December 1st. Up, and to the
office, where sat all the morning, and at noon with
my people to dinner, and so to the office, very busy
till night, and then home and made my boy read to me
Wilkins’s Reall Character, which do please
me mightily, and so after supper to bed with great
pleasure and content with my wife. This day I
hear of poor Mr. Clerke, the solicitor, being dead,
of a cold, after being not above two days ill, which
troubles me mightily, poor man!
2nd. Up, and at the office all
the morning upon some accounts of Sir D. Gawden, and
at noon abroad with W. Hewer, thinking to have found
Mr. Wren at Captain Cox’s, to have spoke something
to him about doing a favour for Will’s uncle
Steventon, but missed him. And so back home and
abroad with my wife, the first time that ever I rode
in my own coach, which do make my heart rejoice, and
praise God, and pray him to bless it to me and continue
it. So she and I to the King’s playhouse,
and there sat to avoid seeing Knepp in a box above
where Mrs. Williams happened to be, and there saw
“The Usurper;” a pretty good play, in all
but what is designed to resemble Cromwell and Hugh
Peters, which is mighty silly. The play done,
we to White Hall; where my wife staid while I up to
the Duchesse’s and Queen’s side, to speak
with the Duke of York: and here saw all the ladies,
and heard the silly discourse of the King, with his
people about him, telling a story of my Lord Rochester’s
having of his clothes stole, while he was with a wench;
and his gold all gone, but his clothes found afterwards
stuffed into a feather bed by the wench that stole
them. I spoke with the Duke of York, just as he
was set down to supper with the King, about our sending
of victuals to Sir Thomas Allen’s fleet hence
to Cales [Cadiz] to meet him. And so back to my
wife in my coach, and so with great content and joy
home, where I made my boy to make an end of the Reall
Character, which I begun a great while ago, and do
please me infinitely, and indeed is a most worthy labour,
and I think mighty easy, though my eyes make me unable
to attempt any thing in it. To-day I hear that
Mr. Ackworth’s cause went for him at Guildhall,
against his accusers, which I am well enough pleased
with.
3rd. Up betimes, and by water
with W. Hewer to White Hall, and there to Mr. Wren,
who gives me but small hopes of the favour I hoped
for Mr. Steventon, Will’s uncle, of having leave,
being upon the point of death, to surrender his place,
which do trouble me, but I will do what I can.
So back again to the Office, Sir Jer. Smith with
me; who is a silly, prating, talking man; but he tells
me what he hears, that Holmes and Spragg now rule
all with the Duke of Buckingham, as to seabusiness,
and will be great men: but he do prophesy what
will be the fruit of it; so I do. So to the Office,
where we sat all the morning; and at noon home to
dinner, and then abroad again, with my wife, to the
Duke of York’s playhouse, and saw “The
Unfortunate Lovers;” a mean play, I think, but
some parts very good, and excellently acted. We
sat under the boxes, and saw the fine ladies; among
others, my Lady Kerneguy, a who is most devilishly
painted. And so home, it being mighty pleasure
to go alone with my poor wife, in a coach of our own,
to a play, and makes us appear mighty great, I think,
in the world; at least, greater than ever I could,
or my friends for me, have once expected; or, I think,
than ever any of my family ever yet lived, in my memory,
but my cozen Pepys in Salisbury Court. So to
the office, and thence home to supper and to bed.
4th. Up, and with W. Hewer by
water to White Hall, and there did wait as usual upon
the Duke of York, where, upon discoursing something
touching the Ticket-Office, which by letter the Board
did give the Duke of York their advice, to be put
upon Lord Brouncker, Sir J. Minnes did foolishly rise
up and complain of the Office, and his being made nothing
of; and this before Sir Thomas Littleton, who would
be glad of this difference among us, which did trouble
me mightily; and therefore I did forbear to say what
I otherwise would have thought fit for me to say on
this occasion, upon so impertinent a speech as this
doting fool made but, I say, I let it alone,
and contented myself that it went as I advised, as
to the Duke of York’s judgment, in the thing
disputed. And so thence away, my coach meeting
me there and carrying me to several places to do little
jobs, which is a mighty convenience, and so home, where
by invitation I find my aunt Wight, who looked over
all our house, and is mighty pleased with it, and
indeed it is now mighty handsome, and rich in furniture.
By and by comes my uncle, and then to dinner, where
a venison pasty and very merry, and after dinner I
carried my wife and her to Smithfield, where they
sit in the coach, while Mr. Pickering, who meets me
there, and I, and W. Hewer, and a friend of his, a
jockey, did go about to see several pairs of horses,
for my coach; but it was late, and we agreed on none,
but left it to another time: but here I do see
instances of a piece of craft and cunning that I never
dreamed of, concerning the buying and choosing of
horses. So Mr. Pickering, to whom I am much beholden
for his kindness herein, and I parted; and I with my
people home, where I left them, and I to the office,
to meet about some business of Sir W. Warren’s
accounts, where I vexed to see how ill all the Comptroller’s
business is likely to go on, so long as ever Sir J.
Minnes lives; and so troubled I was, that I thought
it a good occasion for me to give my thoughts of it
in writing, and therefore wrote a letter at the Board,
by the help of a tube, to Lord Brouncker, and did
give it him, which I kept a copy of, and it may be
of use to me hereafter to shew, in this matter.
This being done, I home to my aunt, who supped with
us, and my uncle also: and a good-humoured woman
she is, so that I think we shall keep her acquaintance;
but mighty proud she is of her wedding-ring, being
lately set with diamonds; cost her about L12:
and I did commend it mightily to her, but do not think
it very suitable for one of our quality. After
supper they home, and we to bed.
5th. Up, after a little talk
with my wife, which troubled me, she being ever since
our late difference mighty watchful of sleep and dreams,
and will not be persuaded but I do dream of Deb., and
do tell me that I speak in my dreams and that this
night I did cry, Huzzy, and it must be she, and now
and then I start otherwise than I used to do, she says,
which I know not, for I do not know that I dream of
her more than usual, though I cannot deny that my
thoughts waking do run now and then against my will
and judgment upon her, for that only is wanting to
undo me, being now in every other thing as to my mind
most happy, and may still be so but for my own fault,
if I be catched loving any body but my wife again.
So up and to the office, and at noon to dinner, and
thence to office, where late, mighty busy, and despatching
much business, settling papers in my own office, and
so home to supper, and to bed. No news stirring,
but that my Lord of Ormond is likely to go to Ireland
again, which do shew that the Duke of Buckingham do
not rule all so absolutely; and that, however, we
shall speedily have more changes in the Navy:
and it is certain that the Nonconformists do now preach
openly in houses, in many places, and among others
the house that was heretofore Sir G. Carteret’s,
in Leadenhall Streete, and have ready access to the
King. And now the great dispute is, whether this
Parliament or another; and my great design, if I continue
in the Navy, is to get myself to be a Parliament-man.
6th (Lord’s day). Up, and
with my wife to church; which pleases me mightily,
I being full of fear that she would never go to church
again, after she had declared to me that she was a
Roman Catholique. But though I do verily
think she fears God, and is truly and sincerely righteous,
yet I do see she is not so strictly so a Catholique
as not to go to church with me, which pleases me mightily.
Here Mills made a lazy sermon, upon Moses’s
meeknesse, and so home, and my wife and I alone to
dinner, and then she to read a little book concerning
speech in general, a translation late out of French;
a most excellent piece as ever I read, proving a soul
in man, and all the ways and secrets by which nature
teaches speech in man, which do please me most infinitely
to read. By and by my wife to church, and I to
my Office to complete my Journall for the last three
days, and so home to my chamber to settle some papers,
and so to spend the evening with my wife and W. Hewer
talking over the business of the Office, and particularly
my own Office, how I will make it, and it will become,
in a little time, an Office of ease, and not slavery,
as it hath for so many years been. So to supper,
and to bed.
7th. Up by candlelight, the first
time I have done so this winter, but I had lost my
labour so often to visit Sir W. Coventry, and not visited
him so long, that I was resolved to get time enough,
and so up, and with W. Hewer, it being the first frosty
day we have had this winter, did walk it very well
to W. Coventry’s, and there alone with him an
hour talking of the Navy, which he pities, but says
he hath no more mind to be found meddling with the
Navy, lest it should do it hurt, as well as him, to
be found to meddle with it. So to talk of general
things: and telling him that, with all these
doings, he, I thanked God, stood yet; he told me,
Yes, but that he thought his continuing in, did arise
from his enemies my Lord of Buckingham and Arlington’s
seeing that he cared so little if he was out; and
he do protest to me that he is as weary of the Treasury,
as ever he was of the Navy. He tells me that he
do believe that their heat is over almost, as to the
Navy, there being now none left of the old stock but
my Lord Brouncker, J. Minnes, who is ready to leave
the world, and myself. But he tells me that he
do foresee very great wants and great disorders by
reason thereof; insomuch, as he is represented to
the King by his enemies as a melancholy man, and one
that is still prophesying ill events, so as the King
called him Visionaire, which being told him, he said
he answered the party, that, whatever he foresaw,
he was not afeard as to himself of any thing, nor particularly
of my Lord Arlington, so much as the Duke of Buckingham
hath been, nor of the Duke of Buckingham, so much
as my Lord Arlington at this time is. But he
tells me that he hath been always looked upon as a
melancholy man; whereas, others that would please
the King do make him believe that all is safe:
and so he hath heard my Lord Chancellor openly say
to the King, that he was now a glorious prince, and
in a glorious condition, because of some one accident
that hath happened, or some one rub that hath been
removed; “when,” says W. Coventry, “they
reckoned their one good meal, without considering
that there was nothing left in the cup board for to-morrow.”
After this and other discourse of this kind, I away,
and walked to my Lord Sandwich’s, and walked
with him to White Hall, and took a quarter of an hour’s
walk in the garden with him, which I had not done
for so much time with him since his coming into England;
and talking of his own condition, and particularly
of the world’s talk of his going to Tangier.
I find, if his conditions can be made profitable and
safe as to money, he would go, but not else; but,
however, will seem not averse to it, because of facilitating
his other accounts now depending, which he finds hard
to get through, but yet hath some hopes, the King,
he says, speaking very kindly to him. Thence to
a Committee of Tangier, and so with W. Hewer to Westminster
to Sir R. Longs office, and so to the Temple, but
did nothing, the Auditor not being within, and so
home to dinner, and after dinner out again with my
wife to the Temple, and up and down to do a little
business, and back again, and so to my office, and
did a little business, and so home, and W. Hewer with
me, to read and talk, and so to supper, and then to
bed in mighty good humour. This afternoon, passing
through Queen’s Street, I saw pass by our coach
on foot Deb., which, God forgive me, did put me into
some new thoughts of her, and for her, but durst not
shew them, and I think my wife did not see her, but
I did get my thoughts free of her soon as I could.
8th. Up, and Sir H. Cholmly betimes
with me, about some accounts and moneys due to him:
and he gone, I to the Office, where sat all the morning;
and here, among other things, breaks out the storm
W. Hewer and I have long expected from the Surveyor, [Colonel
Middleton.] about W. Hewer’s conspiring
to get a contract, to the burdening of the stores
with kerseys and cottons, of which he hath often complained,
and lately more than ever; and now he did it by a
most scandalous letter to the Board, reflecting on
my Office: and, by discourse, it fell to such
high words between him and me, as can hardly ever
be forgot; I declaring I would believe W. Hewer as
soon as him, and laying the fault, if there be any,
upon himself; he, on the other hand, vilifying of my
word and W. Hewer’s, calling him knave, and
that if he were his clerk, he should lose his ears.
At last, I closed the business for this morning with
making the thing ridiculous, as it is, and he swearing
that the King should have right in it, or he would
lose his place. The Office was cleared of all
but ourselves and W. Hewer; but, however, the world
did by the beginning see what it meant, and it will,
I believe, come to high terms between us, which I
am sorry for, to have any blemish laid upon me or
mine, at this time, though never so unduly, for fear
of giving occasion to my real discredit: and
therefore I was not only all the rest of the morning
vexed, but so went home to dinner, where my wife tells
me of my Lord Orrery’s new play “Tryphon,”
at the Duke of York’s house, which, however,
I would see, and therefore put a bit of meat in our
mouths, and went thither; where, with much ado, at
half-past one, we got into a blind hole in the 18d.
place, above stairs, where we could not hear well,
but the house infinite full, but the prologue most
silly, and the play, though admirable, yet no pleasure
almost in it, because just the very same design, and
words, and sense, and plot, as every one of his plays
have, any one of which alone would be held admirable,
whereas so many of the same design and fancy do but
dull one another; and this, I perceive, is the sense
of every body else, as well as myself, who therefore
showed but little pleasure in it. So home, mighty
hot, and my mind mightily out of order, so as I could
not eat any supper, or sleep almost all night, though
I spent till twelve at night with W. Hewer to consider
of our business: and we find it not only most
free from any blame of our side, but so horrid scandalous
on the other, to make so groundless a complaint, and
one so shameful to him, that it could not but let
me see that there is no need of my being troubled;
but such is the weakness of my nature, that I could
not help it, which vexes me, showing me how unable
I am to live with difficulties.
9th. Up, and to the Office, but
did little there, my mind being still uneasy, though
more and more satisfied that there is no occasion for
it; but abroad with my wife to the Temple, where I
met with Auditor Wood’s clerk, and did some
business with him, and so to see Mr. Spong, and found
him out by Southampton Market, and there carried my
wife, and up to his chamber, a bye place, but with
a good prospect of the fields; and there I had most
infinite pleasure, not only with his ingenuity in
general, but in particular with his shewing me the
use of the Parallelogram, by which he drew in a quarter
of an hour before me, in little, from a great, a most
neat map of England that is, all the outlines,
which gives me infinite pleasure, and foresight of
pleasure, I shall have with it; and therefore desire
to have that which I have bespoke, made. Many
other pretty things he showed us, and did give me a
glass bubble, to try the strength of liquors with.
[This seems to refer to the first form
of the Hon. Robert Boyle’s hydrometer,
which he described in a paper in the “Philosophical
Transactions” for June, 1675, under the
title of a “New Essay instrument.”
In this paper the author refers to a glass instrument
exhibited many years before by himself, “consisting
of a bubble furnished with a long and slender
stem, which was to be put into several liquors
to compare and estimate their specific gravity.”
Boyle describes this glass bubble in a paper in
“Philosophical Transactions,” vol.
iv., N, , 1669, entitled, “The Weights
of Water in Water with ordinary Balances and Weights.”]
This done, and having spent 6d. in
ale in the coach, at the door of the Bull Inn, with
the innocent master of the house, a Yorkshireman, for
his letting us go through his house, we away to Hercules
Pillars, and there eat a bit of meat: and so,
with all speed, back to the Duke of York’s house,
where mighty full again; but we come time enough to
have a good place in the pit, and did hear this new
play again, where, though I better understood it than
before, yet my sense of it and pleasure was just the
same as yesterday, and no more, nor any body else’s
about us. So took our coach and home, having
now little pleasure to look about me to see the fine
faces, for fear of displeasing my wife, whom I take
great comfort now, more than ever, in pleasing; and
it is a real joy to me. So home, and to my Office,
where spent an hour or two; and so home to my wife,
to supper and talk, and so to bed.
10th. Up, and to the Office,
where busy all the morning: Middleton not there,
so no words or looks of him. At noon, home to
dinner; and so to the Office, and there all the afternoon
busy; and at night W. Hewer home with me; and we think
we have got matter enough to make Middleton appear
a coxcomb. But it troubled me to have Sir W. Warren
meet me at night, going out of the Office home, and
tell me that Middleton do intend to complain to the
Duke of York: but, upon consideration of the business,
I did go to bed, satisfied that it was best for me
that he should; and so my trouble was over, and to
bed, and slept well.
11th. Up, and with W. Hewer by
water to Somerset House; and there I to my Lord Brouncker,
before he went forth to the Duke of York, and there
told him my confidence that I should make Middleton
appear a fool, and that it was, I thought, best for
me to complain of the wrong he hath done; but brought
it about, that my Lord desired me I would forbear,
and promised that he would prevent Middleton till
I had given in my answer to the Board, which I desired:
and so away to White Hall, and there did our usual
attendance and no word spoke before the Duke of York
by Middleton at all; at which I was glad to my heart,
because by this means I have time to draw up my answer
to my mind. So with W. Hewer by coach to Smithfield,
but met not Mr. Dickering, he being not come, and so
he [Will] and I to a cook’s shop, in Aldersgate
Street; and dined well for 19 1/2 d., upon roast beef,
pleasing ourselves with the infinite strength we have
to prove Middleton a coxcomb; and so, having dined,
we back to Smithfield, and there met Dickering, and
up and down all the afternoon about horses, and did
see the knaveries and tricks of jockeys. Here
I met W. Joyce, who troubled me with his impertinencies
a great while, and the like Mr. Knepp, who, it seems,
is a kind of a jockey, and would fain have been doing
something for me, but I avoided him, and the more
for fear of being troubled thereby with his wife, whom
I desire but dare not see, for my vow to my wife.
At last went away and did nothing, only concluded
upon giving L50 for a fine pair of black horses we
saw this day se’nnight; and so set Mr. Dickering
down near his house, whom I am much beholden to, for
his care herein, and he hath admirable skill, I perceive,
in this business, and so home, and spent the evening
talking and merry, my mind at good ease, and so to
bed.
12th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, and at noon home to dinner,
and so the like mighty busy, late, all the afternoon,
that I might be ready to go to the drawing up of my
answer to Middleton to-morrow, and therefore home
to supper and to bed. I hear this day that there
is fallen down a new house, not quite finished, in
Lumbard Street, and that there have been several so,
they making use of bad mortar and bricks; but no hurt
yet, as God hath ordered it. This day was brought
home my pair of black coach-horses, the first I ever
was master of. They cost me L50, and are a fine
pair.
13th (Lord’s day). Up,
and with W. Hewer to the Office, where all the morning,
and then home to a little dinner, and presently to
it again all alone till twelve at night, drawing up
my answer to Middleton, which I think I shall do to
very good purpose at least, I satisfy myself
therein; and so to bed, weary with walking in my Office
dictating to him [Hewer]. In the night my wife
very ill, vomited, but was well again by and by.
14th. Up, and by water to White
Hall to a Committee of Tangier, where, among other
things, a silly account of a falling out between Norwood,
at Tangier, and Mr. Bland, the mayor, who is fled to
Cales [Cadiz]. His complaint is ill-worded, and
the other’s defence the most ridiculous that
ever I saw; and so everybody else that was there, thought
it; but never did I see so great an instance of the
use of grammar, and knowledge how to tell a man’s
tale as this day, Bland having spoiled his business
by ill-telling it, who had work to have made himself
notorious by his mastering Norwood, his enemy, if
he had known how to have used it. Thence calling
Smith, the Auditor’s clerk at the Temple, I by
the Exchange home, and there looked over my Tangier
accounts with him, and so to dinner, and then set
him down again by a hackney, my coachman being this
day about breaking of my horses to the coach, they
having never yet drawn. Left my wife at Unthank’s,
and I to the Treasury, where we waited on the Lords
Commissioners about Sir D. Gawden’s matters,
and so took her up again at night, and home to the
office, and so home with W. Hewer, and to talk about
our quarrel with Middleton, and so to supper and to
bed. This day I hear, and am glad, that the King
hath prorogued the Parliament to October next; and,
among other reasons, it will give me time to go to
France, I hope.
15th. Up, and to the Office,
where sat all the morning, and the new Treasurers
there; and, for my life, I cannot keep Sir J. Minnes
and others of the Board from shewing our weakness,
to the dishonour of the Board, though I am not concerned
but it do vex me to the heart to have it before these
people, that would be glad to find out all our weaknesses.
At noon Mrs. Mary Batelier with us, and so, after dinner,
I with W. Hewer all the afternoon till night beginning
to draw up our answer to Middleton, and it proves
troublesome, because I have so much in my head at
a time to say, but I must go through with it.
So at night to supper and to bed.
16th. I did the like all day
long, only a little at dinner, and so to work again,
and were at it till 2 in the morning, and so W. Hewer,
who was with me all day, home to his lodging, and
I to bed, after we had finished it.
17th. Up, and set my man Gibson
and Mr. Fists to work to write it over fair, while
I all the morning at the office sitting. At noon
home to them, and all the afternoon looking over them
and examining with W. Hewer, and so about to at night
I to bed, leaving them to finish the writing it fair,
which they did by sitting up most of the night, and
so home to bed.
18th. All the morning at the
office about Sir W. Warren’s accounts, my mind
full of my business, having before we met gone to Lord
Brouncker, and got him to read over my paper, who
owns most absolute content in it, and the advantage
I have in it, and the folly of the Surveyor. At
noon home to dinner; and then again to the office
a while, and so by hackney coach to Brooke House,
and there spoke with Colonel Thomson, I by order carrying
them [the Commissioners of Accounts] our Contract-books,
from the beginning to the end of the late war.
I found him finding of errors in a ship’s book,
where he shewed me many, which must end in the ruin,
I doubt, of the Controller, who found them not out
in the pay of the ship, or the whole Office.
But I took little notice of them to concern myself
in them, but so leaving my books I home to the Office,
where the office met, and after some other business
done, fell to mine, which the Surveyor begun to be
a little brisk at the beginning; but when I come to
the point to touch him, which I had all the advantages
in the world to do, he become as calm as a lamb, and
owned, as the whole Board did, their satisfaction,
and cried excuse: and so all made friends; and
their acknowledgment put into writing, and delivered
into Sir J. Minnes’s hand, to be kept there
for the use of the Board, or me, when I shall call
for it; they desiring it might be so, that I might
not make use of it to the prejudice of the Surveyor,
whom I had an advantage over, by his extraordinary
folly in this matter. But, besides this, I have
no small advantage got by this business, as I have
put several things into my letter which I should otherwise
have wanted an opportunity of saying, which pleases
me mightily. So Middleton desiring to be friends,
I forgave him; and all mighty quiet, and fell to talk
of other stories, and there staid, all of us, till
nine or ten at night, more than ever we did in our
lives before, together. And so home, where I have
a new fight to fight with my wife, who is under new
trouble by some news she hath heard of Deb.’s
being mighty fine, and gives out that she has a friend
that gives her money, and this my wife believes to
be me, and, poor wretch! I cannot blame her,
and therefore she run into mighty extremes; but I
did pacify all, and were mighty good friends, and to
bed, and I hope it will be our last struggle from
this business, for I am resolved never to give any
new occasion, and great peace I find in my mind by
it. So to supper, she and I to bed.
19th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, and at noon, eating very little
dinner, my wife and I by hackney to the King’s
playhouse, and there, the pit being full, satin a
box above, and saw “Catiline’s Conspiracy,”
yesterday being the first day: a play of much
good sense and words to read, but that do appear the
worst upon the stage, I mean, the least diverting,
that ever I saw any, though most fine in clothes;
and a fine scene of the Senate, and of a fight, that
ever I saw in my life. But the play is only to
be read, and therefore home, with no pleasure at all,
but only in sitting next to Betty Hall, that did belong
to this house, and was Sir Philip Howard’s mistress;
a mighty pretty wench, though my wife will not think
so; and I dare neither commend, nor be seen to look
upon her, or any other now, for fear of offending her.
So, our own coach coming for us, home, and to end letters,
and so home, my wife to read to me out of “The
Siege of Rhodes,” and so to supper, and to bed.
20th (Lord’s day). Up,
and with my wife to church, and then home, and there
found W. Joyce come to dine with me, as troublesome
a talking coxcombe as ever he was, and yet once in
a year I like him well enough. In the afternoon
my wife and W. Hewer and I to White Hall, where they
set me down and staid till I had been with the Duke
of York, with the rest of us of the Office, and did
a little business, and then the Duke of York in good
humour did fall to tell us many fine stories of the
wars in Flanders, and how the Spaniards are the [best]
disciplined foot in the world; will refuse no extraordinary
service if commanded, but scorn to be paid for it,
as in other countries, though at the same time they
will beg in the streets: not a soldier will carry
you a cloak-bag for money for the world, though he
will beg a penny, and will do the thing, if commanded
by his Commander. That, in the citadel of Antwerp,
a soldier hath not a liberty of begging till he hath
served three years. They will cry out against
their King and Commanders and Generals, none like
them in the world, and yet will not hear a stranger
say a word of them but he will cut his throat.
That, upon a time, some of the Commanders of their
army exclaiming against their Generals, and particularly
the Marquis de Caranen, the Confessor of the Marquis
coming by and hearing them, he stops and gravely tells
them that the three great trades of the world are,
the lawyers, who govern the world; the churchmen,
who enjoy the world; and a sort of fools whom they
call souldiers, who make it their work to defend the
world. He told us, too, that Turenne being now
become a Catholique, he is likely to get over
the head of Colbert, their interests being contrary;
the latter to promote trade
[This reminds us of
the famous reply, ‘Laissez nous affaire’,
made
to Colbert by the French
merchants, whose interests he thought to
promote by laws and
regulations. B.]
and the sea, which, says the Duke
of York, is that that we have most cause to fear;
and Turenne to employ the King and his forces by land,
to encrease his conquests. Thence to the coach
to my wife, and so home, and there with W. Hewer to
my office and to do some business, and so set down
my Journall for four or five days, and then home to
supper and read a little, and to bed. W. Hewer
tells me to-day that he hears that the King of France
hath declared in print, that he do intend this next
summer to forbid his Commanders to strike [Strike
topsails] to us, but that both we and the
Dutch shall strike to him; and that he hath made his
captains swear it already, that they will observe it:
which is a great thing if he do it, as I know nothing
to hinder him.
21st. My own coach carrying me
and my boy Tom, who goes with me in the room of W.
Hewer, who could not, and I dare not go alone, to the
Temple, and there set me down, the first time my fine
horses ever carried me, and I am mighty proud of them,
and there took a hackney and to White Hall, where
a Committee of Tangier, but little to do, and so away
home, calling at the Exchange and buying several little
things, and so home, and there dined with my wife
and people and then she, and W. Hewer, and I by appointment
out with our coach, but the old horses, not daring
yet to use the others too much, but only to enter
them, and to the Temple, there to call Talbot Pepys,
and took him up, and first went into Holborne, and
there saw the woman that is to be seen with a beard.
She is a little plain woman, a Dane: her name,
Ursula Dyan; about forty years old; her voice like
a little girl’s; with a beard as much as any
man I ever saw, black almost, and grizly; they offered
to shew my wife further satisfaction if she desired
it, refusing it to men that desired it there, but
there is no doubt but by her voice she is a woman;
it begun to grow at about seven years old, and was
shaved not above seven months ago, and is now so big
as any man’s almost that ever I saw; I say,
bushy and thick. It was a strange sight to me,
I confess, and what pleased me mightily. Thence
to the Duke’s playhouse, and saw “Macbeth.”
The King and Court there; and we sat just under them
and my Lady Castlemayne, and close to the woman that
comes into the pit, a kind of a loose gossip, that
pretends to be like her, and is so, something.
And my wife, by my troth, appeared, I think, as pretty
as any of them; I never thought so much before; and
so did Talbot and W. Hewer, as they said, I heard,
to one another. The King and Duke of York minded
me, and smiled upon me, at the handsome woman near
me but it vexed me to see Moll Davis, in the box over
the King’s and my Lady Castlemayne’s head,
look down upon the King, and he up to her; and so
did my Lady Castlemayne once, to see who it was; but
when she saw her, she looked like fire; which troubled
me. The play done, took leave of Talbot, who goes
into the country this Christmas, and so we home, and
there I to work at the office late, and so home to
supper and to bed.
22nd. At the office all the morning,
and at noon to the ’Change, thinking to meet
with Langford about my father’s house in Fleet
Streete, but I come too late, and so home to dinner,
and all the afternoon at the office busy, and at night
home to supper and talk, and with mighty content with
my wife, and so to bed.
23rd. Met at the Office all the
morning, and at noon to the ’Change, and there
met with Langford and Mr. Franke, the landlord of my
father’s house in Fleet Streete, and are come
to an arbitration what my father shall give him to
be freed of his lease and building the house again.
Walked up and down the ’Change, and among others
discoursed with Sir John Bankes, who thinks this prorogation
will please all but the Parliament itself, which will,
if ever they meet, be vexed at Buckingham, who yet
governs all. He says the Nonconformists are glad
of it, and, he believes, will get the upperhand in
a little time, for the King must trust to them or
nobody; and he thinks the King will be forced to it.
He says that Sir D. Gawden is mightily troubled at
Pen’s being put upon him, by the Duke of York,
and that he believes he will get clear of it, which,
though it will trouble me to have Pen still at the
Office, yet I shall think D. Gawden do well in it,
and what I would advise him to, because I love him.
So home to dinner, and then with my wife alone abroad,
with our new horses, the beautifullest almost that
ever I saw, and the first time they ever carried her,
and me but once; but we are mighty proud of them.
To her tailor’s, and so to the ’Change,
and laid out three or four pounds in lace, for her
and me; and so home, and there I up to my Lord Brouncker,
at his lodgings, and sat with him an hour, on purpose
to talk over the wretched state of this Office at
present, according to the present hands it is made
up of; wherein he do fully concur with me, and that
it is our part not only to prepare for defending it
and ourselves, against the consequences of it, but
to take the best ways we can, to make it known to
the Duke of York; for, till Sir J. Minnes be removed,
and a sufficient man brought into W. Pen’s place,
when he is gone, it is impossible for this Office ever
to support itself. So home, and to supper and
to bed.
24th. A cold day. Up, and
to the Office, where all the morning alone at the
Office, nobody meeting, being the eve of Christmas.
At noon home to dinner, and then to the Office busy,
all the afternoon, and at night home to supper, and
it being now very cold, and in hopes of a frost, I
begin this night to put on a waistcoat, it being the
first winter in my whole memory that ever I staid
till this day before I did so. So to bed in mighty
good humour with my wife, but sad, in one thing, and
that is for my poor eyes.
25th (Christmas-day). Up, and
continued on my waistcoat, the first day this winter,
and I to church, where Alderman Backewell, coming in
late, I beckoned to his lady to come up to us, who
did, with another lady; and after sermon, I led her
down through the church to her husband and coach,
a noble, fine woman, and a good one, and one my wife
shall be acquainted with. So home, and to dinner
alone with my wife, who, poor wretch! sat undressed
all day, till ten at night, altering and lacing of
a noble petticoat: while I by her, making the
boy read to me the Life of Julius Cæsar, and Des
Cartes’ book of Musick
["Musicae Compendium.”
By René Des Cartes, Amsterdam,
1617; rendered into English, London, 1653, 4to.
The translator, whose name did not appear on
the title, was William, Viscount Brouncker, Pepys’s
colleague, who proved his knowledge of music by the
performance.]
the latter of which I
understand not, nor think he did well that writ it,
though a most learned man. Then, after supper,
I made the boy play upon his lute, which I have not
done twice before since he come to me; and so, my
mind in mighty content, we to bed.
26th. Lay long with pleasure,
prating with my wife, and then up, and I a little
to the Office, and my head busy setting some papers
and accounts to rights, which being long neglected
because of my eyes will take me up much time and care
to do, but it must be done. So home at noon to
dinner, and then abroad with my wife to a play, at
the Duke of York’s house, the house full of
ordinary citizens. The play was “Women
Pleased,” which we had never seen before; and,
though but indifferent, yet there is a good design
for a good play. So home, and there to talk,
and my wife to read to me, and so to bed.
27th (Lord’s day). Walked
to White Hall and there saw the King at chapel; but
staid not to hear anything, but went to walk in the
Park, with W. Hewer, who was with me; and there, among
others, met with Sir G. Downing, and walked with him
an hour, talking of business, and how the late war
was managed, there being nobody to take care of it,
and telling how, when he was in Holland, what he offered
the King to do, if he might have power, and they would
give him power, and then, upon the least word, perhaps
of a woman, to the King, he was contradicted again,
and particularly to the loss of all that we lost in
Guinny. He told me that he had so good spies,
that he hath had the keys taken out of De Witt’s
[The celebrated John de Witt, Grand
Pensionary of Holland, who, a few years afterwards,
was massacred, with his brother Cornelius, by
the Dutch mob, enraged at their opposition to the elevation
of William of Orange to the Stadtholdership,
when the States were overrun by the French army,
and the Dutch fleets beaten at sea by the English.
The murder of the De Witts forms one of the main
incidents of Alexandre Dumas’s “Black
Tulip.”]
pocket when he was a-bed, and his
closet opened, and papers brought to him, and left
in his hands for an hour, and carried back and laid
in the place again, and keys put into his pocket again.
He says that he hath always had their most private
debates, that have been but between two or three of
the chief of them, brought to him in an hour after,
and an hour after that, hath sent word thereof to
the King, but nobody here regarded them. But
he tells me the sad news, that he is out of all expectations
that ever the debts of the Navy will be paid, if the
Parliament do not enable the King to do it by money;
all they can hope for to do out of the King’s
revenue being but to keep our wheels a-going on present
services, and, if they can, to cut off the growing
interest: which is a sad story, and grieves me
to the heart. So home, my coach coming for me,
and there find Balty and Mr. How, who dined with me;
and there my wife and I fell out a little about the
foulness of the linen of the table, but were friends
presently, but she cried, poor heart! which I was
troubled for, though I did not give her one hard word.
Dinner done, she to church, and W. How and I all the
afternoon talking together about my Lord Sandwich’s
suffering his business of the prizes to be managed
by Sir R. Cuttance, who is so deep in the business,
more than my Lord knows of, and such a loggerhead,
and under such prejudice, that he will, we doubt,
do my Lord much wrong. In the evening, he gone,
my wife to read to me and talk, and spent the evening
with much pleasure, and so to supper and to bed.
28th. Up, called up by drums
and trumpets; these things and boxes [??] having cost
me much money this Christmas already, and will do more.
My wife down by water to see her mother, and I with
W. Hewer all day together in my closet making some
advance in the settling of my accounts, which have
been so long unevened that it troubles me how to set
them right, having not the use of my eyes to help me.
My wife at night home, and tells me how much her mother
prays for me and is troubled for my eyes; and I am
glad to have friendship with them, and believe they
are truly glad to see their daughter come to live so
well as she do. So spent the night in talking,
and so to supper and to bed.
29th. Up, and at the Office all
the morning, and at noon to dinner, and there, by
a pleasant mistake, find my uncle and aunt Wight, and
three more of their company, come to dine with me
to-day, thinking that they had been invited, which
they were not; but yet we did give them a pretty good
dinner, and mighty merry at the mistake. They
sat most of the afternoon with us, and then parted,
and my wife and I out, thinking to have gone to a
play, but it was too far begun, and so to the ’Change,
and there she and I bought several things, and so home,
with much pleasure talking, and then to reading, and
so to supper and to bed.
30th. Up, and vexed a little
to be forced to pay 40s. for a glass of my coach,
which was broke the other day, nobody knows how, within
the door, while it was down; but I do doubt that I
did break it myself with my knees. After dinner,
my wife and I to the Duke’s playhouse, and there
did see King Harry the Eighth; and was mightily pleased,
better than I ever expected, with the history and
shows of it. We happened to sit by Mr. Andrews,
our neighbour, and his wife, who talked so fondly to
his little boy. Thence my wife and I to the ’Change;
but, in going, our neere horse did fling himself,
kicking of the coachbox over the pole; and a great
deal of trouble it was to get him right again, and
we forced to ’light, and in great fear of spoiling
the horse, but there was no hurt. So to the ’Change,
and then home, and there spent the evening talking,
and so to supper and to bed.
31st. Up, and at the Office all
the morning. At noon Capt. Ferrers and Mr.
Sheres
[Henry Sheres accompanied Lord Sandwich
in his embassy to Spain, and returned to England
in September, 1667, bearing letters from the ambassador
(see September 8th, 22nd, 27th). He was an officer
in the Ordnance, and served under Lord Dartmouth
at the demolition of the Mole at Tangier in 1683.
He was knighted about 1684. He translated
Polybius (2 vols. 8vo., 1693), and also some of
the “Dialogues” of Lucian, included
in the translation published in 1711 (3 vols.
8vo.). Pepys bequeathed him a ring, and he died
about 1713.]
come to me to dinner, who did, and
pretty pleased with their talk of Spayne; but my wife
did not come down, I suppose because she would not,
Captain Ferrers being there, to oblige me by it.
They gone, after dinner, I to the office, and then
in the evening home, being the last day of the year,
to endeavour to pay all bills and servants’ wages,
&c., which I did almost to L5 that I know that I owe
in the world, but to the publique; and so with great
pleasure to supper and to bed, and, blessed be God!
the year ends, after some late very great sorrow with
my wife by my folly, yet ends, I say, with great mutual
peace and content, and likely to last so by my care,
who am resolved to enjoy the sweet of it, which I
now possess, by never giving her like cause of trouble.
My greatest trouble is now from the backwardness of
my accounts, which I have not seen the bottom of now
near these two years, so that I know not in what condition
I am in the world, but by the grace of God, as far
as my eyes will give me leave, I will do it.