January 1st. Up, and presented
from Captain Beckford with a noble silver warming-pan,
which I am doubtful whether to take or no. Up,
and with W. Hewer to the New Exchange, and then he
and I to the cabinet-shops, to look out, and did agree,
for a cabinet to give my wife for a New-year’s
gift; and I did buy one cost me L11, which is very
pretty, of walnutt-tree, and will come home to-morrow.
So back to the old Exchange, and there met my uncle
Wight; and there walked, and met with the Houblons,
and talked with them gentlemen whom I honour
mightily: and so to my uncle’s, and met
my wife; and there, with W. Hewer, we dined with our
family, and had a very good dinner, and pretty merry
and after dinner, my wife and I with our coach to
the King’s playhouse, and there in a box saw
“The Mayden Queene.” Knepp looked
upon us, but I durst not shew her any countenance;
and, as well as I could carry myself, I found my wife
uneasy there, poor wretch! therefore, I shall avoid
that house as much as I can. So back to my aunt’s,
and there supped and talked, and staid pretty late,
it being dry and moonshine, and so walked home, and
to bed in very good humour.
2nd. Up, at the office all the
morning, and at noon home to dinner, where I find
my cabinet come home, and paid for it, and it pleases
me and my wife well. So after dinner busy late
at the office, and so home and to bed.
3rd (Lord’s day). Up, and
busy all the morning, getting rooms and dinner ready
for my guests, which were my uncle and aunt Wight,
and two of their cousins, and an old woman, and Mr.
Mills and his wife; and a good dinner, and all our
plate out, and mighty fine and merry, only I a little
vexed at burning a new table-cloth myself, with one
of my trencher-salts. Dinner done, I out with
W. Hewer and Mr. Spong, who by accident come to dine
with me, and good talk with him: to White Hall
by coach, and there left him, and I with my Lord Brouncker
to attend the Duke of York, and then up and down the
House till the evening, hearing how the King do intend
this frosty weather, it being this day the first,
and very hard frost, that hath come this year, and
very cold it is. So home; and to supper and read;
and there my wife and I treating about coming to an
allowance to my wife for clothes; and there I, out
of my natural backwardness, did hang off, which vexed
her, and did occasion some discontented talk in bed,
when we went to bed; and also in the morning, but
I did recover all in the morning.
4th. Lay long, talking with my
wife, and did of my own accord come to an allowance
of her of L30 a-year for all expences, clothes and
everything, which she was mightily pleased with, it
being more than ever she asked or expected, and so
rose, with much content, and up with W. Hewer to White
Hall, there to speak with Mr. Wren, which I did about
several things of the office entered in my memorandum
books, and so about noon, going homeward with W. Hewer,
he and I went in and saw the great tall woman that
is to be seen, who is but twenty-one years old, and
I do easily stand under her arms. Then, going
further, The. Turner called me, out of her coach
where her mother, &c., was, and invited me by all means
to dine with them, at my cozen Roger’s mistress’s,
the widow Dickenson! So, I went to them afterwards,
and dined with them, and mighty handsomely treated,
and she a wonderful merry, good-humoured, fat, but
plain woman, but I believe a very good woman, and mighty
civil to me. Mrs. Turner, the mother, and Mrs.
Dyke, and The., and Betty was the company, and a gentleman
of their acquaintance. Betty I did long to see,
and she is indifferent pretty, but not what the world
did speak of her; but I am mighty glad to have one
so pretty of our kindred. After dinner, I walked
with them, to shew them the great woman, which they
admire, as well they may; and so back with them, and
left them; and I to White Hall, where a Committee
of Tangier met, but little to do there, but I did
receive an instance of the Duke of York’s kindness
to me, and the whole Committee, that they would not
order any thing about the Treasurer for the Corporation
now in establishing, without my assent, and considering
whether it would be to my wrong or no. Thence
up and down the house, and to the Duke of York’s
side, and there in the Duchess’s presence; and
was mightily complimented by my Lady Peterborough,
in my Lord Sandwich’s presence, whom she engaged
to thank me for my kindness to her and her Lord....
By and by I met my Lord Brouncker; and he and I to
the Duke of York alone, and discoursed over the carriage
of the present Treasurers, in opposition to, or at
least independency of, the Duke of York, or our Board,
which the Duke of York is sensible of, and all remember,
I believe; for they do carry themselves very respectlessly
of him and us. We also declared our minds together
to the Duke of York about Sir John Minnes’s
incapacity to do any service in the Office, and that
it is but to betray the King to have any business of
trust committed to his weakness. So the Duke
of York was very sensible of it and promised to speak
to the King about it. That done, I with W. Hewer
took up my wife at Unthank’s, and so home, and
there with pleasure to read and talk, and so to supper,
and put into writing, in merry terms, our agreement
between my wife and me, about L30 a-year, and so to
bed. This was done under both our hands merrily,
and put into W. Hewer’s to keep.
5th. Up, and to the office all
the morning, the frost and cold continuing. At
noon home with my people to dinner; and so to work
at the office again; in the evening comes Creed to
me, and tells me his wife is at my house. So
I in, and spent an hour with them, the first time she
hath been here, or I have seen her, since she was married.
She is not overhandsome, though a good lady, and one
I love. So after some pleasant discourse, they
gone, I to the Office again, and there late, and then
home to supper to my wife, who is not very well of
those, and so sat talking till past one in the morning,
and then to bed.
6th (Twelfth day). Up, and to
look after things against dinner to-day for my guests,
and then to the Office to write down my journall for
five or six days backward, and so home to look after
dinner, it being now almost noon. At noon comes
Mrs. Turner and Dyke, and Mrs. Dickenson, and then
comes The. and Betty Turner, the latter of which is
a very pretty girl; and then Creed and his wife, whom
I sent for, by my coach. These were my guests,
and Mrs. Turner’s friend, whom I saw the other
day, Mr. Wicken, and very merry we were at dinner,
and so all the afternoon, talking, and looking up
and down my house; and in the evening I did bring
out my cake a noble cake, and there cut
it into pieces, with wine and good drink: and
after a new fashion, to prevent spoiling the cake,
did put so many titles into a hat, and so drew cuts;
and I was the Queene; and The. Turner, King Creed,
Sir Martin Marr-all; and Betty, Mrs. Millicent:
and so we were mighty merry till it was night; and
then, being moonshine and fine frost, they went home,
I lending some of them my coach to help to carry them,
and so my wife and I spent the rest of the evening
in talk and reading, and so with great pleasure to
bed.
7th. Up, and to the office, where
busy all the morning, and then at noon home to dinner,
and thence my wife and I to the King’s playhouse,
and there saw “The Island Princesse,”
the first time I ever saw it; and it is a pretty good
play, many good things being in it, and a good scene
of a town on fire. We sat in an upper box, and
the jade Nell come and sat in the next box; a bold
merry slut, who lay laughing there upon people; and
with a comrade of hers of the Duke’s house, that
come in to see the play. Thence home and to the
office to do some business, and so home to supper
and to bed.
8th. Up, and with Colonel Middleton,
in his coach, and Mr. Tippets to White Hall; and there
attended the Duke of York with the rest, where the
Duke was mighty plain with the Treasurers, according
to the advice my Lord Brouncker and I did give him
the other night, and he did it fully; and so as, I
believe, will make the Treasurers carefull of themselves,
unless they do resolve upon defying the Duke of York.
Thence with W. Hewer home, and to dinner, and so out
again, my wife and I and Mr. Hater to White Hall,
where she set us down, and she up and down to buy things,
while we at the Treasury-Chamber, where I alone did
manage the business of “The Leopard” against
the whole Committee of the East India Company, with
Mr. Blackburne with them; and to the silencing of them
all, to my no great content. Thence walked to
my wife, and so set out for home in our coach, it
being very cold weather, and so to the office to do
a little business, and then home to my wife’s
chamber, my people having laid the cloth, and got
the rooms all clean above-stairs to-night for our
dinner to-morrow, and therefore I to bed.
9th. Up, and at the office all
the morning, and at noon, my Lord Brouncker, Mr. Wren,
Joseph Williamson, and Captain Cocke, dined with me;
and, being newly sat down, comes in, by invitation
of Williamson’s, the Lieutenant of the Tower,
and he brings in with him young Mr. Whore, whose father,
of the Tower, I know. And here I had a neat
dinner, and all in so good manner and fashion, and
with so good company, and everything to my mind, as
I never had more in my life the company
being to my heart’s content, and they all well
pleased. So continued, looking over my books
and closet till the evening, and so I to the Office
and did a good deal of business, and so home to supper
and to bed with my mind mightily pleased with this
day’s management, as one of the days of my life
of fullest content.
10th (Lord’s day). Accidentally
talking of our maids before we rose, I said a little
word that did give occasion to my wife to fall out;
and she did most vexatiously, almost all the morning,
but ended most perfect good friends; but the thoughts
of the unquiet which her ripping up of old faults
will give me, did make me melancholy all day long.
So about noon, past 12, we rose, and to dinner, and
then to read and talk, my wife and I alone, for Balty
was gone, who come to dine with us, and then in the
evening comes Pelting to sit and talk with us, and
so to supper and pretty merry discourse, only my mind
a little vexed at the morning’s work, but yet
without any appearance. So after supper to bed.
11th. Up, and with W. Hewer,
my guard, to White Hall, where no Committee of Tangier
met, so up and down the House talking with this and
that man, and so home, calling at the New Exchange
for a book or two to send to Mr. Shepley and thence
home, and thence to the ’Change, and there did
a little business, and so walked home to dinner, and
then abroad with my wife to the King’s playhouse,
and there saw “The Joviall Crew,” but ill
acted to what it was heretofore, in Clun’s time,
and when Lacy could dance. Thence to the New
Exchange, to buy some things; and, among others, my
wife did give me my pair of gloves, which, by contract,
she is to give me in her L30 a-year. Here Mrs.
Smith tells us of the great murder thereabouts, on
Saturday last, of one Captain Bumbridge, by one Symons,
both of her acquaintance; and hectors that were at
play, and in drink: the former is killed, and
is kinsman to my Lord of Ormond, which made him speak
of it with so much passion, as I overheard him this
morning, but could not make anything of it till now,
but would they would kill more of them. So home;
and there at home all the evening; and made Tom to
prick down some little conceits and notions of mine,
in musique, which do mightily encourage me to
spend some more thoughts about it; for I fancy, upon
good reason, that I am in the right way of unfolding
the mystery of this matter, better than ever yet.
12th. Up, and to the Office,
where, by occasion of a message from the Treasurers
that their Board found fault with Commissioner Middleton,
I went up from our Board to the Lords of the Treasury
to meet our Treasurers, and did, and there did dispute
the business, it being about the matter of paying
a little money to Chatham Yard, wherein I find the
Treasurers mighty supple, and I believe we shall bring
them to reason, though they begun mighty upon us,
as if we had no power of directing them, but they,
us. Thence back presently home, to dinner, where
I discern my wife to have been in pain about where
I have been, but said nothing to me, but I believe
did send W. Hewer to seek me, but I take no notice
of it, but am vexed. So to dinner with my people,
and then to the Office, where all the afternoon, and
did much business, and at it late, and so home to
supper, and to bed. This day, meeting Mr. Pierce
at White Hall, he tells me that his boy hath a great
mind to see me, and is going to school again; and
Dr. Clerke, being by, do tell me that he is a fine
boy; but I durst not answer anything, because I durst
not invite him to my house, for fear of my wife; and
therefore, to my great trouble, was forced to neglect
that discourse. But here Mr. Pierce, I asking
him whither he was going, told me as a great secret
that he was going to his master’s mistress,
Mrs. Churchill, with some physic; meaning for the pox
I suppose, or else that she is got with child.
This evening I observed my wife mighty dull, and I
myself was not mighty fond, because of some hard words
she did give me at noon, out of a jealousy at my being
abroad this morning, which, God knows, it was upon
the business of the Office unexpectedly: but
I to bed, not thinking but she would come after me.
But waking by and by out of a slumber, which I usually
fall into presently after my coming into the bed,
I found she did not prepare to come to bed, but got
fresh candles, and more wood for her fire, it being
mighty cold, too. At this being troubled, I after
a while prayed her to come to bed, all my people being
gone to bed; so, after an hour or two, she silent,
and I now and then praying her to come to bed, she
fell out into a fury, that I was a rogue, and false
to her. But yet I did perceive that she was to
seek what to say, only she invented, I believe, a
business that I was seen in a hackney coach with the
glasses up with Deb., but could not tell the time,
nor was sure I was he. I did, as I might truly,
deny it, and was mightily troubled, but all would not
serve. At last, about one o’clock, she come
to my side of the bed, and drew my curtaine open,
and with the tongs red hot at the ends, made as if
she did design to pinch me with them, at which, in
dismay, I rose up, and with a few words she laid them
down; and did by little and, little, very sillily,
let all the discourse fall; and about two, but with
much seeming difficulty, come to bed, and there lay
well all night, and long in bed talking together,
with much pleasure, it being, I know, nothing but
her doubt of my going out yesterday, without telling
her of my going, which did vex her, poor wretch! last
night, and I cannot blame her jealousy, though it
do vex me to the heart.
13th. So up and by coach to Sir
W. Coventry’s, but he gone out, so I to White
Hall, and thence walked out into the Park, all in the
snow, with the Duke of York and the rest, and so home,
after visiting my Lady Peterborough, and there by
invitation find Mr. Povy, and there was also Talbot
Pepys, newly come from Impington, and dined with me;
and after dinner and a little talk with Povy about
publick matters, he gone, and I and my wife and Talbot
towards the Temple, and there to the King’s
playhouse, and there saw, I think, “The Maiden
Queene,” and so home and to supper and read,
and to bed. This day come home the instrument
I have so long longed for, the Parallelogram.
14th. Up and to the office, where
all the morning busy, and so home to dinner, where
Goodgroome with us, and after dinner a song, and then
to the office, where busy till night, and then home
to work there with W. Hewer to get ready some Tangier
papers against to-morrow, and so to supper and to
bed.
15th. Up, and by coach to Sir
W. Coventry, where with him a good while in his chamber,
talking of one thing or another; among others, he
told me of the great factions at Court at this day,
even to the sober engaging of great persons, and differences,
and making the King cheap and ridiculous. It
is about my Lady Harvy’s being offended at Doll
Common’s acting of Sempronia, to imitate her;
for which she got my Lord Chamberlain, her kinsman,
to imprison Doll: when my Lady Castlemayne made
the King to release her, and to order her to act it
again, worse than ever, the other day, where the King
himself was: and since it was acted again, and
my Lady Harvy provided people to hiss her and fling
oranges at her: but, it seems the heat is come
to a great height, and real troubles at Court about
it. Thence he and I out of doors, but he to Sir
J. Duncomb, and I to White Hall through the Park, where
I met the King and the Duke of York, and so walked
with them, and so to White Hall, where the Duke of
York met the office and did a little business; and
I did give him thanks for his favour to me yesterday,
at the Committee of Tangier, in my absence, Mr. Povy
having given me advice of it, of the discourse there
of doing something as to the putting the payment of
the garrison into some undertaker’s hand, Alderman
Backewell, which the Duke of York would not suffer
to go on, without my presence at the debate.
And he answered me just thus: that he ought to
have a care of him that do the King’s business
in the manner that I do, and words of more force than
that. Then down with Lord Brouncker to Sir R.
Murray, into the King’s little elaboratory,
under his closet, a pretty place; and there saw a
great many chymical glasses and things, but understood
none of them. So I home and to dinner, and then
out again and stop with my wife at my cozen Turner’s
where I staid and sat a while, and carried The. and
my wife to the Duke of York’s house, to “Macbeth,”
and myself to White Hall, to the Lords of the Treasury,
about Tangier business; and there was by at much merry
discourse between them and my Lord Anglesey, who made
sport of our new Treasurers, and called them his deputys,
and much of that kind. And having done my own
business, I away back, and carried my cozen Turner
and sister Dyke to a friend’s house, where they
were to sup, in Lincoln’s Inn Fields; and I to
the Duke of York’s house and saw the last two
acts, and so carried The. thither, and so home with
my wife, who read to me late, and so to supper and
to bed. This day The. Turner shewed me at
the play my Lady Portman, who has grown out of my
knowledge.
16th. Up, and to the office all
the morning, dined at home with my people, and so
all the afternoon till night at the office busy, and
so home to supper and to bed. This morning Creed,
and in the afternoon comes Povy, to advise with me
about my answer to the Lords [Commissioners] of Tangier,
about the propositions for the Treasurership there,
which I am not much concerned for. But the latter,
talking of publick things, told me, as Mr. Wren also
did, that the Parliament is likely to meets again,
the King being frighted with what the Speaker hath
put him in mind of his promise not to prorogue,
but only to adjourne them. They speak mighty
freely of the folly of the King in this foolish woman’s
business, of my Lady Harvy. Povy tells me that
Sir W. Coventry was with the King alone, an hour this
day; and that my Lady Castlemayne is now in a higher
command over the King than ever not as a
mistress, for she scorns him, but as a tyrant, to command
him: and says that the Duchess of York and the
Duke of York are mighty great with her, which is a
great interest to my Lord Chancellor’s’
family; and that they do agree to hinder all they
can the proceedings of the Duke of Buckingham and
Arlington: and so we are in the old mad condition,
or rather worse than any; no man knowing what the
French intend to do the next summer.
17th (Lord’s day). To church
myself after seeing every thing fitted for dinner,
and so, after church, home, and thither comes Mrs.
Batelier and her two daughters to dinner to us; and
W. Hewer and his mother, and Mr. Spong. We were
very civilly merry, and Mrs. Batelier a very discreet
woman, but mighty fond in the stories she tells of
her son Will. After dinner, Mr. Spong and I to
my closet, there to try my instrument Parallelogram,
which do mighty well, to my full content; but only
a little stiff, as being new. Thence, taking
leave of my guests, he and I and W. Hewer to White
Hall, and there parting with Spong, a man that I mightily
love for his plainness and ingenuity, I into the Court,
and there up and down and spoke with my Lords Bellassis
and Peterborough about the business now in dispute,
about my deputing a Treasurer to pay the garrison
at Tangier, which I would avoid, and not be accountable,
and they will serve me therein. Here I met Hugh
May, and he brings me to the knowledge of Sir Henry
Capell, a Member of Parliament, and brother of my
Lord of Essex, who hath a great value, it seems, for
me; and they appoint a day to come and dine with me,
and see my books, and papers of the Office, which
I shall be glad to shew them, and have opportunity
to satisfy them therein. Here all the discourse
is, that now the King is of opinion to have the Parliament
called, notwithstanding his late resolutions for proroguing
them; so unstable are his councils, and those about
him. So staying late talking in the Queen’s
side, I away, with W. Hewer home, and there to read
and talk with my wife, and so to bed.
18th. Up by candlelight, and
with W. Hewer walked to the Temple, and thence took
coach and to Sir William Coventry’s, and there
discoursed the business of my Treasurer’s place,
at Tangier, wherein he consents to my desire, and
concurs therein, which I am glad of, that I may not
be accountable for a man so far off. And so I
to my Lord Sandwich’s, and there walk with him
through the garden, to White Hall, where he tells me
what he had done about this Treasurer’s place,
and I perceive the whole thing did proceed from him:
that finding it would be best to have the Governor
have nothing to do with the pay of the garrison, he
did propose to the Duke of York alone that a pay-master
should be there; and that being desirous to do a courtesy
to Sir Charles Harbord, and to prevent the Duke of
York’s looking out for any body else, he did
name him to the Duke of York. That when he come
the other day to move this to the Board of Tangier,
the Duke of York, it seems, did readily reply, that
it was fit to have Mr. Pepys satisfied therein first,
and that it was not good to make places for persons.
This my Lord in great confidence tells me, that he
do take very ill from the Duke of York, though nobody
knew the meaning of these words but him; and that
he did take no notice of them, but bit his lip, being
satisfied that the Duke of York’s care of me
was as desirable to him, as it could be to have Sir
Charles Harbord: and did seem industrious to
let me see that he was glad that the Duke of York
and he might come to contend who shall be the kindest
to me, which I owned as his great love, and so I hope
and believe it is, though my Lord did go a little
too far in this business, to move it so far, without
consulting me. But I took no notice of that, but
was glad to see this competition come about, that
my Lord Sandwich is apparently jealous of my thinking
that the Duke of York do mean me more kindness than
him. So we walked together, and I took this occasion
to invite him to dinner one day to my house, and he
readily appointed Friday next, which I shall be glad
to have over to his content, he having never yet eat
a bit of my bread. Thence to the Duke of York
on the King’s side, with our Treasurers of the
Navy, to discourse some business of the Navy, about
the pay of the yards, and there I was taken notice
of, many Lords being there in the room, of the Duke
of York’s conference with me; and so away, and
meeting Mr. Sidney Montagu and Sheres, a small invitation
served their turn to carry them to London, where I
paid Sheres his L100, given him for his pains in drawing
the plate of Tangier fortifications, &c., and so home
to my house to dinner, where I had a pretty handsome
sudden dinner, and all well pleased; and thence we
three and my wife to the Duke of York’s playhouse,
and there saw “The Witts,” a medley of
things, but some similes mighty good, though ill mixed;
and thence with my wife to the Exchange and bought
some things, and so home, after I had been at White
Hall, and there in the Queen’s withdrawing-room
invited my Lord Peterborough to dine with me, with
my Lord Sandwich, who readily accepted it. Thence
back and took up my wife at the ’Change, and
so home. This day at noon I went with my young
gentlemen (thereby to get a little time while W. Hewer
went home to bid them get a dinner ready) to the Pope’s
Head tavern, there to see the fine painted room which
Rogerson told me of, of his doing; but I do not like
it at all, though it be good for such a publick room.
19th. Up, and at the office all
the morning. At noon eat a mouthful, and so with
my wife to Madam Turner’s, and find her gone,
but The. staid for us; and so to the King’s
house, to see “Horace;” this the third
day of its acting a silly tragedy; but
Lacy hath made a farce of several dances between
each act, one: but his words are but silly, and
invention not extraordinary, as to the dances; only
some Dutchmen come out of the mouth and tail of a
Hamburgh sow. Thence, not much pleased with the
play, set them at home in the Strand; and my wife and
I home, and there to do a little business at the Office,
and so home to supper and to bed.
20th. Up; and my wife, and I,
and W. Hewer to White Hall, where she set us down;
and there I spoke with my Lord Peterborough, to tell
him of the day for his dining with me being altered
by my Lord Sandwich from Friday to Saturday next.
And thence heard at the Council-board the City, by
their single counsel Symson, and the company of Strangers
Merchants, a debate the business of water-baylage;
a tax demanded upon all goods, by the City, imported
and exported: which these Merchants oppose, and
demanding leave to try the justice of the City’s
demand by a Quo Warranto, which the City opposed,
the Merchants did quite lay the City on their backs
with great triumph, the City’s cause being apparently
too weak: but here I observed Mr. Gold, the merchant,
to speak very well, and very sharply, against the
City. Thence to my wife at Unthanke’s, and
with her and W. Hewer to Hercules Pillars, calling
to do two or three things by the way, end there dined,
and thence to the Duke of York’s house, and
saw “Twelfth Night,” as it is now revived;
but, I think, one of the weakest plays that ever I
saw on the stage. This afternoon, before the
play, I called with my wife at Dancre’s, the
great landscape-painter, by Mr. Povy’s advice;
and have bespoke him to come to take measure of my
dining-room panels, and there I met with the pretty
daughter of the coalseller’s, that lived in Cheapside,
and now in Covent Garden, who hath her picture drawn
here, but very poorly; but she is a pretty woman,
and now, I perceive, married, a very pretty black woman.
So, the play done, we home, my wife letting fall some
words of her observing my eyes to be mightily employed
in the playhouse, meaning upon women, which did vex
me; but, however, when we come home, we were good
friends; and so to read, and to supper, and so to bed.
21st. Up, and walked to the Temple,
it being frosty, and there took coach, my boy Tom
with me, and so to White Hall to a Committee of Tangier,
where they met, and by and by and till twelve at noon
upon business, among others mine, where my desire
about being eased of appointing and standing accountable
for a Treasurer there was well accepted, and they
will think of some other way. This I was glad
of, finding reason to doubt that I might in this (since
my Lord Sandwich made me understand what he had said
to the Duke of York herein) fear to offend either
the Duke of York by denying it, for he seemed on Sunday
night last, when I first made known my desire to him
herein to be a little amused at it, though I knew
not then the reason, or else offend my Lord Sandwich
by accepting it, or denying it in a manner that might
not forward his desire for Sir Charles Harbord, but
I thank God I did it to my great content without any
offence, I think, to either. Thence in my own
coach home, where I find Madam Turner, Dyke, and The.,
and had a good dinner for them, and merry; and so
carried them to the Duke of York’s house, all
but Dyke, who went away on other business; and there
saw “The Tempest;” but it is but ill done
by Gosnell, in lieu of Moll Davis. Thence set
them at home, and my wife and I to the ’Change,
and so home, where my wife mighty dogged, and I vexed
to see it, being mightily troubled, of late, at her
being out of humour, for fear of her discovering any
new matter of offence against me, though I am conscious
of none; but do hate to be unquiet at home. So,
late up, silent, and not supping, but hearing her
utter some words of discontent to me with silence,
and so to bed, weeping to myself for grief, which she
discerning, come to bed, and mighty kind, and so with
great joy on both sides to sleep.
22nd. Up, and with W. Hewer to
White Hall, and there attended the Duke of York, and
thence to the Exchange, in the way calling at several
places on occasions relating to my feast to-morrow,
on which my mind is now set; as how to get a new looking-glass
for my dining-room, and some pewter, and good wine,
against to-morrow; and so home, where I had the looking-glass
set up, cost me L6 7d. And here at the ’Change
I met with Mr. Dancre, the famous landscape painter,
with whom I was on Wednesday; and he took measure
of my panels in my dining-room, where, in the four,
I intend to have the four houses of the King, White
Hall, Hampton Court, Greenwich, and Windsor.
He gone, I to dinner with my people, and so to my
office to dispatch a little business, and then home
to look after things against to-morrow, and among other
things was mightily pleased with the fellow that come
to lay the cloth, and fold the napkins, which I like
so well, as that I am resolved to give him 40s. to
teach my wife to do it. So to supper, with much
kindness between me and my wife, which, now-a-days,
is all my care, and so to bed.
23rd. Up, and again to look after
the setting things right against dinner, which I did
to very good content. So to the office, where
all the morning till noon, when word brought me to
the Board that my Lord Sandwich was come; so I presently
rose, leaving the Board ready to rise, and there I
found my Lord Sandwich, Peterborough, and Sir Charles
Harbord; and presently after them comes my Lord Hinchingbroke,
Mr. Sidney, and Sir William Godolphin. And after
greeting them, and some time spent in talk, dinner
was brought up, one dish after another, but a dish
at a time, but all so good; but, above all things,
the variety of wines, and excellent of their kind,
I had for them, and all in so good order, that they
were mightily pleased, and myself full of content at
it: and indeed it was, of a dinner of about six
or eight dishes, as noble as any man need to have,
I think; at least, all was done in the noblest manner
that ever I had any, and I have rarely seen in my life
better anywhere else, even at the Court. After
dinner, my Lords to cards, and the rest of us sitting
about them and talking, and looking on my books and
pictures, and my wife’s drawings, which they
commend mightily; and mighty merry all day long, with
exceeding great content, and so till seven at night;
and so took their leaves, it being dark and foul weather.
Thus was this entertainment over, the best of its kind,
and the fullest of honour and content to me, that ever
I had in my life: and shall not easily have so
good again. The truth is, I have some fear that
I am more behind-hand in the world for these last two
years, since I have not, or for some time could not,
look after my accounts, which do a little allay my
pleasure. But I do trust in God I am pretty well
yet, and resolve, in a very little time, to look into
my accounts, and see how they stand. So to my
wife’s chamber, and there supped, and got her
cut my hair and look my shirt, for I have itched mightily
these 6 or 7 days, and when all comes to all she finds
that I am lousy, having found in my head and body
about twenty lice, little and great, which I wonder
at, being more than I have had I believe these 20 years.
I did think I might have got them from the little
boy, but they did presently look him, and found none.
So how they come I know not, but presently did shift
myself, and so shall be rid of them, and cut my hair
close to my head, and so with much content to bed.
24th (Lord’s day). An order
brought me in bed, for the Principal Officers to attend
the King at my Lord Keeper’s this afternoon,
it being resolved late the last night; and, by the
warrant, I find my Lord Keeper did not then know the
cause of it, the messenger being ordered to call upon
him, to tell it him by the way, as he come to us.
So I up, and to my Office to set down my Journall
for yesterday, and so home, and with my wife to Church,
and then home, and to dinner, and after dinner out
with my wife by coach, to cozen Turner’s, where
she and The. gone to church, but I left my wife with
Mrs. Dyke and Joyce Norton, whom I have not seen till
now since their coming to town: she is become
an old woman, and with as cunning a look as ever,
and thence I to White Hall, and there walked up and
down till the King and Duke of York were ready to
go forth; and here I met Will. Batelier, newly
come post from France, his boots all dirty. He
brought letters to the King, and I glad to see him,
it having been reported that he was drowned, for some
days past, and then, he being gone, I to talk with
Tom Killigrew, who told me and others, talking about
the playhouse, that he is fain to keep a woman on
purpose at 20s. a week to satisfy 8 or 10 of the young
men of his house, whom till he did so he could never
keep to their business, and now he do. By and
by the King comes out, and so I took coach, and followed
his coaches to my Lord Keeper’s, at Essex House,
where I never was before, since I saw my old Lord
Essex lie in state when he was dead; a large, but
ugly house. Here all the Officers of the Navy
attended, and by and by were called in to the King
and Cabinet, where my Lord, who was ill, did lie upon
the bed, as my old Lord Treasurer, or Chancellor,
heretofore used to; and the business was to know in
what time all the King’s ships might be repaired,
fit for service. The Surveyor answered, in two
years, and not sooner. I did give them hopes that,
with supplies of money suitable, we might have them
all fit for sea some part of the summer after this.
Then they demanded in what time we could set out forty
ships. It was answered, as they might be chosen
of the newest and most ready, we could, with money,
get forty ready against May. The King seemed
mighty full that we should have money to do all that
we desired, and satisfied that, without it, nothing
could be done: and so, without determining any
thing, we were dismissed; and I doubt all will end
in some little fleete this year, and those of hired
merchant-men, which would indeed be cheaper to the
King, and have many conveniences attending it, more
than to fit out the King’s own; and this, I perceive,
is designed, springing from Sir W. Coventry’s
counsel; and the King and most of the Lords, I perceive,
full of it, to get the King’s fleete all at
once in condition for service. Thence I with Mr.
Wren in his coach to my cozen Turner’s for discourse
sake, and in our way he told me how the business of
the Parliament is wholly laid aside, it being overruled
now, that they shall not meet, but must be prorogued,
upon this argument chiefly, that all the differences
between the two Houses, and things on foot, that were
matters of difference and discontent, may be laid aside,
and must begin again, if ever the House shall have
a mind to pursue them. They must begin all anew.
Here he set me down, and I to my cozen Turner, and
stayed and talked a little; and so took my wife, and
home, and there to make her read, and then to supper,
and to bed. At supper come W. Batelier and supped
with us, and told us many pretty things of France,
and the greatness of the present King.
25th. Up, and to the Committee
of Tangier, where little done, and thence I home by
my own coach, and busy after dinner at my office all
the afternoon till late at night, that my eyes were
tired. So home, and my wife shewed me many excellent
prints of Nanteuil’s and others, which W. Batelier
hath, at my desire, brought me out of France, of the
King, and Colbert, and others, most excellent, to
my great content. But he hath also brought a
great many gloves perfumed, of several sorts; but all
too big by half for her, and yet she will have two
or three dozen of them, which vexed me, and made me
angry. So she, at last, to please me, did come
to take what alone I thought fit, which pleased me.
So, after a little supper, to bed, my eyes being very
bad.
26th. Up, and to the office,
where busy sitting all the morning. Then to the
Office again, and then to White Hall, leaving my wife
at Unthanke’s; and I to the Secretary’s
chamber, where I was, by particular order, this day
summoned to attend, as I find Sir D. Gawden also was.
And here was the King and the Cabinet met; and, being
called in, among the rest I find my Lord Privy Seale,
whom I never before knew to be in so much play, as
to be of the Cabinet. The business is, that the
Algerines have broke the peace with us, by taking
some Spaniards and goods out of an English ship, which
had the Duke of York’s pass, of which advice
come this day; and the King is resolved to stop Sir
Thomas Allen’s fleete from coming home till
he hath amends made him for this affront, and therefore
sent for us to advise about victuals to be sent to
that fleete, and some more ships; wherein I answered
them to what they demanded of me, which was but some
few mean things; but I see that on all these occasions
they seem to rely most upon me. And so, this being
done, I took coach and took up my wife and straight
home, and there late at the office busy, and then
home, and there I find W. Batelier hath also sent
the books which I made him bring me out of France.
Among others, L’Estat, de France, Marnix, &c.,
to my great content; and so I was well pleased with
them, and shall take a time to look them over:
as also one or two printed musick-books of songs;
but my eyes are now too much out of tune to look upon
them with any pleasure, therefore to supper and to
bed.
27th. Up, and with Sir John Minnes
in his coach to White Hall, where first we waited
on the Lords of the Treasury about finishing the Victualling
Contract; and there also I was put to it to make good
our letter complaining against my Lord Anglesey’s
failing us in the payment of the moneys assigned us
upon the Customs, where Mr. Fenn was, and I know will
tell my Lord; but it is no matter, I am over shy already,
and therefore must not fear. Then we up to a
Committee of the Council for the Navy, about a business
of Sir D. Gawden’s relating to the Victualling,
and thence I by hackney to the Temple to the Auditor’s
man, and with him to a tavern to meet with another
under-auditor to advise about the clearing of my Lord
Bellasses’ accounts without injuring myself
and perplexing my accounts, and so thence away to my
cozen Turner’s, where I find Roger Pepys come
last night to town, and here is his mistress, Mrs.
Dickenson, and by and by comes in Mr. Turner, a worthy,
sober, serious man I honour him mightily.
And there we dined, having but an ordinary dinner;
and so, after dinner, she, and I, and Roger, and his
mistress, to the Duke of York’s playhouse, and
there saw “The Five Hours’ Adventure,”
which hath not been acted a good while before, but
once, and is a most excellent play, I must confess.
My wife and The. come after us, after they had been
to buy some things abroad, and so after the play done
we to see them home, and then home ourselves, and
my wife to read to me, and so to supper and to bed.
28th. Up, and to the office,
where all the afternoon, also after dinner, and there
late dispatching much business, and then home to supper
with my wife, and to get her to read to me, and here
I did find that Mr. Sheres hath, beyond his promise,
not only got me a candlestick made me, after a form
he remembers to have seen in Spain, for keeping the
light from one’s eyes, but hath got it done
in silver very neat, and designs to give it me, in
thanks for my paying him his L100 in money, for his
service at Tangier, which was ordered him; but I do
intend to force him to make me [pay] for it.
But I yet, without his direction, cannot tell how
it is to be made use of. So after a little reading
to bed.
29th. Up, and with W. Hewer in
Colonel Middleton’s coach to White Hall, and
there to the Duke of York, to attend him, where among
other things I did give a severe account of our proceedings,
and what we found, in the business of Sir W. Jenings’s
demand of Supernumeraries. I thought it a good
occasion to make an example of him, for he is a proud,
idle fellow; and it did meet with the Duke of York’s
acceptance and well-liking; and he did call him in,
after I had done, and did not only give him a soft
rebuke, but condemns him to pay both their victuals
and wages, or right himself of the purser. This
I was glad of, and so were all the rest of us, though
I know I have made myself an immortal enemy by it.
Thence home by hackney, calling Roger Pepys at the
Temple gate in the bookseller’s shop, and to
the Old Exchange, where I staid a little to invite
my uncle Wight, and so home, and there find my aunt
Wight and her husband come presently, and so to dinner;
and after dinner Roger, and I, and my wife, and aunt,
to see Mr. Cole; but he nor his wife was within, but
we looked upon his picture of Cleopatra, which I went
principally to see, being so much commended by my
wife and aunt; but I find it a base copy of a good
originall, that vexed me to hear so much commended.
Thence to see Creed’s wife, and did so, and staid
a while, where both of them within; and here I met
Mr. Bland, newly come from Gales [Cadiz] after his
differences with Norwood. I think him a foolish,
light-headed man; but certainly he hath been abused
in this matter by Colonel Norwood. Here Creed
shewed me a copy of some propositions, which Bland
and others, in the name of the Corporation of Tangier,
did present to Norwood, for his opinion in, in order
to the King’s service, which were drawn up very
humbly, and were really good things; but his answer
to them was in the most shitten proud, carping, insolent,
and ironically-prophane stile, that ever I saw in
my life, so as I shall never think the place can do
well, while he is there. Here, after some talk,
and Creed’s telling us that he is upon taking
the next house to his present lodgings, which is next
to that that my cozen Tom Pepys once lived in, in
Newport Street, in Covent Garden; and is in a good
place, and then, I suppose, he will keep his coach.
So, setting Roger down at the Temple, who tells me
that he is now concluded in all matters with his widow,
we home, and there hired my wife to make an end of
Boyle’s Book of Formes, to-night and to-morrow;
and so fell to read and sup, and then to bed.
This day, Mr. Ned Pickering brought his lady to see
my wife, in acknowledgment of a little present of
oranges and olives, which I sent her, for his kindness
to me in the buying of my horses, which was very civil.
She is old, but hath, I believe, been a pretty comely
woman:
30th. Lay long in bed, it being
a fast-day for the murder of the late King; and so
up and to church, where Dr. Hicks made a dull sermon;
and so home, and there I find W. Batelier and Balty,
and they dined with us, and I spent all the afternoon
with my wife and W. Batelier talking, and then making
them read, and particularly made an end of Mr. Boyle’s
Book of Formes, which I am glad to have over, and
then fell to read a French discourse, which he hath
brought over with him for me, to invite the people
of France to apply themselves to Navigation, which
it do very well, and is certainly their interest,
and what will undo us in a few years, if the King
of France goes on to fit up his Navy, and encrease
it and his trade, as he hath begun. At night
to supper, and after supper, and W. Batelier gone,
my wife begun another book I lately bought, called
“The State of England,” which promises
well, and is worth reading, and so after a while to
bed.
31st (Lord’s day). Lay
long talking with pleasure, and so up and I to church,
and there did hear the Doctor that is lately turned
Divine, I have forgot his name, I met him a while
since at Sir D. Gawden’s at dinner, Dr. Waterhouse!
He preaches in a devout manner of way, not elegant
nor very persuasive, but seems to mean well, and that
he would preach holily; and was mighty passionate
against people that make a scoff of religion.
And, the truth is, I did observe Mrs. Hollworthy smile
often, and many others of the parish, who, I perceive,
have known him, and were in mighty expectation of
hearing him preach, but could not forbear smiling,
and she particularly upon me, and I on her. So
home to dinner: and before dinner to my Office,
to set down my journal for this week, and then home
to dinner; and after dinner to get my wife and boy,
one after another, to read to me: and so spent
the afternoon and the evening, and so after supper
to bed. And thus endeth this month, with many
different days of sadness and mirth, from differences
between me and my wife, from her remembrance of my
late unkindness to her with Willet, she not being
able to forget it, but now and then hath her passionate
remembrance of it as often as prompted to it by any
occasion; but this night we are at present very kind.
And so ends this month.