February 1st. Up (my maids rising
early this morning to washing), and being ready I
found Mr. Strutt the purser below with 12 bottles of
sacke, and tells me (which from Sir W. Batten I had
heard before) how young Jack Davis has railed against
Sir W. Batten for his endeavouring to turn him out
of his place, at which for the fellow’s sake,
because it will likely prove his ruin, I am sorry,
though I do believe he is a very arch rogue.
I took Strutt by coach with me to White Hall, where
I set him down, and I to my Lord’s, but found
him gone out betimes to the Wardrobe, which I am glad
to see that he so attends his business, though it
troubles me that my counsel to my prejudice must be
the cause of it. They tell me that he goes into
the country next week, and that the young ladies come
up this week before the old lady. Here I hear
how two men last night, justling for the wall about
the New Exchange, did kill one another, each thrusting
the other through; one of them of the King’s
Chappell, one Cave, and the other a retayner of my
Lord Generall Middleton’s. Thence to White
Hall; where, in the Duke’s chamber, the King
came and stayed an hour or two laughing at Sir W. Petty,
who was there about his boat; and at Gresham College
in general; at which poor Petty was, I perceive, at
some loss; but did argue discreetly, and bear the
unreasonable follies of the King’s objections
and other bystanders with great discretion; and offered
to take oddes against the King’s best boates;
but the King would not lay, but cried him down with
words only. Gresham College he mightily laughed
at, for spending time only in weighing of ayre, and
doing nothing else since they sat. Thence to
Westminster Hall, and there met with diverse people,
it being terme time. Among others I spoke
with Mrs. Lane, of whom I doubted to hear something
of the effects of our last meeting about a fortnight
or three weeks ago, but to my content did not.
Here I met with Mr. Pierce, who tells me of several
passages at Court, among others how the King, coming
the other day to his Theatre to see “The Indian
Queene” (which he commends for a very fine thing),
my Lady Castlemaine was in the next box before he
came; and leaning over other ladies awhile to whisper
to the King, she rose out of the box and went into
the King’s, and set herself on the King’s
right hand, between the King and the Duke of York;
which, he swears, put the King himself, as well as
every body else, out of countenance; and believes
that she did it only to show the world that she is
not out of favour yet, as was believed. Thence
with Alderman Maynell by his coach to the ’Change,
and there with several people busy, and so home to
dinner, and took my wife out immediately to the King’s
Theatre, it being a new month, and once a month I may
go, and there saw “The Indian Queene”
acted; which indeed is a most pleasant show, and beyond
my expectation; the play good, but spoiled with the
ryme, which breaks the sense. But above my expectation
most, the eldest Marshall did do her part most excellently
well as I ever heard woman in my life; but her voice
not so sweet as Ianthe’s; but, however, we came
home mightily contented. Here we met Mr. Pickering
and his mistress, Mrs. Doll Wilde; he tells me that
the business runs high between the Chancellor and my
Lord Bristoll against the Parliament; and that my Lord
Lauderdale and Cooper open high against the Chancellor;
which I am sorry for. In my way home I ’light
and to the Coffee-house, where I heard Lt.
Coll. Baron tell very good stories of his travels
over the high hills in Asia above the clouds, how
clear the heaven is above them, how thicke like a mist
the way is through the cloud that wets like a sponge
one’s clothes, the ground above the clouds all
dry and parched, nothing in the world growing, it
being only a dry earth, yet not so hot above as below
the clouds. The stars at night most delicate
bright and a fine clear blue sky, but cannot see the
earth at any time through the clouds, but the clouds
look like a world below you. Thence home and to
supper, being hungry, and so to the office, did business,
specially about Creed, for whom I am now pretty well
fitted, and so home to bed. This day in Westminster
Hall W. Bowyer told me that his father is dead lately,
and died by being drowned in the river, coming over
in the night; but he says he had not been drinking.
He was taken with his stick in his hand and cloake
over his shoulder, as ruddy as before he died.
His horse was taken overnight in the water, hampered
in the bridle, but they were so silly as not to look
for his master till the next morning, that he was
found drowned.
2nd. Up and to the office, where,
though Candlemas day, Mr. Coventry and Sir W. Pen
and I all the morning, the others being at a survey
at Deptford. At noon by coach to the ’Change
with Mr. Coventry, thence to the Coffee-house with
Captain Coeke, who discoursed well of the good effects
in some kind of a Dutch warr and conquest (which I
did not consider before, but the contrary) that is,
that the trade of the world is too little for us two,
therefore one must down: 2ndly, that though our
merchants will not be the better husbands by all this,
yet our wool will bear a better price by vaunting
of our cloths, and by that our tenants will be better
able to pay rents, and our lands will be more worth,
and all our owne manufactures, which now the Dutch
outvie us in; that he thinks the Dutch are not in
so good a condition as heretofore because of want
of men always, and now from the warrs against the Turke
more than ever. Then to the ’Change again,
and thence off to the Sun Taverne with Sir W.
Warren, and with him discoursed long, and had good
advice, and hints from him, and among other things
he did give me a payre of gloves for my wife wrapt
up in paper, which I would not open, feeling it hard;
but did tell him that my wife should thank him, and
so went on in discourse. When I came home, Lord!
in what pain I was to get my wife out of the room
without bidding her go, that I might see what these
gloves were; and, by and by, she being gone, it proves
a payre of white gloves for her and forty pieces in
good gold, which did so cheer my heart, that I could
eat no victuals almost for dinner for joy to think
how God do bless us every day more and more, and more
yet I hope he will upon the increase of my duty and
endeavours. I was at great losse what to do,
whether tell my wife of it or no, which I could hardly
forbear, but yet I did and will think of it first before
I do, for fear of making her think me to be in a better
condition, or in a better way of getting money, than
yet I am. After dinner to the office, where doing
infinite of business till past to at night to the comfort
of my mind, and so home with joy to supper and to
bed. This evening Mr. Hempson came and told me
how Sir W, Batten his master will not hear of continuing
him in his employment as Clerk of the Survey at Chatham,
from whence of a sudden he has removed him without
any new or extraordinary cause, and I believe (as
he himself do in part write, and J. Norman do confess)
for nothing but for that he was twice with me the
other day and did not wait upon him. So much
he fears me and all that have to do with me. Of
this more in the Mem. Book of my office upon
this day, there I shall find it.
3rd. Up, and after a long discourse
with my cozen Thomas Pepys, the executor, I with my
wife by coach to Holborn, where I ’light, and
she to her father’s, I to the Temple and several
places, and so to the ’Change, where much business,
and then home to dinner alone; and so to the Mitre
Taverne by appointment (and there met by chance
with W. Howe come to buy wine for my Lord against
his going down to Hinchingbroke, and I private with
him a great while discoursing of my Lord’s strangeness
to me; but he answers that I have no reason to think
any such thing, but that my Lord is only in general
a more reserved man than he was before) to meet Sir
W. Rider and Mr. Clerke, and there after much ado made
an end, giving Mr. Custos L202 against Mr. Bland,
which I endeavoured to bring down but could not, and
think it is well enough ended for Mr. Bland for all
that. Thence by coach to fetch my wife from her
brother’s, and found her gone home. Called
at Sir Robert Bernard’s about surrendering my
estate in reversion to the use of my life, which will
be done, and at Roger Pepys, who was gone to bed in
pain of a boyle that he could not sit or stand.
So home, where my wife is full of sad stories of her
good-natured father and roguish brother, who is going
for Holland and his wife, to be a soldier. And
so after a little at the office to bed. This
night late coming in my coach, coming up Ludgate Hill,
I saw two gallants and their footmen taking a pretty
wench, which I have much eyed, lately set up shop
upon the hill, a seller of riband and gloves.
They seek to drag her by some force, but the wench
went, and I believe had her turn served, but, God
forgive me! what thoughts and wishes I had of being
in their place. In Covent Garden to-night, going
to fetch home my wife, I stopped at the great Coffee-house’
there, where I never was before; where Dryden the
poet (I knew at Cambridge), and all the wits of the
town, and Harris the player, and Mr. Hoole of our College.
And had I had time then, or could at ether times,
it will be good coming thither, for there, I perceive,
is very witty and pleasant discourse. But I could
not tarry, and as it was late, they were all ready
to go away.
4th. Up and to the office, where
after a while sitting, I left the board upon pretence
of serious business, and by coach to Paul’s School,
where I heard some good speeches of the boys that
were to be elected this year. Thence by and by
with Mr. Pullen and Barnes (a great Non-Conformist)
with several others of my old acquaintance to the Nag’s
Head Taverne, and there did give them a bottle
of sacke, and away again and I to the School, and
up to hear the upper form examined; and there was
kept by very many of the Mercers, Clutterbucke, a Barker,
Harrington, and others; and with great respect used
by them all, and had a noble dinner. Here they
tell me, that in Dr. Colett’s will he says that
he would have a Master found for the School that hath
good skill in Latin, and (if it could be) one that
had some knowledge of the Greeke; so little was Greeke
known here at that time. Dr. Wilkins and one Mr.
Smallwood, Posers. After great pleasure there,
and specially to Mr. Crumlum, so often to tell of
my being a benefactor to the School, I to my bookseller’s
and there spent an hour looking over Theatrum
Urbium and Flandria illustrata, with excellent cuts,
with great content. So homeward, and called at
my little milliner’s, where I chatted with her,
her husband out of the way, and a mad merry slut she
is. So home to the office, and by and by comes
my wife home from the burial of Captain Grove’s
wife at Wapping (she telling me a story how her mayd
Jane going into the boat did fall down and show her
arse in the boat), and alone comes my uncle Wight
and Mr. Maes with the state of their case, which he
told me very discreetly, and I believe is a very hard
one, and so after drinking a bottle of ale or two
they gone, and I a little more to the office, and
so home to prayers and to bed. This evening I
made an end of my letter to Creed about his pieces
of eight, and sent it away to him. I pray God
give good end to it to bring me some money, and that
duly as from him.
5th. Up, and down by water, a
brave morning, to Woolwich, and there spent an houre
or two to good purpose, and so walked to Greenwich
and thence to Deptford, where I found (with Sir W.
Batten upon a survey) Sir J. Minnes, Sir W. Pen, and
my Lady Batten come down and going to dinner.
I dined with them, and so after dinner by water home,
all the way going and coming reading “Faber
Fortunae,” which I can never read too often.
At home a while with my wife, and so to my office,
where till 8 o’clock, and then home to look
over some Brampton papers, and my uncle’s accounts
as Generall-Receiver of the County for 1647 of our
monthly assessment, which, contrary to my expectation,
I found in such good order and so, thoroughly that
I did not expect, nor could have thought, and that
being done, having seen discharges for every farthing
of money he received, I went to bed late with great
quiett.
6th. Up, and to the office, where
we sat all the morning, and so at noon to the ’Change,
where I met Mr. Coventry, the first time I ever saw
him there, and after a little talke with him and other
merchants, I up and down about several businesses,
and so home, whither came one Father Fogourdy, an
Irish priest, of my wife’s and her mother’s
acquaintance in France, a sober, discreet person,
but one that I would not have converse with my wife
for fear of meddling with her religion, but I like
the man well. Thence with my wife abroad, and
left her at Tom’s, while I abroad about several
businesses and so back to her, myself being vexed to
find at my first coming Tom abroad, and all his books,
papers, and bills loose upon the open table in the
parlour, and he abroad, which I ranted at him for
when he came in. Then by coach home, calling at
my cozen Scott’s, who (she) lies dying, they
say, upon a miscarriage. My wife could not be
admitted to see her, nor anybody. At home to the
office late writing letters, and then home to supper
and to bed. Father Fogourdy confirms to me the
newes that for certain there is peace between the
Pope and King of France.
7th (Lord’s day). Up and
to church, and thence home, my wife being ill ...
kept her bed all day, and I up and dined by her bedside,
and then all the afternoon till late at night writing
some letters of business to my father stating of matters
to him in general of great import, and other letters
to ease my mind in the week days that I have not time
to think of, and so up to my wife, and with great mirth
read Sir W. Davenant’s two speeches in dispraise
of London and Paris, by way of reproach one to another,
and so to prayers and to bed.
8th. Up, and by coach called
upon Mr. Phillips, and after a little talk with him
away to my Lord Sandwich’s, but he being gone
abroad, I staid a little and talked with Mr. Howe,
and so to Westminster in term time, and there met
Mr. Pierce, who told me largely how the King still
do doat upon his women, even beyond all shame; and
that the good Queen will of herself stop before she
goes sometimes into her dressing-room, till she knows
whether the King be there, for fear he should be, as
she hath sometimes taken him, with Mrs. Stewart; and
that some of the best parts of the Queen’s joynture
are, contrary to faith, and against the opinion of
my Lord Treasurer and his Council, bestowed or rented,
I know not how, to my Lord Fitz-Harding and Mrs. Stewart,
and others of that crew that the King do doat infinitely
upon the Duke of Monmouth, apparently as one that
he intends to have succeed him. God knows what
will be the end of it! After he was gone I went
and talked with Mrs. Lane about persuading her to
Hawly, and think she will come on, which I wish were
done, and so to Mr. Howlett and his wife, and talked
about the same, and they are mightily for it, and
I bid them promote it, for I think it will be for
both their goods and my content. But I was much
pleased to look upon their pretty daughter, which
is grown a pretty mayd, and will make a fine modest
woman. Thence to the ’Change by coach, and
after some business done, home to dinner, and thence
to Guildhall, thinking to have heard some pleading,
but there were no Courts, and so to Cade’s, the
stationer, and there did look upon some pictures which
he promised to give me the buying of, but I found
he would have played the Jacke with me, but at
last he did proffer me what I expected, and I have
laid aside L10 or L12 worth, and will think of it,
but I am loth to lay out so much money upon them.
So home a little vexed in my mind to think how to-day
I was forced to compliment W. Howe and admit myself
to an equality with Mr. Moore, which is come to challenge
in his discourse with me, but I will admit it no more,
but let me stand or fall, I will show myself as strange
to them as my Lord do himself to me. After at
the office till 9 o’clock, I home in fear of
some pain by taking cold, and so to supper and to
bed.
9th. Up and to the office, where
sat all the morning. At noon by coach with Mr.
Coventry to the ’Change, where busy with several
people. Great talke of the Dutch proclaiming
themselves in India, Lords of the Southern Seas, and
deny traffick there to all ships but their owne, upon
pain of confiscation; which makes our merchants mad.
Great doubt of two ships of ours, the “Greyhound”
and another, very rich, coming from the Streights,
for fear of the Turkes. Matters are made up between
the Pope and the King of France; so that now all the
doubt is, what the French will do with their armies.
Thence home, and there found Captain Grove in mourning
for his wife, and Hawly, and they dined with me.
After dinner, and Grove gone, Hawly and I talked of
his mistress, Mrs. Lane, and I seriously advising
him and inquiring his condition, and do believe that
I shall bring them together. By and by comes Mr.
Moore, with whom much good discourse of my Lord, and
among other things told me that my Lord is mightily
altered, that is, grown very high and stately, and
do not admit of any to come into his chamber to him,
as heretofore, and that I must not think much of his
strangeness to me, for it was the same he do to every
body, and that he would not have me be solicitous in
the matter, but keep off and give him now and then
a visit and no more, for he says he himself do not
go to him now a days but when he sends for him, nor
then do not stay for him if he be not there at the
hour appointed, for, says he, I do find that I can
stand upon my own legs and I will not by any over
submission make myself cheap to any body and contemptible,
which was the doctrine of the world that I lacked most,
and shall follow it. I discoursed with him about
my money that my Lord hath, and the L1000 that I stand
bound with him in, to my cozen Thomas Pepys, in both
which I will get myself at liberty as soon as I can;
for I do not like his being angry and in debt both
together to me; and besides, I do not perceive he
looks after paying his debts, but runs farther and
farther in. He being gone, my wife and I did walk
an houre or two above in our chamber, seriously talking
of businesses. I told her my Lord owed me L700,
and shewed her the bond, and how I intended to carry
myself to my Lord. She and I did cast about how
to get Captain Grove for my sister, in which we are
mighty earnest at present, and I think it would be
a good match, and will endeavour it. So to my
office a while, then home to supper and to bed.
10th. Up, and by coach to my
Lord Sandwich, to his new house, a fine house, but
deadly dear, in Lincoln’s Inne Fields, where
I found and spoke a little to him. He is high
and strange still, but did ask me how my wife did,
and at parting remembered him to his cozen, which I
thought was pretty well, being willing to flatter
myself that in time he will be well again. Thence
home straight and busy all the forenoon, and at noon
with Mr. Bland to Mr. Povy’s, but he being at
dinner and full of company we retreated and went into
Fleet Street to a friend of his, and after a long
stay, he telling me the long and most perplexed story
of Coronell and Bushell’s business of sugars,
wherein Parke and Green and Mr. Bland and 40 more
have been so concerned about the King of Portugal’s
duties, wherein every party has laboured to cheat
another, a most pleasant and profitable story to hear,
and in the close made me understand Mr. Maes’
business better than I did before. By and by dinner
came, and after dinner and good discourse that and
such as I was willing for improvement sake to hear,
I went away too to White Hall to a Committee of Tangier,
where I took occasion to demand of Creed whether he
had received my letter, and he told me yes, and that
he would answer it, which makes me much wonder what
he means to do with me, but I will be even with him
before I have done, let him make as light of it as
he will. Thence to the Temple, where my cozen
Roger Pepys did show me a letter my Father wrote to
him last Terme to shew me, proposing such things
about Sturtlow and a portion for Pall, and I know
not what, that vexes me to see him plotting how to
put me to trouble and charge, and not thinking to pay
our debts and legacys, but I will write him a letter
will persuade him to be wiser. So home, and finding
my wife abroad (after her coming home from being with
my aunt Wight to-day to buy Lent provisions) gone with
Will to my brother’s, I followed them by coach,
but found them not, for they were newly gone home
from thence, which troubled me. I to Sir Robert
Bernard’s chamber, and there did surrender my
reversion in Brampton lands to the use of my will,
which I was glad to have done, my will being now good
in all parts. Thence homewards, calling a little
at the Coffee-house, where a little merry discourse,
and so home, where I found my wife, who says she went
to her father’s to be satisfied about her brother,
who I found at my house with her. He is going
this next tide with his wife into Holland to seek
his fortune. He had taken his leave of us this
morning. I did give my wife 10s. to give him,
and a coat that I had by me, a close-bodied light-coloured
cloth coat, with a gold edgeing in each seam, that
was the lace of my wife’s best pettycoat that
she had when I married her. I staid not there,
but to my office, where Stanes the glazier was with
me till to at night making up his contract, and, poor
man, I made him almost mad through a mistake of mine,
but did afterwards reconcile all, for I would not have
the man that labours to serve the King so cheap above
others suffer too much. He gone I did a little
business more, and so home to supper and to bed, being
now pretty well again, the weather being warm.
My pain do leave me without coming to any great excesse,
but my cold that I had got I suppose was not very
great, it being only the leaving of my wastecoat unbuttoned
one morning.
11th. Up, after much pleasant
discourse with my wife, and to the office, where we
sat all the morning, and did much business, and some
much to my content by prevailing against Sir W. Batten
for the King’s profit. At noon home to
dinner, my wife and I hand to fist to a very fine pig.
This noon Mr. Falconer came and visited my wife, and
brought her a present, a silver state-cup and cover,
value about L3 or L4, for the courtesy I did him the
other day. He did not stay dinner with me.
I am almost sorry for this present, because I would
have reserved him for a place to go in summer a-visiting
at Woolwich with my wife.
12th. Up, and ready, did find
below Mr. Creed’s boy with a letter from his
master for me. So I fell to reading it, and it
is by way of stating the case between S. Pepys and
J. Creed most excellently writ, both showing his stoutness
and yet willingness to peace, reproaching me yet flattering
me again, and in a word in as good a manner as I think
the world could have wrote, and indeed put me to a
greater stand than ever I thought I could have been
in this matter. All the morning thinking how
to behave myself in the business, and at noon to the
Coffee-house; thence by his appointment met him upon
the ’Change, and with him back to the Coffee-house,
where with great seriousness and strangeness on both
sides he said his part and I mine, he sometimes owning
my favour and assistance, yet endeavouring to lessen
it, as that the success of his business was not wholly
or very much to be imputed to that assistance:
I to alledge the contrary, and plainly to tell him
that from the beginning I never had it in my mind
to do him all that kindnesse for nothing, but he gaining
5 or L600, I did expect a share of it, at least a real
and not a complimentary acknowledgment of it.
In fine I said nothing all the while that I need fear
he can do me more hurt with them than before I spoke
them. The most I told him was after we were come
to a peace, which he asked me whether he should answer
the Board’s letter or no. I told him he
might forbear it a while and no more. Then he
asked how the letter could be signed by them without
their much enquiry. I told him it was as I worded
it and nothing at all else of any moment, whether my
words be ever hereafter spoken of again or no.
So that I have the same neither better nor worse force
over him that I had before, if he should not do his
part. And the peace between us was this:
Says he after all, well, says he, I know you will
expect, since there must be some condescension, that
it do become me to begin it, and therefore, says he,
I do propose (just like the interstice between the
death of the old and the coming in of the present
king, all the time is swallowed up as if it had never
been) so our breach of friendship may be as if it had
never been, that I should lay aside all misapprehensions
of him or his first letter, and that he would reckon
himself obliged to show the same ingenuous acknowledgment
of my love and service to him as at the beginning
he ought to have done, before by my first letter I
did (as he well observed) put him out of a capacity
of doing it, without seeming to do it servilely, and
so it rests, and I shall expect how he will deal with
me. After that I began to be free, and both of
us to discourse of other things, and he went home
with me and dined with me and my wife and very pleasant,
having a good dinner and the opening of my lampry
(cutting a notch on one side), which proved very good.
After dinner he and I to Deptford, walking all the
way, where we met Sir W. Petty and I took him back,
and I got him to go with me to his vessel and discourse
it over to me, which he did very well, and then walked
back together to the waterside at Redriffe, with good
discourse all the way. So Creed and I by boat
to my house, and thence to coach with my wife and called
at Alderman Backewell’s and there changed Mr.
Falconer’s state-cup, that he did give us the
other day, for a fair tankard. The cup weighed
with the fashion L5 16s., and another little cup that
Joyce Norton did give us 17s., both L6 13s.; for which
we had the tankard, which came to L6 10s., at 5d. per oz., and 3s. in money, and with great content
away thence to my brother’s, Creed going away
there, and my brother bringing me the old silk standard
that I lodged there long ago, and then back again
home, and thence, hearing that my uncle Wight had been
at my house, I went to him to the Miter, and there
with him and Maes, Norbury, and Mr. Rawlinson till
late eating some pot venison (where the Crowne earthen
pot pleased me mightily), and then homewards and met
Mr. Barrow, so back with him to the Miter and sat
talking about his business of his discontent in the
yard, wherein sometimes he was very foolish and pettish,
till 12 at night, and so went away, and I home and
up to my wife a-bed, with my mind ill at ease whether
I should think that I had by this made myself a bad
end by missing the certainty of L100 which I proposed
to myself so much, or a good one by easing myself of
the uncertain good effect but the certain trouble
and reflection which must have fallen on me if we
had proceeded to a public dispute, ended besides embarking
myself against my Lord, who (which I had forgot) had
given him his hand for the value of the pieces of
eight at his rates which were all false, which by
the way I shall take heed to the giving of my Lord
notice of it hereafter whenever he goes out again.
13th. Up, and after I had told
my wife in the morning in bed the passages yesterday
with Creed my head and heart was mightily lighter
than they were before, and so up and to the office,
and thence, after sitting, at 11 o’clock with
Mr. Coventry to the African House, and there with
Sir W. Ryder by agreement we looked over part of my
Lord Peterborough’s accounts, these being by
Creed and Vernaty. Anon down to dinner to a table
which Mr. Coventry keeps here, out of his L300 per
annum as one of the Assistants to the Royall Company,
a very pretty dinner, and good company, and excellent
discourse, and so up again to our work for an hour
till the Company came to having a meeting of their
own, and so we broke up and Creed and I took coach
and to Reeves, the perspective glass maker, and there
did indeed see very excellent microscopes, which did
discover a louse or mite or sand most perfectly and
largely. Being sated with that we went away (yet
with a good will were it not for my obligation to
have bought one) and walked to the New Exchange, and
after a turn or two and talked I took coach and home,
and so to my office, after I had been with my wife
and saw her day’s work in ripping the silke
standard, which we brought home last night, and it
will serve to line a bed, or for twenty uses, to our
great content. And there wrote fair my angry
letter to my father upon that that he wrote to my
cozen Roger Pepys, which I hope will make him the more
carefull to trust to my advice for the time to come
without so many needless complaints and jealousys,
which are troublesome to me because without reason.
14th (Lord’s day). Up and
to church alone, where a lazy sermon of Mr. Mills,
upon a text to introduce catechizing in his parish,
which I perceive he intends to begin. So home
and very pleasant with my wife at dinner. All
the afternoon at my office alone doing business, and
then in the evening after a walk with my wife in the
garden, she and I to my uncle Wight’s to supper,
where Mr. Norbury, but my uncle out of tune, and after
supper he seemed displeased mightily at my aunt’s
desiring [to] put off a copper kettle, which it seems
with great study he had provided to boil meat in,
and now she is put in the head that it is not wholesome,
which vexed him, but we were very merry about it, and
by and by home, and after prayers to bed.
15th. Up, and carrying my wife
to my Lord’s lodgings left her, and I to White
Hall, to the Duke; where he first put on a periwigg
to-day; but methought his hair cut short in order
thereto did look very prettily of itself, before he
put on his periwigg.
[Charles ii. followed
his brother in the use of the periwig in the
following April.]
Thence to his closet and there did
our business, and thence Mr. Coventry and I down to
his chamber and spent a little time, and so parted,
and I took my wife homeward, I stopping at the Coffee-house,
and thence a while to the ’Change, where great
newes of the arrivall of two rich ships, the Greyhound
and another, which they were mightily afeard of, and
great insurance given, and so home to dinner, and after
an houre with my wife at her globes, I to the office,
where very busy till 11 at night, and so home to supper
and to bed. This afternoon Sir Thomas Chamberlin
came to the office to me, and showed me several letters
from the East Indys, showing the height that the Dutch
are come to there, showing scorn to all the English,
even in our only Factory there of Surat, beating several
men, and hanging the English Standard St. George under
the Dutch flagg in scorn; saying, that whatever their
masters do or say at home, they will do what they
list, and will be masters of all the world there;
and have so proclaimed themselves Soveraigne of all
the South Seas; which certainly our King cannot endure,
if the Parliament will give him money. But I
doubt and yet do hope they will not yet, till we are
more ready for it.
16th. Up and to the office, where
very busy all the morning, and most with Mr. Wood,
I vexing him about his masts. At noon to the ’Change
a little and thence brought Mr. Barrow to dinner with
me, where I had a haunch of venison roasted, given
me yesterday, and so had a pretty dinner, full of
discourse of his business, wherein the poor man is
mightily troubled, and I pity him in it, but hope to
get him some ease. He being gone I to the office,
where very busy till night, that my uncle Wight and
Mr. Maes came to me, and after discourse about Maes’
business to supper very merry, but my mind upon my
business, and so they being gone I to my Vyall a little,
which I have not done some months, I think, before,
and then a little to my office, at 11 at night, and
so home and to bed.
17th. Up, and with my wife, setting
her down by her father’s in Long Acre, in so
ill looked a place, among all the whore houses, that
I was troubled at it, to see her go thither.
Thence I to White Hall and there walked up and down
talking with Mr. Pierce, who tells me of the King’s
giving of my Lord Fitz-Harding two leases which belong
indeed to the Queene, worth L20,000 to him; and how
people do talk of it, and other things of that nature
which I am sorry to hear. He and I walked round
the Park with great pleasure, and back again, and finding
no time to speak with my Lord of Albemarle, I walked
to the ’Change and there met my wife at our
pretty Doll’s, and so took her home, and Creed
also whom I met there, and sent her hose, while Creed
and I staid on the ’Change, and by and by home
and dined, where I found an excellent mastiffe, his
name Towser, sent me by a chyrurgeon. After dinner
I took my wife again by coach (leaving Creed by the
way going to Gresham College, of which he is now become
one of the virtuosos) and to White Hall, where I delivered
a paper about Tangier to my Lord Duke of Albemarle
in the council chamber, and so to Mrs. Hunt’s
to call my wife, and so by coach straight home, and
at my office till 3 o’clock in the morning, having
spent much time this evening in discourse with Mr.
Cutler, who tells me how the Dutch deal with us abroad
and do not value us any where, and how he and Sir
W. Rider have found reason to lay aside Captain Cocke
in their company, he having played some indiscreet
and unfair tricks with them, and has lost himself
every where by his imposing upon all the world with
the conceit he has of his own wit, and so has, he tells
me, Sir R. Ford also, both of whom are very witty
men. He being gone Sir W. Rider came and staid
with me till about 12 at night, having found ourselves
work till that time, about understanding the measuring
of Mr. Wood’s masts, which though I did so well
before as to be thought to deal very hardly against
Wood, yet I am ashamed I understand it no better, and
do hope yet, whatever be thought of me, to save the
King some more money, and out of an impatience to
breake up with my head full of confused confounded
notions, but nothing brought to a clear comprehension,
I was resolved to sit up and did till now it is ready
to strike 4 o’clock, all alone, cold, and my
candle not enough left to light me to my owne house,
and so, with my business however brought to some good
understanding, and set it down pretty clear, I went
home to bed with my mind at good quiet, and the girl
sitting up for me (the rest all a-bed). I eat
and drank a little, and to bed, weary, sleepy, cold,
and my head akeing.
18th. Called up to the office
and much against my will I rose, my head aching mightily,
and to the office, where I did argue to good purpose
for the King, which I have been fitting myself for
the last night against Mr. Wood about his masts, but
brought it to no issue. Very full of business
till noon, and then with Mr. Coventry to the African
House, and there fell to my Lord Peterborough’s
accounts, and by and by to dinner, where excellent
discourse, Sir G. Carteret and others of the African
Company with us, and then up to the accounts again,
which were by and by done, and then I straight home,
my head in great pain, and drowsy, so after doing
a little business at the office I wrote to my father
about sending him the mastiff was given me yesterday.
I home and by daylight to bed about 6 o’clock
and fell to sleep, wakened about 12 when my wife came
to bed, and then to sleep again and so till morning,
and then:
19th. Up in good order in my
head again and shaved myself, and then to the office,
whither Mr. Cutler came, and walked and talked with
me a great while; and then to the ’Change together;
and it being early, did tell me several excellent
examples of men raised upon the ’Change by their
great diligence and saving; as also his owne fortune,
and how credit grew upon him; that when he was not
really worth L1100, he had credit for L100,000 of
Sir W. Rider how he rose; and others. By and by
joyned with us Sir John Bankes; who told us several
passages of the East India Company; and how in his
very case, when there was due to him and Alderman
Mico L64,000 from the Dutch for injury done to them
in the East Indys, Oliver presently after the peace,
they delaying to pay them the money, sent them word,
that if they did not pay them by such a day, he would
grant letters of mark to those merchants against them;
by which they were so fearful of him, they did presently
pay the money every farthing. By and by, the
’Change filling, I did many businesses, and
about 2 o’clock went off with my uncle Wight
to his house, thence by appointment we took our wives
(they by coach with Mr. Mawes) and we on foot to Mr.
Jaggard, a salter, in Thames Street, for whom I did
a courtesy among the poor victuallers, his wife, whom
long ago I had seen, being daughter to old Day, my
uncle Wight’s master, is a very plain woman,
but pretty children they have. They live methought
at first in but a plain way, but afterward I saw their
dinner, all fish, brought in very neatly, but the
company being but bad I had no great pleasure in it.
After dinner I to the office, where we should have
met upon business extraordinary, but business not
coming we broke up, and I thither again and took my
wife; and taking a coach, went to visit my Ladys Jemimah
and Paulina Montagu, and Mrs. Elizabeth Dickering,
whom we find at their father’s new house
[The Earl of Sandwich
had just moved to a house in Lincoln’s Inn
Fields. Elizabeth
Dickering, who afterwards married John Creed, was
niece to Lord Sandwich.]
in Lincolne’s Inn Fields; but
the house all in dirt. They received us well
enough; but I did not endeavour to carry myself over
familiarly with them; and so after a little stay,
there coming in presently after us my Lady Aberguenny
and other ladies, we back again by coach, and visited,
my wife did, my she cozen Scott, who is very ill still,
and thence to Jaggard’s again, where a very
good supper and great store of plate; and above all
after supper Mrs. Jaggard did at my entreaty play
on the Vyall, but so well as I did not think any woman
in England could and but few Maisters, I must confess
it did mightily surprise me, though I knew heretofore
that she could play, but little thought so well.
After her I set Maes to singing, but he did it so
like a coxcomb that I was sick of him. About
11 at night I carried my aunt home by coach, and then
home myself, having set my wife down at home by the
way. My aunt tells me they are counted very rich
people, worth at least 10 or L12,000, and their country
house all the yeare long and all things liveable, which
mightily surprises me to think for how poore a man
I took him when I did him the courtesy at our office.
So after prayers to bed, pleased at nothing all the
day but Mrs. Jaggard playing on the Vyall, and that
was enough to make me bear with all the rest that
did not content me.
20th. Up and to the office, where
we sat all the morning, and at noon to the ’Change
with Mr. Coventry and thence home to dinner, after
dinner by a gaily down to Woolwich, where with Mr.
Falconer, and then at the other yard doing some business
to my content, and so walked to Greenwich, it being
a very fine evening and brought right home with me
by water, and so to my office, where late doing business,
and then home to supper and to bed.
21st. (Lord’s day). Up,
and having many businesses at the office to-day I
spent all the morning there drawing up a letter to
Mr. Coventry about preserving of masts, being collections
of my own, and at noon home to dinner, whither my
brother Tom comes, and after dinner I took him up and
read my letter lately of discontent to my father, and
he is seemingly pleased at it, and cries out of my
sister’s ill nature and lazy life there.
He being gone I to my office again, and there made
an end of my morning’s work, and then, after
reading my vows of course, home and back again with
Mr. Maes and walked with him talking of his business
in the garden, and he being gone my wife and I walked
a turn or two also, and then my uncle Wight fetching
of us, she and I to his house to supper, and by the
way calling on Sir G. Carteret to desire his consent
to my bringing Maes to him, which he agreed to.
So I to my uncle’s, but staid a great while
vexed both of us for Maes not coming in, and soon he
came, and I with him from supper to Sir G. Carteret,
and there did largely discourse of the business, and
I believe he may expect as much favour as he can do
him, though I fear that will not be much. So back,
and after sitting there a good while, we home, and
going my wife told me how my uncle when he had her
alone did tell her that he did love her as well as
ever he did, though he did not find it convenient to
show it publicly for reasons on both sides, seeming
to mean as well to prevent my jealousy as his wife’s,
but I am apt to think that he do mean us well, and
to give us something if he should die without children.
So home to prayers and to bed. My wife called
up the people to washing by four o’clock in
the morning; and our little girl Susan is a most admirable
Slut and pleases us mightily, doing more service than
both the others and deserves wages better.
22nd. Up and shaved myself, and
then my wife and I by coach out, and I set her down
by her father’s, being vexed in my mind and angry
with her for the ill-favoured place, among or near
the whore houses, that she is forced to come to him.
So left her there, and I to Sir Th. Warwick’s
but did not speak with him. Thence to take a
turn in St. James’s Park, and meeting with Anth.
Joyce walked with him a turn in the Pell Mell and
so parted, he St. James’s ward and I out to Whitehall
ward, and so to a picture-sellers by the Half Moone
in the street over against the Exchange, and there
looked over the maps of several cities and did buy
two books of cities stitched together cost me 9d.,
and when I came home thought of my vowe, and paid
5s. into my poor box for it, hoping in God that I
shall forfeit no more in that kind. Thence, meeting
Mr. Moore, and to the Exchange and there found my
wife at pretty Doll’s, and thence by coach set
her at my uncle Wight’s, to go with my aunt to
market once more against Lent, and I to the Coffee-house,
and thence to the ’Change, my chief business
being to enquire about the manner of other countries
keeping of their masts wet or dry, and got good advice
about it, and so home, and alone ate a bad, cold dinner,
my people being at their washing all day, and so to
the office and all the afternoon upon my letter to
Mr. Coventry about keeping of masts, and ended it very
well at night and wrote it fair over. This evening
came Mr. Alsopp the King’s brewer, with whom
I spent an houre talking and bewailing the posture
of things at present; the King led away by half-a-dozen
men, that none of his serious servants and friends
can come at him. These are Lauderdale, Buckingham,
Hamilton, Fitz-Harding (to whom he hath, it seems,
given L2,000 per annum in the best part of the King’s
estate); and that that the old Duke of Buckingham
could never get of the King. Progers is another,
and Sir H. Bennett. He loves not the Queen at
all, but is rather sullen to her; and she, by all
reports, incapable of children. He is so fond
of the Duke of Monmouth, that every body admires it;
and he says the Duke hath said, that he would be the
death of any man that says the King was not married
to his mother: though Alsopp says, it is well
known that she was a common whore before the King lay
with her. But it seems, he says, that the King
is mighty kind to these his bastard children; and
at this day will go at midnight to my Lady Castlemaine’s
nurses, and take the child and dance it in his arms:
that he is not likely to have his tables up again
in his house, [The tables at which the
king dined in public.-B.] for the crew that
are about him will not have him come to common view
again, but keep him obscurely among themselves.
He hath this night, it seems, ordered that the Hall
(which there is a ball to be in to-night before the
King) be guarded, as the Queen-Mother’s is,
by his Horse Guards; whereas heretofore they were
by the Lord Chamberlain or Steward, and their people.
But it is feared they will reduce all to the soldiery,
and all other places taken away; and what is worst
of all, that he will alter the present militia, and
bring all to a flying army. That my Lord Lauderdale,
being Middleton’s enemy, and one that scorns
the Chancellor even to open affronts before the King,
hath got the whole power of Scotland into his hand;
whereas the other day he was in a fair way to have
had his whole estate, and honour, and life, voted
away from him. That the King hath done himself
all imaginable wrong in the business of my Lord Antrim,
in Ireland; who, though he was the head of rebels,
yet he by his letter owns to have acted by his father’s
and mother’s, and his commissions; but it seems
the truth is, he hath obliged himself, upon the clearing
of his estate, to settle it upon a daughter of the
Queene-Mother’s (by my Lord Germin, I suppose,)
in marriage, be it to whom the Queene pleases; which
is a sad story. It seems a daughter of the Duke
of Lenox’s was, by force, going to be married
the other day at Somerset House, to Harry Germin;
but she got away and run to the King, and he says he
will protect her. She is, it seems, very near
akin to the King: Such mad doings there are every
day among them! The rape upon a woman at Turnstile
the other day, her husband being bound in his shirt,
they both being in bed together, it being night, by
two Frenchmen, who did not only lye with her but abused
her with a linke, is hushed up for L300, being
the Queen Mother’s servants. There was
a French book in verse, the other day, translated
and presented to the Duke of Monmouth in such a high
stile, that the Duke of York, he tells me, was mightily
offended at it. The Duke of Monmouth’s
mother’s brother hath a place at Court; and being
a Welchman (I think he told me) will talk very broad
of the King’s being married to his sister.
The King did the other day, at the Council, commit
my Lord Digby’s’ chaplin, and steward,
and another servant, who went upon the process begun
there against their lord, to swear that they saw him
at church, end receive the Sacrament as a Protestant,
(which, the judges said, was sufficient to prove him
such in the eye of the law); the King, I say, did
commit them all to the Gate-house, notwithstanding
their pleading their dépendance upon him, and
the faith they owed him as their lord, whose bread
they eat. And that the King should say, that he
would soon see whether he was King, or Digby.
That the Queene-Mother hath outrun herself in her
expences, and is now come to pay very ill, or run
in debt; the money being spent that she received for
leases. He believes there is not any money laid
up in bank, as I told him some did hope; but he says,
from the best informers he can assure me there is no
such thing, nor any body that should look after such
a thing; and that there is not now above L80,000 of
the Dunkirke money left in stock. That Oliver
in the year when he spent L1,400,000 in the Navy, did
spend in the whole expence of the kingdom L2,600,000.
That all the Court are mad for a Dutch war; but both
he and I did concur, that it was a thing rather to
be dreaded than hoped for; unless by the French King’s
falling upon Flanders, they and the Dutch should be
divided. That our Embassador had, it is true,
an audience; but in the most dishonourable way that
could be; for the Princes of the Blood (though invited
by our Embassador, which was the greatest absurdity
that ever Embassador committed these 400 years) were
not there; and so were not said to give place to our
King’s Embassador. And that our King did
openly say, the other day in the Privy Chamber, that
he would not be hectored out of his right and preeminencys
by the King of France, as great as he was. That
the Pope is glad to yield to a peace with the French
(as the newes-book says), upon the basest terms that
ever was. That the talke which these people about
our King, that I named before, have, is to tell him
how neither privilege of Parliament nor City is any
thing; but his will is all, and ought to be so:
and their discourse, it seems, when they are alone,
is so base and sordid, that it makes the eares of the
very gentlemen of the back-stairs (I think he called
them) to tingle to hear it spoke in the King’s
hearing; and that must be very bad indeed. That
my Lord Digby did send to Lisbon a couple of priests,
to search out what they could against the Chancellor
concerning the match, as to the point of his knowing
before-hand that the Queene was not capable of bearing
children; and that something was given her to make
her so. But as private as they were, when they
came thither they were clapped up prisoners.
That my Lord Digby endeavours what he can to bring
the business into the House of Commons, hoping there
to master the Chancellor, there being many enemies
of his there; but I hope the contrary. That whereas
the late King did mortgage ‘Clarendon’
to somebody for L20,000, and this to have given it
to the Duke of Albemarle, and he sold it to my Lord
Chancellor, whose title of Earldome is fetched from
thence; the King hath this day sent his order to the
Privy Seale for the payment of this L20,000 to my Lord
Chancellor, to clear the mortgage! Ireland in
a very distracted condition about the hard usage which
the Protestants meet with, and the too good which the
Catholiques. And from altogether, God knows
my heart, I expect nothing but ruine can follow,
unless things are better ordered in a little time.
He being gone my wife came and told me how kind my
uncle Wight had been to her to-day, and that though
she says that all his kindness comes from respect
to her she discovers nothing but great civility from
him, yet but what she says he otherwise will tell
me, but to-day he told her plainly that had she a
child it should be his heir, and that should I or
she want he would be a good friend to us, and did give
my wife instructions to consent to all his wife says
at any time, she being a pettish woman, which argues
a design I think he has of keeping us in with his
wife in order to our good sure, and he declaring her
jealous of him that so he dares not come to see my
wife as otherwise he would do and will endeavour to
do. It looks strange putting all together, but
yet I am in hopes he means well. My aunt also
is mighty open to my wife and tells her mighty plain
how her husband did intend to double her portion to
her at his death as a jointure. That he will give
presently L100 to her niece Mary and a good legacy
at his death, and it seems did as much to the other
sister, which vexed [me] to think that he should bestow
so much upon his wife’s friends daily as he
do, but it cannot be helped for the time past, and
I will endeavour to remedy it for the time to come.
After all this discourse with my wife at my office
alone, she home to see how the wash goes on and I
to make an end of my work, and so home to supper and
to bed.
23rd. Up, it being Shrove Tuesday,
and at the office sat all the morning, at noon to
the ’Change and there met with Sir W. Rider,
and of a sudden knowing what I had at home, brought
him and Mr. Cutler and Mr. Cooke, clerk to Mr. Secretary
Morrice, a sober and pleasant man, and one that I
knew heretofore, when he was my Lord ’s secretary
at Dunkirke. I made much of them and had a pretty
dinner for a sudden. We talked very pleasantly,
and they many good discourses of their travels abroad.
After dinner they gone, I to my office, where doing
many businesses very late, but to my good content
to see how I grow in estimation every day more and
more, and have things given more oftener than I used
to have formerly, as to have a case of very pretty
knives with agate shafts by Mrs. Russell. So
home and to bed. This day, by the blessing of
God, I have lived thirty-one years in the world; and,
by the grace of God, I find myself not only in good
health in every thing, and particularly as to the
stone, but only pain upon taking cold, and also in
a fair way of coming to a better esteem and estate
in the world, than ever I expected. But I pray
God give me a heart to fear a fall, and to prepare
for it!
24th (Ash-Wednesday). Up and
by water, it being a very fine morning, to White Hall,
and there to speak with Sir Ph. Warwicke, but
he was gone out to chappell, so I spent much of the
morning walking in the Park, and going to the Queene’s
chappell, where I staid and saw their masse, till
a man came and bid me go out or kneel down: so
I did go out. And thence to Somerset House; and
there into the chappell, where Monsieur d’Espagne
used to preach. But now it is made very fine,
and was ten times more crouded than the Queene’s
chappell at St. James’s; which I wonder at.
Thence down to the garden of Somerset House, and up
and down the new building, which in every respect
will be mighty magnificent and costly. I staid
a great while talking with a man in the garden that
was sawing of a piece of marble, and did give him
6d. to drink. He told me much of the nature and
labour of the worke, how he could not saw above 4 inches
of the stone in a day, and of a greater not above one
or two, and after it is sawed, then it is rubbed with
coarse and then with finer and finer sand till they
come to putty, and so polish it as smooth as glass.
Their saws have no teeth, but it is the sand only
which the saw rubs up and down that do the thing.
Thence by water to the Coffee-house, and there sat
with Alderman Barker talking of hempe and the trade,
and thence to the ’Change a little, and so home
and dined with my wife, and then to the office till
the evening, and then walked a while merrily with my
wife in the garden, and so she gone, I to work again
till late, and so home to supper and to bed.
25th. Up and to the office, where
we sat, and thence with Mr. Coventry by coach to the
glasshouse and there dined, and both before and after
did my Lord Peterborough’s accounts. Thence
home to the office, and there did business till called
by Creed, and with him by coach (setting my wife at
my brother’s) to my Lord’s, and saw the
young ladies, and talked a little with them, and thence
to White Hall, a while talking but doing no business,
but resolved of going to meet my Lord tomorrow, having
got a horse of Mr. Coventry to-day. So home, taking
up my wife, and after doing something at my office
home, God forgive me, disturbed in my mind out of
my jealousy of my wife tomorrow when I am out of town,
which is a hell to my mind, and yet without all reason.
God forgive me for it, and mend me. So home,
and getting my things ready for me, weary to bed.
26th. Up, and after dressing
myself handsomely for riding, I out, and by water
to Westminster, to Mr. Creed’s chamber, and after
drinking some chocolate, and playing on the vyall,
Mr. Mallard being there, upon Creed’s new vyall,
which proves, methinks, much worse than mine, and,
looking upon his new contrivance of a desk and shelves
for books, we set out from an inne hard by, whither
Mr. Coventry’s horse was carried, and round
about the bush through bad ways to Highgate. Good
discourse in the way had between us, and it being
all day a most admirable pleasant day, we, upon consultation,
had stopped at the Cocke, a mile on this side Barnett,
being unwilling to put ourselves to the charge or doubtful
acceptance of any provision against my Lord’s
coming by, and there got something and dined, setting
a boy to look towards Barnett Hill, against their
coming; and after two or three false alarms, they come,
and we met the coach very gracefully, and I had a
kind receipt from both Lord and Lady as I could wish,
and some kind discourse, and then rode by the coach
a good way, and so fell to discoursing with several
of the people, there being a dozen attending the coach,
and another for the mayds and parson. Among others
talking with W. Howe, he told me how my Lord in his
hearing the other day did largely tell my Lord Peterborough
and Povy (who went with them down to Hinchinbrooke)
how and when he discarded Creed, and took me to him,
and that since the Duke of York has several times
thanked him for me, which did not a little please me,
and anon I desiring Mr. Howe to tell me upon [what]
occasion this discourse happened, he desired me to
say nothing of it now, for he would not have my Lord
to take notice of our being together, but he would
tell me another time, which put me into some trouble
to think what he meant by it. But when we came
to my Lord’s house, I went in; and whether it
was my Lord’s neglect, or general indifference,
I know not, but he made me no kind of compliment there;
and, methinks, the young ladies look somewhat highly
upon me. So I went away without bidding adieu
to anybody, being desirous not to be thought too servile.
But I do hope and believe that my Lord do yet value
me as high as ever, though he dare not admit me to
the freedom he once did, and that my Lady is still
the same woman. So rode home and there found
my uncle Wight. ’Tis an odd thing as my
wife tells me his caressing her and coming on purpose
to give her visits, but I do not trouble myself for
him at all, but hope the best and very good effects
of it. He being gone I eat something and my wife.
I told all this day’s passages, and she to give
me very good and rational advice how to behave myself
to my Lord and his family, by slighting every body
but my Lord and Lady, and not to seem to have the
least society or fellowship with them, which I am resolved
to do, knowing that it is my high carriage that must
do me good there, and to appear in good clothes and
garbe. To the office, and being weary, early
home to bed.
27th. Up, but weary, and to the
office, where we sat all the morning. Before
I went to the office there came Bagwell’s wife
to me to speak for her husband. I liked the woman
very well and stroked her under the chin, but could
not find in my heart to offer anything uncivil to her,
she being, I believe, a very modest woman. At
noon with Mr. Coventry to the African house, and to
my Lord Peterborough’s business again, and then
to dinner, where, before dinner, we had the best oysters
I have seen this year, and I think as good in all
respects as ever I eat in my life. I eat a great
many. Great, good company at dinner, among others
Sir Martin Noell, who told us the dispute between
him, as farmer of the Additional Duty, and the East
India Company, whether callicos be linnen or no; which
he says it is, having been ever esteemed so: they
say it is made of cotton woole, and grows upon trees,
not like flax or hempe. But it was carried against
the Company, though they stand out against the verdict.
Thence home and to the office, where late, and so home
to supper and to bed, and had a very pleasing and
condescending answer from my poor father to-day in
answer to my angry discontentful letter to him the
other day, which pleases me mightily.
28th (Lord’s day). Up and
walked to Paul’s; and by chance it was an extraordinary
day for the Readers of the Inns of Court and all the
Students to come to church, it being an old ceremony
not used these twenty-five years, upon the first Sunday
in Lent. Abundance there was of Students, more
than there was room to seat but upon forms, and the
Church mighty full. One Hawkins preached, an Oxford
man. A good sermon upon these words: “But
the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable.”
Both before and after sermon I was most impatiently
troubled at the Quire, the worst that ever I heard.
But what was extraordinary, the Bishop of London,
who sat there in a pew, made a purpose for him by
the pulpitt, do give the last blessing to the congregation;
which was, he being a comely old man, a very decent
thing, methought. The Lieutenant of the Tower,
Sir J. Robinson, would needs have me by coach home
with him, and sending word home to my house I did go
and dine with him, his ordinary table being very good,
and his lady a very high-carriaged but comely big
woman; I was mightily pleased with her. His officers
of his regiment dined with him. No discourse at
table to any purpose, only after dinner my Lady would
needs see a boy which was represented to her to be
an innocent country boy brought up to towne a day
or two ago, and left here to the wide world, and he
losing his way fell into the Tower, which my Lady
believes, and takes pity on him, and will keep him;
but though a little boy and but young, yet he tells
his tale so readily and answers all questions so wittily,
that for certain he is an arch rogue, and bred in
this towne; but my Lady will not believe it, but ordered
victuals to be given him, and I think will keep him
as a footboy for their eldest son. After dinner
to chappell in the Tower with the Lieutenant, with
the keyes carried before us, and the Warders and Gentleman-porter
going before us. And I sat with the Lieutenant
in his pew, in great state, but slept all the sermon.
None, it seems, of the prisoners in the Tower that
are there now, though they may, will come to prayers
there. Church being done, I back to Sir John’s
house and there left him and home, and by and by to
Sir W. Pen, and staid a while talking with him about
Sir J. Minnes his folly in his office, of which I
am sicke and weary to speak of it, and how the King
is abused in it, though Pen, I know, offers the discourse
only like a rogue to get it out of me, but I am very
free to tell my mind to him, in that case being not
unwilling he should tell him again if he will or any
body else. Thence home, and walked in the garden
by brave moonshine with my wife above two hours, till
past 8 o’clock, then to supper, and after prayers
to bed.
29th. Up and by coach with Sir
W. Pen to Charing Cross, and there I ’light,
and to Sir Phillip Warwick to visit him and discourse
with him about navy business, which I did at large
and he most largely with me, not only about the navy
but about the general Revenue of England, above two
hours, I think, many staying all the while without,
but he seemed to take pains to let me either understand
the affairs of the Revenue or else to be a witness
of his pains and care in stating it. He showed
me indeed many excellent collections of the State
of the Revenue in former Kings and the late times,
and the present. He showed me how the very Assessments
between 1643 and 1659, which were taxes (besides Excise,
Customes, Séquestrations, Décimations, King
and Queene’s and Church Lands, or any thing
else but just the Assessments), come to above fifteen
millions. He showed me a discourse of his concerning
the Revenues of this and foreign States. How
that of Spayne was great, but divided with his kingdoms,
and so came to little. How that of France did,
and do much exceed ours before for quantity; and that
it is at the will of the Prince to tax what he will
upon his people; which is not here. That the
Hollanders have the best manner of tax, which is only
upon the expence of provisions, by an excise; and do
conclude that no other tax is proper for England but
a pound-rate, or excise upon the expence of provisions.
He showed me every particular sort of payment away
of money, since the King’s coming in, to this
day; and told me, from one to one, how little he hath
received of profit from most of them; and I believe
him truly. That the L1,200,000 which the Parliament
with so much ado did first vote to give the King, and
since hath been reexamined by several committees of
the present Parliament, is yet above L300,000 short
of making up really to the King the L1,200,000, as
by particulars he showed me.
[A committee was appointed in September,
1660, to consider the subject of the King’s
revenue, and they “reported to the Commons that
the average revenue of Charles I., from 1637 to
1641 inclusive, had been L895,819, and the average
expenditure about L1,110,000. At that time
prices were lower and the country less burthened with
navy and garrisons, among which latter Dunkirk
alone now cost more than L100,000 a year.
It appeared, therefore, that the least sum to which
the King could be expected to ‘conform his expense’
was L1,200,000.” Burnet writes, “It
was believed that if two millions had been asked
he could have carried it. But he (Clarendon)
had no mind to put the King out of the necessity
of having recourse to his Parliament.” Lister’s
Life of Clarendon, vol. ii., pp. 22, 23.]
And in my Lord Treasurer’s excellent
letter to the King upon this subject, he tells the
King how it was the spending more than the revenue
that did give the first occasion of his father’s
ruine, and did since to the rebels; who, he says,
just like Henry the Eighth, had great and sudden increase
of wealth, but yet, by overspending, both died poor;
and further tells the King how much of this L1,200,000
depends upon the life of the Prince, and so must be
renewed by Parliament again to his successor; which
is seldom done without parting with some of the prerogatives
of the Crowne; or if denied and he persists to take
it of the people, it gives occasion to a civill war,
which may, as it did in the late business of tonnage
and poundage, prove fatal to the Crowne. He showed
me how many ways the Lord Treasurer did take before
he moved the King to farme the Customes in the manner
he do, and the reasons that moved him to do it.
He showed the a very excellent argument to prove,
that our importing lesse than we export, do not impoverish
the kingdom, according to the received opinion:
which, though it be a paradox, and that I do not remember
the argument, yet methought there was a great deale
in what he said. And upon the whole I find him
a most exact and methodicall man, and of great industry:
and very glad that he thought fit to show me all this;
though I cannot easily guess the reason why he should
do it to me, unless from the plainness that he sees
I use to him in telling him how much the King may
suffer for our want of understanding the case of our
Treasury. Thence to White Hall (where my Lord
Sandwich was, and gave me a good countenance, I thought),
and before the Duke did our usual business, and so
I about several businesses in the house, and then
out to the Mewes with Sir W. Pen. But in my way
first did meet with W. Howe, who did of himself advise
me to appear more free with my Lord and to come to
him, for my own strangeness he tells me he thinks
do make my Lord the worse. At the Mewes Sir W.
Pen and Mr. Baxter did shew me several good horses,
but Pen, which Sir W. Pen did give the Duke of York,
was given away by the Duke the other day to a Frenchman,
which Baxter is cruelly vexed at, saying that he was
the best horse that he expects a great while to have
to do with. Thence I to the ’Change, and
thence to a Coffee-house with Sir W. Warren, and did
talk much about his and Wood’s business, and
thence homewards, and in my way did stay to look upon
a fire in an Inneyard in Lumbard Streete. But,
Lord! how the mercers and merchants who had warehouses
there did carry away their cloths and silks.
But at last it was quenched, and I home to dinner,
and after dinner carried my wife and set her and her
two mayds in Fleete Streete to buy things, and I to
White Hall to little purpose, and so to Westminster
Hall, and there talked with Mrs. Lane and Howlett,
but the match with Hawly I perceive will not take,
and so I am resolved wholly to avoid occasion of further
ill with her. Thence by water to Salsbury Court,
and found my wife, by agreement, at Mrs. Turner’s,
and after a little stay and chat set her and young
Armiger down in Cheapside, and so my wife and I home.
Got home before our mayds, who by and by came with
a great cry and fright that they had like to have been
killed by a coach; but, Lord! to see how Jane did tell
the story like a foole and a dissembling fanatique,
like her grandmother, but so like a changeling, would
make a man laugh to death almost, and yet be vexed
to hear her. By and by to the office to make
up my monthly accounts, which I make up to-night,
and to my great content find myself worth eight hundred
and ninety and odd pounds, the greatest sum I ever
yet knew, and so with a heart at great case to bed.