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February
1st. Up, and by water from the Tower to White
Hall, the first time that I have gone to that end of the town by water,
for two or three months, I think, since I kept a coach, which God send propitious
to me; but it is a very great convenience. I went to a Committee of Tangier,
but it did not meet, and so I meeting Mr. Povy, he and I away to Dancre's,
to speak something touching the pictures I am getting him to make for me.
And thence he carried me to Mr. Streeter's, the famous history-painter over
the way, whom I have often heard of, but did never see him before; and there
I found him, and Dr. Wren, and several Virtuosos, looking upon the paintings
which he is making for the new Theatre at Oxford: and, indeed, they look
as if they would be very fine, and the rest think better than those of Rubens
in the Banqueting-house at White Hall, but I do not so fully think so. But
they will certainly be very noble; and I am mightily pleased to have the
fortune to see this man and his work, which is very famous; and he a very
civil little man, and lame, but lives very handsomely. So thence to my Lord
Bellassis, and met him within: my business only to see a chimney-piece of
Dancre's doing, in distemper, with egg to keep off the glaring of the light,
which I must have done for my room: and indeed it is pretty, but, I must
confess, I do think it is not altogether so beautiful as the oyle pictures;
but I will have some of one, and some of another. Thence set him down at
Little Turnstile, and so I home, and there eat a little dinner, and away
with my wife by coach to the King's playhouse, thinking to have seen "The
Heyresse," first acted on Saturday last; but when we come thither,
we find no play there; Kinaston, that did act a part therein, in abuse to
Sir Charles Sedley, being last night exceedingly beaten with sticks, by
two or three that assaulted him, so as he is mightily bruised, and forced
to keep his bed. So we to the Duke of York's playhouse, and there saw "
She Would if She Could," arid so home and to my office to business,
and then to supper and to bed. This day, going to the play, The. Turner
met us, and carried us to her mother, at my Lady Mordaunt's; and I did carry
both mother and daughter with us to the Duke of York's playhouse, at next
door.
2nd. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, and home to dinner at noon, where I find Mr. Sheres;
and there made a short dinner, and carried him with us to the King's playhouse,
where "The Heyresse," not- withstanding Kinaston's being beaten,
is acted; and they say the King is very angry with Sir Charles Sedley
for his being beaten, but he do deny it. But his part is done by Beeston,
who is fain to read it out of a book all the while, and thereby spoils
the part, and almost the play, it being one of the best parts in it; and
though the design is, in the first conception of it, pretty good, yet
it is but an indifferent play, wrote, they say, by my Lord Newcastle.
But it was pleasant to see Beeston come in with others, supposing it to
be dark, and yet he is forced to read his part by the light of the candles:
and this I observing to a gentleman that sat by me, he was mightily pleased
therewith, and spread it up and down. But that, that pleased me most in
the play is, the first song that Knepp sings, she singing three or four;
and, indeed, it was very finely sung, so as to make the whole house clap
her. Thence carried Sheres to White Hall, and there I stepped in, and
looked out Mr. May, who tells me that he and his company cannot come to
dine with me to- morrow, whom I expected only to come to see the manner
of our Office and books, at which I was not very much displeased, having
much business at the Office, and so away home, and there to the office
about my letters, and then home to supper and to bed, my wife being in
mighty ill humour all night, and in the morning I found it to be from
her observing Knepp to wink and smile on me; and she says I smiled on
her; and, poor wretch! I did perceive that she did, and do on all such
occasions, mind my eyes. I did, with much difficulty, pacify her, and
were friends, she desiring that hereafter, at that house, we might always
sit either above in a box, or, if there be [no] room, close up to the
lower boxes.
3rd. So up, and to the
Office till noon, and then home to a little dinner, and thither again
till night, mighty busy, to my great content, doing a great deal of business,
and so home to supper, and to bed; I finding this day that I may be able
to do a great deal of business by dictating, if I do not read myself,
or write, without spoiling my eyes, I being very well in my eyes after
a great day's work.
4th. Up, and at the office
all the morning. At noon home with my people to dinner, and then after
dinner comes Mr. Spong to see me, and brings me my Parallelogram, in better
order than before, and two or three draughts of the port of Brest, to
my great content, and I did call Mr. Gibson to take notice of it, who
is very much pleased therewith; and it seems this Parallelogram is not,
as Mr. Sheres would, the other day, have persuaded me, the same as a Protractor,
which do so much the more make me value it, but of itself it is a most
usefull instrument. Thence out with my wife and him, and carried him to
an instrument-maker's shop in Chancery Lane, that was once a 'Prentice
of Greatorex's, but the master was not within, and there he [Gibson] shewed
me a Parallelogram in brass, which I like so well that I will buy, and
therefore bid it be made clean and fit for me. And so to my cozen Turner's,
and there just spoke with The., the mother not being at home; and so to
the New Exchange, and thence home to my letters; and so home to supper
and to bed. This morning I made a slip from the Office to White Hall,
expecting Povy's business at a Committee of Tangier, at which I would
be, but it did not meet, and so I presently back.
5th. Up betimes, by coach
to Sir W. Coventry's, and with him by coach to White Hall, and there walked
in the garden talking of several things, and by my visit to keep fresh
my interest in him; and there he tells me how it hath been talked that
he was to go one of the Commissioners to Ireland, which he was resolved
never to do, unless directly commanded; for he told me that for to go
thither, while the Chief Secretary of State was his professed enemy, was
to undo himself; and, therefore, it were better for him to venture being
unhappy here, than to go further off, to be undone by some obscure instructions,
or whatever other way of mischief his enemies should cut out for him.
He mighty kind to me, and so parted, and thence home, calling in two or
three places--among others, Dancre's, where I find him beginning of a
piece for me, of Greenwich, which will please me well, and so home to
dinner, and very busy all the afternoon, and so at night home to supper,
and to bed.
6th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, and thence after dinner to the King's playhouse,
and there,--in an upper box, where come in Colonel Poynton and Doll Stacey,
who is very fine, and, by her wedding-ring, I suppose he hath married
her at last,--did see "The Moor of Venice:" but ill acted in
most parts; Mohun, which did a little surprise me, not acting Iago's part
by much so well as Clun used to do; nor another Hart's, which was Cassio's;
nor, indeed, Burt doing the Moor's so well as I once thought he did. Thence
home, and just at Holborn Conduit the bolt broke, that holds the fore-wheels
to the perch, and so the horses went away with them, and left the coachman
and us; but being near our coachmaker's, and we staying in a little ironmonger's
shop, we were presently supplied with another, and so home, and there
to my letters at the office, and so to supper and to bed.
7th (Lord's day). My wife
mighty peevish in the morning about my lying unquietly a-nights, and she
will have it that it is a late practice, from my evil thoughts in my dreams,
. . . .and mightily she is troubled about it; but all blew over, and I
up, and to church, and so home to dinner, where she in a worse fit, which
lasted all the afternoon, and shut herself up, in her closet, and I mightily
grieved and vexed, and could not get her to tell me what ayled her, or
to let me into her closet, but at last she did, where I found her crying
on the ground, and I could not please her; but I did at last find that
she did plainly expound it to me. It was, that she did believe me false
to her with Jane, and did rip up three or four silly circumstances of
her not rising till I come out of my chamber, and her letting me thereby
see her dressing herself; and that I must needs go into her chamber and
was naught with her; which was so silly, and so far from truth, that I
could not be troubled at it, though I could not wonder at her being troubled,
if she had these thoughts, and therefore she would lie from me, and caused
sheets to be put on in the blue room, and would have Jane to lie with
her lest I should come to her. At last, I did give her such satisfaction,
that we were mighty good friends, and went to bed betimes . . . . .
8th. Up, and dressed myself;
and by coach, with W. Hewer and my wife, to White Hall, where she set
us two down; and in the way, our little boy, at Martin, my bookseller's
shop, going to 'light, did fall down; and, had he not been a most nimble
boy (I saw how he did it, and was mightily pleased with him for it), he
had been run over by the coach. I to visit my Lord Sandwich; and there,
while my Lord was dressing himself, did see a young Spaniard, that he
hath brought over with him, dance, which he is admired for, as the best
dancer in Spain, and indeed he do with mighty mastery; but I do not like
his dancing as the English, though my Lord commends it mightily: but I
will have him to my house, and show it my wife. Here I met with Mr. Moore,
who tells me the state of my Lord's accounts of his embassy, which I find
not so good as I thought: for, though it be passed the King and his Cabal
(the Committee for Foreign Affairs as they are called), yet they have
cut off from L9000 full L8000, and have now sent it to the Lords of the
Treasury, who, though the Committee have allowed the rest, yet they are
not obliged to abide by it. So that I do fear this account may yet be
long ere it be passed--much more, ere that sum be paid: I am sorry for
the family, and not a little for what it owes me. So to my wife, took
her up at Unthank's, and in our way home did shew her the tall woman in
Holborne, which I have seen before; and I measured her, and she is, without
shoes, just six feet five inches high, and they say not above twenty-one
years old.
Thence home, and there to dinner, and my wife in a wonderful
ill humour; and, after dinner, I staid with her alone, being not able
to endure this life, and fell to some angry words together; but by and
by were mighty good friends, she telling me plain it was still about Jane,
whom she cannot believe but I am base with, which I made a matter of mirth
at; but at last did call up Jane, and confirm her mistress's directions
for her being gone at Easter, which I find the wench willing to be, but
directly prayed that Tom might go with her, which I promised, and was
but what I designed; and she being thus spoke with, and gone, my wife
and I good friends, and mighty kind, I having promised, and I will perform
it, never to give her for the time to come ground of new trouble; and
so I to the Office, with a very light heart, and there close at my business
all the afternoon. This day I was told by Mr. Wren, that Captain Cox,
Master- Attendant at Deptford, is to be one of us very soon, he and Tippets
being to take their turns for Chatham and Portsmouth, which choice I like
well enough; and Captain Annesley is to come in his room at Deptford.
This morning also, going to visit Roger Pepys, at the potticary's in King's
Street, he tells me that Roger is gone to his wife's, so that they have
been married, as he tells me, ever since the middle of last week: it was
his design, upon good reasons, to make no noise of it; but I am well enough
contented that it is over. Dispatched a great deal of business at the
office, and there pretty late, till finding myself very full of wind,
by my eating no dinner to-day, being vexed, I was forced to go home, and
there supped W. Batelier with us, and so with great content to bed.
9th. Up, and all the morning
busy at the office, and after dinner abroad with my wife to the King's
playhouse, and there saw "The Island Princesse," which I like
mighty well, as an excellent play: and here we find Kinaston to be well
enough to act again, which he do very well, after his beating by Sir Charles
Sedley's appointment; and so thence home, and there to my business at
the Office, and after my letters done, then home to supper and to bed,
my mind being mightily eased by my having this morning delivered to the
Office a letter of advice about our answers to the Commissioners of Accounts,
whom we have neglected, and I have done this as a record in my justification
hereafter, when it shall come to be examined.
10th. Up, and with my wife
and W. Hewer, she set us down at White Hall, where the Duke of York was
gone a-hunting: and so, after I had done a little business there, I to
my wife, and with her to the plaisterer's at Charing Cross, that casts
heads and bodies in plaister: and there I had my whole face done; but
I was vexed first to be forced to daub all my face over with pomatum:
but it was pretty to feel how soft and easily it is done on the face,
and by and by, by degrees, how hard it becomes, that you cannot break
it, and sits so close, that you cannot pull it off, and yet so easy, that
it is as soft as a pillow, so safe is everything where many parts of the
body do bear alike. Thus was the mould made; but when it came off there
was little pleasure in it, as it looks in the mould, nor any resemblance
whatever there will be in the figure, when I come to see it cast off,
which I am to call for a day or two hence, which I shall long to see.
Thence to Hercules Pillars, and there my wife and W. Hewer and I dined,
and back to White Hall, where I staid till the Duke of York come from
hunting, which he did by and by, and, when dressed, did come out to dinner;
and there I waited: and he did tell me that to-morrow was to be the great
day that the business of the Navy would be dis coursed of before the King
and his Caball, and that he must stand on his guard, and did design to
have had me in readiness by, but that upon second thoughts did think it
better to let it alone, but they are now upon entering into the economical
part of the Navy. Here he dined, and did mightily magnify his sauce, which
he did then eat with every thing, and said it was the best universal sauce
in the world, it being taught him by the Spanish Embassador; made of some
parsley and a dry toast, beat in a mortar, together with vinegar, salt,
and a little pepper: he eats it with flesh, or fowl, or fish: and then
he did now mightily commend some new sort of wine lately found out, called
Navarre wine, which I tasted, and is, I think, good wine: but I did like
better the notion of the sauce, and by and by did taste it, and liked
it mightily.
After dinner, I did what I went for, which was to get
his consent that Balty might hold his Muster- Master's place by deputy,
in his new employment which I design for him, about the Storekeeper's
accounts; which the Duke of York did grant me, and I was mighty glad of
it. Thence home, and there I find Povy and W. Batelier, by appointment,
met to talk of some merchandize of wine and linnen; but I do not like
of their troubling my house to meet in, having no mind to their pretences
of having their rendezvous here, but, however, I was not much troubled,
but went to the office, and there very busy, and did much business till
late at night, and so home to supper, and with great pleasure to bed.
This day, at dinner, I sent to Mr. Spong to come to me to Hercules Pillars,
who come to us, and there did bring with him my new Parallelogram of brass,
which I was mightily pleased with, and paid for it 25s., and am mightily
pleased with his ingenious and modest company.
11th. Up, and to the office,
where sat all the morning, and at noon home and heard that the last night
Colonel Middleton's wife died, a woman I never saw since she come hither,
having never been within their house since. Home at noon to dinner, and
thence to work all the afternoon with great pleasure, and did bring my
business to a very little compass in my day book, which is a mighty pleasure,
and so home to supper and get my wife to read to me, and then to bed.
12th. Up, and my wife with
me to White Hall, and Tom, and there she sets us down, and there to wait
on the Duke of York, with the rest of us, at the Robes, where the Duke
of York did tell us that the King would have us prepare a draught of the
present administration of the Navy, and what it was in the late times,
in order to his being able to distinguish between the good and the bad,
which I shall do, but to do it well will give me a great deal of trouble.
Here we shewed him Sir J. Minnes's propositions about balancing Storekeeper's
accounts; and I did shew him Hosier's, which did please him mightily,
and he will have it shewed the Council and King anon, to be put in practice.
Thence to the Treasurer's; and I and Sir J. Minnes and Mr. Tippets down
to the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury, and there had a hot debate
from Sir Thomas Clifford and my Lord Ashly (the latter of which, I hear,
is turning about as fast as he can to the Duke of Buckingham's side, being
in danger, it seems, of being otherwise out of play, which would not be
convenient for him), against Sir W. Coventry and Sir J. Duncomb, who did
uphold our Office against an accusation of our Treasurers, who told the
Lords that they found that we had run the King in debt L50,000 or more,
more than the money appointed for the year would defray, which they declared
like fools, and with design to hurt us, though the thing is in itself
ridiculous. But my Lord Ashly and Clifford did most horribly cry out against
the want of method in the Office. At last it come that it should be put
in writing what they had to object; but I was devilish mad at it, to see
us thus wounded by our own members, and so away vexed, and called my wife,
and to Hercules Pillars, Tom and I, there dined; and here there coming
a Frenchman by with his Shew, we did make him shew it us, which he did
just as Lacy acts it, which made it mighty pleasant to me.
So after dinner we away and to Dancre's, and there saw
our picture of Greenwich in doing, which is mighty pretty, and so to White
Hall, my wife to Unthank's, and I attended with Lord Brouncker the King
and Council, about the proposition of balancing Storekeeper's accounts
and there presented Hosier's book, and it was mighty well resented and
approved of. So the Council being up, we to the Queen's side with the
King and Duke of York: and the Duke of York did take me out to talk of
our Treasurers, whom he is mighty angry with: and I perceive he is mighty
desirous to bring in as many good motions of profit and reformation in
the Navy as he can, before the Treasurers do light upon them, they being
desirous, it seems, to be thought the great reformers: and the Duke of
York do well. But to my great joy he is mighty open to me in every thing;
and by this means I know his whole mind, and shall be able to secure myself,
if he stands. Here to-night I understand, by my Lord Brouncker, that at
last it is concluded on by the King and Buckingham that my Lord of Ormond
shall not hold his government of Ireland, which is a great stroke, to
shew the power of Buckingham and the poor spirit of the King, and little
hold that any man can have of him. Thence I homeward, and calling my wife
called at my cozen Turner's, and there met our new cozen Pepys (Mrs. Dickenson),
and Bab. and Betty' come yesterday to town, poor girls, whom we have reason
to love, and mighty glad we are to see them; and there staid and talked
a little, being also mightily pleased to see Betty Turner, who is now
in town, and her brothers Charles and Will, being come from school to
see their father, and there talked a while, and so home, and there Pelling
hath got me W. Pen's book against the Trinity. [Entitled,
"The Sandy Foundation Shaken; or those . . . doctrines of one God
subsisting in three distinct and separate persons; the impossibility of
God's pardoning sinners without a plenary satisfaction, the justification
of impure persons by an imputative righteousness, refuted from the authority
of Scripture testimonies and right reason, etc. London, 1668." It
caused him to be imprisoned in the Tower. "Aug. 4, 1669. Young Penn
who wrote the blasphemous book is delivered to his father to be transported"
("Letter to Sir John Birkenhead, quoted by Bishop Kennett in his
MS. Collections, vol. lxxxix., p. 477).] I got my wife to read
it to me; and I find it so well writ as, I think, it is too good for him
ever to have writ it; and it is a serious sort of book, and not fit for
every body to read. So to supper and to bed.
13th. Up, and all the morning
at the office, and at noon home to dinner, and thence to the office again
mighty busy, to my great content, till night, and then home to supper
and, my eyes being weary, to bed.
14th (Lord's day). Up,
and by coach to Sir W. Coventry, and there, he taking physic, I with him
all the morning, full of very good discourse of the Navy and publick matters,
to my great content, wherein I find him doubtful that all will be bad,
and, for his part, he tells me he takes no more care for any thing more
than in the Treasury; and that, that being done, he goes to cards and
other delights, as plays, and in summertime to bowles. But here he did
shew me two or three old books of the Navy, of my Lord Northumberland's'
times, which he hath taken many good notes out of, for justifying the
Duke of York and us, in many things, wherein, perhaps, precedents will
be necessary to produce, which did give me great content. At noon home,
and pleased mightily with my morning's work, and coming home, I do find
a letter from Mr. Wren, to call me to the Duke of York after dinner. So
dined in all haste, and then W. Hewer and my wife and I out, we set her
at my cozen Turner's while we to White Hall, where the Duke of York expected
me; and in his closet Wren and I. He did tell me how the King hath been
acquainted with the Treasurers' discourse at the Lords Commissioners of
the Treasury, the other day, and is dissatisfied with our running him
in debt, which I removed; and he did, carry me to the King, and I did
satisfy him also; but his satisfaction is nothing worth, it being easily
got, and easily removed; but I do purpose to put in writing that which
shall make the Treasurers ashamed. But the Duke of York is horrid angry
against them; and he hath cause, for they do all they can to bring dishonour
upon his management, as do vainly appear in all they do.
Having done with the Duke of York, who do repose all
in me, I with Mr. Wren to his, chamber, to talk; where he observed, that
these people are all of them a broken sort of people, that have not much
to lose, and therefore will venture all to make their fortunes better:
that Sir Thomas Osborne is a beggar, having 11 of L1200 a-year, but owes
above L10,000. The Duke of Buckingham's condition is shortly this: that
he hath about L19,600 a-year, of which he pays away about L7,000 a-year
in interest, about L2000 in fee-farm rents to the King, about L6000 wages
and pensions, and the rest to live upon, and pay taxes for the whole.
Wren says, that for the Duke of York to stir in this matter, as his quality
might justify, would but make all things worse, and that therefore he
must bend, and suffer all, till time works it out: that he fears they
will sacrifice the Church, and that the King will take anything, and so
he will hold up his head a little longer, and then break in pieces. But
Sir W. Coventry did today mightily magnify my late Lord Treasurer, for
a wise and solid, though infirm man: and, among other things, that when
he hath said it was impossible in nature to find this or that sum of money,
and my Lord Chancellor hath made sport of it, and tell the King that when
my Lord hath said it [was] impossible, yet he hath made shift to find
it, and that was by Sir G. Carteret's getting credit, my Lord did once
in his hearing say thus, which he magnifies as a great saying--that impossible
would be found impossible at last; meaning that the King would run himself
out, beyond all his credit and funds, and then we should too late find
it impossible; which is, he says, now come to pass. For that Sir W. Coventry
says they could borrow what money they would, if they had assignments,
and funds to secure it with, which before they had enough of, and then
must spend it as if it would never have an end. From White Hall to my
cozen Turner's, and there took up my wife; and so to my uncle Wight's,
and there sat and supped, and talked pretty merry, and then walked home,
and to bed.
15th. Up, and with Tom
to White Hall; and there at a Committee of Tangier, where a great instance
of what a man may lose by the neglect of a friend: Povy never had such
an opportunity of passing his accounts, the Duke of York being there,
and everybody well disposed, and in expectation of them; but my Lord Ashly,
on whom he relied, and for whose sake this day was pitched on, that he
might be sure to be there, among the rest of his friends, staid too long,
till the Duke of York and the company thought unfit to stay longer and
so the day lost, and God knows when he will ever have so good a one again,
as long as he lives; and this was the man of the whole company that he
hath made the most interest to gain, and now most depended upon him. So
up and down the house a while, and then to the plaisterer's, and there
saw the figure of my face taken from the mould: and it is most admirably
like, and I will have another made, before I take it away, and therefore
I away and to the Temple, and thence to my cozen Turner's, where, having
the last night been told by her that she had drawn me for her Valentine,
I did this day call at the New Exchange, and bought her a pair of green
silk stockings and garters and shoe-strings, and two pair of jessimy gloves,
all coming to about 28s., and did give them her this noon.
At the 'Change, I did at my bookseller's shop accidentally
fall into talk with Sir Samuel Tuke about trees, and Mr. Evelyn's garden;
and I do find him, I think, a little conceited, but a man of very fine
discourse as any I ever heard almost, which I was mighty glad of. I dined
at my cozen Turner's, and my wife also and her husband there, and after
dinner, my wife and I endeavoured to make a visit to Ned Pickering; but
he not at home, nor his lady; and therefore back again, and took up my
cozen Turner, and to my cozen Roger's lodgings, and there find him pretty
well again, and his wife mighty kind and merry, and did make mighty much
of us, and I believe he is married to a very good woman. Here was also
Bab. and Betty, who have not their clothes yet, and therefore cannot go
out, otherwise I would have had them abroad to-morrow; but the poor girls
mighty kind to us, and we must skew them kindness also. Here in Suffolk
Street lives Moll Davis; and we did see her coach come for her to her
door, a mighty pretty fine coach. Here we staid an hour or two, and then
carried Turner home, and there staid and talked a while, and then my wife
and I to White Hall; and there, by means of Mr. Cooling, did get into
the play, the only one we have seen this winter: it was "The Five
Hours' Adventure:" but I sat so far I could not hear well, nor was
there any pretty woman that I did see, but my wife, who sat in my Lady
Fox's pew [We may suppose that pews were by no means
common at this time within consecrated walls, from the word being applied
indifferently by Pepys to a box in a place of amusement, and two days
afterwards to a seat at church. It would appear, from other authorities,
that between 1646 and 1660 scarcely any pews had been erected; and Sir
C. Wren is known to have objected to their introduction into his London
churches.--B.] with her. The house very full; and late before done,
so that it was past eleven before we got home. But we were well pleased
with seeing it, and so to supper, where it happened that there was no
bread in the house, which was an unusual case, and so to bed.
16th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, my head full of business of the office now at once
on my hands, and so at noon home to dinner, where I find some things of
W. Batelier's come out of France, among which some clothes for my wife,
wherein she is likely to lead me to the expence of so much money as vexed
me; but I seemed so, more than I at this time was, only to prevent her
taking too much, and she was mighty calm under it. But I was mightily
pleased with another picture of the King of France's head, of Nanteuil's,
bigger than the other which he brought over, that pleases me infinitely:
and so to the Office, where busy all the afternoon, though my eyes mighty
bad with the light of the candles last night, which was so great as to
make my eyes sore all this day, and do teach me, by a manifest experiment,
that it is only too much light that do make my eyes sore. Nevertheless,
with the help of my tube, and being desirous of easing my mind of five
or six days journall, I did venture to write it down from ever since this
day se'nnight, and I think without hurting my eyes any more than they
were before, which was very much, and so home to supper and to bed.
17th. Up, and with W. Hewer
with me to Lincoln's Inn, by appointment, to have spoke with Mr. Pedley
about Mr. Goldsborough's business and Mr. Weaver's, but he was gone out,
and so I with Mr. Castle, the son-in-law of Weaver, to White Hall to look
for him, but did not find him, but here I did meet with several and talked,
and do hear only that the King dining yesterday at the Dutch Embassador's,
after dinner they drank, and were pretty merry; and, among the rest of
the King's company, there was that worthy fellow my lord of Rochester,
and Tom Killigrew, whose mirth and raillery offended the former so much,
that he did give Tom Killigrew a box on the ear in the King's presence,
which do much give offence to the people here at Court, to see how cheap
the King makes himself, and the more, for that the King hath not only
passed by the thing, and pardoned it to Rochester already, but this very
morning the King did publickly walk up and down, and Rochester I saw with
him as free as ever, to the King's everlasting shame, to have so idle
a rogue his companion. How Tom Killigrew takes it, I do not hear. I do
also this day hear that my Lord Privy Seale do accept to go Lieutenant
into Ireland; but whether it be true or no, I cannot tell. So calling
at my shoemaker's, and paying him to this day, I home to dinner, and in
the afternoon to Colonel Middleton's house, to the burial of his wife,
where we are all invited, and much more company, and had each of us a
ring: and so towards evening to our church, where there was a sermon preached
by Mills, and so home.
At church there was my Lord Brouncker and Mrs. Williams
in our pew, the first time they were ever there or that I knew that either
of them would go to church. At home comes Castle to me, to desire me to
go to Mr. Pedly, this night, he being to go out of town to-morrow morning,
which I, therefore, did, by hackney-coach, first going to White Hall to
meet with Sir W. Coventry, but missed him. But here I had a pleasant rencontre
of a lady in mourning, that, by the little light I had, seemed handsome.
I passing by her, I did observe she looked back again and again upon me,
I suffering her to go before, and it being now duske. I observed she went
into the little passage towards the Privy Water-Gate, and I followed,
but missed her; but coming back again, I observed she returned, and went
to go out of the Court. I followed her, and took occasion, in the new
passage now built, where the walke is to be, to take her by the hand,
to lead her through, which she willingly accepted, and I led her to the
Great Gate, and there left her, she telling me, of her own accord, that
she was going as far as, Charing Cross; but my boy was at the gate, and
so je durst not go out con her, which vexed me, and my mind (God forgive
me) did run apres her toute that night, though I have reason to thank
God, and so I do now, that I was not tempted to go further. So to Lincoln's
Inn, where to Mr. Pedly, with whom I spoke, and did my business presently:
and I find him a man of very good language, and mighty civil, and I believe
very upright: and so home, where W. Batelier was, and supped with us,
and I did reckon this night what I owed him; and I do find that the things
my wife, of her own head, hath taken (together with my own, which comes
not to above L5), comes to above L22. But it is the last, and so I am
the better contented; and they are things that are not trifles, but clothes,
gloves, shoes, hoods, &c. So after supper, to bed.
18th. Up, and to the Office,
and at noon home, expecting to have this day seen Bab. and Betty Pepys
here, but they come not; and so after dinner my wife and I to the Duke
of York's house, to a play, and there saw "The Mad Lover," which
do not please me so well as it used to do, only Betterton's part still
pleases me. But here who should we have come to us but Bab. and Betty
and Talbot, the first play they were yet at; and going to see us, and
hearing by my boy, whom I sent to them, that we were here, they come to
us hither, and happened all of us to sit by my cozen Turner and The.,
and we carried them home first, and then took Bab. and Betty to our house,
where they lay and supped, and pretty merry, and very fine with their
new clothes, and good comely girls they are enough, and very glad I am
of their being with us, though I would very well have been contented to
have been without the charge. So they to bed and we to bed.
19th. Up, and after seeing
the girls, who lodged in our bed, with their maid Martha, who hath been
their father's maid these twenty years and more, I with Lord Brouncker
to White Hall, where all of us waited on the Duke of York; and after our
usual business done, W. Hewer and I to look my wife at the Black Lion,
Mercer's, but she is gone home, and so I home and there dined, and W.
Batelierand W. Hewer with us. All the afternoon I at the Office, while
the young people went to see Bedlam, and at night home to them and to
supper, and pretty merry, only troubled with a great cold at this time,
and my eyes very bad ever since Monday night last that the light of the
candles spoiled me. So to bed. This morning, among other things, talking
with Sir W. Coventry, I did propose to him my putting in to serve in Parliament,
if there should, as the world begins to expect, be a new one chose: he
likes it mightily, both for the King's and Service's sake, and the Duke
of York's, and will propound it to the Duke of York: and I confess, if
there be one, I would be glad to be in.
20th. Up, and all the morning
at the office, and then home to dinner, and after dinner out with my wife
and my two girls to the Duke of York's house, and there saw "The
Gratefull Servant," a pretty good play, and which I have forgot that
ever I did see. And thence with them to Mrs. Gotier's, the Queen's tire-woman,
for a pair of locks for my wife; she is an oldish French woman, but with
a pretty hand as most I have seen; and so home, and to supper, W. Batelier
and W. Hewer with us, and so my cold being great, and greater by my having
left my coat at my tailor's to-night and come home in a thinner that I
borrowed there, I went to bed before them and slept pretty well.
21st (Lord's day). Up,
and with my wife and two girls to church, they very fine; and so home,
where comes my cozen Roger and his wife, I having sent for them, to dine
with us, and there comes in by chance also Mr. Shepley, who is come to
town with my Lady Paulina, who is desperately sick, and is gone to Chelsey,
to the old house where my Lord himself was once sick, where I doubt my
Lord means to visit hers more for young Mrs. Beck's sake than for hers.
Here we dined with W. Batelier, and W. Hewer with us, these two, girls
making it necessary that they be always with us, for I am not company
light enough to be always merry with them and so sat talking all the afternoon,
and then Shepley went: away first, and then my cozen Roger and his wife.
And so I!, to my Office, to write down my Journall, and so home to my
chamber and to do a little business there, my papers being in mighty disorder,
and likely so to continue while these girls are with us. In the evening
comes W. Batelier and his sisters and supped and talked with us, and so
spent the evening, myself being somewhat out of order because of my eyes,
which have never been well since last Sunday's reading at Sir W. Coventry's
chamber, and so after supper to bed.
22nd. Up, and betimes to
White Hall; but there the Duke of York is gone abroad a-hunting, and therefore
after a little stay there I into London, with Sir H. Cholmly, talking
all the way of Tangier matters, wherein I find him troubled from some
reports lately from Norwood (who is his great enemy and I doubt an ill
man), of some decay of the Mole, and a breach made therein by the sea
to a great value. He set me down at the end of Leadenhall Street, and
so I home, and after dinner, with my wife, in her morning-gown, and the
two girls dressed, to Unthanke's, where my wife dresses herself, having
her gown this day laced, and a new petticoat; and so is indeed very fine.
And in the evening I do carry them to White Hall, and there did without
much trouble get into the playhouse, there in a good place among the Ladies
of Honour, and myself also sat in the pit; and there by and by come the
King and Queen, and they begun "Bartholomew Fayre." But I like
no play here so well as at the common playhouse; besides that, my eyes
being very ill since last Sunday and this day se'nnight, with the light
of the candles, I was in mighty pain to defend myself now from the light
of the candles. After the play done, we met with W. Batelier and W. Hewer
and Talbot Pepys, and they follow us in a hackney-coach: and we all stopped
at Hercules' Pillars; and there I did give them the best supper I could,
and pretty merry; and so home between eleven and twelve at night, and
so to bed, mightily well pleased with this day's work.
23rd. Up: and to the Office,
where all the morning, and then home, and put a mouthfull of victuals
in my mouth; and by a hackney-coach followed my wife and the girls, who
are gone by eleven o'clock, thinking to have seen a new play at the Duke
of York's house. But I do find them staying at my tailor's, the play not
being to-day, and therefore I now took them to Westminster Abbey, and
there did show them all the tombs very finely, having one with us alone,
there being other company this day to see the tombs, it being Shrove Tuesday;
and here we did see, by particular favour, the body of Queen Katherine
of Valois; and I had the upper part of her body in my hands, and I did
kiss her mouth, reflecting upon it that I did kiss a Queen,
[Pepys's attachment to the fair sex extended even to a dead queen. The
record of this royal salute on his natal day is very characteristic. The
story told him in Westminster Abbey appears to have been correct; for
Neale informs us ("History of Westminster Abbey," vol. ii.,
p. 88) that near the south side of Henry V.'s tomb there was formerly
a wooden chest, or coffin, wherein part of the skeleton and parched body
of Katherine de Valois, his queen (from the waist upwards), was to be
seen. She was interred in January, 1457, in the Chapel of Our Lady, at
the east end of this church; but when that building was pulled down by
her grandson, Henry VII., her coffin was found to be decayed, and her
body was taken up, and placed in a chest, near her first husband's tomb.
"There," says Dart, "it hath ever since continued to be
seen, the bones being firmly united, and thinly clothed with flesh, like
scrapings of tanned leather." This awful spectacle of frail mortality
was at length removed from the public gaze into St. Nicholas's Chapel,
and finally deposited under the monument of Sir George Villiers, when
the vault was made for the remains of Elizabeth Percy, Duchess of Northumberland,
in December, 1776.--B.] and that this was my birth-day, thirty-six
years old, that I did first kiss a Queen. But here this man, who seems
to understand well, tells me that the saying is not true that says she
was never buried, for she was buried; only, when Henry the Seventh built
his chapel, it was taken up and laid in this wooden coffin; but I did
there see that, in it, the body was buried in a leaden one, which remains
under the body to this day. Thence to the Duke of York's playhouse, and
there, finding the play begun, we homeward to the Glass-House, and there
shewed my cozens the making of glass, and had several things made with
great content; and, among others, I had one or two singing- glasses made,
which make an echo to the voice, the first that ever I saw; but so thin,
that the very breath broke one or two of them. So home, and thence to
Mr. Batelier's, where we supped, and had a good supper, and here was Mr.
Gumbleton; and after supper some fiddles, and so to dance; but my eyes
were so out of order, that I had little pleasure this night at all, though
I was glad to see the rest merry, and so about midnight home and to bed.
24th. Lay long in bed,
both being sleepy and my eyes bad, and myself having a great cold so as
I was hardly able to speak, but, however, by and by up and to the office,
and at noon home with my people to dinner, and then I to the office again,
and there till the evening doing of much business, and at night my wife
sends for me to W. Hewer's lodging, where I find two best chambers of
his so finely furnished, and all so rich and neat, that I was mightily
pleased with him and them and here only my wife, and I, and the two girls,
and had a mighty neat dish of custards and tarts, and good drink and talk.
And so away home to bed, with infinite content at this his treat; for
it was mighty pretty, and everything mighty rich.
25th. All the morning at
the office. At noon home and eat a bit myself, and then followed my wife
and girls to the Duke of York's house, and there before one, but the house
infinite full, where, by and by, the King and Court come, it being a new
play, or an old one new vamped, by Shadwell, called "The Royall Shepherdesse;"
but the silliest for words and design, and everything, that ever I saw
in my whole life, there being nothing in the world pleasing in it, but
a good martial dance of pikemen, where Harris and another do handle their
pikes in a dance to admiration; but never less satisfied with a play in
my life. Thence to the office I, and did a little business, and so home
to supper with my girls, and pretty merry, only my eyes, which continue
very bad, and my cold, that I cannot speak at all, do trouble me.
26th. Was forced to send
my excuse to the Duke of York for my not attending him with my fellows
this day because of my cold, and was the less troubled because I was thereby
out of the way to offer my proposals about Pursers till the Surveyor hath
delivered his notions, which he is to do to-day about something he has
to offer relating to the Navy in general, which I would be glad to see
and peruse before I offer what I have to say. So lay long in bed, and
then up and to my office, and so to dinner, and then, though I could not
speak, yet I went with my wife and girls to the King's playhouse, to shew
them that, and there saw "The Faithfull Shepherdesse." But,
Lord! what an empty house, there not being, as I could tell the people,
so many as to make up above L10 in the whole house! The being of a new
play at the other house, I suppose, being the cause, though it be so silly
a play that I wonder how there should be enough people to go thither two
days together, and not leave more to fill this house. The emptiness of
the house took away our pleasure a great deal, though I liked it the better;
for that I plainly discern the musick is the better, by how much the house
the emptier. Thence home, and again to W. Hewer's, and had a pretty little
treat, and spent an hour or two, my voice being wholly taken away with
my cold, and so home and to bed.
27th. Up, and at the office
all the morning, where I could speak but a little. At noon home to dinner,
and all the afternoon till night busy at the office again, where forced
to speak low and dictate. But that that troubles me most is my eyes, which
are still mighty bad night and day, and so home at night to talk and sup
with my cozens, and so all of us in mighty good humour to bed.
28th (Lord's day). Up,
and got my wife to read to me a copy of what the Surveyor offered to the
Duke of York on Friday, he himself putting it into my hands to read; but,
Lord! it is a poor, silly thing ever to think to bring it in practice,
in the King's Navy. It is to have the Captains to account for all stores
and victuals; but upon so silly grounds, to my thinking; and ignorance
of the present instructions of Officers, that I am ashamed to hear it.
However, I do take a copy of it, for my future use and answering; and
so to church, where, God forgive me! I did most of the time gaze on the
fine milliner's wife, in Fenchurch Street, who was at our church to-day;
and so home to dinner. And after dinner to write down my Journall; and
then abroad by coach with my cozens, to their father's, where we are kindly
received, but he is an great pain for his man Arthur, who, he fears, is
now dead, having been desperately sick, and speaks so much of him that
my cozen, his wife, and I did make mirth of it, and call him Arthur O'Bradly.
After staying here a little, and eat and drank, and she gave me some ginger-bread
made in cakes, like chocolate, very good, made by a friend, I carried
him and her to my cozen Turner's, where we staid, expecting her coming
from church; but she coming not, I went to her husband's chamber in the
Temple, and thence fetched her, she having been there alone ever since
sermon staying till the evening to walk home on foot, her horses being
ill. This I did, and brought her home. And after talking there awhile,
and agreeing to be all merry at my house on Tuesday next, I away home;
and there spent the evening talking and reading, with my wife and Mr.
Pelling, and yet much troubled with my cold, it hardly suffering me to
speak, we to bed.
March
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