July 1st. Up; and all the morning
we met at the office about the Victualler’s
contract. At noon home to dinner, my Cozen Roger,
come newly to town, dined with us, and mighty importunate
for our coming down to Impington, which I think to
do, this Sturbridge fair. Thence I set him down
at the Temple, and Commissioner Middleton dining the
first time with me, he and I to White Hall, and so
to St. James’s, where we met; and much business
with the Duke of York. And I find the Duke of
York very hot for regulations in the Navy; and, I
believe, is put on it by W. Coventry; and I am glad
of it; and particularly, he falls heavy on Chatham-yard,,
and is vexed that Lord Anglesey did, the other day,
complain at the Council-table of disorders in the Navy,
and not to him. So I to White Hall to a Committee
of Tangier; and there vexed, with the importunity
and clamours of Alderman Backewell, for my acquittance
for money supplied by him to the garrison, before I
have any order for paying it: so home, calling
at several places-among others, the ’Change,
and on Cooper, to know when my wife shall come to sit
for her picture, which will be next week, and so home
and to walk with my wife, and then to supper and to
bed.
2nd. Called up by a letter from
W. Coventry telling me that the Commissioners of Accounts
intend to summons me about Sir W. Warren’s Hamburg
contract, and so I up and to W. Coventry’s (he
and G. Carteret being the party concerned in it),
and after conference with him about it to satisfaction
I home again to the office. At noon home to dinner,
and then all the afternoon busy to prepare an answer
to this demand of the Commissioners of Accounts, and
did discourse with Sir W. Warren about it, and so
in the evening with my wife and Deb. by coach to take
ayre to Mile-end, and so home and I to bed, vexed
to be put to this frequent trouble in things we deserve
best in.
3rd. Betimes to the office, my
head full of this business. Then by coach to
the Commissioners of Accounts at Brooke House, the
first time I was ever there, and there Sir W. Turner
in the chair; and present, Lord Halifax, Thoms[on],
Gregory, Dunster, and Osborne. I long with them,
and see them hot set on this matter; but I did give
them proper and safe answers. Halifax, I perceive,
was industrious on my side, in behalf of his uncle
Coventry, it being the business of fir W. Warren.
Vexed only at their denial of a copy of what I set
my hand to, and swore. Here till almost two o’clock,
and then home to dinner, and set down presently what
I had done and said this day, and so abroad by water
to Eagle Court in the Strand, and there to an alehouse:
met Mr. Pierce, the Surgeon, and Dr. Clerke, Waldron,
Turberville, my physician for the eyes, and Lowre,
to dissect several eyes of sheep and oxen, with great
pleasure, and to my great information. But strange
that this Turberville should be so great a man, and
yet, to this day, had seen no eyes dissected, or but
once, but desired this Dr. Lowre to give him the opportunity
to see him dissect some. Thence to Unthanke’s,
to my wife, and carried her home, and there walked
in the garden, and so to supper and to bed.
4th. Up, and to see Sir W. Coventry,
and give him account of my doings yesterday, which
he well liked of, and was told thereof by my Lord
Halifax before; but I do perceive he is much concerned
for this business. Gives me advice to write a
smart letter to the Duke of York about the want of
money in the Navy, and desire him to communicate it
to the Commissioners of the Treasury; for he tells
me he hath hot work sometimes to contend with the
rest for the Navy, they being all concerned for some
other part of the King’s expenses, which they
would prefer to this, of the Navy. He shewed
me his closet, with his round table, for him to sit
in the middle, very convenient; and I borrowed several
books of him, to collect things out of the Navy, which
I have not, and so home, and there busy sitting all
the morning, and at noon dined, and then all the afternoon
busy, till night, and then to Mile-End with my wife
and girl, and there drank and eat a joie of salmon,
at the Rose and Crown, our old house; and so home
to bed.
5th (Lord’s day). About
four in the morning took four pills of Dr. Turberville’s
prescribing, for my eyes, and they wrought pretty well
most of the morning, and I did get my wife to spend
the morning reading of Wilkins’s Reall
Character. At noon comes W. Hewer and Pelling,
and young Michell and his wife, and dined with us,
and most of the afternoon talking; and then at night
my wife to read again, and to supper and to bed.
6th. Up, and to St. James’s,
and there attended the Duke of York, and was there
by himself told how angry he was, and did declare to
my Lord Anglesey, about his late complaining of things
of the Navy to the King in Council, and not to him;
and I perceive he is mightily concerned at it, and
resolved to reform things therein. Thence with
W. Coventry walked in the Park together a good while,
he mighty kind to me. And hear many pretty stories
of my Lord Chancellor’s being heretofore made
sport of by Peter Talbot the priest, in his story
of the death of Cardinall Bleau;
[It is probable these stories, in ridicule
of Clarendon, are nowhere recorded. Cardinal
Jean Balue was the minister of Louis xi. of France.
The reader will remember him in Sir W. Scott’s
“Quentin Durward.” He was confined
for eleven years in an iron cage invented by
himself in the Chateau de Loches, and
died soon after he regained his liberty. B.]
by Lord Cottington, in his ‘Dolor de las Tyipas’;
[Gripes. It was
a joke against Lord Cottington that whenever he was
seriously ill he declared
himself a Roman Catholic, when he was well
again he returned to
the Protestant faith.]
and Tom Killigrew, in his being bred
in Ram Ally, and now bound prentice to Lord Cottington,
going to Spain with L1000, and two suits of clothes.
Thence home to dinner, and thence to Mr. Cooper’s,
and there met my wife and W. Hewer and Deb.; and there
my wife first sat for her picture: but he is
a most admirable workman, and good company. Here
comes Harris, and first told us how Betterton is come
again upon the stage: whereupon my wife and company
to the [Duke’s] house to see “Henry the
Fifth;” while I to attend the Duke of York at
the Committee of the Navy, at the Council, where some
high dispute between him and W. Coventry about settling
pensions upon all Flag-Officers, while unemployed:
W. Coventry against it, and, I think, with reason.
Thence I to the playhouse, and saw a piece of the
play, and glad to see Betterton; and so with wife and
Deb. to Spring-garden, and eat a lobster, and so home
in the evening and to bed. Great doings at Paris,
I hear, with their triumphs for their late conquests!
The Duchesse of Richmond sworn last week
of the queen’s Bedchamber, and the King minding
little else but what he used to do about
his women.
7th. Up, and to the office, where
Kate Joyce come to me about some tickets of hers,
but took no notice to me of her being married, but
seemed mighty pale, and doubtful what to say or do,
expecting, I believe, that I should begin; and not
finding me beginning, said nothing, but, with trouble
in her face, went away. At the office all the
morning, and after dinner also all the afternoon, and
in the evening with my wife and Deb. and Betty Turner
to Unthanke’s, where we are fain to go round
by Newgate, because of Fleet Bridge being under rebuilding.
They stayed there, and I about some business, and then
presently back and brought them home and supped and
Mrs. Turner, the mother, comes to us, and there late,
and so to bed.
8th. Betimes by water to Sir
W. Coventry, and there discoursed of several things;
and I find him much concerned in the present enquiries
now on foot of the Commissioners of Accounts, though
he reckons himself and the rest very safe, but vexed
to see us liable to these troubles, in things wherein
we have laboured to do best. Thence, he being
to go out of town to-morrow, to drink Banbury waters,
I to the Duke of York, to attend him about business
of the Office; and find him mighty free to me, and
how he is concerned to mend things in the Navy himself,
and not leave it to other people. So home to
dinner; and then with my wife to Cooper’s, and
there saw her sit; and he do do extraordinary things
indeed. So to White Hall; and there by and by
the Duke of York comes to the Robe-chamber, and spent
with us three hours till night, in hearing the business
of the Master-Attendants of Chatham, and the Store-keeper
of Woolwich; and resolves to displace them all; so
hot he is of giving proofs of his justice at this
time, that it is their great fate now, to come to
be questioned at such a time as this. Thence I
to Unthanke’s, and took my wife and Deb. home,
and to supper and to bed.
9th. Up, and to the office, where
sat all the morning, and after noon to the office
again till night, mighty busy getting Mr. Fist to come
and help me, my own clerks all busy, and so in the
evening to ease my eyes, and with my wife and Deb.
and Betty Turner, by coach to Unthanke’s and
back again, and then to supper and to bed.
10th. Up, and to attend the Council,
but all in vain, the Council spending all the morning
upon a business about the printing of the Critickes,
a dispute between the first Printer, one Bee that is
dead, and the Abstractor, who would now print his
Abstract, one Poole. So home to dinner, and thence
to Haward’s to look upon an Espinette, and I
did come near the buying one, but broke off.
I have a mind to have one. So to Cooper’s;
and there find my wife and W. Hewer and Deb., sitting,
and painting; and here he do work finely, though I
fear it will not be so like as I expected: but
now I understand his great skill in musick, his playing
and setting to the French lute most excellently; and
speaks French, and indeed is an excellent man.
Thence, in the evening, with my people in a glass
hackney-coach to the park, but was ashamed to be seen.
So to the lodge, and drank milk, and so home to supper
and to bed.
11th. At the office all the morning.
After dinner to the King’s playhouse, to see
an old play of Shirly’s, called “Hide Parker”
the first day acted; where horses are brought upon
the stage but it is but a very moderate play, only
an excellent epilogue spoke by Beck Marshall.
Thence home and to my office, and then to supper and
to bed, and overnight took some pills,
12th. Which work with me pretty
betimes, being Lord’s day, and so I within all
day. Busy all the morning upon some accounts with
W. Hewer, and at noon, an excellent dinner, comes
Pelling and W. Howe, and the latter staid and talked
with me all the afternoon, and in the evening comes
Mr. Mills and his wife and supped and talked with me,
and so to bed. This last night Betty Michell
about midnight cries out, and my wife goes to her,
and she brings forth a girl, and this afternoon the
child is christened, and my wife godmother again to
a Betty.
13th. Up, and to my office, and
thence by water to White Hall to attend the Council,
but did not, and so home to dinner, and so out with
my wife, and Deb., and W. Hewer towards Cooper’s,
but I ’light and walked to Ducke Lane, and there
to the bookseller’s; at the Bible, whose moher
je have a mind to, but elle no erat dentro,
but I did there look upon and buy some books, and
made way for coming again to the man, which pleases
me. Thence to Reeves’s, and there saw some,
and bespoke a little perspective, and was mightily
pleased with seeing objects in a dark room. And
so to Cooper’s, and spent the afternoon with
them; and it will be an excellent picture. Thence
my people all by water to Deptford, to see Balty,
while I to buy my espinette,
[Espinette is the French
term for a small harpsichord, at that time
called in England a
spinet. It was named from a fancied resemblance
of its quill plectra
to spines or thorns.]
which I did now agree for, and did
at Haward’s meet with Mr. Thacker, and heard
him play on the harpsicon, so as I never heard man
before, I think. So home, it being almost night,
and there find in the garden Pelling, who hath brought
Tempest, Wallington, and Pelham, to sings and there
had most excellent musick late, in the dark, with great
pleasure. Made them drink and eat; and so with
much pleasure to bed, but above all with little Wallington.
This morning I was let blood, and did bleed about
fourteen ounces, towards curing my eyes.
14th. Up, and to my office, where
sat all the morning. At noon home to dinner,
and thence all the afternoon hard at the office, we
meeting about the Victualler’s new contract;
and so into the garden, my Lady Pen, Mrs. Turner and
her daughter, my wife and I, and there supped in the
dark and were merry, and so to bed. This day Bossc
finished his copy of my picture, which I confess I
do not admire, though my wife prefers him to Browne;
nor do I think it like. He do it for W. Hewer,
who hath my wife’s also, which I like less.
This afternoon my Lady Pickering come to see us:
I busy, saw her not. But how natural it is for
us to slight people out of power, and for people out
of power to stoop to see those that while in power
they contemned!
15th. Up, and all the morning
busy at the office to my great content, attending
to the settling of papers there that I may have the
more rest in winter for my eyes by how much I do the
more in the settling of all things in the summer by
daylight. At noon home to dinner, where is brought
home the espinette I bought the other day of Haward;
costs me L5. So to St. James’s, where did
our ordinary business with the Duke of York.
So to Unthanke’s to my wife, and with her and
Deb. to visit Mrs. Pierce, whom I do not now so much
affect, since she paints. But stayed here a while,
and understood from her how my Lady Duchesse
of Monmouth is still lame, and likely always to be
so, which is a sad chance for a young [lady] to get,
only by trying of tricks in dancing. So home,
and there Captain Deane come and spent the evening
with me, to draw some finishing lines on his fine
draught of “The Resolution,” the best ship,
by all report, in the world, and so to bed. Wonderful
hot all day and night, and this the first night that
I remember in my life that ever I could lie with only
a sheet and one rug. So much I am now stronger
than ever I remember myself, at least since before
I had the stone.
16th. Up, and to the office,
where Yeabsly and Lanyon come to town and to speak
with me about a matter wherein they are accused of
cheating the King before the Lords’ Commissioners
of Tangier, and I doubt it true, but I have no hand
in it, but will serve them what I can. All the
morning at the office, and at noon dined at home, and
then to the office again, where we met to finish the
draft of the Victualler’s contract, and so I
by water with my Lord Brouncker to Arundell House,
to the Royall Society, and there saw an experiment
of a dog’s being tied through the back, about
the spinal artery, and thereby made void of all motion;
and the artery being loosened again, the dog recovers.
Thence to Cooper’s, and saw his advance on my
wife’s picture, which will be indeed very fine.
So with her to the ’Change, to buy some things,
and here I first bought of the sempstress next my
bookseller’s, where the pretty young girl is,
that will be a great beauty. So home, and to supper
with my wife in the garden, it being these two days
excessively hot, and so to bed.
17th. Up, and fitted myself to
discourse before the Council about business of tickets.
So to White Hall, where waited on the Duke of York,
and then the Council about that business; and I did
discourse to their liking, only was too high to assert
that nothing could be invented to secure the King
more in the business of tickets than there is; which
the Duke of Buckingham did except against, and I could
have answered, but forbore; but all liked very well.
Thence home, and with my wife and Deb. to the King’s
House to see a play revived called The------, a sorry
mean play, that vexed us to sit in so much heat of
the weather to hear it. Thence to see Betty Michell
newly lain in, and after a little stay we took water
and to Spring Garden, and there walked, and supped,
and staid late, and with much pleasure, and to bed.
The weather excessive hot, so as we were forced to
lie in two beds, and I only with a sheet and rug,
which is colder than ever I remember I could bear.
18th. At the office all the morning.
At noon dined at home and Creed with me, who I do
really begin to hate, and do use him with some reservedness.
Here was also my old acquaintance, Will Swan, to see
me, who continues a factious fanatick still, and I
do use him civilly, in expectation that those fellows
may grow great again. Thence to the office, and
then with my wife to the ’Change and Unthanke’s,
after having been at Cooper’s and sat there
for her picture, which will be a noble picture, but
yet I think not so like as Hales’s is. So
home and to my office, and then to walk in the garden,
and home to supper and to bed. They say the King
of France is making a war again, in Flanders, with
the King of Spain; the King of Spain refusing to give
him all that he says was promised him in the treaty.
Creed told me this day how when the King was at my
Lord Cornwallis’s when he went last to Newmarket,
that being there on a Sunday, the Duke of Buckingham
did in the afternoon to please the King make a bawdy
sermon to him out of Canticles, and that my Lord Cornwallis
did endeavour to get the King a whore, and that must
be a pretty girl the daughter of the parson of the
place, but that she did get away, and leaped off of
some place and killed herself, which if true is very
sad.
19th (Lord’s day). Up,
and to my chamber, and there I up and down in the
house spent the morning getting things ready against
noon, when come Mr. Cooper, Hales, Harris, Mr. Butler,
that wrote Hudibras, and Mr. Cooper’s cozen
Jacke; and by and by comes Mr. Reeves and his
wife, whom I never saw before: and there we dined:
a good dinner, and company that pleased me mightily,
being all eminent men in their way. Spent all
the afternoon in talk and mirth, and in the evening
parted, and then my wife and I to walk in the garden,
and so home to supper, Mrs. Turner and husband and
daughter with us, and then to bed.
20th. Up, and to the office,
where Mrs. Daniel comes.... All the morning at
the office. Dined at home, then with Mr. Colvill
to the new Excise Office in Aldersgate Street, and
thence back to the Old Exchange, to see a very noble
fine lady I spied as I went through, in coming; and
there took occasion to buy some gloves, and admire
her, and a mighty fine fair lady indeed she was.
Thence idling all the afternoon to Duck Lane, and
there saw my bookseller’s moher, but get no ground
there yet; and here saw Mrs. Michell’s daughter
married newly to a bookseller, and she proves a comely
little grave woman. So to visit my Lord Crew,
who is very sick, to great danger, by an irisipulus; [Erysipelas.] the
first day I heard of it, and so home, and took occasion
to buy a rest for my espinette at the ironmonger’s
by Holborn Conduit, where the fair pretty woman is
that I have lately observed there, and she is pretty,
and je credo vain enough. Thence home and
busy till night, and so to bed.
21st. Up, and to St. James’s,
but lost labour, the Duke abroad. So home to
the office, where all the morning, and so to dinner,
and then all the afternoon at the office, only went
to my plate-maker’s, and there spent an hour
about contriving my little plates,
[This passage has been frequently quoted
as referring to Pepys’s. small bookplate,
with his initials S. P. and two anchors and ropes
entwined; but if looked at carefully with the
further reference on the 27th, it will be seen
that it merely describes the preparation of engravings
of the four dockyards.]
for my books of the King’s four
Yards. At night walked in the garden, and supped
and to bed, my eyes bad.
22nd. All the morning at the
office. Dined at home, and then to White Hall
with Symson the joyner, and after attending at the
Committee of the Navy about the old business of tickets,
where the only expedient they have found is to bind
the Commanders and Officers by oaths. The Duke
of York told me how the Duke of Buckingham, after the
Council the other day, did make mirth at my position,
about the sufficiency of present rules in the business
of tickets; and here I took occasion to desire a private
discourse with the Duke of York, and he granted it
to me on Friday next. So to shew Symson the King’s
new lodgings for his chimnies, which I desire to have
one built in that mode, and so I home, and with little
supper, to bed. This day a falling out between
my wife and Deb., about a hood lost, which vexed me.
23rd. Up, and all day long, but
at dinner, at the Office, at work, till I was almost
blind, which makes my heart sad.
24th. Up, and by water to St.
James’s, having, by the way, shewn Symson Sir
W. Coventry’s chimney-pieces, in order to the
making me one; and there, after the Duke of York was
ready, he called me to his closet; and there I did
long and largely show him the weakness of our Office,
and did give him advice to call us to account for
our duties, which he did take mighty well, and desired
me to draw up what I would have him write to the Office.
I did lay open the whole failings of the Office, and
how it was his duty to find them, and to find fault
with them, as Admiral, especially at this time, which
he agreed to, and seemed much to rely on what I said.
Thence to White Hall, and there waited to attend the
Council, but was not called in, and so home, and after
dinner back with Sir J. Minnes by coach, and there
attended, all of us, the Duke of York, and had the
hearing of Mr. Pett’s business, the Master-Shipwright
at Chatham, and I believe he will be put out.
But here Commissioner. Middleton did, among others,
shew his good-nature and easiness to the Masters-Attendants,
by mitigating their faults, so as, I believe, they
will come in again. So home, and to supper and
to bed, the Duke of York staying with us till almost
night.
25th. Up, and at the Office all
the morning; and at noon, after dinner, to Cooper’s,
it being a very rainy day, and there saw my wife’s
picture go on, which will be very fine indeed.
And so home again to my letters, and then to supper
and to bed.
26th (Lord’s day). Up,
and all the morning and after dinner, the afternoon
also, with W. Hewer in my closet, setting right my
Tangier Accounts, which I have let alone these six
months and more, but find them very right, and is
my great comfort. So in the evening to walk with
my wife, and to supper and to bed.
27th. Busy all the morning at
my office. At noon dined, and then I out of doors
to my bookseller in Duck Lane, but su moher not
at home, and it was pretty here to see a pretty woman
pass by with a little wanton look, and je did
sequi her round about the street from Duck Lane
to Newgate Market, and then elle did turn back, and
je did lose her. And so to see my Lord Crew,
whom I find up; and did wait on him; but his face sore,
but in hopes to do now very well again. Thence
to Cooper’s, where my wife’s picture almost
done, and mighty fine indeed. So over the water
with my wife, and Deb., and Mercer, to Spring-Garden,
and there eat and walked; and observe how rude some
of the young gallants of the town are become, to go
into people’s arbours where there are not men,
and almost force the women; which troubled me, to
see the confidence of the vice of the age: and
so we away by water, with much pleasure home.
This day my plate-maker comes with my four little
plates of the four Yards, cost me L5, which troubles
me, but yet do please me also.
28th. All the morning at the
office, and after dinner with my wife and Deb. to
the Duke of York’s playhouse, and there saw “The
Slighted Maid,” but a mean play; and thence
home, there being little pleasure now in a play, the
company being but little. Here we saw Gosnell,
who is become very homely, and sings meanly, I think,
to what I thought she did.
29th. Busy all the morning at
the office. So home to dinner, where Mercer,
and there comes Mr. Swan, my old acquaintance, and
dines with me, and tells me, for a certainty, that
Creed is to marry Betty Pickering, and that the thing
is concluded, which I wonder at, and am vexed for.
So he gone I with my wife and two girls to the King’s
house, and saw “The Mad Couple,” a mean
play altogether, and thence to Hyde Parke, where but
few coaches, and so to the New Exchange, and thence
by water home, with much pleasure, and then to sing
in the garden, and so home to bed, my eyes for these
four days being my trouble, and my heart thereby mighty
sad.
30th. Up, and by water to White
Hall. There met with Mr. May, who was giving
directions about making a close way for people to go
dry from the gate up into the House, to prevent their
going through the galleries; which will be very good.
I staid and talked with him about the state of the
King’s Offices in general, and how ill he is
served, and do still find him an excellent person,
and so back to the office. So close at my office
all the afternoon till evening, and then out with my
wife to the New Exchange, and so back again.
31st. Up, and at my office all
the morning. About noon with Mr. Ashburnham to
the new Excise Office, and there discoursed about
our business, and I made him admire my drawing a thing
presently in shorthand: but, God knows!
I have paid dear for it, in my eyes. Home and
to dinner, and then my wife and Deb. and I, with Sir
J. Minnes, to White Hall, she going hence to the New
Exchange, and the Duke of York not being in the way,
Sir J. Minnes and I to her and took them two to the
King’s house, to see the first day of Lacy’s
“Monsieur Ragou,” now new acted.
The King and Court all there, and mighty merry a
farce. Thence Sir J. Minnes giving us, like a
gentleman, his coach, hearing we had some business,
we to the Park, and so home. Little pleasure there,
there being little company, but mightily taken with
a little chariot that we saw in the street, and which
we are resolved to have ours like it. So home
to walk in the garden a little, and then to bed.
The month ends mighty sadly with me, my eyes being
now past all use almost; and I am mighty hot upon
trying the late printed experiment of paper tubes.
[An account of these tubulous spectacles
("An easy help for decayed sight”) is given
in “The Philosophical Transactions,” N, pp. 727,731 (Hutton’s Abridgment,
vol. i., . See Diary, August 12th
and 23rd, post.]