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October
1st.
All the morning busy at the office, pleased mightily with my girle that
we have got to wait on my wife. At noon dined with Sir G. Carteret and
the rest of our officers at his house in Broad Street, they being there
upon his accounts. After dinner took coach and to my wife, who was gone
before into the Strand, there to buy a nightgown, where I found her in
a shop with her pretty girle, and having bought it away home, and I thence
to Sir G. Carteret's again, and so took coach alone, it now being almost
night, to White Hall, and there in the Boarded- gallery did hear the musick
with which the King is presented this night by Monsieur Grebus, the master
of his musick; both instrumentall--I think twenty-four violins--and vocall;
an English song upon Peace. But, God forgive me! I never was so little
pleased with a concert of musick in my life. The manner of setting of
words and repeating them out of order, and that with a number of voices,
makes me sick, the whole design of vocall musick being lost by it. Here
was a great press of people; but I did not see many pleased with it, only
the instrumental musick he had brought by practice to play very just.
So thence late in the dark round by the wall home by coach, and there
to sing and sup with my wife, and look upon our pretty girle, and so to
bed.
2nd. Up, and very busy
all the morning, upon my accounts of Tangier, to present to the Commissioners
of the Treasury in the afternoon, and the like upon the accounts of the
office. This morning come to me Mr. Gawden about business, with his gold
chain about his neck, as being Sheriffe of the City this year. At noon
to the Treasury Office again, and there dined and did business, and then
by coach to the New Exchange, and there met my wife and girl, and took
them to the King's house to see "The Traytour," which still
I like as a very good play; and thence, round by the wall, home, having
drunk at the Cock ale-house, as I of late have used to do, and so home
and to my chamber to read, and so to supper and to bed.
3rd. Up, and going out
of doors, I understand that Sir W. Batten is gone to bed on a sudden again
this morning, being struck very ill, and I confess I have observed him
for these last two months to look very ill and to look worse and worse.
I to St. James's (though it be a sitting day) to the Duke of York, about
the Tangier Committee, which met this morning, and he come to us, and
the Charter for the City of Tangier was read and the form of the Court
Merchant. That being done Sir W. Coventry took me into the gallery, and
walked with me an hour, discoursing of Navy business, and with much kindness
to, and confidence in, me still; which I must endeavour to preserve, and
will do; and, good man! all his care how to get the Navy paid off, and
that all other things therein may go well. He gone, I thence to my Lady
Peterborough, who sent for me; and with her an hour talking about her
husband's pension, and how she hath got an order for its being paid again;
though, I believe, for all that order, it will hardly be; but of that
I said nothing; but her design is to get it paid again: and how to raise
money upon it, to clear it from the engagement which lies upon it to some
citizens, who lent her husband money, without her knowledge, upon it,
to vast loss. She intends to force them to take their money again, and
release her husband of those hard terms. The woman is a very wise woman,
and is very plain in telling me how her plate and jewels are at pawne
for money, and how they are forced to live beyond their estate, and do
get nothing by his being a courtier. The lady I pity, and her family.
Having done with her, and drunk two glasses of her meade, which she did
give me, and so to the Treasurer's Office, and there find my Lord Bruncker
and [Sir] W. Pen at dinner with Sir G. Carteret about his accounts, where
I dined and talked and settled some business, and then home, and there
took out my wife and Willet, thinking to have gone to a play, but both
houses were begun, and so we to the 'Change, and thence to my tailor's,
and there, the coachman desiring to go home to change his horses, we went
with him into a nasty end of all St. Giles's, and there went into a nasty
room, a chamber of his, where he hath a wife and child, and there staid,
it growing dark too, and I angry thereat, till he shifted his horses,
and then home apace, and there I to business late, and so home, to supper,
and walk in the garden with my wife and girle, with whom we are mightily
pleased, and after talking and supping, to bed. This noon, going home,
I did call on Will Lincolne and agree with him to carry me to Brampton.
4th. Up, and to White Hall
to attend the Council about Commissioner Pett's business, along with my
Lord Bruncker and Sir W. Pen, and in the Robe-chamber the Duke of York
come to us, the officers of the Navy, and there did meet together about
Navy business, where Sir W. Coventry was with us, and among other things
did recommend his Royal Highness, now the prizes were disposing, to remember
Sir John Harman to the King, for some bounty, and also for my Lady Minnes,
which was very nobly done of him. Thence all of us to attend the Council,
where we were anon called on, and there was a long hearing of Commissioner
Pett, who was there, and there were the two Masters Attendant of Chatham
called in, who do deny their having any order from Commissioner Pett about
bringing up the great ships, which gives the lie to what he says; but,
in general, I find him to be but a weak, silly man, and that is guilty
of horrid neglect in this business all along. Here broke off without coming
to an issue, but that there should be another hearing on Monday next.
So the Council rose, and I staid walking up and down the galleries till
the King went to dinner, and then I to my Lord Crew's to dinner; but he
having dined, I took a very short leave, confessing I had not dined; and
so to an ordinary hard by the Temple-gate, where I have heretofore been,
and there dined--cost me 10d. And so to my Lord Ashly's, where after dinner
Sir H. Cholmly, Creed and I, with his Lordship, about Mr. Yeabsly's business,
where having come to agreement with him abating him L1000 of what he demands
for ships lost, I to Westminster, to Mrs. Martin's lodging, whither I
sent for her, and there hear that her husband is come from sea, which
is sooner than I expected; and here I staid and drank, and so did toucher
elle and away, and so by coach to my tailor's, and thence to my Lord Crew's,
and there did stay with him an hour till almost night, discoursing about
the ill state of my Lord Sandwich, that he can neither be got to be called
home, nor money got to maintain him there; which will ruin his family.
And the truth is, he do almost deserve it, for by all relation he hath,
in a little more than a year and a half, spent L20,000 of the King's money,
and the best part of L10,000 of his own; which is a most prodigious expence,
more than ever Embassador spent there, and more than these Commissioners
of the Treasury will or do allow. And they demand an account before they
will give him any more money; which puts all his friends to a loss what
to answer. But more money we must get him, or to be called home. I offer
to speak to Sir W. Coventry about it; but my Lord will not advise to it,
without consent of Sir G. Carteret. So home, and there to see Sir W. Batten,
who fell sick yesterday morning: He is asleep: and so I could not see
him; but in an hour after, word is brought me that he is so ill, that
it is believed he cannot live till to-morrow, which troubles me and my
wife mightily, partly out of kindness, he being a good neighbour and partly
because of the money he owes me, upon our bargain of the late prize. So
home and to supper and to bed.
5th. Up, and to the Office;
and there all the morning; none but my Lord Anglesey and myself; but much
surprized with the news of the death of Sir W. Batten, who died this morning,
having been but two days sick. Sir W. Pen and I did dispatch a letter
this morning to Sir W. Coventry, to recommend Colonel Middleton, who we
think a most honest and understanding man, and fit for that place. Sir
G. Carteret did also come this morning, and walked with me in the garden;
and concluded not to concern [himself] or have any advice made to Sir
W. Coventry, in behalf of my Lord Sandwich's business; so I do rest satisfied,
though I do think they are all mad, that they will judge Sir W. Coventry
an enemy, when he is indeed no such man to any body, but is severe and
just, as he ought to be, where he sees things ill done. At noon home,
and by coach to Temple Bar to a India shop, and there bought a gown and
sash, which cost me 26s., and so she [Mrs. Pepys] and Willet away to the
'Change, and I to my Lord Crew, and there met my Lord Hinchingbroke and
Lady Jemimah, and there dined with them and my Lord, where pretty merry,
and after dinner my Lord Crew and Hinchingbroke and myself went aside
to discourse about my Lord Sandwich's business, which is in a very ill
state for want of money, and so parted, and I to my tailor's, and there
took up my wife and Willet, who staid there for me, and to the Duke of
York's playhouse, but the house so full, it being a new play, "The
Coffee House," that we could not get in, and so to the King's house:
and there, going in, met with Knepp, and she took us up into the tireing-rooms:
and to the women's shift, where Nell was dressing herself, and was all
unready, and is very pretty, prettier than I thought. And so walked all
up and down the house above, and then below into the scene-room, and there
sat down, and she gave us fruit and here I read the questions to Knepp,
while she answered me, through all her part of "Flora's Figary's,"
which was acted to-day. But, Lord! to see how they were both painted would
make a man mad, and did make me loath them; and what base company of men
comes among them, and how lewdly they talk! and how poor the men are in
clothes, and yet what a shew they make on the stage by candle-light, is
very observable. But to see how Nell cursed, for having so few people
in the pit, was pretty; the other house carrying away all the people at
the new play, and is said, now-a-days, to have generally most company,
as being better players. By and by into the pit, and there saw the play,
which is pretty good, but my belly was full of what I had seen in the
house, and so, after the play done, away home, and there to the writing
my letters, and so home to supper and to bed.
6th (Lord's day). Up, and
dressed myself, and so walked out with the boy to Smithfield to Cow Lane,
to Lincolne's, and there spoke with him, and agreed upon the hour to-morrow,
to set out towards Brampton; but vexed that he is not likely to go himself,
but sends another for him. Here I took a hackney coach, and to White Hall,
and there met Sir W. Coventry, and discoursed with him, and then with
my Lord Bruncker, and many others, to end my matters in order to my going
into the country to-morrow for five or six days, which I have not done
for above three years. Walked with Creed into the Park a little, and at
last went into the Queen's side, and there saw the King and Queen, and
saw the ladies, in order to my hearing any news stirring to carry into
the country, but met with none, and so away home by coach, and there dined,
and W. How come to see me, and after dinner parted, and I to my writing
to my Lord Sandwich, which is the greatest business I have to do before
my going into the country, and in the evening to my office to set matters
to rights there, and being in the garden Sir W. Pen did come to me, and
fell to discourse about the business of "The Flying Greyhound,"
wherein I was plain to him and he to me, and at last concluded upon my
writing a petition to the Duke of York for a certain ship, The Maybolt
Gallyott, and he offers to give me L300 for my success, which, however,
I would not oblige him to, but will see the issue of it by fair play,
and so I did presently draw a petition, which he undertakes to proffer
to the Duke of York, and solicit for me, and will not seem to doubt of
his success. So I wrote, and did give it him, and left it with him, and
so home to supper, where Pelling comes and sits with me, and there tells
us how old Mr. Batelier is dead this last night in the night, going to
bed well, which I am mightily troubled for, he being a good man. Supper
done, and he gone, I to my chamber to write my journal to this night,
and so to bed.
7th. Up betimes, and did
do several things towards the settling all matters both of house and office
in order for my journey this day, and did leave my chief care, and the
key of my closet, with Mr. Hater, with directions what papers to secure,
in case of fire or other accident; and so, about nine o'clock, I, and
my wife, and Willet, set out in a coach I have hired, with four horses;
and W. Hewer and Murford rode by us on horseback; and so my wife and she
in their morning gowns, very handsome and pretty, and to my great liking.
We set out, and so out at Allgate, and so to the Green Man, and so on
to Enfield, in our way seeing Mr. Lowther and his lady in a coach, going
to Walthamstow; and he told us that he would overtake us at night, he
being to go that way. So we to Enfield, and there bayted, it being but
a foul, bad day, and there Lowther and Mr. Burford, an acquaintance of
his, did overtake us, and there drank and eat together; and, by and by,
we parted, we going before them, and very merry, my wife and girle and
I talking, and telling tales, and singing, and before night come to Bishop
Stafford, where Lowther and his friend did meet us again, and carried
us to the Raynedeere, where Mrs. Aynsworth,
[Elizabeth Aynsworth, here mentioned, was a noted
procurerss at Cambridge, banished from that town by the university authorities
for her evil courses. She subsequently kept the Rein Deer Inn at Bishops
Stortford, at which the Vice-Chancellor, and some of the heads of colleges,
had occasion to sleep, in their way to London, and were nobly entertained,
their supper being served off plate. The next morning their hostess refused
to make any charge, saying, that she was still indebted to the Vice-Chancellor,
who, by driving her out of Cambridge, had made her fortune. No tradition
of this woman has been preserved at Bishops Stortford; but it appears,
from the register of that parish, that she was buried there 26th of March,
1686. It is recorded in the "History of Essex," vol. iii., (p.
130) 8vo., 1770, and in a pamphlet in the British Museum, entitled, "Boteler's
Case," that she was implicated in the murder of Captain Wood, a Hertfordshire
gentleman, at Manuden, in Essex, and for which offence a person named
Boteler was executed at Chelmsford, September 10th, 1667, and that Mrs.
Aynsworth, tried at the same time as an accessory before the fact, was
acquitted for want of evidence; though in her way to the jail she endeavoured
to throw herself into the river, but was prevented. See Postea, May 25th,
1668.--B.]
who lived heretofore at Cambridge, and whom I knew better than they think
for, do live. It was the woman that, among other things, was great with
my cozen Barnston, of Cottenham, and did use to sing to him, and did teach
me "Full forty times over," a very lewd song: a woman they are
very well acquainted with, and is here what she was at Cambridge, and
all the good fellows of the country come hither. Lowther and his friend
stayed and drank, and then went further this night; but here we stayed,
and supped, and lodged. But, as soon as they were gone, and my supper
getting ready, I fell to write my letter to my Lord Sandwich, which I
could not finish before my coming from London; so did finish it to my
good content, and a good letter, telling him the present state of all
matters, and did get a man to promise to carry it to-morrow morning, to
be there, at my house, by noon, and I paid him well for it; so, that being
done, and my mind at ease, we to supper, and so to bed, my wife and I
in one bed, and the girl in another, in the same room, and lay very well,
but there was so much tearing company in the house, that we could not
see my landlady; so I had no opportunity of renewing my old acquaintance
with her, but here we slept very well.
8th. Up pretty betimes,
though not so soon as we intended, by reason of Murford's not rising,
and then not knowing how to open our door, which, and some other pleasant
simplicities of the fellow, did give occasion to us to call him. Sir Martin
Marrall, and W. Hewer being his helper and counsellor, we did call him,
all this journey, Mr. Warner, which did give us good occasion of mirth
now and then. At last, rose, and up, and broke our fast, and then took
coach, and away, and at Newport did call on Mr. Lowther, and he and his
friend, and the master of the house, their friend, where they were, a
gentleman, did presently get a-horseback and overtook us, and went with
us to Audley-End, and did go along with us all over the house and garden:
and mighty merry we were. The house indeed do appear very fine, but not
so fine as it hath heretofore to me; particularly the ceilings are not
so good as I always took them to be, being nothing so well wrought as
my Lord Chancellor's are; and though the figure of the house without be
very extraordinary good, yet the stayre- case is exceeding poor; and a
great many pictures, and not one good one in the house but one of Harry
the Eighth, done by Holben; and not one good suit of hangings in all the
house, but all most ancient things, such as I would not give the hanging-up
of in my house; and the other furniture, beds and other things, accordingly.
[Mr. George T. Robinson, F.S.A., in a paper on "Decorative
Plaster Work," read before the Society of Arts in April, 1891, refers
to the ceilings at Audley End as presenting an excellent idea of the state
of the stuccoer's art in the middle of James I.'s reign, and adds, "Few
houses in England can show so fine a series of the same date . . . . The
great hall has medallions in the square portions of the ceiling formed
by its dividing timber beams. The large saloon on the principal floor-a
room about 66 feet long by 30 feet wide-has a very remarkable ceiling
of the pendentive type, which presents many peculiarities, the most notable
of which, that these not only depend from the ceiling, but the outside
ones spring from the walls in a natural and structural manner. This is
a most unusual circumstance in the stucco work of the time, the reason
for the omission of this reasonable treatment evidently being the unwillingness
of the stuccoer to omit his elaborate frieze in which he took such delight"
("Journal Soc. of Arts," vol. xxxix., p. 449)]
Only the gallery is good, and, above all things, the cellars, where we
went down and drank of much good liquor; and indeed the cellars are fine:
and here my wife and I did sing to my great content. And then to the garden,
and there eat many grapes, and took some with us and so away thence, exceeding
well satisfied, though not to that degree that, by my old esteem of the
house, I ought and did expect to have done, the situation of it not pleasing
me. Here we parted with Lowther and his friends, and away to Cambridge,
it being foul, rainy weather, and there did take up at the Rose, for the
sake of Mrs. Dorothy Drawwater, the vintner's daughter, which is mentioned
in the play of Sir Martin Marrall. Here we had a good chamber, and bespoke
a good supper; and then I took my wife, and W. Hewer, and Willet, it holding
up a little, and shewed them Trinity College and St. John's Library, and
went to King's College Chapel, to see the outside of it only; and so to
our inne, and with much pleasure did this, they walking in their pretty
morning gowns, very handsome, and I proud to find myself in condition
to do this; and so home to our lodging, and there by and by, to supper,
with much good sport, talking with the Drawers concerning matters of the
town, and persons whom I remember, and so, after supper, to cards; and
then to bed, lying, I in one bed, and my wife and girl in another, in
the same room, and very merry talking together, and mightily pleased both
of us with the girl. Saunders, the only violin in my time, is, I hear,
dead of the plague in the late plague there.
9th. Up, and got ready,
and eat our breakfast; and then took coach: and the poor, as they did
yesterday, did stand at the coach to have something given them, as they
do to all great persons; and I did give them something: and the town musique
did also come and play: but, Lord! what sad music they made! However,
I was pleased with them, being all of us in very good humour, and so through
the town, and observed at our College of Magdalene the posts new painted,
and understand that the Vice- Chancellor' is there this year.
And so away for Huntingdon
mightily pleased all along the road to remember old stories; and come
to Brampton at about noon, and there find my father and sister and brother
all well and here laid up our things, and up and down to see the garden
with my father, and the house, and do altogether find it very pretty;
especially the little parlour and the summerhouses in the garden, only
the wall do want greens upon it, and the house is too low-roofed; but
that is only because of my coming from a house with higher ceilings. But
altogether is very pretty; and I bless God that I am like to have such
a pretty place to retire to: and I did walk with my father without doors,
and do find a very convenient way of laying out money there in building,
which will make a very good seat, and the place deserves it, I think,
very well.
By and by to dinner, and after dinner I walked up to
Hinchingbroke, where my Lady expected me; and there spent all the afternoon
with her: the same most excellent, good, discreet lady that ever she was;
and, among other things, is mightily pleased with the lady that is like
to be her son Hinchingbroke's wife, which I am mightily glad of. By and
by my wife comes with Willet, my wife in her velvett vest, which is mighty
fine, and becomes her exceedingly. I am pleased with my Lady Paulina and
Anne, who both are grown very proper ladies, and handsome enough. But
a thousand questions my Lady asked me, till she could think of no more
almost, but walked up and down the house, with me. But I do find, by her,
that they are reduced to great straits for money, having been forced to
sell her plate, 8 or L900 worth; and she is now going to sell a suit of
her best hangings, of which I could almost wish to buy a piece or two,
if the pieces will be broke. But the house is most excellently furnished,
and brave rooms and good pictures, so that it do please me infinitely
beyond Audley End. Here we staid till night walking and talking and drinking,
and with mighty satisfaction my Lady with me alone most of the day talking
of my Lord's bad condition to be kept in Spayne without money and at a
great expense, which (as we will save the family) we must labour to remove.
Night being come, we took leave with all possible kindness,
and so home, and there Mr. Shepley staid with us and sapped, and full
of good country discourse, and when supper done took his leave, and we
all to bed, only I a little troubled that my father tells me that he is
troubled that my wife shows my sister no countenance, and, him but very
little, but is as a stranger in the house; and I do observe she do carry
herself very high; but I perceive there was some great falling out when
she was here last, but the reason I have no mind to enquire after, for
vexing myself, being desirous to pass my time with as much mirth as I
can while I am abroad. So all to bed. My wife and I in the high bed in
our chamber, and Willet in the trundle bed, which she desired to lie in,
by us.
10th. Waked in the morning
with great pain of the collique, by cold taken yesterday, I believe, with
going up and down in my shirt, but with rubbing my belly, keeping of it
warm, I did at last come to some ease, and rose, and up to walk up and
down the garden with my father, to talk of all our concernments: about
a husband for my sister, whereof there is at present no appearance; but
we must endeavour to find her one now, for she grows old and ugly: then
for my brother; and resolve he shall stay here this winter, and then I
will either send him to Cambridge for a year, till I get him some church
promotion, or send him to sea as a chaplain, where he may study, and earn
his living. Then walked round about our Greene, to see whether, in case
I cannot buy out my uncle Thomas and his son's right in this house, that
I can buy another place. as good thereabouts to build on, and I do not
see that I can. But this, with new building, may be made an excellent
pretty thing, and I resolve to look after it as soon as I can, and Goody
Gorum dies. By this time it was almost noon, and then my father and I
and wife and Willet abroad, by coach round the towne of Brampton, to observe
any other place as good as ours, and find none; and so back with great
pleasure; and thence went all of us, my sister and brother, and W. Hewer,
to dinner to Hinchingbroke, where we had a good plain country dinner,
but most kindly used; and here dined the Minister of Brampton and his
wife, who is reported a very good, but poor man. Here I spent alone with
my Lady, after dinner, the most of the afternoon, and anon the two twins
were sent for from schoole, at Mr. Taylor's, to come to see me, and I
took them into the garden, and there, in one of the summer-houses, did
examine them, and do find them so well advanced in their learning, that
I was amazed at it: they repeating a whole ode without book out of Horace,
and did give me a very good account of any thing almost, and did make
me very readily very good Latin, and did give me good account of their
Greek grammar, beyond all possible expectation; and so grave and manly
as I never saw, I confess, nor could have believed; so that they will
be fit to go to Cambridge in two years at most. They are both little,
but very like one another, and well- looked children.
Then in to my Lady again, and staid till it was almost
night again, and then took leave for a great while again, but with extraordinary
kindness from my Lady, who looks upon me like one of her own family and
interest. So thence, my wife and people by the highway, and I walked over
the park with Mr. Shepley, and through the grove, which is mighty pretty,
as is imaginable, and so over their drawbridge to Nun's Bridge, and so
to my father's, and there sat and drank, and talked a little, and then
parted. And he being gone, and what company there was, my father and I,
with a dark lantern; it being now night, into the garden with my wife,
and there went about our great work to dig up my gold.
But, Lord! what a tosse I was for some time in, that
they could not justly tell where it was; that I begun heartily to sweat,
and be angry, that they should not agree better upon the place, and at
last to fear that it was gone but by and by poking with a spit, we found
it, and then begun with a spudd to lift up the ground. But, good God!
to see how sillily they did it, not half a foot under ground, and in the
sight of the world from a hundred places, if any body by accident were
near hand, and within sight of a neighbour's window, and their hearing
also, being close by: only my father says that he saw them all gone to
church before he begun the work, when he laid the money, but that do not
excuse it to me. But I was out of my wits almost, and the more from that,
upon my lifting up the earth with the spudd, I did discern that I had
scattered the pieces of gold round about the ground among the grass and
loose earth; and taking up the iron head-pieces wherein they were put,
I perceive the earth was got among the gold, and wet, so that the bags
were all rotten, and all the notes, that I could not tell what in the
world to say to it, not knowing how to judge what was wanting, or what
had been lost by Gibson in his coming down: which, all put together, did
make me mad; and at last was forced to take up the head-pieces, dirt and
all, and as many of the scattered pieces as I could with the dirt discern
by the candlelight, and carry them up into my brother's chamber, and there
locke them up till I had eat a little supper: and then, all people going
to bed, W. Hewer and I did all alone, with several pails of water and
basins, at last wash the dirt off of the pieces, and parted the pieces
and the dirt, and then begun to tell [them]; and by a note which I had
of the value of the whole in my pocket, do find that there was short above
a hundred pieces, which did make me mad; and considering that the neighbour's
house was so near that we could not suppose we could speak one to another
in the garden at the place where the gold lay--especially my father being
deaf--but they must know what we had been doing on, I feared that they
might in the night come and gather some pieces and prevent us the next
morning; so W. Hewer and I out again about midnight, for it was now grown
so late, and there by candlelight did make shift to gather forty-five
pieces more. And so in, and to cleanse them: and by this time it was past
two in the morning; and so to bed, with my mind pretty quiet to think
that I have recovered so many. And then to bed, and I lay in the trundle-bed,
the girl being gone to bed to my wife, and there lay in some disquiet
all night, telling of the clock till it was daylight.
11th. And then rose and
called W. Hewer, and he and I, with pails and a sieve, did lock ourselves
into the garden, and there gather all the earth about the place into pails,
and then sift those pails in one of the summer-houses, just as they do
for dyamonds in other parts of the world; and there, to our great content,
did with much trouble by nine o'clock (and by the time we emptied several
pails and could not find one), we did make the last night's forty-five
up seventy-nine: so that we are come to about twenty or thirty of what
I think the true number should be; and perhaps within less; and of them
I may reasonably think that Mr. Gibson might lose some: so that I am pretty
well satisfied that my loss is not great, and do bless God that it is
so well,
[About the year 1842, in removing the foundation of
an old wall, adjoining a mansion at Brampton, always considered the quondam
residence of the Pepys family, an iron pot, full of silver coins, was
discovered, and taken to the Earl of Sandwich, the owner of the house,
in whose possession they still remain. The pot was so much corroded, that
a small piece of it only could be preserved. The coins were chiefly half-crowns
of Elizabeth and the two elder Stuarts, and all of a date anterior to
the Restoration. Although Pepys states that the treasure which he caused
to be buried was gold exclusively, it is very probable that, in the confusion,
a pot full of silver money was packed up with the rest; but, at all events,
the coincidence appeared too singular to pass over without notice.--B.]
and do leave my father to make a second examination of the dirt, which
he promises he will do, and, poor man, is mightily troubled for this accident,
but I declared myself very well satisfied, and so indeed I am; and my
mind at rest in it, being but an accident, which is unusual; and so gives
me some kind of content to remember how painful it is sometimes to keep
money, as well as to get it, and how doubtful I was how to keep it all
night, and how to secure it to London: and so got all my gold put up in
bags. And so having the last night wrote to my Lady Sandwich to lend me
John Bowles to go along with me my journey, not telling her the reason,
that it was only to secure my gold, we to breakfast, and then about ten
o'clock took coach, my wife and I, and Willet, and W. Hewer, and Murford
and Bowles (whom my Lady lent me), and my brother John on horseback; and
with these four I thought myself pretty safe. But, before we went out,
the Huntingdon musick come to me and played, and it was better than that
of Cambridge. Here I took leave of my father, and did give my sister 20s.
She cried at my going; but whether it was at her unwillingness for my
going, or any unkindness of my wife's, or no, I know not; but, God forgive
me! I take her to be so cunning and ill-natured, that I have no great
love for her; but only [she] is my sister, and must be provided for. My
gold I put into a basket, and set under one of the seats; and so my work
every quarter of an hour was to look to see whether all was well; and
I did ride in great fear all the day, but it was a pleasant day, and good
company, and I mightily contented. Mr. Shepley saw me beyond St. Neots,
and there parted, and we straight to Stevenage, through Bald Lanes, which
are already very bad; and at Stevenage we come well before night, and
all sat, and there with great care I got the gold up to the chamber, my
wife carrying one bag, and the girl another, and W. Hewer the rest in
the basket, and set it all under a bed in our chamber; and then sat down
to talk, and were very pleasant, satisfying myself, among other things,
from John Bowles, in some terms of hunting, and about deere, bucks, and
does. And so anon to supper, and very merry we were, and a good supper,
and after supper to bed. Brecocke alive still, and the best host I know
almost.
12th. Up, and eat our breakfast,
and set out about nine o'clock, and so to Barnett, where we staid and
baited, the weather very good all day and yesterday, and by five o'clock
got home, where I find all well; and did bring my gold, to my heart's
content, very safe home, having not this day carried it in a basket, but
in our hands: the girl took care of one, and my wife another bag, and
I the rest, I being afraid of the bottom of the coach, lest it should
break, and therefore was at more ease in my mind than I was yesterday.
At home we find that Sir W. Batten's burial was to-day carried from hence,
with a hundred or two of coaches, to Walthamstow, and there buried. Here
I hear by Mr. Pierce the surgeon; and then by Mr. Lewes, and also by Mr.
Hater, that the Parliament hath met on Thursday last, and adjourned to
Monday next. The King did make them a very kind speech, promising them
to leave all to them to do, and call to account what and whom they pleased;
and declared by my Lord Keeper how many, thirty-six, actes he had done
since he saw them; among others, disbanding the army, and putting all
Papists out of employment, and displacing persons that had managed their
business ill, that the Parliament is mightily pleased with the King's
speech, and voted giving him thanks for what he said and hath done; and,
among things, would by name thank him for displacing my Lord Chancellor,
for which a great many did speak in the House, but it was opposed by some,
and particularly Harry Coventry, who got that it should be put to a Committee
to consider what particulars to mention in their thanks to the King, saying
that it was too soon to give thanks for the displacing of a man, before
they knew or had examined what was the cause of his displacing. And so
it rested; but this do shew that they are and will be very high; and Mr.
Pierce do tell me that he fears, and do hear, that it hath been said among
them, that they will move for the calling my Lord Sandwich home, to bring
him to account; which do trouble me mightily; but I trust it will not
be so. Anon comes home Sir W. Pen from the burial, and he and I to walk
in the garden, where he did confirm the most of this news, and so to talk
of our particular concernments, and among the rest he says that Lady Batten
and her children-in-law are all broke in pieces, and that there is but
L800 found in the world, of money; and is in great doubt what we shall
do towards the doing ourselves right with them, about the prize-money.
This troubles me, but we will fall to work upon that next week close.
Then he tells me he did deliver my petition into the hands of Sir W. Coventry,
who did take it with great kindness and promised to present it to the
Duke of York, and that himself has since seen the Duke of York, but it
was in haste, and thinks the Duke of York did tell him that the thing
was done, but he is confident that it either is or will be done. This
do please me mightily. So after a little talk more I away home to supper
with John Bowles and brother and wife (who, I perceive, is already a little
jealous of my being fond of Willet, but I will avoid giving her any cause
to continue in that mind, as much as possible), and before that did go
with Sir W. Pen to my Lady Batten, whom I had not seen since she was a
widow, which she took unkindly, but I did excuse it; and the house being
full of company, and of several factions, she against the children, and
they against one another and her, I away, and home to supper, and after
supper to bed.
13th (Lord's day). Up,
and by water to White Hall, and thence walked to Sir W. Coventry's lodgings,
but he was gone out, so I to St. James's, and there to the Duke of York's
chamber: and there he was dressing; and many Lords and Parliament-men
come to kiss his hands, they being newly come to town. And there the Duke
of York did of himself call me to him, and tell me that he had spoke to
the King, and that the King had granted me the ship I asked for; and did,
moreover, say that he was mightily satisfied with my service, and that
he would be willing to do anything that was in his power for me: which
he said with mighty kindness; which I did return him thanks for, and departed
with mighty joy, more than I did expect. And so walked over the Park to
White Hall, and there met Sir H. Cholmly, who walked with me, and told
me most of the news I heard last night of the Parliament; and thinks they
will do all things very well, only they will be revenged of my Lord Chancellor;
and says, however, that he thinks there will be but two things proved
on him; and that one is, that he may have said to the King, and to others,
words to breed in the King an ill opinion of the Parliament--that they
were factious, and that it was better to dissolve them: and this, he thinks,
they will be able to prove; but what this will amount to, he knows not.
And next, that he hath taken money for several bargains that have been
made with the Crown; and did instance one that is already complained of:
but there are so many more involved in it, that, should they unravel things
of this sort, every body almost will be more or less concerned. But these
are the two great points which he thinks they will insist on, and prove
against him.
Thence I to the Chapel, and there heard the sermon and
a pretty good anthem, and so home by water to dinner, where Bowies and
brother, and a good dinner, and in the afternoon to make good my journal
to this day, and so by water again to White Hall, and thence only walked
to Mrs. Martin's, and there sat with her and her sister and Borroughs.
. . and there drank and talked and away by water home, and there walked
with Sir W. Pen, and told him what the Duke of York told me to-day about
the ship I begged; and he was knave enough, of his own accord, but, to
be sure, in order to his own advantage, to offer me to send for the master
of the vessel, "The Maybolt Galliott," and bid him to get her
furnished as for a long voyage, and I to take no notice of it, that she
might be the more worth to me: so that here he is a very knave to the
King, and I doubt not his being the same to me on occasion. So in a doors
and supped with my wife and brother, W. Hewer, and Willett, and so evened
with W. Hewer for my expenses upon the road this last journey, and do
think that the whole journey will cost me little less than L18 or L20,
one way or other; but I am well pleased with it, and so after supper to
bed.
14th. Up, and by water
to White Hall, and thence walked to St. James's, and there to Mr. Wren's;
and he told me that my business was done about my warrant on the Maybolt
Galliott; which I did see, and though it was not so full in the reciting
of my services as the other was in that of Sir W. Pen's, yet I was well
pleased with it, and do intend to fetch it away anon. Thence with Sir
Thomas Allen, in a little sorry coach which he hath set up of late, and
Sir Jeremy Smith, to White Hall, and there I took water and went to Westminster
Hall, and there hear that the House is this day again upon the business
of giving the King the thanks of the House for his speech, and, among
other things, for laying aside of my Lord Chancellor. Thence I to Mrs.
Martin's, where by appointment comes to me Mrs. Howlett, which I was afraid
was to have told me something of my freedom with her daughter, but it
was not so, but only to complain to me of her son-in-law, how he abuses
and makes a slave of her, and his mother is one that encourages him in
it, so that they are at this time upon very bad terms one with another,
and desires that I would take a time to advise him and tell him what it
becomes him to do, which office I am very glad of, for some ends of my
own also con sa fille, and there drank and parted, I mightily satisfied
with this business, and so home by water with Sir W. Warren, who happened
to be at Westminster, and there I pretty strange to him, and little discourse,
and there at the office Lord Bruncker, W. Pen, T. Hater and I did some
business, and so home to dinner, and thence I out to visit Sir G. Carteret
and ladies there; and from him do understand that the King himself (but
this he told me as a great secret) is satisfied that this thanks which
he expects from the House, for the laying aside of my Lord Chancellor,
is a thing irregular; but, since it is come into the House, he do think
it necessary to carry it on, and will have it, and hath made his mind
known to be so, to some of the House. But Sir G. Carteret do say he knows
nothing of what my Lord Bruncker told us to-day, that the King was angry
with the Duke of York yesterday, and advised him not to hinder what he
had a mind to have done, touching this business; which is news very bad,
if true. Here I visited my Lady Carteret, who hath been sick some time,
but now pretty well, but laid on her bed.
Thence to my Lord Crew, to see him after my coming
out of the country, and he seems satisfied with some steps they have made
in my absence towards my Lord Sandwich's relief for money: and so I have
no more to do, nor will trouble myself more about it till they send for
me. He tells me also that the King will have the thanks of the House go
on: and commends my Lord Keeper's speech for all but what he was forced
to say, about the reason of the King's sending away the House so soon
the last time, when they were met, but this he was forced to do. Thence
to Westminster Hall, and there walked with Mr. Scowen, who tells me that
it is at last carried in the House that the thanks shall be given to the
King--among other things, particularly for the removal of my Lord Chancellor;
but he tells me it is a strange act, and that which he thinks would never
have been, but that the King did insist upon it, that, since it come into
the House, it might not be let fall. After walking there awhile I took
coach and to the Duke of York's House, and there went in for nothing into
the pit, at the last act, to see Sir Martin Marrall, and met my wife,
who was there, and my brother, and W. Hewer and Willett, and carried them
home, still being pleased with the humour of the play, almost above all
that ever I saw. Home, and there do find that John Bowles is not yet come
thither. I suppose he is playing the good fellow in the town. So to the
office a while, and then home to supper and to bed.
15th. Up, and to the office,
where, Sir W. Pen being ill of the gout, we all of us met there in his
parlour and did the business of the office, our greatest business now
being to manage the pay of the ships in order and with speed to satisfy
the Commissioners of the Treasury. This morning my brother set out for
Brampton again, and is gone. At noon home to dinner, and thence my wife
and I and Willet to the Duke of York's house, where, after long stay,
the King and Duke of York come, and there saw "The Coffee-house,"
the most ridiculous, insipid play that ever I saw in my life, and glad
we were that Betterton had no part in it. But here, before the play begun,
my wife begun to complain to me of Willet's confidence in sitting cheek
by jowl by us, which was a poor thing; but I perceive she is already jealous
of my kindness to her, so that I begin to fear this girle is not likely
to stay long with us. The play done, we home by coach, it being moonlight,
and got well home, and I to my chamber to settle some papers, and so to
supper and to bed.
16th. Up, and at home most
of the morning with Sir H. Cholmly, about some accounts of his; and for
news he tells me that the Commons and Lords have concurred, and delivered
the King their thanks, among other things, for his removal of the Chancellor;
who took their thanks very well, and, among other things, promised them,
in these words, never, in any degree, to entertain the Chancellor any
employment again. And he tells me that it is very true, he hath it from
one that was by, that the King did, give the Duke of York a sound reprimand;
told him that he had lived with him with more kindness than ever any brother
King lived with a brother, and that he lived as much like a monarch as
himself, but advised him not to cross him in his designs about the Chancellor;
in which the Duke of York do very wisely acquiesce, and will be quiet
as the King bade him, but presently commands all his friends to be silent
in the business of the Chancellor, and they were so: but that the Chancellor
hath done all that is possible to provoke the King, and to bring himself
to lose his head by enraging of people. He gone, I to the office, busy
all the morning. At noon to Broad Street to Sir G. Carteret and Lord Bruncker,
and there dined with them, and thence after dinner with Bruncker to White
Hall, where the Duke of York is now newly come for this winter, and there
did our usual business, which is but little, and so I away to the Duke
of York's house, thinking as we appointed, to meet my wife there, but
she was not; and more, I was vexed to see Young (who is but a bad actor
at best) act Macbeth in the room of Betterton, who, poor man! is sick:
but, Lord! what a prejudice it wrought in me against the whole play, and
everybody else agreed in disliking this fellow. Thence home, and there
find my wife gone home; because of this fellow's acting of the part, she
went out of the house again. There busy at my chamber with Mr. Yeabsly,
and then with Mr. Lewes, about public business late, and so to supper
and to bed.
17th. Up, and being sent
for by my Lady Batten, I to her, and there she found fault with my not
seeing her since her being a widow, which I excused as well as I could,
though it is a fault, but it is my nature not to be forward in visits.
But here she told me her condition, which is good enough, being sole executrix,
to the disappointment of all her husband's children, and prayed my friendship
about the accounts of the prizes, which I promised her. And here do see
what creatures widows are in weeping for their husbands, and then presently
leaving off; but I cannot wonder at it, the cares of the world taking
place of all other passions. Thence to the office, where all the morning
busy, and at noon home to dinner, where Mr. John Andrews and his wife
come and dined with me, and pretty merry we were, only I out of humour
the greatest part of the dinner, by reason that my people had forgot to
get wine ready, I having none in my house, which I cannot say now these
almost three years, I think, without having two or three sorts, by which
we were fain to stay a great while, while some could be fetched. When
it come I begun to be merry, and merry we were, but it was an odd, strange
thing to observe of Mr. Andrews what a fancy he hath to raw meat, that
he eats it with no pleasure unless the blood run about his chops, which
it did now by a leg of mutton that was not above half boiled; but, it
seems, at home all his meat is dressed so, and beef and all, and [he]
eats it so at nights also. Here most of our discourse is of the business
of the Parliament, who run on mighty furiously, having yesterday been
almost all the morning complaining against some high proceedings of my
Lord Chief Justice Keeling, that the gentlemen of the country did complain
against him in the House, and run very high. It is the man that did fall
out with my cozen Roger Pepys, once, at the Assizes there, and would have
laid him by the heels; but, it seems, a very able lawyer. After dinner
I to the office, where we all met with intent to proceed to the publique
sale of several prize ships, but upon discourse my Lord Anglesey did discover
(which troubled me that he that is a stranger almost should do more than
we ourselves could) that the appraisements made by our officers were not
above half of what he had been offered for one of them, and did make it
good by bringing a gentleman to give us L700 for the Wildboare, which
they valued but at L276, which made us all startle and stop the sale,
and I did propose to acquaint the Duke of York with it, and accordingly
we did agree on it, and I wrote a severe letter about it, and we are to
attend him with it to-morrow about it. This afternoon my Lord Anglesey
tells us that the House of Commons have this morning run into the inquiry
in many things; as, the sale of Dunkirke, the dividing of the fleete the
last year, the business of the prizes with my Lord Sandwich, and many
other things; so that now they begin to fall close upon it, and God knows
what will be the end of it, but a Committee they have chosen to inquire
into the miscarriages of the war. Having done, and being a little tired,
Sir W. Pen and I in his coach out to Mile End Green, and there drank a
cup of Byde's ale, and so talking about the proceedings of Parliament,
and how little a thing the King is become to be forced to suffer it, though
I declare my being satisfied that things should be enquired into, we back
again home, and I to my office to my letters, and so home to supper and
to bed.
18th. Up, and by coach
with Sir W. Pen to White Hall, and there attended the Duke of York; but
first we find him to spend above an hour in private in his closet with
Sir W. Coventry; which I was glad to see, that there is so much confidence
between them. By and by we were called in and did our usual business,
and complained of the business yesterday discovered of our officers abusing
the King in the appraisement of the prizes. Here it was worth observing
that the Duke of York, considering what third rate ships to keep abroad,
the Rupert was thought on, but then it was said that Captain Hubbert was
Commander of her and that the King had a mind for Spragg to command the
ship, which would not be well to be by turning out Hubbert, who is a good
man, but one the Duke of York said he did not know whether he did so well
conforme, as at this lime to please the people and Parliament. Sir W.
Coventry answered, and the Duke of York merrily agreed to it, that it
was very hard to know what it was that the Parliament would call conformity
at this time, and so it stopped, which I only observe to see how the Parliament's
present temper do amuse them all. Thence to several places to buy a hat,
and books, and neckcloths, and several errands I did before I got home,
and, among others, bought me two new pair of spectacles of Turlington,
who, it seems, is famous for them; and his daughter, he being out of the
way, do advise me two very young sights, as that that will help me most,
and promises me great ease from them, and I will try them. At the Exchange
I met Creed, and took him home with me, and dined, and among other things
he tells me that Sir Robert Brookes is the man that did mention the business
in Parliament yesterday about my Lord Sandwich, but that it was seconded
by nobody, but the matter will fall before the Committee for miscarriages.
Thence, after dinner, my wife and he, and I, and Willet to the King's
house, and saw "Brenoralt," which is a good tragedy, that I
like well, and parted after the play, and so home, and there a little
at my office, and so to my chamber, and spent this night late in telling
over all my gold, and putting it into proper bags and my iron chest, being
glad with my heart to see so much of it here again, but cannot yet tell
certainly how much I have lost by Gibson in his journey, and my father's
burying of it in the dirt. At this late, but did it to my mind, and so
to supper and to bed.
19th. At the office all
the morning, where very busy, and at noon home to a short dinner, being
full of my desire of seeing my Lord Orrery's new play this afternoon at
the King's house, "The Black Prince," the first time it is acted;
where, though we come by two o'clock, yet there was no room in the pit,
but we were forced to go into one of the upper boxes, at 4s. a piece,
which is the first time I ever sat in a box in my life. And in the same
box come, by and by, behind me, my Lord Barkeley [of Stratton] and his
lady; but I did not turn my face to them to be known, so that I was excused
from giving them my seat; and this pleasure I had, that from this place
the scenes do appear very fine indeed, and much better than in the pit.
The house infinite full, and the King and Duke of York was there. By and
by the play begun, and in it nothing particular but a very fine dance
for variety of figures, but a little too long. But, as to the contrivance,
and all that was witty (which, indeed, was much, and very witty), was
almost the same that had been in his two former plays of "Henry the
5th" and "Mustapha," and the same points and turns of wit
in both, and in this very same play often repeated, but in excellent language,
and were so excellent that the whole house was mightily pleased with it
all along till towards the end he comes to discover the chief of the plot
of the play by the reading of along letter, which was so long and some
things (the people being set already to think too long) so unnecessary
that they frequently begun to laugh, and to hiss twenty times, that, had
it not been for the King's being there, they had certainly hissed it off
the stage. But I must confess that, as my Lord Barkeley says behind me,
the having of that long letter was a thing so absurd, that he could not
imagine how a man of his parts could possibly fall into it; or, if he
did, if he had but let any friend read it, the friend would have told
him of it; and, I must confess, it is one of the most remarkable instances
that ever I did or expect to meet with in my life of a wise man's not
being wise at all times, and in all things, for nothing could be more
ridiculous than this, though the letter of itself at another time would
be thought an excellent letter, and indeed an excellent Romance, but at
the end of the play, when every body was weary of sitting, and were already
possessed with the effect of the whole letter; to trouble them with a
letter a quarter of an hour long, was a most absurd thing. After the play
done, and nothing pleasing them from the time of the letter to the end
of the play, people being put into a bad humour of disliking (which is
another thing worth the noting), I home by coach, and could not forbear
laughing almost all the way home, and all the evening to my going to bed,
at the ridiculousness of the letter, and the more because my wife was
angry with me, and the world, for laughing, because the King was there,
though she cannot defend the length of the letter. So after having done
business at the office, I home to supper and to bed.
20th (Lord's day). Up,
and put on my new tunique of velvett; which is very plain, but good. This
morning is brought to me an order for the presenting the Committee of
Parliament to-morrow with a list of the commanders and ships' names of
all the fleetes set out since the war, and particularly of those ships
which were divided from the fleete with Prince Rupert;
[This question of the division of the fleet in May,
1666, was one over which endless controversy as to responsibility was
raised. When Prince Rupert, with twenty ships, was detached to prevent
the junction of the French squadron with the Dutch, the Duke of Albemarle
was left with fifty-four ships against eighty belonging to the Dutch.
Albemarle's tactics are praised by Captain Mahan.]
which gives me occasion to see that they are busy after that business,
and I am glad of it. So I alone to church, and then home, and there Mr.
Deane comes and dines with me by invitation, and both at and after dinner
he and I spent all the day till it was dark in discourse of business of
the Navy and the ground of the many miscarriages, wherein he do inform
me in many more than I knew, and I had desired him to put them in writing,
and many indeed they are and good ones; and also we discoursed of the
business of shipping, and he hath promised me a draught of the ship he
is now building, wherein I am mightily pleased. This afternoon comes to
me Captain O'Bryan, about a ship that the King hath given him; and he
and I to talk of the Parliament; and he tells me that the business of
the Duke of York's slackening sail in the first fight, at the beginning
of the war, is brought into question, and Sir W. Pen and Captain Cox are
to appear to-morrow about it; and it is thought will at last be laid upon
Mr. Bruncker's giving orders from the Duke of York (which the Duke of
York do not own) to Captain Cox to do it; but it seems they do resent
this very highly, and are mad in going through all business, where they
can lay any fault. I am glad to hear, that in the world I am as kindly
spoke of as any body; for, for aught I see, there is bloody work like
to be, Sir W. Coventry having been forced to produce a letter in Parliament
wherein the Duke of Albemarle did from Sheernesse write in what good posture
all things were at Chatham, and that the chain was so well placed that
he feared no attempt of the enemy: so that, among other things, I see
every body is upon his own defence, and spares not to blame another to
defend himself, and the same course I shall take. But God knows where
it will end! He gone, and Deane, I to my chamber for a while, and then
comes Pelling the apothecary to see us, and sat and supped with me (my
wife being gone to bed sick of the cholique), and then I to bed, after
supper. Pelting tells me that my Lady Duchesse Albemarle was at Mrs. Turner's
this afternoon, she being ill, and did there publickly talk of business,
and of our Office; and that she believed that I was safe, and had done
well; and so, I thank God! I hear every body speaks of me; and indeed,
I think, without vanity, I may expect to be profited rather than injured
by this inquiry, which the Parliament makes into business.
21st. Up, and betimes got
a coach at the Exchange, and thence to St. James's, where I had forgot
that the Duke of York and family were gone to White Hall, and thence to
Westminster Hall and there walked a little, finding the Parliament likely
to be busy all this morning about the business of Mr. Bruncker for advising
Cox and Harman to shorten sail when they were in pursuit of the Dutch
after the first great victory. I went away to Mr. Creed's chamber, there
to meet Sir H. Cholmly, about business of Mr. Yeabsly, where I was delivered
of a great fear that they would question some of the orders for payment
of money which I had got them signed at the time of the plague, when I
was here alone, but all did pass. Thence to Westminster again, and up
to the lobby, where many commanders of the fleete were, and Captain Cox,
and Mr. Pierce, the Surgeon; the last of whom hath been in the House,
and declared that he heard Bruncker advise; and give arguments to, Cox,
for the safety of the Duke of York's person, to shorten sail, that they
might not be in the middle of the enemy in the morning alone; and Cox
denying to observe his advice, having received the Duke of York's commands
over night to keep within cannon-shot (as they then were) of the enemy,
Bruncker did go to Harman, and used the same arguments, and told him that
he was sure it would be well pleasing to the King that care should be
taken of not endangering the Duke of York; and, after much persuasion,
Harman was heard to say, "Why, if it must be, then lower the topsail."
And so did shorten sail, to the loss, as the Parliament will have it,
of the greatest victory that ever was, and which would have saved all
the expence of blood, and money, and honour, that followed; and this they
do resent, so as to put it to the question, whether Bruncker should not
be carried to the Tower: who do confess that, out of kindness to the Duke
of York's safety, he did advise that they should do so, but did not use
the Duke of York's name therein; and so it was only his error in advising
it, but the greatest theirs in taking it, contrary to order. At last,
it ended that it should be suspended till Harman comes home; and then
the Parliament-men do all tell me that it will fall heavy, and, they think,
be fatal to Bruncker or him. Sir W. Pen tells me he was gone to bed, having
been all day labouring, and then not able to stand, of the goute, and
did give order for the keeping the sails standing, as they then were,
all night. But, which I wonder at, he tells me that he did not know the
next day that they had shortened sail, nor ever did enquire into it till
about ten days ago, that this begun to be mentioned; and, indeed, it is
charged privately as a fault on the Duke of York, that he did not presently
examine the reason of the breach of his orders, and punish it. But Cox
tells me that he did finally refuse it; and what prevailed with Harman
he knows not, and do think that we might have done considerable service
on the enemy the next day, if this had not been done.
Thus this business ended to-day, having kept them till
almost two o'clock; and then I by coach with Sir W. Pen as far as St.
Clement's, talking of this matter, and there set down; and I walked to
Sir G. Carteret's, and there dined with him and several Parliament-men,
who, I perceive, do all look upon it as a thing certain that the Parliament
will enquire into every thing, and will be very severe where they can
find any fault. Sir W. Coventry, I hear, did this day make a speech, in
apology for his reading the letter of the Duke of Albemarle, concerning
the good condition which Chatham was in before the enemy come thither:
declaring his simple intention therein, without prejudice to my Lord.
And I am told that he was also with the Duke of Albemarle yesterday to
excuse it; but this day I do hear, by some of Sir W. Coventry's friends,
that they think he hath done himself much injury by making this man, and
his interest, so much his enemy. After dinner, I away to Westminster,
and up to the Parliament-house, and there did wait with great patience,
till seven at night, to be called in to the Committee, who sat all this
afternoon, examining the business of Chatham; and at last was called in,
and told, that the least they expected from us Mr. Wren had promised them,
and only bade me to bring all my fellow-officers thitherto attend them
tomorrow, afternoon. Sir Robert Brookes in the chair: methinks a sorry
fellow to be there, because a young man; and yet he seems to speak very
well. I gone thence, my cozen Pepys comes out to me, and walks in the
Hall with me, and bids me prepare to answer to every thing; for they do
seem to lodge the business of Chatham upon the Commissioners of the Navy,
and they are resolved to lay the fault heavy somewhere, and to punish
it: and prays me to prepare to save myself, and gives me hints what to
prepare against; which I am obliged to him for, and do begin to mistrust
lest some unhappy slip or other after all my diligence and pains may not
be found (which I can [not] foresee) that may prove as fatal to a man
as the constant course of negligence and unfaithfulness of other men.
Here we parted, and I to White Hall to Mr. Wren's chamber,
thereto advise with him about the list of ships and commanders which he
is to present to the Parliament, and took coach (little Michell being
with me, whom I took with me from Westminster Hall), and setting him down
in Gracious street home myself, where I find my wife and the two Mercers
and Willett and W. Batelier have been dancing, but without a fidler. I
had a little pleasure in talking with these, but my head and heart full
of thoughts between hope and fear and doubts what will become of us and
me particularly against a furious Parliament. Then broke up and to bed,
and there slept pretty well till about four o'clock, and from that time
could not, but my thoughts running on speeches to the Parliament to excuse
myself from the blame which by other men's negligence will 'light, it
may be, upon the office. This day I did get a list of the fourteen particular
miscarriages which are already before the Committee to be examined; wherein,
besides two or three that will concern this Office much, there are those
of the prizes, and that of Bergen, and not following the Dutch ships,
against my Lord Sandwich; that, I fear, will ruine him, unless he hath
very good luck, or they may be in better temper before he can come to
be charged: but my heart is full of fear for him and his family. I hear
that they do prosecute the business against my Lord Chief Justice Keeling
with great severity.
22nd. Slept but ill all
the last part of the night, for fear of this day's success in Parliament:
therefore up, and all of us all the morning close, till almost two o'clock,
collecting all we had to say and had done from the beginning, touching
the safety of the River Medway and Chatham. And, having done this, and
put it into order, we away, I not having time to eat my dinner; and so
all in my Lord Bruncker's coach, that is to say, Bruncker, W. Pen, T.
Harvy, and myself, talking of the other great matter with which they charge
us, that is, of discharging men by ticket, in order to our defence in
case that should be asked. We come to the Parliament-door, and there,
after a little waiting till the Committee was sat, we were, the House
being very full, called in: Sir W. Pen went in and sat as a Member; and
my Lord Bruncker would not at first go in, expecting to have a chair set
for him, and his brother had bid him not go in, till he was called for;
but, after a few words, I had occasion to mention him, and so he was called
in, but without any more chair or respect paid him than myself: and so
Bruncker, and T. Harvy, and I, were there to answer: and I had a chair
brought me to lean my books upon: and so did give them such an account,
in a series of the whole business that had passed the Office touching
the matter, and so answered all questions given me about it, that I did
not perceive but they were fully satisfied with me and the business as
to our Office: and then Commissioner Pett (who was by at all my discourse,
and this held till within an hour after candlelight, for I had candles
brought in to read my papers by) was to answer for himself, we having
lodged all matters with him for execution. But, Lord! what a tumultuous
thing this Committee is, for all the reputation they have of a great council,
is a strange consideration; there being as impertinent questions, and
as disorderly proposed, as any man could make. But Commissioner Pett,
of all men living, did make the weakest defence for himself: nothing to
the purpose, nor to satisfaction, nor certain; but sometimes one thing
and sometimes another, sometimes for himself and sometimes against him;
and his greatest failure was, that I observed, from his [not] considering
whether the question propounded was his part to answer or no, and the
thing to be done was his work to do: the want of which distinction will
overthrow him; for he concerns himself in giving an account of the disposal
of the boats, which he had no reason at all to do, or take any blame upon
him for them. He charged the not carrying up of "The Charles"
upon the Tuesday, to the Duke of Albemarle; but I see the House is mighty
favourable to the Duke of Albemarle, and would give little weight to it.
And something of want of armes he spoke, which Sir J. Duncomb answered
with great imperiousness and earnestness; but, for all that, I do see
the House is resolved to be better satisfied in the business of the unreadiness
of Sherenesse, and want of armes and ammunition there and every where:
and all their officers were here to-day attending, but only one called
in, about armes for boats, to answer Commissioner Pett. None of my brethren
said anything but me there, but only two or three silly words my Lord
Bruncker gave, in answer to one question about the number of men there
were in the King's Yard at the time. At last, the House dismissed us,
and shortly after did adjourne the debate till Friday next: and my cozen
Pepys did come out and joy me in my acquitting myself so well, and so
did several others, and my fellow-officers all very brisk to see themselves
so well acquitted; which makes me a little proud, but yet not secure but
we may yet meet with a back-blow which we see not. So, with our hearts
very light, Sir W. Pen and I in his coach home, it being now near eight
o'clock, and so to the office, and did a little business by the post,
and so home, hungry, and eat a good supper, and so, with my mind well
at ease, to bed. My wife not very well of those.
23rd. Up, and Sir W. Pen
and I in his coach to White Hall, there to attend the Duke of York; but
come a little too late, and so missed it: only spoke with him, and heard
him correct my Lord Barkeley, who fell foul on Sir Edward Spragg, who,
it seems, said yesterday to the House, that if the Officers of the Ordnance
had done as much work at Shereness in ten weeks as "The Prince"
did in ten days, he could have defended the place against the Dutch: but
the Duke of York told him that every body must have liberty, at this time,
to make their own defence, though it be to the charging of the fault upon
any other, so it be true; so I perceive the whole world is at work in
blaming one another. Thence Sir W. Pen and I back into London; and there
saw the King, with his kettle-drums and trumpets, going to the Exchange,
to lay the first stone of the first pillar of the new building of the
Exchange; which, the gates being shut, I could not get in to see: but,
with Sir W. Pen, to Captain Cocke's to drink a dram of brandy, and so
he to the Treasury office about Sir G. Carteret's accounts, and I took
coach and back again toward Westminster; but in my way stopped at the
Exchange, and got in, the King being newly gone; and there find the bottom
of the first pillar laid. And here was a shed set up, and hung with tapestry,
and a canopy of state, and some good victuals and wine, for the King,
who, it seems, did it; and so a great many people, as Tom Killigrew, and
others of the Court there, and there I did eat a mouthful and drink a
little, and do find Mr. Gawden in his gowne as Sheriffe, and understand
that the King hath this morning knighted him upon the place, which I am
mightily pleased with; and I think the other Sheriffe, who is Davis, the
little fellow, my schoolfellow,--the bookseller, who was one of Audley's'
Executors, and now become Sheriffe; which is a strange turn, methinks.
Here mighty merry (there being a good deal of good company) for a quarter
of an hour, and so I away and to Westminster Hall, where I come just as
the House rose; and there, in the Hall, met with Sir W. Coventry, who
is in pain to defend himself in the business of tickets, it being said
that the paying of the ships at Chatham by ticket was by his direction,
and he hath wrote to me to find his letters, and shew them him, but I
find none; but did there argue the case with him, and I think no great
blame can be laid on us for that matter, only I see he is fearfull. And
he tells me his mistake in the House the other day, which occasions him
much trouble, in shewing of the House the Duke of Albemarle's letter about
the good condition of Chatham, which he is sorry for, and, owns as a mistake,
the thing not being necessary to have been done; and confesses that nobody
can escape from such error, some times or other. He says the House was
well satisfied with my Report yesterday; and so several others told me
in the Hall that my Report was very good and satisfactory, and that I
have got advantage by it in the House: I pray God it may prove so! And
here, after the Hall pretty empty, I did walk a few turns with Commissioner
Pett, and did give the poor weak man some advice for his advantage how
to better his pleading for himself, which I think he will if he can remember
and practise, for I would not have the man suffer what he do not deserve,
there being enough of what he do deserve to lie upon him.
Thence to Mrs. Martin's, and there staid till two o'clock,
and drank and talked, and did give her L3 to buy my goddaughter her first
new gowne . . . . and so away homeward, and in my way met Sir W. Pen in
Cheapside, and went into his coach, and back again and to the King's playhouse,
and there saw "The Black Prince" again: which is now mightily
bettered by that long letter being printed, and so delivered to every
body at their going in, and some short reference made to it in heart in
the play, which do mighty well; but, when all is done, I think it the
worst play of my Lord Orrery's. But here, to my great satisfaction, I
did see my Lord Hinchingbroke and his mistress, with her father and mother;
and I am mightily pleased with the young lady, being handsome enough--and,
indeed, to my great liking, as I would have her. I could not but look
upon them all the play; being exceeding pleased with my good hap to see
them, God bring them together! and they are now already mighty kind to
one another, and he is as it were one of their family. The play done I
home, and to the office a while, and then home to supper, very hungry,
and then to my chamber, to read the true story, in Speed, of the Black
Prince, and so to bed. This day, it was moved in the House that a day
might be appointed to bring in an, impeachment against the Chancellor,
but it was decried as being irregular; but that, if there was ground for
complaint, it might be brought to the Committee for miscarriages, and,
if they thought good, to present it to the House; and so it was carried.
They did also vote this day thanks to be given to the Prince and Duke
of Albemarle, for their care and conduct in the last year's war, which
is a strange act; but, I know not how, the blockhead Albemarle hath strange
luck to be loved, though he be, and every man must know it, the heaviest
man in the world, but stout and honest to his country. This evening late,
Mr. Moore come to me to prepare matters for my Lord Sandwich's defence;
wherein I can little assist, but will do all I can; and am in great fear
of nothing but the damned business of the prizes, but I fear my Lord will
receive a cursed deal of trouble by it.
24th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning very busy, and at noon took Mr. Hater home with
me to dinner, and instantly back again to write what letters I had to
write, that I might go abroad with my wife, who was not well, only to
jumble her, and so to the Duke of York's playhouse; but there Betterton
not being yet well, we would not stay, though since I hear that Smith
do act his part in "The Villaine," which was then acted, as
well or better than he, which I do not believe; but to Charing Cross,
there to see Polichinelli. But, it being begun, we in to see a Frenchman,
at the house, where my wife's father last lodged, one Monsieur Prin, play
on the trump-marine,
[The trumpet marine is a stringed instrument having
a triangular- shaped body or chest and a long neck, a single string raised
on a bridge and running along the body and neck. It was played with a
bow.]
which he do beyond belief; and, the truth is, it do so far outdo a trumpet
as nothing more, and he do play anything very true, and it is most admirable
and at first was a mystery to me that I should hear a whole concert of
chords together at the end of a pause, but he showed me that it was only
when the last notes were 5ths or 3rds, one to another, and then their
sounds like an Echo did last so as they seemed to sound all together.
The instrument is open at the end, I discovered; but he would not let
me look into it, but I was mightily pleased with it, and he did take great
pains to shew me all he could do on it, which was very much, and would
make an excellent concert, two or three of them, better than trumpets
can ever do, because of their want of compass. Here we also saw again
the two fat children come out of Ireland, and a brother and sister of
theirs now come, which are of little ordinary growth, like other people.
But, Lord! how strange it is to observe the difference between the same
children, come out of the same little woman's belly! Thence to Mile-End
Greene, and there drank, and so home bringing home night with us, and
so to the office a little, and then to bed.
25th. Up, and all the morning
close till two o'clock, till I had not time to eat my dinner, to make
our answer ready for the Parliament this afternoon, to shew how Commissioner
Pett was singly concerned in the executing of all orders from Chatham,
and that we did properly lodge all orders with him. Thence with Sir W.
Pen to the Parliament Committee, and there we all met, and did shew, my
Lord Bruncker and I, our commissions under the Great Seal in behalf of
all the rest, to shew them our duties, and there I had no more matters
asked me, but were bid to withdraw, and did there wait, I all the afternoon
till eight at, night, while they were examining several about the business
of Chatham again, and particularly my Lord Bruncker did meet with two
or three blurs that he did not think of. One from Spragg, who says that
"The Unity" was ordered up contrary to his order, by my Lord
Bruncker and Commissioner Pett. Another by Crispin, the waterman, who
said he was upon "The Charles;" and spoke to Lord Bruncker coming
by in his boat, to know whether they should carry up "The Charles,"
they being a great many naked men without armes, and he told them she
was well as she was. Both these have little in them indeed, but yet both
did stick close against him; and he is the weakest man in the world to
make his defence, and so is like to have much fault laid on him therefrom.
Spragg was in with them all the afternoon, and hath much fault laid on
him for a man that minded his pleasure, and little else of his whole charge.
I walked in the lobby, and there do hear from Mr. Chichly that they were
(the Commissioners of the Ordnance) shrewdly put to it yesterday, being
examined with all severity and were hardly used by them, much otherwise
than we, and did go away with mighty blame; and I am told by every body
that it is likely to stick mighty hard upon them: at which every body
is glad, because of Duncomb's pride, and their expecting to have the thanks
of the House whereas they have deserved, as the Parliament apprehends,
as bad as bad can be. Here is great talk of an impeachment brought in
against my Lord Mordaunt, and that another will be brought in against
my Lord Chancellor in a few days. Here I understand for certain that they
have ordered that my Lord Arlington's letters, and Secretary Morrice's
letters of intelligence, be consulted, about the business of the Dutch
fleete's coming abroad, which is a very high point, but this they have
done, but in what particular manner I cannot justly say, whether it was
not with the King's leave first asked. Here late, as I have said, and
at last they broke up, and we had our commissions again, and I do hear
how Birch is the high man that do examine and trouble every body with
his questions, and they say that he do labour all he can to clear Pett,
but it seems a witness has come in tonight, C. Millett, who do declare
that he did deliver a message from the Duke of Albemarle time enough for
him to carry up "The Charles," and he neglected it, which will
stick very hard, it seems, on him. So Sir W. Pen and I in his coach home,
and there to supper, a good supper, and so weary, and my eyes spent, to
bed.
26th. Up, and we met all
this morning at Sir W. Pen's roome, the office being fowle with the altering
of our garden door. There very busy, and at noon home, where Mrs. Pierce
and her daughter's husband and Mr. Corbet dined with me. I had a good
dinner for them, and mighty merry. Pierce and I very glad at the fate
of the officers of Ordnance, that they are like to have so much blame
on them. Here Mrs. Pierce tells me that the two Marshalls at the King's
house are Stephen Marshall's, the great Presbyterian's daughters: and
that Nelly and Beck Marshall, falling out the other day, the latter called
the other my Lord Buckhurst's whore. Nell answered then, "I was but
one man's whore, though I was brought up in a bawdy-house to fill strong
waters to the guests; and you are a whore to three or four, though a Presbyter's
praying daughter!" which was very pretty. Mrs. Pierce is still very
pretty, but paints red on her face, which makes me hate her, that I thank
God I take no pleasure in her at all more. After much mirth and good company
at dinner, I to the office and left them, and Pendleton also, who come
in to see my wife and talk of dancing, and there I at the office all the
afternoon very busy, and did much business, with my great content to see
it go off of hand, and so home, my eyes spent, to supper and to bed.
27th (Lord's day). Up,
and to my office, there, with W. Hewer, to dictate a long letter to the
Duke of York, about the bad state of the office, it being a work I do
think fit for the office to do, though it be to no purpose but for their
vindication in these bad times; for I do now learn many things tending
to our safety which I did not wholly forget before, but do find the fruits
of, and would I had practised them more, as, among other things, to be
sure to let our answers to orders bear date presently after their date,
that we may be found quick in our execution. This did us great good the
other day before the Parliament. All the morning at this, at noon home
to dinner, with my own family alone. After dinner, I down to Deptford,
the first time that I went to look upon "The Maybolt," which
the King hath given me, and there she is; and I did meet with Mr. Uthwayte,
who do tell me that there are new sails ordered to be delivered her, and
a cable, which I did not speak of at all to him. So, thereupon, I told
him I would not be my own hindrance so much as to take her into my custody
before she had them, which was all I said to him, but desired him to take
a strict inventory of her, that I might not be cheated by the master nor
the company, when they come to understand that the vessel is gone away,
which he hath promised me, and so away back again home, reading all the
way the book of the collection of oaths in the several offices of this
nation, which is worth a man's reading, and so away home, and there my
boy and I to sing, and at it all the evening, and to supper, and so to
bed. This evening come Sir J. Minnes to me, to let me know that a Parliament-man
hath been with him, to tell him that the Parliament intend to examine
him particularly about Sir W. Coventry's selling of places, and about
my Lord Bruncker's discharging the ships at Chatham by ticket: for the
former of which I am more particularly sorry that that business of [Sir]
W. Coventry should come up again; though this old man tells me, and, I
believe, that he can say nothing to it.
28th. Up, and by water
to White Hall (calling at Michell's and drank a dram of strong water,
but it being early I did not see his wife), and thence walked to Sir W.
Coventry's lodging, but he was gone out, and so going towards St. James's
I find him at his house which is fitting for him; and there I to him,
and was with him above an hour alone, discoursing of the matters of the
nation, and our Office, and himself. He owns that he is, at this day,
the chief person aymed at by the Parliament--that is, by the friends of
my Lord Chancellor, and also by the Duke of Albemarle, by reason of his
unhappy shewing of the Duke of Albemarle's letter, the other day, in the
House; but that he thinks that he is not liable to any hurt they can fasten
on him for anything, he is so well armed to justify himself in every thing,
unless in the old business of selling places, when he says every body
did; and he will now not be forward to tell his own story, as he hath
been; but tells me he is grown wiser, and will put them to prove any thing,
and he will defend himself: besides that, he will dispute the statute,
thinking that it will not be found to reach him. We did talk many things,
which, as they come into my mind now, I shall set down without order:
that he is weary of public employment; and neither ever designed, nor
will ever, if his commission were brought to him wrapt in gold, would
he accept of any single place in the State, as particularly Secretary
of State; which, he says, the world discourses Morrice is willing to resign,
and he thinks the King might have thought of him, but he would not, by
any means, now take it, if given him, nor anything, but in commission
with others, who may bear part of the blame; for now he observes well,
that whoever did do anything singly are now in danger, however honest
and painful they were, saying that he himself was the only man, he thinks,
at the council- board that spoke his mind clearly, as he thought, to the
good of the King; and the rest, who sat silent, have nothing said to them,
nor are taken notice of. That the first time the King did take him so
closely into his confidence and ministry of affairs was upon the business
of Chatham, when all the disturbances were there, and in the kingdom;
and then, while everybody was fancying for himself, the King did find
him to persuade him to call for the Parliament, declaring that it was
against his own proper interest, forasmuch as [it was] likely they would
find faults with him, as well as with others, but that he would prefer
the service of the King before his own: and, thereupon, the King did take
him into his special notice, and, from that time to this, hath received
him so; and that then he did see the folly and mistakes of the Chancellor
in the management of things, and saw that matters were never likely to
be done well in that sort of conduct, and did persuade the King to think
fit of the taking away the seals from the Chancellor, which, when it was
done, he told me that he himself, in his own particular, was sorry for
it; for, while he stood, there was he and my Lord Arlington to stand between
him and harm: whereas now there is only my Lord Arlington, and he is now
down, so that all their fury is placed upon him but that he did tell the
King, when he first moved it, that, if he thought the laying of him, W.
Coventry, aside, would at all facilitate the removing of the Chancellor,
he would most willingly submit to it, whereupon the King did command him
to try the Duke of York about it, and persuade him to it, which he did,
by the King's command, undertake, and compass, and the Duke of York did
own his consent to the King, but afterwards was brought to be of another
mind for the Chancellor, and now is displeased with him, and [so is] the
Duchesse, so that she will not see him; but he tells me the Duke of York
seems pretty kind, and hath said that he do believe that W. Coventry did
mean well, and do it only out of judgment. He tells me that he never was
an intriguer in his life, nor will be, nor of any combination of persons
to set up this, or fling down that, nor hath, in his own business, this
Parliament, spoke to three members to say any thing for him, but will
stand upon his own defence, and will stay by it, and thinks that he is
armed against all they can [say], but the old business of selling places,
and in that thinks they cannot hurt him. However, I do find him mighty
willing to have his name used as little as he can, and he was glad when
I did deliver him up a letter of his to me, which did give countenance
to the discharging of men by ticket at Chatham, which is now coming in
question; and wherein, I confess, I am sorry to find him so tender of
appearing, it being a thing not only good and fit, all that was done in
it, but promoted and advised by him. But he thinks the House is set upon
wresting anything to his prejudice that they can pick up. He tells me
he did never, as a great many have, call the Chancellor rogue and knave,
and I know not what; but all that he hath said, and will stand by, is,
that his counsels were not good, nor the manner of his managing of things.
I suppose he means suffering the King to run in debt; for by and by the
King walking in the parke, with a great crowd of his idle people about
him, I took occasion to say that it was a sorry thing to be a poor King,
and to have others to come to correct the faults of his own servants,
and that this was it that brought us all into this condition. He answered
that he would never be a poor King, and then the other would mend of itself.
"No," says he, "I would eat bread and drink water first,
and this day discharge all the idle company about me, and walk only with
two footmen; and this I have told the King, and this must do it at last."
I asked him how long the King would suffer this. He told me the King must
suffer it yet longer, that he would not advise the King to do otherwise;
for it would break out again worse, if he should break them up before
the core be come up. After this, we fell to other talk, of my waiting
upon him hereafter, it may be, to read a chapter in Seneca, in this new
house, which he hath bought, and is making very fine, when we may be out
of employment, which he seems to wish more than to fear, and I do believe
him heartily. Thence home, and met news from Mr. Townsend of the Wardrobe
that old Young, the yeoman taylor, whose place my Lord Sandwich promised
my father, is dead. Upon which, resolving presently that my father shall
not be troubled with it, but I hope I shall be able to enable him to end
his days where he is, in quiet, I went forth thinking to tell Mrs. Ferrers
(Captain Ferrers's wife), who do expect it after my father, that she may
look after it, but upon second thoughts forbore it, and so back again
home, calling at the New Exchange, and there buying "The Indian Emperour,"
newly printed, and so home to dinner, where I had Mr. Clerke, the sollicitor,
and one of the Auditor's clerks to discourse about the form of making
up my accounts for the Exchequer, which did give me good satisfaction,
and so after dinner, my wife, and Mercer, who grows fat, and Willett,
and I, to the King's house, and there saw "The Committee," a
play I like well, and so at night home and to the office, and so to my
chamber about my accounts, and then to Sir W. Pen's to speak with Sir
John Chichly, who desired my advice about a prize which he hath begged
of the King, and there had a great deal of his foolish talk of ladies
and love and I know not what, and so home to supper and to bed.
29th. Up, and at the office,
my Lord Bruncker and I close together till almost 3 after noon, never
stirring, making up a report for the Committee this afternoon about the
business of discharging men by ticket, which it seems the House is mighty
earnest in, but is a foolery in itself, yet gives me a great deal of trouble
to draw up a defence for the Board, as if it was a crime; but I think
I have done it to very good purpose. Then to my Lady Williams's, with
her and my Lord, and there did eat a snapp of good victuals, and so to
Westminster Hall, where we find the House not up, but sitting all this
day about the method of bringing in the charge against my Lord Chancellor;
and at last resolved for a Committee to draw up the heads, and so rose,
and no Committee to sit tonight. Here Sir W. Coventry and Lord Bruncker
and I did in the Hall (between the two Courts at the top of the Hall)
discourse about a letter of [Sir] W. Coventry's to Bruncker, whereon Bruncker
did justify his discharging men by ticket, and insists on one word which
Sir W. Coventry would not seem very earnest to have left out, but I did
see him concerned, and did after labour to suppress the whole letter,
the thing being in itself really impertinent, but yet so it is that [Sir]
W. Coventry do not desire to have his name used in this business, and
I have prevailed with Bruncker for it. Thence Bruncker and I to the King's
House, thinking to have gone into a box above, for fear of being seen,
the King being there, but the play being 3 acts done we would not give
4s., and so away and parted, and I home, and there after a little supper
to bed, my eyes ill, and head full of thoughts of the trouble this Parliament
gives us.
30th. All the morning till
past noon preparing over again our report this afternoon to the Committee
of Parliament about tickets, and then home to eat a bit, and then with
Sir W. Pen to White Hall, where we did a very little business with the
Duke of York at our usual meeting, only I perceive that he do leave all
of us, as the King do those about him, to stand and fall by ourselves,
and I think is not without some cares himself what the Parliament may
do in matters wherein his honour is concerned. Thence to the Parliament-house;
where, after the Committee was sat, I was called in; and the first thing
was upon the complaint of a dirty slut that was there, about a ticket
which she had lost, and had applied herself to me for another. . . . I
did give them a short and satisfactory answer to that; and so they sent
her away, and were ashamed of their foolery, in giving occasion to 500
seamen and seamen's wives to come before them, as there was this afternoon.
But then they fell to the business of tickets, and I did give them the
best answer I could, but had not scope to do it in the methodical manner
which I had prepared myself for, but they did ask a great many broken
rude questions about it, and were mightily hot whether my Lord Bruncker
had any order to discharge whole ships by ticket, and because my answer
was with distinction, and not direct, I did perceive they were not so
fully satisfied therewith as I could wish they were. So my Lord Bruncker
was called in, and they could fasten nothing on him that I could see,
nor indeed was there any proper matter for blame, but I do see, and it
was said publicly in the House by Sir T. Clerges that Sir W. Batten had
designed the business of discharging men by ticket and an order after
the thing was done to justify my Lord Bruncker for having done it. But
this I did not owne at all, nor was it just so, though he did indeed do
something like it, yet had contributed as much to it as any man of the
board by sending down of tickets to do it. But, Lord! to see that we should
be brought to justify ourselves in a thing of necessity and profit to
the King, and of no profit or convenience to us, but the contrary. We
being withdrawn, we heard no more of it, but there staid late and do hear
no more, only my cozen Pepys do tell me that he did hear one or two whisper
as if they thought that I do bogle at the business of my Lord Bruncker,
which is a thing I neither did or have reason to do in his favour, but
I do not think it fit to make him suffer for a thing that deserves well.
But this do trouble me a little that anything should stick to my prejudice
in any of them, and did trouble me so much that all the way home with
Sir W. Pen I was not at good ease, nor all night, though when I come home
I did find my wife, and Betty Turner, the two Mercers, and Mrs. Parker,
an ugly lass, but yet dances well, and speaks the best of them, and W.
Batelier, and Pembleton dancing; and here I danced with them, and had
a good supper, and as merry as I could be, and so they being gone we to
bed.
31st. Up, and all the morning at the office, and at
noon Mr. Creed and Yeabsly dined with me (my wife gone to dine with Mrs.
Pierce and see a play with her), and after dinner in comes Mr. Turner,
of Eynsbury, lately come to town, and also after him Captain Hill of the
"Coventry," who lost her at Barbadoes, and is come out of France,
where he hath been long prisoner. After a great deal of mixed discourse,
and then Mr. Turner and I alone a little in my closet, talking about my
Lord Sandwich (who I hear is now ordered by the King to come home again),
we all parted, and I by water, calling at Michell's, and saw and once
kissed su wife, but I do think that he is jealous of her, and so she dares
not stand out of his sight; so could not do more, but away by water to
the Temple, and there, after spending a little time in my bookseller's
shop, I to Westminster; and there at the lobby do hear by Commissioner
Pett, to my great amazement, that he is in worse condition than before,
by the coming in of the Duke of Albemarle's and Prince Rupert's Narratives'
this day; wherein the former do most severely lay matters upon him, so
as the House this day have, I think, ordered him to the Tower again, or
something like it; so that the poor man is likely to be overthrown, I
doubt, right or wrong, so infinite fond they are of any thing the Duke
of Albemarle says or writes to them! I did then go down, and there met
with Colonel Reames and cozen Roger Pepys; and there they do tell me how
the Duke of Albemarle and the Prince have laid blame on a great many,
and particularly on our Office in general; and particularly for want of
provision, wherein I shall come to be questioned again in that business
myself; which do trouble me. But my cozen Pepys and I had much discourse
alone: and he do bewail the constitution of this House, and says there
is a direct caball and faction, as much as is possible between those for
and those against the Chancellor, and so in other factions, that there
is nothing almost done honestly and with integrity; only some few, he
says, there are, that do keep out of all plots and combinations, and when
their time comes will speak and see right done, if possible; and that
he himself is looked upon to be a man that will be of no faction, and
so they do shun to make him; and I am glad of it. He tells me that he
thanks God he never knew what it was to be tempted to be a knave in his
life; till he did come into the House of Commons, where there is nothing
done but by passion, and faction, and private interest. Reames did tell
me of a fellow last night (one Kelsy, a commander of a fire-ship, who
complained for want of his money paid him) did say that he did see one
of the Commissioners of the Navy bring in three waggon-loads of prize-goods
into Greenwich one night; but that the House did take no notice of it,
nor enquire; but this is me, and I must expect to be called to account,
and answer what I did as well as I can. So thence away home, and in Holborne,
going round, it being dark, I espied Sir D. Gawden's coach, and so went
out of mine into his; and there had opportunity to talk of the business
of victuals, which the Duke of Albemarle and Prince did complain that
they were in want of the last year: but we do conclude we shall be able
to show quite the contrary of that; only it troubles me that we must come
to contend with these great persons, which will overrun us. So with some
disquiet in my mind on this account I home, and there comes Mr. Yeabsly,
and he and I to even some accounts, wherein I shall be a gainer about
L200, which is a seasonable profit, for I have got nothing a great while;
and he being gone, I to bed.
November 1667
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