March 1st. Up, and to White Hall
to the Committee of Tangier, but it did not meet.
But here I do hear first that my Lady Paulina Montagu
did die yesterday; at which I went to my Lord’s
lodgings, but he is shut up with sorrow, and so not
to be spoken with: and therefore I returned, and
to Westminster Hall, where I have not been, I think,
in some months. And here the Hall was very full,
the King having, by Commission to some Lords this
day, prorogued the Parliament till the 19th of October
next: at which I am glad, hoping to have time
to go over to France this year. But I was most
of all surprised this morning by my Lord Bellassis,
who, by appointment, met me at Auditor Wood’s,
at the Temple, and tells me of a duell designed between
the Duke of Buckingham and my Lord Halifax, or Sir
W. Coventry; the challenge being carried by Harry Saville,
but prevented by my Lord Arlington, and the King told
of it; and this was all the discourse at Court this
day. But I, meeting Sir W. Coventry in the Duke
of York’s chamber, he would not own it to me,
but told me that he was a man of too much peace to
meddle with fighting, and so it rested: but the
talk is full in the town of the business. Thence,
having walked some turns with my cozen Pepys, and most
people, by their discourse, believing that this Parliament
will never sit more, I away to several places to look
after things against to-morrow’s feast, and
so home to dinner; and thence, after noon, my wife
and I out by hackneycoach, and spent the afternoon
in several places, doing several things at the ’Change
and elsewhere against to-morrow; and, among others,
I did also bring home a piece of my face cast in plaister,
for to make a wizard upon, for my eyes. And so
home, where W. Batelier come, and sat with us; and
there, after many doubts, did resolve to go on with
our feast and dancing to-morrow; and so, after supper,
left the maids to make clean the house, and to lay
the cloth, and other things against to-morrow, and
we to bed.
2nd. Up, and at the office till
noon, when home, and there I find my company come,
namely, Madam Turner, Dyke, The., and Betty Turner,
and Mr. Bellwood, formerly their father’s clerk,
but now set up for himself a conceited,
silly fellow, but one they make mightily of my
cozen Roger Pepys, and his wife, and two daughters.
I had a noble dinner for them, as I almost ever had,
and mighty merry, and particularly myself pleased
with looking on Betty Turner, who is mighty pretty.
After dinner, we fell one to one talk, and another
to another, and looking over my house, and closet,
and things; and The. Turner to write a letter
to a lady in the country, in which I did, now and then,
put in half a dozen words, and sometimes five or six
lines, and then she as much, and made up a long and
good letter, she being mighty witty really, though
troublesome-humoured with it. And thus till night,
that our musick come, and the Office ready and candles,
and also W. Batelier and his sister Susan come, and
also Will. Howe and two gentlemen more, strangers,
which, at my request yesterday, he did bring to dance,
called Mr. Ireton and Mr. Starkey. We fell to
dancing, and continued, only with intermission for
a good supper, till two in the morning, the musick
being Greeting, and another most excellent violin,
and theorbo, the best in town. And so with mighty
mirth, and pleased with their dancing of jigs afterwards
several of them, and, among others, Betty Turner,
who did it mighty prettily; and, lastly, W. Batelier’s
“Blackmore and Blackmore Mad;” and then
to a country-dance again, and so broke up with extraordinary
pleasure, as being one of the days and nights of my
life spent with the greatest content; and that which
I can but hope to repeat again a few times in my whole
life. This done, we parted, the strangers home,
and I did lodge my cozen Pepys and his wife in our
blue chamber. My cozen Turner, her sister, and
The., in our best chamber; Bab., Betty, and Betty
Turner, in our own chamber; and myself and my wife
in the maid’s bed, which is very good.
Our maids in the coachman’s bed; the coachman
with the boy in his settlebed, and Tom where he uses
to lie. And so I did, to my great content, lodge
at once in my house, with the greatest ease, fifteen,
and eight of them strangers of quality. My wife
this day put on first her French gown, called a Sac,
which becomes her very well, brought her over by W.
Batelier.
3rd. Up, after a very good night’s
rest, and was called upon by Sir H. Cholmly, who was
with me an hour, and though acquainted did not stay
to talk with my company I had in the house, but away,
and then I to my guests, and got them to breakfast,
and then parted by coaches; and I did, in mine, carry
my she-cozen Pepys and her daughters home, and there
left them, and so to White Hall, where W. Hewer met
me; and he and I took a turn in St. James’s
Park, and in the Mall did meet Sir W. Coventry and
Sir J. Duncomb, and did speak with them about some
business before the Lords of the Treasury; but I did
find them more than usually busy, though I knew not
then the reason of it, though I guess it by what followed
to-morrow. Thence to Dancre’s, the painter’s,
and there saw my picture of Greenwich, finished to
my very good content, though this manner of distemper
do make the figures not so pleasing as in oyle.
So to Unthanke’s, and there took up my wife,
and carried her to the Duke of York’s playhouse,
and there saw an old play, the first time acted these
forty years, called “The Lady’s Tryall,”
acted only by the young people of the house; but the
house very full. But it is but a sorry play, and
the worse by how much my head is out of humour by being
a little sleepy and my legs weary since last night.
So after the play we to the New Exchange, and so called
at my cozen Turner’s; and there, meeting Mr.
Bellwood, did hear how my Lord Mayor, being invited
this day to dinner at the Reader’s at the Temple,
and endeavouring to carry his sword up, the students
did pull it down, and forced him to go and stay all
the day in a private Councillor’s chamber, until
the Reader himself could get the young gentlemen to
dinner; and then my Lord Mayor did retreat out of
the Temple by stealth, with his sword up. This
do make great heat among the students; and my Lord
Mayor did send to the King, and also I hear that Sir
Richard Browne did cause the drums to beat for the
Train-bands, but all is over, only I hear that the
students do resolve to try the Charter of the City.
So we home, and betimes to bed, and slept well all
night.
4th. Up, and a while at the office,
but thinking to have Mr. Povy’s business to-day
at the Committee for Tangier, I left the Board and
away to White Hall, where in the first court I did
meet Sir Jeremy Smith, who did tell me that Sir W.
Coventry was just now sent to the Tower, about the
business of his challenging the Duke of Buckingham,
and so was also Harry Saville to the Gate-house; which,
as [he is] a gentleman, and of the Duke of York’s
bedchamber, I heard afterwards that the Duke of York
is mightily incensed at, and do appear very high to
the King that he might not be sent thither, but to
the Tower, this being done only in contempt to him.
This news of Sir W. Coventry did strike me to the
heart, and with reason, for by this and my Lord of
Ormond’s business, I do doubt that the Duke
of Buckingham will be so flushed, that he will not
stop at any thing, but be forced to do any thing now,
as thinking it not safe to end here; and, Sir W. Coventry
being gone, the King will have never a good counsellor,
nor the Duke of York any sure friend to stick to him;
nor any good man will be left to advise what is good.
This, therefore, do heartily trouble me as any thing
that ever I heard. So up into the House, and
met with several people; but the Committee did not
meet; and the whole House I find full of this business
of Sir W. Coventry’s, and most men very sensible
of the cause and effects of it. So, meeting with
my Lord Bellassis, he told me the particulars of this
matter; that it arises about a quarrel which Sir W.
Coventry had with the Duke of Buckingham about a design
between the Duke and Sir Robert Howard, to bring him
into a play at the King’s house, which W. Coventry
not enduring, did by H. Saville send a letter to the
Duke of Buckingham, that he had a desire to speak
with him. Upon which, the Duke of Buckingham
did bid Holmes, his champion ever since my Lord Shrewsbury’s
business,
[Charles ii. wrote to his sister
(Henrietta, Duchess of Orleans), on March 7th,
1669: “I am not sorry that Sir Will.
Coventry has given me this good occasion by sending
my Lord of Buckingham a challenge to turne
him out of the Councill. I do intend to turn
him allso out of the Treasury. The truth
of it is, he has been a troublesome man in both
places and I am well rid of him” (Julia Cartwright’s
“Madame,” 1894, p. 283).]
go to him to know the business; but
H. Saville would not tell it to any but himself, and
therefore did go presently to the Duke of Buckingham,
and told him that his uncle Coventry was a person of
honour, and was sensible of his Grace’s liberty
taken of abusing him, and that he had a desire of
satisfaction, and would fight with him. But that
here they were interrupted by my Lord Chamberlain’s
coming in, who was commanded to go to bid the Duke
of Buckingham to come to the King, Holmes having discovered
it. He told me that the King did last night, at
the Council, ask the Duke of Buckingham, upon his
honour, whether he had received any challenge from
W. Coventry? which he confessed that he had; and then
the King asking W. Coventry, he told him that he did
not owne what the Duke of Buckingham had said, though
it was not fit for him to give him a direct contradiction.
But, being by the King put upon declaring, upon his
honour, the matter, he answered that he had understood
that many hard questions had upon this business been
moved to some lawyers, and that therefore he was unwilling
to declare any thing that might, from his own mouth,
render him obnoxious to his Majesty’s displeasure,
and, therefore, prayed to be excused: which the
King did think fit to interpret to be a confession,
and so gave warrant that night for his commitment
to the Tower. Being very much troubled at this,
I away by coach homewards, and directly to the Tower,
where I find him in one Mr. Bennet’s house,
son to Major Bayly, one of the Officers of the Ordnance,
in the Bricke Tower:
[The Brick Tower stands on the northern
wall, a little to the west of Martin tower, with
which it communicates by a secret passage. It
was the residence of the Master of the Ordnance, and
Raleigh was lodged here for a time.]
where I find him busy with my Lord
Halifax and his brother; so I would not stay to interrupt
them, but only to give him comfort, and offer my service
to him, which he kindly and cheerfully received, only
owning his being troubled for the King his master’s
displeasure, which, I suppose, is the ordinary form
and will of persons in this condition. And so
I parted, with great content, that I had so earlily
seen him there; and so going out, did meet Sir Jer.
Smith going to meet me, who had newly been with Sir
W. Coventry. And so he and I by water to Redriffe,
and so walked to Deptford, where I have not been,
I think, these twelve months: and there to the
Treasurer’s house, where the Duke of York is,
and his Duchess; and there we find them at dinner
in the great room, unhung; and there was with them
my Lady Duchess of Monmouth, the Countess of Falmouth,
Castlemayne, Henrietta Hide’ (my Lady Hinchingbroke’s
sister), and my Lady Peterborough. And after
dinner Sir Jer. Smith and I were invited down
to dinner with some of the Maids of Honour, namely,
Mrs. Ogle, Blake, and Howard, which did me good to
have the honour to dine with, and look on; and the
Mother of the Maids, and Mrs. Howard, the mother of
the Maid of Honour of that name, and the Duke’s
housekeeper here. Here was also Monsieur Blancfort,
Sir Richard Powell, Colonel Villers, Sir Jonathan
Trelawny, and others. And here drank most excellent,
and great variety, and plenty of wines, more than I
have drank, at once, these seven years, but yet did
me no great hurt. Having dined and very merry,
and understanding by Blancfort how angry the Duke
of York was, about their offering to send Saville to
the Gate-house, among the rogues; and then, observing
how this company, both the ladies and all, are of
a gang, and did drink a health to the union of the
two brothers, and talking of others as their enemies,
they parted, and so we up; and there I did find the
Dupe of York and Duchess, with all the great ladies,
sitting upon a carpet, on the ground, there being no
chairs, playing at “I love my love with an A,
because he is so and so: and I hate him with
an A, because of this and that:” and some
of them, but particularly the Duchess herself, and
my Lady Castlemayne, were very witty. This done,
they took barge, and I with Sir J. Smith to Captain
Cox’s; and there to talk, and left them and other
company to drink; while I slunk out to Bagwell’s;
and there saw her, and her mother, and our late maid
Nell, who cried for joy to see me, but I had no time
for pleasure then nor could stay, but after drinking
I back to the yard, having a month’s mind para
have had a bout with Nell, which I believe I could
have had, and may another time. So to Cox’s,
and thence walked with Sir J. Smith back to Redriffe;
and so, by water home, and there my wife mighty angry
for my absence, and fell mightily out, but not being
certain of any thing, but thinks only that Pierce or
Knepp was there, and did ask me, and, I perceive,
the boy, many questions. But I did answer her;
and so, after much ado, did go to bed, and lie quiet
all night; but [she] had another bout with me in the
morning, but I did make shift to quiet her, but yet
she was not fully satisfied, poor wretch! in her mind,
and thinks much of my taking so much pleasure from
her; which, indeed, is a fault, though I did not design
or foresee it when I went.
5th. Up, and by water to White
Hall, where did a little business with the Duke of
York at our usual attending him, and thence to my wife,
who was with my coach at Unthanke’s, though
not very well of those upon her, and so home to dinner,
and after dinner I to the Tower, where I find Sir
W. Coventry with abundance of company with him; and
after sitting awhile, and hearing some merry discourse,
and, among others, of Mr. Brouncker’s being
this day summoned to Sir William Morton, one of the
judges, to give in security for his good behaviour,
upon his words the other day to Sir John Morton, a
Parliament-man, at White Hall, who had heretofore
spoke very highly against Brouncker in the House, I
away, and to Aldgate, and walked forward towards White
Chapel, till my wife overtook me with the coach, it
being a mighty fine afternoon; and there we went the
first time out of town with our coach and horses, and
went as far as Bow, the spring beginning a little
now to appear, though the way be dirty; and so, with
great pleasure, with the fore-part of our coach up,
we spent the afternoon. And so in the evening
home, and there busy at the Office awhile, and so
to bed, mightily pleased with being at peace with
my poor wife, and with the pleasure we may hope to
have with our coach this summer, when the weather
comes to be good.
6th. Up, and to the office, where
all the morning, only before the Office I stepped
to Sir W. Coventry at the Tower, and there had a great
deal of discourse with him; among others, of the King’s
putting him out of the Council yesterday, with which
he is well contented, as with what else they can strip
him of, he telling me, and so hath long done, that
he is weary and surfeited of business; but he joins
with me in his fears that all will go to naught, as
matters are now managed. He told me the matter
of the play that was intended for his abuse, wherein
they foolishly and sillily bring in two tables like
that which he hath made, with a round hole in the
middle, in his closet, to turn himself in; and he
is to be in one of them as master, and Sir J. Duncomb
in the other, as his man or imitator: and their
discourse in those tables, about the disposing of
their books and papers, very foolish. But that,
that he is offended with, is his being made so contemptible,
as that any should dare to make a gentleman a subject
for the mirth of the world: and that therefore
he had told Tom Killigrew that he should tell his actors,
whoever they were, that did offer at any thing like
representing him, that he would not complain to my
Lord Chamberlain, which was too weak, nor get him
beaten, as Sir Charles Sidly is said to do, but that
he would cause his nose to be cut. He told me
the passage at the Council much like what my Lord
Bellassis told me. He told me how that the Duke
of Buckingham did himself, some time since, desire
to join with him, of all men in England, and did bid
him propound to himself to be Chief Minister of State,
saying that he would bring it about, but that he refused
to have anything to do with any faction; and that the
Duke of Buckingham did, within these few days, say
that, of all men in England, he would have chosen
W. Coventry to have joined entire with. He tells
me that he fears their prevailing against the Duke
of York; and that their violence will force them to
it, as being already beyond his pardon. He repeated
to me many examples of challenging of Privy-Councillors
and others; but never any proceeded against with that
severity which he is, it never amounting to others
to more than a little confinement. He tells me
of his being weary of the Treasury, and of the folly,
ambition, and desire of popularity of Sir Thomas Clifford;
and yet the rudeness of his tongue and passions when
angry. This and much more discourse being over
I with great pleasure come home and to the office,
where all the morning, and at noon home to dinner,
and thence to the office again, where very hard at
work all the afternoon till night, and then home to
my wife to read to me, and to bed, my cold having been
now almost for three days quite gone from me.
This day my wife made it appear to me that my late
entertainment this week cost me above L12, an expence
which I am almost ashamed of, though it is but once
in a great while, and is the end for which, in the
most part, we live, to have such a merry day once
or twice in a man’s life.
7th (Lord’s day). Up, and
to the office, busy till church time, and then to
church, where a dull sermon, and so home to dinner,
all alone with my wife, and then to even my Journall
to this day, and then to the Tower, to see Sir W.
Coventry, who had H. Jermin and a great many more with
him, and more, while I was there, come in; so that
I do hear that there was not less than sixty coaches
there yesterday, and the other day; which I hear also
that there is a great exception taken at, by the King
and the Duke of Buckingham, but it cannot be helped.
Thence home, and with our coach out to Suffolk Street,
to see my cozen Pepys, but neither the old nor young
at home. So to my cozen Turner’s, and there
staid talking a little, and then back to Suffolk Street,
where they not being yet come home I to White Hall,
and there hear that there are letters come from Sir
Thomas Allen, that he hath made some kind of peace
with Algiers; upon which the King and Duke of York,
being to go out of town to-morrow, are met at my Lord
Arlington’s: so I there, and by Mr. Wren
was desired to stay to see if there were occasion for
their speaking with me, which I did, walking without,
with Charles Porter,
[Charles Porter “was the son
of a prebend[ary] in Norwich, and a ’prentice
boy in the city in the rebellious times. When
the committee house was blown up, he was very
active in that rising, and after the soldiers
came and dispersed the rout, he, as a rat among joint
stools, shifted to and fro among the shambles, and
had forty pistols shot at him by the troopers
that rode after him to kill him [24th April,
1648]. In that distress he had the presence of
mind to catch up a little child that, during
the rout, was frighted, and stood crying in the
streets, and, unobserved by the troopers, ran away
with it. The people opened a way for him, saying,
’Make room for the poor child.’
Thus he got off, and while search was made for him
in the market-place, got into the Yarmouth ferry, and
at Yarmouth took ship and went to Holland....
In Holland he trailed a pike, and was in several
actions as a common soldier. At length
he kept a cavalier eating-house; but, his customers
being needy, he soon broke, and came for England,
and being a genteel youth, was taken in among
the chancery clerks, and got to be under a master....
His industry was great; and he had an acquired dexterity
and skill in the forms of the court; and although he
was a bon companion, and followed much the bottle,
yet he made such dispatches as satisfied his
clients, especially the clerks, who knew where
to find him. His person was florid, and speech
prompt and articulate. But his vices, in
the way of women and the bottle, were so ungoverned,
as brought him to a morsel.... When the Lord
Keeper North had the Seal, who from an early acquaintance
had a kindness for him which was well known,
and also that he was well heard, as they call
it, business flowed in to him very fast, and yet he
could scarce keep himself at liberty to follow his
business.... At the Revolution, when his
interest fell from, and his debts began to fall
upon him, he was at his wits’ end.... His
character for fidelity, loyalty, and facetious
conversation was without exception” Roger
North’s Lives of the Norths (Lord Keeper Guilford),
ed. Jessopp, vol. i., pp. 381-2.
He was originally made Lord Chancellor of Ireland
in the reign of James ii., during the viceroyalty
of Lord Clarendon, 1686, when he was knighted.
“He was,” says Burnet, “a
man of ready wit, and being poor was thought a person
fit to be made a tool of. When Clarendon was
recalled, Porter was also displaced, and Fitton
was made chancellor, a man who knew no other
law than the king’s pleasure” ("Own Time").
Sir Charles Porter was again made Lord Chancellor
of Ireland in 1690, and in this same year he
acted as one of the Lords Justices. This note
of Lord Braybrooke’s is retained and added to,
but the reference may after all be to another
Charles Porter. See vol. iii., , and vol. vi., .]
talking of a great many things:
and I perceive all the world is against the Duke of
Buckingham his acting thus high, and do prophesy nothing
but ruin from it: But he do well observe that
the church lands cannot certainly come to much, if
the King shall [be] persuaded to take them; they being
leased out for long leases. By and by, after two
hours’ stay, they rose, having, as Wren tells
me, resolved upon sending six ships to the Streights
forthwith, not being contented with the peace upon
the terms they demand, which are, that all our ships,
where any Turks or Moores shall be found slaves, shall
be prizes; which will imply that they, must be searched.
I hear that to-morrow the King and the Duke of York
set out for Newmarket, by three in the morning; to
some foot and horse-races, to be abroad ten or twelve
days: So I away, without seeing the Duke of York;
but Mr. Wren showed me the Order of Council about the
balancing the Storekeeper’s accounts, passed
the Council in the very terms I drew it, only I did
put in my name as he that presented the book of Hosier’s
preparing, and that is left out I mean,
my name which is no great matter.
So to my wife to Suffolk Streete, where she was gone,
and there I found them at supper, and eat a little
with them, and so home, and there to bed, my cold
pretty well gone.
8th. Up, and with W. Hewer by
hackney coach to White Hall, where the King and the
Duke of York is gone by three in the morning, and had
the misfortune to be overset with the Duke of York,
the Duke of Monmouth, and the Prince, at the King’s
Gate’ in Holborne; and the King all dirty, but
no hurt. How it come to pass I know not, but only
it was dark, and the torches did not, they say, light
the coach as they should do. I thought this morning
to have seen my Lord Sandwich before he went out of
town, but I come half an hour too late; which troubles
me, I having not seen him since my Lady Palls died.
So W. Hewer and I to the Harp-and-Ball, to drink my
morning draught, having come out in haste; and there
met with King, the Parliament-man, with whom I had
some impertinent talk. And so to the Privy Seal
Office, to examine what records I could find there,
for my help in the great business I am put upon, of
defending the present constitution of the Navy; but
there could not have liberty without order from him
that is in present waiting, Mr. Bickerstaffe, who
is out of town. This I did after I had walked
to the New Exchange and there met Mr. Moore, who went
with me thither, and I find him the same discontented
poor man as ever. He tells me that Mr. Shepley
is upon being turned away from my Lord’s family,
and another sent down, which I am sorry for; but his
age and good fellowship have almost made him fit for
nothing. Thence, at Unthanke’s my wife met
me, and with our coach to my cozen Turner’s and
there dined, and after dinner with my wife alone to
the King’s playhouse, and there saw “The
Mocke Astrologer,” which I have often seen, and
but an ordinary play; and so to my cozen Turner’s
again, where we met Roger Pepys, his wife, and two
daughters, and there staid and talked a little, and
then home, and there my wife to read to me, my eyes
being sensibly hurt by the too great lights of the
playhouse. So to supper and to bed.
9th. Up, and to the Tower; and
there find Sir W. Coventry alone, writing down his
journal, which, he tells me, he now keeps of the material
things; upon which I told him, and he is the only man
I ever told it to, I think, that I kept it most strictly
these eight or ten years; and I am sorry almost that
I told it him, it not being necessary, nor may be
convenient to have it known. Here he showed me
the petition he had sent to the King by my Lord Keeper,
which was not to desire any admittance to employment,
but submitting himself therein humbly to his Majesty;
but prayed the removal of his displeasure, and that
he might be set free. He tells me that my Lord
Keeper did acquaint the King with the substance of
it, not shewing him the petition; who answered, that
he was disposing of his employments, and when that
was done, he might be led to discharge him: and
this is what he expects, and what he seems to desire.
But by this discourse he was pleased to take occasion
to shew me and read to me his account, which he hath
kept by him under his own hand, of all his discourse,
and the King’s answers to him, upon the great
business of my Lord Clarendon, and how he had first
moved the Duke of York with it twice, at good distance,
one after another, but without success; shewing me
thereby the simplicity and reasons of his so doing,
and the manner of it; and the King’s accepting
it, telling him that he was not satisfied in his management,
and did discover some dissatisfaction against him for
his opposing the laying aside of my Lord Treasurer,
at Oxford, which was a secret the King had not discovered.
And really I was mighty proud to be privy to this
great transaction, it giving me great conviction of
the noble nature and ends of Sir W. Coventry in it,
and considerations in general of the consequences
of great men’s actions, and the uncertainty
of their estates, and other very serious considerations.
From this to other discourse, and so to the Office,
where we sat all the morning, and after dinner by
coach to my cozen Turner’s, thinking to have
taken the young ladies to a play; but The. was let
blood to-day; and so my wife and I towards the King’s
playhouse, and by the way found Betty [Turner], and
Bab., and Betty Pepys staying for us; and so took them
all to see “Claricilla,” which do not
please me almost at all, though there are some good
things in it. And so to my cozen Turner’s
again, and there find my Lady Mordaunt, and her sister
Johnson; and by and by comes in a gentleman, Mr. Overbury,
a pleasant man, who plays most excellently on the
flagelette, a little one, that sounded as low as one
of mine, and mighty pretty. Hence by and by away,
and with my wife, and Bab. and Betty Pepys, and W.
Hewer, whom I carried all this day with me, to my
cozen Stradwick’s, where I have not been ever
since my brother Tom died, there being some difference
between my father and them, upon the account of my
cozen Scott; and I was glad of this opportunity of
seeing them, they being good and substantial people,
and kind, and here met my cozen Roger and his wife,
and my cozen Turner, and here, which I never did before,
I drank a glass, of a pint, I believe, at one draught,
of the juice of oranges, of whose peel they make comfits;
and here they drink the juice as wine, with sugar,
and it is very fine drink; but, it being new, I was
doubtful whether it might not do me hurt. Having
staid a while, my wife and I back, with my cozen Turner,
etc., to her house, and there we took our leaves
of my cozen Pepys, who goes with his wife and two
daughters for Impington tomorrow. They are very
good people, and people I love, and am obliged to,
and shall have great pleasure in their friendship,
and particularly in hers, she being an understanding
and good woman. So away home, and there after
signing my letters, my eyes being bad, to supper and
to bed.
10th. Up, and by hackney-coach
to Auditor Beale’s Office, in Holborne, to look
for records of the Navy, but he was out of the way,
and so forced to go next to White Hall, to the Privy
Seal; and, after staying a little there, then to Westminster,
where, at the Exchequer, I met with Mr. Newport and
Major Halsey; and, after doing a little business with
Mr. Burges, we by water to White Hall, where I made
a little stop: and so with them by coach to Temple
Bar, where, at the Sugar Loaf we dined, and W. Hewer
with me; and there comes a companion of theirs, Colonel
Vernon, I think they called him; a merry good fellow,
and one that was very plain in cursing the Duke of
Buckingham, and discoursing of his designs to ruin
us, and that ruin must follow his counsels, and that
we are an undone people. To which the others
concurred, but not so plain, but all vexed at Sir
W. Coventry’s being laid aside: but Vernon,
he is concerned, I perceive, for my Lord Ormond’s
being laid aside; but their company, being all old
cavaliers, were very pleasant to hear how they swear
and talk. But Halsey, to my content, tells me
that my Lord Duke of Albemarle says that W. Coventry
being gone, nothing will be well done at the Treasury,
and I believe it; but they do all talk as that Duncombe,
upon some pretence or other, must follow him.
Thence to Auditor Beale’s, his house and office,
but not to be found, and therefore to the Privy Seale
at White Hall, where, with W. Hewer and Mr. Gibson,
who met me at the Temple, I spent the afternoon till
evening looking over the books there, and did find
several things to my purpose, though few of those I
designed to find, the books being kept there in no
method at all. Having done there, we by water
home, and there find my cozen Turner and her two daughters
come to see us; and there, after talking a little,
I had my coach ready, and my wife and I, they going
home, we out to White Chapel to take a little ayre,
though yet the dirtiness of the road do prevent most
of the pleasure, which should have been from this tour.
So home, and my wife to read to me till supper, and
to bed.
11th. Up, and to Sir W. Coventry,
to the Tower, where I walked and talked with him an
hour alone, from one good thing to another: who
tells me that he hears that the Commission is gone
down to the King, with a blank to fill, for his place
in the Treasury: and he believes it will be filled
with one of our Treasurers of the Navy, but which he
knows not, but he believes it will be Osborne.
We walked down to the Stone Walk, which is called,
it seems, my Lord of Northumberland’s walk, being
paved by some one of that title, that was prisoner
there: and at the end of it, there is a piece
of iron upon the wall, with, his armes upon it, and
holes to put in a peg, for every turn that they make
upon that walk. So away to the Office, where
busy all the morning, and so to dinner, and so very
busy all the afternoon, at my Office, late; and then
home tired, to supper, with content with my wife,
and so to bed, she pleasing me, though I dare not
own it, that she hath hired a chambermaid; but she,
after many commendations, told me that she had one
great fault, and that was, that she was very handsome,
at which I made nothing, but let her go on; but many
times to-night she took occasion to discourse of her
handsomeness, and the danger she was in by taking her,
and that she did doubt yet whether it would be fit
for her, to take her. But I did assure her of
my resolutions to have nothing to do with her maids,
but in myself I was glad to have the content to have
a handsome one to look on.
12th. Up, and abroad, with my
own coach, to Auditor Beale’s house, and thence
with W. Hewer to his Office, and there with great content
spent all the morning looking over the Navy accounts
of several years, and the several patents of the Treasurers,
which was more than I did hope to have found there.
About noon I ended there, to my great content, and
giving the clerks there 20s. for their trouble, and
having sent for W. Howe to me to discourse with him
about the Patent Office records, wherein I remembered
his brother to be concerned, I took him in my coach
with W. Hewer and myself towards Westminster; and there
he carried me to Nott’s, the famous bookbinder,
that bound for my Lord Chancellor’s library;
and here I did take occasion for curiosity to bespeak
a book to be bound, only that I might have one of
his binding. Thence back to Graye’s Inne:
and, at the next door, at a cook’s-shop of Howe’s
acquaintance, we bespoke dinner, it being now two o’clock;
and in the meantime he carried us into Graye’s
Inne, to his chamber, where I never was before;
and it is very pretty, and little, and neat, as he
was always. And so, after a little stay, and
looking over a book or two there, we carried a piece
of my Lord Coke with us, and to our dinner, where,
after dinner, he read at my desire a chapter in my
Lord Coke about perjury, wherein I did learn a good
deal touching oaths, and so away to the Patent Office;
in Chancery Lane, where his brother Jacke, being
newly broke by running in debt, and growing an idle
rogue, he is forced to hide himself; and W. Howe do
look after the Office, and here I did set a clerk
to look out some things for me in their books, while
W. Hewer and I to the Crowne Offices where we met
with several good things that I most wanted, and did
take short notes of the dockets, and so back to the
Patent Office, and did the like there, and by candle-light
ended. And so home, where, thinking to meet my
wife with content, after my pains all this day, I
find her in her closet, alone, in the dark, in a hot
fit of railing against me, upon some news she has this
day heard of Deb.’s living very fine, and with
black spots, and speaking ill words of her mistress,
which with good reason might vex her; and the baggage
is to blame, but, God knows, I know nothing of her,
nor what she do, nor what becomes of her, though God
knows that my devil that is within me do wish that
I could. Yet God I hope will prevent me therein,
for I dare not trust myself with it if I should know
it; but, what with my high words, and slighting it,
and then serious, I did at last bring her to very
good and kind terms, poor heart! and I was heartily
glad of it, for I do see there is no man can be happier
than myself, if I will, with her. But in her
fit she did tell me what vexed me all the night, that
this had put her upon putting off her handsome maid
and hiring another that was full of the small pox,
which did mightily vex me, though I said nothing,
and do still. So down to supper, and she to read
to me, and then with all possible kindness to bed.
13th. Up, and to the Tower, to
see Sir W. Coventry, and with him talking of business
of the Navy, all alone, an hour, he taking physic.
And so away to the Office, where all the morning,
and then home to dinner, with my people, and so to
the Office again, and there all the afternoon till
night, when comes, by mistake, my cozen Turner, and
her two daughters, which love such freaks, to eat
some anchovies and ham of bacon with me, instead of
noon, at dinner, when I expected them. But, however,
I had done my business before they come, and so was
in good humour enough to be with them, and so home
to them to supper, and pretty merry, being pleased
to see Betty Turner, which hath something mighty pretty.
But that which put me in good humour, both at noon
and night, is the fancy that I am this day made a
Captain of one of the King’s ships, Mr. Wren
having this day sent me, the Duke of York’s commission
to be Captain of “The Jerzy,” in order
to my being of a Court-martiall for examining the
loss of “The Defyance,” and other things;
which do give me occasion of much mirth, and may be
of some use to me, at least I shall get a little money
by it for the time I have it; it being designed that
I must really be a Captain to be able to sit in this
Court. They staid till about eight at night,
and then away, and my wife to read to me, and then
to bed in mighty good humour, but for my eyes.
14th (Lord’s day). Up,
and to my office with Tom, whom I made to read to
me the books of Propositions in the time of the Grand
Commission, which I did read a good part of before
church, and then with my wife to church, where I did
see my milliner’s wife come again, which pleased
me; but I durst not be seen to mind her for fear of
my wife’s seeing me, though the woman I did
never speak twenty words to, and that but only in
her husband’s shop. But so fearful I am
of discontenting my wife, or giving her cause of jealousy.
But here we heard a most excellent good sermon of
Mr. Gifford’s, upon the righteousness of Scribes
and Pharisees. So home to dinner and to work
again, and so till dinner, where W. Howe come and
dined with me, and staid and read in my Lord Cooke
upon his chapter of perjury again, which pleased me,
and so parted, and I to my office, and there made
an end of the books of Propositions, which did please
me mightily to hear read, they being excellently writ
and much to the purpose, and yet so as I think I shall
make good use of his defence of our present constitution.
About four o’clock took coach to visit my cozen
Turner, and I out with her to make a visit, but the
lady she went to see was abroad. So back and to
talk with her and her daughters, and then home, and
she and I to walk in the garden, the first time this
year, the weather being mighty temperate; and then
I to write down my Journall for the last week, my eyes
being very bad, and therefore I forced to find a way
to use by turns with my tube, one after another, and
so home to supper and to bed. Before I went from
my office this night I did tell Tom my resolution not
to keep him after Jane was gone, but shall do well
by him, which pleases him; and I think he will presently
marry her, and go away out of my house with her.
15th. Up, and by water with W.
Hewer to the Temple; and thence to the Rolls, where
I made inquiry for several rolls, and was soon informed
in the manner of it: and so spent the whole morning
with W. Hewer, he taking little notes in short-hand,
while I hired a clerk there to read to me about twelve
or more several rolls which I did call for: and
it was great pleasure to me to see the method wherein
their rolls are kept; that when the Master of the
Office, one Mr. Case, do call for them, who is a man
that I have heretofore known by coming to my Lord of
Sandwich’s, he did most readily turn to them.
At noon they shut up; and W. Hewer and I did walk
to the Cocke, at the end of Suffolke Streete, where
I never was, a great ordinary, mightily cried up, and
there bespoke a pullett; which while dressing, he
and I walked into St. James’s Park, and thence
back, and dined very handsome, with a good soup, and
a pullet, for 4d. the whole. Thence back to
the Rolls, and did a little more business: and
so by water to White Hall, whither. I went to
speak with Mr. Williamson, that if he hath any papers
relating to the Navy I might see them, which he promises
me: and so by water home, with great content
for what I have this day found, having got almost
as much as I desire of the history of the Navy, from
1618 to 1642, when the King and Parliament fell out.
So home, and did get my wife to read, and so to supper
and to bed.
16th. Up, and to the office,
after having visited Sir W. Coventry at the Tower,
and walked with him upon the Stone Walk, alone, till
other company come to him, and had very good discourse
with him. At noon home, where my wife and Jane
gone abroad, and Tom, in order to their buying of
things for their wedding, which, upon my discourse
the last night, is now resolved to be done, upon the
26th of this month, the day of my solemnity for my
cutting of the stone, when my cozen Turner must be
with us. My wife, therefore, not at dinner; and
comes to me Mr. Evelyn of Deptford, a worthy good
man, and dined with me, but a bad dinner; who is grieved
for, and speaks openly to me his thoughts of, the times,
and our ruin approaching; and all by the folly of
the King. His business to me was about some ground
of his, at Deptford, next to the King’s yard:
and after dinner we parted. My sister Michell
coming also this day to see us, whom I left there,
and I away down by water with W. Hewer to Woolwich,
where I have not been I think more than a year or two,
and here I saw, but did not go on board, my ship “The
Jerzy,” she lying at the wharf under repair.
But my business was to speak with Ackworth, about
some old things and passages in the Navy, for my information
therein, in order to my great business now of stating
the history of the Navy. This I did; and upon
the whole do find that the late times, in all their
management, were not more husbandly than we; and other
things of good content to me. His wife was sick,
and so I could not see her. Thence, after seeing
Mr. Sheldon, I to Greenwich by water, and there landed
at the King’s house, which goes on slow, but
is very pretty.
[The old palace at Greenwich had just
been pulled down, and a new building commenced
by Charles ii., only one wing of which was completed,
at the expense of L36,000, under the auspices of Webb,
Inigo Jones’s kinsman and executor.
In 1694 the unfinished edifice was granted by
William and Mary to trustees for the use and service
of a Naval Hospital; and it has been repeatedly
enlarged and improved till it has arrived at
its present splendour. B.]
I to the Park, there to see the prospect
of the hill, to judge of Dancre’s picture, which
he hath made thereof for me: and I do like it
very well: and it is a very pretty place.
Thence to Deptford, but staid not, Uthwayte being
out of the way: and so home, and then to the Ship
Tavern, Morrice’s, and staid till W. Hewer fetched
his uncle Blackburne by appointment to me, to discourse
of the business of the Navy in the late times; and
he did do it, by giving me a most exact account in
writing, of the several turns in the Admiralty and
Navy, of the persons employed therein, from the beginning
of the King’s leaving the Parliament, to his
Son’s coming in, to my great content; and now
I am fully informed in all I at present desire.
We fell to other talk; and I find by him that the
Bishops must certainly fall, and their hierarchy;
these people have got so much ground upon the King
and kingdom as is not to be got again from them:
and the Bishops do well deserve it. But it is
all the talk, I find, that Dr. Wilkins, my friend,
the Bishop of Chester, shall be removed to Winchester,
and be Lord Treasurer. Though this be foolish
talk, yet I do gather that he is a mighty rising man,
as being a Latitudinarian, and the Duke of Buckingham
his great friend. Here we staid talking till
to at night, where I did never drink before since
this man come to the house, though for his pretty wife’s
sake I do fetch my wine from this, whom I could not
nevertheless get para see to-night, though her husband
did seem to call for her. So parted here and
I home, and to supper and to bed.
17th. Up, and by water to see
Mr. Wren, and then Mr. Williamson, who did shew me
the very original bookes of propositions made by the
Commissioners for the Navy, in 1618, to my great content;
but no other Navy papers he could now shew me.
Thence to Westminster by water and to the Hall, where
Mrs. Michell do surprize me with the news that Doll
Lane is suddenly brought to bed at her sister’s
lodging, and gives it out that she is married, but
there is no such thing certainly, she never mentioning
it before, but I have cause to rejoice that I have
not seen her a great while, she having several times
desired my company, but I doubt to an evil end.
Thence to the Exchequer, where W. Hewer come to me,
and after a little business did go by water home, and
there dined, and took my wife by a hackney to the
King’s playhouse, and saw “The Coxcomb,”
the first time acted, but an old play, and a silly
one, being acted only by the young people. Here
met cozen Turner and The. So parted there from
them, and home by coach and to my letters at the office,
where pretty late, and so to supper and to bed.
18th. Up, and to see Sir W. Coventry,
and walked with him a good while in the Stone Walk:
and brave discourse about my Lord Chancellor, and his
ill managements and mistakes, and several things of
the Navy, and thence to the office, where we sat all
the morning, and so home to dinner, where my wife
mighty finely dressed, by a maid that she hath taken,
and is to come to her when Jane goes; and the same
she the other day told me of, to be so handsome.
I therefore longed to see her, but did not till after
dinner, that my wife and I going by coach, she went
with us to Holborne, where we set her down. She
is a mighty proper maid, and pretty comely, but so
so; but hath a most pleasing tone of voice, and speaks
handsomely, but hath most great hands, and I believe
ugly; but very well dressed, and good clothes, and
the maid I believe will please me well enough.
Thence to visit Ned Pickering and his lady, and Creed
and his wife, but the former abroad, and the latter
out of town, gone to my Lady Pickering’s in
Northamptonshire, upon occasion of the late death of
their brother, Oliver Pickering, a youth, that is dead
of the smallpox. So my wife and I to Dancre’s
to see the pictures; and thence to Hyde Park, the
first time we were there this year, or ever in our
own coach, where with mighty pride rode up and down,
and many coaches there; and I thought our horses and
coach as pretty as any there, and observed so to be
by others. Here staid till night, and so home,
and to the office, where busy late, and so home to
supper and to bed, with great content, but much business
in my head of the office, which troubles me.
19th. Up, and by water to White
Hall, there to the Lords of the Treasury, and did
some business, and here Sir Thomas Clifford did speak
to me, as desirous that I would some time come and
confer with him about the Navy, which I am glad of,
but will take the direction of the Duke of York before
I do it, though I would be glad to do something to
secure myself, if I could, in my employment.
Thence to the plaisterer’s, and took my face,
and my Lord Duke of Albemarle’s, home with me
by coach, they being done to my mind; and mighty glad
I am of understanding this way of having the pictures
of any friends. At home to dinner, where Mr.
Sheres dined with us, but after dinner I left him and
my wife, and with Commissioner Middleton and Kempthorne
to a Court-martiall, to which, by virtue of my late
Captainship, I am called, the first I was ever at;
where many Commanders, and Kempthorne president.
Here was tried a difference between Sir L. Van Hemskirke,
the Dutch Captain who commands “The Nonsuch,”
built by his direction, and his Lieutenant; a drunken
kind of silly business. We ordered the Lieutenant
to ask him pardon, and have resolved to lay before
the Duke of York what concerns the Captain, which
was striking of his Lieutenant and challenging him
to fight, which comes not within any article of the
laws martiall. But upon discourse the other day
with Sir W. Coventry, I did advise Middleton, and he
and I did forbear to give judgment, but after the
debate did withdraw into another cabin, the Court
being held in one of the yachts, which was on purpose
brought up over against St. Katharine’s, it being
to be feared that this precedent of our being made
Captains, in order to the trying of the loss of “The
Defyance,” wherein we are the proper persons
to enquire into the want of instructions while ships
do lie in harbour, evil use might be hereafter made
of the precedent by putting the Duke of Buckingham,
or any of these rude fellows that now are uppermost,
to make packed Courts, by Captains made on purpose
to serve their turns. The other cause was of
the loss of “The Providence” at Tangier,
where the Captain’s being by chance on shore
may prove very inconvenient to him, for example’s
sake, though the man be a good man, and one whom, for
Norwood’s sake, I would be kind to; but I will
not offer any thing to the excusing such a miscarriage.
He is at present confined, till he can bring better
proofs on his behalf of the reasons of his being on
shore. So Middleton and I away to the Office;
and there I late busy, making my people, as I have
done lately, to read Mr. Holland’s’ Discourse
of the Navy, and what other things I can get to inform
me fully in all; and here late, about eight at night,
comes Mr. Wren to me, who had been at the Tower to
Coventry. He come only to see how matters go,
and tells me, as a secret, that last night the Duke
of York’s closet was broken open, and his cabinets,
and shut again, one of them that the rogue that did
it hath left plate and a watch behind him, and therefore
they fear that it was only for papers, which looks
like a very malicious business in design, to hurt
the Duke of York; but they cannot know that till the
Duke of York comes to town about the papers, and therefore
make no words of it. He gone, I to work again,
and then to supper at home, and to bed.
20th. Up, and to the Tower, to
W. Coventry, and there walked with him alone, on the
Stone Walk, till company come to him; and there about
the business of the Navy discoursed with him, and
about my Lord Chancellor and Treasurer; that they
were against the war [with the Dutch] at first, declaring,
as wise men and statesmen, at first to the King, that
they thought it fit to have a war with them at some
time or other, but that it ought not to be till we
found the Crowns of Spain and France together by the
Bares, the want of which did ruin our war. But
then he told me that, a great deal before the war,
my Lord Chancellor did speak of a war with some heat,
as a thing to be desired, and did it upon a belief
that he could with his speeches make the Parliament
give what money he pleased, and do what he would,
or would make the King desire; but he found himself
soon deceived of the Parliament, they having a long
time before his removal been cloyed with his speeches
and good words, and were come to hate him. Sir
W. Coventry did tell me it, as the wisest thing that
ever was said to the King by any statesman of his time,
and it was by my Lord Treasurer that is dead, whom,
I find, he takes for a very great statesman that
when the King did shew himself forward for passing
the Act of Indemnity, he did advise the King that he
would hold his hand in doing it, till he had got his
power restored, that had been diminished by the late
times, and his revenue settled in such a manner as
he might depend on himself, without resting upon Parliaments, and
then pass it. But my Lord Chancellor, who thought
he could have the command of Parliaments for ever,
because for the King’s sake they were awhile
willing to grant all the King desired, did press for
its being done; and so it was, and the King from that
time able to do nothing with the Parliament almost.
Thence to the office, where sat all the forenoon,
and then home to dinner, and so to the office, where
late busy, and so home, mightily pleased with the
news brought me to-night, that the King and Duke of
York are come back this afternoon, and no sooner come,
but a warrant was sent to the Tower for the releasing
Sir W. Coventry; which do put me in some hopes that
there may be, in this absence, some accommodation
made between the Duke of York and the Duke of Buckingham
and; Arlington. So home, to supper, and to bed.
21st (Lord’s day). Up,
and by water over to Southwarke; and then, not getting
a boat, I forced to walk to Stangate; and so over to
White Hall, in a scull; where up to the Duke of York’s
dressing-room, and there met Harry Saville, and understand
that Sir W. Coventry is come to his house last night.
I understand by Mr. Wren that his friends having, by
Secretary Trevor and my Lord Keeper, applied to the
King upon his first coming home, and a promise made
that he should be discharged this day, my Lord Arlington
did anticipate them, by sending a warrant presently
for his discharge which looks a little like kindness,
or a desire of it; which God send! though I fear the
contrary: however, my heart is glad that he is
out. Thence up and down the House. Met with
Mr. May, who tells me the story of his being put by
Sir John Denham’s place, of Surveyor of the
King’s Works, who it seems, is lately dead, by
the unkindness of the Duke Buckingham, who hath brought
in Dr. Wren: though, he tells me, he hath been
his servant for twenty years together in all his wants
and dangers, saving him from want of bread by his care
and management, and with a promise of having his help
in his advancement, and an engagement under his hand
for L1000 not yet paid, and yet the Duke of Buckingham
so ungrateful as to put him by: which is an ill
thing, though Dr. Wren is a worthy man. But he
tells me that the King is kind to him, and hath promised
him a pension of L300 a-year out of the Works; which
will be of more content to him than the place, which,
under their present wants of money, is a place that
disobliges most people, being not able to do what
they desire to their lodgings. Here meeting with
Sir H. Cholmly and Povy, that tell me that my Lord
Middleton is resolved in the Cabal that he shall not
go to Tangier; and that Sir Edward Harlow [Harley],
whom I know not, is propounded to go, who was Governor
of Dunkirke, and, they say, a most worthy brave man,
which I shall be very glad of. So by water (H.
Russell coming for me) home to dinner, where W. Howe
comes to dine with me; and after dinner propounds
to me my lending him L500, to help him to purchase
a place the Master of the Patent Office,
of Sir Richard Piggott. I did give him a civil
answer, but shall think twice of it; and the more,
because of the changes we are like to have in the
Navy, which will not make it fit for me to divide
the little I have left more than I have done, God knowing
what my condition is, I having not attended, and now
not being able to examine what my state is, of my
accounts, and being in the world, which troubles me
mightily. He gone, I to the office to enter my
journall for a week. News is lately come of the
Algerines taking L3000 in money, out of one of our
Company’s East India ships, outward bound, which
will certainly make the war last; which I am sorry
for, being so poor as we are, and broken in pieces.
At night my wife to read to me, and then to supper,
where Pelling comes to see and sup with us, and I find
that he is assisting my wife in getting a licence
to our young people to be married this Lent, which
is resolved shall be done upon Friday next, my great
day, or feast, for my being cut of the stone.
So after supper to bed, my eyes being very bad.
22nd. Up, and by water, with
W. Newer, to White Hall, there to attend the Lords
of the Treasury; but, before they sat, I did make a
step to see Sir W. Coventry at his house, where, I
bless God! he is come again; but in my way I met him,
and so he took me into his coach and carried me to
White Hall, and there set me down where he ought not at
least, he hath not yet leave to come, nor hath thought
fit to ask it, hearing that Henry Saville is not only
denied to kiss the King’s hand, but the King,
being asked it by the Duke of York, did deny it, and
directed that the Duke shall not receive him, to wait
upon him in his chamber, till further orders.
Sir W. Coventry told me that he was going to visit
Sir John Trevor, who hath been kind to him; and he
shewed me a long list of all his friends that he must
this week make visits to, that come to visit him in
the Tower; and seems mighty well satisfied with his
being out of business, but I hope he will not long
be so; at least, I do believe that all must go to
rat if the King do not come to see the want of such
a servant. Thence to the Treasury-Chamber, and
there all the morning to my great grief, put to do
Sir G. Downing’s work of dividing the Customes
for this year, between the Navy, the Ordnance and Tangier:
but it did so trouble my eyes, that I had rather have
given L20 than have had it to do; but I did thereby
oblige Sir Thomas Clifford and Sir J. Duncombe, and
so am glad of the opportunity to recommend myself to
the former for the latter I need not, he loving me
well already. At it till noon, here being several
of my brethren with me but doing nothing, but I all.
But this day I did also represent to our Treasurers,
which was read here, a state of the charge of the
Navy, and what the expence of it this year would likely
be; which is done so as it will appear well done and
to my honour, for so the Lords did take it: and
I oblige the Treasurers by doing it, at their request.
Thence with W. Hewer at noon to Unthanke’s,
where my wife stays for me and so to the Cocke, where
there was no room, and thence to King Street, to several
cook’s shops, where nothing to be had; and at
last to the corner shop, going down Ivy Lane, by my
Lord of Salisbury’s, and there got a good dinner,
my wife, and W. Newer, and I: and after dinner
she, with her coach, home; and he and I to look over
my papers for the East India Company, against the
afternoon: which done, I with them to White Hall,
and there to the Treasury-Chamber, where the East
India Company and three Councillors pleaded against
me alone, for three or four hours, till seven at night,
before the Lords; and the Lords did give me the conquest
on behalf of the King, but could not come to any conclusion,
the Company being stiff: and so I think we shall
go to law with them. This done, and my eyes mighty
bad with this day’s work, I to Mr. Wren’s,
and then up to the Duke of York, and there with Mr.
Wren did propound to him my going to Chatham to-morrow
with Commissioner Middleton, and so this week to make
the pay there, and examine the business of “The
Defyance” being lost, and other businesses,
which I did the rather, that I might be out of the
way at the wedding, and be at a little liberty myself
for a day, or two, to find a little pleasure, and
give my eyes a little ease. The Duke of York
mightily satisfied with it; and so away home, where
my wife troubled at my being so late abroad, poor
woman! though never more busy, but I satisfied her;
and so begun to put things in order for my journey
to-morrow, and so, after supper, to bed.
23rd. Up, and to my office to
do a little business there, and so, my things being
all ready, I took coach with Commissioner Middleton,
Captain Tinker, and Mr. Huchinson, a hackney coach,
and over the bridge, and so out towards Chatham, and;
dined at Dartford, where we staid an hour or two,
it being a cold day; and so on, and got to Chatham
just at night, with very good discourse by the way,
but mostly of matters of religion, wherein Huchinson
his vein lies. After supper, we fell to talk
of spirits and apparitions, whereupon many pretty,
particular stories were told, so as to make me almost
afeard to lie alone, but for shame I could not help
it; and so to bed and, being sleepy, fell soon to rest,
and so rested well.
24th. Up, and walked abroad in
the garden, and find that Mrs. Tooker has not any
of her daughters here as I expected and so walked to
the yard, leaving Middleton at the pay, and there
I only walked up and down the yard, and then to the
Hill-House, and there did give order for the coach
to be made ready; and got Mr. Gibson, whom I carried
with me, to go with me and Mr. Coney, the surgeon,
towards Maydston which I had a mighty mind to see,
and took occasion, in my way, at St. Margett’s,
to pretend to call to see Captain Allen to see whether
Mrs. Jowles, his daughter, was there; and there his
wife come to the door, he being at London, and through
a window, I spied Jowles, but took no notice of he
but made excuse till night, and then promised to come
and see Mrs. Allen again, and so away, it being a
mighty cold and windy, but clear day; and had the
pleasure of seeing the Medway running, winding up and
down mightily, and a very fine country; and I went
a little out of the way to have visited Sir John Bankes,
but he at London; but here I had a sight of his seat
and house, the outside, which is an old abbey just
like Hinchingbroke, and as good at least, and mighty
finely placed by the river; and he keeps the grounds
about it, and walls and the house, very handsome:
I was mightily pleased with the sight of it. Thence
to Maydstone, which I had a mighty mind to see, having
never been there; and walked all up and down the town,
and up to the top of the steeple, and had a noble
view, and then down again: and in the town did
see an old man beating of flax, and did step into
the barn and give him money, and saw that piece of
husbandry which I never saw, and it is very pretty:
in the street also I did buy and send to our inne,
the Bell, a dish of fresh fish. And so, having
walked all round the town, and found it very pretty,
as most towns I ever saw, though not very big, and
people of good fashion in it, we to our inne to
dinner, and had a good dinner; and after dinner a
barber come to me, and there trimmed me, that I might
be clean against night, to go to Mrs. Allen. And
so, staying till about four o’clock, we set
out, I alone in the coach going and coming; and in
our way back, I ’light out of the way to see
a Saxon monument,
[Kits-Cotty House, a cromlech in Aylesford
parish, Kent, on a hillside adjacent to the river
Medway, three and a half miles N. by W. of Maidstone.
It consists of three upright stones and an overlying
one, and forms a small chamber open in front.
It is supposed to have been the centre of a
group of monuments indicating the burial-place
of the Belgian settlers in this part of Britain.
Other stones of a similar character exist in the
neighbourhood.]
as they say, of a King, which is three
stones standing upright, and a great round one lying
on them, of great bigness, although not so big as
those on Salisbury Plain; but certainly it is a thing
of great antiquity, and I mightily glad to see it;
it is near to Aylesford, where Sir John Bankes lives.
So homeward, and stopped again at Captain Allen’s,
and there ’light, and sent the coach and Gibson
home, and I and Coney staid; and there comes to us
Mrs. Jowles, who is a very fine, proper lady, as most
I know, and well dressed. Here was also a gentleman,
one Major Manly, and his wife, neighbours; and here
we staid, and drank, and talked, and set Coney and
him to play while Mrs. Jowles and I to talk, and there
had all our old stories up, and there I had the liberty
to salute her often, and pull off her glove, where
her hand mighty moist, and she mighty free in kindness
to me, and je do not at all doubt that I might
have had that that I would have desired de elle had
I had time to have carried her to Cobham, as she, upon
my proposing it, was very willing to go, for elle
is a whore, that is certain, but a very brave and
comely one. Here was a pretty cozen of hers come
in to supper also, of a great fortune, daughter-in-law
to this Manly, mighty pretty, but had now such a cold,
she could not speak. Here mightily pleased with
Mrs. Jowles, and did get her to the street door, and
there to her su breasts, and baiser her
without any force, and credo that I might have had
all else, but it was not time nor place. Here
staid till almost twelve at night, and then with a
lanthorn from thence walked over the fields, as dark
as pitch, and mighty cold, and snow, to Chatham, and
Mr. Coney with great kindness to me: and there
all in bed before I come home, and so I presently
to bed.
25th. Up, and by and by, about
eight o’clock, come Rear-Admiral Kempthorne
and seven Captains more, by the Duke of York’s
order, as we expected, to hold the Court-martiall
about the loss of “The Defyance;” and
so presently we by boat to “The Charles,”
which lies over against Upnor Castle, and there we
fell to the business; and there I did manage the business,
the Duke of York having, by special order, directed
them to take the assistance of Commissioner Middleton
and me, forasmuch as there might be need of advice
in what relates to the government of the ships in
harbour. And so I did lay the law open to them,
and rattle the Master Attendants out of their wits
almost; and made the trial last till seven at night,
not eating a bit all the day; only when we had done
examination, and I given my thoughts that the neglect
of the Gunner of the ship was as great as I thought
any neglect could be, which might by the law deserve
death, but Commissioner Middleton did declare that
he was against giving the sentence of death, we withdrew,
as not being of the Court, and so left them to do
what they pleased; and, while they were debating it,
the Boatswain of the ship did bring us out of the
kettle a piece of hot salt beef, and some brown bread
and brandy; and there we did make a little meal, but
so good as I never would desire to eat better meat
while I live, only I would have cleaner dishes.
By and by they had done, and called us down from the
quarterdeck; and there we find they do sentence that
the Gunner of “The Defyance” should stand
upon “The Charles” three hours with his
fault writ upon his breast, and with a halter about
his neck, and so be made incapable of any office.
The truth is, the man do seem, and is, I believe, a
good man; but his neglect, in trusting a girl to carry
fire into his cabin, is not to be pardoned. This
being done, we took boat and home; and there a good
supper was ready for us, which should have been our
dinner. The Captains, desirous to be at London,
went away presently for Gravesend, to get thither
by this night’s tide; and so we to supper, it
having been a great snowy and mighty cold, foul day;
and so after supper to bed.
26th. Up, and with Middleton
all the morning at the Docke, looking over the storehouses
and Commissioner Pett’s house, in order to Captain
Cox’s coming to live there in his stead, as
Commissioner. But it is a mighty pretty house;
and pretty to see how every thing is said to be out
of repair for this new man, though L10 would put it
into as good condition in every thing as it ever was
in, so free every body is of the King’s money.
By and by to Mr. Wilson’s, and there drank, but
did not see his wife, nor any woman in the yard, and
so to dinner at the Hill-House; and after dinner,
till eight at night, close, Middleton and I, examining
the business of Mr. Pett, about selling a boat, and
we find him a very knave; and some other quarrels
of his, wherein, to justify himself, he hath made
complaints of others. This being done, we to supper,
and so to talk, Commissioner Middleton being mighty
good company upon a journey, and so to bed, thinking
how merry my people are at this time, putting Tom
and Jane to bed, being to have been married this day,
it being also my feast for my being cut of the stone,
but how many years I do not remember, but I think
it to be about ten or eleven.
27th. Up, and did a little business,
Middleton and I, then; after drinking a little buttered
ale, he and Huchinson and: I took coach, and,
exceeding merry in talk, to Dartford: Middleton
finding stories of his own life at Barbadoes, and
up and down at Venice, and elsewhere, that are mighty
pretty, and worth hearing; and he is a strange good
companion, and; droll upon the road, more than ever
I could have thought to have been in him. Here
we dined and met Captain Allen of Rochester, who dined
with us, and so went on his journey homeward, and we
by and by took coach again and got home about six
at night, it being all the morning as cold, snowy,
windy, and rainy day, as any in the whole winter past,
but pretty clear in the afternoon. I find all
well, but my wife abroad with Jane, who was married
yesterday, and I to the office busy, till by and by
my wife comes home, and so home, and there hear how
merry they were yesterday, and I glad at it, they
being married, it seems, very handsomely, at Islington;
and dined at the old house, and lay in our blue chamber,
with much company, and wonderful merry. The Turner
and Mary Batelier bridesmaids, and Talbot Pepys and
W. Hewer bridesmen. Anon to supper and to bed,
my head a little troubled with the muchness of the
business I have upon me at present. So to bed.
28th (Lord’s day). Lay
long talking with pleasure with my wife, and so up
and to the Office with Tom, who looks mighty smug upon
his marriage, as Jane also do, both of whom I did
give joy, and so Tom and I at work at the Office all
the morning, till dinner, and then dined, W. Batelier
with us; and so after dinner to work again, and sent
for Gibson, and kept him also till eight at night,
doing much business. And so, that being done,
and my journal writ, my eyes being very bad, and every
day worse and worse, I fear: but I find it most
certain that stronge drinks do make my eyes sore,
as they have done heretofore always; for, when I was
in the country, when my eyes were at the best, their
stronge beere would make my eyes sore: so home
to supper, and by and by to bed.
29th. Up, and by water to White
Hall; and there to the Duke of York, to shew myself,
after my journey to Chatham, but did no business to-day
with him: only after gone from him, I to Sir T.
Clifford’s; and there, after an hour’s
waiting, he being alone in his closet, I did speak
with him, and give him the account he gave me to draw
up, and he did like it very well: and then fell
to talk of the business of the Navy and giving me
good words, did fall foul of the constitution [of the
Board], and did then discover his thoughts, that Sir
J. Minnes was too old, and so was Colonel Middleton,
and that my Lord Brouncker did mind his mathematics
too much. I did not give much encouragement to
that of finding fault with my fellow-officers; but
did stand up for the constitution, and did say that
what faults there were in our Office would be found
not to arise from the constitution, but from the failures
of the officers in whose hands it was. This he
did seem to give good ear to; but did give me of myself
very good words, which pleased me well, though I shall
not build upon them any thing. Thence home; and
after dinner by water with Tom down to Greenwich,
he reading to me all the way, coming and going, my
collections out of the Duke of York’s old manuscript
of the Navy, which I have bound up, and do please
me mightily. At Greenwich I come to Captain Cocke’s,
where the house full of company, at the burial of James
Temple, who, it seems, hath been dead these five days
here I had a very good ring, which I did give my wife
as soon as I come home. I spent my time there
walking in the garden, talking with James Pierce, who
tells me that he is certain that the Duke of Buckingham
had been with his wenches all the time that he was
absent, which was all the last week, nobody knowing
where he was. The great talk is of the King’s
being hot of late against Conventicles, and to see
whether the Duke of Buckingham’s being returned
will turn the King, which will make him very popular:
and some think it is his plot to make the King thus,
to shew his power in the making him change his mind.
But Pierce did tell me that the King did certainly
say, that he that took one stone from the Church,
did take two from his Crown. By and by the corpse
come out; and I, with Sir Richard Browne and Mr. Evelyn,
in their coach to the church, where Mr. Plume preached.
But I, in the midst of the sermon, did go out, and
walked all alone, round to Deptford, thinking para
have seen the wife of Bagwell, which I did at her
door, but I could not conveniently go into her house,
and so lost my labour: and so to the King’s
Yard, and there my boat by order met me; and home,
where I made my boy to finish the my manuscript, and
so to supper and to bed my new chamber-maid, that comes
in the room of Jane; is come, Jane and Tom lying at
their own lodging this night: the new maid’s
name is Matt, a proper and very comely maid...
This day also our cook-maid Bridget went away, which
I was sorry for; but, just at her going she was found
to be a thief, and so I was the less trouble for it;
but now our whole house will, in a manner, be new
which, since Jane is gone, I am not at all sorry for,
for that my late differences with my wife about poor
Deb. will not be remembered. So to bed after
supper, and to sleep with great content.
30th. Up, and to Sir W. Coventry,
to see and discourse with him; and he tells me that
he hath lately been with my Lord Keeper, and had much
discourse about the Navy; and particularly he tells
me that he finds they are divided touching me and
my Lord Brouncker; some are for removing; and some
for keeping us. He told my Lord Keeper that it
would cost the King L10,000 before he hath made another
as fit to serve him in the Navy as I am; which, though
I believe it is true, yet I am much pleased to have
that character given me by W. Coventry, whatever be
the success of it. But I perceive they do think
that I know too much, and shall impose upon whomever
shall come next, and therefore must be removed, though
he tells me that Sir T. Clifford is inclined well enough
to me, and Sir T. Osborne; by what I have lately done,
I suppose. This news do a little trouble me,
but yet, when I consider it, it is but what I ought
not to be much troubled for, considering my incapacity,
in regard to my eyes, to continue long at this work,
and this when I think of and talk with my wife do
make me the less troubled for it. After some
talk of the business of the navy more with him, I away
and to the Office, where all the morning; and Sir
W. Pen, the first time that he hath been here since
his being last sick, which, I think, is two or three
months; and I think will be the last that he will be
here as one of the Board, he now inviting us all to
dine with him, as a parting dinner, on Thursday next,
which I am glad of, I am sure; for he is a very villain.
At noon home to dinner, where, and at the office, all
the afternoon, troubled at what I have this morning
heard, at least my mind full of thoughts upon it,
and so at night after supper to bed.
31st. Up, and by water to Sir
W. Coventry’s, there to talk with him about
business of the Navy, and received from him direction
what to advise the Duke of York at this time, which
was, to submit and give way to the King’s naming
a man or two, that the people about him have a mind
should be brought into the Navy, and perhaps that may
stop their fury in running further against the whole;
and this, he believes, will do it. After much
discourse with him, I walked out with him into St.
James’s Park, where, being afeard to be seen
with him, he having not leave yet to kiss the King’s
hand, but notice taken, as I hear, of all that go to
him, I did take the pretence of my attending the Tangier
Committee, to take my leave, though to serve him I
should, I think, stick at nothing. At the Committee,
this morning, my Lord Middleton declares at last his
being ready to go, as soon as ever money can be made
ready to pay the garrison: and so I have orders
to get money, but how soon I know not. Thence
home, and there find Mr Sheres, for whom I find my
moher of late to talk with mighty kindness; and particularly
he hath shewn himself to be a poet, and that she do
mightily value him for. He did not stay to dine
with us, but we to dinner; and then, in the afternoon,
my wife being very well dressed by her new maid, we
abroad, to make a visit to Mrs. Pickering; but she
abroad again, and so we never yet saw her. Thence
to Dancre’s, and there, saw our pictures which
are in doing; and I did choose a view of Rome instead
of Hampton Court; and mightily pleased I shall be
in them. Here were Sir Charles Cotterell and his
son bespeaking something; both ingenious men.
Thence my wife and I to the Park; and pretty store
of company; and so home with great content the month,
my mind in pretty good content for all things, but
the designs on foot to bring alterations in the Office,
which troubles me.