May 1st, 1668. Up, and to the
office, where all the morning busy. Then to Westminster
Hall, and there met Sir W. Pen, who labours to have
his answer to his impeachment, and sent down from
the Lords’ House, read by the House of Commons;
but they are so busy on other matters, that he cannot,
and thereby will, as he believes, by design, be prevented
from going to sea this year. Here met my cozen
Thomas Pepys of Deptford, and took some turns with
him; who is mightily troubled for this Act now passed
against Conventicles, and in few words, and sober,
do lament the condition we are in, by a negligent
Prince and a mad Parliament. Thence I by coach
to the Temple, and there set him down, and then to
Sir G. Carteret’s to dine, but he not being
at home, I back again to the New Exchange a little,
and thence back again to Hercules Pillars, and there
dined all alone, and then to the King’s playhouse,
and there saw “The Surprizall;” and a
disorder in the pit by its raining in, from the cupola
at top, it being a very foul day, and cold, so as there
are few I believe go to the Park to-day, if any.
Thence to Westminster Hall, and there I understand
how the Houses of Commons and Lords are like to disagree
very much, about the business of the East India Company
and one Skinner; to the latter of which the Lords
have awarded L5000 from the former, for some wrong
done him heretofore; and the former appealing to the
Commons, the Lords vote their petition a libell; and
so there is like to follow very hot work. Thence
by water, not being able to get a coach, nor boat
but a sculler, and that with company, is being so foul
a day, to the Old Swan, and so home, and there spent
the evening, making Balty read to me, and so to supper
and to bed.
2nd. Up, and at the office all
the morning. At noon with Lord Brouncker in his
coach as far as the Temple, and there ’light
and to Hercules Pillars, and there dined, and thence
to the Duke of York’s playhouse, at a little
past twelve, to get a good place in the pit, against
the new play, and there setting a poor man to keep
my place, I out, and spent an hour at Martin’s,
my bookseller’s, and so back again, where I find
the house quite full. But I had my place, and
by and by the King comes and the Duke of York; and
then the play begins, called “The Sullen Lovers;
or, The Impertinents,” having many good humours
in it, but the play tedious, and no design at all
in it. But a little boy, for a farce, do dance
Polichinelli, the best that ever anything was done
in the world, by all men’s report: most
pleased with that, beyond anything in the world, and
much beyond all the play. Thence to the King’s
house to see Knepp, but the play done; and so I took
a hackney alone, and to the park, and there spent
the evening, and to the lodge, and drank new milk.
And so home to the Office, ended my letters, and, to
spare my eyes, home, and played on my pipes, and so
to bed.
3rd (Lord’s day). Up, and
to church, where I saw Sir A. Rickard, though he be
under the Black Rod, by order of the Lords’ House,
upon the quarrel between the East India Company and
Skinner, which is like to come to a very great heat
between the two Houses. At noon comes Mr. Mills
and his wife, and Mr. Turner and his wife, by invitation
to dinner, and we were mighty merry, and a very pretty
dinner, of my Bridget and Nell’s dressing, very
handsome. After dinner to church again....
So home and with Sir W. Pen took a hackney, and he
and I to Old Street, to a brew-house there, to see
Sir Thomas Teddiman, who is very ill in bed of a fever,
got, I believe, by the fright the Parliament have
put him into, of late. But he is a good man, a
good seaman, and stout. Thence Pen and I to Islington,
and there, at the old house, eat, and drank, and merry,
and there by chance giving two pretty fat boys each
of them a cake, they proved to be Captain Holland’s
children, whom therefore I pity. So round by
Hackney home, having good discourse, he [Pen] being
very open to me in his talk, how the King ought to
dissolve this Parliament, when the Bill of Money is
passed, they being never likely to give him more;
how he [the King] hath great opportunity of making
himself popular by stopping this Act against Conventicles;
and how my Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, if the Parliament
continue, will undoubtedly fall, he having managed
that place with so much self-seeking, and disorder,
and pleasure, and some great men are designing to
overthrow [him], as, among the rest, my Lord Orrery;
and that this will try the King mightily, he being
a firm friend to my Lord Lieutenant. So home;
and to supper a little, and then to bed, having stepped,
after I come home, to Alderman Backewell’s about
business, and there talked a while with him and his
wife, a fine woman of the country, and how they had
bought an estate at Buckeworth, within four mile of
Brampton.
4th. Up betimes, and by water
to Charing Cross, and so to W. Coventry, and there
talked a little with him, and thence over the Park
to White Hall, and there did a little business at
the Treasury, and so to the Duke, and there present
Balty to the Duke of York and a letter from the Board
to him about him, and the Duke of York is mightily
pleased with him, and I doubt not his continuance
in employment, which I am glad of. Thence with
Sir H. Cholmly to Westminster Hall talking, and he
crying mightily out of the power the House of Lords
usurps in this business of the East India Company.
Thence away home and there did business, and so to
dinner, my sister Michell and I, and thence to the
Duke of York’s house, and there saw “The
Impertinents” again, and with less pleasure
than before, it being but a very contemptible play,
though there are many little witty expressions in
it; and the pit did generally say that of it.
Thence, going out, Mrs. Pierce called me from the gallery,
and there I took her and Mrs. Corbet by coach up and
down, and took up Captain Rolt in the street; and
at last, it being too late to go to the Park, I carried
them to the Beare in Drury Lane, and there did treat
them with a dish of mackrell, the first I have seen
this year, and another dish, and mighty merry; and
so carried her home, and thence home myself, well
pleased with this evening’s pleasure, and so
to bed.
5th. Up, and all the morning
at the office. At noon home to dinner and Creed
with me, and after dinner he and I to the Duke of York’s
playhouse; and there coming late, he and I up to the
balcony-box, where we find my Lady Castlemayne and
several great ladies; and there we sat with them,
and I saw “The Impertinents” once more,
now three times, and the three only days it hath been
acted. And to see the folly how the house do
this day cry up the play more than yesterday! and I
for that reason like it, I find, the better, too;
by Sir Positive At-all, I understand, is meant Sir
Robert Howard. My Lady [Castlemaine] pretty well
pleased with it; but here I sat close to her fine woman,
Willson, who indeed is very handsome, but, they say,
with child by the King. I asked, and she told
me this was the first time her Lady had seen it, I
having a mind to say something to her. One thing
of familiarity I observed in my Lady Castlemayne:
she called to one of her women, another that sat by
this, for a little patch off her face, and put it into
her mouth and wetted it, and so clapped it upon her
own by the side of her mouth, I suppose she feeling
a pimple rising there. Thence with Creed to Westminster
Hall, and there met with cozen Roger, who tells me
of the great conference this day between the Lords
and Commons, about the business of the East India
Company, as being one of the weightiest conferences
that hath been, and managed as weightily. I am
heartily sorry I was not there, it being upon a mighty
point of the privileges of the subjects of England,
in regard to the authority of the House of Lords,
and their being condemned by them as the Supreme Court,
which, we say, ought not to be, but by appeal from
other Courts. And he tells me that the Commons
had much the better of them, in reason and history
there quoted, and believes the Lords will let it fall.
Thence to walk in the Hall, and there hear that Mrs.
Martin’s child, my god-daughter, is dead, and
so by water to the Old Swan, and thence home, and there
a little at Sir W. Pen’s, and so to bed.
6th. Up, and to the office, and
thence to White Hall, but come too late to see the
Duke of York, with whom my business was, and so to
Westminster Hall, where met with several people and
talked with them, and among other things understand
that my Lord St. John is meant by Mr. Woodcocke, in
“The Impertinents.”
["Whilst
Positive walks, like Woodcock in the park,
Contriving
projects with a brewer’s clerk.”
Andrew Marvell’s “Instructions
to a Painter,” part iii., to which is subjoined
the following note: “Sir Robert Howard,
and Sir William Bucknell, the brewer.” Works,
ed. by Capt. E. Thompson, vol. iii.,
. B.]
Here met with Mrs. Washington, my
old acquaintance of the Hall, whose husband has a
place in the Excise at Windsor, and it seems lives
well. I have not seen her these 8 or 9 years,
and she begins to grow old, I perceive, visibly.
So time do alter, and do doubtless the like in myself.
This morning the House is upon the City Bill, and they
say hath passed it, though I am sorry that I did not
think to put somebody in mind of moving for the churches
to be allotted according to the convenience of the
people, and not to gratify this Bishop, or that College.
Thence by water to the New Exchange, where bought a
pair of shoe-strings, and so to Mr. Pierces, where
invited, and there was Knepp and Mrs. Foster and here
dined, but a poor, sluttish dinner, as usual, and
so I could not be heartily merry at it: here saw
her girl’s picture, but it is mighty far short
of her boy’s, and not like her neither; but
it makes Hales’s picture of her boy appear a
good picture. Thence to White Hall, walked with
Brisband, who dined there also, and thence I back
to the King’s playhouse, and there saw “The
Virgin Martyr,” and heard the musick that I
like so well, and intended to have seen Knepp, but
I let her alone; and having there done, went to Mrs.
Pierces back again, where she was, and there I found
her on a pallet in the dark..., that is Knepp.
And so to talk; and by and by did eat some curds and
cream, and thence away home, and it being night, I
did walk in the dusk up and down, round through our
garden, over Tower Hill, and so through Crutched Friars,
three or four times, and once did meet Mercer and
another pretty lady, but being surprized I could say
little to them,, although I had an opportunity of
pleasing myself with them, but left them, and then
I did see our Nell, Payne’s daughter, and her
je did desire venir after me, and so
elle did see me to, Tower Hill to our back entry there
that comes upon the degrés entrant into nostra
garden..., and so parted, and je home to put
up things against to-morrow’s carrier for my
wife; and, among others, a very fine salmon-pie, sent
me by Mr. Steventon, W. Hewer’s uncle, and so
to bed.
7th. Up, and to the office, where
all the morning. At noon home to dinner, and
thither I sent for Mercer to dine with me, and after
dinner she and I called Mrs. Turner, and I carried
them to the Duke of York’s house, and there
saw “The Man’s the Master,” which
proves, upon my seeing it again, a very good play.
Thence called Knepp from the King’s house, where
going in for her, the play being done, I did see Beck
Marshall come dressed, off of the stage, and looks
mighty fine, and pretty, and noble: and also
Nell, in her boy’s clothes, mighty pretty.
But, Lord! their confidence! and how many men do hover
about them as soon as they come off the stage, and
how confident they are in their talk! Here I
did kiss the pretty woman newly come, called Pegg,
that was Sir Charles Sidly’s mistress, a mighty
pretty woman, and seems, but is not, modest.
Here took up Knepp into our coach, and all of us with
her to her lodgings, and thither comes Bannister with
a song of hers, that he hath set in Sir Charles Sidly’s
play for her, which is, I think, but very meanly set;
but this he did, before us, teach her, and it being
but a slight, silly, short ayre, she learnt it presently.
But I did get him to prick me down the notes of the
Echo in “The Tempest,” which pleases me
mightily. Here was also Haynes, the incomparable
dancer of the King’s house, and a seeming civil
man, and sings pretty well, and they gone, we abroad
to Marrowbone, and there walked in the garden, the
first time I ever was there; and a pretty place it
is, and here we eat and drank and stayed till 9 at
night, and so home by moonshine.... And so set
Mrs. Knepp at her lodging, and so the rest, and I
home talking with a great deal of pleasure, and so
home to bed.
8th. Up, and to the office, where
busy all the morning. Towards noon I to Westminster
and there understand that the Lords’ House did
sit till eleven o’clock last night, about the
business in difference between them and the Commons,
in the matter of the East India Company. Here
took a turn or two, and up to my Lord Crew’s,
and there dined; where Mr. Case, the minister, a dull
fellow in his talk, and all in the Presbyterian manner;
a great deal of noise and a kind of religious tone,
but very dull. After dinner my Lord and I together.
He tells me he hears that there are great disputes
like to be at Court, between the factions of the two
women, my Lady Castlemayne and Mrs. Stewart, who is
now well again, and the King hath made several public
visits to her, and like to come to Court: the
other is to go to Barkeshire-house, which is taken
for her, and they say a Privy-Seal is passed for L5000
for it. He believes all will come to ruin.
Thence I to White Hall, where the Duke of York gone
to the Lords’ House, where there is to be a conference
on the Lords’ side to the Commons this afternoon,
giving in their Reasons, which I would have been at,
but could not; for, going by direction to the Prince’s
chamber, there Brouncker, W. Pen, and Mr. Wren, and
I, met, and did our business with the Duke of York.
But, Lord! to see how this play of Sir Positive At-all, ["The
Impertinents."] in abuse of Sir Robert
Howard, do take, all the Duke’s and every body’s
talk being of that, and telling more stories of him,
of the like nature, that it is now the town and country
talk, and, they say, is most exactly true. The
Duke of York himself said that of his playing at trap-ball
is true, and told several other stories of him.
This being done, Brouncker, Pen, and I to Brouncker’s
house, and there sat and talked, I asking many questions
in mathematics to my Lord, which he do me the pleasure
to satisfy me in, and here we drank and so spent an
hour, and so W. Pen and I home, and after being with
W. Pen at his house an hour, I home and to bed.
9th. Up, and to the office, where
all the morning we sat. Here I first hear that
the Queene hath miscarryed of a perfect child, being
gone about ten weeks, which do shew that she can conceive,
though it be unfortunate that she cannot bring forth.
Here we are told also that last night the Duchesse
of Monmouth, dancing at her lodgings, hath sprained
her thigh. Here we are told also that the House
of Commons sat till five o’clock this morning,
upon the business of the difference between the Lords
and them, resolving to do something therein before
they rise, to assert their privileges. So I at
noon by water to Westminster, and there find the King
hath waited in the Prince’s chamber these two
hours, and the Houses are not ready for him.
The Commons having sent this morning, after their
long debate therein the last night, to the Lords, that
they do think the only expedient left to preserve unity
between the two Houses is, that they do put a stop
to any proceedings upon their late judgement against
the East India Company, till their next meeting; to
which the Lords returned answer that they would return
answer to them by a messenger of their own, which
they not presently doing, they were all inflamed,
and thought it was only a trick, to keep them in suspense
till the King come to adjourne them; and, so, rather
than lose the opportunity of doing themselves right,
they presently with great fury come to this vote:
“That whoever should assist in the execution
of the judgement of the Lords against the Company,
should be held betrayers of the liberties of the people
of England, and of the privileges of that House.”
This the Lords had notice of, and were mad at it; and
so continued debating without any design to yield
to the Commons, till the King come in, and sent for
the Commons, where the Speaker made a short but silly
speech, about their giving Him L300,000; and then the
several Bills, their titles were read, and the King’s
assent signified in the proper terms, according to
the nature of the Bills, of which about three or four
were public Bills, and seven or eight private ones,
the additional Bills for the building of the City
and the Bill against Conventicles being none of them.
The King did make a short, silly speech, which he
read, giving them thanks for the money, which now,
he said, he did believe would be sufficient, because
there was peace between his neighbours, which was
a kind of a slur, methought, to the Commons; and that
he was sorry for what he heard of difference between
the two Houses, but that he hoped their recesse would
put them into a way of accommodation; and so adjourned
them to the 9th of August, and then recollected himself,
and told them the 11th; so imperfect a speaker he
is. So the Commons went to their House, and forthwith
adjourned; and the Lords resumed their House, the
King being gone, and sat an hour or two after, but
what they did, I cannot tell; but every body expected
they would commit Sir Andrew Rickard, Sir Samuel Barnardiston,
Mr. Boone, and Mr. Wynne, who were all there, and
called in, upon their knees, to the bar of the House;
and Sir John Robinson I left there, endeavouring to
prevent their being committed to the Tower, lest he
should thereby be forced to deny their order, because
of this vote of the Commons, whereof he is one, which
is an odde case.
[This “odd case” was that
of Thomas Skinner and the East India Company.
According to Ralph, the Commons had ordered Skinner,
the plaintiff, into the custody of the Serjeant-at-Arms,
and the Lords did the same by Sir Samuel Barnadiston,
deputy-governor of the company, as likewise Sir
Andrew Rickard, Mr. Rowland Gwynn, and Mr. Christopher
Boone. B.]
Thence I to the Rose Taverne
in Covent Garden, and there sent for a pullet and
dined all alone, being to meet Sir W. Pen, who by and
by come, and he and I into the King’s house,
and there “The Mayd’s Tragedy,”
a good play, but Knepp not there; and my head and eyes
out of order, the first from my drinking wine at dinner,
and the other from my much work in the morning.
Thence parted, and I towards the New Exchange and
there bought a pair of black silk stockings at the
hosier’s that hath the very pretty woman to
his wife, about ten doors on this side of the ’Change,
and she is indeed very pretty, but I think a notable
talking woman by what I heard to others there.
Thence to Westminster Hall, where I hear the Lords
are up, but what they have done I know not, and so
walked toward White Hall and thence by water to the
Tower, and so home and there to my letters, and so
to Sir W. Pen’s; and there did talk with Mrs.
Lowther, who is very kind to me, more than usual, and
I will make use of it. She begins to draw very
well, and I think do as well, if not better, than
my wife, if it be true that she do it herself, what
she shews me, and so to bed, and my head akeing all
night with the wine I drank to-day, and my eyes ill.
So lay long, my head pretty well in the morning.
10th (Lord’s day). Up,
and to the office, there to do, business till church
time, when Mr. Shepley, newly come to town, come to
see me, and we had some discourse of all matters,
and particularly of my Lord Sandwich’s concernments,
and here did by the by as he would seem tell me that
my Lady [Lady Sandwich.] had
it in her thoughts, if she had occasion, to, borrow
L100 of me, which I did not declare any opposition
to, though I doubt it will be so much lost. But,
however, I will not deny my Lady, if she ask it, whatever
comes of it, though it be lost; but shall be glad
that it is no bigger sum. And yet it vexes me
though, and the more because it brings into my head
some apprehensions what trouble I may here after be
brought to when my Lord comes home, if he should ask
me to come into bonds with him, as I fear he will have
occasions to make money, but I hope I shall have the
wit to deny it. He being gone, I to church, and
so home, and there comes W. Hewer and Balty, and by
and by I sent for Mercer to come and dine with me,
and pretty merry, and after dinner I fell to teach
her “Canite Jehovae,” which she did a
great part presently, and so she away, and I to church,
and from church home with my Lady Pen; and, after being
there an hour or so talking, I took her, and Mrs.
Lowther, and old Mrs. Whistler, her mother-in-law,
by water with great pleasure as far as Chelsy, and
so back to Spring Garden, at Fox-hall, and there walked,
and eat, and drank, and so to water again, and set
down the old woman at home at Durham Yard:’
and it raining all the way, it troubled us; but, however,
my cloak kept us all dry, and so home, and at the Tower
wharf there we did send for a pair of old shoes for
Mrs. Lowther, and there I did pull the others off
and put them on, elle being peu shy, but do speak
con mighty kindness to me that she would desire me
pour su mari if it were to be done.....
Here staid a little at Sir W. Pen’s, who was
gone to bed, it being about eleven at night, and so
I home to bed.
11th. Up, and to my office, where
alone all the morning. About noon comes to me
my cousin Sarah, and my aunt Livett, newly come out
of Gloucestershire, good woman, and come to see me;
I took them home, and made them drink, but they would
not stay dinner, I being alone. But here they
tell me that they hear that this day Kate Joyce was
to be married to a man called Hollingshed, whom she
indeed did once tell me of, and desired me to enquire
after him. But, whatever she said of his being
rich, I do fear, by her doing this without my advice,
it is not as it ought to be; but, as she brews, let
her bake. They being gone, I to dinner with Balty
and his wife, who is come to town to-day from Deptford
to see us, and after dinner I out and took a coach,
and called Mercer, and she and I to the Duke of York’s
playhouse, and there saw “The Tempest,”
and between two acts, I went out to Mr. Harris, and
got him to repeat to me the words of the Echo, while
I writ them down, having tried in the play to have
wrote them; but, when I had done it, having done it
without looking upon my paper, I find I could not read
the blacklead. But now I have got the words clear,
and, in going in thither, had the pleasure to see
the actors in their several dresses, especially the
seamen and monster, which were very droll: so
into the play again. But there happened one thing
which vexed me, which is, that the orange-woman did
come in the pit, and challenge me for twelve oranges,
which she delivered by my order at a late play, at
night, to give to some ladies in a box, which was
wholly untrue, but yet she swore it to be true.
But, however, I did deny it, and did not pay her;
but, for quiet, did buy 4s. worth of oranges of her,
at 6d. a-piece. Here I saw first my Lord Ormond
since his coming from Ireland, which is now about eight
days. After the play done, I took Mercer by water
to Spring Garden; and there with great pleasure walked,
and eat, and drank, and sang, making people come about
us, to hear us, and two little children of one of our
neighbours that happened to be there, did come into
our arbour, and we made them dance prettily.
So by water, with great pleasure, down to the Bridge,
and there landed, and took water again on the other
side; and so to the Tower, and I saw her home, I myself
home to my chamber, and by and by to bed.
12th. Up, and to the office,
where we sat, and sat all the morning. Here Lord
Anglesey was with us, and in talk about the late difference
between the two Houses, do tell us that he thinks
the House of Lords may be in an error, at least, it
is possible they may, in this matter of Skinner; and
he doubts they may, and did declare his judgement in
the House of Lords against their proceedings therein,
he having hindered 100 originall causes being brought
into their House, notwithstanding that he was put
upon defending their proceedings: but that he
is confident that the House of Commons are in the
wrong, in the method they take to remedy an error
of the Lords, for no vote of theirs can do it; but,
in all like cases, the Commons have done it by petition
to the King, sent up to the Lords, and by them agreed
to, and so redressed, as they did in the Petition
of Right. He says that he did tell them indeed,
which is talked of, and which did vex the Commons,
that the Lords were “Judices nati et
Conciliarii nati;” but all other judges
among us are under salary, and the Commons themselves
served for wages; and therefore the Lords, in reason,
were the freer judges. At noon to dinner at home,
and after dinner, where Creed dined with me, he and
I, by water to the Temple, where we parted, and I
both to the King’s and Duke of York’s playhouses,
and there went through the houses to see what faces
I could spy that I knew, and meeting none, I away
by coach to my house, and then to Mrs. Mercer’s,
where I met with her two daughters, and a pretty-lady
I never knew yet, one Mrs. Susan Gayet, a very pretty
black lady, that speaks French well, and is a Catholick,
and merchant’s daughter, by us, and here was
also Mrs. Anne Jones, and after sitting and talking
a little, I took them out, and carried them through
Hackney to Kingsland, and there walked to Sir G. Whitmore’s
house, where I have not been many a day; and so to
the old house at Islington, and eat, and drank, and
sang, and mighty merry; and so by moonshine with infinite
pleasure home, and there sang again in Mercer’s
garden. And so parted, I having there seen a
mummy in a merchant’s warehouse there, all the
middle of the man or woman’s body, black and
hard. I never saw any before, and, therefore,
it pleased me much, though an ill sight; and he did
give me a little bit, and a bone of an arme,
I suppose, and so home, and there to bed.
13th. Up, and by water to White
Hall, and so to Sir H. Cholmly’s, who not being
up I made a short visit to Sir W. Coventry, and he
and I through the Park to White Hall, and thence I
back into the Park, and there met Sir H. Cholmly,
and he and I to Sir Stephen Fox’s, where we
met and considered the business of the Excise, how
far it is charged in reference to the payment of the
Guards and Tangier. Thence he and I walked to
Westminster Hall and there took a turn, it being holyday,
and so back again, and I to the mercer’s, and
my tailor’s about a stuff suit that I am going
to make. Thence, at noon, to Hercules Pillars,
and there dined all alone, and so to White Hall, some
of us attended the Duke of York as usual, and so to
attend the Council about the business of Hemskirke’s
project of building a ship that sails two feet for
one of any other ship, which the Council did agree
to be put in practice, the King to give him, if it
proves good, L5000 in hand, and L15,000 more in seven
years, which, for my part, I think a piece of folly
for them to meddle with, because the secret cannot
be long kept. So thence, after Council, having
drunk some of the King’s wine and water with
Mr. Chevins, my Lord Brouncker, and some others, I
by water to the Old Swan, and there to Michell’s,
and did see her and drink there, but he being there
je ne baiser la; and so back again
by water to Spring Garden all alone, and walked a
little, and so back again home, and there a little
to my viall, and so to bed, Mrs. Turner having sat
and supped with me. This morning I hear that
last night Sir Thomas Teddiman, poor man! did die
by a thrush in his mouth: a good man, and stout
and able, and much lamented; though people do make
a little mirth, and say, as I believe it did in good
part, that the business of the Parliament did break
his heart, or, at least, put him into this fever and
disorder, that caused his death.
14th. Up, and to the office,
where we sat all the morning, and at noon home to
dinner with my people, but did not stay to dine out
with them, but rose and straight by water to the Temple,
and so to Penny’s, my tailor’s, where
by and by by agreement Mercer, and she, to my great
content, brings Mrs. Gayet, and I carried them to the
King’s house; but, coming too soon, we out again
to the Rose taverne, and there I did give
them a tankard of cool drink, the weather being very
hot, and then into the playhouse again, and there
saw “The Country Captain,” a very dull
play, that did give us no content, and besides, little
company there, which made it very unpleasing.
Thence to the waterside, at Strand bridge, and so
up by water and to Fox-hall, where we walked a great
while, and pleased mightily with the pleasure thereof,
and the company there, and then in, and eat and drank,
and then out again and walked, and it beginning to
be dark, we to a corner and sang, that everybody got
about us to hear us; and so home, where I saw them
both at their doors, and, full of the content of this
afternoon’s pleasure, I home and to walk in
the garden a little, and so home to bed.
15th. Up, and betimes to White
Hall, and there met with Sir H. Cholmly at Sir Stephen
Fox’s, and there was also the Cofferer, and we
did there consider about our money and the condition
of the Excise, and after much dispute agreed upon
a state thereof and the manner of our future course
of payments. Thence to the Duke of York, and there
did a little navy business as we used to do, and so
to a Committee for Tangier, where God knows how my
Lord Bellasses’s accounts passed; understood
by nobody but my Lord Ashly, who, I believe, was mad
to let them go as he pleased. But here Sir H.
Cholmly had his propositions read, about a greater
price for his work of the Mole, or to do it upon account,
which, being read, he was bid to withdraw. But,
Lord! to see how unlucky a man may be, by chance;
for, making an unfortunate minute when they were almost
tired with the other business, the Duke of York did
find fault with it, and that made all the rest, that
I believe he had better have given a great deal, and
had nothing said to it to-day; whereas, I have seen
other things more extravagant passed at first hearing,
without any difficulty. Thence I to my Lord Brouncker’s,
at Mrs. Williams’s, and there dined, and she
did shew me her closet, which I was sorry to see, for
fear of her expecting something from me; and here
she took notice of my wife’s not once coming
to see her, which I am glad of; for she shall not a
prating, vain, idle woman. Thence with Lord Brouncker
to Loriners’-hall,
[The Loriners, or Lorimers (bit-makers),
of London are by reputation an ancient mistery,
but they were first incorporated by letters patent
of 10 Queen Anne (December 3rd, 1711). Their
small hall was at the corner of Basinghall Street
in London Wall. The company has no hall
now.]
by Mooregate, a hall I never heard
of before, to Sir Thomas Teddiman’s burial,
where most people belonging to the sea were. And
here we had rings: and here I do hear that some
of the last words that he said were, that he had a
very good King, God bless him! but that the Parliament
had very ill rewarded him for all the service he had
endeavoured to do them and his country; so that, for
certain, this did go far towards his death. But,
Lord! to see among [the company] the young commanders,
and Thomas Killigrew and others that come, how unlike
a burial this was, O’Brian taking out some ballads
out of his pocket, which I read, and the rest come
about me to hear! and there very merry we were all,
they being new ballets. By and by the corpse
went; and I, with my Lord Brouncker, and Dr. Clerke,
and Mr. Pierce, as far as the foot of London-bridge;
and there we struck off into Thames Street, the rest
going to Redriffe, where he is to be buried.
And we ’light at the Temple, and there parted;
and I to the King’s house, and there saw the
last act of “The Committee,” thinking
to have seen Knepp there, but she did not act.
And so to my bookseller’s, and there carried
home some books-among others, “Dr. Wilkins’s
Reall Character,” and thence to Mrs. Turner’s,
and there went and sat, and she showed me her house
from top to bottom, which I had not seen before, very
handsome, and here supped, and so home, and got Mercer,
and she and I in the garden singing till ten at night,
and so home to a little supper, and then parted, with
great content, and to bed. The Duchesse
of Monmouth’s hip is, I hear, now set again,
after much pain. I am told also that the Countess
of Shrewsbury is brought home by the Duke of Buckingham
to his house, where his Duchess saying that it was
not for her and the other to live together in a house,
he answered, Why, Madam, I did think so, and, therefore,
have ordered your coach to be ready, to carry you
to your father’s, which was a devilish speech,
but, they say, true; and my Lady Shrewsbury is there,
it seems.
16th. Up; and to the Office,
where we sat all the morning; and at noon, home with
my people to dinner; and thence to the Office all the
afternoon, till, my eyes weary, I did go forth by coach
to the King’s playhouse, and there saw the best
part of “The Sea Voyage,” where Knepp
I see do her part of sorrow very well. I afterwards
to her house; but she did not come presently home;
and there je did kiss her ancilla, which
is so mighty belle; and I to my tailor’s, and
to buy me a belt for my new suit against to-morrow;
and so home, and there to my Office, and afterwards
late walking in the garden; and so home to supper,
and to bed, after Nell’s cutting of my hair
close, the weather being very hot.
17th (Lord’s day). Up,
and put on my new stuff-suit, with a shoulder-belt,
according to the new fashion, and the bands of my vest
and tunique laced with silk lace, of the colour
of my suit: and so, very handsome, to Church,
where a dull sermon and of a stranger, and so home;
and there I find W. Howe, and a younger brother of
his, come to dine with me; and there comes Mercer,
and brings with her Mrs. Gayet, which pleased me mightily;
and here was also W. Hewer, and mighty merry; and
after dinner to sing psalms. But, Lord! to hear
what an excellent base this younger brother of W.
Howe’s sings, even to my astonishment, and mighty
pleasant. By and by Gayet goes away, being a Catholick,
to her devotions, and Mercer to church; but we continuing
an hour or two singing, and so parted; and I to Sir
W. Pen’s, and there sent for a hackney-coach;
and he and she [Lady Pen] and I out, to take the gyre.
We went to Stepney, and there stopped at the Trinity
House, he to talk with the servants there against
to-morrow, which is a great day for the choice of
a new Master, and thence to Mile End, and there eat
and drank, and so home; and I supped with them that
is, eat some butter and radishes, which is my excuse
for not eating any other of their victuals, which
I hate, because of their sluttery: and so home,
and made my boy read to me part of Dr. Wilkins’s
new book of the “Real Character;” and
so to bed.
18th. Up, and to my office, where
most of the morning doing business and seeing my window-frames
new painted, and then I out by coach to my Lord Bellasses,
at his new house by my late Lord Treasurer’s,
and there met him and Mr. Sherwin, Auditor Beale,
and Creed, about my Lord’s accounts, and here
my Lord shewed me his new house, which, indeed, is
mighty noble, and good pictures indeed,
not one bad one in it. Thence to my tailor’s,
and there did find Mercer come with Mrs. Horsfield
and Gayet according to my desire, and there I took
them up, it being almost twelve o’clock, or
a little more, and carried them to the King’s
playhouse, where the doors were not then open; but
presently they did open; and we in, and find many
people already come in, by private ways, into the
pit, it being the first day of Sir Charles Sidly’s
new play, so long expected, “The Mullberry Guarden,”
of whom, being so reputed a wit, all the world do
expect great matters. I having sat here awhile,
and eat nothing to-day, did slip out, getting a boy
to keep my place; and to the Rose Tavern, and there
got half a breast of mutton, off of the spit, and
dined all alone. And so to the play again, where
the King and Queen, by and by, come, and all the Court;
and the house infinitely full. But the play,
when it come, though there was, here and there, a pretty
saying, and that not very many neither, yet the whole
of the play had nothing extraordinary in it, at all,
neither of language nor design; insomuch that the
King I did not see laugh, nor pleased the whole play
from the beginning to the end, nor the company; insomuch
that I have not been less pleased at a new play in
my life, I think. And which made it the worse
was, that there never was worse musick played that
is, worse things composed, which made me and Captain
Rolt, who happened to sit near me, mad. So away
thence, very little satisfied with the play, but pleased
with my company. I carried them to Kensington,
to the Grotto, and there we sang, to my great content,
only vexed, in going in, to see a son of Sir Heneage
Finch’s beating of a poor little dog to death,
letting it lie in so much pain that made me mad to
see it, till, by and by, the servants of the house
chiding of their young master, one of them come with
a thong, and killed the dog outright presently.
Thence to Westminster palace, and there took boat
and to Fox Hall, where we walked, and eat, and drank,
and sang, and very merry. But I find Mrs. Horsfield
one of the veriest citizen’s wives in the world,
so full of little silly talk, and now and then a little
sillily bawdy, that I believe if you had her sola
a man might hazer all with her. So back by water
to Westminster Palace, and there got a coach which
carried us as far as the Minorys, and there some thing
of the traces broke, and we forced to ’light,
and walked to Mrs. Horsfield’s house, it being
a long and bad way, and dark, and having there put
her in a doors, her husband being in bed, we left
her and so back to our coach, where the coachman had
put it in order, but could not find his whip in the
dark a great while, which made us stay long.
At last getting a neighbour to hold a candle out of
their window Mercer found it, and so away we home at
almost 12 at night, and setting them both at their
homes, I home and to bed.
19th. Up, and called on Mr. Pierce,
who tells me that after all this ado Ward is come
to town, and hath appeared to the Commissioners of
Accounts and given such answers as he thinks will
do every body right, and let the world see that their
great expectations and jealousies have been vain in
this matter of the prizes. The Commissioners were
mighty inquisitive whether he was not instructed by
letters or otherwise from hence from my Lord Sandwich’s
friends what to say and do, and particularly from
me, which he did wholly deny, as it was true, I not
knowing the man that I know of. He tells me also
that, for certain, Mr. Vaughan is made Lord Chief
justice, which I am glad of. He tells me, too;
that since my Lord of Ormond’s coming over, the
King begins to be mightily reclaimed, and sups every
night with great pleasure with the Queene: and
yet, it seems, he is mighty hot upon the Duchess of
Richmond; insomuch that, upon Sunday was se’nnight,
at night, after he had ordered his Guards and coach
to be ready to carry him to the Park, he did, on a
sudden, take a pair of oars or sculler, and all alone,
or but one with him, go to Somersett House, and there,
the garden-door not being open, himself clamber over
the walls to make a visit to her, which is a horrid
shame. He gone, I to the office, where we sat
all the morning, Sir W. Pen sick of the gout comes
not out. After dinner at home, to White Hall,
it being a very rainy day, and there a Committee for
Tangier, where I was mightily pleased to see Sir W.
Coventry fall upon my Lord Bellasses’ business
of the 3d. in every piece of it which he would get
to himself, making the King pay 4d, while he puts
them off for 4d., so that Sir W. Coventry continues
still the same man for the King’s good.
But here Creed did vex me with saying that I ought
first to have my account past by the Commissioners
of Tangier before in the Exchequer. Thence W.
Coventry and I in the Matted gallery, and there he
did talk very well to me about the way to save the
credit of the officers of the Navy, and their places
too, by making use of this interval of Parliament
to be found to be mending of matters in the Navy,
and that nothing but this will do it, and gives an
instance in themselves of the Treasury, whereof himself
and Sir John Duncombe all the world knows have enemies,
and my Lord Ashly a man obnoxious to most, and Sir
Thomas Clifford one that as a man suddenly rising and
a creature of my Lord Arlington’s hath enemies
enough (none of them being otherwise but the Duke
of Albemarle), yet with all this fault they hear nothing
of the business of the Treasury, but all well spoken
of there. He is for the removal of Sir John Minnes,
thinking that thereby the world will see a greater
change in the hands than now they do; and I will endeavour
it, and endeavour to do some good in the office also.
So home by coach, and to the office, where ended my
letters, and then home, and there got Balty to read
to me out of Sorbiere’s Observations in his Voyage
into England, and then to bed.
20th. Up, and with Colonell Middleton,
in a new coach he hath made him, very handsome, to
White Hall, where the Duke of York having removed his
lodgings for this year to St. James’s, we walked
thither; and there find the Duke of York coming to
White Hall, and so back to the Council-chamber, where
the Committee of the Navy sat; and here we discoursed
several things; but, Lord! like fools; so as it was
a shame to see things of this importance managed by
a Council that understand nothing of them: and,
among other things, one was about this building of
a ship with Hemskirke’s secret, to sail a third
faster than any other ship; but he hath got Prince
Rupert on his side, and by that means, I believe,
will get his conditions made better than he would otherwise,
or ought indeed. Having done there, I met with
Sir Richard Browne, and he took me to dinner with
him to a new tavern, above Charing Cross, where some
clients of his did give him a good dinner, and good
company; among others, one Bovy, a solicitor, and
lawyer and merchant all together, who hath travelled
very much, did talk some things well; but only he is
a “Sir Positive:” but the talk of
their travels over the Alps very fine. Thence
walked to the King’s playhouse, and saw “The
Mulberry Garden” again, and cannot be reconciled
to it, but only to find here and there an independent
sentence of wit, and that is all. Here met with
Creed; and took him to Hales’s, and there saw
the beginnings of Harris’s head which he draws
for me, which I do not yet like. So he and I down
to the New Exchange, and there cheapened ribbands
for my wife, and so down to the Whey house and drank
some and eat some curds, which did by and by make
my belly ake mightily. So he and I to White Hall,
and walked over the Park to the Mulberry-Garden,
[On the site of the
present Buckingham Palace and gardens.
Originally a garden
of mulberry trees, planted by James I. in
with the intention of
cultivating the manufacture of English silks.]
where I never was before; and find
it a very silly place, worse than Spring-garden, and
but little company, and those a rascally, whoring,
roguing sort of people, only a wilderness here, that
is somewhat pretty, but rude. Did not stay to
drink, but walked an hour and so away to Charing Cross,
and there took coach and away home, in my way going
into Bishopsgate Street, to bespeak places for myself
and boy to go to Cambridge in the coach this week,
and so to Brampton, to see my wife. So home,
and to supper and to bed.
21st. Up, and busy to send some
things into the country, and then to the Office, where
meets me Sir Richard Ford, who among other things
congratulates me, as one or two did yesterday, [on]
my great purchase; and he advises me rather to forbear,
if it be not done, as a thing that the world will
envy me in: and what is it but my cozen Tom Pepys’s
buying of Martin Abbey, in Surry! which is a mistake
I am sorry for, and yet do fear that it may spread
in the world to my prejudice. All the morning
at the office, and at noon my clerks dined with me,
and there do hear from them how all the town is full
of the talk of a meteor, or some fire, that did on
Saturday last fly over the City at night, which do
put me in mind that, being then walking in the dark
an hour or more myself in the garden, after I had
done writing, I did see a light before me come from
behind me, which made me turn back my head; and I did
see a sudden fire or light running in the sky, as
it were towards Cheapside ward, and it vanished very
quick, which did make me bethink myself what holyday
it was, and took it for some rocket, though it was
much brighter than any rocket, and so thought no more
of it, but it seems Mr. Hater and Gibson going home
that night did meet with many clusters of people talking
of it, and many people of the towns about the city
did see it, and the world do make much discourse of
it, their apprehensions being mighty full of the rest
of the City to be burned, and the Papists to cut our
throats. Which God prevent! Thence after
dinner I by coach to the Temple, and there bought
a new book of songs set to musique by one Smith
of Oxford, some songs of Mr. Cowley’s, and so
to Westminster, and there to walk a little in the
Hall, and so to Mrs. Martin’s, and there did
hazer cet que je voudrai mit
her, and drank and sat most of the afternoon with
her and her sister, and here she promises me her fine
starling, which was the King’s, and speaks finely,
which I shall be glad of, and so walked to the Temple,
meeting in the street with my cozen Alcocke, the young
man, that is a good sober youth, I have not seen these
four or five years, newly come to town to look for
employment: but I cannot serve him, though I
think he deserves well, and so I took coach and home
to my business, and in the evening took Mrs. Turner
and Mercer out to Mile End and drank, and then home,
and sang; and eat a dish of greene pease, the first
I have seen this year, given me by Mr. Gibson, extraordinary
young and pretty, and so saw them at home, and so home
to bed. Sir W. Pen continues ill of the gout.
22nd. Up, and all the morning
at the office busy. At noon home with my people
to dinner, where good discourse and merry. After
dinner comes Mr. Martin, the purser, and brings me
his wife’s starling, which was formerly the
King’s bird, that do speak and whistle finely,
which I am mighty proud of and shall take pleasure
in it. Thence to the Duke of York’s house
to a play, and saw Sir Martin Marr-all, where the house
is full; and though I have seen it, I think, ten times,
yet the pleasure I have is yet as great as ever, and
is undoubtedly the best comedy ever was wrote.
Thence to my tailor’s and a mercer’s for
patterns to carry my wife of cloth and silk for a
bed, which I think will please her and me, and so
home, and fitted myself for my journey to-morrow, which
I fear will not be pleasant, because of the wet weather,
it raining very hard all this day; but the less it
troubles me because the King and Duke of York and
Court are at this day at Newmarket, at a great horse-race,
and proposed great pleasure for two or three days,
but are in the same wet. So from the office home
to supper, and betimes to bed.
23rd. Up by four o’clock;
and, getting my things ready, and recommending the
care of my house to W. Hewer, I with my boy Tom, whom
I take with me, to the Bull, in Bishopsgate Street,
and there, about six, took coach, he and I, and a
gentleman and his man, there being another coach also,
with as many more, I think, in it; and so away to Bishop’s
Stafford, and there dined, and changed horses and coach,
at Mrs. Aynsworth’s; but I took no knowledge
of her. Here the gentleman and I to dinner, and
in comes Captain Forster, an acquaintance of his, he
that do belong to my Lord Anglesey, who had been at
the late horse-races at Newmarket, where the King
now is, and says that they had fair weather there
yesterday, though we here, and at London, had nothing
but rain, insomuch that the ways are mighty full of
water, so as hardly to be passed. Here I hear
Mrs. Aynsworth is going to live at London: but
I believe will be mistaken in it; for it will be found
better for her to be chief where she is, than to have
little to do at London. There being many finer
than she there. After dinner away again and come
to Cambridge, after much bad way, about nine at night;
and there, at the Rose, I met my father’s horses,
with a man, staying for me. But it is so late,
and the waters so deep, that I durst not go to-night;
but after supper to bed; and there lay very ill, by
reason of some drunken scholars making a noise all
night, and vexed for fear that the horses should not
be taken up from grass, time enough for the morning.
Well pleased all this journey with the conversation
of him that went with me, who I think is a lawyer,
and lives about Lynne, but his name I did not ask.
24th (Lord’s day). I up,
at between two and three in the morning, and, calling
up my boy, and father’s boy, we set out by three
o’clock, it being high day; end so through the
water with very good success, though very deep almost
all the way, and got to Brampton, where most of them
in bed, and so I weary up to my wife’s chamber,
whom I find in bed, and pretended a little not well,
and indeed she hath those upon her, but fell to talk
and mightily pleased both of us, and upgot the rest,
Betty Turner and Willet and Jane, all whom I was glad
to see, and very merry, and got me ready in my new
stuff clothes that I send down before me, and so my
wife and they got ready too, while I to my father,
poor man, and walked with him up and down the house it
raining a little, and the waters all over Portholme
and the meadows, so as no pleasure abroad. Here
I saw my brothers and sister Jackson, she growing fat,
and, since being married, I think looks comelier than
before: but a mighty pert woman she is, and I
think proud, he keeping her mighty handsome, and they
say mighty fond, and are going shortly to live at Ellington
of themselves, and will keep malting, and grazing
of cattle. At noon comes Mr. Phillips and dines
with us, and a pretty odd-humoured man he seems to
be; but good withal, but of mighty great methods in
his eating and drinking, and will not kiss a woman
since his wife’s death. After dinner my
Lady Sandwich sending to see whether I was come, I
presently took horse, and find her and her family
at chapel; and thither I went in to them, and sat
out the sermon, where I heard Jervas Fullwood, now
their chaplain, preach a very good and seraphic kind
of sermon, too good for an ordinary congregation.
After sermon, I with my Lady, and my Lady Hinchingbroke,
and Paulina, and Lord Hinchingbroke, to the dining-room,
saluting none of them, and there sat and talked an
hour or two, with great pleasure and satisfaction,
to my Lady, about my Lord’s matters; but I think
not with that satisfaction to her, or me, that otherwise
would, she knowing that she did design tomorrow, and
I remaining all the while in fear, of being asked
to lend her some money, as I was afterward, when I
had taken leave of her, by Mr. Shepley, L100, which
I will not deny my Lady, and am willing to be found
when my Lord comes home to have done something of
that kind for them, and so he riding to Brampton and
supping there with me he did desire it of me from my
Lady, and I promised it, though much against my will,
for I fear it is as good as lost. After supper,
where very merry, we to bed, myself very weary and
to sleep all night.
25th. Waked betimes, and lay
long.... and there fell to talking, and by and by
rose, it being the first fair day, and yet not quite
fair, that we have had some time, and so up, and to
walk with my father again in the garden, consulting
what to do with him and this house when Pall and her
husband go away; and I think it will be to let it,
and he go live with her, though I am against letting
the house for any long time, because of having it
to retire to, ourselves. So I do intend to think
more of it before I resolve. By and by comes Mr.
Cooke to see me and so spent the morning, and he gone
by and by at noon to dinner, where Mr. Shepley come
and we merry, all being in good humour between my wife
and her people about her, and after dinner took horse,
I promising to fetch her away about fourteen days
hence, and so calling all of us, we men on horseback,
and the women and my father, at Goody Gorum’s,
and there in a frolic drinking I took leave, there
going with me and my boy, my two brothers, and one
Browne, whom they call in mirth Colonell, for our
guide, and also Mr. Shepley, to the end of Huntingdon,
and another gentleman who accidentally come thither,
one Mr. Castle; and I made them drink at the Chequers,
where I observed the same tapster, Tom, that was there
when I was a little boy and so we, at the end of the
town, took leave of Shepley and the other gentleman,
and so we away and got well to Cambridge, about seven
to the Rose, the waters not being now so high as before.
And here ’lighting, I took my boy and two brothers,
and walked to Magdalene College: and there into
the butterys, as a stranger, and there drank my bellyfull
of their beer, which pleased me, as the best I ever
drank: and hear by the butler’s man, who
was son to Goody Mulliner over against the College,
that we used to buy stewed prunes of, concerning the
College and persons in it; and find very few, only
Mr. Hollins and Pechell, I think, that were of my
time. But I was mightily pleased to come in this
condition to see and ask, and thence, giving the fellow
something, away walked to Chesterton, to see our old
walk, and there into the Church, the bells ringing,
and saw the place I used to sit in, and so to the
ferry, and ferried over to the other side, and walked
with great pleasure, the river being mighty high by
Barnewell Abbey: and so by Jesus College to the
town, and so to our quarters, and to supper, and then
to bed, being very weary and sleepy and mightily pleased
with this night’s walk.
26th. Up by four o’clock;
and by the time we were ready, and had eat, we were
called to the coach, where about six o’clock
we set out, there being a man and two women of one
company, ordinary people, and one lady alone, that
is tolerably handsome, but mighty well spoken, whom
I took great pleasure in talking to, and did get her
to read aloud in a book she was reading, in the coach,
being the King’s Meditations; [The
meditations on death, and prayers used by Charles I.
shortly before his execution] and then
the boy and I to sing, and so about noon come to Bishop’s
Stafford, to another house than what we were at the
other day, and better used. And here I paid for
the reckoning 11s., we dining together, and pretty
merry; and then set out again, sleeping most part
of the way; and got to Bishopsgate Street before eight
o’clock, the waters being now most of them down,
and we avoiding the bad way in the forest by a privy
way, which brought us to Hodsden; and so to Tibalds,
that road, which was mighty pleasant. So home,
where we find all well, and brother Balty and his
wife looking to the house, she mighty fine, in a new
gold-laced ‘just a cour’. I shifted
myself, and so to see Mrs. Turner, and Mercer appearing
over the way, called her in, and sat and talked, and
then home to my house by and by, and there supped and
talked mighty merry, and then broke up and to bed,
being a little vexed at what W. Hewer tells me Sir
John Shaw did this day in my absence say at the Board,
complaining of my doing of him injury and the board
permitting it, whereas they had more reason to except
against his attributing that to me alone which I could
not do but with their condent and direction, it being
to very good service to the King, and which I shall
be proud to have imputed to me alone. The King
I hear come to town last night.
27th. Up, and to the office,
where some time upon Sir D. Gawden’s accounts,
and then I by water to Westminster for some Tangier
orders, and so meeting with Mr. Sawyers my old chamber-fellow,
he and I by water together to the Temple, he giving
me an account of the base, rude usage, which he and
Sir G. Carteret had lately, before the Commissioners
of Accounts, where he was, as Counsel to Sir G. Carteret,
which I was sorry to hear, they behaving themselves
like most insolent and ill-mannered men. Thence
by coach to the Exchange, and there met with Sir H.
Cholmly at Colvill’s; and there did give him
some orders, and so home, and there to the office
again, where busy till two o’clock, and then
with Sir D. Gawden to his house, with my Lord Brouncker
and Sir J. Minnes, to dinner, where we dined very
well, and much good company, among others, a Dr.,
a fat man, whom by face I know, as one that uses to
sit in our church, that after dinner did take me out,
and walked together, who told me that he had now newly
entered himself into Orders, in the decay of the Church,
and did think it his duty so to do, thereby to do his
part toward the support and reformation thereof; and
spoke very soberly, and said that just about the same
age Dr. Donne did enter into Orders. I find him
a sober gentleman, and a man that hath seen much of
the world, and I think may do good. Thence after
dinner to the office, and there did a little business,
and so to see Sir W. Pen, who I find still very ill
of the goûte, sitting in his great chair, made
on purpose for persons sick of that disease, for their
ease; and this very chair, he tells me, was made for
my Lady Lambert! Thence I by coach to my tailor’s,
there to direct about the making of me another suit,
and so to White Hall, and through St. James’s
Park to St. James’s, thinking to have met with
Mr. Wren, but could not, and so homeward toward the
New Exchange, and meeting Mr. Creed he and I to drink
some whey at the whey-house, and so into the ’Change
and took a walk or two, and so home, and there vexed
at my boy’s being out of doors till ten at night,
but it was upon my brother Jackson’s business,
and so I was the less displeased, and then made the
boy to read to me out of Dr. Wilkins his “Real
Character,” and particularly about Noah’s
arke, where he do give a very good account thereof,
shewing how few the number of the several species
of beasts and fowls were that were to be in the arke,
and that there was room enough for them and their
food and dung, which do please me mightily and is
much beyond what ever I heard of the subject, and so
to bed.
28th. Up, to set right some little
matters of my Tangier accounts, and so to the office,
where busy all the morning, and then home with my
people to dinner, and after dinner comes about a petition
for a poor woman whose-ticket she would get paid,
and so talked a little and did baiser her, and
so to the office, being pleased that this morning my
bookseller brings me home Marcennus’s book of
musick,’ which costs me L3 2s.; but is a very
fine book. So to the office and did some business,
and then by coach to the New Exchange, and there by
agreement at my bookseller’s shop met Mercer
and Gayet, and took them by water, first to one of
the Neat-houses, where walked in the garden, but nothing
but a bottle of wine to be had, though pleased with
seeing the garden; and so to Fox Hall, where with
great pleasure we walked, and then to the upper end
of the further retired walk, and there sat and sang,
and brought great many gallants and fine people about
us, and, upon the bench, we did by and by eat and
drink what we had, and very merry: and so with
much pleasure to the Old Swan, and walked with them
home, and there left them, and so I home to my business
at the office a little, and so to bed.
29th. Betimes up, and up to my
Tangier accounts, and then by water to the Council
Chamber, and there received some directions from the
Duke of York and the Committee of the Navy there about
casting up the charge of the present summer’s
fleete, that so they may come within the bounds of
the sum given by the Parliament. But it is pretty
to see how Prince Rupert and other mad, silly people,
are for setting out but a little fleete, there being
no occasion for it; and say it will be best to save
the money for better uses. But Sir W. Coventry
did declare that, in wisdom, it was better to do so;
but that, in obedience to the Parliament, he was [for]
setting out the fifty sail talked on, though it spent
all the money, and to little purpose; and that this
was better than to leave it to the Parliament to make
bad construction of their thrift, if any trouble should
happen. Thus wary the world is grown! Thence
back again presently home, and did business till noon:
and then to Sir G. Carteret’s to dinner, with
much good company, it being the King’s birthday,
and many healths drunk: and here I did receive
another letter from my Lord Sandwich, which troubles
me to see how I have neglected him, in not writing,
or but once, all this time of his being abroad; and
I see he takes notice, but yet gently, of it, that
it puts me to great trouble, and I know not how to
get out of it, having no good excuse, and too late
now to mend, he being coming home. Thence home,
whither, by agreement, by and by comes Mercer and Gayet,
and two gentlemen with them, Mr. Monteith and Pelham,
the former a swaggering young handsome gentleman,
the latter a sober citizen merchant. Both sing,
but the latter with great skill-the other, no skill,
but a good voice, and a good basse, but used
to sing only tavern tunes; and so I spent all this
evening till eleven at night singing with them, till
I was tired of them, because of the swaggering fellow
with the base, though the girl Mercer did mightily
commend him before to me. This night je
had agreed par’ alter at Deptford, there par’
avoir lain con the moher de Bagwell, but this
company did hinder me.
30th. Up, and put on a new summer
black bombazin suit, and so to the office; and being
come now to an agreement with my barber, to keep my
perriwig in good order at 20s. a-year, I am like to
go very spruce, more than I used to do. All the
morning at the office and at noon home to dinner,
and so to the King’s playhouse, and there saw
“Philaster;” where it is pretty to see
how I could remember almost all along, ever since
I was a boy, Arethusa, the part which I was to have
acted at Sir Robert Cooke’s; and it was very
pleasant to me, but more to think what a ridiculous
thing it would have been for me to have acted a beautiful
woman. Thence to Mr. Pierces, and there saw Knepp
also, and were merry; and here saw my little Lady
Katherine Montagu come to town, about her eyes, which
are sore, and they think the King’s evil, poor,
pretty lady. Here I was freed from a fear that
Knepp was angry or might take advantage to declare
the essay that je did the other day, quand
je was con her ... Thence to the New Exchange,
and there met Harris and Rolt, and one Richards, a
tailor and great company-keeper, and with these over
to Fox Hall, and there fell into the company of Harry
Killigrew, a rogue newly come back out of France,
but still in disgrace at our Court, and young Newport
and others, as very rogues as any in the town, who
were ready to take hold of every woman that come by
them. And so to supper in an arbour: but,
Lord! their mad bawdy talk did make my heart ake!
And here I first understood by their talk the meaning
of the company that lately were called Ballets; Harris
telling how it was by a meeting of some young blades,
where he was among them, and my Lady Bennet
[Evidently adopted as a cant expression.
The woman here alluded to was a procuress well
known in her day, and described in the “Tatler”
(N as “the celebrated Madam Bennet.”
We further learn, from the “Spectator”
(N, that she was the Lady B. to whom Wycherley
addressed his ironical dedication of “The Plain
Dealer,” which is considered as a masterpiece
of raillery. It is worthy of remark that
the fair sex may justly complain of almost every word
in the English language designating a woman having,
at some time or another, been used as a term
of reproach; for we find Mother, Madam, Mistress,
and Miss, all denoting women of bad character; and
here Pepys adds the title of my Lady to the number,
and completes the ungracious catalogue. B.]
and her ladies; and their there dancing
naked, and all the roguish things in the world.
But, Lord! what loose cursed company was this, that
I was in to-night, though full of wit; and worth a
man’s being in for once, to know the nature
of it, and their manner of talk, and lives. Thence
set Rolt and some of [them] at the New Exchange, and
so I home, and my business being done at the office,
I to bed.
31st (Lord’s day). Up,
and to church in the morning. At noon I sent for
Mr. Mills and his wife and daughter to dine, and they
dined with me, and W. Hewer, and very good company,
I being in good humour. They gone to church,
comes Mr. Tempest, and he and I sang a psalm or two,
and so parted, and I by water to the New Exchange,
and there to Mrs. Pierces, where Knepp, and she, and
W. Howe, and Mr. Pierce, and little Betty, over to
Fox Hall, and there walked and supped with great pleasure.
Here was Mrs. Manuel also, and mighty good company,
and good mirth in making W. Howe spend his six or
seven shillings, and so they called him altogether
“Cully.” So back, and at Somerset-stairs
do understand that a boy is newly drowned, washing
himself there, and they cannot find his body.
So seeing them home, I home by water, W. Howe going
with me, and after some talk he lay at my house, and
all to bed. Here I hear that Mrs. Davis is quite
gone from the Duke of York’s house, and Gosnell
comes in her room, which I am glad of. At the
play at Court the other night, Mrs. Davis was there;
and when she was to come to dance her jigg, the Queene
would not stay to see it, which people do think it
was out of displeasure at her being the King’s
whore, that she could not bear it. My Lady Castlemayne
is, it seems, now mightily out of request, the King
coming little to her, and thus she mighty melancholy
and discontented.