September 1st (Lord’s day).
Last night being very rainy [the rain] broke into
my house, the gutter being stopped, and spoiled all
my ceilings almost. At church in the morning,
and dined at home with my wife. After dinner
to Sir W. Batten’s, where I found Sir W. Pen
and Captain Holmes. Here we were very merry with
Sir W. Pen about the loss of his tankard, though all
be but a cheat, and he do not yet understand it; but
the tankard was stole by Sir W. Batten, and the letter,
as from the thief, wrote by me, which makes:
very good sport. Here I staid all the afternoon,
and then Captain Holmes and I by coach to White Hall;
in our way, I found him by discourse, to be a great
friend of my Lord’s, and he told me there was
many did seek to remove him; but they were old seamen,
such as Sir J. Minnes (but he would name no more, though
I do believe Sir W. Batten is one of them that do
envy him), but he says he knows that the King do so
love him, and the Duke of York too, that there is no
fear of him. He seems to be very well acquainted
with the King’s mind, and with all the several
factions at Court, and spoke all with so much frankness,
that I do take him to be my Lord’s good friend,
and one able to do him great service, being a cunning
fellow, and one (by his own confession to me) that
can put on two several faces, and look his enemies
in the face with as much love as his friends.
But, good God! what an age is this, and what a world
is this! that a man cannot live without playing the
knave and dissimulation. At Whitehall we parted,
and I to Mrs. Pierce’s, meeting her and Madam
Clifford in the street, and there staid talking and
laughing with them a good while, and so back to my
mother’s, and there supped, and so home and to
bed.
2nd. In the morning to my cozen
Thos. Pepys, executor, and there talked with
him about my uncle Thomas, his being in the country,
but he could not advise me to anything therein, not
knowing what the other has done in the country, and
so we parted. And so to Whitehall, and there my
Lord Privy Seal, who has been out of town this week,
not being yet come, we can have no seal, and therefore
meeting with Mr. Battersby the apothecary in Fenchurch
Street to the King’s Apothecary’s chamber
in Whitehall, and there drank a bottle or two of wine,
and so he and I by water towards London. I landed
at Blackfriars and so to the Wardrobe and dined, and
then back to Whitehall with Captain Ferrers, and there
walked, and thence to Westminster Hall, where we met
with Mr. Pickering, and so all of us to the Rhenish
wine house (Prior’s), where the master of the
house is laying out some money in making a cellar with
an arch in his yard, which is very convenient for
him. Here we staid a good while, and so Mr. Pickering
and I to Westminster Hall again, and there walked
an hour or two talking, and though he be a fool, yet
he keeps much company, and will tell all he sees or
hears, and so a man may understand what the common
talk of the town is, and I find by him that there
are endeavours to get my Lord out of play at sea, which
I believe Mr. Coventry and the Duke do think will
make them more absolute; but I hope, for all this,
they will not be able to do it. He tells me plainly
of the vices of the Court, and how the pox is so common
there, and so I hear on all hands that it is as common
as eating and swearing. From him by water to
the bridge, and thence to the Mitre, where I met my
uncle and aunt Wight come to see Mrs. Rawlinson (in
her husband’s absence out of town), and so I
staid with them and Mr. Lucas and other company, very
merry, and so home, Where my wife has been busy all
the day making of pies, and had been abroad and bought
things for herself, and tells that she met at the
Change with my young ladies of the Wardrobe and there
helped them to buy things, and also with Mr. Somerset,
who did give her a bracelet of rings, which did a
little trouble me, though I know there is no hurt yet
in it, but only for fear of further acquaintance.
So to bed. This night I sent another letter to
Sir W. Pen to offer him the return of his tankard
upon his leaving of 30s. at a place where it should
be brought. The issue of which I am to expect.
3rd. This day some of us Commissioners
went down to Deptford to pay off some ships, but I
could not go, but staid at home all the morning setting
papers to rights, and this morning Mr. Howell, our
turner, sent me two things to file papers on very
handsome. Dined at home, and then with my wife
to the Wardrobe, where my Lady’s child was christened
(my Lord Crew and his Lady, and my Lady Montagu, my
Lord’s mother-in-law, were the witnesses), and
named Katherine
[Lady Katherine Montagu, youngest daughter
of Lord Sandwich, married, first, Nicholas Bacon,
eldest son and heir of Sir Nicholas Bacon, K.B.,
of Shrubland Hall, co. Suffolk; and, secondly,
the Rev. Balthazar Gardeman. She died January
15th, 1757, at ninety-six years, four months. B.]
(the Queen elect’s name); but
to my and all our trouble, the Parson of the parish
christened her, and did not sign the child with the
sign of the cross. After that was done, we had
a very fine banquet, the best I ever was at, and so
(there being very little company) we by and by broke
up, and my wife and I to my mother, who I took a liberty
to advise about her getting things ready to go this
week into the country to my father, and she (being
become now-a-days very simple) took it very ill, and
we had a great deal of noise and wrangling about it.
So home by coach.
4th. In the morning to the Privy
Seal to do some things of the last month, my Lord
Privy Seal having been some time out of town.
Then my wife came to me to Whitehall, and we went
and walked a good while in St. James’s Park
to see the brave alterations, and so to Wilkinson’s,
the Cook’s, to dinner, where we sent for Mrs.
Sarah and there dined and had oysters, the first I
have eat this year, and were pretty good. After
dinner by agreement to visit Mrs. Symonds, but she
is abroad, which I wonder at, and so missing her my
wife again to my mother’s (calling at Mrs. Pierce’s,
who we found brought to bed of a girl last night) and
there staid and drank, and she resolves to be going
to-morrow without fail. Many friends come in
to take their leave of her, but a great deal of stir
I had again tonight about getting her to go to see
my Lady Sandwich before she goes, which she says she
will do tomorrow. So I home.
5th. To the Privy Seal this morning
about business, in my way taking leave of my mother,
who goes to Brampton to-day. But doing my business
at the Privy Seal pretty soon, I took boat and went
to my uncle Fenner’s, and there I found my mother
and my wife and Pall (of whom I had this morning at
my own house taken leave, and given her 20s. and good
counsel how to carry herself to my father and mother),
and so I took them, it being late, to Beard’s,
where they were staid for, and so I put them into
the waggon, and saw them going presently, Pall crying
exceedingly. Then in with my wife, my aunt Bell
and Charles Pepys, whom we met there, and drank, and
so to my uncle Fenner’s to dinner (in the way
meeting a French footman with feathers, who was in
quest of my wife, and spoke with her privately, but
I could not tell what it was, only my wife promised
to go to some place to-morrow morning, which do trouble
my mind how to know whither it was), where both his
sons and daughters were, and there we were merry and
dined. After dinner news was brought that my
aunt Kite, the butcher’s widow in London, is
sick ready to die and sends for my uncle and me to
come to take charge of things, and to be entrusted
with the care of her daughter. But I through want
of time to undertake such a business, I was taken
up by Antony Joyce, which came at last to very high
words, which made me very angry, and I did not think
that he would ever have been such a fool to meddle
with other people’s business, but I saw he spoke
worse to his father than to me and therefore I bore
it the better, but all the company was offended with
him, so we parted angry he and I, and so my wife and
I to the fair, and I showed her the Italians dancing
the ropes, and the women that do strange tumbling
tricks and so by foot home vexed in my mind about
Antony Joyce.
6th. This morning my uncle Fenner
by appointment came and drank his morning draft with
me, and from thence he and I go to see my aunt Kite
(my wife holding her resolution to go this morning
as she resolved yesterday, and though there could
not be much hurt in it, yet my own jealousy put a
hundred things into my mind, which did much trouble
me all day), whom we found in bed and not like to
live as we think, and she told us her mind was that
if she should die she should give all she had to her
daughter, only L5 apiece to her second husband’s
children, in case they live to come out of their apprenticeships,
and that if her daughter should die before marrying,
then L10 to be divided between Sarah Kite’s
children and the rest as her own daughter shall dispose
of it, and this I set down that I may be able to swear
in case there should be occasion. From thence
to an alehouse while it rained, which kept us there
I think above two hours, and at last we were fain to
go through the rainy street home, calling on his sister
Utbeck and drank there. Then I home to dinner
all alone, and thence my mind being for my wife’s
going abroad much troubled and unfit for business,
I went to the Theatre, and saw “Elder Brother”
ill acted; that done, meeting here with Sir G. Askew,
Sir Theophilus Jones, and another Knight, with Sir
W. Pen, we to the Ship tavern, and there staid and
were merry till late at night, and so got a coach,
and Sir Wm. and I home, where my wife had been long
come home, but I seemed very angry, as indeed I am,
and did not all night show her any countenance, neither
before nor in bed, and so slept and rose discontented.
7th. At the office all the morning.
At noon Mr. Moore dined with me, and then in comes
Wm. Joyce to answer a letter of mine I wrote this morning
to him about a maid of his that my wife had hired,
and she sent us word that she was hired to stay longer
with her master, which mistake he came to clear himself
of; and I took it very kindly. So I having appointed
the young ladies at the Wardrobe to go with them to
a play to-day, I left him and my brother Tom who came
along with him to dine, and my wife and I took them
to the Theatre, where we seated ourselves close by
the King, and Duke of York, and Madame Palmer, which
was great content; and, indeed, I can never enough
admire her beauty. And here was “Bartholomew
Fayre,” with the puppet-show, acted to-day, which
had not been these forty years (it being so satyricall
against Puritanism, they durst not till now, which
is strange they should already dare to do it, and the
King do countenance it), but I do never a whit like
it the better for the puppets, but rather the worse.
Thence home with the ladies, it being by reason of
our staying a great while for the King’s coming,
and the length of the play, near nine o’clock
before it was done, and so in their coach home, and
still in discontent with my wife, to bed, and rose
so this morning also.
8th (Lord’s day). To church,
it being a very wet night last night and to-day, dined
at home, and so to church again with my wife in the
afternoon, and coming home again found our new maid
Doll asleep, that she could not hear to let us in,
so that we were fain to send the boy in at a window
to open the door to us. So up to my chamber all
alone, and troubled in mind to think how much of late
I have addicted myself to expense and pleasure, that
now I can hardly reclaim myself to look after my great
business of settling Gravely business, until now almost
too late. I pray God give me grace to begin now
to look after my business, but it always was, and
I fear will ever be, my foible that after I am once
got behind-hand with business, I am hard to set to
it again to recover it. In the evening I begun
to look over my accounts and upon the whole I do find
myself, by what I can yet see, worth near L600, for
which God be blessed, which put me into great comfort.
So to supper and to bed.
9th. To the Privy Seal in the
morning, but my Lord did not come, so I went with
Captain Morrice at his desire into the King’s
Privy Kitchen to Mr. Sayres, the Master Cook, and
there we had a good slice of beef or two to our breakfast,
and from thence he took us into the wine cellar where,
by my troth, we were very merry, and I drank too much
wine, and all along had great and particular kindness
from Mr. Sayres, but I drank so much wine that I was
not fit for business, and therefore at noon I went
and walked in Westminster Hall a while, and thence
to Salisbury Court play house, where was acted the
first time “’Tis pity Shee’s a Whore,”
a simple play and ill acted, only it was my fortune
to sit by a most pretty and most ingenious lady, which
pleased me much. Thence home, and found Sir Williams
both and much more company gone to the Dolphin to
drink the 30s. that we got the other day of Sir W.
Pen about his tankard. Here was Sir R. Slingsby,
Holmes, Captn. Allen, Mr. Turner, his wife and
daughter, my Lady Batten, and Mrs. Martha, &c., and
an excellent company of fiddlers; so we exceeding
merry till late; and then we begun to tell Sir W.
Pen the business, but he had been drinking to-day,
and so is almost gone, that we could not make him understand
it, which caused us more sport. But so much the
better, for I believe when he do come to understand
it he will be angry, he has so talked of the business
himself and the letter up and down that he will be
ashamed to be found abused in it. So home and
to bed.
10th. At the office all the morn,
dined at home; then my wife into Wood Street to buy
a chest, and thence to buy other things at my uncle
Fenner’s (though by reason of rain we had ill
walking), thence to my brother Tom’s, and there
discoursed with him about business, and so to the
Wardrobe to see my Lady, and after supper with the
young ladies, bought a link and carried it myself
till I met one that would light me home for the link.
So he light me home with his own, and then I did give
him mine. This night I found Mary, my cozen W.
Joyce’s maid, come to me to be my cook maid,
and so my house is full again. So to bed.
11th. Early to my cozen Thomas
Trice to discourse about our affairs, and he did make
demand of the L200 and the interest thereof. But
for the L200 I did agree to pay him, but for the other
I did desire to be advised. So from him to Dr.
Williams, who did carry me into his garden, where
he hath abundance of grapes; and did show me how a
dog that he hath do kill all the cats that come thither
to kill his pigeons, and do afterwards bury them;
and do it with so much care that they shall be quite
covered; that if but the tip of the tail hangs out
he will take up the cat again, and dig the hole deeper.
Which is very strange; and he tells me that he do
believe that he hath killed above 100 cats. After
he was ready we went up and down to inquire about my
affairs and then parted, and to the Wardrobe, and
there took Mr. Moore to Tom Trice, who promised to
let Mr. Moore have copies of the bond and my aunt’s
deed of gift, and so I took him home to my house to
dinner, where I found my wife’s brother, Balty,
as fine as hands could make him, and his servant,
a Frenchman, to wait on him, and come to have my wife
to visit a young lady which he is a servant to, and
have hope to trepan and get for his wife. I did
give way for my wife to go with him, and so after dinner
they went, and Mr. Moore and I out again, he about
his business and I to Dr. Williams: to talk with
him again, and he and I walking through Lincoln’s
Fields observed at the Opera a new play, “Twelfth
Night”
[Pepys seldom liked
any play of Shakespeare’s, and he sadly
blundered when he supposed
“Twelfth Night” was a new play.]
was acted there, and the King there;
so I, against my own mind and resolution, could not
forbear to go in, which did make the play seem a burthen
to me, and I took no pleasure at all in it; and so
after it was done went home with my mind troubled
for my going thither, after my swearing to my wife
that I would never go to a play without her. So
that what with this and things going so cross to me
as to matters of my uncle’s estate, makes me
very much troubled in my mind, and so to bed.
My wife was with her brother to see his mistress today,
and says she is young, rich, and handsome, but not
likely for him to get.
12th. Though it was an office
day, yet I was forced to go to the Privy Seal, at
which I was all the morning, and from thence to my
Lady’s to dinner at the Wardrobe; and in my
way upon the Thames, I saw the King’s new pleasure-boat
that is come now for the King to take pleasure in
above bridge; and also two Gundaloes
["Two long boats that were made in
Venice, called gondolas, were by the Duke of
Venice (Dominico Contareni) presented to His Majesty;
and the attending watermen, being four, were in
very rich clothes, crimson satin; very big were
their breeches and doublets; they wore also very
large shirts of the same satin, very richly laced.”
Rugge’s Diurnal. B.]
that are lately brought, which are
very rich and fine. After dinner I went into
my Lady’s chamber where I found her up now out
of her childbed, which I was glad to see, and after
an hour’s talk with her I took leave and to
Tom Trice again, and sat talking and drinking with
him about our business a great while. I do find
I am likely to be forced to pay interest for the L200.
By and by in comes my uncle Thomas, and as he was
always a close cunning fellow, so he carries himself
to me, and says nothing of what his endeavours are,
though to my trouble I know that he is about recovering
of Gravely, but neither I nor he began any discourse
of the business. From thence to Dr. Williams (at
the little blind alehouse in Shoe Lane, at the Gridiron,
a place I am ashamed to be seen to go into), and there
with some bland counsel of his we discuss our matters,
but I find men of so different minds that by my troth
I know not what to trust to. It being late I
took leave, and by link home and called at Sir W.
Batten’s, and there hear that Sir W. Pen do take
our jest of the tankard very ill, which Pam sorry
for.
13th. This morning I was sent
for by my uncle Fenner to come and advise about the
buriall of my aunt, the butcher, who died yesterday;
and from thence to the Anchor, by Doctor’s Commons,
and there Dr. Williams and I did write a letter for
my purpose to Mr. Sedgewick, of Cambridge, about Gravely
business, and after that I left him and an attorney
with him and went to the Wardrobe, where I found my
wife, and thence she and I to the water to spend the
afternoon in pleasure; and so we went to old George’s,
and there eat as much as we would of a hot shoulder
of mutton, and so to boat again and home. So
to bed, my mind very full of business and trouble.
14th. At the office all the morning,
at noon to the Change, and then home again. To
dinner, where my uncle Fenner by appointment came and
dined with me, thinking to go together to my aunt Kite’s
that is dead; but before we had dined comes Sir R.
Slingsby and his lady, and a great deal of company,
to take my wife and I out by barge to shew them the
King’s and Duke’s yachts. So I was
forced to leave my uncle and brother Tom at dinner
and go forth with them, and we had great pleasure,
seeing all four yachts, viz., these two and the
two Dutch ones. And so home again, and after
writing letters by post, to bed.
15th (Lord’s day). To my
aunt Kite’s in the morning to help my uncle
Fenner to put things in order against anon for the
buriall, and at noon home again; and after dinner
to church, my wife and I, and after sermon with my
wife to the buriall of my aunt Kite, where besides
us and my uncle Fenner’s family, there was none
of any quality, but poor rascally people. So
we went to church with the corps, and there had service
read at the grave, and back again with Pegg Kite who
will be, I doubt, a troublesome carrion to us executors;
but if she will not be ruled, I shall fling up my
executorship. After that home, and Will Joyce
along with me where we sat and talked and drank and
ate an hour or two, and so he went away and I up to
my chamber and then to prayers and to bed.
16th. This morning I was busy
at home to take in my part of our freight of Coles,
which Sir G. Carteret, Sir R. Slingsby, and myself
sent for, which is 10 Chaldron, 8 of which I took
in, and with the other to repay Sir W. Pen what I
borrowed of him a little while ago. So that from
this day I should see how long 10 chaldron of coals
will serve my house, if it please the Lord to let
me live to see them burned. In the afternoon
by appointment to meet Dr. Williams and his attorney,
and they and I to Tom Trice, and there got him in
discourse to confess the words that he had said that
his mother did desire him not to see my uncle about
her L200 bond while she was alive. Here we were
at high words with T. Trice and then parted, and we
to Standing’s, in Fleet Street, where we sat
and drank and talked a great while about my going
down to Gravely Court,
[The manorial court
of Graveley, in Huntingdonshire, to which
Impington owed suit
or service, and under which the Pepys’s copyhold
estates were held.
See July 8th, 1661, ante. B.]
which will be this week, whereof the
Doctor had notice in a letter from his sister this
week. In the middle of our discourse word was
brought me from my brother’s that there is a
fellow come from my father out of the country, on
purpose to speak to me, so I went to him and he made
a story how he had lost his letter, but he was sure
it was for me to go into the country, which I believed,
and thought it might be to give me notice of Gravely
Court, but I afterwards found that it was a rogue that
did use to play such tricks to get money of people,
but he got none of me. At night I went home,
and there found letters-from my father informing me
of the Court, and that I must come down and meet him
at Impington, which I presently resolved to do,
17th. And the next morning got
up, telling my wife of my journey, and she with a
few words got me to hire her a horse to go along with
me. So I went to my Lady’s and elsewhere
to take leave, and of Mr. Townsend did borrow a very
fine side-saddle for my wife; and so after all things
were ready, she and I took coach to the end of the
town towards Kingsland, and there got upon my horse
and she upon her pretty mare that I hired for her,
and she rides very well. By the mare at one time
falling she got a fall, but no harm; so we got to
Ware, and there supped, and to bed very merry and
pleasant.
18th. The next morning up early
and begun our march; the way about Puckridge [Puckeridge,
a village in Hertfordshire six and a half miles N.N.E,
of Ware.] very bad, and my wife, in the
very last dirty place of all, got a fall, but no hurt,
though some dirt. At last she begun, poor wretch,
to be tired, and I to be angry at it, but I was to
blame; for she is a very good companion as long as
she is well. In the afternoon we got to Cambridge,
where I left my wife at my cozen Angier’s while
I went to Christ’s College, and there found
my brother in his chamber, and talked with him; and
so to the barber’s, and then to my wife again,
and remounted for Impington, where my uncle received
me and my wife very kindly. And by and by in
comes my father, and we supped and talked and were
merry, but being weary and sleepy my wife and I to
bed without talking with my father anything about
our business.
19th. Up early, and my father
and I alone into the garden, and there talked about
our business, and what to do therein. So after
I had talked and advised with my coz Claxton, and
then with my uncle by his bedside, we all horsed away
to Cambridge, where my father and I, having left my
wife at the Beare with my brother, went to Mr. Sedgewicke,
the steward of Gravely, and there talked with him,
but could get little hopes from anything that he would
tell us; but at last I did give him a fee, and then
he was free to tell me what I asked, which was something,
though not much comfort. From thence to our horses,
and with my wife went and rode through Sturbridge
[Sturbridge fair is of great antiquity.
The first trace of it is found in a charter
granted about 1211 by King John to the Lepers of the
Hospital of St. Mary Magdalen at Sturbridge by Cambridge,
a fair to be held in the close of the hospital
on the vigil and feast of the Holy Cross (see
Cornelius Walford’s “Fairs Past and Present,”
1883, .]
but the fair was almost done.
So we did not ’light there at all, but went
back to Cambridge, and there at the Beare we had some
herrings, we and my brother, and after dinner set
out for Brampton, where we come in very good time,
and found all things well, and being somewhat weary,
after some talk about tomorrow’s business with
my father, we went to bed.
20th. Will Stankes and I set
out in the morning betimes for Gravely, where to an
ale-house and drank, and then, going towards the Court
House, met my uncle Thomas and his son Thomas, with
Bradly, the rogue that had betrayed us, and one Young,
a cunning fellow, who guides them. There passed
no unkind words at all between us, but I seemed fair
and went to drink with them. I said little till
by and by that we come to the Court, which was a simple
meeting of a company of country rogues, with the Steward,
and two Fellows of Jesus College, that are lords of
the town where the jury were sworn; and I producing
no surrender, though I told them I was sure there
is and must be one somewhere, they found my uncle
Thomas heir at law, as he is, and so, though I did
tell him and his son that they would find themselves
abused by these fellows, and did advise them to forbear
being admitted this Court (which they could have done,
but that these rogues did persuade them to do it now),
my uncle was admitted, and his son also, in reversion
after his father, which he did well in to secure his
money. The father paid a year and a half for
his fine, and the son half a year, in all L48, besides
about L3 fees; so that I do believe the charges of
his journeys, and what he gives those two rogues,
and other expenses herein, cannot be less than L70,
which will be a sad thing for them if a surrender
be found. After all was done, I openly wished
them joy in it, and so rode to Offord with them and
there parted fairly without any words. I took
occasion to bid them money for their half acre of
land, which I had a mind to do that in the surrender
I might secure Piggott’s, which otherwise I should
be forced to lose. So with Stankes home and supped,
and after telling my father how things went, I went
to bed with my mind in good temper, because I see
the matter and manner of the Court and the bottom of
my business, wherein I was before and should always
have been ignorant.
21st. All the morning pleasing
myself with my father, going up and down the house
and garden with my father and my wife, contriving some
alterations. After dinner (there coming this morning
my aunt Hanes and her son from London, that is to
live with my father) I rode to Huntingdon, where I
met Mr. Philips, and there put my Bugden
[Bugden, or Buckden,
a village and parish in the St. Neots district
of Huntingdonshire,
four miles S.W. of Huntingdon.]
matter in order against the Court,
and so to Hinchingbroke, where Mr. Barnwell shewed
me the condition of the house, which is yet very backward,
and I fear will be very dark in the cloyster when it
is done. So home and to supper and to bed, very
pleasant and quiet.
22nd (Lord’s day). Before
church time walking with my father in the garden contriving.
So to church, where we had common prayer, and a dull
sermon by one Mr. Case, who yet I heard sing very well.
So to dinner, and busy with my father about his accounts
all the afternoon, and people came to speak with us
about business. Mr. Barnwell at night came and
supped with us. So after setting matters even
with my father and I, to bed.
23rd. Up, and sad to hear my
father and mother wrangle as they used to do in London,
of which I took notice to both, and told them that
I should give over care for anything unless they would
spend what they have with more love and quiet.
So (John Bowles coming to see us before we go) we
took horse and got early to Baldwick; where there was
a fair, and we put in and eat a mouthfull of pork,
which they made us pay 14d. for, which vexed us much.
And so away to Stevenage, and staid till a showre
was over, and so rode easily to Welling, where we supped
well, and had two beds in the room and so lay single,
and still remember it that of all the nights that
ever I slept in my life I never did pass a night with
more epicurism of sleep; there being now and then a
noise of people stirring that waked me, and then it
was a very rainy night, and then I was a little weary,
that what between waking and then sleeping again,
one after another, I never had so much content in all
my life, and so my wife says it was with her.
24th. We rose, and set forth,
but found a most sad alteration in the road by reason
of last night’s rains, they being now all dirty
and washy, though not deep. So we rode easily
through, and only drinking at Holloway, at the sign
of a woman with cakes in one hand and a pot of ale
in the other, which did give good occasion of mirth,
resembling her to the maid that served us, we got
home very timely and well, and finding there all well,
and letters from sea, that speak of my Lord’s
being well, and his action, though not considerable
of any side, at Argier. [Algiers] I
went straight to my Lady, and there sat and talked
with her, and so home again, and after supper we to
bed somewhat weary, hearing of nothing ill since my
absence but my brother Tom, who is pretty well though
again.
25th. By coach with Sir W. Pen
to Covent Garden. By the way, upon my desire,
he told me that I need not fear any reflection upon
my Lord for their ill success at Argier, for more
could not be done than was done. I went to my
cozen, Thos. Pepys, there, and talked with him
a good while about our country business, who is troubled
at my uncle Thomas his folly, and so we parted; and
then meeting Sir R. Slingsby in St. Martin’s
Lane, he and I in his coach through the Mewes, which
is the way that now all coaches are forced to go,
because of a stop at Charing Cross, by reason of a
drain there to clear the streets. To Whitehall,
and there to Mr. Coventry, and talked with him, and
thence to my Lord Crew’s and dined with him,
where I was used with all imaginable kindness both
from him and her. And I see that he is afraid
that my Lord’s reputacon will a little suffer
in common talk by this late success; but there is
no help for it now. The Queen of England (as she
is now owned and called) I hear doth keep open Court,
and distinct at Lisbon. Hence, much against my
nature and will, yet such is the power of the Devil
over me I could not refuse it, to the Theatre, and
saw “The Merry Wives of Windsor,” ill
done. And that ended, with Sir W. Pen and Sir
G. More to the tavern, and so home with him by coach,
and after supper to prayers and to bed. In full
quiet of mind as to thought, though full of business,
blessed be God.
26th. At the office all the morning,
so dined at home, and then abroad with my wife by
coach to the Theatre to shew her “King and no
King,” it being very well done. And so
by coach, though hard to get it, being rainy, home.
So to my chamber to write letters and the journal for
these six last days past.
27th. By coach to Whitehall with
my wife (where she went to see Mrs. Pierce, who was
this day churched, her month of childbed being out).
I went to Mrs. Montagu and other businesses, and at
noon met my wife at the Wardrobe; and there dined,
where we found Captain Country (my little Captain
that I loved, who carried me to the Sound), come with
some grapes and millóns
[The antiquity of the cultivation of
the melon is very remote. Both the melon
(cucaimis mélo) and the water-melon (cucumis
citrullus) were introduced into England at the
end of the sixteenth century. See vol.
i., .]
from my Lord at Lisbon, the first
that ever I saw any, and my wife and I eat some, and
took some home; but the grapes are rare things.
Here we staid; and in the afternoon comes Mr. Edwd.
Montagu (by appointment this morning) to talk with
my Lady and me about the provisions fit to be bought,
and sent to my Lord along with him. And told us,
that we need not trouble ourselves how to buy them,
for the King would pay for all, and that he would
take care to get them: which put my Lady and me
into a great deal of ease of mind. Here we staid
and supped too, and, after my wife had put up some
of the grapes in a basket for to be sent to the King,
we took coach and home, where we found a hampire of
millóns sent to me also.
28th. At the office in the morning,
dined at home, and then Sir W. Pen and his daughter
and I and my wife to the Theatre, and there saw “Father’s
own Son,” a very good play, and the first time
I ever saw it, and so at night to my house, and there
sat and talked and drank and merrily broke up, and
to bed.
29th (Lord’s day). To church
in the morning, and so to dinner, and Sir W. Pen and
daughter, and Mrs. Poole, his kinswoman, Captain Poole’s
wife, came by appointment to dinner with us, and a
good dinner we had for them, and were very merry,
and so to church again, and then to Sir W. Pen’s
and there supped, where his brother, a traveller, and
one that speaks Spanish very well, and a merry man,
supped with us, and what at dinner and supper I drink
I know not how, of my own accord, so much wine, that
I was even almost foxed, and my head aked all night;
so home and to bed, without prayers, which I never
did yet, since I came to the house, of a Sunday night:
I being now so out of order that I durst not read
prayers, for fear of being perceived by my servants
in what case I was. So to bed.
30th. This morning up by moon-shine,
at 5 o’clock, to White Hall, to meet Mr. Moore
at the Privy Seal, but he not being come as appointed,
I went into King Street to the Red Lyon’ to drink
my morning draft, and there I heard of a fray between
the two Embassadors of Spain and France; and that,
this day, being the day of the entrance of an Embassador
from Sweden, they intended to fight for the precedence!
Our King, I heard, ordered that no Englishman should
meddle in the business,
[The Comte de Brienne insinuates, in
his “Memoirs,” that Charles purposely
abstained from interfering, in the belief that it was
for his interest to let France and Spain quarrel,
in order to further his own designs in the match
with Portugal. Louis certainly held that
opinion; and he afterwards instructed D’Estrades
to solicit from the English court the punishment
of those Londoners who had insulted his ambassador,
and to demand the dismissal of De Batteville.
Either no Londoner had interfered, or Louis’s
demand had not in England the same force as in
Spain; for no one was punished. The latter
part of his request it was clearly not for Charles
to entertain, much less enforce. B.]
but let them do what they would.
And to that end all the soldiers in the town were
in arms all the day long, and some of the train-bands
in the City; and a great bustle through the City all
the day. Then I to the Privy Seal, and there
Mr. Moore and a gentleman being come with him, we
took coach (which was the business I come for) to Chelsy,
to my Lord Privy Seal, and there got him to seal the
business. Here I saw by day-light two very fine
pictures in the gallery, that a little while ago I
saw by night; and did also go all over the house, and
found it to be the prettiest contrived house that
ever I saw in my life. So to coach back again;
and at White Hall light, and saw the soldiers and people
running up and down the streets. So I went to
the Spanish Embassador’s and the French, and
there saw great preparations on both sides; but the
French made the most noise and vaunted most, the other
made no stir almost at all; so that I was afraid the
other would have had too great a conquest over them.
Then to the Wardrobe, and dined there, end then abroad
and in Cheapside hear that the Spanish hath got the
best of it, and killed three of the French coach-horses
and several men, and is gone through the City next
to our King’s coach; at which, it is strange
to see how all the City did rejoice. And indeed
we do naturally all love the Spanish, and hate the
French. But I, as I am in all things curious,
presently got to the water-side, and there took oars
to Westminster Palace, thinking to have seen them
come in thither with all the coaches, but they being
come and returned, I ran after them with my boy after
me through all the dirt and the streets full of people;
till at last, at the Mewes, I saw the Spanish coach
go, with fifty drawn swords at least to guard it,
and our soldiers shouting for joy. And so I followed
the coach, and then met it at York House, where the
embassador lies; and there it went in with great state.
So then I went to the French house, where I observe
still, that there is no men in the world of a more
insolent spirit where they do well, nor before they
begin a matter, and more abject if they do miscarry,
than these people are; for they all look like dead
men, and not a word among them, but shake their heads.
The truth is, the Spaniards were not only observed
to fight most desperately, but also they did outwitt
them; first in lining their own harness with chains
of iron that they could not be cut, then in setting
their coach in the most advantageous place, and to
appoint men to guard every one of their horses, and
others for to guard the coach, and others the coachmen.
And, above all, in setting upon the French horses and
killing them, for by that means the French were not
able to stir. There were several men slain of
the French, and one or two of the Spaniards, and one
Englishman by a bullet. Which is very observable,
the French were at least four to one in number, and
had near 100 case of pistols among them, and the Spaniards
had not one gun among them; which is for their honour
for ever, and the others’ disgrace. So,
having been very much daubed with dirt, I got a coach,
and home where I vexed my wife in telling of her this
story, and pleading for the Spaniards against the
French. So ends this month; myself and family
in good condition of health, but my head full of my
Lord’s and my own and the office business; where
we are now very busy about the business of sending
forces to Tangier,
[This place so often mentioned, was
first given up to the English fleet under Lord
Sandwich, by the Portuguese, January 30th, 1662; and
Lord Peterborough left governor, with a garrison.
The greatest pains were afterwards taken
to preserve the fortress, and a fine mole was
constructed at a vast expense, to improve the harbour.
At length, after immense sums of money had been
wasted there, the House of Commons expressed
a dislike to the management of the garrison, which
they suspected to be a nursery for a popish army, and
seemed disinclined to maintain it any longer.
The king consequently, in 1683, sent Lord Dartmouth
to bring home the troops, and destroy the works;
which he performed so effectually, that it would puzzle
all our engineers to restore the harbour.
It were idle to speculate on the benefits which
might have accrued to England, by its preservation
and retention; Tangier fell into the hands of the
Moors, its importance having ceased, with the
demolition of the mole. Many curious views
of Tangier were taken by Hollar, during its occupation
by the English; and his drawings are preserved in the
British Museum. Some have been engraved
by himself; but the impressions are of considerable
rarity. B.]
and the fleet to my Lord of Sandwich,
who is now at Lisbon to bring over the Queen, who
do now keep a Court as Queen of England. The business
of Argier hath of late troubled me, because my Lord
hath not done what he went for, though he did as much
as any man in the world could have done. The
want of money puts all things, and above all things
the Nary, out of order; and yet I do not see that
the King takes care to bring in any money, but thinks
of new designs to lay out money.