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September
1st (Lord's day).
Up, and betimes by water from the Tower, and called at the Old Swan for
a glass of strong water, and sent word to have little Michell and his
wife come and dine with us to-day; and so, taking in a gentleman and his
lady that wanted a boat, I to Westminster. Setting them on shore at Charing
Cross, I to Mrs. Martin's, where I had two pair of cuffs which I bespoke,
and there did sit and talk with her . . . . . and here I did see her little
girle my goddaughter, which will be pretty, and there having staid a little
I away to Creed's chamber, and when he was ready away to White Hall, where
I met with several people and had my fill of talk. Our new Lord-keeper,
Bridgeman, did this day, the first time, attend the King to chapel with
his Seal. Sir H. Cholmly tells me there are hopes that the women will
also have a rout, and particularly that my Lady Castlemayne is coming
to a composition with the King to be gone; but how true this is, I know
not. Blancfort is made Privy-purse to the Duke of York; the Attorney-general
is made Chief justice, in the room of my Lord Bridgeman; the Solicitor-
general is made Attorney-general; and Sir Edward Turner made Solicitor-
general. It is pretty to see how strange every body looks, nobody knowing
whence this arises; whether from my Lady Castlemayne, Bab. May, and their
faction; or from the Duke of York, notwithstanding his great appearance
of defence of the Chancellor; or from Sir William Coventry, and some few
with him. But greater changes are yet expected. So home and by water to
dinner, where comes Pelting and young Michell and his wife, whom I have
not seen a great while, poor girle, and then comes Mr. Howe, and all dined
with me very merry, and spent all the afternoon, Pelting, Howe, and I,
and my boy, singing of Lock's response to the Ten Commandments, which
he hath set very finely, and was a good while since sung before the King,
and spoiled in the performance, which occasioned his printing them for
his vindication, and are excellent good. They parted, in the evening my
wife and I to walk in the garden and there scolded a little, I being doubtful
that she had received a couple of fine pinners (one of point de Gesne),
which I feared she hath from some [one] or other of a present; but, on
the contrary, I find she hath bought them for me to pay for them, without
my knowledge. This do displease me much; but yet do so much please me
better than if she had received them the other way, that I was not much
angry, but fell to other discourse, and so to my chamber, and got her
to read to me for saving of my eyes, and then, having got a great cold,
I know not how, I to bed and lay ill at ease all the night.
2nd. This day is kept in
the City as a publick fast for the fire this day twelve months: but I
was not at church, being commanded, with the rest, to attend the Duke
of York; and, therefore, with Sir J. Minnes to St. James's, where we had
much business before the Duke of York, and observed all things to be very
kind between the Duke of York and W. Coventry, which did mightily joy
me. When we had done, Sir W. Coventry called me down with him to his chamber,
and there told me that he is leaving the Duke of York's service, which
I was amazed at. But he tells me that it is not with the least unkindness
on the Duke of York's side, though he expects, and I told him he was in
the right, it will be interpreted otherwise, because done just at this
time; "but," says he, "I did desire it a good while since,
and the Duke of York did, with much entreaty, grant it, desiring that
I would say nothing of it, that he might have time and liberty to choose
his successor, without being importuned for others whom he should not
like:" and that he hath chosen Mr. Wren, which I am glad of, he being
a very ingenious man; and so Sir W. Coventry says of him, though he knows
him little; but particularly commends him for the book he writ in answer
to "Harrington's Oceana," which, for that reason, I intend to
buy. He tells me the true reason is, that he, being a man not willing
to undertake more business than he can go through, and being desirous
to have his whole time to spend upon the business of the Treasury, and
a little for his own ease, he did desire this of the Duke of York. He
assures me that the kindness with which he goes away from the Duke of
York is one of the greatest joys that ever he had in the world. I used
some freedom with him, telling him how the world hath discoursed of his
having offended the Duke of York, about the late business of the Chancellor.
He do not deny it, but says that perhaps the Duke of York might have some
reason for it, he opposing him in a thing wherein he was so earnest but
tells me, that, notwithstanding all that, the Duke of York does not now,
nor can blame him; for he tells me that he was the man that did propose
the removal of the Chancellor; and that he did still persist in it, and
at this day publickly owns it, and is glad of it; but that the Duke of
York knows that he did first speak of it to the Duke of York, before he
spoke to any mortal creature besides, which was fair dealing: and the
Duke of York was then of the same mind with him, and did speak of it to
the King; though since, for reasons best known to himself, he was afterwards
altered. I did then desire to know what was the great matter that grounded
his desire of the Chancellor's removal? He told me many things not fit
to be spoken, and yet not any thing of his being unfaithful to the King;
but, 'instar omnium', he told me, that while he was so great at the Council-board,
and in the administration of matters, there was no room for any body to
propose any remedy to what was amiss, or to compass any thing, though
never so good for the kingdom, unless approved of by the Chancellor, he
managing all things with that greatness which now will be removed, that
the King may have the benefit of others' advice. I then told him that
the world hath an opinion that he hath joined himself with my Lady Castlemayne's
faction in this business; he told me, he cannot help it, but says they
are in an errour: but for first he will never, while he lives, truckle
under any body or any faction, but do just as his own reason and judgment
directs; and, when he cannot use that freedom, he will have nothing to
do in public affairs but then he added, that he never was the man that
ever had any discourse with my Lady Castlemayne, or with others from her,
about this or any public business, or ever made her a visit, or at least
not this twelvemonth, or been in her lodgings but when called on any business
to attend the King there, nor hath had any thing to do in knowing her
mind in this business. He ended all with telling me that he knows that
he that serves a Prince must expect, and be contented to stand, all fortunes,
and be provided to retreat, and that that he is most willing to do whenever
the King shall please.
And so we parted, he setting me down out of his coach
at Charing Cross, and desired me to tell Sir W. Pen what he had told me
of his leaving the Duke of York's service, that his friends might not
be the last that know it. I took a coach and went homewards; but then
turned again, and to White Hall, where I met with many people; and, among
other things, do learn. that there is some fear that Mr. Bruncker is got
into the King's favour, and will be cherished there; which will breed
ill will between the King and Duke of York, he lodging at this time in
White Hall since he was put away from the Duke of York: and he is great
with Bab. May, my Lady Castlemayne, and that wicked crew. But I find this
denied by Sir G. Carteret, who tells me that he is sure he hath no kindness
from the King; that the King at first, indeed, did endeavour to persuade
the Duke of York from putting him away; but when, besides this business
of his ill words concerning his Majesty in the business of the Chancellor,
he told him that he hath had, a long time, a mind to put him away for
his ill offices, done between him and his wife, the King held his peace,
and said no more, but wished him to do what he pleased with him; which
was very noble. I met with Fenn; and he tells me, as I do hear from some
others, that the business of the Chancellor's had proceeded from something
of a mistake, for the Duke of York did first tell the King that the Chancellor
had a desire to be eased of his great trouble; and that the King, when
the Chancellor come to him, did wonder to hear him deny it, and the Duke
of York was forced to deny to the King that ever he did tell him so in
those terms: but the King did answer that he was sure that he did say
some such thing to him; but, however, since it had gone so far, did desire
him to be contented with it, as a thing very convenient for him as well
as for himself (the King), and so matters proceeded, as we find. Now it
is likely the Chancellor might, some time or other, in a compliment or
vanity, say to the Duke of York, that he was weary of this burden, and
I know not what; and this comes of it. Some people, and myself among them,
are of good hope from this change that things are reforming; but there
are others that do think but that it is a hit of chance, as all other
our greatest matters are, and that there is no general plot or contrivance
in any number of people what to do next, though, I believe, Sir W. Coventry
may in himself have further designs; and so that, though other changes
may come, yet they shall be accidental and laid upon [not] good principles
of doing good. Mr. May shewed me the King's new buildings, in order to
their having of some old sails for the closing of the windows this winter.
I dined with Sir G. Carteret, with whom dined Mr. Jack Ashburnham and
Dr. Creeton, who I observe to be a most good man and scholar. In discourse
at dinner concerning the change of men's humours and fashions touching
meats, Mr. Ashburnham told us, that he remembers since the only fruit
in request, and eaten by the King and Queen at table as the best fruit,
was the Katharine payre, though they knew at the time other fruits of
France and our own country. After dinner comes in Mr. Townsend; and there
I was witness of a horrid rateing, which Mr. Ashburnham, as one of the
Grooms of the King's Bedchamber, did give him for want of linen for the
King's person; which he swore was not to be endured, and that the King
would not endure it, and that the King his father, would have hanged his
Wardrobe-man should he have been served so the King having at this day
no handkerchers, and but three bands to his neck, he swore. Mr. Townsend
answered want of money, and the owing of the linen-draper L5000; and that
he hath of late got many rich things made--beds, and sheets, and saddles,
and all without money, and he can go no further but still this old man,
indeed, like an old loving servant, did cry out for the King's person
to be neglected. But, when he was gone, Townsend told me that it is the
grooms taking away the King's linen at the quarter's end, as their fees,
which makes this great want: for, whether the King can get it or no, they
will run away at the quarter's end with what he hath had, let the King
get more as he can.
All the company gone, Sir G. Carteret and I to talk:
and it is pretty to observe how already he says that he did always look
upon the Chancellor indeed as his friend, though he never did do him any
service at all, nor ever got any thing by him, nor was he a man apt, and
that, I think, is true, to do any man any kindness of his own nature;
though I do know that he was believed by all the world to be the greatest
support of Sir G. Carteret with the King of any man in England: but so
little is now made of it! He observes that my Lord Sandwich will lose
a great friend in him; and I think so too, my Lord Hinchingbroke being
about a match calculated purely out of respect to my Lord Chancellor's
family. By and by Sir G. Carteret, and Townsend, and I, to consider of
an answer to the Commissioners of the Treasury about my Lord Sandwich's
profits in the Wardrobe; which seem, as we make them, to be very small,
not L1000 a-year; but only the difference in measure at which he buys
and delivers out to the King, and then 6d. in the pound from the tradesmen
for what money he receives for him; but this, it is believed, these Commissioners
will endeavour to take away. From him I went to see a great match at tennis,
between Prince Rupert and one Captain Cooke, against Bab. May and the
elder Chichly; where the King was, and Court; and it seems are the best
players at tennis in the nation. But this puts me in mind of what I observed
in the morning, that the King, playing at tennis, had a steele- yard carried
to him, and I was told it was to weigh him after he had done playing;
and at noon Mr. Ashburnham told me that it is only the King's curiosity,
which he usually hath of weighing himself before and after his play, to
see how much he loses in weight by playing: and this day he lost 4 lbs.
Thence home and took my wife out to Mile End Green, and there I drank,
and so home, having a very fine evening. Then home, and I to Sir W. Batten
and [Sir] W. Pen, and there discoursed of Sir W. Coventry's leaving the
Duke of York, and Mr. Wren's succeeding him. They told me both seriously,
that they had long cut me out for Secretary to the Duke of York, if ever
[Sir] W. Coventry left him; which, agreeing with what I have heard from
other hands heretofore, do make me not only think that something of that
kind hath been thought on, but do comfort me to see that the world hath
such an esteem of my qualities as to think me fit for any such thing.
Though I am glad, with all my heart, that I am not so; for it would never
please me to be forced to the attendance that that would require, and
leave my wife and family to themselves, as I must do in such a case; thinking
myself now in the best place that ever man was in to please his own mind
in, and, therefore, I will take care to preserve it. So to bed, my cold
remaining though not so much upon me. This day Nell, an old tall maid,
come to live with us, a cook maid recommended by Mr. Batelier.
3rd. All the morning, business
at the office, dined at home, then in the afternoon set my wife down at
the Exchange, and I to St. James's, and there attended the Duke of York
about the list of ships that we propose to sell: and here there attended
Mr. Wren the first time, who hath not yet, I think, received the Duke
of York's seal and papers. At our coming hither, we found the Duke and
Duchesse all alone at dinner, methought melancholy; or else I thought
so, from the late occasion of the Chancellor's fall, who, they say, however,
takes it very contentedly. Thence I to White Hall a little, and so took
up my wife at the 'Change, and so home, and at the office late, and so
home to supper and to bed, our boy ill.
4th. By coach to White
Hall to the Council-chamber; and there met with Sir W. Coventry going
in, who took me aside, and told me that he was just come from delivering
up his seal and papers to Mr. Wren; and told me he must now take his leave
of me as a naval man,
[One is reminded of Sir Winston Churchill referring
to himself in his correspondence with Franklin Roosevelt in the early
days of WW II., as "Former Naval Person." D.W.]
but that he shall always bear respect to his friends there, and particularly
to myself, with great kindness; which I returned to him with thanks, and
so, with much kindness parted: and he into, the Council. I met with Sir
Samuel Morland, who chewed me two orders upon the Exchequer, one of L600,
and another of L400, for money assigned to him, which he would have me
lend him money upon, and he would allow 12 per cent. I would not meddle
with them, though they are very good; and would, had I not so much money
out already on public credit. But I see by this his condition all trade
will be bad. I staid and heard Alderman Barker's case of his being abused
by the Council of Ireland, touching his lands there: all I observed there
is the silliness of the King, playing with his dog all the while, and
not minding the business,
[Lord Rochester wrote
"His very dog at council board Sits grave and wise as any lord."
Poems, 1697; p. 150.--The king's dogs were constantly stolen from him,
and he advertised for their return. Some of these amusing advertisements
are printed in "Notes and Queries" (seventh series, vol. vii.,
p. 26).]
and what he said was mighty weak; but my Lord Keeper I observe to be a
mighty able man. The business broke off without any end to it, and so
I home, and thence with my wife and W. Hewer to Bartholomew fayre, and
there Polichinelli, where we saw Mrs. Clerke and all her crew; and so
to a private house, and sent for a side of pig, and eat it at an acquaintance
of W. Hewer's, where there was some learned physic and chymical books,
and among others, a natural "Herball" very fine. Here we staid
not, but to the Duke of York's play house, and there saw "Mustapha,"
which, the more I see, the more I like; and is a most admirable poem,
and bravely acted; only both Betterton and Harris could not contain from
laughing in the midst of a most serious part from the ridiculous mistake
of one of the men upon the stage; which I did not like. Thence home, where
Batelier and his sister Mary come to us and sat and talked, and so, they
gone, we to supper and to bed.
5th. Up, and all the morning
at the office, where we sat till noon, and then I home to dinner, where
Mary Batelier and her brother dined with us, who grows troublesome in
his talking so much of his going to Marseilles, and what commissions he
hath to execute as a factor, and a deal of do of which I am weary. After
dinner, with Sir W. Pen, my wife, and Mary Batelier to the Duke of York's
house, and there saw "Heraclius," which is a good play; but
they did so spoil it with their laughing, and being all of them out, and
with the noise they made within the theatre, that I was ashamed of it,
and resolve not to come thither again a good while, believing that this
negligence, which I never observed before, proceeds only from their want
of company in the pit, that they have no care how they act. My wife was
ill, and so I was forced to go out of the house with her to Lincoln's
Inn walks, and there in a corner she did her business, and was by and
by well, and so into the house again, but sick of their ill acting.--[Obviously
there were no "Rest Rooms" in the theatres of the 17th century.
D.W.]--So home and to the office, where busy late, then home to
supper and to bed. This morning was told by Sir W. Batten, that he do
hear from Mr. Grey, who hath good intelligence, that our Queen is to go
into a nunnery, there to spend her days; and that my Lady Castlemayne
is going into France, and is to have a pension of L4000 a-year. This latter
I do more believe than the other, it being very wise in her to do it,
and save all she hath, besides easing the King and kingdom of a burden
and reproach.
6th. Up, and to Westminster
to the Exchequer, and then into the Hall, and there bought "Guillim's
Heraldry" for my wife, and so to the Swan, and thither come Doll
Lane, and je did toucher her, and drank, and so away, I took coach and
home, where I find my wife gone to Walthamstow by invitation with Sir
W. Batten, and so I followed, taking up Mrs. Turner, and she and I much
discourse all the way touching the baseness of Sir W. Pen and sluttishness
of his family, and how the world do suspect that his son Lowther, who
is sick of a sore mouth, has got the pox. So we come to Sir W. Batten's,
where Sir W. Pen and his Lady, and we and Mrs. Shipman, and here we walked
and had an indifferent good dinner, the victuals very good and cleanly
dressed and good linen, but no fine meat at all. After dinner we went
up and down the house, and I do like it very well, being furnished with
a great deal of very good goods. And here we staid, I tired with the company,
till almost evening, and then took leave, Turner and I together again,
and my wife with [Sir] W. Pen. At Aldgate I took my wife into our coach,
and so to Bartholomew fair, and there, it being very dirty, and now night,
we saw a poor fellow, whose legs were tied behind his back, dance upon
his hands with his arse above his head, and also dance upon his crutches,
without any legs upon the ground to help him, which he did with that pain
that I was sorry to see it, and did pity him and give him money after
he had done. Then we to see a piece of clocke-work made by an Englishman--indeed,
very good, wherein all the several states of man's age, to 100 years old,
is shewn very pretty and solemne; and several other things more cheerful,
and so we ended, and took a link, the women resolving to be dirty, and
walked up and down to get a coach; and my wife, being a little before
me, had been like to be taken up by one, whom we saw to be Sam Hartlib.
My wife had her wizard on: yet we cannot say that he meant any hurt; for
it was as she was just by a coach-side, which he had, or had a mind to
take up; and he asked her, "Madam, do you go in this coach?"
but, soon as he saw a man come to her (I know not whether he knew me)
he departed away apace. By and by did get a coach, and so away home, and
there to supper, and to bed.
7th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning. At noon home to dinner, where Goodgroome was teaching
my wife, and dined with us, and I did tell him of my intention to learn
to trill, which he will not promise I shall obtain, but he will do what
can be done, and I am resolved to learn. All the afternoon at the office,
and towards night out by coach with my wife, she to the 'Change, and I
to see the price of a copper cisterne for the table, which is very pretty,
and they demand L6 or L7 for one; but I will have one. Then called my
wife at the 'Change, and bought a nightgown for my wife: cost but 24s.,
and so out to Mile End to drink, and so home to the office to end my letters,
and so home to supper and to bed.
8th (Lord's day). Up, and
walked to St. James's; but there I find Sir W. Coventry gone from his
chamber, and Mr. Wren not yet come thither. But I up to the Duke of York,
and there, after being ready, my Lord Bruncker and I had an audience,
and thence with my Lord Bruncker to White Hall, and he told me, in discourse,
how that, though it is true that Sir W. Coventry did long since propose
to the Duke of York the leaving his service, as being unable to fulfill
it, as he should do, now he hath so much public business, and that the
Duke of York did bid him to say nothing of it, but that he would take
time to please himself in another to come in his place; yet the Duke's
doing it at this time, declaring that he hath found out another, and this
one of the Chancellor's servants, he cannot but think was done with some
displeasure, and that it could not well be otherwise, that the Duke of
York should keep one in that place, that had so eminently opposed him
in the defence of his father-in-law, nor could the Duchesse ever endure
the sight of him, to be sure. But he thinks that the Duke of York and
he are parted upon clear terms of friendship. He tells me he do believe
that my Lady Castlemayne is compounding with the King for a pension, and
to leave the Court; but that her demands are mighty high: but he believes
the King is resolved, and so do every body else I speak with, to do all
possible to please the Parliament; and he do declare that he will deliver
every body up to them to give an account of their actions: and that last
Friday, it seems, there was an Act of Council passed, to put out all Papists
in office, and to keep out any from coming in. I went to the King's Chapel
to the closet, and there I hear Cresset sing a tenor part along with the
Church musick very handsomely, but so loud that people did laugh at him,
as a thing done for ostentation. Here I met Sir G. Downing, who would
speak with me, and first to inquire what I paid for my kid's leather gloves
I had on my hand, and shewed me others on his, as handsome, as good in
all points, cost him but 12d. a pair, and mine me 2s. He told me he had
been seven years finding out a man that could dress English sheepskin
as it should be--and, indeed, it is now as good, in all respects, as kid,
and he says will save L100,000 a-year, that goes out to France for kid's
skins. Thus he labours very worthily to advance our own trade, but do
it with mighty vanity and talking. But then he told me of our base condition,
in the treaty with Holland and France, about our prisoners, that whereas
before we did clear one another's prisoners, man for man, and we upon
the publication of the peace did release all our's, 300 at Leith, and
others in other places for nothing, the Dutch do keep theirs, and will
not discharge them with[out] paying their debts according to the Treaty.
That his instruments in Holland, writing to our Embassadors about this
to Bredagh, they answer them that they do not know of any thing that they
have done therein, but left it just as it was before. To which, when they
answer, that by the treaty their Lordships had [not] bound our countrymen
to pay their debts in prison, they answer they cannot help it, and we
must get them off as cheap as we can. On this score, they demand L1100
for Sir G. Ascue, and L5000 for the one province of Zealand, for the prisoners
that we have therein. He says that this is a piece of shame that never
any nation committed, and that our very Lords here of the Council, when
he related this matter to them, did not remember that they had agreed
to this article; and swears that all their articles are alike, as the
giving away Polleroon, and Surinam, and Nova Scotia, which hath a river
300 miles up the country, with copper mines more than Swedeland, and Newcastle
coals, the only place in America that hath coals that we know of; and
that Cromwell did value those places, and would for ever have made much
of them; but we have given them away for nothing, besides a debt to the
King of Denmarke. But, which is most of all, they have discharged those
very particular demands of merchants of the Guinny Company and others,
which he, when he was there, had adjusted with the Dutch, and come to
an agreement in writing, and they undertaken to satisfy, and that this
was done in black and white under their hands; and yet we have forgiven
all these, and not so much as sent to Sir G. Downing to know what he had
done, or to confer with him about any one point of the treaty, but signed
to what they would have, and we here signed to whatever in grosse was
brought over by Mr. Coventry. And [Sir G. Downing] tells me, just in these
words, "My Lord Chancellor had a mind to keep himself from being
questioned by clapping up a peace upon any terms." When I answered
that there was other privy-councillors to be advised with besides him,
and that, therefore, this whole peace could not be laid to his charge,
he answered that nobody durst say any thing at the council-table but himself,
and that the King was as much afeard of saying any thing there as the
meanest privy-councillor; and says more, that at this day the King, in
familiar talk, do call the Chancellor "the insolent man," and
says that he would not let him speak himself in Council: which is very
high, and do shew that the Chancellor is like to be in a bad state, unless
he can defend himself better than people think. And yet Creed tells me
that he do hear that my Lord Cornbury do say that his father do long for
the coming of the Parliament, in order to his own vindication, more than
any one of his enemies. And here it comes into my head to set down what
Mr. Rawlinson, whom I met in Fenchurch Street on Friday last, looking
over his ruines there, told me, that he was told by one of my Lord Chancellor's
gentlemen lately (-------- byname), that a grant coming to him to be sealed,
wherein the King hath given her [Lady Castlemaine], or somebody by her
means, a place which he did not like well of, he did stop the grant; saying,
that he thought this woman would sell everything shortly: which she hearing
of, she sent to let him know that she had disposed of this place, and
did not doubt, in a little time, to dispose of his. This Rawlinson do
tell me my Lord Chancellor's own gentleman did tell him himself.
Thence, meeting Creed, I with him to the Parke, there
to walk a little, and to the Queen's Chapel and there hear their musique,
which I liked in itself pretty well as to the composition, but their voices
are very harsh and rough that I thought it was some instruments they had
that made them sound so. So to White Hall, and saw the King and Queen
at dinner; and observed (which I never did before), the formality, but
it is but a formality, of putting a bit of bread wiped upon each dish
into the mouth of every man that brings a dish; but it should be in the
sauce. Here were some Russes come to see the King at dinner: among others,
the interpreter, a comely Englishman, in the Envoy's own clothes; which
the Envoy, it seems, in vanity did send to show his fine clothes upon
this man's back, which is one, it seems, of a comelier presence than himself:
and yet it is said that none of their clothes are their own, but taken
out of the King's own Wardrobe; and which they dare not bring back dirty
or spotted, but clean, or are in danger of being beaten, as they say:
insomuch that, Sir Charles Cotterell says, when they are to have an audience
they never venture to put on their clothes till he appears to come to
fetch them; and, as soon as ever they come home, put them off again. I
to Sir G. Carteret's to dinner; where Mr. Cofferer Ashburnham; who told
a good story of a prisoner's being condemned at Salisbury for a small
matter. While he was on the bench with his father-in-law, judge Richardson,
and while they were considering to transport him to save his life, the
fellow flung a great stone at the judge, that missed him, but broke through
the wainscoat. Upon this, he had his hand cut off, and was hanged presently!
Here was a gentleman, one Sheres, one come lately from my Lord Sandwich,
with an express; but, Lord! I was almost ashamed to see him, lest he should
know that I have not yet wrote one letter to my Lord since his going.
I had no discourse with him, but after dinner Sir G. Carteret and I to
talk about some business of his, and so I to Mrs. Martin, where was Mrs.
Burroughs, and also fine Mrs. Noble, my partner in the christening of
Martin's child, did come to see it, and there we sat and talked an hour,
and then all broke up and I by coach home, and there find Mr. Pelling
and Howe, and we to sing and good musique till late, and then to supper,
and Howe lay at my house, and so after supper to bed with much content,
only my mind a little troubled at my late breach of vowes, which however
I will pay my forfeits, though the badness of my eyes, making me unfit
to read or write long, is my excuse, and do put me upon other pleasures
and employment which I should refrain from in observation of my vowes.
9th. Up; and to the office,
where all the morning, and at noon comes Creed to dine with me. After
dinner, he and I and my wife to the Bear- Garden, to see a prize fought
there. But, coming too soon, I left them there and went on to White Hall,
and there did some business with the Lords of the Treasury; and here do
hear, by Tom Killigrew and Mr. Progers, that for certain news is come
of Harman's having spoiled nineteen of twenty-two French ships, somewhere
about the Barbadoes, I think they said; but wherever it is, it is a good
service, and very welcome. Here I fell in talk with Tom Killigrew about
musick, and he tells me that he will bring me to the best musick in England
(of which, indeed, he is master), and that is two Italians and Mrs. Yates,
who, he says, is come to sing the Italian manner as well as ever he heard
any: says that Knepp won't take pains enough, but that she understands
her part so well upon the stage, that no man or woman in the House do
the like. Thence I by water to the Bear-Garden, where now the yard was
full of people, and those most of them seamen, striving by force to get
in, that I was afeard to be seen among them, but got into the ale-house,
and so by a back-way was put into the bull-house, where I stood a good
while all alone among the bulls, and was afeard I was among the bears,
too; but by and by the door opened, and I got into the common pit; and
there, with my cloak about my face, I stood and saw the prize fought,
till one of them, a shoemaker, was. so cut in both his wrists that he
could not fight any longer, and then they broke off: his enemy was a butcher.
The sport very good, and various humours to be seen among the rabble that
is there. Thence carried Creed to White Hall, and there my wife and I
took coach and home, and both of us to Sir W. Batten's, to invite them
to dinner on Wednesday next, having a whole buck come from Hampton Court,
by the warrant which Sir Stephen Fox did give me. And so home to supper
and to bed, after a little playing on the flageolet with my wife, who
do outdo therein whatever I expected of her.
10th. Up, and all the morning
at the Office, where little to do but bemoan ourselves under the want
of money; and indeed little is, or can be done, for want of money, we
having not now received one penny for any service in many weeks, and none
in view to receive, saving for paying of some seamen's wages. At noon
sent to by my Lord Bruncker to speak with him, and it was to dine with
him and his Lady Williams (which I have not now done in many months at
their own table) and Mr. Wren, who is come to dine with them, the first
time he hath been at the office since his being the Duke of York's Secretary.
Here we sat and eat and talked and of some matters of the office, but
his discourse is as yet but weak in that matter, and no wonder, he being
new in it, but I fear he will not go about understanding with the impatience
that Sir W. Coventry did. Having dined, I away, and with my wife and Mercer,
set my wife down at the 'Change, and the other at White Hall, and I to
St. James's, where we all met, and did our usual weekly business with
the Duke of York. But, Lord! methinks both he and we are mighty flat and
dull over what we used to be, when Sir W. Coventry was among us. Thence
I into St. James's Park, and there met Mr. Povy; and he and I to walk
an hour or more in the Pell Mell, talking of the times. He tells me, among
other things, that this business of the Chancellor do breed a kind of
inward distance between the King and the Duke of York, and that it cannot
be avoided; for though the latter did at first move it through his folly,
yet he is made to see that he is wounded by it, and is become much a less
man than he was, and so will be: but he tells me that they are, and have
always been, great dissemblers one towards another; and that their parting
heretofore in France is never to be thoroughly reconciled between them.
He tells me that he believes there is no such thing like to be, as a composition
with my Lady Castlemayne, and that she shall be got out of the way before
the Parliament comes; for he says she is as high as ever she was, though
he believes the King is as weary of her as is possible, and would give
any thing to remove her, but he is so weak in his passion that he dare
not do it; that he do believe that my Lord Chancellor will be doing some
acts in the Parliament which shall render him popular; and that there
are many people now do speak kindly of him that did not before; but that,
if he do do this, it must provoke the King, and that party that removed
him. He seems to doubt what the King of France will do, in case an accommodation
shall be made between Spain and him for Flanders, for then he will have
nothing more easy to do with his army than to subdue us. Parted with him
at White Hall, and, there I took coach and took up my wife and Mercer,
and so home and I to the office, where ended my letters, and then to my
chamber with my boy to lay up some papers and things that lay out of order
against to-morrow, to make it clear against the feast that I am to have.
Here Mr. Pelling come to sit with us, and talked of musique and the musicians
of the town, and so to bed, after supper.
11th. Up, and with Mr.
Gawden to the Exchequer. By the way, he tells me this day he is to be
answered whether he must hold Sheriffe or no; for he would not hold unless
he may keep it at his office, which is out of the city (and so my Lord
Mayor must come with his sword down, whenever he comes thither), which
he do, because he cannot get a house fit for him in the city, or else
he will fine for it. Among others that they have in nomination for Sheriffe,
one is little Chaplin, who was his servant, and a very young man to undergo
that place; but as the city is now, there is no great honour nor joy to
be had, in being a public officer. At the Exchequer I looked after my
business, and when done went home to the 'Change, and there bought a case
of knives for dinner, and a dish of fruit for 5s., and bespoke other things,
and then home, and here I find all things in good order, and a good dinner
towards. Anon comes Sir W. Batten and his lady, and Mr. Griffith, their
ward, and Sir W. Pen and his lady, and Mrs. Lowther, who is grown, either
through pride or want of manners, a fool, having not a word to say almost
all dinner; and, as a further mark of a beggarly, proud fool, hath a bracelet
of diamonds and rubies about her wrist, and a sixpenny necklace about
her neck, and not one good rag of clothes upon her back; and Sir John
Chichly in their company, and Mrs. Turner. Here I had an extraordinary
good and handsome dinner for them, better than any of them deserve or
understand, saving Sir John Chichly and Mrs. Turner, and not much mirth,
only what I by discourse made, and that against my genius. After dinner
I took occasion to break up the company soon as I could, and all parted,
Sir W. Batten and I by water to White Hall, there to speak with the Commissioners
of the Treasury, who are mighty earnest for our hastening all that may
be the paying off of the Seamen, now there is money, and are considering
many other thins for easing of charge, which I am glad of, but vexed to
see that J. Duncomb should be so pressing in it as if none of us had like
care with him. Having done there, I by coach to the Duke of York's playhouse,
and there saw part of "The Ungratefull Lovers;" and sat by Beck
Marshall, who is very handsome near hand. Here I met Mrs. Turner and my
wife as we agreed, and together home, and there my wife and I part of
the night at the flageolet, which she plays now any thing upon almost
at first sight and in good time. But here come Mr. Moore, and sat and
discoursed with me of publique matters: the sum of which is, that he do
doubt that there is more at the bottom than the removal of the Chancellor;
that is, he do verily believe that the King do resolve to declare the
Duke of Monmouth legitimate, and that we shall soon see it. This I do
not think the Duke of York will endure without blows; but his poverty,
and being lessened by having the Chancellor fallen and [Sir] W. Coventry
gone from him, will disable him from being able to do any thing almost,
he being himself almost lost in the esteem of people; and will be more
and more, unless my Lord Chancellor, who is already begun to be pitied
by some people, and to be better thought of than was expected, do recover
himself in Parliament. He would seem to fear that this difference about
the Crowne (if there be nothing else) will undo us. He do say that, that
is very true; that my Lord [Chancellor] did lately make some stop of some
grants of L2000 a-year to my Lord Grandison, which was only in his name,
for the use of my Lady Castlemaine's children; and that this did incense
her, and she did speak very scornful words, and sent a scornful message
to him about it. He gone, after supper, I to bed, being mightily pleased
with my wife's playing so well upon the flageolet, and I am resolved she
shall learn to play upon some instrument, for though her eare be bad,
yet I see she will attain any thing to be done by her hand.
12th. Up, and at the office
all the morning till almost noon, and then I rode from the office (which
I have not done five times I think since I come thither) and to the Exchequer
for some tallies for Tangier; and that being done, to the Dog taverne,
and there I spent half a piece upon the clerks, and so away, and I to
Mrs. Martin's, but she not at home, but staid and drunk with her sister
and landlady, and by that time it was time to go to a play, which I did
at the Duke's house, where "Tu Quoque" was the first time acted,
with some alterations of Sir W. Davenant's; but the play is a very silly
play, methinks; for I, and others that sat by me, Mr. Povy and Mr. Progers,
were weary of it; but it will please the citizens. My wife also was there,
I having sent for her to meet me there, and W. Hewer. After the play we
home, and there I to the office and despatched my business, and then home,
and mightily pleased with my wife's playing on the flageolet, she taking
out any tune almost at first sight, and keeping time to it, which pleases
me mightily. So to supper and to bed.
13th. Called up by people
come to deliver in ten chaldron of coals, brought in one of our prizes
from Newcastle. The rest we intend to sell, we having above ten chaldron
between us. They sell at about 28s. or 29s. per chaldron; but Sir W. Batten
hath sworn that he was a cuckold that sells under 30s., and that makes
us lay up all but what we have for our own spending, which is very pleasant;
for I believe we shall be glad to sell them for less. To the office, and
there despatched business till ten o'clock, and then with Sir W. Batten
and my wife and Mrs. Turner by hackney-coach to Walthamstow, to Mr. Shipman's
to dinner, where Sir W. Pen and my Lady and Mrs. Lowther (the latter of
which hath got a sore nose, given her, I believe, from her husband, which
made me I could not look upon her with any pleasure), and here a very
good and plentifull wholesome dinner, and, above all thing, such plenty
of milk meats, she keeping a great dairy, and so good as I never met with.
The afternoon proved very foul weather, the morning fair. We staid talking
till evening, and then home, and there to my flageolet with my wife, and
so to bed without any supper, my belly being full and dinner not digested.
It vexed me to hear how Sir W. Pen, who come alone from London, being
to send his coachman for his wife and daughter, and bidding his coachman
in much anger to go for them (he being vexed, like a rogue, to do anything
to please his wife), his coachman Tom was heard to say a pox, or God rot
her, can she walk hither? These words do so mad me that I could find in
my heart to give him or my Lady notice of them.
14th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning busy. At noon comes Mr. Pierce and dined with me
to advise about several matters of his relating to the office and his
purse, and here he told me that the King and Duke of York and the whole
Court is mighty joyful at the Duchesse of York's being brought to bed
this day, or yesterday, of a son; which will settle men's minds mightily.
And he tells me that he do think that what the King do, of giving the
Duke of Monmouth the command of his Guards, and giving my Lord Gerard
L12,000 for it, is merely to find an employment for him upon which he
may live, and not out of any design to bring him into any title to the
Crowne; which Mr. Moore did the other day put me into great fear of. After
dinner, he gone, my wife to the King's play- house to see "The Northerne
Castle," which I think I never did see before. Knipp acted in it,
and did her part very extraordinary well; but the play is but a mean,
sorry play; but the house very full of gallants. It seems, it hath not
been acted a good while. Thence to the Exchange for something for my wife,
and then home and to the office, and then home to our flageolet, and so
to bed, being mightily troubled in mind at the liberty I give myself of
going to plays upon pretence of the weakness of my eyes, that cannot continue
so long together at work at my office, but I must remedy it.
15th (Lord's day). Up to
my chamber, there to set some papers to rights. By and by to church, where
I stood, in continual fear of Mrs. Markham's coming to church, and offering
to come into our pew, to prevent which, soon as ever I heard the great
door open, I did step back, and clap my breech to our pew-door, that she
might be forced to shove me to come in; but as God would have it, she
did not come. Mr. Mills preached, and after sermon, by invitation, he
and his wife come to dine with me, which is the first time they have been
in my house; I think, these five years, I thinking it not amiss, because
of their acquaintance in our country, to shew them some respect. Mr. Turner
and his wife, and their son the Captain, dined with me, and I had a very
good dinner for them, and very merry, and after dinner, he [Mr. Mills]
was forced to go, though it rained, to Stepney, to preach. We also to
church, and then home, and there comes Mr. Pelling, with two men, by promise,
one Wallington and Piggott, the former whereof, being a very little fellow,
did sing a most excellent bass, and yet a poor fellow, a working goldsmith,
that goes without gloves to his hands. Here we sung several good things,
but I am more and more confirmed that singing with many voices is not
singing, but a sort of instrumental musique, the sense of the words being
lost by not being heard, and especially as they set them with Fuges of
words, one after another, whereas singing properly, I think, should be
but with one or two voices at most and the counterpoint. They supped with
me, and so broke, up, and then my wife and I to my chamber, where, through
the badness of my eyes, she was forced to read to me, which she do very
well, and was Mr. Boyle's discourse upon the style of the Scripture,'
which is a very fine piece, and so to bed.
16th. Up, and several come
to me, among others Mr. Yeabsly of Plymouth, to discourse about their
matters touching Tangier, and by and by Sir H. Cholmly, who was with me
a good while; who tells me that the Duke of York's child is christened,
the Duke of Albemarle and the Marquis of Worcester' godfathers, and my
Lady Suffolke godmother; and they have named it Edgar, which is a brave
name. But it seems they are more joyful in the Chancellor's family, at
the birth of this Prince, than in wisdom they should, for fear it should
give the King cause of jealousy. Sir H. Cholmly do not seem to think there
is any such thing can be in the King's intention as that of raising the
Duke of Monmouth to the Crowne, though he thinks there may possibly be
some persons that would, and others that would be glad to have the Queen
removed to some monastery, or somewhere or other, to make room for a new
wife; for they will all be unsafe under the Duke of York. He says the
King and Parliament will agree; that is, that the King will do any thing
that they will have him. We together to the Exchequer about our Tangier
orders, and so parted at the New Exchange, where I staid reading Mrs.
Phillips's poems till my wife and Mercer called me to Mrs. Pierces, by
invitation to dinner, where I find her painted, which makes me loathe
her, and the nastiest poor dinner that made me sick, only here I met with
a Fourth Advice to the Painter upon the coming in of the Dutch to the
River and end of the war, that made my heart ake to read, it being too
sharp, and so true. Here I also saw a printed account of the examinations
taken, touching the burning of the City of London, shewing the plot of
the Papists therein; which, it seems, hath been ordered and to have been
burnt by the hands of the hangman, in Westminster Palace. I will try to
get one of them. After dinner she showed us her closet, which is pretty,
with her James's picture done by Hales, but with a mighty bad hand, which
is his great fault that he do do negligently, and the drapery also not
very good. Being tired of being here, and sick of their damned sluttish
dinner, my wife and Mercer and I away to the King's play-house, to see
the "Scornfull Lady;" but it being now three o'clock there was
not one soul in the pit; whereupon, for shame, we would not go in, but,
against our wills, went all to see "Tu Quoque" again, where
there is a pretty store of company, and going with a prejudice the play
appeared better to us. Here we saw Madam Morland, who is grown mighty
fat, but is very comely. But one of the best arts of our sport was a mighty
pretty lady that sat behind, that did laugh so heartily and constantly,
that it did me good to hear her. Thence to the King's house, upon a wager
of mine with my wife, that there would be no acting there today, there
being no company: so I went in and found a pretty good company there,
and saw their dance at the end of he play, and so to the coach again,
and to the Cock ale house, and there drank in our coach, and so home,
and my wife read to me as last night, and so to bed vexed with our dinner
to-day, and myself more with being convinced that Mrs. Pierce paints,
so that henceforth to be sure I shall loathe her.
17th. Up, and at the office
all the morning, where Mr. Wren come to us and sat with us, only to learn,
and do intend to come once or twice a week and sit with us. In the afternoon
walked to the Old Swan, the way mighty dirty, and there called at Michell's,
and there had opportunity para kiss su moher, but elle did receive it
with a great deal of seeming regret, which did vex me. But however I do
not doubt overcoming her as I did the moher of the monsieur at Deptford.
So thence by water to Westminster, to Burgess, and there did receive my
orders for L1500 more for Tangier. Thence to the Hall, and there talked
a little with Mrs. Michell, and so to Mrs. Martin's to pay for my cuffs
and drink with her . . . . And by and by away by coach and met with Sir
H. Cholmly, and with him to the Temple, and there in Playford's shop did
give him some of my Exchequer orders and took his receipts, and so parted
and home, and there to my business hard at the office, and then home,
my wife being at Mrs. Turner's, who and her husband come home with her,
and here staid and talked and staid late, and then went away and we to
bed. But that which vexed me much this evening is that Captain Cocke and
Sir W. Batten did come to me, and sat, and drank a bottle of wine, and
told me how Sir W. Pen hath got an order for the "Flying Greyhound"
for himself, which is so false a thing, and the part of a knave, as nothing
almost can be more. This vexed me; but I resolve to bring it before the
Duke, and try a pull for it.
18th. Up betimes and to
Captain Cocke, in his coach which he sent for me, and he not being ready
I walked in the Exchange, which is now made pretty, by having windows
and doors before all their shops, to keep out the cold. By and by to him,
and he being ready, he and I out in his coach to my Lord Chancellor's;
there to Mr. Wren's chamber, who did tell us the whole of Sir W. Pen's
having the order for this ship of ours, and we went with him to St. James's,
and there I did see the copy of it, which is built upon a suggestion of
his having given the King a ship of his, "The Prosperous," wherein
is such a cheat as I have the best advantage in the world over him, and
will make him do reason, or lay him on his back. This I was very glad
of, and having done as far as I could in it we returned, and I home, and
there at the office all the morning, and at noon with my Lord Bruncker
to the Treasurer's office to look over the clerks who are there making
up the books, but in such a manner as it is a shame to see. Then home
to dinner, and after dinner, my mind mighty full of this business of Sir
W. Pen's, to the office, and there busy all the afternoon. This evening
Sir W. Batten and [Sir] W. Pen and I met at [Sir] W. Batten's house, and
there I took an opportunity to break the business, at which [Sir] W. Pen
is much disturbed, and would excuse it the most he can, but do it so basely,
that though he do offer to let go his pretence to her, and resign up his
order for her, and come in only to ask his share of her (which do very
well please me, and give me present satisfaction), yet I shall remember
him for a knave while I live. But thus my mind is quieted for the present
more than I thought I should be, and am glad that I shall have no need
of bidding him open defiance, which I would otherwise have done, and made
a perpetual war between us. So to the office, and there busy pretty late,
and so home and to supper with my wife, and so to bed.
19th. Up, and all the morning
at the office. At noon home to dinner, W. Hewer and I and my wife, when
comes my cozen, Kate Joyce, and an aunt of ours, Lettice, formerly Haynes,
and now Howlett, come to town to see her friends, and also Sarah Kite,
with her little boy in her armes, a very pretty little boy. The child
I like very well, and could wish it my own. My wife being all unready,
did not appear. I made as much of them as I could such ordinary company;
and yet my heart was glad to see them, though their condition was a little
below my present state, to be familiar with. She tells me how the lifeguard,
which we thought a little while since was sent down into the country about
some insurrection, was sent to Winchcombe, to spoil the tobacco there,
which it seems the people there do plant contrary to law, and have always
done, and still been under force and danger of having it spoiled, as it
hath been oftentimes, and yet they will continue to plant it.
[Winchcombe St. Peter, a market-town in Gloucestershire.
Tobacco was first cultivated in this parish, after its introduction into
England, in 1583, and it proved, a considerable source of profit to the
inhabitants, till the trade was placed under restrictions. The cultivation
was first prohibited during the Commonwealth, and various acts were passed
in the reign of Charles II. for the same purpose. Among the king's pamphlets
in the British Museum is a tract entitled "Harry Hangman's Honour,
or Glostershire Hangman's Request to the Smokers and Tobacconists of London,"
dated June 11th, 1655. The author writes: "The very planting of tobacco
hath proved the decay of my trade, for since it hath been planted in Glostershire,
especially at Winchcomb, my trade hath proved nothing worth." He
adds: "Then 'twas a merry world with me, for indeed before tobacco
was there planted, there being no kind of trade to employ men, and very
small tillage, necessity compelled poor men to stand my friends by stealing
of sheep and other cattel, breaking of hedges, robbing of orchards, and
what not."]
The place, she says, is a miserable poor place. They gone, I to the office,
where all the afternoon very busy, and at night, when my eyes were weary
of the light, I and my wife to walk in the garden, and then home to supper
and pipe, and then to bed.
20th. At the office doing
business all the morning. At noon expected Creed to have come to dine
with me and brought Mr. Sheres (the gentleman lately come from my Lord
Sandwich) with him; but they come not, so there was a good dinner lost.
After dinner my wife and Jane about some business of hers abroad, and
then I to the office, where, having done my business, I out to pay some
debts: among others to the taverne at the end of Billiter Lane, where
my design was to see the pretty mistress of the house, which I did, and
indeed is, as I always thought, one of the modestest, prettiest, plain
women that ever I saw. Thence was met in the street by Sir W. Pen, and
he and I by coach to the King's playhouse, and there saw "The Mad
Couple," which I do not remember that I have seen; it is a pretty
pleasant play. Thence home, and my wife and I to walk in the garden, she
having been at the same play with Jane, in the 18d. seat, to shew Jane
the play, and so home to supper and to bed.
21st. All the morning at
the office, dined at home, and expected Sheres again, but he did not come,
so another dinner lost by the folly of Creed. After having done some business
at the office, I out with my wife to Sheres's lodging and left an invitation
for him to dine with me tomorrow, and so back and took up my wife at the
Exchange, and then kissed Mrs. Smith's pretty hand, and so with my wife
by coach to take some ayre (but the way very dirty) as far as Bow, and
so drinking (as usual) at Mile End of Byde's ale, we home and there busy
at my letters till late, and so to walk by moonshine with my wife, and
so to bed. The King, Duke of York, and the men of the Court, have been
these four or five days a-hunting at Bagshot.
22nd (Lord's day). At my
chamber all the morning making up some accounts, to my great content.
At noon comes Mr. Sheres, whom I find a good, ingenious man, but do talk
a little too much of his travels. He left my Lord Sandwich well, but in
pain to be at home for want of money, which comes very hardly. Most of
the afternoon talking of Spain, and informing him against his return how
things are here, and so spent most of the afternoon, and then he parted,
and then to my chamber busy till my eyes were almost blind with writing
and reading, and I was fain to get the boy to come and write for me, and
then to supper, and Pelling come to me at supper, and then to sing a Psalm
with him, and so parted and to bed, after my wife had read some thing
to me (to save my eyes) in a good book. This night I did even my accounts
of the house, which I have to my great shame omitted now above two months
or more, and therefore am content to take my wife's and mayd's accounts
as they give them, being not able to correct them, which vexes me; but
the fault being my own, contrary to my wife's frequent desires, I cannot
find fault, but am resolved never to let them come to that pass again.
The truth is, I have indulged myself more in pleasure for these last two
months than ever I did in my life before, since I come to be a person
concerned in business; and I doubt, when I come to make up my accounts,
I shall find it so by the expence.
23rd. Up, and walked to
the Exchange, there to get a coach but failed, and so was forced to walk
a most dirty walk to the Old Swan, and there took boat, and so to the
Exchange, and there took coach to St. James's and did our usual business
with the Duke of York. Thence I walked over the Park to White Hall and
took water to Westminster, and there, among other things, bought the examinations
of the business about the Fire of London, which is a book that Mrs. Pierce
tells me hath been commanded to be burnt. The examinations indeed are
very plain. Thence to the Excise office, and so to the Exchange, and did
a little business, and so home and took up my wife, and so carried her
to the other end, where I 'light at my Lord Ashly's, by invitation, to
dine there, which I did, and Sir H. Cholmly, Creed, and Yeabsly, upon
occasion of the business of Yeabsly, who, God knows, do bribe him very
well for it; and it is pretty to see how this great man do condescend
to these things, and do all he can in his examining of his business to
favour him, and yet with great cunning not to be discovered but by me
that am privy to it. At table it is worth remembering that my Lord tells
us that the House of Lords is the last appeal that a man can make, upon
a poynt of interpretation of the law, and that therein they are above
the judges; and that he did assert this in the Lords' House upon the late
occasion of the quarrel between my Lord Bristoll and the Chancellor, when
the former did accuse the latter of treason, and the judges did bring
it in not to be treason: my Lord Ashly did declare that the judgment of
the judges was nothing in the presence of their Lordships, but only as
far as they were the properest men to bring precedents; but not to interpret
the law to their Lordships, but only the inducements of their persuasions:
and this the Lords did concur in. Another pretty thing was my Lady Ashly's
speaking of the bad qualities of glass-coaches; among others, the flying
open of the doors upon any great shake: but another was, that my Lady
Peterborough being in her glass-coach, with the glass up, and seeing a
lady pass by in a coach whom she would salute, the glass was so clear,
that she thought it had been open, and so ran her head through the glass,
and cut all her forehead! After dinner, before we fell to the examination
of Yeabsly's business, we were put into my Lord's room before he could
come to us, and there had opportunity to look over his state of his accounts
of the prizes; and there saw how bountiful the King hath been to several
people and hardly any man almost, Commander of the Navy of any note, but
hath had some reward or other out of it; and many sums to the Privy-purse,
but not so many, I see, as I thought there had been: but we could not
look quite through it. But several Bedchamber-men and people about the
Court had good sums; and, among others, Sir John Minnes and Lord Bruncker
have L200 a-piece for looking to the East India prizes, while I did their
work for them. By and by my Lord come, and we did look over Yeabsly's
business a little; and I find how prettily this cunning Lord can be partial
and dissemble it in this case, being privy to the bribe he is to receive.
This done; we away, and with Sir H. Cholmly to Westminster;
who by the way told me how merry the king and Duke of York and Court were
the other day, when they were abroad a-hunting. They come to Sir G. Carteret's
house at Cranbourne, and there were entertained, and all made drunk; and
that all being drunk, Armerer did come to the King, and swore to him,
"By God, Sir," says he, "you are not so kind to the Duke
of York of late as you used to be."--"Not I?" says the
King. "Why so?"--"Why," says he, "if you are,
let us drink his health."--"Why, let us," says the King.
Then he fell on his knees, and drank it; and having done, the King began
to drink it. "Nay, Sir," says Armerer, "by God you must
do it on your knees!" So he did, and then all the company: and having
done it, all fell a-crying for joy, being all maudlin and kissing one
another, the King the Duke of York, and the Duke of York the King: and
in such a maudlin pickle as never people were: and so passed the day.
But Sir H. Cholmly tells me, that the King hath this good luck, that the
next day he hates to have any body mention what he had done the day before,
nor will suffer any body to gain upon him that way; which is a good quality.
Parted with Sir H. Cholmly at White Hall, and there I took coach and took
up my wife at Unthanke's, and so out for ayre, it being a mighty pleasant
day, as far as Bow, and so drank by the way, and home, and there to my
chamber till by and by comes Captain Cocke about business; who tells me
that Mr. Bruncker is lost for ever, notwithstanding my Lord Bruncker hath
advised with him, Cocke, how he might make a peace with the Duke of York
and Chancellor, upon promise of serving him in the Parliament but Cocke
says that is base to offer, and will have no success neither. He says
that Mr. Wren hath refused a present of Tom Wilson's for his place of
Store-keeper of Chatham, and is resolved never to take any thing; which
is both wise in him, and good to the King's service. He stayed with me
very late, here being Mrs. Turner and W. Batelier drinking and laughing,
and then to bed.
24th. Up, and to the Office,
where all the morning very busy. At noon home, where there dined with
me Anthony Joyce and his wife, and Will and his wife, and my aunt Lucett,
that was here the other day, and Sarah Kite, and I had a good dinner for
them, and were as merry as I could be in that company where W. Joyce is,
who is still the same impertinent fellow that ever he was. After dinner
I away to St. James's, where we had an audience of the Duke of York of
many things of weight, as the confirming an establishment of the numbers
of men on ships in peace and other things of weight, about which we stayed
till past candle-light, and so Sir W. Batten and W. Pen and I fain to
go all in a hackney-coach round by London Wall, for fear of cellars, this
being the first time I have been forced to go that way this year, though
now I shall begin to use it. We tired one coach upon Holborne-Conduit
Hill, and got another, and made it a long journey home. Where to the office
and then home, and at my business till twelve at night, writing in short
hand the draught of a report to make to the King and Council to-morrow,
about the reason of not having the book of the Treasurer made up. This
I did finish to-night to the spoiling of my eyes, I fear. This done, then
to bed. This evening my wife tells me that W. Batelier hath been here
to-day, and brought with him the pretty girl he speaks of, to come to
serve my wife as a woman, out of the school at Bow. My wife says she is
extraordinary handsome, and inclines to have her, and I am glad of it--at
least, that if we must have one, she should be handsome. But I shall leave
it wholly to my wife, to do what she will therein.
25th. Up as soon as I could
see and to the office to write over fair with Mr. Hater my last night's
work, which I did by nine o'clock, and got it signed, and so with Sir
H. Cholmly, who come to me about his business, to White Hall: and thither
come also my Lord Bruncker: and we by and by called in, and our paper
read; and much discourse thereon by Sir G. Carteret, my Lord Anglesey,
Sir W. Coventry, and my Lord Ashly, and myself: but I could easily discern
that they none of them understood the business; and the King at last ended
it with saying lazily, "Why," says he, "after all this
discourse, I now come to understand it; and that is, that there can nothing
be done in this more than is possible," which was so silly as I never
heard: "and therefore," says he, "I would have these gentlemen
to do as much as possible to hasten the Treasurer's accounts; and that
is all." And so we broke up: and I confess I went away ashamed, to
see how slightly things are advised upon there. Here I saw the Duke of
Buckingham sit in Council again, where he was re-admitted, it seems, the
last Council-day: and it is wonderful to see how this man is come again
to his places, all of them, after the reproach and disgrace done him:
so that things are done in a most foolish manner quite through. The Duke
of Buckingham did second Sir W. Coventry in the advising the King that
he would not concern himself in the owning or not owning any man's accounts,
or any thing else, wherein he had not the same satisfaction that would
satisfy the Parliament; saying, that nothing would displease the Parliament
more than to find him defending any thing that is not right, nor justifiable
to the utmost degree but methought he spoke it but very poorly. After
this, I walked up and down the Gallery till noon; and here I met with
Bishop Fuller, who, to my great joy, is made, which I did not hear before,
Bishop of Lincoln. At noon I took coach, and to Sir G. Carteret's, in
Lincoln's-Inn-Fields, to the house that is my Lord's, which my Lord lets
him have: and this is the first day of dining there. And there dined with
him and his lady my Lord Privy-seale, who is indeed a very sober man;
who, among other talk, did mightily wonder at the reason of the growth
of the credit of banquiers, since it is so ordinary a thing for citizens
to break, out of knavery. Upon this we had much discourse; and I observed
therein, to the honour of this City, that I have not heard of one citizen
of London broke in all this war, this plague, this fire, and this coming
up of the enemy among us; which he owned to be very considerable.
[This remarkable fact is confirmed by Evelyn, in a
letter to Sir Samuel Tuke, September 27th, 1666. See "Correspondence,"
vol. iii., p. 345, edit. 1879.]
After dinner I to the King's playhouse, my eyes being so bad since last
night's straining of them, that I am hardly able to see, besides the pain
which I have in them. The play was a new play; and infinitely full: the
King and all the Court almost there. It is "The Storme," a play
of Fletcher's;' which is but so-so, methinks; only there is a most admirable
dance at the end, of the ladies, in a military manner, which indeed did
please me mightily. So, it being a mighty wet day and night, I with much
ado got a coach, and, with twenty stops which he made, I got him to carry
me quite through, and paid dear for it, and so home, and there comes my
wife home from the Duke of York's playhouse, where she hath been with
my aunt and Kate Joyce, and so to supper, and betimes to bed, to make
amends for my last night's work and want of sleep.
26th. Up, and to my chamber,
whither Jonas Moore comes, and, among other things, after our business
done, discoursing of matters of the office, I shewed him my varnished
things, which he says he can outdo much, and tells me the mighty use of
Napier's bones;
[John Napier or Neper (1550-1617), laird of Merchiston
(now swallowed up in the enlarged Edinburgh of to-day, although the old
castle still stands), and the inventor of logarithms. He published his
"Rabdologiae seu numerationis per virgulas libri duo" in 1617,
and the work was reprinted and translated into Italian (1623) and Dutch
(1626). In 1667 William Leybourn published "The Art of Numbering
by Speaking Rods, vulgarly termed Napier's Bones."]
so that I will have a pair presently. To the office, where busy all the
morning sitting, and at noon home to dinner, and then with my wife abroad
to the King's playhouse, to shew her yesterday's new play, which I like
as I did yesterday, the principal thing extraordinary being the dance,
which is very good. So to Charing Cross by coach, about my wife's business,
and then home round by London Wall, it being very dark and dirty, and
so to supper, and, for the ease of my eyes, to bed, having first ended
all my letters at the office.
27th. Up, and to the office,
where very busy all the morning. While I was busy at the Office, my wife
sends for me to come home, and what was it but to see the pretty girl
which she is taking to wait upon her: and though she seems not altogether
so great a beauty as she had before told me, yet indeed she is mighty
pretty; and so pretty, that I find I shall be too much pleased with it,
and therefore could be contented as to my judgement, though not to my
passion, that she might not come, lest I may be found too much minding
her, to the discontent of my wife. She is to come next week. She seems,
by her discourse, to be grave beyond her bigness and age, and exceeding
well bred as to her deportment, having been a scholar in a school at Bow
these seven or eight years. To the office again, my head running on this
pretty girl, and there till noon, when Creed and Sheres come and dined
with me; and we had a great deal of pretty discourse of the ceremoniousness
of the Spaniards, whose ceremonies are so many and so known, that, Sheres
tells me, upon all occasions of joy or sorrow in a Grandee's family, my
Lord Embassador is fain to send one with an 'en hora buena', if it be
upon a marriage, or birth of a child, or a 'pesa me', if it be upon the
death of a child, or so. And these ceremonies are so set, and the words
of the compliment, that he hath been sent from my Lord, when he hath done
no more than send in word to the Grandee that one was there from the Embassador;
and he knowing what was his errand, that hath been enough, and he never
spoken with him: nay, several Grandees having been to marry a daughter,
have wrote letters to my Lord to give him notice, and out of the greatness
of his wisdom to desire his advice, though people he never saw; and then
my Lord he answers by commending the greatness of his discretion in making
so good an alliance, &c., and so ends. He says that it is so far from
dishonour to a man to give private revenge for an affront, that the contrary
is a disgrace; they holding that he that receives an affront is not fit
to appear in the sight of the world till he hath revenged himself; and
therefore, that a gentleman there that receives an affront oftentimes
never appears again in the world till he hath, by some private way or
other, revenged himself: and that, on this account, several have followed
their enemies privately to the Indys, thence to Italy, thence to France
and back again, watching for an opportunity to be revenged. He says my
Lord was fain to keep a letter from the Duke of York to the Queen of Spain
a great while in his hands, before he could think fit to deliver it, till
he had learnt whether the Queen would receive it, it being directed to
his cozen. He says that many ladies in Spain, after they are found to
be with child, do never stir out of their beds or chambers till they are
brought to bed: so ceremonious they are in that point also. He tells me
of their wooing by serenades at the window, and that their friends do
always make the match; but yet that they have opportunities to meet at
masse at church, and there they make love: that the Court there hath no
dancing, nor visits at night to see the King or Queen, but is always just
like a cloyster, nobody stirring in it: that my Lord Sandwich wears a
beard now, turned up in the Spanish manner. But that which pleases me
most indeed is, that the peace which he hath made with Spain is now printed
here, and is acknowledged by all the merchants to be the best peace that
ever England had with them: and it appears that the King thinks it so,
for this is printed before the ratification is gone over; whereas that
with France and Holland was not in a good while after, till copys come
over of it in English out of Holland and France, that it was a reproach
not to have it printed here. This I am mighty glad of; and is the first
and only piece of good news, or thing fit to be owned, that this nation
hath done several years. After dinner I to the office, and they gone,
anon comes Pelling, and he and I to Gray's Inne Fields, thinking to have
heard Mrs. Knight sing at her lodgings, by a friend's means of his;
[Mrs. Knight, a celebrated singer and mistress of
Charles II. There is in Waller's "Poems" a song sung by her
to the queen on her birthday. In her portrait, engraved by Faber, after
Kneller, she is represented in mourning, and in a devout posture before
a crucifix. Evelyn refers to her singing as incomparable, and adds that
she had "the greatest reach of any English woman; she had been lately
roaming in Italy, and was much improv'd in that quality" ("Diary,"
December 2nd, 1674).]
but we come too late; so must try another time. So lost our labour, and
I by coach home, and there to my chamber, and did a great deal of good
business about my Tangier accounts, and so with pleasure discoursing with
my wife of our journey shortly to Brampton, and of this little girle,
which indeed runs in my head, and pleases me mightily, though I dare not
own it, and so to supper and to bed.
28th. Up, having slept
not so much to-night as I used to do, for my thoughts being so full of
this pretty little girle that is coming to live with us, which pleases
me mightily. All the morning at the Office, busy upon an Order of Council,
wherein they are mightily at a loss what to advise about our discharging
of seamen by ticket, there being no money to pay their wages before January,
only there is money to pay them since January, provided by the Parliament,
which will be a horrid disgrace to the King and Crowne of England that
no man shall reckon himself safe, but where the Parliament takes care.
And this did move Mr. Wren at the table to-day to say, that he did believe
if ever there be occasion more to raise money, it will become here, as
it is in Poland, that there are two treasurers--one for the King, and
the other for the kingdom. At noon dined at home, and Mr. Hater with me,
and Mr. Pierce, the surgeon, dropped in, who I feared did come to bespeak
me to be godfather to his son, which I am unwilling now to be, having
ended my liking to his wife, since I find she paints. After dinner comes
Sir Fr. Hollis to me about business; and I with him by coach to the Temple,
and there I 'light; all the way he telling me romantic lies of himself
and his family, how they have been Parliamentmen for Grimsby, he and his
forefathers, this 140 years; and his father is now: and himself, at this
day, stands for to be, with his father, by the death of his fellow-burgess;
and that he believes it will cost him as much as it did his predecessor,
which was L300 in ale, and L52 in buttered ale; which I believe is one
of his devilish lies. Here I 'light and to the Duke of York's playhouse,
and there saw a piece of "Sir Martin Marrall," with great delight,
though I have seen it so often, and so home, and there busy late, and
so home to my supper and bed.
29th (Lord's day). Up,
and put off first my summer's silk suit, and put on a cloth one. Then
to church, and so home to dinner, my wife and I alone to a good dinner.
All the afternoon talking in my chamber with my wife, about my keeping
a coach the next year, and doing some things to my house, which will cost
money--that is, furnish our best chamber with tapestry, and other rooms
with pictures. In the evening read good books --my wife to me; and I did
even my kitchen accounts. Then to supper, and so to bed.
30th. By water to White
Hall, there to a committee of Tangier, but they not met yet, I went to
St. James's, there thinking to have opportunity to speak to the Duke of
York about the petition I have to make to him for something in reward
for my service this war, but I did waive it. Thence to White Hall, and
there a Committee met, where little was done, and thence to the Duke of
York to Council, where we the officers of the Navy did attend about the
business of discharging the seamen by tickets, where several of the Lords
spoke and of our number none but myself, which I did in such manner as
pleased the King and Council. Speaking concerning the difficulty of pleasing
of seamen and giving them assurance to their satisfaction that they should
be paid their arrears of wages, my Lord Ashly did move that an assignment
for money on the Act might be put into the hands of the East India Company,
or City of London, which he thought the seamen would believe. But this
my Lord Anglesey did very handsomely oppose, and I think did carry it
that it will not be: and it is indeed a mean thing that the King should
so far own his own want of credit as to borrow theirs in this manner.
My Lord Anglesey told him that this was the way indeed to teach the Parliament
to trust the King no more for the time to come, but to have a kingdom's
Treasurer distinct from the King's. Home at noon to dinner, where I expected
to have had our new girle, my wife's woman, but she is not yet come. I
abroad after dinner to White Hall, and there among other things do hear
that there will be musique to- morrow night before the King. So to Westminster,
where to the Swan . . . . and drank and away to the Hall, and thence to
Mrs. Martin's, to bespeak some linen, and there je did avoir all with
her, and drank, and away, having first promised my goddaughter a new coat-her
first coat. So by coach home, and there find our pretty girl Willet come,
brought by Mr. Batelier, and she is very pretty, and so grave as I never
saw a little thing in my life. Indeed I think her a little too good for
my family, and so well carriaged as I hardly ever saw. I wish my wife
may use her well. Now I begin to be full of thought for my journey the
next week, if I can get leave, to Brampton. Tonight come and sat with
me Mr. Turner and his wife and tell me of a design of sending their son
Franke to the East Indy Company's service if they can get him entertainment,
which they are promised by Sir Andr. Rickard, which I do very well like
of. So the company broke up and to bed.
October 1667
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