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[In
this part of the "Diary" no entry occurs for thirteen days,
though there are several pages left blank. During the interval Pepys went
into the country, as he subsequently mentions his having been at Saxham,
in Suffolk, during the king's visit to Lord Crofts, which took place at
this time (see October 23rd, host). He might also probably have gone to
Impington to fetch his wife. The pages left blank were never filled up.--B.]
October 11th (Lord's day').
Up and to church, where I find Parson Mills come to town and preached,
and the church full, most people being now come home to town, though the
season of year is as good as summer in all respects. At noon dined at
home with my wife, all alone, and busy all the afternoon in my closet,
making up some papers with W. Hewer and at night comes Mr. Turner and
his wife, and there they tell me that Mr. Harper is dead at Deptford,
and so now all his and my care is, how to secure his being Storekeeper
in his stead; and here they and their daughter, and a kinswoman that come
along with them, did sup with me, and pretty merry, and then, they gone,
and my wife to read to me, and to bed.
12th. Up, and with Mr.
Turner by water to White Hall, there to think to enquire when the Duke
of York will be in town, in order to Mr. Turner's going down to Audley
Ends about his place; and here I met in St. James's Park with one that
told us that the Duke of York would be in town to-morrow, and so Turner
parted and went home, and I also did stop my intentions of going to the
Court, also this day, about securing Mr. Turner's place of Petty-purveyor
to Mr. Hater. So I to my Lord Brouncker's, thinking to have gone and spoke
to him about it, but he is gone out to town till night, and so, meeting
a gentleman of my Lord Middleton's looking for me about the payment of
the L1000 lately ordered to his Lord, in advance of his pay, which shall
arise upon his going Governor to Tangier, I did go to his Lord's lodgings,
and there spoke the first time with him, and find him a shrewd man, but
a drinking man, I think, as the world says; but a man that hath seen much
of the world, and is a Scot. I offered him my service, though I can do
him little; but he sends his man home with me, where I made him stay,
till I had gone to Sir W. Pen, to bespeak him about Mr. Hater, who, contrary
to my fears, did appear very friendly, to my great content; for I was
afraid of his appearing for his man Burroughs. But he did not; but did
declare to me afterwards his intentions to desire an excuse in his own
business, to be eased of the business of the Comptroller, his health not
giving him power to stay always in town, but he must go into the country.
I did say little to him but compliment, having no leisure to think of
his business, or any man's but my own, and so away and home, where I find
Sir H. Cholmly come to town; and is come hither to see me: and he is a
man that I love mightily, as being, of a gentleman, the most industrious
that ever I saw. He staid with me awhile talking, and telling me his obligations
to my Lord Sandwich, which I was glad of; and that the Duke of Buckingham
is now chief of all men in this kingdom, which I knew before; and that
he do think the Parliament will hardly ever meet again; which is a great
many men's thoughts, and I shall not be sorry for it.
He being gone, I with my Lord Middleton's servant to
Mr. Colvill's, but he was not in town, and so he parted, and I home, and
there to dinner, and Mr. Pelling with us; and thence my wife and Mercer,
and W. Hewer and Deb., to the King's playhouse, and I afterwards by water
with them, and there we did hear the Eunuch (who, it seems, is a Frenchman,
but long bred in Italy) sing, which I seemed to take as new to me, though
I saw him on Saturday last, but said nothing of it; but such action and
singing I could never have imagined to have heard, and do make good whatever
Tom Hill used to tell me. Here we met with Mr. Batelier and his sister,
and so they home with us in two coaches, and there at my house staid and
supped, and this night my bookseller Shrewsbury comes, and brings my books
of Martyrs, and I did pay him for them, and did this night make the young
women before supper to open all the volumes for me. So to supper, and
after supper to read a ridiculous nonsensical book set out by Will. Pen,
for the Quakers; but so full of nothing but nonsense, that I was ashamed
to read in it. So they gone, we to bed.
[Penn's first work, entitled, "Truth exalted,
in a short but sure testimony against all those religions, faiths, and
worships, that have been formed and followed, in the darkness of apostacy;
and for that glorious light which is now risen, and shines forth, in the
life and doctrine of the despised Quakers . . . . by W. Penn, whom divine
love constrains, in holy contempt, to trample on Egypt's glory, not fearing
the King's wrath, having beheld the Majesty of Him who is invisible:"
London, 1668.--B.]
13th. Up, and to the office,
and before the office did speak with my Lord Brouncker, and there did
get his ready assent to T. Hater's having of Mr. Turner's place, and so
Sir J. Minnes's also: but when we come to sit down at the Board, comes
to us Mr. Wren this day to town, and tells me that James Southern do petition
the Duke of York for the Storekeeper's place of Deptford, which did trouble
me much, and also the Board, though, upon discourse, after he was gone,
we did resolve to move hard for our Clerks, and that places of preferment
may go according to seniority and merit. So, the Board up, I home with
my people to dinner, and so to the office again, and there, after doing
some business, I with Mr. Turner to the Duke of Albemarle's at night;
and there did speak to him about his appearing to Mr. Wren a friend to
Mr. Turner, which he did take kindly from me; and so away thence, well
pleased with what we had now done, and so I with him home, stopping at
my Lord Brouncker's, and getting his hand to a letter I wrote to the Duke
of York for T. Hater, and also at my Lord Middleton's, to give him an
account of what I had done this day, with his man, at Alderman Backewell's,
about the getting of his L1000 paid;
[It was probably for this payment that the tally was
obtained, the loss of which caused Pepys so much anxiety. See November
26th, 1668]
and here he did take occasion to discourse about the business of the Dutch
war, which, he says, he was always an enemy to; and did discourse very
well of it, I saying little, but pleased to hear him talk; and to see
how some men may by age come to know much, and yet by their drinking and
other pleasures render themselves not very considerable. I did this day
find by discourse with somebody, that this nobleman was the great Major-General
Middleton; that was of the Scots army, in the beginning of the late war
against the King. Thence home and to the office to finish my letters,
and so home and did get my wife to read to me, and then Deb to comb my
head . . . .
14th. Up, and by water,
stopping at Michell's, and there saw Betty, but could have no discourse
with her, but there drank. To White Hall, and there walked to St. James's,
where I find the Court mighty full, it being the Duke or York's birthday;
and he mighty fine, and all the musick, one after another, to my great
content. Here I met with Sir H. Cholmly; and he and I to walk, and to
my Lord Barkeley's new house; there to see a new experiment of a cart,
which; by having two little wheeles fastened to the axle-tree, is said
to make it go with half the ease and more, than another cart but we did
not see the trial made. Thence I home, and after dinner to St. James's,
and there met my brethren; but the Duke of York being gone out, and to-night
being a play there; and a great festival, we would not stay, but went
all of us to the King's playhouse, and there saw "The Faythful Shepherdess"
again, that we might hear the French Eunuch sing, which we did, to our
great content; though I do admire his action as much as his singing, being
both beyond all I ever saw or heard. Thence with W. Pen home, and there
to get my people to read, and to supper, and so to bed.
15th. Up, and all the morning
at the office, and at home at dinner, where, after dinner, my wife and
I and Deb. out by coach to the upholsters in Long Lane, Alderman Reeve's,
and then to Alderman Crow's, to see variety of hangings, and were mightily
pleased therewith, and spent the whole afternoon thereupon; and at last
I think we shall pitch upon the best suit of Apostles, where three pieces
for my room will come to almost L80: so home, and to my office, and then
home to supper and to bed. This day at the Board comes unexpected the
warrants from the Duke of York for Mr. Turner and Hater, for the places
they desire, which contents me mightily.
16th. Up, and busy all
the morning at the office, and before noon I took my wife by coach, and
Deb., and shewed her Mr. Wren's hangings and bed, at St. James's, and
Sir W. Coventry's in the Pell Mell, for our satisfaction in what we are
going to buy; and so by Mr. Crow's, home, about his hangings, and do pitch
upon buying his second suit of Apostles- the whole suit, which comes to
L83; and this we think the best for us, having now the whole suit, to
answer any other rooms or service. So home to dinner, and with Mr. Hater
by water to St. James's: there Mr. Hater, to give Mr. Wren thanks for
his kindness about his place that he hath lately granted him, of Petty
Purveyor of petty emptions, upon the removal of Mr. Turner to be Storekeeper
at Deptford, on the death of Harper. And then we all up to the Duke of
York, and there did our usual business, and so I with J. Minnes home,
and there finding my wife gone to my aunt Wight's, to see her the first
time after her coming to town, and indeed the first time, I think, these
two years (we having been great strangers one to the other for a great
while), I to them; and there mighty kindly used, and had a barrel of oysters,
and so to look up and down their house, they having hung a room since
I was there, but with hangings not fit to be seen with mine, which I find
all come home to-night, and here staying an hour or two we home, and there
to supper and to bed.
17th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning sitting, and at noon home to dinner, and to the
office all the afternoon, and then late home, and there with much pleasure
getting Mr. Gibbs, that writes well, to write the name upon my new draught
of "The Resolution;" and so set it up, and altered the situation
of some of my pictures in my closet, to my extraordinary content, and
at it with much pleasure till almost 12 at night. Mr. Moore and Seymour
were with me this afternoon, who tell me that my Lord Sandwich was received
mighty kindly by the King, and is in exceeding great esteem with him,
and the rest about him; but I doubt it will be hard for him to please
both the King and the Duke of York, which I shall be sorry for. Mr. Moore
tells me the sad condition my Lord is in, in his estate and debts; and
the way he now lives in, so high, and so many vain servants about him,
that he must be ruined, if he do not take up, which, by the grace of God,
I will put him upon, when I come to see him.
18th (Lord's day). Up,
and with my boy Tom all the morning altering the places of my pictures
with great pleasure, and at noon to dinner, and then comes Mr. Shales
to see me, and I with him to recommend him to my Lord Brouncker's service,
which I did at Madam Williams's, and my Lord receives him. Thence with
Brouncker to Lincolne's Inn, and Mr. Ball, to visit Dr. Wilkins, now newly
Bishop of Chester: and he received us mighty kindly; and had most excellent
discourse from him about his Book of Reall Character: and so I with Lord
Brouncker to White Hall, and there saw the Queen and some ladies, and
with Lord Brouncker back, it again being a rainy evening, and so my Lord
forced to lend me his coach till I got a hackney, which I did, and so
home and to supper, and got my wife to read to me, and so to bed.
19th. Up, and to my office
to set down my Journall for some days past, and so to other business.
At the office all the morning upon some business of Sir W. Warren's, and
at noon home to dinner, and thence out by coach with my wife and Deb.
and Mr. Harman, the upholster, and carried them to take measure of Mr.
Wren's bed at St. James's, I being resolved to have just such another
made me, and thence set him down in the Strand, and my wife and I to the
Duke of York's playhouse; and there saw, the first time acted, "The
Queene of Arragon," an old Blackfriars play, but an admirable one,
so good that I am astonished at it, and wonder where it hath lain asleep
all this while, that I have never heard of it before. Here met W. Batelier
and Mrs. Hunt, Deb.'s aunt; and saw her home--a very witty woman, and
one that knows this play, and understands a play mighty well. Left her
at home in Jewen Street, and we home, and to supper, and my wife to read
to me, and so to bed.
20th. Up, and to the office
all the morning, and then home to dinner, having this day a new girl come
to us in the room of Nell, who is lately, about four days since, gone
away, being grown lazy and proud. This girl to stay only till we have
a boy, which I intend to keep when I have a coach, which I am now about.
At this time my wife and I mighty busy laying out money in dressing up
our best chamber, and thinking of a coach and coachman and horses, &c.;
and the more because of Creed's being now married to Mrs. Pickering; a
thing I could never have expected, but it is done about seven or ten days
since, as I hear out of the country. At noon home to dinner, and my wife
and Harman and girl abroad to buy things, and I walked out to several
places to pay debts, and among other things to look out for a coach, and
saw many; and did light on one for which I bid L50, which do please me
mightily, and I believe I shall have it. So to my tailor's, and the New
Exchange, and so by coach home, and there, having this day bought "The
Queene of Arragon" play, I did get my wife and W. Batelier to read
it over this night by 11 o'clock, and so to bed.
21st. Lay pretty long talking
with content with my wife about our coach and things, and so to the office,
where Sir D. Gawden was to do something in his accounts. At noon to dinner
to Mr. Batelier's, his mother coming this day a-housewarming to him, and
several friends of his, to which he invited us. Here mighty merry, and
his mother the same; I heretofore took her for a gentlewoman, and understanding.
I rose from table before the rest, because under an obligation to go to
my Lord Brouncker's, where to meet several gentlemen of the Royal Society,
to go and make a visit to the French Embassador Colbert, at Leicester
House, he having endeavoured to make one or two to my Lord Brouncker,
as our President, but he was not within, but I come too late, they being
gone before: but I followed to Leicester House; but they are gore in and
up before me; and so I away to the New Exchange, and there staid for my
wife, and she come, we to Cow Lane, and there I shewed her the coach which
I pitch on, and she is out of herself for joy almost. But the man not
within, so did nothing more towards an agreement, but to Mr. Crow's about
a bed, to have his advice, and so home, and there had my wife to read
to me, and so to supper and to bed. Memorandum: that from Crow's, we went
back to Charing Cross, and there left my people at their tailor's, while
I to my Lord Sandwich's lodgings, who come to town the last night, and
is come thither to lye: and met with him within: and among others my new
cozen Creed, who looks mighty soberly; and he and I saluted one another
with mighty gravity, till we come to a little more freedom of talk about
it. But here I hear that Sir Gilbert Pickering is lately dead, about three
days since, which makes some sorrow there, though not much, because of
his being long expected to die, having been in a lethargy long. So waited
on my Lord to Court, and there staid and saw the ladies awhile: and thence
to my wife, and took them up; and so home, and to supper and bed.
22nd. Up, and W. Batelier's
Frenchman, a perriwigg maker, comes and brings me a new one, which I liked
and paid him for: a mighty genteel fellow. So to the office, where sat
all the morning, and at noon home to dinner, and thence with wife and
Deb. to Crow's, and there did see some more beds; and we shall, I think,
pitch upon a camlott one, when all is done. Thence sent them home, and
I to Arundell House, where the first time we have met since the vacation,
and not much company: but here much good discourse, and afterwards my
Lord and others and I to the Devil tavern, and there eat and drank, and
so late, with Mr. Colwell, home by coach; and at home took him with me,
and there found my uncle Wight and aunt, and Woolly and his wife, and
there supped, and mighty merry. And anon they gone, and Mrs. Turner staid,
who was there also to talk of her husband's business; and the truth is,
I was the less pleased to talk with her, for that she hath not yet owned,
in any fit manner of thanks, my late and principal service to her husband
about his place, which I alone ought to have the thanks for, if they know
as much as I do; but let it go: if they do not own it, I shall have it
in my hand to teach them to do it. So to bed. This day word come for all
the Principal Officers to bring them [the Commissioners of Accounts] their
patents, which I did in the afternoon, by leaving it at their office,
but am troubled at what should be their design therein.
23rd. Up, and plasterers
at work and painters about my house. Commissioner Middleton and I to St.
James's, where with the rest of our company we attended on our usual business
the Duke of York. Thence I to White Hall, to my Lord Sandwich's, where
I find my Lord within, but busy, private; and so I staid a little talking
with the young gentlemen: and so away with Mr. Pierce, the surgeon, towards
Tyburne, to see the people executed; but come too late, it being done;
two men and a woman hanged, and so back again and to my coachmaker's,
and there did come a little nearer agreement for the coach, and so to
Duck Lane, and there my bookseller's, and saw his moher, but elle is so
big-bellied that elle is not worth seeing. So home, and there all alone
to dinner, my wife and W. Hewer being gone to Deptford to see her mother,
and so I to the office all the afternoon.
In the afternoon comes my cozen, Sidney Pickering,
to bring my wife and me his sister's Favour for her wedding, which is
kindly done, and he gone, I to business again, and in the evening home,
made my wife read till supper time, and so to bed. This day Pierce do
tell me, among other news, the late frolick and debauchery of Sir Charles
Sidly and Buckhurst, running up and down all the night with their arses
bare, through the streets; and at last fighting, and being beat by the
watch and clapped up all night; and how the King takes their parts; and
my Lord Chief Justice Keeling hath laid the constable by the heels to
answer it next Sessions: which is a horrid shame. How the King and these
gentlemen did make the fiddlers of Thetford, this last progress, to sing
them all the bawdy songs they could think of. How Sir W. Coventry was
brought the other day to the Duchesse of York by the Duke, to kiss her
hand; who did acknowledge his unhappiness to occasion her so much sorrow,
declaring his intentions in it, and praying her pardon; which she did
give him upon his promise to make good his pretences of innocence to her
family, by his faithfulness to his master, the Duke of York. That the
Duke of Buckingham is now all in all, and will ruin Coventry, if he can:
and that W. Coventry do now rest wholly upon the Duke of York for his
standing, which is a great turn. He tells me that my Lady Castlemayne,
however, is a mortal enemy to the Duke of Buckingham, which I understand
not; but, it seems, she is disgusted with his greatness, and his ill usage
of her. That the King was drunk at Saxam with Sidly, Buckhurst, &c.,
the night that my Lord Arlington come thither, and would not give him
audience, or could not which is true, for it was the night that I was
there, and saw the King go up to his chamber, and was told that the King
had been drinking. He tells me, too, that the Duke of York did the next
day chide Bab. May for his occasioning the King's giving himself up to
these gentlemen, to the neglecting of my Lord Arlington: to which he answered
merrily, that, by God, there was no man in England that had heads to lose,
durst do what they do, every day, with the King, and asked the Duke of
York's pardon: which is a sign of a mad world. God bless us out of it!
24th. This morning comes
to me the coachmaker, and agreed with me for L53, and stand to the courtesy
of what more I should give him upon the finishing of the coach: he is
likely also to fit me with a coachman. There comes also to me Mr. Shotgrave,
the operator of our Royal Society, to show me his method of making the
Tubes for the eyes, which are clouterly done, so that mine are better,
but I have well informed myself in several things from him, and so am
glad of speaking with him. So to the office, where all the morning, and
then to dinner, and so all the afternoon late at the office, and so home;
and my wife to read to me, and then with much content to bed. This day
Lord Brouncker tells me that the making Sir J. Minnes a bare Commissioner
is now in doing, which I am glad of; but he speaks of two new Commissioners,
which I do not believe.
25th (Lord's
day). Up, and discoursing with my wife about our house and many
new things we are doing of, and so to church I, and there find Jack Fenn
come, and his wife, a pretty black woman: I never saw her before, nor
took notice of her now. So home and to dinner, and after dinner all the
afternoon got my wife and boy to read to me, and at night W. Batelier
comes and sups with us; and, after supper, to have my head combed by Deb.,
which occasioned the greatest sorrow to me that ever I knew in this world,
for my wife, coming up suddenly, did find me embracing the girl . . .
. . I was at a wonderful loss upon it, and the girle also, and I endeavoured
to put it off, but my wife was struck mute and grew angry, and so her
voice come to her, grew quite out of order, and I to say little, but to
bed, and my wife said little also, but could not sleep all night, but
about two in the morning waked me and cried, and fell to tell me as a
great secret that she was a Roman Catholique and had received the Holy
Sacrament, which troubled me, but I took no notice of it, but she went
on from one thing to another till at last it appeared plainly her trouble
was at what she saw, but yet I did not know how much she saw, and therefore
said nothing to her. But after her much crying and reproaching me with
inconstancy and preferring a sorry girl before her, I did give her no
provocation, but did promise all fair usage to her and love, and foreswore
any hurt that I did with her, till at last she seemed to be at ease again,
and so toward morning a little sleep, and so I with some little repose
and rest
26th. Rose, and up and
by water to White Hall, but with my mind mightily troubled for the poor
girle, whom I fear I have undone by this, my [wife] telling me that she
would turn her out of doors. However, I was obliged to attend the Duke
of York, thinking to have had a meeting of Tangier to-day, but had not;
but he did take me and Mr. Wren into his closet, and there did press me
to prepare what I had to say upon the answers of my fellow-officers to
his great letter, which I promised to do against his coming to town again,
the next week; and so to other discourse, finding plainly that he is in
trouble, and apprehensions of the Reformers, and would be found to do
what he can towards reforming, himself. And so thence to my Lord Sandwich's,
where, after long stay, he being in talk with others privately, I to him;
and there he, taking physic and keeping his chamber, I had an hour's talk
with him about the ill posture of things at this time, while the King
gives countenance to Sir Charles Sidly and Lord Buckhurst, telling him
their late story of running up and down the streets a little while since
all night, and their being beaten and clapped up all night by the constable,
who is since chid and imprisoned for his pains. He tells me that he thinks
his matters do stand well with the King, and hopes to have dispatch to
his mind; but I doubt it, and do see that he do fear it, too. He told
me my Lady Carteret's trouble about my writing of that letter of the Duke
of York's lately to the Office, which I did not own, but declared to be
of no injury to G. Carteret, and that I would write a letter to him to
satisfy him therein. But this I am in pain how to do, without doing myself
wrong, and the end I had, of preparing a justification to myself hereafter,
when the faults of the Navy come to be found out however, I will do it
in the best manner I can. Thence by coach home and
to dinner, finding my wife mightily discontented, and the girle sad, and
no words from my wife to her. So after dinner they out with me about two
or three things, and so home again, I all the evening busy, and my wife
full of trouble in her looks, and anon to bed, where about midnight she
wakes me, and there falls foul of me again, affirming that she saw me
hug and kiss the girle; the latter I denied, and truly, the other I confessed
and no more, and upon her pressing me did offer to give her under my hand
that I would never see Mrs. Pierce more nor Knepp, but did promise her
particular demonstrations of my true love to her, owning some indiscretions
in what I did, but that there was no harm in it. She at last upon these
promises was quiet, and very kind we were, and so to sleep, and
27th.
In the morning up, but my, mind troubled for the poor girle, with whom
I could not get opportunity to speak, but to the office, my mind mighty
full of sorrow for her, to the office, where all the morning, and to dinner
with my people, and to the office all the afternoon, and so at night home,
and there busy to get some things ready against to-morrow's meeting of
Tangier, and that being done, and my clerks gone, my wife did towards
bedtime begin to be in a mighty rage from some new matter that she had
got in her head, and did most part of the night in bed rant at me in most
high terms of threats of publishing my shame, and when I offered to rise
would have rose too, and caused a candle to be light to burn by her all
night in the chimney while she ranted, while the knowing myself to have
given some grounds for it, did make it my business to appease her all
I could possibly, and by good words and fair promises did make her very
quiet, and so rested all night, and rose with perfect good peace, being
heartily afflicted for this folly of mine that did occasion it, but was
forced to be silent about the girle, which I have no mind to part with,
but much less that the poor girle should be undone by my folly. So up
with mighty kindness from my wife and a thorough peace, and being up did
by a note advise the girle what I had done and owned, which note I was
in pain for till she told me she had burned it. This evening Mr. Spong
come, and sat late with me, and first told me of the instrument called
parallelogram,
[This useful instrument, used for copying maps, plans,
drawings, &c. either of the same size, or larger or smaller than the
originals, is now named a pantograph.]
which I must have one of, shewing me his practice thereon, by a map of
England.
28th. So by coach with
Mr. Gibson to Chancery Lane, and there made oath before a Master of Chancery
to the Tangier account of fees, and so to White Hall, where, by and by,
a Committee met, my Lord Sandwich there, but his report was not received,
it being late; but only a little business done, about the supplying the
place with victuals. But I did get, to my great content, my account allowed
of fees, with great applause by my Lord Ashly and Sir W. Pen. Thence home,
calling at one or two places; and there about our workmen, who are at
work upon my wife's closet, and other parts of my house, that we are all
in dirt. So after dinner with Mr. Gibson all the afternoon in my closet,
and at night to supper and to bed, my wife and I at good peace, but yet
with some little grudgings of trouble in her and more in me about the
poor girle.
29th. At the office all
the morning, where Mr. Wren first tells us of the order from the King,
came last night to the Duke of York, for signifying his pleasure to the
Sollicitor-General for drawing up a Commission for suspending of my Lord
Anglesey, and putting in Sir Thomas. Littleton and Sir Thomas Osborne,
the former a creature of Arlington's, and the latter of the Duke of Buckingham's,
during the suspension. The Duke of York was forced to obey, and did grant
it, he being to go to Newmarket this day with the King, and so the King
pressed for it. But Mr. Wren do own that the Duke of York is the most
wounded in this, in the world, for it is done and concluded without his
privity, after his appearing for Lord Anglesey, and that it is plain that
they do ayme to bring the Admiralty into Commission too, and lessen the
Duke of York. This do put strange apprehensions into all our Board; only
I think I am the least troubled at it, for I care not at all for it: but
my Lord Brouncker and Pen do seem to think much of it. So home to dinner,
full of this news, and after dinner to the office, and so home all the
afternoon to do business towards my drawing up an account for the Duke
of York of the answers of this office to his late great letter, and late
at it, and so to bed, with great peace from my wife and quiet, I bless
God.
30th. Up betimes; and Mr.
Povy comes to even accounts with me, which we did, and then fell to other
talk. He tells, in short, how the King is made a child of, by Buckingham
and Arlington, to the lessening of the Duke of York, whom they cannot
suffer to be great, for fear of my Lord Chancellor's return, which, therefore,
they make the King violent against. That he believes it is impossible
these two great men can hold together long: or, at least, that the ambition
of the former is so great, that he will endeavour to master all, and bring
into play as many as he can. That Anglesey will not lose his place easily,
but will contend in law with whoever comes to execute it. That the Duke
of York, in all things but in his cod-piece, is led by the nose by his
wife. That W. Coventry is now, by the Duke of York, made friends with
the Duchess; and that he is often there, and waits on her. That he do
believe that these present great men will break in time, and that W. Coventry
will be a great man again; for he do labour to have nothing to do in matters
of the State, and is so usefull to the side that he is on, that he will
stand, though at present he is quite out of play. That my Lady Castlemayne
hates the Duke of Buckingham. That the Duke of York hath expressed himself
very kind to my Lord Sandwich, which I am mighty glad of. That we are
to expect more changes if these men stand. This done, he and I to talk
of my coach, and I got him to go see it, where he finds most infinite
fault with it, both as to being out of fashion and heavy, with so good
reason that I am mightily glad of his having corrected me in it; and so
I do resolve to have one of his build, and with his advice, both in coach
and horses, he being the fittest man in the world for it, and so he carried
me home, and said the same to my wife. So I to the office and he away,
and at noon I home to dinner, and all the afternoon late with Gibson at
my chamber about my present great business, only a little in the afternoon
at the office about Sir D. Gawden's accounts, and so to bed and slept
heartily, my wife and I at good peace, but my heart troubled and her mind
not at ease, I perceive, she against and I for the girle, to whom I have
not said anything these three days, but resolve to be mighty strange in
appearance to her. This night W. Batelier come and took his leave of us,
he setting out for France to-morrow.
31st. Up, and at the office
all the morning. At noon home to dinner with my people, and afternoon
to the office again, and then to my chamber with Gibson to do more about
my great answer for the Duke of York, and so at night after supper to
bed well pleased with my advance thereon. This day my Lord Anglesey was
at the Office, and do seem to make nothing of this business of his suspension,
resolving to bring it into the Council, where he seems not to doubt to
have right, he standing upon his defence and patent, and hath put in his
caveats to the several Offices: so, as soon as the King comes back again,
which will be on Tuesday next, he will bring it into the Council. So
ends this month with some quiet to my mind, though not perfect, after
the greatest falling out with my poor wife, and through my folly with
the girl, that ever I had, and I have reason to be sorry and ashamed of
it, and more to be troubled for the poor girl's sake, whom I fear I shall
by this means prove the ruin of, though I shall think myself concerned
both to love and be a friend to her. This day Roger Pepys and his son
Talbot, newly come to town, come and dined with me, and mighty glad I
am to see them.
November 1668
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