June 1st. Up and with Sir J.
Minnes to Westminster, and in the Hall there I met
with Harris and Rolt, and carried them to the Rhenish
wine-house, where I have not been in a morning nor
any tavern, I think, these seven years and more.
Here I did get the words of a song of Harris that
I wanted. Here also Mr. Young and Whistler by
chance met us, and drank with us. Thence home,
and to prepare business against the afternoon, and
did walk an hour in the garden with Sir W. Warren,
who do tell me of the great difficulty he is under
in the business of his accounts with the Commissioners
of Parliament, and I fear some inconveniences and
troubles may be occasioned thereby to me. So to
dinner, and then with Sir J. Minnes to White Hall,
and there attended the Lords of the Treasury and also
a committee of Council with the Duke of York about
the charge of this year’s fleete, and thence
I to Westminster and to Mrs. Martin’s, and did
hazer what je would con her, and did once toker
la thigh de su landlady, and thence all alone
to Fox Hall, and walked and saw young Newport, and
two more rogues of the town, seize on two ladies,
who walked with them an hour with their masks on;
perhaps civil ladies; and there I left them, and so
home, and thence to Mr. Mills’s, where I never
was before, and here find, whom I indeed saw go in,
and that did make me go thither, Mrs. Hallworthy and
Mrs. Andrews, and here supped, and, extraordinary
merry till one in the morning, Mr. Andrews coming
to us: and mightily pleased with this night’s
company and mirth I home to bed. Mrs. Turner,
too, was with us.
2nd. Up, and to the office, where
all the morning. At noon home to dinner, and
there dined with me, besides my own people, W. Batelier
and Mercer, and we very merry. After dinner,
they gone, only Mercer and I to sing a while, and
then parted, and I out and took a coach, and called
Mercer at their back-door, and she brought with her
Mrs. Knightly, a little pretty sober girl, and I carried
them to Old Ford, a town by Bow, where I never was
before, and there walked in the fields very pleasant,
and sang: and so back again, and stopped and drank
at the Gun, at Mile End, and so to the Old Exchange
door, and did buy them a pound of cherries, cost me
2s., and so set them down again; and I to my little
mercer’s Finch, that lives now in the Minories,
where I have left my cloak, and did here baiser
su moher, a belle femme, and there took my cloak
which I had left there, and so by water, it being now
about nine o’clock, down to Deptford, where
I have not been many a day, and there it being dark
I did by agreement aller a la house de Bagwell,
and there after a little playing and baisando we did
go up in the dark a su camera... and to my boat
again, and against the tide home. Got there by
twelve o’clock, taking into my boat, for company,
a man that desired a passage a certain
western bargeman, with whom I had good sport, talking
of the old woman of Woolwich, and telling him the whole
story.
3rd. Up, and to the office, where
busy till g o’clock, and then to White Hall,
to the Council-chamber, where I did present the Duke
of York with an account of the charge of the present
fleete, to his satisfaction; and this being done,
did ask his leave for my going out of town five or
six days, which he did give me, saying, that my diligence
in the King’s business was such, that I ought
not to be denied when my own business called me any
whither. Thence with Sir D. Gawden to Westminster,
where I did take a turn or two, and met Roger Pepys,
who is mighty earnest for me to stay from going into
the country till he goes, and to bring my people thither
for some time: but I cannot, but will find another
time this summer for it. Thence with him home,
and there to the office till noon, and then with Lord
Brouncker, Sir J. Minnes, and Sir G. Carteret, upon
whose accounts they have been this day to the Three
Tuns to dinner, and thence back again home, and
after doing a little business I by coach to the King’s
house, and there saw good, part of “The Scornfull
Lady,” and that done, would have takn out Knepp,
but she was engaged, and so to my Lord Crew’s
to visit him; from whom I learn nothing but that there
hath been some controversy at the Council-table, about
my Lord Sandwich’s signing, where some would
not have had him, in the treaty with Portugall; but
all, I think, is over in it. Thence by coach
to Westminster to the Hall, and thence to the Park,
where much good company, and many fine ladies; and
in so handsome a hackney I was, that I believe Sir
W. Coventry and others, who looked on me, did take
me to be in one of my own, which I was a little troubled
for. So to the lodge, and drank a cup of new
milk, and so home, and there to Mrs. Turner’s,
and sat and talked with her, and then home to bed,
having laid my business with W. Hewer to go out of
town Friday next, with hopes of a great deal of pleasure.
4th. Up, and to the office, where
all the morning, and at noon home to dinner, where
Mr. Clerke, the solicitor, dined with me and my clerks.
After dinner I carried and set him down at the Temple,
he observing to me how St. Sepulchre’s church
steeple is repaired already a good deal, and the Fleet
Bridge is contracted for by the City to begin to be
built this summer, which do please me mightily.
I to White Hall, and walked through the Park for a
little ayre; and so back to the Council-chamber, to
the Committee of the Navy, about the business of fitting
the present fleete, suitable to the money given, which,
as the King orders it, and by what appears, will be
very little; and so as I perceive the Duke of York
will have nothing to command, nor can intend to go
abroad. But it is pretty to see how careful these
great men are to do every thing so as they may answer
it to the Parliament, thinking themselves safe in
nothing but where the judges, with whom they often
advise, do say the matter is doubtful; and so they
take upon themselves then to be the chief persons
to interpret what is doubtful. Thence home, and
all the evening to set matters in order against my
going to Brampton to-morrow, being resolved upon my
journey, and having the Duke of York’s leave
again to-day; though I do plainly see that I can very
ill be spared now, there being much business, especially
about this, which I have attended the Council about,
and I the man that am alone consulted with; and, besides,
my Lord Brouncker is at this time ill, and Sir W. Pen.
So things being put in order at the Office, I home
to do the like there; and so to bed.
5th (Friday).
[The rough notes for the journal from
this time to the 17th of June are contained on
five leaves, inserted in the book; and after them
follow several pages left blank for the fair copy
which was never made.]
At Barnet, for milk, 6d. On the
highway, to menders of the highway, 6d. Dinner
at Stevenage, 5d.
6th (Saturday). Spent at Huntingdon
with Bowles, and Appleyard, and Shepley, 2s.
7th (Sunday). My father, for
money lent, and horse-hire L1 11s.
8th (Monday). Father’s
servants (father having in the garden told me bad
stories of my wife’s ill words), 14s.; one that
helped at the horses, 2s.; menders of the highway,
2s. Pleasant country to Bedford, where, while
they stay, I rode through the town; and a good country-town;
and there, drinking, 1s. We on to Newport; and
there ’light, and I and W. Hewer to the Church,
and there give the boy 1s. So to Buckingham, a
good old town. Here I to see the Church, which
very good, and the leads, and a school in it:
did give the sexton’s boy 1s. A fair bridge
here, with many arches: vexed at my people’s
making me lose so much time; reckoning, 13d.
Mighty pleased with the pleasure of the ground all
the day. At night to Newport Pagnell; and there
a good pleasant country-town, but few people in it.
A very fair and like a Cathedral Church;
and I saw the leads, and a vault that goes far under
ground, and here lay with Betty Turner’s sparrow:
the town, and so most of this country, well watered.
Lay here well, and rose next day by four o’clock:
few people in the town: and so away. Reckoning
for supper, 19d.; poor, 6d. Mischance to
the coach, but no time lost.
9th (Tuesday). When come to Oxford,
a very sweet place: paid our guide, L1 2d.;
barber, 2d.; book, Stonage, 4s.
[This must have been either Inigo Jones’s
“The most notable Antiquity of Great Britain
vulgarly called Stonehenge,” printed in 1655,
or “Chorea Gigantum, or the most famous Antiquity
of Great Britain, vulgarly called Stones Heng,
standing on Salisbury Plain, restor’d to
the Danes,” by Walter Charleton, M.D., and published
in 1663.]
To dinner; and then out with my wife
and people, and landlord: and to him that showed
us the schools and library, 10s.; to him that showed
us All Souls’ College, and Chichly’s picture,
5s. So to see Christ Church with my wife, I seeing
several others very fine alone, with W. Hewer, before
dinner, and did give the boy that went with me 1s.
Strawberries, 1d. Dinner and servants, L1
0d. After come home from the schools, I out
with the landlord to Brazen-nose College; to
the butteries, and in the cellar find the hand of
the Child of Hales,... long. Butler, 2s.
Thence with coach and people to Physic-garden, 1s.
So to Friar Bacon’s study: I up and saw
it, and give the man 1s. Bottle of sack for landlord,
2s. Oxford mighty fine place; and well seated,
and cheap entertainment. At night come to Abingdon,
where had been a fair of custard; and met many people
and scholars going home; and there did get some pretty
good musick, and sang and danced till supper:
5s.
10th (Wednesday). Up, and walked
to the Hospitall: [Christ’s Hospital] very
large and fine; and pictures of founders, and the
History’ of the Hospitall; and is said to be
worth; L700 per annum; and that Mr. Foly was here
lately to see how their lands were settled; and here,
in old English, the story of the occasion of it, and
a rebus at the bottom. So did give the poor,
which they would not take but in their box, 2d.
So to the inn, and paid the reckoning and what not,
13s. So forth towards Hungerford, led this good
way by our landlord, one Heart, an old but very civil
and well-spoken man, more than I ever heard, of his
quality. He gone, we forward; and I vexed at my
people’s not minding the way. So come to
Hungerford, where very good trouts, eels, and crayfish.
Dinner: a mean town. At dinner there, 12s.
Thence set out with a guide, who saw us to Newmarket-heath,
and then left us, 3d. So all over the Plain
by the sight of the steeple, the Plain high and low,
to Salisbury, by night; but before I come to the town,
I saw a great fortification, and there ’light,
and to it and in it; and find it prodigious, so as
to frighten me to be in it all alone at that time of
night, it being dark. I understand, since, it
to be that, that is called Old Sarum. Come to
the George Inne, where lay in a silk bed; and
very good diet. To supper; then to bed.
11th (Thursday). Up, and W. Hewer
and I up and down the town, and find it a very brave
place. The river goes through every street; and
a most capacious market-place. The city great,
I think greater than Hereford. But the Minster
most admirable; as big, I think, and handsomer than
Westminster: and a most large Close about it,
and houses for the Officers thereof, and a fine palace
for the Bishop. So to my lodging back, and took
out my wife and people to shew them the town and Church;
but they being at prayers, we could not be shown the
Quire. A very good organ; and I looked in, and
saw the Bishop, my friend Dr. Ward. Thence to
the inne; and there not being able to hire coach-horses,
and not willing to use our own, we got saddle-horses,
very dear. Boy that went to look for them, 6d.
So the three women behind W. Hewer, Murford, and our
guide, and I single to Stonage; over the Plain and
some great hills, even to fright us. Come thither,
and find them as prodigious as any tales I ever heard
of them, and worth going this journey to see.
God knows what their use was! they are hard to tell,
but yet maybe told. Give the shepherd-woman,
for leading our horses, 4d. So back by Wilton,
my Lord Pembroke’s house, which we could not
see, he being just coming to town; but the situation
I do not like, nor the house promise much, it being
in a low but rich valley. So back home; and there
being ’light, we to the Church, and there find
them at prayers again, so could not see the Quire;
but I sent the women home, and I did go in, and saw
very many fine tombs, and among the rest some very
ancient, of the Montagus.
[The Montacutes, from
whom Lord Sandwich’s family claimed descent:
B.]
So home to dinner; and, that being
done, paid the reckoning, which was so exorbitant;
and particular in rate of my horses, and 7d. for
bread and beer, that I was mad, and resolve to trouble
the master about it, and get something for the poor;
and come away in that humour: L2 5d.
Servants, 1d.; poor, 1s.; guide to the Stones,
2s.; poor woman in the street, 1s.; ribbands, 9d.;
washwoman, 1s.; sempstress for W. Hewer, 3s.; lent
W. Hewer, 3s. Thence about six o’clock,
and with a guide went over the smooth Plain indeed
till night; and then by a happy mistake, and that
looked like an adventure, we were carried out of our
way to a town where we would lye, since we could not
go so far as we would. And there with great difficulty
come about ten at night to a little inn, where we
were fain to go into a room where a pedlar was in
bed, and made him rise; and there wife and I lay, and
in a truckle-bed Betty Turner and Willett. But
good beds, and the master of the house a sober, understanding
man, and I had good discourse with him about this
country’s matters, as wool, and corne, and
other things. And he also merry, and made us
mighty merry at supper, about manning the new ship,
at Bristol, with none but men whose wives do master
them; and it seems it is become in reproach to some
men of estate that are such hereabouts, that this
is become common talk. By and by to bed, glad
of this mistake, because, it seems, had we gone on
as we intended, we could not have passed with our
coach, and must have lain on the Plain all night.
This day from Salisbury I wrote by the post my excuse
for not coming home, which I hope will do, for I am
resolved to see the Bath, and, it may be, Bristol.
12th (Friday). Up, finding our
beds good, but lousy; which made us merry. We
set out, the reckoning and servants coming to 9d.;
my guide thither, 2s.; coachman, advanced, 10s.
So rode a very good way, led to my great content by
our landlord to Philips-Norton, with great pleasure,
being now come into Somersetshire; where my wife and
Deb. mightily joyed thereat, [They were
natives of that county.-B.] I commending
the country, as indeed it deserves. And the first
town we came to was Brekington, where, we stopping
for something for the horses, we called two or three
little boys to us, and pleased ourselves with their
manner of speech, and did make one of them kiss Deb.,
and another say the Lord’s Prayer (hallowed
be thy kingdom come). At Philips-Norton I walked
to the Church, and there saw a very ancient tomb of
some Knight Templar, I think; and here saw the tombstone
whereon there were only two heads cut, which, the
story goes, and credibly, were two sisters, called
the Fair Maids of Foscott, that had two bodies upward
and one belly, and there lie buried. Here is
also a very fine ring of six bells, and they mighty
tuneable. Having dined very well, 10s., we come
before night to the Bath; where I presently stepped
out with my landlord, and saw the baths, with people
in them. They are not so large as I expected,
but yet pleasant; and the town most of stone, and
clean, though the streets generally narrow. I
home, and being weary, went to bed without supper;
the rest supping.
13th (Saturday). Up at four o’clock,
being by appointment called up to the Cross Bath,
where we were carried one after one another, myself,
and wife, and Betty Turner, Willet, and W. Hewer.
And by and by, though we designed to have done before
company come, much company come; very fine ladies;
and the manner pretty enough, only methinks it cannot
be clean to go so many bodies together in the same
water. Good conversation among them that are
acquainted here, and stay together. Strange to
see how hot the water is; and in some places, though
this is the most temperate bath, the springs so hot
as the feet not able to endure. But strange to
see, when women and men herein, that live all the season
in these waters, that cannot but be parboiled, and
look like the creatures of the bath! Carried
away, wrapped in a sheet, and in a chair, home; and
there one after another thus carried, I staying above
two hours in the water, home to bed, sweating for
an hour; and by and by, comes musick to play to me,
extraordinary good as ever I heard at London almost,
or anywhere: 5s. Up, to go to Bristol, about
eleven o’clock, and paying my landlord that
was our guide from Chiltern, 10s., and the serjeant
of the bath, 10s., and the man that carried us in
chairs, 3d. Set out towards Bristoll, and
come thither (in a coach hired to spare our own horses);
the way bad, but country good, about two o’clock,
where set down at the Horse’shoe, and there,
being trimmed by a very handsome fellow, 2s., walked
with my wife and people through the city, which is
in every respect another London, that one can hardly
know it, to stand in the country, no more than that.
No carts, it standing generally on vaults, only dog-carts.
["They draw all their heavy goods here
on sleds, or sledges, which they call ‘gee
hoes,’ without wheels, which kills a multitude
of horses.” Another writer says,
“They suffer no carts to be used in the
city, lest, as some say, the shake occasioned by them
on the pavement should affect the Bristol milk
(the sherry) in the vaults, which is certainly
had here in the greatest perfection.” An
order of Common Council occurs in 1651 to prohibit
the use of carts and waggons-only suffering drays.
“Camden in giving our city credit for its
cleanliness in forming ‘goutes,’ says they
use sledges here instead of carts, lest they
destroy the arches beneath which are the goutes.” Chilcott’s
New Guide to Bristol, &c.,]
So to the Three..Crowns Tavern I was
directed; but, when I come in, the master told me
that he had newly given over the selling of wine; it
seems, grown rich; and so went to the Sun; and there
Deb. going with W. Hewer and Betty Turner to see her
uncle [Butts], and leaving my wife with the mistress
of the house, I to see the quay, which is a most large
and noble Vlace; and to see the new ship building by
Bally, neither he nor Furzer being in town. It
will be a fine ship. Spoke with the foreman,
and did give the boys that kept the cabin 2s.
Walked back to the Sun, where I find Deb. come back,
and with her, her uncle, a sober merchant, very good
company, and so like one of our sober, wealthy, London
merchants, as pleased me mightily. Here we dined,
and much good talk with him, 7d.: a messenger
to Sir John Knight, who was not at home, 6d.
Then walked with him [Butts] and my wife and company
round the quay, and to the ship; and he shewed me
the Custom-house, and made me understand many things
of the place, and led us through Marsh Street, where
our girl was born. But, Lord! the joy that was
among the old poor people of the place, to see Mrs.
Willet’s daughter, it seems her mother being
a brave woman and mightily beloved! And so brought
us a back way by surprize to his house, where a substantial
good house, and well furnished; and did give us good
entertainment of strawberries, a whole venison-pasty,
cold, and plenty of brave wine, and above all Bristoll
milk,
[A sort of rum punch (milk punch),
which, and turtle, were products
of the trade of Bristol with the West Indies.
So Byron says in the
first edition of his “English Bards and
Scotch Reviewers”
“Too much in turtle
Bristol’s sons delight,
Too much oer bowls of rack prolong
the night.”
These lines will not be found
in the modern editions; but the
following are substituted:
“Four turtle feeder’s
verse must needs he flat,
Though Bristol bloat him with the verdant
fat.”
Lord Macaulay says of the collations
with which the sugar-refiners of Bristol regaled
their visitors: “The repast was dressed
in the furnace, And was accompanied by a rich
brewage made of the best Spanish wine, and celebrated
over the whole kingdom as Bristol milk” ("Hist.
of England,” vol. i., B.]
where comes in another poor woman,
who, hearing that Deb. was here, did come running
hither, and with her eyes so lull of tears, and heart
so full of joy, that she could not speak when she
come in, that it made me weep too: I protest
that I was not able to speak to her, which I would
have done, to have diverted her tears. His wife
a good woman, and so sober and substantiall as I was
never more pleased anywhere. Servant-maid, 2s.
So thence took leave, and he with us through the city,
where in walking I find the city pay him great respect,
and he the like to the meanest, which pleased me mightily.
He shewed us the place where the merchants meet here,
and a fine Cross yet standing, like Cheapside.
And so to the Horseshoe, where paid the reckoning,
2d. We back, and by moonshine to the Bath
again, about ten-o’clock: bad way; and giving
the coachman 1s., went all of us to bed.
14th (Sunday). Up, and walked
up and down the town, and saw a pretty good market-place,
and many good streets, and very fair stone-houses.
And so to the great Church, and there saw Bishop Montagu’s
tomb;
[James Montagu, Bishop of Bath and
Wells in 1608, and of Winchester in 1616 died
1618. He was uncle to the Earl of Sandwich, whose
mother was Pepys’s aunt. Hence Pepys’s
curiosity respecting the tomb. B.]
and, when placed, did there see many
brave people come, and, among others, two men brought
in, in litters, and set down in the chancel to hear:
but I did not know one face. Here a good organ;
but a vain, pragmatical fellow preached a ridiculous,
affected sermon, that made me angry, and some gentlemen
that sat next me, and sang well. So home, walking
round the walls of the City, which are good, and the
battlements all whole. The sexton of the church
is. So home to dinner, and after dinner comes
Mr. Butts again to see me, and he and I to church,
where the same idle fellow preached; and I slept most
of the sermon. Thence home, and took my wife
out and the girls, and come to this church again,
to see it, and look over the monuments, where, among
others, Dr. Venner and Pelting, and a lady of Sir
W. Walter’s; he lying with his face broken.
So to the fields a little and walked, and then home
and had my head looked [at], and so to supper, and
then comes my landlord to me, a sober understanding
man, and did give me a good account of the antiquity
of this town and Wells; and of two Heads, on two pillars,
in Wells church. But he a Catholick. So
he gone, I to bed.
15th (Monday). Up, and with Mr.
Butts to look into the baths, and find the King and
Queen’s full of a mixed sort, of good and bad,
and the Cross only almost for the gentry. So
home and did the like with my wife, and did pay my
guides, two women, 5s.; one man, 2d.; poor, 6d.;
woman to lay my foot-cloth, 1s. So to our inne,
and there eat and paid reckoning, L1 8d.; servants,
3s.; poor, 1s.; lent the coach man, 10s. Before
I took coach, I went to make a boy dive in the King’s
bath, 1s. I paid also for my coach and a horse
to Bristol, L1 1d. Took coach, and away,
without any of the company of the other stage-coaches,
that go out of this town to-day; and rode all day with
some trouble, for fear of being out of our way, over
the Downes, where the life of the shepherds is, in
fair weather only, pretty. In the afternoon come
to Abebury, where, seeing great stones like those
of Stonage standing up, I stopped, and took a countryman
of that town, and he carried me and shewed me a place
trenched in, like Old Sarum almost, with great stones
pitched in it, some bigger than those at Stonage in
figure, to my great admiration: and he told me
that most people of learning, coming by, do come and
view them, and that the King did so: and that
the Mount cast hard by is called Selbury, from one
King Seall buried there, as tradition says. I
did give this man 1s. So took coach again, seeing
one place with great high stones pitched round, which,
I believe, was once some particular building, in some
measure like that of Stonage. But, about a mile
off, it was prodigious to see how full the Downes are
of great stones; and all along the vallies, stones
of considerable bigness, most of them growing certainly
out of the ground so thick as to cover the ground,
which makes me think the less of the wonder of Stonage,
for hence they might undoubtedly supply themselves
with stones, as well as those at Abebury. In
my way did give to the poor and menders of the highway
3s. Before night, come to Marlborough, and lay
at the Hart; a good house, and a pretty fair town
for a street or two; and what is most singular is,
their houses on one side having their pent-houses supported
with pillars, which makes it a good walk. My wife
pleased with all, this evening reading of “Mustapha”
to me till supper, and then to supper, and had musique
whose innocence pleased me, and I did give them 3s.
So to bed, and lay well all night, and long, so as
all the five coaches that come this day from Bath,
as well as we, were gone out of the town before six.
16th (Tuesday). So paying the
reckoning, 14d., and servants, 2s., poor 1s.,
set out; and overtook one coach and kept a while company
with it, till one of our horses losing a shoe, we
stopped and drank and spent 1s. So on, and passing
through a good part of this county of Wiltshire, saw
a good house of Alexander Popham’s, and another
of my Lord Craven’s, I think in Barkeshire.
Come to Newbery, and there dined, which cost me, and
musick, which a song of the old courtier of Queen Elizabeth’s,
and how he was changed upon the coming in of the King,
did please me mightily, and I did cause W. Hewer to
write it out, 3d. Then comes the reckoning,
forced to change gold, 8d.; servants and poor,
1d. So out, and lost our way, which made
me vexed, but come into it again; and in the evening
betimes come to Reading, and there heard my wife read
more of “Mustapha,” and then to supper,
and then I to walk about the town, which is a very
great one, I think bigger than Salsbury: a river
runs through it, in seven branches, and unite in one,
in one part of the town, and runs into the Thames
half-a-mile off one odd sign of the Broad Face.
W. Hewer troubled with the headake we had none of his
company last night, nor all this day nor night to talk.
Then to my inn, and so to bed.
17th (Wednesday). Rose, and paying
the reckoning, 12d.; servants and poor, 2d.;
musick, the worst we have had, coming to our chamber-door,
but calling us by wrong names, we lay; so set out with
one coach in company, and through Maydenhead, which
I never saw before, to Colebrooke by noon; the way
mighty good; and there dined, and fitted ourselves
a little to go through London, anon. Somewhat
out of humour all day, reflecting on my wife’s
neglect of things, and impertinent humour got by this
liberty of being from me, which she is never to be
trusted with; for she is a fool. Thence pleasant
way to London, before night, and find all very well,
to great content; and there to talk with my wife,
and saw Sir W. Pen, who is well again. I hear
of the ill news by the great fire at Barbados.
By and by home, and there with my people to supper,
all in pretty good humour, though I find my wife hath
something in her gizzard, that only waits an opportunity
of being provoked to bring up; but I will not, for
my content-sake, give it. So I to bed, glad to
find all so well here, and slept well.
[The
rough notes end here.]
18th. Up betimes and to the office,
there to set my papers in order and books, my office
having been new whited and windows made clean, and
so to sit, where all the morning, and did receive
a hint or two from my Lord Anglesey, as if he thought
much of my taking the ayre as I have done; but I care
not a turd; but whatever the matter is, I think he
hath some ill-will to me, or at least an opinion that
I am more the servant of the Board than I am.
At noon home to dinner, where my wife still in a melancholy,
fusty humour, and crying, and do not tell me plainly
what it is; but I by little words find that she hath
heard of my going to plays, and carrying people abroad
every day, in her absence; and that I cannot help
but the storm will break out, I think, in a little
time. After dinner carried her by coach to St.
James’s, where she sat in the coach till I to
my Lady Peterborough’s, who tells me, among other
things, her Lord’s good words to the Duke of
York lately, about my Lord Sandwich, and that the
Duke of York is kind to my Lord Sandwich, which I am
glad to hear: my business here was about her
Lord’s pension from Tangier. Here met with
Povy, who tells me how hard Creed is upon him, though
he did give him, about six months since, I think he
said, fifty pieces in gold; and one thing there is
in his accounts that I fear may touch me, but I shall
help it, I hope. So my wife not speaking a word,
going nor coming, nor willing to go to a play, though
a new one, I to the Office, and did much business.
At night home, where supped Mr. Turner and his wife,
and Betty and Mercer and Pelling, as merry as the ill,
melancholy humour that my wife was in, would let us,
which vexed me; but I took no notice of it, thinking
that will be the best way, and let it wear away itself.
After supper, parted, and to bed; and my wife troubled
all night, and about one o’clock goes out of
the bed to the girl’s bed, which did trouble
me, she crying and sobbing, without telling the cause.
By and by she comes back to me, and still crying; I
then rose, and would have sat up all night, but she
would have me come to bed again; and being pretty
well pacified, we to sleep.
19th. When between two and three
in the morning we were waked with my maids crying
out, “Fire, fire, in Markelane!” So I rose
and looked out, and it was dreadful; and strange apprehensions
in me, and us all, of being presently burnt.
So we all rose; and my care presently was to secure
my gold, and plate, and papers, and could quickly have
done it, but I went forth to see where it was; and
the whole town was presently in the streets; and I
found it in a new-built house that stood alone in
Minchin-lane, over against the Cloth-workers’-hall,
which burned furiously: the house not yet quite
finished; and the benefit of brick was well seen,
for it burnt all inward, and fell down within itself;
so no fear of doing more hurt. So homeward, and
stopped at Mr. Mills’s, where he and she at
the door, and Mrs. Turner, and Betty, and Mrs. Hollworthy,
and there I stayed and talked, and up to the church
leads, and saw the fire, which spent itself, till
all fear over. I home, and there we to bed again,
and slept pretty well, and about nine rose, and then
my wife fell into her blubbering again, and at length
had a request to make to me, which was, that she might
go into France, and live there, out of trouble; and
then all come out, that I loved pleasure and denied
her any, and a deal of do; and I find that there have
been great fallings out between my father and her,
whom, for ever hereafter, I must keep asunder, for
they cannot possibly agree. And I said nothing,
but, with very mild words and few, suffered her humour
to spend, till we begun to be very quiet, and I think
all will be over, and friends, and so I to the office,
where all the morning doing business. Yesterday
I heard how my Lord Ashly is like to die, having some
imposthume in his breast, that he hath been fain to
be cut into the body.
["Such an operation was performed in
this year, after a consultation of medical men,
and chiefly by Locke’s advice, and the wound
was afterwards always kept open, a silver pipe
being inserted. This saved Lord Ashley’s
life, and gave him health” Christie’s
Life of the first Earl of Shaftesbury, vol.
ii., . ‘Tapski’ was a name
given to Shaftesbury in derision, and vile defamers
described the abscess, which had originated in
a carriage accident in Holland, as the result
of extreme dissipation. Lines by Duke, a friend
and imitator of Dryden:
“The
working ferment of his active mind,
In
his weak body’s cask with pain confined,
Would
burst the rotten vessel where ’tis pent,
But
that ’tis tapt to give the treason vent.”]
At noon home to dinner, and thence
by coach to White Hall, where we attended the Duke
of York in his closet, upon our usual business.
And thence out, and did see many of the Knights of
the Garter, with the King and Duke of York, going
into the Privychamber, to elect the Elector of Saxony
into that Order, who, I did hear the Duke of York say,
was a good drinker: I know not upon what score
this compliment is done him. Thence with W. Pen,
who is in great pain of the gowte, by coach round by
Holborne home, he being at every kennel full of pain.
Thence home, and by and by comes my wife and Deb.
home, have been at the King’s playhouse to-day,
thinking to spy me there; and saw the new play, “Evening
Love,” of Dryden’s, which, though the
world commends, she likes not. So to supper and
talk, and all in good humour, and then to bed, where
I slept not well, from my apprehensions of some trouble
about some business of Mr. Povy’s he told me
of the other day.
20th. Up, and talked with my
wife all in good humour, and so to the office, where
all the morning, and then home to dinner, and so she
and I alone to the King’s house, and there I
saw this new play my wife saw yesterday, and do not
like it, it being very smutty, and nothing so good
as “The Maiden Queen,” or “The Indian
Emperour,” of his making, that I was troubled
at it; and my wife tells me wholly (which he confesses
a little in the epilogue) taken out of the “Illustre
Bassa.” So she to Unthanke’s and
I to Mr. Povy, and there settled some business; and
here talked of things, and he thinks there will be
great revolutions, and that Creed will be a great
man, though a rogue, he being a man of the old strain,
which will now be up again. So I took coach, and
set Povy down at Charing Cross, and took my wife up,
and calling at the New Exchange at Smith’s shop,
and kissed her pretty hand, and so we home, and there
able to do nothing by candlelight, my eyes being now
constantly so bad that I must take present advice or
be blind. So to supper, grieved for my eyes,
and to bed.
21st (Lord’s day). Up,
and to church, and home and dined with my wife and
Deb. alone, but merry and in good humour, which is,
when all is done, the greatest felicity of all, and
after dinner she to read in the “Illustre
Bassa” the plot of yesterday’s play, which
is most exactly the same, and so to church I alone,
and thence to see Sir W. Pen, who is ill again, and
then home, and there get my wife to read to me till
supper, and then to bed.
22nd. Up, and with Balty to St.
James’s, and there presented him to Mr. Wren
about his being Muster-Master this year, which will
be done. So up to wait on the Duke of York, and
thence, with W. Coventry, walked to White Hall good
discourse about the Navy, where want of money undoes
us. Thence to the Harp and Ball I to drink, and
so to the Coffee-house in Covent Garden; but met with
nobody but Sir Philip Howard, who shamed me before
the whole house there, in commendation of my speech
in Parliament, and thence I away home to dinner alone,
my wife being at her tailor’s, and after dinner
comes Creed, whom I hate, to speak with me, and before
him comes Mrs. Daniel about business.... She gone,
Creed and I to the King’s playhouse, and saw
an act or two of the new play ["Evening’s Love”]
again, but like it not. Calling this day at Herringman’s,
he tells me Dryden do himself call it but a fifth-rate
play. Thence with him to my Lord Brouncker’s,
where a Council of the Royall Society; and there heard
Mr. Harry Howard’s’ noble offers about
ground for our College, and his intentions of building
his own house there most nobly. My business was
to meet Mr. Boyle, which I did, and discoursed about
my eyes; and he did give me the best advice he could,
but refers me to one Turberville, of Salsbury, lately
come to town, which I will go to.
[Daubigny Turberville, of Oriel College;
created M.D. at Oxford,1660. He was a physician
of some eminence, and, dying at Salisbury on
the 21st April, 1696, aged eighty-five, he was buried
in the cathedral, where his monument remains.
Cassan, in his “Lives of the Bishops of
Sarum,” part iii., , has reprinted an
interesting account of Turberville, from the “Memoir
of Bishop Seth Ward,” published in 1697,
by Dr. Walter Pope. Turberville was born at
Wayford, co. Somerset, in 1612, and became an
expert oculist; and probably Pepys received great
benefit from his advice, as his vision does not
appear to have failed during the many years that he
lived after discontinuing the Diary. The
doctor died rich, and subsequently to his decease
his sister Mary, inheriting all his prescriptions,
and knowing how to use them, practised as an oculist
in London with good reputation. B.]
Thence home, where the streets full,
at our end of the town, removing their wine against
the Act begins, which will be two days hence, to raise
the price. I did get my store in of Batelier this
night. So home to supper and to bed.
23rd. Up, and all the morning
at the office. At noon home to dinner, and so
to the office again all the afternoon, and then to
Westminster to Dr. Turberville about my eyes, whom
I met with: and he did discourse, I thought,
learnedly about them; and takes time before he did
prescribe me any thing, to think of it. So I
away with my wife and Deb., whom I left at Unthanke’s,
and so to Hercules Pillars, and there we three supped
on cold powdered beef, and thence home and in the garden
walked a good while with Deane, talking well of the
Navy miscarriages and faults. So home to bed.
24th. Up, and Creed and Colonell
Atkins come to me about sending coals to Tangier:
and upon that most of the morning. Thence Creed
and I to Alderman Backewell’s about Tangier
business of money, and thence I by water (calling
and drinking, but not baisado, at Michell’s)
to Westminster, but it being holyday did no business,
only to Martin’s... and so home again by water,
and busy till dinner, and then with wife, Mercer,
Deb., and W. Hewer to the Duke of York’s playhouse,
and there saw “The Impertinents,” a pretty
good play; and so by water to Spring Garden, and there
supped, and so home, not very merry, only when we come
home, Mercer and I sat and sung in the garden a good
while, and so to bed.
25th. Up, and to the office all
the morning, and after dinner at home to the office
again, and there all the afternoon very busy till night,
and then home to supper and to bed.
26th. All the morning doing business
at the office. At noon, with my Fellow-Officers,
to the Dolphin, at Sir G. Carteret’s charge,
to dinner, he having some accounts examined this morning.
All the afternoon we all at Sir W. Pen’s with
him about the Victuallers’ accounts, and then
in the evening to Charing Cross, and there took up
my wife at her tailor’s, and so home and to
walk in the garden, and then to sup and to bed.
27th. At the office all the morning,
at noon dined at home, and then my wife, and Deb.,
and I to the King’s playhouse, and saw “The
Indian Queene,” but do not doat upon Nan Marshall’s
acting therein, as the world talks of her excellence
therein. Thence with my wife to buy some linnen,
L13 worth, for sheets, &c., at the new shop over against
the New Exchange; [and the master, who is] come out
of London [To the Strand.] since
the fire, says his and other tradesmen’s retail
trade is so great here, and better than it was in
London, that they believe they shall not return, nor
the city be ever so great for retail as heretofore.
So home and to my business, and to bed.
28th (Lord’s day). Up,
and to church, and then home to dinner, where Betty
Turner, Mercer, and Captain Deane, and after dinner
to sing, Mr. Pelting coming. Then, they gone,
Deane and I all the afternoon till night to talk of
navy matters and ships with great pleasure, and so
at night, he gone, I to supper, Pelling coming again
and singing a while, then to bed. Much talk of
the French setting out their fleete afresh; but I
hear nothing that our King is alarmed at it, at all,
but rather making his fleete less.
29th. Called up by my Lady Peterborough’s
servant about some business of hers, and so to the
office. Thence by and by with Sir J. Minnes toward
St. James’s, and I stop at Dr. Turberville’s,
and there did receive a direction for some physic,
and also a glass of something to drop into my eyes:
who gives me hopes that I may do well. Thence
to St. James’s, and thence to White Hall, where
I find the Duke of York in the Council-chamber; where
the Officers of the Navy were called in about Navy
business, about calling in of more ships; the King
of France having, as the Duke of York says, ordered
his fleete to come in, notwithstanding what he had
lately ordered for their staying abroad. Thence
to the Chapel, it being St. Peter’s day, and
did hear an anthem of Silas Taylor’s making;
a dull, old-fashioned thing, of six and seven parts,
that nobody could understand: and the Duke of
York, when he come out, told me that he was a better
store-keeper than anthem-maker, and that was bad enough,
too. This morning Mr. May’ shewed me the
King’s new buildings at White Hall, very fine;
and among other things, his ceilings, and his houses
of office. So home to dinner, and then with my
wife to the King’s playhouse “The
Mulberry Garden,” which she had not seen.
So by coach to Islington, and round by Hackney home
with much pleasure, and to supper and bed.
30th. Up, and at the Office all
the morning: then home to dinner, where a stinking
leg of mutton, the weather being very wet and hot to
keep meat in. Then to the Office again, all the
afternoon: we met about the Victualler’s
new contract. And so up, and to walk all the evening
with my wife and Mrs. Turner in the garden, till supper,
about eleven at night; and so, after supper, parted,
and to bed, my eyes bad, but not worse, only weary
with working. But, however, I very melancholy
under the fear of my eyes being spoiled, and not to
be recovered; for I am come that I am not able to
readout a small letter, and yet my sight good for
the little while I can read, as ever they were, I think.