November 1st. I went this morning
with Sir W. Pen by coach to Westminster, and having
done my business at Mr. Montagu’s, I went back
to him at Whitehall, and from thence with him to the
3 Tun Tavern, at Charing Cross, and there sent for
up the maister of the house’s dinner, and dined
very well upon it, and afterwards had him and his fayre
sister (who is very great with Sir W. Batten and Sir
W. Pen in mirth) up to us, and looked over some medals
that they shewed us of theirs; and so went away to
the Theatre, to “The Joviall Crew,” and
from hence home, and at my house we were very merry
till late, having sent for his son, Mr. William Pen,
[The celebrated Quaker,
and founder of Pennsylvania.]
lately come from Oxford. And
after supper parted, and to bed.
2d. At the office all the morning;
where Sir John Minnes, our new comptroller, was fetched
by Sir Wm. Pen and myself from Sir Wm. Batten’s,
and led to his place in the office. The first
time that he had come hither, and he seems a good
fair condition man, and one that I am glad hath the
office. After the office done, I to the Wardrobe,
and there dined, and in the afternoon had an hour
or two’s talk with my Lady with great pleasure.
And so with the two young ladies by coach to my house,
and gave them some entertainment, and so late at night
sent them home with Captain Ferrers by coach.
This night my boy Wayneman, as I was in my chamber,
I overheard him let off some gunpowder; and hearing
my wife chide him below for it, and a noise made,
I call him up, and find that it was powder that he
had put in his pocket, and a match carelessly with
it, thinking that it was out, and so the match did
give fire to the powder, and had burnt his side and
his hand that he put into his pocket to put out the
fire. But upon examination, and finding him in
a lie about the time and place that he bought it,
I did extremely beat him, and though it did trouble
me to do it, yet I thought it necessary to do it.
So to write by the post, and to bed.
3rd (Lord’s day). This
day I stirred not out, but took physique, and it did
work very well, and all the day as I was at leisure
I did read in Fuller’s Holy Warr, which I have
of late bought, and did try to make a song in the
praise of a liberall genius (as I take my own to be)
to all studies and pleasures, but it not proving to
my mind I did reject it and so proceeded not in it.
At night my wife and I had a good supper by ourselves
of a pullet hashed, which pleased me much to see my
condition come to allow ourselves a dish like that,
and so at night to bed.
4th. In the morning, being very
rainy, by coach with Sir W. Pen and my wife to Whitehall,
and sent her to Mrs. Bunt’s, and he and I to
Mr. Coventry’s about business, and so sent for
her again, and all three home again, only I to the
Mitre (Mr. Rawlinson’s), where Mr. Pierce, the
Purser, had got us a most brave chine of beef, and
a dish of marrowbones. Our company my uncle Wight,
Captain Lambert, one Captain Davies, and purser Barter,
Mr. Rawlinson, and ourselves; and very merry.
After dinner I took coach, and called my wife at my
brother’s, where I left her, and to the Opera,
where we saw “The Bondman,” which of old
we both did so doat on, and do still; though to both
our thinking not so well acted here (having too great
expectations), as formerly at Salisbury-court.
But for Betterton he is called by us both the best
actor in the world. So home by coach, I lighting
by the way at my uncle Wight’s and staid there
a little, and so home after my wife, and to bed.
5th. At the office all the morning.
At noon comes my brother Tom and Mr. Armiger to dine
with me, and did, and we were very merry. After
dinner, I having drunk a great deal of wine, I went
away, seeming to go about business with Sir W. Pen,
to my Lady Batten’s (Sir William being at Chatham),
and there sat a good while, and then went away (before
I went I called at home to see whether they were gone,
and found them there, and Armiger inviting my wife
to go to a play, and like a fool would be courting
her, but he is an ass, and lays out money with Tom,
otherwise I should not think him worth half this respect
I shew him). To the Dolphin, where he and I and
Captain Cocke sat late and drank much, seeing the
boys in the streets flying their crackers, this day
being kept all the day very strictly in the City.
At last broke up, and called at my Lady Batten’s
again and would have gone to cards, but Sir W. Pen
was so fuddled that we could not try him to play, and
therefore we parted, and I home and to bed.
6th. Going forth this morning
I met Mr. Davenport and a friend of his, one Mr. Furbisher,
to drink their morning draft with me, and I did give
it them in good wine, and anchovies, and pickled oysters,
and took them to the Sun in Fish Street, there did
give them a barrel of good ones, and a great deal
of wine, and sent for Mr. W. Bernard (Sir Robert’s
son), a grocer thereabouts, and were very merry, and
cost me a good deal of money, and at noon left them,
and with my head full of wine, and being invited by
a note from Luellin, that came to my hands this morning
in bed, I went to Nick Osborne’s at the Victualling
Office, and there saw his wife, who he has lately
married, a good sober woman, and new come to their
home. We had a good dish or two of marrowbones
and another of neats’ tongues to dinner, and
that being done I bade them adieu and hastened to
Whitehall (calling Mr. Moore by the way) to my Lord
Privy Seal, who will at last force the clerks to bring
in a table of their fees, which they have so long
denied, but I do not join with them, and so he is
very respectful to me. So he desires me to bring
in one which I observe in making of fees, which I
will speedily do. So back again, and endeavoured
to speak with Tom Trice (who I fear is hatching some
mischief), but could not, which vexed me, and so I
went home and sat late with pleasure at my lute, and
so to bed.
7th. This morning came one Mr.
Hill (sent by Mr. Hunt, the Instrument maker), to
teach me to play on the Theorbo, but I do not like
his play nor singing, and so I found a way to put
him off. So to the office. And then to dinner,
and got Mr. Pett the Commissioner to dinner with me,
he and I alone, my wife not being well, and so after
dinner parted. And I to Tom Trice, who in short
shewed me a writt he had ready for my father, and
I promised to answer it. So I went to Dr. Williams
(who is now pretty well got up after his sickness),
and after that to Mr. Moore to advise, and so returned
home late on foot, with my mind cleared, though not
satisfied. I met with letters at home from my
Lord from Lisbone, which speak of his being well;
and he tells me he had seen at the court there the
day before he wrote this letter, the Juego de
Toro. [A bull fight. See May
24th, 1662. B:] So fitted myself
for bed. Coming home I called at my uncle Fenner’s,
who tells that Peg Kite now hath declared she will
have the beggarly rogue the weaver, and so we are resolved
neither to meddle nor make with her.
8th. This morning up early, and
to my Lord Chancellor’s with a letter to him
from my Lord, and did speak with him; and he did ask
me whether I was son to Mr. Talbot Pepys or no (with
whom he was once acquainted in the Court of Requests),
and spoke to me with great respect. Thence to
Westminster Hall (it being Term time) and there met
with Commissioner Pett, and so at noon he and I by
appointment to the Sun in New Fish Street, where Sir
J. Minnes, Sir W. Batten, and we all were to dine,
at an invitation of Captain Stoaks and Captain Clerk,
and were very merry, and by discourse I found Sir
J. Minnes a fine gentleman and a very good scholler.
After dinner to the Wardrobe, and thence to Dr. Williams,
who went with me (the first time that he has been
abroad a great while) to the Six Clerks Office to
find me a clerk there able to advise me in my business
with Tom Trice, and after I had heard them talk, and
had given me some comfort, I went to my brother Tom’s,
and took him with me to my coz. Turner at the
Temple, and had his opinion that I should not pay
more than the principal L200, with which I was much
pleased, and so home.
9th. At the office all the morning.
At noon Mr. Davenport, Phillips, and Mr. Wm. Bernard
and Furbisher, came by appointment and dined with me,
and we were very merry. After dinner I to the
Wardrobe, and there staid talking with my Lady all
the afternoon till late at night. Among other
things my Lady did mightily urge me to lay out money
upon my wife, which I perceived was a little more
earnest than ordinary, and so I seemed to be pleased
with it, and do resolve to bestow a lace upon her,
and what with this and other talk, we were exceeding
merry. So home at night.
10th (Lord’s day). At our
own church in the morning, where Mr. Mills preached.
Thence alone to the Wardrobe to dinner with my Lady,
where my Lady continues upon yesterday’s discourse
still for me to lay out money upon my wife, which
I think it is best for me to do for her honour and
my own. Last night died Archibald, my Lady’s
butler and Mrs. Sarah’s brother, of a dropsy,
which I am troubled at. In the afternoon went
and sat with Mr. Turner in his pew at St. Gregory’s,
where I hear our Queen Katherine, the first time by
name as such, publickly prayed for, and heard Dr.
Buck upon “Woe unto thee, Corazin,” &c.,
where he started a difficulty, which he left to another
time to answer, about why God should give means of
grace to those people which he knew would not receive
them, and deny to others which he himself confesses,
if they had had them, would have received them, and
they would have been effectual too. I would I
could hear him explain this, when he do come to it.
Thence home to my wife, and took her to my Aunt Wight’s,
and there sat a while with her (my uncle being at
Katharine hill), and so home, and I to Sir W. Batten’s,
where Captain Cock was, and we sent for two bottles
of Canary to the Rose, which did do me a great deal
of hurt, and did trouble me all night, and, indeed,
came home so out of order that I was loth to say prayers
to-night as I am used ever to do on Sundays, which
my wife took notice of and people of the house, which
I was sorry for.
11th. To the Wardrobe, and with
Mr. Townsend and Moore to the Saracen’s Head
to a barrel of oysters, and so Mr. Moore and I to Tom
Trice’s, with whom I did first set my hand to
answer to a writt of his this tearm. Thence to
the Wardrobe to dinner, and there by appointment met
my wife, who had by my direction brought some laces
for my Lady to choose one for her. And after
dinner I went away, and left my wife and ladies together,
and all their work was about this lace of hers.
Captain Ferrers and I went together, and he carried
me the first time that ever I saw any gaming house,
to one, entering into Lincoln’s-Inn-Fields, at
the end of Bell Yard, where strange the folly of men
to lay and lose so much money, and very glad I was
to see the manner of a gamester’s life, which
I see is very miserable, and poor, and unmanly.
And thence he took me to a dancing school in Fleet
Street, where we saw a company of pretty girls dance,
but I do not in myself like to have young girls exposed
to so much vanity. So to the Wardrobe, where
I found my Lady had agreed upon a lace for my wife
of L6, which I seemed much glad of that it was no more,
though in my mind I think it too much, and I pray God
keep me so to order myself and my wife’s expenses
that no inconvenience in purse or honour follow this
my prodigality. So by coach home.
12th. At the office all the morning.
Dined at home alone. So abroad with Sir W. Pen.
My wife and I to “Bartholomew Fayre,” with
puppets which I had seen once before, and Ate play
without puppets often, but though I love the play
as much as ever I did, yet I do not like the puppets
at all, but think it to be a lessening to it.
Thence to the Greyhound in Fleet Street, and there
drank some raspberry sack and eat some sasages, and
so home very merry. This day Holmes come to town;
and we do expect hourly to hear what usage he hath
from the Duke and the King about this late business
of letting the Swedish Embassador go by him without
striking his flag.
[And that, too, in the river Thames
itself. The right of obliging ships of
all nations to lower topsails, and strike their flag
to the English, whilst in the British seas, and
even on the French coasts, had, up to this time,
been rigidly enforced. When Sully was sent by
Henry iv., in 1603, to congratulate James
I. on his accession, and in a ship commanded
by a vice-admiral of France, he was fired upon by
the English Admiral Mansel, for daring to hoist the
flag of France in the presence of that of England,
although within sight of Calais. The French
flag was lowered, and all Sully’s remonstrances
could obtain no redress for the alleged injury.
According to Rugge, Holmes had insisted upon
the Swede’s lowering his flag, and had even
fired a shot to enforce the observance of the
usual tribute of respect, but the ambassador
sent his secretary and another gentleman on board
the English frigate, to assure the captain, upon the
word and honour of an ambassador, that the king,
by a verbal order, had given him leave and a
dispensation in that particular, and upon this false
representation he was allowed to proceed on his voyage
without further question. This want of
caution, and disobedience of orders, fell heavily
on Holmes, who was imprisoned for two months, and not
re-appointed to the same ship. Brahe afterwards
made a proper submission for the fault he had
committed, at his own court. His conduct
reminds us of Sir Henry Wotton’s definition of
an ambassador that he is an honest
man sent to lie abroad for the good of his country.
A pun upon the term liéger ambassador. B.]
13th. By appointment, we all
went this morning to wait upon the Duke of York, which
we did in his chamber, as he was dressing himself in
his riding suit to go this day by sea to the Downs.
He is in mourning for his wife’s grandmother,
which is thought a great piece of fondness.
[Fondness, foolishness.
“Fondness
it were for any, being free,
To
covet fetters, tho’ they golden be.”
Spenser,
Sonnet 37, M. B.]
After we had given him our letter
relating the bad condition of the Navy for want of
money, he referred it to his coming back and so parted,
and I to Whitehall and to see la belle Pierce, and
so on foot to my Lord Crew’s, where I found
him come to his new house, which is next to that he
lived in last; here I was well received by my Lord
and Sir Thomas, with whom I had great talk: and
he tells me in good earnest that he do believe the
Parliament (which comes to sit again the next week),
will be troublesome to the Court and Clergy, which
God forbid! But they see things carried so by
my Lord Chancellor and some others, that get money
themselves, that they will not endure it. From
thence to the Theatre, and there saw “Father’s
own Son” again, and so it raining very hard
I went home by coach, with my mind very heavy for this
my expensefull life, which will undo me, I fear, after
all my hopes, if I do not take up, for now I am coming
to lay out a great deal of money in clothes for my
wife, I must forbear other expenses. To bed, and
this night began to lie in the little green chamber,
where the maids lie, but we could not a great while
get Nell to lie there, because I lie there and my wife,
but at last, when she saw she must lie there or sit
up, she, with much ado, came to bed.
4th. At the office all the morning.
At noon I went by appointment to the Sun in Fish Street
to a dinner of young Mr. Bernard’s for myself,
Mr. Phillips, Davenport, Weaver, &c., where we had
a most excellent dinner, but a pie of such pleasant
variety of good things, as in all my life I never
tasted. Hither came to me Captain Lambert to take
his leave of me, he being this day to set sail for
the Straights. We drank his farewell and a health
to all our friends, and were very merry, and drank
wine enough. Hence to the Temple to Mr. Turner
about drawing up my bill in Chancery against T. Trice,
and so to Salisbury Court, where Mrs. Turner is come
to town to-night, but very ill still of an ague, which
I was sorry to see. So to the Wardrobe and talked
with my Lady, and so home and to bed.
15th. At home all the morning,
and at noon with my wife to the Wardrobe to dinner,
and there, did shew herself to my Lady in the handkercher
that she bought the lace for the other day, and indeed
it is very handsome. Here I left my wife and
went to my Lord Privy Seal to Whitehall, and there
did give him a copy of the Fees of the office as I
have received them, and he was well pleased with it.
So to the Opera, where I met my wife and Captain Ferrers
and Madamoiselle Le Blanc, and there did see the second
part of “The Siege of Rhodes” very well
done; and so by coach set her home, and the coach
driving down the hill through Thames Street, which
I think never any coach did before from that place
to the bridge-foot, but going up Fish Street Hill his
horses were so tired, that they could not be got to
go up the hill, though all the street boys and men
did beat and whip them. At last I was fain to
send my boy for a link, and so light out of the coach
till we got to another at the corner of Fenchurch
Street, and so home, and to bed.
16th. At the office all the morning.
Dined at home, and so about my business in the afternoon
to the Temple, where I found my Chancery bill drawn
against T. Trice, which I read and like it, and so
home.
17th (Lord’s day). To our
own church, and at noon, by invitation, Sir W. Pen
dined with me, and I took Mrs. Hester, my Lady Batten’s
kinswoman, to dinner from church with me, and we were
very merry. So to church again, and heard a simple
fellow upon the praise of Church musique, and
exclaiming against men’s wearing their hats on
in the church, but I slept part of the sermon, till
latter prayer and blessing and all was done without
waking which I never did in my life. So home,
and by and by comes my uncle Wight and my aunt and
Mr. Norbury and his lady, and we drank hard and were
very merry till supper time, and then we parted, my
wife and I being invited to Sir W. Pen’s, where
we also were very merry, and so home to prayers and
to bed.
18th. By coach with Sir W. Pen;
my wife and I toward Westminster, but seeing Mr. Moore
in the street I light and he and I went to Mr. Battersby’s
the minister, in my way I putting in at St. Paul’s,
where I saw the quiristers in their surplices going
to prayers, and a few idle poor people and boys to
hear them, which is the first time I have seen them,
and am sorry to see things done so out of order, and
there I received L50 more, which make up L100 that
I now have borrowed of him, and so I did burn the
old bond for L50, and paying him the use of it did
make a new bond for the whole L100. Here I dined
and had a good dinner, and his wife a good pretty
woman. There was a young Parson at the table
that had got himself drunk before dinner, which troubled
me to see. After dinner to Mr. Bowers at Westminster
for my wife, and brought her to the Theatre to see
“Philaster,” which I never saw before,
but I found it far short of my expectations.
So by coach home.
19th. At the office all the morning,
and coming home found Mr. Hunt with my wife in the
chamber alone, which God forgive me did trouble my
head, but remembering that it was washing and that
there was no place else with a fire for him to be
in, it being also cold weather, I was at ease again.
He dined with us, and after dinner took coach and carried
him with us as far as my cozen Scott’s, where
we set him down and parted, and my wife and I staid
there at the christening of my cozens boy, where my
cozen Samuel Pepys, of Ireland, and I were godfathers,
and I did name the child Samuel. There was a
company of pretty women there in the chamber, but
we staid not, but went with the minister into another
room and eat and drank, and at last, when most of
the women were gone, Sam and I went into my cozen
Scott, who was got off her bed, and so we staid and
talked and were very merry, my she-cozen, Stradwick,
being godmother. And then I left my wife to go
home by coach, and I walked to the Temple about my
law business, and there received a subpoena for T.
Trice. I carried it myself to him at the usual
house at Doctors Commons and did give it him, and
so home and to bed. It cost me 20s, between the
midwife and the two nurses to-day.
20th. To Westminster Hall by
water in the morning, where I saw the King going in
his barge to the Parliament House; this being the first
day of their meeting again. And the Bishops,
I hear, do take their places in the Lords House this
day. I walked long in the Hall, but hear nothing
of news, but what Ned Pickering tells me, which I
am troubled at, that Sir J. Minnes should send word
to the King, that if he did not remove all my Lord
Sandwich’s captains out of this fleet, he believed
the King would not be master of the fleet at its coming
again: and so do endeavour to bring disgrace
upon my Lord. But I hope all that will not do,
for the King loves him. Hence by water to the
Wardrobe, and dined with my Lady, my Lady Wright being
there too, whom I find to be a witty but very conceited
woman and proud. And after dinner Mr. Moore and
I to the Temple, and there he read my bill and likes
it well enough, and so we came back again, he with
me as far as the lower end of Cheapside, and there
I gave him a pint of sack and parted, and I home, and
went seriously to look over my papers touching T.
Trice, and I think I have found some that will go
near to do me more good in this difference of ours
than all I have before. So to bed with my mind
cheery upon it, and lay long reading “Hobbs
his Liberty and Necessity,” and a little but
very shrewd piece, and so to sleep.
21st. In the morning again at
looking over my last night’s papers, and by
and by comes Mr. Moore, who finds that my papers may
do me much good. He staid and dined with me,
and we had a good surloyne of rost beefe, the first
that ever I had of my own buying since I kept house;
and after dinner he and I to the Temple, and there
showed Mr. Smallwood my papers, who likes them well,
and so I left them with him, and went with Mr. Moore
to Gray’s Inn to his chamber, and there he shewed
me his old Camden’s “Britannica”,
which I intend to buy of him, and so took it away
with me, and left it at St. Paul’s Churchyard
to be bound, and so home and to the office all the
afternoon; it being the first afternoon that we have
sat, which we are now to do always, so long as the
Parliament sits, who this day have voted the King
L 120,000
[A mistake. According
to the journals, L1,200,000. And see Diary,
February 29th, 1663-64. M.
B.]
to be raised to pay his debts.
And after the office with Sir W. Batten to the Dolphin,
and drank and left him there, and I again to the Temple
about my business, and so on foot home again and to
bed.
22nd. Within all the morning,
and at noon with my wife, by appointment to dinner
at the Dolphin, where Sir W. Batten, and his lady and
daughter Matt, and Captain Cocke and his lady, a German
lady, but a very great beauty, and we dined together,
at the spending of some wagers won and lost between
him and I; and there we had the best musique and
very good songs, and were very merry and danced, but
I was most of all taken with Madam Cocke and her little
boy, which in mirth his father had given to me.
But after all our mirth comes a reckoning of L4, besides
40s. to the musicians, which did trouble us, but it
must be paid, and so I took leave and left them there
about eight at night. And on foot went to the
Temple, and then took my cozen Turner’s man Roger,
and went by his advice to Serjeant Fountaine and told
him our case, who gives me good comfort in it, and
I gave him 30s. fee. So home again and to bed.
This day a good pretty maid was sent my wife by Mary
Bowyer, whom my wife has hired.
23rd. To Westminster with my
wife (she to her father’s), and about 10 o’clock
back again home, and there I to the office a little,
and thence by coach with Commissioner Pett to Cheapside
to one Savill, a painter, who I intend shall do my
picture and my wife’s. Thence I to dinner
at the Wardrobe, and so home to the office, and there
all the afternoon till night, and then both Sir Williams
to my house, and in comes Captain Cock, and they to
cards. By and by Sir W. Batten and Cock, after
drinking a good deal of wine, went away, and Sir W.
Pen staid with my wife and I to supper, very pleasant,
and so good night. This day I have a chine of
beef sent home, which I bespoke to send, and did send
it as a present to my uncle Wight.
24th (Lord’s day). Up early,
and by appointment to St. Clement Danes to church,
and there to meet Captain Cocke, who had often commended
Mr. Alsopp, their minister, to me, who is indeed an
able man, but as all things else did not come up to
my expectations. His text was that all good and
perfect gifts are from above. Thence Cocke and
I to the Sun tavern behind the Exchange, and there
met with others that are come from the same church,
and staid and drank and talked with them a little,
and so broke up, and I to the Wardrobe and there dined,
and staid all the afternoon with my Lady alone talking,
and thence to see Madame Turner, who, poor lady, continues
very ill, and I begin to be afraid of her. Thence
homewards, and meeting Mr. Yong, the upholster, he
and I to the Mitre, and with Mr. Rawlinson sat and
drank a quart of sack, and so I to Sir W. Batten’s
and there staid and supped, and so home, where I found
an invitation sent my wife and I to my uncle Wight’s
on Tuesday next to the chine of beef which I presented
them with yesterday. So to prayers and to bed.
25th. To Westminster Hall in
the morning with Captain Lambert, and there he did
at the Dog give me and some other friends of his, his
foy, he being to set sail to-day towards the Streights.
Here we had oysters and good wine. Having this
morning met in the Hall with Mr. Sanchy, we appointed
to meet at the play this afternoon. At noon, at
the rising of the House, I met with Sir W. Pen and
Major General Massy,
[Major-General Edward Massey (or Massie),
son of John Massie, was captain of one of the
foot companies of the Irish Expedition, and had
Oliver Cromwell as his ensign (see Peacock’s
“Army Lists in 1642,” .
He was Governor of Gloucester in its obstinate defence
against the royal forces, 1643; dismissed by the self-
denying ordinance when he entered Charles II’s
service. He was taken prisoner at the battle
of Worcester, September 3rd, 1651, but escaped
abroad.]
who I find by discourse to be a very
ingenious man, and among other things a great master
in the secresys of powder and fireworks, and another
knight to dinner, at the Swan, in the Palace yard,
and our meat brought from the Legg; and after dinner
Sir W. Pen and I to the Theatre, and there saw “The
Country Captain,” a dull play, and that being
done, I left him with his Torys
[This is a strange use of the word
Tory, and an early one also. The word originally
meant bogtrotters or wild Irish, and as Penn was Governor
of Kildare these may have been some of his Irish followers.
The term was not used politically until about
1679.]
and went to the Opera, and saw the
last act of “The Bondman,” and there found
Mr. Sanchy and Mrs. Mary Archer, sister to the fair
Betty, whom I did admire at Cambridge, and thence
took them to the Fleece in Covent Garden, there to
bid good night to Sir W. Pen who staid for me; but
Mr. Sanchy could not by any argument get his lady
to trust herself with him into the tavern, which he
was much troubled at, and so we returned immediately
into the city by coach, and at the Mitre in Cheapside
there light and drank, and then yet her at her uncle’s
in the Old Jewry. And so he and I back again
thither, and drank till past 12 at night, till I had
drank something too much. He all the while telling
me his intention to get a girl who is worth L1000,
and many times we had her sister Betty’s health,
whose memory I love. At last parted, and I well
home, only had got cold and was hoarse and so to bed.
27th. This morning our maid Dorothy
and my wife parted, which though she be a wench for
her tongue not to be borne with, yet I was loth to
part with her, but I took my leave kindly of her and
went out to Savill’s, the painter, and there
sat the first time for my face with him; thence to
dinner with my Lady; and so after an hour or two’s
talk in divinity with my Lady, Captain Ferrers and
Mr. Moore and I to the Theatre, and there saw “Hamlett”
very well done, and so I home, and found that my wife
had been with my aunt Wight and Ferrers to wait on
my Lady to-day this afternoon, and there danced and
were very merry, and my Lady very fond as she is always
of my wife. So to bed.
28th. At home all the morning;
at noon Will brought me from Whitehall, whither I
had sent him, some letters from my Lord Sandwich, from
Tangier; where he continues still, and hath done some
execution upon the Turks, and retaken an Englishman
from them, of one Mr. Parker’s, a merchant in
Marke-lane. In the afternoon Mr. Pett and I met
at the office; there being none more there than we
two I saw there was not the reverence due to us observed,
and so I took occasion to break up and took Mr. Gawdon
along with me, and he and I (though it rained) were
resolved to go, he to my Lord Treasurer’s and
I to the Chancellor’s with a letter from my
Lord to-day. So to a tavern at the end of Mark
Lane, and there we staid till with much ado we got
a coach, and so to my Lord Treasurer’s and lost
our labours, then to the Chancellor’s, and there
met with Mr. Dugdale, and with him and one Mr. Simons,
I think that belongs to my Lord Hatton, and Mr. Kipps
and others, to the Fountain tavern, and there staid
till twelve at night drinking and singing, Mr. Simons
and one Mr. Agar singing very well. Then Mr. Gawdon
being almost drunk had the wit to be gone, and so
I took leave too, and it being a fine moonshine night
he and I footed it all the way home, but though he
was drunk he went such a pace as I did admire how he
was able to go. When I came home I found our
new maid Sarah [Sarah did not stay long
with Mrs. Pepys, who was continually falling out with
her. She left to enter Sir William Penn’s
service.] come, who is a tall and a very
well favoured wench, and one that I think will please
us. So to bed.
29th. I lay long in bed, till
Sir Williams both sent me word that we were to wait
upon the Duke of York to-day; and that they would have
me to meet them at Westminster Hall, at noon:
so I rose and went thither; and there I understand
that they are gone to Mr. Coventry’s lodgings,
in the Old Palace Yard, to dinner (the first time
I knew he had any); and there I met them two and Sir
G. Carteret, and had a very fine dinner, and good
welcome, and discourse; and so, by water, after dinner
to White Hall to the Duke, who met us in his closet;
and there he did discourse to us the business of Holmes,
and did desire of us to know what hath been the common
practice about making of forrayne ships to strike sail
to us, which they did all do as much as they could;
but I could say nothing to it, which I was sorry for.
So indeed I was forced to study a lie, and so after
we were gone from the Duke, I told Mr. Coventry that
I had heard Mr. Selden often say, that he could prove
that in Henry the 7th’s time, he did give commission
to his captains to make the King of Denmark’s
ships to strike to him in the Baltique. From thence
Sir W. Pen and I to the Theatre, but it was so full
that we could hardly get any room, so he went up to
one of the boxes, and I into the 18d. places, and
there saw “Love at first sight,” a play
of Mr. Killigrew’s, and the first time that
it hath been acted since before the troubles, and great
expectation there was, but I found the play to be a
poor thing, and so I perceive every body else do.
So home, calling at Paul’s Churchyard for a
“Mare Clausum,” having it in
my mind to write a little matter, what I can gather,
about the business of striking sayle, and present it
to the Duke, which I now think will be a good way
to make myself known. So home and to bed.
30th. In the morning to the Temple,
Mr. Philips and Dr. Williams about my several law
matters, and so to the Wardrobe to dinner, and after
dinner stole away, my Lady not dining out of her chamber,
and so home and then to the office all the afternoon,
and that being done Sir W. Batten and I and Captain
Cock got a bottle of sack into the office, and there
we sat late and drank and talked, and so home and to
bed. I am this day in very good health, only
got a little cold. The Parliament has sat a pretty
while. The old condemned judges of the late King
have been brought before the Parliament, and like
to be hanged. I am deep in Chancery against Tom
Trice, God give a good issue; and myself under great
trouble for my late great expending of money vainly,
which God stop for the future. This is the last
day for the old State’s coyne
[In a speech of Lord Lucas in the House
of Lords, the 22nd February, 1670-1 (which speech
was burnt by the common hangman), he thus adverted
to that coin: “It is evident that there
is scarcity of money; for all the parliament’s
money called breeches (a fit stamp for the coin
of the Rump) is wholly vanished the king’s
proclamation and the Dutch have swept it all away,
and of his now majesty’s coin there appears
but very little; so that in effect we have none
left for common use, but a little old lean coined money
of the late three former princes. And what
supply is preparing for it, my lords? I
hear of none, unless it be of copper farthings, and
this is the metal that is to vindicate, according
to the inscription on it, the dominion of the
four seas.” Quoted in Penn’s
“Memorials of Sir Wm. Penn,” ii.
264.]
to pass in common payments, but they
say it is to pass in publique payments to the King
three months still.