the King of England
with Amsterdam; and, it seems, hath assured our King, that if he will
make a league with him, he will make a peace exclusive to the Hollander.
These things are almost romantique, but yet true, as Sir H. Cholmly tells
me the King himself did relate it all yesterday; and it seems as if the
King of France did think other princes fit for nothing but to make sport
for him: but simple princes they are, that are forced to suffer this from
him.
So at noon with Sir W. Pen by coach to the Sun in Leadenhall
Streete, where Sir R. Ford, Sir W. Batten, and Commissioner Taylor (whose
feast it was) were, and we dined and had a very good dinner. Among other
discourses Sir R. Ford did tell me that he do verily believe that the
city will in few years be built again in all the greatest streets, and
answered the objections I did give to it. Here we had the proclamation
this day come out against the Duke of Buckingham, commanding him to come
in to one of the Secretaries, or to the Lieutenant of the Tower. A silly,
vain man to bring himself to this: and there be many hard circumstances
in the proclamation of the causes of this proceeding of the King's, which
speak great displeasure of the King's, and crimes of his. Then to discourse
of the business of the day, that is, to see Commissioner Taylor's accounts
for his ship he built, The Loyall London, and it is pretty to see how
dully this old fellow makes his demands, and yet plaguy wise sayings will
come from the man sometimes, and also how Sir R. Ford and [Sir] W. Batten
did with seeming reliance advise him what to do, and how to come prepared
to answer objections to the Common Council. Thence away to the office,
where late busy, and then home to supper, mightily pleased with my wife's
trill, and so to bed. This night Mr. Carcasse did come to me again to
desire favour, and that I would mediate that he might be restored, but
I did give him no kind answer at all, but was very angry, and I confess
a good deal of it from my Lord Bruncker's simplicity and passion.
12th. Up, and to the office,
where all-the morning, and my Lord Bruncker mighty quiet, and no words
all day, which I wonder at, expecting that he would have fallen again
upon the business of Carcasse, and the more for that here happened that
Perkins, who was the greatest witness of all against him, was brought
in by Sir W. Batten to prove that he did really belong to The Prince,
but being examined was found rather a fool than anything, as not being
able to give any account when he come in nor when he come out of her,
more than that he was taken by the Dutch in her, but did agree in earnest
to Sir W. Pen's saying that she lay up all, the winter before at Lambeth.
This I confess did make me begin to doubt the truth of his evidence, but
not to doubt the faults of Carcasse, for he was condemned by, many other
better evidences than his, besides the whole world's report. At noon home,
and there find Mr. Goodgroome, whose teaching of my wife only by singing
over and over again to her, and letting her sing with him, not by herself,
to correct her faults, I do not like at all, but was angry at it; but
have this content, that I do think she will come to sing pretty well,
and to trill in time, which pleases me well. He dined with us, and then
to the office, when we had a sorry meeting to little purpose, and then
broke up, and I to my office, and busy late to good purpose, and so home
to supper and to bed. This day a poor seaman, almost starved for want
of food, lay in our yard a- dying. I sent him half-a-crown, and we ordered
his ticket to be paid.
13th. Up, and with [Sir]
W. Batten to the Duke of York to our usual attendance, where I did fear
my Lord Bruncker might move something in revenge that might trouble me,
but he did not, but contrarily had the content to hear Sir G. Carteret
fall foul on him in the Duke of York's bed chamber for his directing people
with tickets and petitions to him, bidding him mind his Controller's place
and not his, for if he did he should be too hard for him, and made high
words, which I was glad of. Having done our usual business with the Duke
of York, I away; and meeting Mr. D. Gawden in the presence-chamber, he
and I to talk; and among other things he tells me, and I do find every
where else, also, that our masters do begin not to like of their councils
in fitting out no fleete, but only squadrons, and are finding out excuses
for it; and, among others, he tells me a Privy-Councillor did tell him
that it was said in Council that a fleete could not be set out this year,
for want of victuals, which gives him and me a great alarme, but me especially
for had it been so, I ought to have represented it; and therefore it puts
me in policy presently to prepare myself to answer this objection, if
ever it should come about, by drawing up a state of the Victualler's stores,
which I will presently do. So to Westminster Hall, and there staid and
talked, and then to Sir G. Carteret's, where I dined with the ladies,
he not at home, and very well used I am among them, so that I am heartily
ashamed that my wife hath not been there to see them; but she shall very
shortly.
So home by water, and stepped into Michell's, and there
did baiser my Betty, 'que aegrotat' a little. At home find Mr. Holliard,
and made him eat a bit of victuals. Here I find Mr. Greeten, who teaches
my wife on the flageolet, and I think she will come to something on it.
Mr. Holliard advises me to have my father come up to town, for he doubts
else in the country he will never find ease, for, poor man, his grief
is now grown so great upon him that he is never at ease, so I will have
him up at Easter. By and by by coach, set down Mr. Holliard near his house
at Hatton Garden and myself to Lord Treasurer's, and sent my wife to the
New Exchange. I staid not here, but to Westminster Hall, and thence to
Martin's, where he and she both within, and with them the little widow
that was once there with her when I was there, that dissembled so well
to be grieved at hearing a tune that her, late husband liked, but there
being so much company, I had no pleasure here, and so away to the Hall
again, and there met Doll Lane coming out, and 'par contrat did hazer
bargain para aller to the cabaret de vin', called the Rose, and 'ibi'
I staid two hours, 'sed' she did not 'venir', 'lequel' troubled me, and
so away by coach and took up my wife, and away home, and so to Sir W.
Batten's, where I am told that it is intended by Mr. Carcasse to pray
me to be godfather with Lord Bruncker to-morrow to his child, which I
suppose they tell me in mirth, but if he should ask me I know not whether
I should refuse it or no. Late at my office preparing a speech against
to-morrow morning, before the King, at my Lord Treasurer's, and the truth
is it run in my head all night. So home to supper and to bed. The Duke
of Buckingham is concluded gone over sea, and, it is thought, to France.
14th. Up, and with Sir
W. Batten and [Sir] W. Pen to my Lord Treasurer's, where we met with my
Lord Bruncker an hour before the King come, and had time to talk a little
of our business. Then come much company, among others Sir H. Cholmly,
who tells me that undoubtedly my Lord Bellasses will go no more as Governor
to Tangier, and that he do put in fair for it, and believes he shall have
it, and proposes how it may conduce to his account and mine in the business
of money. Here we fell into talk with Sir Stephen Fox, and, among other
things, of the Spanish manner of walking, when three together, and shewed
me how, which was pretty, to prevent differences. By and by comes the
King and Duke of York, and presently the officers of the Ordnance were
called; my Lord Berkeley, Sir John Duncomb, and Mr. Chichly; then we,
my Lord Bruncker, [Sir] W. Batten, [Sir] W. Pen, and myself; where we
find only the King and Duke of York, and my Lord Treasurer, and Sir G.
Carteret; where I only did speak, laying down the state of our wants,
which the King and Duke of York seemed very well pleased with, and we
did get what we asked, L500,000, assigned upon the eleven months' tax:
but that is not so much ready money, or what will raise L40,000 per week,
which we desired, and the business will want. Yet are we fain to come
away answered, when, God knows, it will undo the King's business to have
matters of this moment put off in this manner. The King did prevent my
offering anything by and by as Treasurer for Tangier, telling me that
he had ordered us L30,000 on the same tax; but that is not what we would
have to bring our payments to come within a year. So we gone out, in went
others; viz., one after another, Sir Stephen Fox for the army, Captain
Cocke for sick and wounded, Mr. Ashburnham for the household. Thence [Sir]
W. Batten, [Sir] W. Pen, and I, back again; I mightily pleased with what
I had said and done, and the success thereof. But, it being a fine clear
day, I did, 'en gayete de coeur', propose going to Bow for ayre sake,
and dine there, which they embraced, and so [Sir] W. Batten and I (setting
[Sir] W. Pen down at Mark Lane end) straight to Bow, to the Queen's Head,
and there bespoke our dinner, carrying meat with us from London; and anon
comes [Sir] W. Pen with my wife and Lady Batten, and then Mr. Lowder with
his mother and wife. While [Sir] W. Batten and I were alone, we had much
friendly discourse, though I will never trust him far; but we do propose
getting "The Flying Greyhound," our privateer, to us and [Sir]
W. Pen at the end of the year when we call her home, by begging her of
the King, and I do not think we shall be denied her. They being come,
we to oysters and so to talk, very pleasant I was all day, and anon to
dinner, and I made very good company. Here till the evening, so as it
was dark almost before we got home (back again in the same method, I think,
we went), and spent the night talking at Sir W. Batten's, only a little
at my office, to look over the Victualler's contract, and draw up some
arguments for him to plead for his charges in transportation of goods
beyond the ports which the letter of one article in his contract do lay
upon him. This done I home to supper and to bed. Troubled a little at
my fear that my Lord Bruncker should tell Sir W. Coventry of our neglecting
the office this afternoon (which was intended) to look after our pleasures,
but nothing will fall upon me alone about this.
15th. Up, and pleased at
Tom's teaching of Barker something to sing a 3rd part to a song, which
will please mightily. So I to the office all the morning, and at noon
to the 'Change, where I do hear that letters this day come to Court do
tell us that we are likely not to agree, the Dutch demanding high terms,
and the King of France the like, in a most braving manner. The merchants
do give themselves over for lost, no man knowing what to do, whether to
sell or buy, not knowing whether peace or war to expect, and I am told
that could that be now known a man might get L20,000 in a week's time
by buying up of goods in case there should be war. Thence home and dined
well, and then with my wife, set her at Unthanke's and I to Sir G. Carteret,
where talked with the ladies a while, and my Lady Carteret talks nothing
but sorrow and afflictions coming on us, and indeed I do fear the same.
So away and met Dr. Fuller, Bishop of Limricke, and walked an hour with
him in the Court talking of newes only, and he do think that matters will
be bad with us. Then to Westminster Hall, and there spent an hour or two
walking up and down, thinking 'para avoir' got out Doll Lane, 'sed je
ne' could do it, having no opportunity 'de hazer le, ainsi lost the tota'
afternoon, and so away and called my wife and home, where a little at
the office, and then home to my closet to enter my journalls, and so to
supper and to bed. This noon come little Mis. Tooker, who is grown a little
woman; ego had opportunity 'para baiser her . . . . This morning I was
called up by Sir John Winter, poor man! come in his sedan from the other
end of the town, before I was up, and merely about the King's business,
which is a worthy thing of him, and I believe him to be a worthy good
man, and I will do him the right to tell the Duke of it, who did speak
well of him the other day. It was about helping the King in the business
of bringing down his timber to the sea-side, in the Forest of Deane.
16th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning; at noon home to dinner, and then to the office
again in the afternoon, and there all day very busy till night, and then,
having done much business, home to supper, and so to bed. This afternoon
come home Sir J. Minnes, who has been down, but with little purpose, to
pay the ships below at the Nore. This evening, having done my letters,
I did write out the heads of what I had prepared to speak to the King
the other day at my Lord Treasurer's, which I do think convenient to keep
by me for future use. The weather is now grown warm again, after much
cold; and it is observable that within these eight days I did see smoke
remaining, coming out of some cellars, from the late great fire, now above
six months since. There was this day at the office (as he is most days)
Sir W. Warren, against whom I did manifestly plead, and heartily too,
God forgive me! But the reason is because I do find that he do now wholly
rely almost upon my Lord Bruncker, though I confess I have no greater
ground of my leaving him than the confidence which I perceive he hath
got in my Lord Bruncker, whose seeming favours only do obtain of him as
much compensation as, I believe (for he do know well the way of using
his bounties), as mine more real. Besides, my Lord and I being become
antagonistic, I do not think it safe for me to trust myself in the hands
of one whom I know to be a knave, and using all means to become gracious
there.
17th (Lord's day). Up betime
with my wife, and by coach with Sir W. Pen and Sir Thomas Allen to White
Hall, there my wife and I the first time that ever we went to my Lady
Jemimah's chamber at Sir Edward Carteret's lodgings. I confess I have
been much to blame and much ashamed of our not visiting her sooner, but
better now than never. Here we took her before she was up, which I was
sorry for, so only saw her, and away to chapel, leaving further visit
till after sermon. I put my wife into the pew below, but it was pretty
to see, myself being but in a plain band, and every way else ordinary,
how the verger took me for her man, I think, and I was fain to tell him
she was a kinswoman of my Lord Sandwich's, he saying that none under knights-baronets'
ladies are to go into that pew. So she being there, I to the Duke of York's
lodging, where in his dressing-chamber he talking of his journey to-morrow
or next day to Harwich, to prepare some fortifications there; so that
we are wholly upon the defensive part this year, only we have some expectations
that we may by our squadrons annoy them in their trade by the North of
Scotland and to the Westward. Here Sir W. Pen did show the Duke of York
a letter of Hogg's about a prize he drove in within the Sound at Plymouth,
where the Vice-Admiral claims her. Sir W. Pen would have me speak to the
latter, which I did, and I think without any offence, but afterwards I
was sorry for it, and Sir W. Pen did plainly say that he had no mind to
speak to the Duke of York about it, so that he put me upon it, but it
shall be, the last time that I will do such another thing, though I think
no manner of hurt done by it to me at all. That done I to walk in the
Parke, where to the Queene's Chapel, and there heard a fryer preach with
his cord about his middle, in Portuguese, something I could understand,
showing that God did respect the meek and humble, as well as the high
and rich. He was full of action, but very decent and good, I thought,
and his manner of delivery very good.
Then I went back to White Hall, and there up to the
closet, and spoke with several people till sermon was ended, which was
preached by the Bishop of Hereford, an old good man, that they say made
an excellent sermon. He was by birth a Catholique, and a great gallant,
having L1500 per annum, patrimony, and is a Knight Barronet; was turned
from his persuasion by the late Archbishop Laud. He and the Bishop of
Exeter, Dr. Ward, are the two Bishops that the King do say he cannot have
bad sermons from. Here I met with Sir H. Cholmly, who tells me, that undoubtedly
my Lord Bellasses do go no more to Tangier, and that he do believe he
do stand in a likely way to go Governor; though he says, and showed me,
a young silly Lord, one Lord Allington, who hath offered a great sum of
money to go, and will put hard for it, he having a fine lady, and a great
man would be glad to have him out of the way. After Chapel I down and
took out my wife from the pew, where she was talking with a lady whom
I knew not till I was gone. It was Mrs. Ashfield of Brampton, who had
with much civility been, it seems, at our house to see her. I am sorry
I did not show her any more respect. With my wife to Sir G. Carteret's,
where we dined and mightily made of, and most extraordinary people they
are to continue friendship with for goodness, virtue, and nobleness and
interest. After dinner he and I alone awhile and did joy ourselves in
my Lord Sandwich's being out of the way all this time. He concurs that
we are in a way of ruin by thus being forced to keep only small squadrons
out, but do tell me that it was not choice, but only force, that we could
not keep out the whole fleete. He tells me that the King is very kind
to my Lord Sandwich, and did himself observe to him (Sir G. Carteret),
how those very people, meaning the Prince and Duke of Albemarle, are punished
in the same kind as they did seek to abuse my Lord Sandwich. Thence away,
and got a hackney coach and carried my wife home, and there only drank,
and myself back again to my Lord Treasurer's, where the King, Duke of
York, and Sir G. Carteret and Lord Arlington were and none else, so I
staid not, but to White Hall, and there meeting nobody I would speak with,
walked into the Park and took two or three turns all alone, and then took
coach and home, where I find Mercer, who I was glad to see, but durst
[not] shew so, my wife being displeased with her, and indeed I fear she
is grown a very gossip. I to my chamber, and there fitted my arguments
which I had promised Mr. Gawden in his behalf in some pretences to allowance
of the King, and then to supper, and so to my chamber a little again,
and then to bed. Duke of Buckingham not heard of yet.
18th. Up betimes, and to
the office to write fair my paper for D. Gawden against anon, and then
to other business, where all the morning. D. Gawden by and by comes, and
I did read over and give him the paper, which I think I have much obliged
him in. A little before noon comes my old good friend, Mr. Richard Cumberland,--[Richard
Cumberland, afterwards Bishop of Peterborough]--to see me, being newly
come to town, whom I have not seen almost, if not quite, these seven years.
In his plain country- parson's dress. I could not spend much time with
him, but prayed him come with his brother, who was with him, to dine with
me to-day; which he did do and I had a great deal of his good company;
and a most excellent person he is as any I know, and one that I am sorry
should be lost and buried in a little country town, and would be glad
to remove him thence; and the truth is, if he would accept of my sister's
fortune, I should give L100 more with him than to a man able to settle
her four times as much as, I fear, he is able to do; and I will think
of it, and a way how to move it, he having in discourse said he was not
against marrying, nor yet engaged. I shewed him my closet, and did give
him some very good musique, Mr. Caesar being here upon his lute. They
gone I to the office, where all the afternoon very busy, and among other
things comes Captain Jenifer to me, a great servant of my Lord Sandwich's,
who tells me that he do hear for certain, though I do not yet believe
it, that Sir W. Coventry is to be Secretary of State, and my Lord Arlington
Lord Treasurer. I only wish that the latter were as fit for the latter
office as the former is for the former, and more fit than my Lord Arlington.
Anon Sir W. Pen come and talked with me in the garden, and tells me that
for certain the Duke of Richmond is to marry Mrs. Stewart, he having this
day brought in an account of his estate and debts to the King on that
account. At night home to supper and so to bed. My father's letter this
day do tell me of his own continued illness, and that my mother grows
so much worse, that he fears she cannot long continue, which troubles
me very much. This day, Mr. Caesar told me a pretty experiment of his,
of angling with a minikin, a gut-string varnished over, which keeps it
from swelling, and is beyond any hair for strength and smallness. The
secret I like mightily.
19th. Up, and to the office,
where we sat all the morning. At noon dined at home very pleasantly with
my wife, and after dinner with a great deal of pleasure had her sing,
which she begins to do with some pleasure to me, more than I expected.
Then to the office again, where all the afternoon close, and at night
home to supper and to bed. It comes in my mind this night to set down
how a house was the other day in Bishopsgate Street blowed up with powder;
a house that was untenanted, and between a flax shop and a -----------,
both bad for fire; but, thanks be to God, it did no more hurt; and all
do conclude it a plot. I would also remember to my shame how I was pleased
yesterday, to find the righteous maid of Magister Griffin sweeping of
'nostra' office, 'elle con the Roman nariz and bonne' body which I did
heretofore like, and do still refresh me to think 'que elle' is come to
us, that I may 'voir her aliquando'. This afternoon I am told again that
the town do talk of my Lord Arlington's being to be Lord Treasurer, and
Sir W. Coventry to be Secretary of State; and that for certain the match
is concluded between the Duke of Richmond and Mrs. Stewart, which I am
well enough pleased with; and it is pretty to consider how his quality
will allay people's talk; whereas, had a meaner person married her, he
would for certain have been reckoned a cuckold at first-dash.
20th. Up pretty betimes,
and to the Old Swan, and there drank at Michell's, but his wife is not
there, but gone to her mother's, who is ill, and so hath staid there since
Sunday. Thence to Westminster Hall and drank at the Swan, and 'baiserais
the petite misse'; and so to Mrs. Martin's. . . . I sent for some burnt
wine, and drank and then away, not pleased with my folly, and so to the
Hall again, and there staid a little, and so home by water again, where,
after speaking with my wife, I with Sir W. Batten and [Sir] J. Minnes
to our church to the vestry, to be assessed by the late Poll Bill, where
I am rated as an Esquire, and for my office, all will come to about L50.
But not more than I expected, nor so much by a great deal as I ought to
be, for all my offices. So shall be glad to escape so. Thence by water
again to White Hall, and there up into the house, and do hear that newes
is come now that the enemy do incline again to a peace, but could hear
no particulars, so do not believe it. I had a great mind to have spoke
with the King, about a business proper enough for me, about the French
prize man-of-war, how he would have her altered, only out of a desire
to show myself mindful of business, but my linen was so dirty and my clothes
mean, that I neither thought it fit to do that, nor go to other persons
at the Court, with whom I had business, which did vex me, and I must remedy
[it]. Here I hear that the Duke of Richmond and Mrs. Stewart were betrothed
last night. Thence to Westminster Hall again, and there saw Betty Michell,
and bought a pair of gloves of her, she being fain to keep shop there,
her mother being sick, and her father gathering of the tax. I 'aimais
her de toute my corazon'.
Thence, my mind wandering all this day upon 'mauvaises
amours' which I be merry for. So home by water again, where I find my
wife gone abroad, so I to Sir W. Batten to dinner, and had a good dinner
of ling and herring pie, very good meat, best of the kind that ever I
had. Having dined, I by coach to the Temple, and there did buy a little
book or two, and it is strange how "Rycaut's Discourse of Turky,"
which before the fire I was asked but 8s. for, there being all but twenty-two
or thereabouts burned, I did now offer 20s., and he demands 50s., and
I think I shall give it him, though it be only as a monument of the fire.
So to the New Exchange, where I find my wife, and so took her to Unthanke's,
and left her there, and I to White Hall, and thence to Westminster, only
out of idleness, and to get some little pleasure to my 'mauvais flammes',
but sped not, so back and took up my wife; and to Polichinelli at Charing
Crosse, which is prettier and prettier, and so full of variety that it
is extraordinary good entertainment. Thence by coach home, that is, my
wife home, and I to the Exchange, and there met with Fenn, who tells me
they have yet no orders out of the Exchequer for money upon the Acts,
which is a thing not to be borne by any Prince of understanding or care,
for no money can be got advanced upon the Acts only from the weight of
orders in form out of the Exchequer so long time after the passing of
the Acts. So home to the office a little, where I met with a sad letter
from my brother, who tells me my mother is declared by the doctors to
be past recovery, and that my father is also very ill every hour: so that
I fear we shall see a sudden change there. God fit them and us for it!
So to Sir W. Pen's, where my wife was, and supped with a little, but yet
little mirth, and a bad, nasty supper, which makes me not love the family,
they do all things so meanly, to make a little bad show upon their backs.
Thence home and to bed, very much troubled about my father's and my mother's
illness.
21st. Up, and to the office,
where sat all the morning. At noon home to dinner, and had some melancholy
discourse with my wife about my mother's being so ill and my father, and
after dinner to cheer myself, I having the opportunity of Sir W. Coventry
and the Duke of York's being out of town, I alone out and to the Duke
of York's play-house, where unexpectedly I come to see only the young
men and women of the house act; they having liberty to act for their own
profit on Wednesdays and Fridays this Lent: and the play they did yesterday,
being Wednesday, was so well- taken, that they thought fit to venture
it publickly to-day; a play of my Lord Falkland's' called "The Wedding
Night," a kind of a tragedy, and some things very good in it, but
the whole together, I thought, not so. I confess I was well enough pleased
with my seeing it: and the people did do better, without the great actors,
than I did expect, but yet far short of what they do when they are there,
which I was glad to find the difference of. Thence to rights home, and
there to the office to my business hard, being sorry to have made this
scape without my wife, but I have a good salvo to my oath in doing it.
By and by, in the evening, comes Sir W. Batten's Mingo to me to pray me
to come to his master and Sir Richard Ford, who have very ill news to
tell me. I knew what it was, it was about our trial for a good prize to-day,
"The Phoenix,"
[There are references to the "Phoenix,"
a Dutch ship taken as a prize, among the State Papers (see "Calendar,"
1666-67, p. 404). Pepys appears to have got into trouble at a later date
in respect to this same ship, for among the Rawlinson MSS. (A. 170) are
"Papers relating to the charge brought against him in the House of
Commons in 1689 with reference to the ship Phoenix and the East India
Company in 1681-86."]
a worth two or L3000. I went to them, where they told me with much trouble
how they had sped, being cast and sentenced to make great reparation for
what we had embezzled, and they did it so well that I was much troubled
at it, when by and by Sir W. Batten asked me whether I was mortified enough,
and told me we had got the day, which was mighty welcome news to me and
us all. But it is pretty to see what money will do. Yesterday, Walker
was mighty cold on our behalf, till Sir W. Batten promised him, if we
sped in this business of the goods, a coach; and if at the next trial
we sped for the ship, we would give him a pair of horses. And he hath
strove for us today like a prince, though the Swedes' Agent was there
with all the vehemence he could to save the goods, but yet we carried
it against him. This put me in mighty good heart, and then we go to Sir
W. Pen, who is come back to-night from Chatham, and did put him into the
same condition, and then comforted him. So back to my office, and wrote
an affectionate and sad letter to my father about his and my mother's
illness, and so home to supper and to bed late.
22nd. Up and by coach to
Sir Ph. Warwicke about business for Tangier about money, and then to Sir
Stephen Fox to give him account of a little service I have done him about
money coming to him from our office, and then to Lovett's and saw a few
baubling things of their doing which are very pretty, but the quality
of the people, living only by shifts, do not please me, that it makes
me I do no more care for them, nor shall have more acquaintance with them
after I have got my Lady Castlemayne's picture home. So to White Hall,
where the King at Chapel, and I would not stay, but to Westminster to
Howlett's, and there, he being not well, I sent for a quart of claret
and burnt it and drank, and had a 'basado' or three or four of Sarah,
whom 'je trouve ici', and so by coach to Sir Robt. Viner's about my accounts
with him, and so to the 'Change, where I hear for certain that we are
going on with our treaty of peace, and that we are to treat at Bredah.
But this our condescension people do think will undo us, and I do much
fear it. So home to dinner, where my wife having dressed herself in a
silly dress of a blue petticoat uppermost, and a white satin waistcoat
and whitehood, though I think she did it because her gown is gone to the
tailor's, did, together with my being hungry, which always makes me peevish,
make me angry, but when my belly was full were friends again, and dined
and then by water down to Greenwich and thence walked to Woolwich, all
the way reading Playford's "Introduction to Musique," wherein
are some things very pretty. At Woolwich I did much business, taking an
account of the state of the ships there under hand, thence to Blackwall,
and did the like for two ships we have repairing there, and then to Deptford
and did the like there, and so home. Captain Perriman with me from Deptford,
telling me many particulars how the King's business is ill ordered, and
indeed so they are, God knows!
So home and to the office, where did business, and so
home to my chamber, and then to supper and to bed. Landing at the Tower
to-night I met on Tower Hill with Captain Cocke and spent half an hour
walking in the dusk of the evening with him, talking of the sorrowful
condition we are in, that we must be ruined if the Parliament do not come
and chastize us, that we are resolved to make a peace whatever it cost,
that the King is disobliging the Parliament in this interval all that
may be, yet his money is gone and he must have more, and they likely not
to give it, without a great deal of do. God knows what the issue of it
will be. But the considering that the Duke of York, instead of being at
sea as Admirall, is now going from port to port, as he is at this day
at Harwich, and was the other day with the King at Sheernesse, and hath
ordered at Portsmouth how fortifications shall be made to oppose the enemy,
in case of invasion, [which] is to us a sad consideration, and as shameful
to the nation, especially after so many proud vaunts as we have made against
the Dutch, and all from the folly of the Duke of Albemarle, who made nothing
of beating them, and Sir John Lawson he always declared that we never
did fail to beat them with lesser numbers than theirs, which did so prevail
with the King as to throw us into this war.
23rd.
At the office all the morning, where Sir W. Pen come, being returned from
Chatham, from considering the means of fortifying the river Medway, by
a chain at the stakes, and ships laid there with guns to keep the enemy
from coming up to burn our ships; all our care now being to fortify ourselves
against their invading us. At noon home to dinner, and then to the office
all the afternoon again, where Mr. Moore come, who tells me that there
is now no doubt made of a peace being agreed on, the King having declared
this week in Council that they would treat at Bredagh. He gone I to my
office, where busy late, and so to supper and to bed. Vexed with our mayde
Luce, our cook-mayde, who is a good drudging servant in everything else,
and pleases us, but that she will be drunk, and hath been so last night
and all this day, that she could not make clean the house. My fear is
only fire.
24th (Lord's day). With
Sir W. Batten to White Hall, and there I to Sir G. Carteret, who is mighty
cheerful, which makes me think and by some discourse that there is expectation
of a peace, but I did not ask [him]. Here was Sir J. Minnes also: and
they did talk of my Lord Bruncker, whose father, it seems, did give Mr.
Ashburnham and the present Lord Digby L1200 to be made an Irish lord,
and swore the same day that he had not 12d. left to pay for his dinner:
they make great mirth at this, my Lord Bruncker having lately given great
matter of offence both to them and us all, that we are at present mightily
displeased with him. By and by to the Duke of York, where we all met,
and there was the King also; and all our discourse was about fortifying
of the Medway and Harwich, which is to be entrenched quite round, and
Portsmouth: and here they advised with Sir Godfry Lloyd and Sir Bernard
de Gum, the two great engineers, and had the plates drawn before them;
and indeed all their care they now take is to fortify themselves, and
are not ashamed of it: for when by and by my Lord Arlington come in with
letters, and seeing the King and Duke of York give us and the officers
of the Ordnance directions in this matter, he did move that we might do
it as privately as we could, that it might not come into the Dutch Gazette
presently, as the King's and Duke of York's going down the other day to
Sheerenesse was, the week after, in the Harlem Gazette. The King and Duke
of York both laughed at it, and made no matter, but said, "Let us
be safe, and let them talk, for there is nothing will trouble them more,
nor will prevent their coming more, than to hear that we are fortifying
ourselves." And the Duke of York said further, "What said Marshal
Turenne, when some in vanity said that the enemies were afraid, for they
entrenched themselves? `Well,' says he, 'I would they were not afraid,
for then they would not entrench themselves, and so we could deal with
them the better.'"
Away thence, and met with Sir H. Cholmly, who tells
me that he do believe the government of Tangier is bought by my Lord Allington
for a sum of money to my Lord Arlington, and something to Lord Bellasses,
who (he did tell me particularly how) is as very a false villain as ever
was born, having received money of him here upon promise and confidence
of his return, forcing him to pay it by advance here, and promising to
ask no more there, when at the same time he was treating with my Lord
Allington to sell his command to him, and yet told Sir H. Cholmly nothing
of it, but when Sir H. Cholmly told him what he had heard, he confessed
that my Lord Allington had spoken to him of it, but that he was a vain
man to look after it, for he was nothing fit for it, and then goes presently
to my Lord Allington and drives on the bargain, yet tells Lord Allington
what he himself had said of him, as [though] Sir H. Cholmly had said them.
I am glad I am informed hereof, and shall know him for a Lord, &c.
Sir H. Cholmly tells me further that he is confident there will be a peace,
and that a great man did tell him that my Lord Albemarle did tell him
the other day at White Hall as a secret that we should have a peace if
any thing the King of France can ask and our King can give will gain it,
which he is it seems mad at. Thence back with Sir W. Batten and [Sir]
W. Pen home, and heard a piece of sermon, and so home to dinner, where
Balty come, very fine, and dined with us, and after dinner with me by
water to White Hall, and there he and I did walk round the Park, I giving
him my thoughts about the difficulty of getting employment for him this
year, but advised him how to employ himself, and I would do what I could.
So he and I parted, and I to Martin's, where I find her within, and 'su
hermano' and 'la veuve' Burroughs. Here I did 'demeurer toda' the afternoon
. . . . By and by come up the mistress of the house, Crags, a pleasant
jolly woman. I staid all but a little, and away home by water through
bridge, a brave evening, and so home to read, and anon to supper, W. Hewer
with us, and then to read myself to sleep again, and then to bed, and
mightily troubled the most of the night with fears of fire, which I cannot
get out of my head to this day since the last great fire. I did this night
give the waterman who uses to carry me 10s. at his request, for the painting
of his new boat, on which shall be my arms.
25th. (Ladyday.) Up, and
with Sir W. Batten and [Sir] W. Pen by coach to Exeter House to our lawyers
to have consulted about our trial to-morrow, but missed them, so parted,
and [Sir] W. Pen and I to Mr. Povy's about a little business of [Sir]
W. Pen's, where we went over Mr. Povy's house, which lies in the same
good condition as ever, which is most extraordinary fine, and he was now
at work with a cabinet-maker, making of a new inlaid table. Having seen
his house, we away, having in our way thither called at Mr. Lilly's, who
was working; and indeed his pictures are without doubt much beyond Mr.
Hales's, I think I may say I am convinced: but a mighty proud man he is,
and full of state. So home, and to the office, and by and by to dinner,
a poor dinner, my wife and I, at Sir W. Pen's, and then he and I before
to Exeter House, where I do not stay, but to the King's playhouse; and
by and by comes Mr. Lowther and his wife and mine, and into a box, forsooth,
neither of them being dressed, which I was almost ashamed of. Sir W. Pen
and I in the pit, and here saw "The Mayden Queene" again; which
indeed the more I see the more I like, and is an excellent play, and so
done by Nell, her merry part, as cannot be better done in nature, I think.
Thence home, and there I find letters from my brother, which tell me that
yesterday when he wrote my mother did rattle in the throat so as they
did expect every moment her death, which though I have a good while expected
did much surprise me, yet was obliged to sup at Sir W. Pen's and my wife,
and there counterfeited some little mirth, but my heart was sad, and so
home after supper and to bed, and much troubled in my sleep of my being
crying by my mother's bedside, laying my head over hers and crying, she
almost dead and dying, and so waked, but what is strange, methought she
had hair over her face, and not the same kind of face as my mother really
hath, but yet did not consider that, but did weep over her as my mother,
whose soul God have mercy of.
26th. Up with a sad heart
in reference to my mother, of whose death I undoubtedly expect to hear
the next post, if not of my father's also, who by his pain as well as
his grief for her is very ill, but on my own behalf I have cause to be
joyful this day, it being my usual feast day, for my being cut of the
stone this day nine years, and through God's blessing am at this day and
have long been in as good condition of health as ever I was in my life
or any man in England is, God make me thankful for it! But the condition
I am in, in reference to my mother, makes it unfit for me to keep my usual
feast. Unless it shall please God to send her well (which I despair wholly
of), and then I will make amends for it by observing another day in its
room. So to the office, and at the office all the morning, where I had
an opportunity to speak to Sir John Harman about my desire to have my
brother Balty go again with him to sea as he did the last year, which
he do seem not only contented but pleased with, which I was glad of. So
at noon home to dinner, where I find Creed, who dined with us, but I had
not any time to talk with him, my head being busy, and before I had dined
was called away by Sir W. Batten, and both of us in his coach (which I
observe his coachman do always go now from hence towards White Hall through
Tower Street, and it is the best way) to Exeter House, where the judge
was sitting, and after several little causes comes on ours, and while
the several depositions and papers were at large reading (which they call
the preparatory), and being cold by being forced to sit with my hat off
close to a window in the Hall, Sir W. Pen and I to the Castle Tavern hard
by and got a lobster, and he and I staid and eat it, and drank good wine;
I only burnt wine, as my whole custom of late hath been, as an evasion,
God knows, for my drinking of wine (but it is an evasion which will not
serve me now hot weather is coming, that I cannot pretend, as indeed I
really have done, that I drank it for cold), but I will leave it off,
and it is but seldom, as when I am in women's company, that I must call
for wine, for I must be forced to drink to them.
Having done here then we back again to the Court, and
there heard our cause pleaded; Sir [Edward] Turner, Sir W. Walker, and
Sir Ellis Layton being our counsel against only Sir Robert Wiseman on
the other. The second of our three counsel was the best, and indeed did
speak admirably, and is a very shrewd man. Nevertheless, as good as he
did make our case, and the rest, yet when Wiseman come to argue (nay,
and though he did begin so sillily that we laughed in scorn in our sleeves
at him), yet he did so state the case, that the judge did not think fit
to decide the cause to-night, but took to to-morrow, and did stagger us
in our hopes, so as to make us despair of the success. I am mightily pleased
with the judge, who seems a very rational, learned, and uncorrupt man,
and much good reading and reason there is heard in hearing of this law
argued, so that the thing pleased me, though our success doth shake me.
Thence Sir W. Pen and I home and to write letters, among others a sad
one to my father upon fear of my mother's death, and so home to supper
and to bed.
27th. [Sir] W. Pen and
I to White Hall, and in the coach did begin our discourse again about
Balty, and he promises me to move it this very day. He and I met my Lord
Bruncker at Sir G. Carteret's by appointment, there to discourse a little
business, all being likely to go to rack for lack of money still. Thence
to the Duke of York's lodgings, and did our usual business, and Sir W.
Pen telling me that he had this morning spoke of Balty to Sir W. Coventry,
and that the thing was done, I did take notice of it also to [Sir] W.
Coventry, who told me that he had both the thing and the person in his
head before to have done it, which is a double pleasure to me. Our business
with the Duke being done, [Sir] W. Pen and I towards the Exchequer, and
in our way met Sir G. Downing going to chapel, but we stopped, and he
would go with us back to the Exchequer and showed us in his office his
chests full and ground and shelves full of money, and says that there
is L50,000 at this day in his office of people's money, who may demand
it this day, and might have had it away several weeks ago upon the late
Act, but do rather choose to have it continue there than to put it into
the Banker's hands, and I must confess it is more than I should have believed
had I not seen it, and more than ever I could have expected would have
arisen for this new Act in so short a time, and if it do so now already
what would it do if the money was collected upon the Act and returned
into the Exchequer so timely as it ought to be. But it comes into my mind
here to observe what I have heard from Sir John Bankes, though I cannot
fully conceive the reason of it, that it will be impossible to make the
Exchequer ever a true bank to all intents, unless the Exchequer stood
nearer the Exchange, where merchants might with ease, while they are going
about their business, at all hours, and without trouble or loss of time,
have their satisfaction, which they cannot have now without much trouble,
and loss of half a day, and no certainty of having the offices open. By
this he means a bank for common practise and use of merchants, and therein
I do agree with him. Being parted from Sir W. Pen and [Sir] G. Downing,
I to Westminster Hall and there met Balty, whom I had sent for, and there
did break the business of my getting him the place of going again as Muster-Master
with Harman this voyage to the West Indys, which indeed I do owe to Sir
W. Pen. He is mighty glad of it, and earnest to fit himself for it, but
I do find, poor man, that he is troubled how to dispose of his wife, and
apparently it is out of fear of her, and his honour, and I believe he
hath received some cause of this his jealousy and care, and I do pity
him in it, and will endeavour to find out some way to do, it for him.
Having put him in a way of preparing himself for the voyage, I did go
to the Swan, and there sent for Jervas, my old periwig maker, and he did
bring me a periwig, but it was full of nits, so as I was troubled to see
it (it being his old fault), and did send him to make it clean, and in
the mean time, having staid for him a good while, did go away by water
to the Castle Taverne, by Exeter House, and there met Sir W. Batten, [Sir]
W. Pen, and several others, among the rest Sir Ellis Layton, who do apply
himself to discourse with me, and I think by his discourse, out of his
opinion of my interest in Sir W. Coventry, the man I find a wonderful
witty, ready man for sudden answers and little tales, and sayings very
extraordinary witty, but in the bottom I doubt he is not so. Yet he pretends
to have studied men, and the truth is in several that I do know he did
give me a very inward account of them. But above all things he did give
me a full account, upon my demand, of this judge of the Admiralty, Judge
Jenkins; who, he says, is a man never practised in this Court, but taken
merely for his merit and ability's sake from Trinity Hall, where he had
always lived; only by accident the business of the want of a Judge being
proposed to the present Archbishop of Canterbury that now is, he did think
of this man and sent for him up: and here he is, against the 'gre' and
content of the old Doctors, made judge, but is a very excellent man both
for judgment and temper, yet majesty enough, and by all men's report,
not to be corrupted. After dinner to the Court, where Sir Ellis Layton
did make a very silly motion in our behalf, but did neither hurt nor good.
After him Walker and Wiseman; and then the judge did pronounce his sentence;
for some part of the goods and ship, and the freight of the whole, to
be free, and returned and paid by us; and the remaining, which was the
greater part, to be ours. The loss of so much troubles us, but we have
got a pretty good part, thanks be to God! So we are not displeased nor
yet have cause to triumph, as we did once expect.
Having seen the end of this, I being desirous to be
at home to see the issue of any country letters about my mother, which
I expect shall give me tidings of her death, I directly home and there
to the office, where I find no letter from my father or brother, but by
and by the boy tells me that his mistress sends me word that she hath
opened my letter, and that she is loth to send me any more news. So I
home, and there up to my wife in our chamber, and there received from
my brother the newes of my mother's dying on Monday, about five or six
o'clock in the afternoon, and that the last time she spoke of her children
was on Friday last, and her last words were, "God bless my poor Sam!"
The reading hereof did set me a- weeping heartily, and so weeping to myself
awhile, and my wife also to herself, I then spoke to my wife respecting
myself, and indeed, having some thoughts how much better both for her
and us it is than it might have been had she outlived my father and me
or my happy present condition in the world, she being helpless, I was
the sooner at ease in my mind, and then found it necessary to go abroad
with my wife to look after the providing mourning to send into the country,
some to-morrow, and more against Sunday, for my family, being resolved
to put myself and wife, and Barker and Jane, W. Hewer and Tom, in mourning,
and my two under-mayds, to give them hoods and scarfs and gloves. So to
my tailor's, and up and down, and then home and to my office a little,
and then to supper and to bed, my heart sad and afflicted, though my judgment
at ease.
28th. My tailor come to
me betimes this morning, and having given him directions, I to the office
and there all the morning. At noon dined well. Balty, who is mighty thoughtful
how to dispose of his wife, and would fain have me provide a place for
her, which the thoughts of what I should do with her if he should miscarry
at sea makes me avoid the offering him that she should be at my house.
I find he is plainly jealous of her being in any place where she may have
ill company, and I do pity him for it, and would be glad to help him,
and will if I can. Having dined, I down by water with Sir W. Batten, [Sir]
W. Pen, and [Sir] R. Ford to our prize, part of whose goods were condemned
yesterday-- "The Lindeboome"--and there we did drink some of
her wine, very good. But it did grate my heart to see the poor master
come on board, and look about into every corner, and find fault that she
was not so clean as she used to be, though methought she was very clean;
and to see his new masters come in, that had nothing to do with her, did
trouble me to see him. Thence to Blackwall and there to Mr. Johnson's,
to see how some works upon some of our repaired ships go on, and at his
house eat and drank and mighty extraordinary merry (too merry for me whose
mother died so lately, but they know it not, so cannot reproach me therein,
though I reproach myself), and in going home had many good stories of
Sir W. Batten and one of Sir W. Pen, the most tedious and silly and troublesome
(he forcing us to hear him) that ever I heard in my life. So to the office
awhile, troubled with Sir W. Pen's impertinences, he being half foxed
at Johnson's, and so to bed.
29th. Lay long talking
with my wife about Balty, whom I do wish very well to, and would be glad
to advise him, for he is very sober and willing to take all pains. Up
and to Sir W. Batten, who I find has had some words with Sir W. Pen about
the employing of a cooper about our prize wines, [Sir] W. Batten standing
and indeed imposing upon us Mr. Morrice, which I like not, nor do [Sir]
W. Pen, and I confess the very thoughts of what our goods will come to
when we have them do discourage me in going any further in the adventure.
Then to the office till noon, doing business, and then to the Exchange,
and thence to the Sun Taverne and dined with [Sir] W. Batten, [Sir] R.
Ford, and the Swede's Agent to discourse of a composition about our prizes
that are condemned, but did do little, he standing upon high terms and
we doing the like. I home, and there find Balty and his wife got thither
both by my wife for me to give them good advice, for her to be with his
father and mother all this time of absence, for saving of money, and did
plainly and like a friend tell them my mind of the necessity of saving
money, and that if I did not find they did endeavour it, I should not
think fit to trouble myself for them, but I see she is utterly against
being with his father and mother, and he is fond of her, and I perceive
the differences between the old people and them are too great to be presently
forgot, and so he do propose that it will be cheaper for him to put her
to board at a place he is offered at Lee, and I, seeing that I am not
like to be troubled with the finding a place, and having given him so
much good advice, do leave them to stand and fall as they please, having
discharged myself as a friend, and not likely to be accountable for her
nor be troubled with her, if he should miscarry I mean, as to her lodging,
and so broke up.
Then he and I to make a visit to [Sir] W. Pen, who hath
thought fit to show kindness to Balty in this business, indeed though
he be a false rogue, but it was he knew a thing easy to do. Thence together
to my shoemaker's, cutler's, tailor's, and up and down about my mourning,
and in my way do observe the great streets in the city are marked out
with piles drove into the ground; and if ever it be built in that form
with so fair streets, it will be a noble sight. So to the Council chamber,
but staid not there, but to a periwigg-maker's of his acquaintance, and
there bought two periwiggs, mighty fine; indeed, too fine, I thought,
for me; but he persuaded me, and I did buy them for L4 10s. the two. Then
to the Exchange and bought gloves, and so to the Bull-Head Taverne, whither
he brought my, French gun; and one Truelocke, the famous gunsmith, that
is a mighty ingenious man, and he did take my gun in pieces, and made
me understand the secrets thereof and upon the whole I do find it a very
good piece of work, and truly wrought; but for certain not a thing to
be used much with safety: and he do find that this very gun was never
yet shot off: I was mighty satisfied with it and him, and the sight of
so much curiosity of this kind. Here he brought also a haberdasher at
my desire, and I bought a hat of him, and so away and called away my wife
from his house, and so home and to read, and then to supper and to bed,
my head full in behalf of Balty, who tells me strange stories of his mother.
Among others, how she, in his absence in Ireland, did pawne all the things
that he had got in his service under Oliver, and run of her own accord,
without her husband's leave, into Flanders, and that his purse, and 4s.
a week which his father receives of the French church, is all the subsistence
his father and mother have, and that about L20 a year maintains them;
which, if it please God, I will find one way or other to provide for them,
to remove that scandal away.
30th. Up, and the French
periwigg maker of whom I bought two yesterday comes with them, and I am
very well pleased with them. So to the office, where all the morning.
At noon home to dinner, and thence with my wife's knowledge and leave
did by coach go see the silly play of my Lady Newcastle's, called "The
Humourous Lovers;" the most silly thing that ever come upon a stage.
I was sick to see it, but yet would not but have seen it, that I might
the better understand her. Here I spied Knipp and Betty, of the King's
house, and sent Knipp oranges, but, having little money about me, did
not offer to carry them abroad, which otherwise I had, I fear, been tempted
to. So with [Sir] W. Pen home (he being at the play also), a most summer
evening, and to my office, where, among other things, a most extraordinary
letter to the Duke of York touching the want of money and the sad state
of the King's service thereby, and so to supper and to bed.
31st (Lord's day). Up,
and my tailor's boy brings my mourning clothes home, and my wife hers
and Barker's, but they go not to church this morning. I to church, and
with my mourning, very handsome, and new periwigg, make a great shew.
After church home to dinner, and there come Betty Michell and her husband.
I do and shall love her, but, poor wretch, she is now almost ready to
lie down. After dinner Balty (who dined also with us) and I with Sir J.
Minnes in his coach to White Hall, but did nothing, but by water to Strand
Bridge and thence walked to my Lord Treasurer's, where the King, Duke
of York, and the Caball, and much company without; and a fine day. Anon
come out from the Caball my Lord Hollis and Mr. H. Coventry, who, it is
conceived, have received their instructions from the King this day; they
being to begin their journey towards their treaty at Bredagh speedily,
their passes being come. Here I saw the Lady Northumberland and her daughter-in-law,
my Lord Treasurer's daughter, my Lady Piercy, a beautiful lady indeed.
So away back by water, and left Balty at White Hall and I to Mrs. Martin
. . . . and so by coach home, and there to my chamber, and then to supper
and bed, having not had time to make up my accounts of this month at this
very day, but will in a day or two, and pay my forfeit for not doing it,
though business hath most hindered me. The month shuts up only with great
desires of peace in all of us, and a belief that we shall have a peace,
in most people, if a peace can be had on any terms, for there is a necessity
of it; for we cannot go on with the war, and our masters are afraid to
come to depend upon the good will of the Parliament any more, as I do
hear.
April 1667
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