April 1st. Up, and with Colonel
Middleton, at the desire of Rear-Admiral Kempthorne,
the President, for our assisting them, to the Court-martiall
on board a yacht in the River here, to try the business
of the Purser’s complaints, Baker against Trevanion,
his Commander, of “The Dartmouth.”
But, Lord! to see what wretched doings there were among
all the Commanders to ruin the Purser, and defend
the Captain in all his rogueries, be it to the prejudice
of the King or Purser, no good man could bear!
I confess I was pretty high, which did not at least
the young gentlemen Commander like; and Middleton
did the like. But could not bring it to any issue
this day, sitting till two o’clock; and therefore
we being sent for, went to Sir W. Pen’s by invitation
to dine; where my wife was, and my Lord Brouncker
and his mistress, and Sir J. Minnes and his niece;
and here a bad dinner, and little mirth, I being little
pleased with my host. However, I made myself sociable;
and so, after dinner, my wife and I, with my Lord
Brouncker and his mistress, they set us down at my
cozen Turner’s, and there we staid awhile and
talked; and particularly here we met with Dr. Ball,
the Parson of the Temple, who did tell me a great
many pretty stories about the manner of the Parsons
being paid for their preaching at Paul’s heretofore,
and now, and the ground of the Lecture, and heretofore
the names of the founders thereof, which were many,
at some 5s., some 6s. per annum towards it: and
had their names read in the pulpit every sermon among
those holy persons that the Church do order a collect
for, giving God thanks for. By and by comes by
my desire Commissioner Middleton’s coach and
horses for us, and we went with it towards the Park,
thinking to have met The. Turner and Betty, but
did not; so turned back again to their lodging, and
there found them and Mr. Batelier, and there, after
a little talk, we took leave, and carry Batelier home
with us. So to supper, and so to bed.
2nd. Up, and by water to White
Hall, and there with the Office attended the Duke
of York, and staid in White Hall till about noon, and
so with W. Hewer to the Cocke, and there he and I
dined alone with great content, he reading to me,
for my memory’s sake, my late collections of
the history of the Navy, that I might represent the
same by and by to the Duke of York; and so, after
dinner, he and I to White Hall, and there to the Duke
of York’s lodgings, whither he, by and by, by
his appointment come: and alone with him an hour
in his closet, telling him mine and W. Coventry’s
advice touching the present posture of the Navy, as
the Duke of Buckingham and the rest do now labour to
make changes therein; and that it were best for him
to suffer the King to be satisfied with the bringing
in of a man or two which they desire. I did also
give the Duke of York a short account of the history
of the Navy, as to our Office, wherewith he was very
well satisfied: but I do find that he is pretty
stiff against their bringing in of men against his
mind, as the Treasures were, and particularly against
Child’s’ coming in, because he is a merchant.
After much discourse with him, we parted; and [he
to] the Council, while I staid waiting for his telling
me when I should be ready to give him a written account
of the administration of the Navy. This caused
me to wait the whole afternoon, till night. In
the mean time, stepping to the Duchess of York’s
side to speak with Lady Peterborough; I did see the
young Duchess,
[The
Princess Mary, afterwards Queen of England.]
a little child in hanging sleeves;
dance most finely, so as almost to ravish me, her
ears were so good: taught by a Frenchman that
did heretofore teach the King, and all the King’s
children, and the Queen-Mother herself, who do still
dance well. Thence to the council door and Mr.
Chevins took me into the back stairs, and they with
his friend, Mr. Fowkes, for whom he is very solicitous
in some things depending in this Office, he did make
me, with some others that he took in (among others,
Alderman Back well), eat a pickled herring, the largest
I ever saw, and drink variety of wines till I was almost
merry; but I did keep in good tune; and so, after
the Council was up, I home; and there find my wife
not yet come home from Deptford, he she hath been
all this day to see her mother, but she come and by,
and so to talk, and supper, and to bed. This
night I did bring home from the King’s potticary’s,
in White Hall by Mr. Cooling’s direction, a water
that he says did him mighty good for his eyes.
I pray God it may do me good; but, by his description,
his disease was the same as mine, and this do encourage
me to use it.
3rd. Up, and to the Council of
War again, with Middleton: but the proceedings
of the Commanders so devilishly bad, and so professedly
partial to the Captain, that I could endure it no longer,
but took occasion to pretend business at the Office,
and away, and Colonel Middleton with me, who was of
the same mind, and resolved to declare our minds freely
to the Duke of York about it. So to the office,
where we sat all the morning. Then home to dinner,
and so back to the office, where busy late till night,
and so home to supper and to bed.
4th (Lord’s day). Up, and
to church, where Alderman Backewell’s wife,
by my invitation with my head, come up with her mother,
and sat with us, and after sermon I did walk with
them home, and there left them, and home to dinner,
and after dinner with Sir J. Minnes and T. Middleton
to White Hall, by appointment; and at my Lord Arlington’s
the Office did attend the King and Cabal, to discourse
the further quantity of victuals fit to be declared
for, which was 2,000 men for six months; and so without
more ado or stay, there, hearing no news but that Sir
Thomas Allen is to be expected every hour at home
with his fleete, or news of his being gone back to
Algier, and so home, where got my wife to read to
me; and so after supper to bed. The Queen-Mother
hath been of late mighty ill, and some fears of her
death.
5th. Up, and by coach, it being
very cold, to White Hall, expecting a meeting of Tangier,
but it did not. But, however, did wait there all
the morning, and, among other things, I spent a little
time with Creed walking in the garden, and talking
about our Office, and Child’s coming in to be
a Commissioner; and, being his friend, I did think
he might do me a kindness to learn of him what the
Duke of Buckingham and the faction do design touching
me, and to instil good words concerning me, which
he says, and I believe he will: and it is but
necessary; for I have not a mind indeed at this time
to be put out of my Office, if I can make any shift
that is honourable to keep it; but I will not do it
by deserting the Duke of York. At noon by appointment
comes Mr. Sheres, and he and I to Unthanke’s,
where my wife stays for us in our coach, and Betty
Turner with her; and we to the Mulberry Garden, where
Sheres is to treat us with a Spanish Olio,
[An olio is a mixed
dish of meat and vegetables, and, secondarily,
mixture or medley.]
by a cook of his acquaintance that
is there, that was with my Lord in Spain: and
without any other company, he did do it, and mighty
nobly; and the Olio was indeed a very noble dish,
such as I never saw better, or any more of. This,
and the discourse he did give us of Spain, and description
of the Escuriall, was a fine treat. So we left
other good things, that would keep till night, for
a collation; and, with much content, took coach again,
and went five or six miles towards Branford, the Prince
of Tuscany, who comes into England only to spend money
and see our country, comes into the town to-day, and
is much expected; and we met him, but the coach passing
by apace, we could not see much of him but he seems
a very jolly and good comely man. By the way,
we overtook Captain Ferrers upon his fine Spanish
horse, and he is a fine horse indeed; but not so good,
I think, as I have seen some. He did ride by
us most of the way, and with us to the Park, and there
left us, where we passed the evening, and meeting
The. Turner, Talbot, W. Batelier, and his sister,
in a coach, we anon took them with us to the Mulberry
Garden; and there, after a walk, to supper upon what
was left at noon; and very good; only Mr. Sheres being
taken suddenly ill for a while, did spoil our mirth;
but by and by was well again, and we mighty merry:
and so broke up, and left him at Charing Cross, and
so calling only at my cozen Turner’s, away home,
mightily pleased with the day’s work, and this
day come another new mayd, for a middle mayd, but her
name I know not yet; and, for a cookmaid, we have,
ever since Bridget went, used a blackmoore of Mr.
Batelier’s, Doll, who dresses our meat mighty
well, and we mightily pleased with her. So by
and by to bed.
6th. Up, and to the Office, and
thence to the Excise Office about some business, and
so back to the office and sat till late, end thence
to Mr. Batelier’s to dinner, where my cozen
Turner and both her daughters, and Talbot Pepys and
my wife, and a mighty fine dinner. They at dinner
before I come; and, when I had dined, I away home,
and thence to White Hall, where the Board waited on
the Duke of York to discourse about the disposing
of Sir Thomas Allen’s fleete, which is newly
come home to Portsmouth; and here Middleton and I
did in plain terms acquaint the Duke of York what
we thought and had observed in the late Court-martiall,
which the Duke did give ear to; and though he thinks
not fit to revoke what is already done in this case
by a Court-martiall, yet it shall bring forth some
good laws in the behaviour of Captains to their under
Officers for the time to come. Thence home, and
there, after a while at the Office, I home, and there
come home my wife, who hath been with Batelier’s
late, and been dancing with the company, at which
I seemed a little troubled, not being sent for thither
myself, but I was not much so, but went to bed well
enough pleased.
7th. Up, and by coach to my cozen
Turner’s, and invited them to dine at the Cocke
to-day, with my wife and me; and so to the Lords of
the Treasury, where all the morning, and settled matters
to their liking about the assignments on the Customes,
between the Navy Office and Victualler, and to that
end spent most of the morning there with D. Gawden,
and thence took him to the Cocke, and there left him
and my clerk Gibson together evening their reckonings,
while I to the New Exchange to talk with Betty, my
little sempstress; and so to Mrs. Turner’s,
to call them to dinner, but my wife not come, I back
again, and was overtaken by a porter, with a message
from my wife that she was ill, and could not come
to us: so I back again to Mrs. Turner’s,
and find them gone; and so back again to the Cocke,
and there find Mr. Turner, Betty, and Talbot Pepys,
and they dined with myself Sir D. Gawden and Gibson,
and mighty merry, this house being famous for good
meat, and particularly pease-porridge and after dinner
broke up, and they away; and I to the Council-Chamber,
and there heard the great complaint of the City, tried
against the gentlemen of the Temple, for the late
riot, as they would have it, when my Lord Mayor was
there. But, upon hearing the whole business,
the City was certainly to blame to charge them in
this manner as with a riot: but the King and Council
did forbear to determine any thing it, till the other
business of the title and privilege be decided which
is now under dispute at law between them, whether
Temple be within the liberty of the City or no.
But I, sorry to see the City so ill advised as to
complain in a thing where their proofs were so weak.
Thence to my cousin Turner’s, and thence with
her and her daughters, and her sister Turner, I carrying
Betty in my lap, to Talbot’s chamber at the
Temple, where, by agreement, the poor rogue had a
pretty dish of anchovies and sweetmeats for them; and
hither come Mr. Eden, who was in his mistress’s
disfavour ever since the other night that he come
in thither fuddled, when we were there. But I
did make them friends by my buffoonery, and bringing
up a way of spelling their names, and making Theophila
spell Lamton, which The. would have to be the name
of Mr. Éden’s mistress, and mighty merry
we were till late, and then I by coach home, and so
to bed, my wife being ill of those, but well enough
pleased with my being with them. This day I do
hear that Betty Turner is to be left at school at
Hackney, which I am mightily pleased with; for then
I shall, now and then, see her. She is pretty,
and a girl for that, and her relations, I love.
8th. Up, and to White Hall, to
the King’s side, to find Sir T. Clifford, where
the Duke of York come and found me, which I was sorry
for, for fear he should think I was making friends
on that side. But I did put it off the best I
could, my being there: and so, by and by, had
opportunity alone to shew Sir T. Clifford the fair
account I had drawn up of the Customes, which he liked,
and seemed mightily pleased with me; and so away to
the Excise-Office, to do a little business there, and
so to the Office, where all the morning. At noon
home to dinner, and then to the office again till
the evening, and then with my wife by coach to Islington,
to pay what we owe there, for the late dinner at Jane’s
wedding; and so round by Kingsland and Hogsden home,
pleased with my wife’s singing with me, by the
way, and so to the office again a little, and then
home to supper and to bed. Going this afternoon
through Smithfield, I did see a coach run over the
coachman’s neck, and stand upon it, and yet
the man rose up, and was well after it, which I thought
a wonder.
9th. Up, and by water to White
Hall, end there, with the Board, attended the Duke
of York, and Sir Thomas Allen with us (who come to
town yesterday); and it is resolved another fleete
shall go to the Streights forthwith, and he command
it. But his coming home is mighty hardly talked
on by the merchants, for leaving their ships there
to the mercy of the Turks: but of this more in
my White-Booke. Thence out, and slipped out by
water to Westminster Hall and there thought to have
spoke with Mrs. Martin, but she was not there, nor
at home. So back again, and with W. Hewer by
coach home and to dinner, and then to the office, and
out again with W. Hewer to the Excise-Office, and to
several places; among others, to Mr. Faythorne’s,
to have seen an instrument which he was said to have,
for drawing perspectives, but he had it not: but
here I did see his work-house, and the best things
of his doing he had by him, and so to other places
among others to Westminster Hall, and I took occasion
to make a step to Mrs. Martin’s, the first time
I have been with her since her husband went last to
sea, which is I think a year since.... But, Lord!
to hear how sillily she tells the story of her sister
Doll’s being a widow and lately brought to bed;
and her husband, one Rowland Powell, drowned, sea
with her husband, but by chance dead at sea, cast
When God knows she hath played the whore, and forced
at this time after she was brought to bed, this story.
Thence calling at several places by the home, and
there to the office, and then home to supper and to
bed.
10th. Up, and to the Excise-Office,
and thence to White Hall a little, and so back again
to the ’Change, but nobody there, it being over,
and so walked home to dinner, and after dinner comes
Mr. Seymour to visit me, a talking fellow: but
I hear by him that Captain Trevanion do give it out
every where, that I did overrule the whole Court-martiall
against him, as long as I was there; and perhaps I
may receive, this time, some wrong by it: but
I care not, for what I did was out of my desire of
doing justice. So the office, where late, and
then home to supper and to bed.
11th (Lord’s day. Easter
day). Up, and to Church; where Alderman Backewell’s
wife, and mother, and boy, and another gentlewoman,
did come, and sit in our pew; but no women of our
own there, and so there was room enough. Our
Parson made a dull sermon, and so home to dinner;
and, after dinner, my wife and I out by coach, and
Balty with us, to Loton, the landscape-drawer, a Dutchman,
living in St. James’s Market, but there saw
no good pictures. But by accident he did direct
us to a painter that was then in the house with him,
a Dutchman, newly come over, one Evarelst, who took
us to his lodging close by, and did shew us a little
flower-pot of his doing, the finest thing that ever,
I think, I saw in my life; the drops of dew hanging
on the leaves, so as I was forced, again and again,
to put my finger to it, to feel whether my eyes were
deceived or no. He do ask L70 for it: I had
the vanity to bid him L20; but a better picture I
never saw in my whole life; and it is worth going
twenty miles to see it. Thence, leaving Balty
there, I took my wife to St. James’s, and there
carried her to the Queen’s Chapel, the first
time I ever did it; and heard excellent musick, but
not so good as by accident I did hear there yesterday,
as I went through the Park from White Hall to see
Sir W. Coventry, which I have forgot to set down in
my journal yesterday. And going out of the Chapel,
I did see the Prince of Tuscany’ come out, a
comely, black, fat man, in a mourning suit; and my
wife and I did see him this afternoon through a window
in this Chapel. All that Sir W. Coventry yesterday
did tell me new was, that the King would not yet give
him leave to come to kiss his hand; and he do believe
that he will not in a great while do it, till those
about him shall see fit, which I am sorry for.
Thence to the Park, my wife and I; and here Sir W.
Coventry did first see me and my wife in a coach of
our own; and so did also this night the Duke of York,
who did eye my wife mightily. But I begin to
doubt that my being so much seen in my own coach at
this time, may be observed to my prejudice; but I
must venture it now. So home, and by night home,
and so to my office, and there set down my journal,
with the help of my left eye through my tube, for fourteen
days’ past; which is so much, as, I hope, I shall
not run in arrear again, but the badness of my eyes
do force me to it. So home to supper and to bed.
12th. Up, and by water to White
Hall, where I of the whole Office attended the Duke
of York at his meeting with Sir Thomas Allen and several
flag-officers, to consider of the manner of managing
the war with Algiers; and, it being a thing I was
wholly silent in, I did only observe; and find that;
their manner of discourse on this weighty affair was
very mean and disorderly, the Duke of York himself
being the man that I thought spoke most to the purpose.
Having done here, I up and down the house, talking
with this man and that, and: then meeting Mr.
Sheres, took him to see the fine flower-pot I saw yesterday,
and did again offer L20 for it; but he [Verelst] insists
upon L50. Thence I took him to St. James’s,
but there was no musique, but so walked to
White Hall, and, by and by to my wife at Unthanke’s,
and with her was Jane, and so to the Cocke, where
they, and I, and Sheres, and Tom dined, my wife having
a great desire to eat of their soup made of pease,
and dined very well, and thence by water to the Bear-Garden,
and there happened to sit by Sir Fretcheville Hollis,
who is still full of his vain-glorious and prophane
talk. Here we saw a prize fought between a soldier
and country fellow, one Warrell, who promised the
least in his looks, and performed the most of valour
in his boldness and evenness of mind, and smiles in
all he did, that ever I saw and we were all both deceived
and infinitely taken with him. He did soundly
beat the soldier, and cut him over the head.
Thence back to White Hall, mightily pleased, all of
us, with this sight, and particularly this fellow,
as a most extraordinary man for his temper and evenness
in fighting. And there leaving Sheres, we by
our own coach home, and after sitting an hour, thrumming
upon my viall, and singing, I to bed, and left my
wife to do something to a waistcoat and petticoat
she is to wear to-morrow. This evening, coming
home, we overtook Alderman Backewell’s coach
and his lady, and followed them to their house, and
there made them the first visit, where they received
us with extraordinary civility, and owning the obligation.
But I do, contrary to my expectation, find her something
a proud and vain-glorious woman, in telling the number
of her servants and family and expences: he is
also so, but he was ever of that strain. But here
he showed me the model of his houses that he is going
to build in Cornhill and Lumbard Street; but he hath
purchased so much there, that it looks like a little
town, and must have cost him a great deal of money.
13th. Up, and at the Office a
good while, and then, my wife going down the River
to spend the day with her mother at Deptford, I abroad,
and first to the milliner’s in Fenchurch Street,
over against Rawlinson’s, and there, meeting
both him and her in the shop, I bought a pair of gloves,
and fell to talk, and found so much freedom that I
stayed there the best part of the morning till towards
noon, with great pleasure, it being a holiday, and
then against my will away and to the ’Change,
where I left W. Hewer, and I by hackney-coach to the
Spittle, and heard a piece of a dull sermon to my
Lord Mayor and Aldermen, and thence saw them all take
horse and ride away, which I have not seen together
many a-day; their wives also went in their coaches;
and, indeed, the sight was mighty pleasing. Thence
took occasion to go back to this milliner’s
[in Fenchurch Street], whose name I now understand
to be Clerke; and there, her husband inviting me up
to the balcony, to see the sight go by to dine at
Clothworker’s-Hall, I did go up and there saw
it go by: and then; there being a good piece
of cold roast beef upon the tables and one Margetts,
a young merchant that lodges there, and is likely to
marry a sister of hers, I staid and eat, and had much
good conversation with her, who hath the vanity to
talk of her great friends and father, one Wingate,
near Welling;, that hath been a Parliament-man.
Here also was Stapely: the rope-merchant, and
dined with us; and, after spending most of the afternoon
also, I away home, and there sent for W. Hewer, and
he and I by water to White Hall to loop among other
things, for Mr. May, to unbespeak his dining with
me to-morrow. But here being in the court-yard,
God would have it, I spied Deb., which made my heart
and head to work, and I presently could not refrain,
but sent W. Hewer away to look for Mr. Wren (W.
Hewer, I perceive, did see her, but whether he did
see me see her I know not, or suspect my sending him
away I know not, but my heart could not hinder me),
and I run after her and two women and a man, more
ordinary people, and she in her old clothes, and after
hunting a little, find them in the lobby of the chapel
below stairs, and there I observed she endeavoured
to avoid me, but I did speak to her and she to me,
and did get her pour dire me où she demeurs now,
and did charge her para say nothing of me that I had
vu elle, which she did promise, and so with my heart
full of surprize and disorder I away, and meeting
with Sir H. Cholmley walked into the Park with him
and back again, looking to see if I could spy her
again in the Park, but I could not. And so back
to White Hall, and then back to the Park with Mr.
May, but could see her, no more, and so with W. Hewer,
who I doubt by my countenance might see some disorder
in me, we home by water, and there I find Talbot Pepys,
and Mrs. Turner, and Betty, come to invite us to dinner
on Thursday; and, after drinking, I saw them to the
water-side, and so back home through Crutched Friars,
and there saw Mary Mercer, and put off my hat to her,
on the other side of the way, but it being a little
darkish she did not, I think, know me well, and so
to my office to put my papers in order, they having
been removed for my closet to be made clean, and so
home to my wife, who is come home from Deptford.
But, God forgive me, I hardly know how to put on confidence
enough to speak as innocent, having had this passage
to-day with Deb., though only, God knows, by accident.
But my great pain is lest God Almighty shall suffer
me to find out this girl, whom indeed I love, and with
a bad amour, but I will pray to God to give me grace
to forbear it. So home to supper, where very
sparing in my discourse, not giving occasion of any
enquiry where I have been to-day, or what I have done,
and so without any trouble to-night more than my fear,
we to bed.
14th. Up, and with W. Hewer to
White Hall, and there I did speak with the Duke of
York, the Council sitting in the morning, and it was
to direct me to have my business ready of the Administration
of the Office against Saturday next, when the King
would have a hearing of it. Thence home, W. Hewer
with me, and then out with my own coach to the Duke
of York’s play-house, and there saw “The
Impertinents,” a play which pleases me well
still; but it is with great trouble that I now see
a play, because of my eyes, the light of the candles
making it very troublesome to me. After the play;
my wife and I towards the Park, but it being too late
we to Creed’s, and there find him and her [his
wife] together alone, in their new house, where I
never was before, they lodging before at the next
door, and a pretty house it is; but I do not see that
they intend to keep any coach. Here they treat
us like strangers, quite according to the fashion nothing
to drink or eat, which is a thing that will spoil
our ever having any acquaintance with them; for we
do continue the old freedom and kindness of England
to all our friends. But they do here talk mightily
of my Lady Paulina making a very good end, and being
mighty religious in her lifetime; and hath left many
good notes of sermons and religion; wrote with her
own hand, hand, which nobody ever knew of; which I
am glad of: but she was always a peevish lady.
Thence home, and there to talk and to supper and to
bed, all being very safe as to my seeing of poor Deb.
yesterday.
15th. Up, and to the office,
and thence before the office sat to the Excise Office
with W. Hewer, but found some occasion to go another
way to the Temple upon business, and I by Deb.’s
direction did know whither in Jewen Street to direct
my hackney coachman, while I staid in the coach in
Aldgate Street, to go thither just to enquire whether
Mrs. Hunt, her aunt, was in town, who brought me word
she was not; thought this was as much as I could do
at once, and therefore went away troubled through
that I could do no more but to the office I must go
and did, and there all the morning, but coming thither
I find Bagwell’s wife, who did give me a little
note into my hand, wherein I find her para invite me
para meet her in Moorfields this noon, where I might
speak with her, and so after the office was up, my
wife being gone before by invitation to my cozen Turner’s
to dine, I to the place, and there, after walking
up and down by the windmills, I did find her and talk
with her, but it being holiday and the place full
of people, we parted, leaving further discourse and
doing to another time. Thence I away, and through
Jewen Street, my mind, God knows, running that way,
but stopped not, but going down Holborne hill, by
the Conduit, I did see Deb. on foot going up the hill.
I saw her, and she me, but she made no stop, but seemed
unwilling to speak to me; so I away on, but then stopped
and ’light, and after her and overtook her at
the end of Hosier lane in Smithfield, and without
standing in the street desired her to follow me, and
I led her into a little blind alehouse within the
walls, and there she and I alone fell to talk and
baiser la and toker su mammailles, but
she mighty coy, and I hope modest.... I did give
her in a paper 20s., and we did agree para meet again
in the Hall at Westminster on Monday next; and so giving
me great hopes by her carriage that she continues
modest and honest, we did there part, she going home
and I to Mrs. Turner’s, but when I come back
to the place where I left my coach it was gone, I having
staid too long, which did trouble me to abuse the
poor fellow, so that taking another coach I did direct
him to find out the fellow and send him to me.
At my cozen Turner’s I find they are gone all
to dinner to Povy’s, and thither I, and there
they were all, and W. Batelier and his sister, and
had dined; but I had good things brought me, and then
all up and down the house, and mightily pleased to
see the fine rooms: but, the truth is, there
are so many bad pictures, that to me make the good
ones lose much of the pleasure in seeing them.
The. and Betty Turner in new flowered tabby gowns,
and so we were pretty merry, only my fear upon me for
what I had newly done, do keep my content in.
So, about five or six o’clock, away, and I took
my wife and the two Bateliers, and carried them homeward,
and W. Batelier ’lighting, I carried the women
round by Islington, and so down Bishopsgate Street
home, and there to talk and sup, and then to bed.
16th. Up, and to my chamber,
where with Mr. Gibson all the morning, and there by
noon did almost finish what I had to write about the
Administration of the Office to present to the Duke
of York, and my wife being gone abroad with W. Hewer,
to see the new play to-day, at the Duke of York’s
house, “Guzman,” I dined alone with my
people, and in the afternoon away by coach to White
Hall; and there the Office attended the Duke of York;
and being despatched pretty soon, and told that we
should not wait on the King, as intended, till Sunday,
I thence presently to the Duke of York’s playhouse,
and there, in the 18d. seat, did get room to see almost
three acts of the play; but it seemed to me but very
ordinary. After the play done, I into the pit,
and there find my wife and W. Hewer; and Sheres got
to them, which, so jealous is my nature, did trouble
me, though my judgment tells me there is no hurt in
it, on neither side; but here I did meet with Shadwell,
the poet, who, to my great wonder, do tell me that
my Lord of [Orrery] did write this play, trying what
he could do in comedy, since his héroïque plays
could do no more wonders. This do trouble me;
for it is as mean a thing, and so he says, as hath
been upon the stage a great while; and Harris, who
hath no part in it, did come to me, and told me in
discourse that he was glad of it, it being a play
that will not take. Thence home, and to my business
at the office, to finish it, but was in great pain
about yesterday still, lest my wife should have sent
her porter to enquire anything, though for my heart
I cannot see it possible how anything could be discovered
of it, but yet such is fear as to render me full of
doubt and disgust. At night to supper and to
bed.
17th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning. At noon at home to dinner,
and there find Mr. Pierce, the surgeon, and he dined
with us; and there hearing that “The Alchymist”
was acted, we did go, and took him with us to the
King’s house; and it is still a good play, having
not been acted for two or three years before; but
I do miss Clun, for the Doctor. But more my eyes
will not let me enjoy the pleasure I used to have
in a play. Thence with my wife in hackney to Sir
W. Coventry’s, who being gone to the Park we
drove after him, and there met him coming out, and
followed him home, and there sent my wife to Unthanke’s
while I spent on hour with him reading over first
my draught of the Administration of the Navy, which
he do like very well; and so fell to talk of other
things, and among the rest of the story of his late
disgrace, and how basely and in what a mean manner
the Duke of Buckingham hath proceeded against him not
like a man of honour. He tells me that the King
will not give other answer about his coming to kiss
his hands, than “Not yet.” But he
says that this that he desires, of kissing the King’s
hand, is only to show to the world that he is not
discontented, and not in any desire to come again into
play, though I do perceive that he speaks this with
less earnestness than heretofore: and this, it
may be, is, from what he told me lately, that the King
is offended at what is talked, that he hath declared
himself desirous not to have to do with any employment
more. But he do tell me that the leisure he hath
yet had do not at all begin to be burdensome to him,
he knowing how to spend his time with content to himself;
and that he hopes shortly to contract his expence,
so as that he shall not be under any straits in that
respect neither; and so seems to be in very good condition
of content. Thence I away over the Park, it being
now night, to White Hall, and there, in the Duchess’s
chamber, do find the Duke of York; and, upon my offer
to speak with him, he did come to me, and withdrew
to his closet, and there did hear and approve my paper
of the Administration of the Navy, only did bid me
alter these words, “upon the rupture between
the late King and the Parliament,” to these,
“the beginning of the late Rebellion;”
giving it me as but reason to shew that it was with
the Rebellion that the Navy was put by out of its old
good course, into that of a Commission. Having
done this, we fell to other talk; he with great confidence
telling me how matters go among our adversaries, in
reference to the Navy, and that he thinks they do begin
to flag; but then, beginning to talk in general of
the excellency of old constitutions, he did bring
out of his cabinet, and made me read it, an extract
out of a book of my late Lord of Northumberland’s,
so prophetic of the business of Chatham, as is almost
miraculous. I did desire, and he did give it
me to copy out, which pleased me mightily, and so,
it being late, I away and to my wife, and by hackney;
home, and there, my eyes being weary with reading
so much: but yet not so much as I was afeard
they would, we home to supper and to bed.
18th (Lord’s day). Up,
and all the morning till 2 o’clock at my Office,
with Gibson and Tom, about drawing up fair my discourse
of the Administration of the Navy, and then, Mr. Spong
being come to dine with me, I in to dinner, and then
out to my Office again, to examine the fair draught;
and so borrowing Sir J. Minnes’s coach, he going
with Colonel Middleton, I to White Hall, where we
all met and did sign it and then to my Lord Arlington’s,
where the King, and the Duke of York, and Prince Rupert,
as also Ormond and the two Secretaries, with my Lord
Ashly and Sir T. Clifton was. And there, by and
by, being called in, Mr. Williamson did read over
our paper, which was in a letter to the Duke of York,
bound up in a book with the Duke of York’s Book
of Instructions. He read it well; and, after
read, we were bid to withdraw, nothing being at all
said to it. And by and by we were called in again,
and nothing said to that business; but another begun,
about the state of this year’s action, and our
wants of money, as I had stated the same lately to
our Treasurers; which I was bid, and did largely,
and with great content, open. And having so done,
we all withdrew, and left them to debate our supply
of money; to which, being called in, and referred to
attend on the Lords of the Treasury, we all departed.
And I only staid in the House till the Council rose;
and then to the Duke of York, who in the Duchess’s
chamber come to me, and told me that the book was there
left with my Lord Arlington, for any of the Lords
to view that had a mind, and to prepare and present
to the King what they had to say in writing, to any
part of it, which is all we can desire, and so that
rested. The Duke of York then went to other talk;
and by and by comes the Prince of Tuscany to visit
him, and the Duchess; and I find that he do still
remain incognito, and so intends to do all the time
he stays here, for avoiding trouble to the King and
himself, and expence also to both. Thence I to
White Hall Gate, thinking to have found Sir J. Minnes’s
coach staying for me; but, not being there, and this
being the first day of rain we have had many a day,
the streets being as dusty as in summer, I forced
to walk to my cozen Turner’s, and there find
my wife newly gone home, which vexed me, and so I,
having kissed and taken leave of Betty, who goes to
Putney to school to-morrow, I walked through the rain
to the Temple, and there, with much ado, got a coach,
and so home, and there to supper, and Pelling comes
to us, and after much talk, we parted, and to bed.
19th. Up, and with Tom (whom,
with his wife, I, and my wife, had this morning taken
occasion to tell that I did intend to give him L40
for himself, and L20 to his wife, towards their setting
out in the world, and that my wife would give her
L20 more, that she might have as much to begin with
as he) by coach to White Hall, and there having set
him work in the Robe Chamber, to write something for
me, I to Westminster Hall, and there walked from 10
o’clock to past 12, expecting to have met Deb.,
but whether she had been there before, and missing
me went away, or is prevented in coming, and hath
no mind to come to me (the last whereof, as being
most pleasing, as shewing most modesty, I should be
most glad of), I know not, but she not then appearing,
I being tired with walking went home, and my wife
being all day at Jane’s, helping her, as she
said, to cut out linen and other things belonging to
her new condition, I after dinner out again, and,
calling for my coach, which was at the coachmaker’s,
and hath been for these two or three days, to be new
painted, and the window-frames gilt against May-day,
went on with my hackney to White Hall, and thence
by water to Westminster Hall, and there did beckon
to Doll Lane, now Mrs. Powell, as she would have herself
called, and went to her sister Martin’s lodgings,
the first time I have been there these eight or ten
months, I think, and her sister being gone to Portsmouth
to her Y husband, I did stay and talk and drink with
Doll.... So away:; and to White Hall, and there
took my own coach, which was now come, and so away
home, and there to do business, and my wife being
come home we to talk and to sup, there having been
nothing yet like discovery in my wife of what hath
lately passed with me about Deb., and so with great
content to bed
20th. Up; and to the Office,
and my wife abroad with Mary Batelier, with our own
coach, but borrowed Sir J Minnes’s coachman,
that so our own might stay at home, to attend at dinner;
our family being mightily disordered by our little
boy’s falling sick the last night; and we fear
it will prove the small-pox. At noon comes my
guest, Mr. Hugh May, and with him Sir Henry Capell,
my old Lord Capel’s son, and Mr. Parker; and
I had a pretty dinner for them; and both before and
after dinner had excellent discourse; and shewed them
my closet and my Office, and the method of it to their
great content; and more extraordinary, manly discourse
and opportunity of shewing myself, and learning from
others, I have not, in ordinary discourse, had in
my life, they being all persons of worth, but especially
Sir H. Capell, whose being a Parliament-man, and hearing
my discourse in the Parliament-house, hath, as May
tells me, given him along desire to know and discourse
with me. In the afternoon we walked to the Old
Artillery-Ground’ near the Spitalfields, where
I never was before, but now, by Captain Deane’s
invitation, did go to see his new gun tryed, this
being the place where the Officers of the Ordnance
do try all their great guns; and when we come, did
find that the trial had been made; and they going
away with extraordinary report of the proof of his
gun, which, from the shortness and bigness, they do
call Punchinello. But I desired Colonel Legg to
stay and give us a sight of her performance, which
he did, and there, in short, against a gun more than
as long and as heavy again, and charged with as much
powder again, she carried the same bullet as strong
to the mark, and nearer and above the mark at a point
blank than theirs, and is more easily managed, and
recoyles no more than that, which is a thing so extraordinary
as to be admired for the happiness of his invention,
and to the great regret of the old Gunners and Officers
of the Ordnance that were there, only Colonel Legg
did do her much right in his report of her. And
so, having seen this great and first experiment, we
all parted, I seeing my guests into a hackney coach,
and myself, with Captain Deane, taking a hackney coach,
did go out towards Bow, and went as far as Stratford,
and all the way talking of this invention, and he
offering me a third of the profit of the invention;
which, for aught I know, or do at present think, may
prove matter considerable to us: for either the
King will give him a reward for it, if he keeps it
to himself, or he will give us a patent to make our
profit of it: and no doubt but it will be of profit
to merchantmen and others, to have guns of the same
force at half the charge. This was our talk:
and then to talk of other things, of the Navy in general:
and, among other things, he did tell me that he do
hear how the Duke of Buckingham hath a spite at me,
which I knew before, but value it not: and he
tells me that Sir T. Allen is not my friend; but for
all this I am not much troubled, for I know myself
so usefull that, as I believe, they will not part
with me; so I thank God my condition is such that
I can; retire, and be able to live with comfort, though
not with abundance. Thus we spent the evening
with extraordinary good discourse, to my great content,
and so home to the Office, and there did some business,
and then home, where my wife do come home, and I vexed
at her staying out so late, but she tells me that she
hath been at home with M. Batelier a good while, so
I made nothing of it, but to supper and to bed.
21st. Up; and with my own coach
as far as the Temple, and thence sent it to my cozen
Turner, who, to ease her own horses, that are going
with her out of town, do borrow mine to-day.
So I to Auditor Wood’s, and thereto meet, and
met my Lord Bellassis upon some business of his accounts,
and having done that did thence go to St. James’s,
and attended the Duke of York a little, being the
first time of my waiting on him at St. James’s
this summer, whither he is now newly gone and thence
walked to White Hall; and so, by and by, to the Council-Chamber,
and heard a remarkable cause pleaded between the Farmers
of the Excise of Wiltshire, in complaint against the
justices of Peace of Salisbury: and Sir H. Finch
was for the former. But, Lord! to see how he did
with his admirable eloquence order the matter, is
not to be conceived almost: so pleasant a thing
it is to hear him plead. Then at noon by coach
home, and thither by and by comes cozen Turner, and
The., and Joyce, in their riding-clod: they being
come from their lodgings to her husbands chamber, at
the Temple, and there do lie, and purpose to go out
of town on Friday next; and here I had a good dinner
for them. After dinner by water to White Hall,
where the Duke of York did meet our Office, and went
with us to the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury;
and there we did go over all the business of the state
I had drawn up, of this year’s action and expence,
which I did do to their satisfaction, and convincing
them of the necessity of providing more money, if
possible, for us. Thence the Duke of York being
gone, I did there stay walking with Sir H. Cholmly
in the Court, talking of news; where he told me, that
now the great design of the Duke of Buckingham is
to prevent the meeting, since he cannot bring about
with the King the dissolving, of this Parliament, that
the King may not need it; and therefore my Lord St.
Albans is hourly expected with great offers of a million
of money, [From Louis XIV. See April
28th] to buy our breach with the Dutch:
and this, they do think, may tempt the King to take
the money, and thereby be out of a necessity of calling
the Parliament again, which these people dare not suffer
to meet again: but this he doubts, and so do
I, that it will be to the ruin of the nation if we
fall out with Holland. This we were discoursing
when my boy comes to tell me that his mistress was
at the Gate with the coach, whither I went, and there
find my wife and the whole company. So she, and
Mrs. Turner, and The., and Talbot, in mine: and
Joyce, W. Batelier, and I, in a hackney, to Hyde Park,
where I was ashamed to be seen; but mightily pleased,
though troubled, with a drunken coachman that did
not remember when we come to ’light, where it
was that he took us up; but said at Hammersmith, and
thither he was carrying of us when we come first out
of the Park. So I carried them all to Hercules-Pillars,
and there did treat them: and so, about ten at
night, parted, and my wife, and I, and W. Batelier,
home; and he gone, we to bed.
22nd. Up, and to the Office,
where all the morning. At noon home to dinner,
and Captain Deane with us; and very good discourse,
and particularly about my getting a book for him to
draw up his whole theory of shipping, which, at my
desire, he hath gone far in, and hath shewn me what
he hath done therein, to admiration. I did give
him a Parallelogram, which he is mightily taken with;
and so after dinner to the Office, where all the afternoon
till night late, and then home. Vexed at my wife’s
not being come home, she being gone again abroad with
M. Batelier, and come not home till ten at night, which
vexed me, so that I to bed, and lay in pain awake
till past one, and then to sleep.
23rd. Going to rise, without
saying anything, my wife stopped me; and, after a
little angry talk, did tell me how she spent all day
yesterday with M. Batelier and her sweetheart, and
seeing a play at the New Nursery, which is set up
at the house in Lincoln’s Inn Fields, which
was formerly the King’s house. So that I
was mightily pleased again, and rose a with great
content; and so by water to White Hall, and there to
the Council-Chamber, and heard two or three causes:
among others, that of the complaint of Sir Philip
Howard and Watson, the inventors, as they pretend,
of the business of varnishing and lackerworke, against
the Company of Painters, who take upon them to do
the same thing; where I saw a great instance of the
weakness of a young Counsel not used to such an audience,
against the Solicitor-General and two more able Counsel
used to it. Though he had the right of, his side,
and did prevail for what he pretended to against the
rest, yet it was with much disadvantage and hazard.
Here, also I heard Mr. Papillion’ make his defence
to the King, against some complaints of the Farmers
of Excise; but it was so weak, and done only by his
own seeking, that it was to his injury more than profit,
and made his case the worse, being ill managed, and
in a cause against the King. Thence at noon,
the Council rising, I to Unthanke’s, and there
by agreement met my wife, and with her to the Cocke,
and did give her a dinner, but yet both of us but in
an ill humour, whatever was the matter with her, but
thence to the King’s playhouse, and saw “The
Generous Portugalls,” a play that pleases me
better and better every time we see it; and, I thank
God! it did not trouble my eyes so much as I was afeard
it would. Here, by accident, we met Mr. Sheres,
and yet I could not but be troubled, because my wife
do so delight to talk of him, and to see him.
Nevertheless, we took him with us to our mercer’s,
and to the Exchange, and he helped me to choose a
summer-suit of coloured camelott, coat and breeches,
and a flowered tabby vest very rich; and so home,
where he took his leave, and down to Greenwich, where
he hath some friends; and I to see Colonel Middleton,
who hath been ill for a day or two, or three; and so
home to supper, and to bed.
24th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, and at noon home to dinner,
Mr. Sheres dining with us by agreement; and my wife,
which troubled me, mighty careful to have a handsome
dinner for him; but yet I see no reason to be troubled
at it, he being a very civil and worthy man, I think;
but only it do seem to imply some little neglect of
me. After dinner to the King’s house, and
there saw “The General” revived a
good play, that pleases me well, and thence, our coach
coming for us, we parted and home, and I busy late
at the office, and then home to supper and to bed.
Well pleased to-night to have Lead, the vizard-maker,
bring me home my vizard, with a tube fastened in it,
which, I think, will do my business, at least in a
great measure, for the easing of my eyes.
25th (Lord’s day). Up,
and to my Office awhile, and thither comes Lead with
my vizard, with a tube fastened within both eyes; which,
with the help which he prompts me to, of a glass in
the tube, do content me mightily. So to church,
where a stranger made a dull sermon, but I mightily
pleased to looks upon Mr. Buckworth’s little
pretty daughters, and so home to, dinner, where W.
Howe come and dined with us; and then I to my Office,
he being gone, to write down my journal for the last
twelve days: and did it with the help of my vizard
and tube fixed to it, and do find it mighty manageable,
but how helpfull to my eyes this trial will shew me.
So abroad with my wife, in the afternoon, to the Park,
where very much company, and the weather very pleasant.
I carried my wife to the Lodge, the first time this
year, and there in our coach eat a cheese-cake and
drank a tankard of milk. I showed her this day
also first the Prince of Tuscany, who was in the Park,
and many very fine ladies, and so home, and after
supper to bed.
26th. Up, having lain long, and
then by coach with W. Hewer to the Excise Office,
and so to Lilly’s, the Varnishes; who is lately
dead, and his wife and brother keep up the trade,
and there I left my French prints to be put on boards:,
and, while I was there, a fire burst out in a chimney
of a house over against his house, but it was with
a gun quickly put out. So to White Hall, and
did a little business there at the Treasury chamber,
and so homeward, calling at the laceman’s for
some lace for my new suit, and at my tailor’s,
and so home, where to dinner, and Mr. Sheres dined,
with us, who come hither to-day to teach my wife the
rules of perspective; but I think, upon trial, he thinks
it too hard to teach her, being ignorant of the principles
of lines. After dinner comes one Colonel Macnachan,
one that I see often at Court, a Scotchman, but know
him not; only he brings me a letter from my Lord Middleton,
who, he says, is in great distress for L500 to relieve
my Lord Morton with, but upon, what account I know
not; and he would have me advance it without order
upon his pay for Tangier, which I was astonished at,
but had the grace to deny him with an excuse.
And so he went away, leaving me a little troubled
that I was thus driven, on a sudden, to do any thing
herein; but Creed, coming just now to see me, he approves
of what I have done. And then to talk of general
matters, and, by and by, Sheres being gone, my wife,
and he, and I out, and I set him down at Temple Bar,
and myself and wife went down the Temple upon seeming
business, only to put him off, and just at the Temple
gate I spied Deb. with another gentlewoman, and Deb.
winked on me and smiled, but undiscovered, and I was
glad to see her. So my wife and I to the ’Change,
about things for her; and here, at Mrs. Burnett’s
shop, I am told by Betty, who was all undressed, of
a great fire happened in Durham-Yard last night, burning
the house of one Lady Hungerford, who was to come to
town to it this night; and so the house is burned,
new furnished, by carelessness of the girl sent to
take off a candle from a bunch of candles, which she
did by burning it off, and left the rest, as is supposed,
on fire. The King and Court were here, it seems,
and stopped the fire by blowing up of the next house.
The King and Court went out of town to Newmarket this
morning betimes, for a week. So home, and there
to my chamber, and got my wife to read to me a little,
and so to supper and to bed. Coming home this
night I did call at the coachmaker’s, and do
resolve upon having the standards of my coach gilt
with this new sort of varnish, which will come but
to 40s.; and, contrary to my expectation, the doing
of the biggest coach all over comes not to above L6,
which is [not] very much.
27th. Up, and to the Office,
where all the morning. At noon home to dinner,
and then to the Office again, where the afternoon busy
till late, and then home, and got my wife to read
to me in the Népotisme,
[The work here mentioned is a bitter
satire against the Court Rome, written in Italian,
and attributed to Gregorio Leti. It was
first printed in 1667, without the name or place
of printer, but it is from the press of the Elzévirs.
The book obtained by Pepys was probably the
anonymous English translation, “Il Nipotismo
di Roma: or the history of the
Popes nephews from the time of Sixtus the iv.
to the death the last Pope Alexander the vii.
In two parts. Written originally Italian
in the year 1667 and Englished by W. A. London, 1669”
8vo. From this work the word Nepotism is derived,
and is applied to the bad practice of statesmen,
when in power, providing lucrative places for
their relations.]
which is very pleasant, and so to
supper and to bed. This afternoon was brought
to me a fresh Distringas upon the score of the Tangier
accounts which vexes me, though I hope it will not
turn to my wrong.
28th. Up, and was called upon
by Sir H. Cholmly to discourse about some accounts
of his, of Tangier: and then other talk; and I
find by him that it is brought almost effect ([through]
the late endeavours of the Duke of York Duchess, the
Queen-Mother, and my Lord St. Albans, together with
some of the contrary faction, my Lord Arlington), that
for a sum of money we shall enter into a league with
the King of France, wherein, he says, my Lord Chancellor [Clarendon;
then an exile in France.] is also concerned;
and that he believes that, in the doing hereof, it
is meant that he [Clarendon] shall come again, and
that this sum of money will so help the King that
he will not need the Parliament; and that, in that
regard it will be forwarded by the Duke of Buckingham
and his faction, who dread the Parliament. But
hereby we must leave the Dutch, and that I doubt will
undo us; and Sir H. Cholmly says he finds W. Coventry
do think the like. Lady Castlemayne is instrumental
in this matter, and, he say never more great with
the King than she is now. But this a thing that
will make the Parliament and kingdom mad, and will
turn to our ruine: for with this money the
King shall wanton away his time in pleasures, and
think nothing of the main till it be too late.
He gone, I to the office, where busy till noon, and
then home to dinner, where W. Batelier dined with
us, and pretty merry, and so I to the office again.
This morning Mr. Sheres sent me, in two volumes, Mariana
his History of Spaine, in Spanish, an excellent book;
and I am much obliged for it to him.
29th. Up, and to the Office,
where all the morning, and at noon dined at home,
and then to the Office again, there to despatch as
much business as I could, that I might be at liberty
to-morrow to look after my many things that I have
to do, against May-day. So at night home to supper
and to bed.
30th. Up, and by coach to the
coachmaker’s: and there I do find a great
many ladies sitting in the body of a coach that must
be ended by to-morrow: they were my Lady Marquess
of Winchester, Bellassis, and other great ladies;
eating of bread and butter, and drinking ale.
I to my coach, which is silvered over, but no varnish
yet laid on, so I put it in a way of doing; and myself
about other business, and particularly to see Sir
W. Coventry, with whom I talked a good while to my
great content; and so to other places-among others,
to my tailor’s: and then to the belt-maker’s,
where my belt cost me 55s., of the colour of my new
suit; and here, understanding that the mistress of
the house, an oldish woman in a hat hath some water
good for the eyes, she did dress me, making my eyes
smart most horribly, and did give me a little glass
of it, which I will use, and hope it will do me good.
So to the cutler’s, and there did give Tom,
who was with me all day a sword cost me 12s. and a
belt of my owne; and set my own silver-hilt sword a-gilding
against to-morrow. This morning I did visit Mr.
Oldenburgh, and did see the instrument for perspective
made by Dr. Wren, of which I have one making by Browne;
and the sight of this do please me mightily. At
noon my wife come to me at my tailor’s, and
I sent her home and myself and Tom dined at Hercules’
Pillars; and so about our business again, and particularly
to Lilly’s, the varnisher about my prints, whereof
some of them are pasted upon the boards, and to my
full content. Thence to the frame-maker’s
one Morris, in Long Acre, who shewed me several forms
of frames to choose by, which was pretty, in little
bits of mouldings, to choose by. This done, I
to my coach-maker’s, and there vexed to see
nothing yet done to my coach, at three in the afternoon;
but I set it in doing, and stood by it till eight
at night, and saw the painter varnish which is pretty
to see how every doing it over do make it more and
more yellow; and it dries as fast in the sun as it
can be laid on almost; and most coaches are, now-a-days
done so, and it is very pretty when laid on well,
and not pale, as some are, even to shew the silver.
Here I did make the workmen drink, and saw my coach
cleaned and oyled; and, staying among poor people
there in the alley, did hear them call their fat child
Punch, which pleased me mightily that word being become
a word of common use for all that is thick and short.
At night home, and there find my wife hath been making
herself clean against to-morrow; and, late as it was,
I did send my coachman and horses to fetch home the
coach to-night, and so we to supper, myself most weary
with walking and standing so much, to see all things
fine against to-morrow, and so to bed. God give
a blessing to it! Meeting with Mr. Sheres, he
went with me up and down to several places, and, among
others, to buy a perriwig, but I bought none; and
also to Dancre’s, where he was about my picture
of Windsor, which is mighty pretty, and so will the
prospect of Rome be.