May 1st. Up betimes. Called
up by my tailor, and there first put on a summer suit
this year; but it was not my fine one of flowered tabby
vest, and coloured camelott tunique, because it
was too fine with the gold lace at the hands, that
I was afeard to be seen in it; but put on the stuff
suit I made the last year, which is now repaired; and
so did go to the Office in it, and sat all the morning,
the day looking as if it would be fowle. At noon
home to dinner, and there find my wife extraordinary
fine, with her flowered tabby gown that she made two
years ago, now laced exceeding pretty; and, indeed,
was fine all over; and mighty earnest to go, though
the day was very lowering; and she would have me put
on my fine suit, which I did. And so anon we went
alone through the town with our new liveries of serge,
and the horses’ manes and tails tied with red
ribbons, and the standards there gilt with varnish,
and all clean, and green refines, that people did mightily
look upon us; and, the truth is, I did not see any
coach more pretty, though more gay, than ours, all
the day. But we set out, out of humour I
because Betty, whom I expected, was not come to go
with us; and my wife that I would sit on the same
seat with her, which she likes not, being so fine:
and she then expected to meet Sheres, which we did
in the Pell Mell, and, against my will, I was forced
to take him into the coach, but was sullen all day
almost, and little complaisant: the day also being
unpleasing, though the Park full of coaches, but dusty
and windy, and cold, and now and then a little dribbling
rain; and, what made it worst, there were so many
hackney-coaches as spoiled the sight of the gentlemen’s;
and so we had little pleasure. But here was W.
Batelier and his sister in a borrowed coach by themselves,
and I took them and we to the lodge; and at the door
did give them a syllabub, and other things, cost me
12s., and pretty merry. And so back to the coaches,
and there till the evening, and then home, leaving
Mr. Sheres at St. James’s Gate, where he took
leave of us for altogether, he; being this night to
set out for Portsmouth post, in his way to Tangier,
which troubled my wife mightily, who is mighty, though
not, I think, too fond of him. But she was out
of humour all the evening, and I vexed at her for it,
and she did not rest almost all the night, so as in
the night I was forced; to take her and hug her to
put her to rest. So home, and after a little
supper, to bed.
2nd (Lord’s day). Up, and
by water to White Hall, and there visit my Lord Sandwich,
who, after about two months’ absence at Hinchingbroke,
come to town last night. I saw him, and very kind;
and I am glad he is so, I having not wrote to him
all the time, my eyes indeed not letting me.
Here with Sir Charles Herbert [Harbord], and my Lord
Hinchingbroke, and Sidney, we looked upon the picture
of Tangier, designed: by Charles Herbert [Harbord],
and drawn by Dancre, which my Lord Sandwich admires,
as being the truest picture that ever he’s saw
in his life: and it is indeed very pretty, and
I will be at the cost of having one of them.
Thence with them to White Hall, and there walked out
the sermon, with one or other; and then saw the Duke
of York after sermon, and he talked to me a little;
and so away back by water home, and after dinner got
my wife to read, and then by coach, she and I, to
the Park, and there spent the evening with much pleasure,
it proving clear after a little shower, and we mighty
fine as yesterday, and people mightily pleased with
our coach, as I perceived; but I had not on my fine
suit, being really afeard to wear it, it being so
fine with the gold lace, though not gay. So home
and to supper, and my wife to read, and Tom, my Népotisme,
and then to bed.
3rd. Up, and by coach to my Lord
Brouncker’s, where Sir G. Carteret did meet
Sir J. Minnes and me, to discourse upon Mr. Deering’s
business, who was directed, in the time of the war,
to provide provisions at Hamburgh, by Sir G. Carteret’s
direction; and now G. Carteret is afeard to own it,
it being done without written order. But by our
meeting we do all begin to recollect enough to preserve
Mr. Deering, I think, which, poor silly man!
I shall be glad of, it being too much he should suffer
for endeavouring to serve us. Thence to St. James’s,
where the Duke of York was playing in the Pell Mell;
and so he called me to him most part of the time that
he played, which was an hour, and talked alone to me;
and, among other things, tells me how the King will
not yet be got to name anybody in the room of Pen,
but puts it off for three or four days; from whence
he do collect that they are brewing something for the
Navy, but what he knows not; but I perceive is vexed
that things should go so, and he hath reason; for
he told me that it is likely they will do in this
as in other things resolve first, and consider
it and the fitness of it afterward. Thence to
White Hall, and met with Creed, and I took him to
the Harp and Balls, and there drank a cup of ale, he
and I alone, and discoursed of matters; and I perceive
by him that he makes no doubt but that all will turn
to the old religion, for these people cannot hold
things in their hands, nor prevent its coming to that;
and by his discourse fits himself for it, and would
have my Lord Sandwich do so, too, and me. After
a little talk with him, and particularly about the
ruinous condition of Tangier, which I have a great
mind to lay before the Duke of York, before it be
too late, but dare not, because of his great kindness
to Lord Middleton, we parted, and I homeward; but
called at Povy’s, and there he stopped me to
dinner, there being Mr. Williamson, the Lieutenant
of the Tower, Mr. Childe, and several others.
And after dinner, Povy and I together to talk of Tangier;
and he would have me move the Duke of York in it,
for it concerns him particularly, more than any, as
being the head of us; and I do think to do it.
Thence home, and at the office busy all the afternoon,
and so to supper and to bed.
4th. Up, and to the office, and
then my wife being gone to see her mother at Deptford,
I before the office sat went to the Excise Office,
and thence being alone stepped into Duck Lane, and
thence tried to have sent a porter to Deb.’s,
but durst not trust him, and therefore having bought
a book to satisfy the bookseller for my stay there,
a 12d. book, Andronicus of Tom Fuller, I took coach,
and at the end of Jewen Street next Red Cross Street
I sent the coachman to her lodging, and understand
she is gone for Greenwich to one Marys’s, a tanner’s,
at which I, was glad, hoping to have opportunity to
find her out; and so, in great fear of being seen,
I to the office, and there all the morning, dined at
home, and presently after dinner comes home my wife,
who I believe is jealous of my spending the day, and
I had very good fortune in being at home, for if Deb.
had been to have been found it is forty to one but
I had been abroad, God forgive me. So the afternoon
at the office, and at night walked with my wife in
the garden, and my Lord Brouncker with us, who is
newly come to W. Pen’s lodgings; and by and by
comes Mr. Hooke; and my Lord, and he, and I into my
Lord’s lodgings, and there discoursed of many
fine things in philosophy, to my great content, and
so home to supper and to bed.
5th. Up, and thought to have
gone with Lord Brouncker to Mr. Hooke this morning
betimes; but my Lord is taken ill of the gout, and
says his new lodgings have infected him, he never
having had any symptoms of it till now. So walked
to Gresham College, to tell Hooke that my Lord could
not come; and so left word, he being abroad, and I
to St. James’s, and thence, with the Duke of
York, to White Hall, where the Board waited on him
all the morning: and so at noon with Sir Thomas
Allen, and Sir Edward Scott, and Lord Carlingford,
to the Spanish Embassador’s, where I dined the
first time. The Olio not so good as Sheres’s.
There was at the table himself and a Spanish Countess,
a good, comely, and witty lady-three Fathers and us.
Discourse good and pleasant. And here was an
Oxford scholar in a Doctor of Law’s gowne, sent
from the College where the Embassador lay, when the
Court was there, to salute him before his return to
Spain: This man, though a gentle sort of scholar,
yet sat like a fool for want of French or Spanish,
but [knew] only Latin, which he spoke like an Englishman
to one of the Fathers. And by and by he and I
to talk, and the company very merry at my defending
Cambridge against Oxford: and I made much use
of my French and Spanish here, to my great content.
But the dinner not extraordinary at all, either for
quantity or quality. Thence home, where my wife
ill of those upon the maid’s bed, and troubled
at my being abroad. So I to the office, and there
till night, and then to her, and she read to me the
Epistle of Cassandra, which is very good indeed; and
the better to her, because recommended by Sheres.
So to supper, and to bed.
6th. Up, and by coach to Sir
W. Coventry’s, but he gone out. I by water
back to the Office, and there all the morning; then
to dinner, and then to the Office again, and anon
with my wife by coach to take the ayre, it being a
noble day, as far as the Greene Man, mightily pleased
with our journey, and our condition of doing it in
our own coach, and so home, and to walk in the garden,
and so to supper and to bed, my eyes being bad with
writing my journal, part of it, to-night.
7th. Up, and by coach to W. Coventry’s;
and there to talk with him a great deal with great
content; and so to the Duke of York, having a great
mind to speak to him about Tangier; but, when I come
to it, his interest for my Lord Middleton is such
that I dare not. So to the Treasury chamber,
and then walked home round by the Excise Office, having
by private vows last night in prayer to God Almighty
cleared my mind for the present of the thoughts of
going to Deb. at Greenwich, which I did long after.
I passed by Guildhall, which is almost finished, and
saw a poor labourer carried by, I think, dead with
a fall, as many there are, I hear. So home to
dinner, and then to the office a little, and so to
see my Lord Brouncker, who is a little ill of the gout;
and there Madam Williams told me that she heard that
my wife was going into France this year, which I did
not deny, if I can get time, and I pray God I may.
But I wondering how she come to know it, she tells
me a woman that my wife spoke to for a maid, did tell
her so, and that a lady that desires to go thither
would be glad to go in her company. Thence with
my wife abroad, with our coach, most pleasant weather;
and to Hackney, and into the marshes, where I never
was before, and thence round about to Old Ford and
Bow; and coming through the latter home, there being
some young gentlewomen at a door, and I seeming not
to know who they were, my wife’s jealousy told
me presently that I knew well enough it was that damned
place where Deb. dwelt, which made me swear very angrily
that it was false, as it was, and I carried [her]
back again to see the place, and it proved not so,
so I continued out of humour a good while at it, she
being willing to be friends, so I was by and by, saying
no more of it. So home, and there met with a
letter from Captain Silas Taylor, and, with it, his
written copy of a play that he hath wrote, and intends
to have acted. It is called “The
Serenade, or Disappointment,” which I will read,
not believing he can make any good of that kind.
He did once offer to show Harris it, but Harris told
him that he would judge by one Act whether it were
good or no, which is indeed a foolish saying, and we
see them out themselves in the choice of a play after
they have read the whole, it being sometimes found
not fit to act above three times; nay, and some that
have been refused at one house is found a good one
at the other. This made Taylor say he would not
shew it him, but is angry, and hath carried it to
the other house, and he thinks it will be acted there,
though he tells me they are not yet agreed upon it.
But I will find time to get it read to me, and I did
get my wife to begin a little to-night in the garden,
but not so much as I could make any judgment of it.
So home to supper and to bed.
8th. Up, and to the Office, and
there comes Lead to me, and at last my vizards are
done, and glasses got to put in and out, as I will;
and I think I have brought it to the utmost, both
for easiness of using and benefit, that I can; and
so I paid him 15s. for what he hath done now last,
in the finishing them, and they, I hope, will do me
a great deal of ease. At the Office all the morning,
and this day, the first time, did alter my side of
the table, after above eight years sitting on that
next the fire. But now I am not able to bear the
light of the windows in my eyes, I do begin there,
and I did sit with much more content than I had done
on the other side for a great while, and in winter
the fire will not trouble my back. At noon home
to dinner, and after dinner all the afternoon within,
with Mr. Hater, Gibson, and W. Hewer, reading over
and drawing up new things in the Instructions of Commanders,
which will be good, and I hope to get them confirmed
by the Duke of York, though I perceive nothing will
effectually perfect them but to look over the whole
body of the Instructions, of all the Officers of a
ship, and make them all perfect together. This
being done, comes my bookseller, and brings me home
bound my collection of papers, about my Addresse to
the Duke of York in August, which makes me glad, it
being that which shall do me more right many years
hence than, perhaps, all I ever did in my life:
and therefore I do, both for my own and the King’s
sake, value it much. By and by also comes Browne,
the mathematical instrument maker, and brings me home
my instrument for perspective, made according to the
description of Dr. Wren’s, in the late Transactions;
and he hath made it, I think, very well, and that,
that I believe will do the thing, and therein gives
me great content; but have I fear all the content that
must be received by my eyes is almost lost. So
to the office, and there late at business, and then
home to supper and to bed.
9th (Lord’s day). Up; and,
after dressing in my best suit with gold trimming,
I to the Office, and there with Gibson and Tom finishing
against to-morrow my notes upon Commanders’ Instructions;
and, when church-time, to church with my wife, leaving
them at work. Dr. Mills preached a dull sermon,
and so we home to dinner; and thence by coach to St.
Andrew’s, Holborne, thinking to have heard Dr.
Stillingfleete preach, but we could not get a place,
and so to St. Margaret’s, Westminster, and there
heard a sermon, and did get a place, the first we
have heard there these many years, and here at a distance
I saw Betty Michell, but she is become much a plainer
woman than she was a girl. Thence towards the
Park, but too soon to go in, so went on to Knightsbridge,
and there eat and drank at “The World’s
End,” where we had good things, and then back
to the Park, and there till night, being fine weather,
and much company, and so home, and after supper to
bed. This day I first left off both my waistcoats
by day, and my waistcoat by night, it being very hot
weather, so hot as to make me break out, here and
there, in my hands, which vexes me to see, but is good
for me.
10th. Troubled, about three in
the morning, with my wife’s calling her maid
up, and rising herself, to go with her coach abroad,
to gather May-dew, which she did, and I troubled for
it, for fear of any hurt, going abroad so betimes,
happening to her; but I to sleep again, and she come
home about six, and to bed again all well, and I up
and with Mr. Gibson by coach to St. James’s,
and thence to White Hall, where the Duke of York met
the Office, and there discoursed of several things,
particularly the Instructions of Commanders of ships.
But here happened by chance a discourse of the Council
of Trade, against which the Duke of York is mightily
displeased, and particularly Mr. Child, against whom
he speaking hardly, Captain Cox did second the Duke
of York, by saying that he was talked of for an unfayre
dealer with masters of ships, about freight:
to which Sir T. Littleton very hotly and foolishly
replied presently, that he never heard any honest
man speak ill of Child; to which the Duke of York
did make a smart reply, and was angry; so as I was
sorry to hear it come so far, and that I, by seeming
to assent to Cox, might be observed too much by Littleton,
though I said nothing aloud, for this must breed great
heart-burnings. After this meeting done, the
Duke of York took the Treasurers into his closet to
chide them, as Mr. Wren tells me; for that my Lord
Keeper did last night at the Council say, when nobody
was ready to say any thing against the constitution
of the Navy, that he did believe the Treasurers of
the Navy had something to say, which was very foul
on their part, to be parties against us. They
being gone, Mr. Wren [and I] took boat, thinking to
dine with my Lord of Canterbury; but, when we come
to Lambeth, the gate was shut, which is strictly done
at twelve o’clock, and nobody comes in afterwards:
so we lost our labour, and therefore back to White
Hall, and thence walked my boy Jacke with me,
to my Lord Crew, whom I have not seen since he was
sick, which is eight months ago, I think and there
dined with him: he is mightily broke. A stranger
a country gentleman, was with him: and he pleased
with my discourse accidentally about the decay of
gentlemen’s families in the country, telling
us that the old rule was, that a family might remain
fifty miles from London one hundred years, one hundred
miles from London two hundred years, and so farther,
or nearer London more or less years. He also told
us that he hath heard his father say, that in his
time it was so rare for a country gentleman to come
to London, that, when he did come, he used to make
his will before he set out. Thence: to St.
James’s, and there met the Duke of York, who
told me, with great content, that he did now think
he should master our adversaries, for that the King
did tell him that he was; satisfied in the constitution
of the Navy, but that it was well to give these people
leave to object against it, which they having not done,
he did give order to give warrant to the Duke of York
to direct Sir Jeremy Smith to be a Commissioner of
the Navy in the room of Pen; which, though he be an
impertinent fellow, yet I am glad of it, it showing
that the other side is not so strong as it was:
and so, in plain terms, the Duke of York did tell
me, that they were every day losing ground; and particularly
that he would take care to keep out Child: at
all which I am glad, though yet I dare not think myself
secure, as the King may yet be wrought upon by these
people to bring changes in our Office, and remove
us, ere it be long. Thence I to White Hall, an
there took boat to Westminster, and to Mrs. Martin’s,
who is not come to town from her husband at Portsmouth.
So drank only at Cragg’s with Doll, and so to
the Swan, and there baiser a new maid that is
there, and so to White Hall again, to a Committee
of Tangier, where I see all things going to rack in
the business of the Corporation, and consequently in
the place, by Middleton’s going. Thence
walked a little with Creed, who tells me he hears
how fine my horses and coach are, and advises me to
avoid being noted for it, which I was vexed to hear
taken notice of, it being what I feared and Povy told
me of my gold-lace sleeves in the Park yesterday,
which vexed me also, so as to resolve never to appear
in Court with them, but presently to have them taken
off, as it is fit I should, and so to my wife at Unthanke’s,
and coach, and so called at my tailor’s to that
purpose, and so home, and after a little walk in the
garden, home to supper and to bed.
11th. My wife again up by four
o’clock, to go to gather May-dew; and so back
home by seven, to bed, and by and by I up and to the
office, where all the morning, and dined at noon at
home with my people, and so all the afternoon.
In the evening my wife and I all alone, with the boy,
by water, up as high as Putney almost, with the tide,
and back again, neither staying going nor coming;
but talking, and singing, and reading a foolish copy
of verses upon my Lord Mayor’s entertaining of
all the bachelors, designed in praise to my Lord Mayor,
and so home and to the office a little, and then home
to bed, my eyes being bad. Some trouble at Court
for fear of the Queen’s miscarrying; she being,
as they all conclude, far gone with child.
12th. Up, and to Westminster
Hall, where the term is, and this the first day of
my being there, and here by chance met Roger Pepys,
come to town the last night: I was glad to see
him. After some talk with him and others, and
among others Sir Charles Harbord and Sidney Montagu,
the latter of whom is to set out to-morrow towards
Flanders and Italy, I invited them to dine with me
to-morrow, and so to Mrs. Martin’s lodging,
who come to town last night, and there je did
hazer her, she having been a month, I think, at Portsmouth
with her husband, newly come home from the Streights.
But, Lord! how silly the woman talks of her great
entertainment there, and how all the gentry come to
visit her, and that she believes her husband is worth
L6 or L700, which nevertheless I am glad of, but I
doubt they will spend it a fast. Thence home,
and after dinner my wife and I to the Duke of York’s
playhouse, and there, in the side balcony, over against
the musick, did hear, but not see, a new play, the
first day acted, “The Roman Virgin,” an
old play, and but ordinary, I thought; but the trouble
of my eyes with the light of the candles did almost
kill me. Thence to my Lord Sandwich’s, and
there had a promise from Sidney to come and dine with
me to-morrow; and so my wife and I home in our coach,
and there find my brother John, as I looked for, come
to town from Ellington, where, among other things,
he tell me the first news that my [sister Jackson]
is with child, and fat gone, which I know not whether
it did more trouble or please me, having no great
care for my friends to have children; though I love
other people’s. So, glad to see him, we
to supper, and so to bed.
13th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, it being a rainy foul day.
But at noon comes my Lord Hinchingbroke, and Sidney,
and Sir Charles Harbord, and Roger Pepys, and dined
with me; and had a good dinner, and very merry with;
us all the afternoon, it being a farewell to Sidney;
and so in the evening they away, and I to my business
at the Office and so to supper, and talk with my brother,
and so to bed.
14th. Up, and to St. James’s
to the Duke of York, and thence to White Hall, where
we met about office business, and then at noon with
Mr. Wren to Lambeth, to dinner with the Archbishop
of Canterbury; the first time I was ever there and
I have long longed for it; where a noble house, and
well furnished with good pictures and furniture, and
noble attendance in good order, and great deal of
company, though an ordinary day; and exceeding great
cheer, no where better, or so much, that ever I think
I saw, for an ordinary table: and the Bishop mighty
kind to me, particularly desiring my company another
time, when less company there. Most of the company
gone, and I going, I heard by a gentleman of a sermon
that was to be there; and so I staid to hear it, thinking
it serious, till by and by the gentleman told me it
was a mockery, by one Cornet Bolton, a very gentleman-like
man, that behind a chair did pray and preach like
a Presbyter Scot that ever I heard in my life, with
all the possible imitation in grimaces and voice.
And his text about the hanging up their harps upon
the willows: and a serious good sermon too, exclaiming
against Bishops, and crying up of my good Lord Eglinton,
a till it made us all burst; but I did wonder to have
the Bishop at this time to make himself sport with
things of this kind, but I perceive it was shewn him
as a rarity; and he took care to have the room-door
shut, but there were about twenty gentlemen there,
and myself, infinitely pleased with the novelty.
So over to White Hall, to a little Committee of Tangier;
and thence walking in the Gallery, I met Sir Thomas
Osborne, who, to my great content, did of his own
accord fall into discourse with me, with so much professions
of value and respect, placing the whole virtue of
the Office of the Navy upon me, and that for the Comptroller’s
place, no man in England was fit for it but me, when
Sir J. Minnes, as he says it is necessary, is removed:
but then he knows not what to do for a man in my place;
and in discourse, though I have no mind to the other,
I did bring in Tom Hater to be the fittest man in the
world for it, which he took good notice of. But
in the whole I was mightily pleased, reckoning myself
now fifty per cent. securer in my place than I did
before think myself to be. Thence to Unthanke’s,
and there find my wife, but not dressed, which vexed
me, because going to the Park, it being a most pleasant
day after yesterday’s rain, which lays all the
dust, and most people going out thither, which vexed
me. So home, sullen; but then my wife and I by
water, with my brother, as high as Fulham, talking
and singing, and playing the rogue with the Western
barge-men, about the women of Woolwich, which mads
them, an so back home to supper and to bed.
15th. Up, and at the Office all
the morning. Dined at home and Creed with me
home, and I did discourse about evening some reckonings
with him in the afternoon; but I could not, for my
eyes, do it, which troubled me, and vexed him that
would not; but yet we were friends, I advancing him
more without it, and so to walk all the afternoon together
in the garden; and I perceive still he do expect a
change in of matters, especially as to religion, and
fits himself for it by professing himself for it in
his discourse. He gone, I to my business at my
Office, and so at night home to supper, and to bed.
16th (Lord’s day). My wife
and I at church, our pew filled with Mrs. Backewell,
and six more that she brought with her, which vexed
me at her confidence. Dined at home and W. Batelier
with us, and I all the afternoon drawing up a foul
draught of my petition to the Duke of York, about
my eyes, for leave to spend three or four months out
of the Office, drawing it so as to give occasion to
a voyage abroad which I did, to my pretty good liking;
and then with my wife to Hyde Park, where a good deal
of company, and good weather, and so home to supper
and to bed.
17th. Up, and to several places
doing business, and the home to dinner, and then my
wife and I and brother John by coach to the King’s
playhouse, and saw “The Spanish Curate”
revived, which is a pretty good play, but my eyes
troubled with seeing it, mightily. Thence carried
them and Mr. Gibson, who met me at my Lord Brouncker’s
with a fair copy of my petition, which I thought to
shew the Duke of York this night, but could not, and
therefore carried them to the Park, where they had
never been, and so home to supper and to bed.
Great the news now of the French taking St. Domingo,
in Spaniola, from the Spaniards, which troubles us,
that they should have it, and have the honour of taking
it, when we could not.
18th. Up, and to St. James’s
and other places, and then to the office, where all
the morning. At noon home and dined in my wife’s
chamber, she being much troubled with the tooth-ake,
and I staid till a surgeon of hers come, one Leeson,
who hath formerly drawn her mouth, and he advised
her to draw it: so I to the Office, and by and
by word is come that she hath drawn it, which pleased
me, it being well done. So I home, to comfort
her, and so back to the office till night, busy, and
so home to supper and to bed.
19th. With my coach to St. James’s;
and there finding the Duke of York gone to muster
his men, in Hyde Park, I alone with my boy thither,
and there saw more, walking out of my coach as other
gentlemen did, of a soldier’s trade, than ever
I did in my life: the men being mighty fine,
and their Commanders, particularly the Duke of Monmouth;
but me-thought their trade but very easy as to the
mustering of their men, and the men but indifferently
ready to perform what was commanded, in the handling
of their arms. Here the news was first talked
of Harry Killigrew’s being wounded in nine places
last night, by footmen, in the highway, going from
the Park in a hackney-coach towards Hammersmith, to
his house at Turnham Greene: they being supposed
to be my Lady Shrewsbury’s men, she being by,
in her coach with six horses; upon an old grudge of
his saying openly that he had lain with her.
Thence by and by to White Hall, and there I waited
upon the King and Queen all dinner-time, in the Queen’s
lodgings, she being in her white pinner and apron,
like a woman with child; and she seemed handsomer
plain so, than dressed. And by and by, dinner
done, I out, and to walk in the Gallery, for the Duke
of York’s coming out; and there, meeting Mr.
May, he took me down about four o’clock to Mr.
Chevins’s lodgings, and all alone did get me
a dish of cold chickens, and good wine; and I dined
like a prince, being before very hungry and empty.
By and by the Duke of York comes, and readily took
me to his closet, and received my petition, and discoursed
about my eyes, and pitied me, and with much kindness
did give me his consent to be absent, and approved
of my proposition to go into Holland to observe things
there, of the Navy; but would first ask the King’s
leave, which he anon did, and did tell me that the
King would be a good master to me, these were his
words, about my eyes, and do like of my going into
Holland, but do advise that nobody should know of my
going thither, but pretend that I did go into the
country somewhere, which I liked well. Glad of
this, I home, and thence took out my wife, and to Mr.
Holliard’s about a swelling in her cheek, but
he not at home, and so round by Islington and eat
and drink, and so home, and after supper to bed.
In discourse this afternoon, the Duke of York did
tell me that he was the most amazed at one thing just
now, that ever he was in his life, which was, that
the Duke of Buckingham did just now come into the Queen’s
bed-chamber, where the King was, and much mixed company,
and among others, Tom Killigrew, the father of Harry,
who was last night wounded so as to be in danger of
death, and his man is quite dead; and [Buckingham]
there in discourse did say that he had spoke with some
one that was by (which all the world must know that
it must be his whore, my Lady Shrewsbury), who says
that they did not mean to hurt, but beat him, and
that he did run first at them with his sword; so that
he do hereby clearly discover that he knows who did
it, and is of conspiracy with them, being of known
conspiracy with her, which the Duke of York did seem
to be pleased with, and said it might, perhaps, cost
him his life in the House of Lords; and I find was
mightily pleased with it, saying it was the most impudent
thing, as well as the most foolish, that ever he knew
man do in all his life.
20th. Up and to the Office, where
all the morning. At noon, the whole Office Brouncker,
J. Minnes, T. Middleton, Samuel Pepys, and Captain
Cox to dine with the Parish, at the Three Tuns,
this day being Ascension-day, where exceeding good
discourse among the merchants, and thence back home,
and after a little talk with my wife, to my office
did a great deal of business, and so with my eyes
might weary, and my head full of care how to get my
accounts and business settled against my journey,
home to supper, and bed. Yesterday, at my coming
home, I found that my wife had, on a sudden, put away
Matt upon some falling out, and I doubt my wife did
call her ill names by my wife’s own discourse;
but I did not meddle to say anything upon it, but
let her go, being not sorry, because now we may get
one that speaks French, to go abroad with us.
21st. I waited with the Office
upon the Duke of York in the morning. Dined at
home, where Lewis Phillips the friend of his, dined
with me. In the afternoon at the Office.
In the evening visited by Roger Pepys and Philip Packer
and so home.
22nd. Dined at home, the rest of the whole day
at office.
23rd (Lord’s day). Called
up by Roger Pepys and his son who to church with me,
and then home to dinner. In the afternoon carried
them to Westminster, and myself to James’s,
where, not finding the Duke of York, back home, and
with my wife spent the evening taking the ayre about
Hackney, with great pleasure, and places we had never
seen before.
24th. To White Hall, and there
all the morning, and they home, and giving order for
some business and setting my brother to making a catalogue
of my books, I back again to W. Hewer to White Hall,
where I attended the Duke of York and was by him led
to [the King], who expressed great sense of my misfortune
in my eyes, and concernment for their recovery; and
accordingly signified, not only his assent to desire
therein, but commanded me to give them rest summer,
according to my late petition to the Duke of York.
W. Hewer and I dined alone at the Swan; and thence
having thus waited on the King, spent till four o’clock
in St. James’s Park, when I met my wife at Unthanke’s,
and so home.
25th. Dined at home; and the
rest of the day, morning and afternoon, at the Office.
26th. To White Hall, where all
the morning. Dined with Mr. Chevins, with Alderman
Backewell, and Spragg. The Court full of the news
from Captain Hubbert, of “The Milford,”
touching his being affronted in the Streights, shot
at, and having eight men killed him by a French man-of-war,
calling him “English dog,” and commanding
him to strike, which he refused, and, as knowing himself
much too weak for him, made away from him. The
Queen, as being supposed with child, fell ill, so as
to call for Madam Nun, Mr. Chevins’s sister,
and one of her women, from dinner from us; this being
the last day of their doubtfulness touching her being
with child; and they were therein well confirmed by
her Majesty’s being well again before night.
One Sir Edmund Bury Godfry, a woodmonger and justice
of Peace in Westminster, having two days since arrested
Sir Alexander Frazier for about L30 in firing, the
bailiffs were apprehended, committed to the porter’s
lodge, and there, by the King’s command, the
last night severely whipped; from which the justice
himself very hardly escaped, to such an unusual degree
was the King moved therein. But he lies now in
the lodge, justifying his act, as grounded upon the
opinion of several of the judges, and, among others,
my Lord Chief-Justice; which makes the King very angry
with the Chief-Justice, as they say; and the justice
do lie and justify his act, and says he will suffer
in the cause for the people, and do refuse to receive
almost any nutriment. The effects of it may be
bad to the Court. Expected a meeting of Tangier
this afternoon, but failed. So home, met by my
wife at Unthanke’s.
27th. At the office all the morning,
dined at home, Mr. Hollier with me. Presented
this day by Mr. Browne with a book of drawing by him,
lately printed, which cost me 20s. to him. In
the afternoon to the Temple, to meet with Auditor
Aldworth about my interest account, but failed meeting
him. To visit my cozen Creed, and found her ill
at home, being with child, and looks poorly.
Thence to her husband, at Gresham College, upon some
occasions of Tangier; and so home, with Sir John Bankes
with me, to Mark Lane.
28th. To St. James’s, where
the King’s being with the Duke of York prevented
a meeting of the Tangier Commission. But, Lord!
what a deal of sorry discourse did I hear between
the King and several Lords about him here! but very
mean methought. So with Creed to the Excise Office,
and back to White Hall, where, in the Park, Sir G.
Carteret did give me an account of his discourse lately,
with the Commissioners of Accounts, who except against
many things, but none that I find considerable; among
others, that of the Officers of the Navy selling of
the King’s goods, and particularly my providing
him with calico flags, which having been by order,
and but once, when necessity, and the King’s
apparent profit, justified it, as conformable to my
particular duty, it will prove to my advantage that
it be enquired into. Nevertheless, having this
morning received from them a demand of an account
of all monies within their cognizance, received and
issued by me, I was willing, upon this hint, to give
myself rest, by knowing whether their meaning therein
might reach only to my Treasurership for Tangier,
or the monies employed on this occasion. I went,
therefore, to them this afternoon, to understand what
monies they meant, where they answered me, by saying,
“The eleven months’ tax, customs, and
prizemoney,” without mentioning, any more than
I demanding, the service they respected therein; and
so, without further discourse, we parted, upon very
good terms of respect, and with few words, but my
mind not fully satisfied about the monies they mean.
At noon Mr. Gibson and I dined at the Swan, and thence
doing this at Brook house, and thence caking at the
Excise Office for an account of payment of my tallies
for Tangier, I home, and thence with my wife and brother
spent the evening on the water, carrying our supper
with us, as high as Chelsea; so home, making sport
with the Westerne bargees, and my wife and I singing,
to my great content.
29th. The King’s birth-day.
To White Hall, where all very gay; and particularly
the Prince of Tuscany very fine, and is the first day
of his appearing out of mourning, since he come.
I heard the Bishop of Peterborough’ preach but
dully; but a good anthem of Pelham’s. Home
to dinner, and then with my wife to Hyde Park, where
all the evening; great store of company, and great
preparations by the Prince of Tuscany to celebrate
the night with fire-works, for the King’s birth-day.
And so home.
30th (Whitsunday). By water to
White Hall, and thence to Sir W. Coventry, where all
the morning by his bed-side, he being indisposed.
Our discourse was upon the notes I have lately prepared
for Commanders’ Instructions; but concluded
that nothing will render them effectual, without an
amendment in the choice of them, that they be seamen,
and not gentleman above the command of the Admiral,
by the greatness of their relations at Court.
Thence to White Hall, and dined alone with Mr. Chevins
his sister: whither by and by come in Mr. Progers
and Sir Thomas Allen, and by and by fine Mrs. Wells,
who is a great beauty; and there I had my full gaze
upon her, to my great content, she being a woman of
pretty conversation. Thence to the Duke of York,
who, with the officers of the Navy, made a good entrance
on my draught of my new Instructions to Commanders,
as well expressing general [views] of a reformation
among them, as liking of my humble offers towards
it. Thence being called by my wife, Mr. Gibson
and I, we to the Park, whence the rain suddenly home.
31st. Up very betimes, and so
continued all the morning with W. Hewer, upon examining
and stating my accounts, in order to the fitting myself
to go abroad beyond sea, which the ill condition of
my eyes, and my neglect for a year or two, hath kept
me behindhand in, and so as to render it very difficult
now, and troublesome to my mind to do it; but I this
day made a satisfactory entrance therein. Dined
at home, and in the afternoon by water to White Hall,
calling by the way at Michell’s, where I have
not been many a day till just the other day, and now
I met her mother there and knew her husband to be
out of town. And here je did baiser
elle, but had not opportunity para hazer some
with her as I would have offered if je had
had it. And thence had another meeting with the
Duke of York, at White Hall, on yesterday’s work,
and made a good advance: and so, being called
by my wife, we to the Park, Mary Batelier, and a Dutch
gentleman, a friend of hers, being with us. Thence
to “The World’s End,” a drinking-house
by the Park; and there merry, and so home late.
And thus ends all that I doubt I shall
ever be able to do with my own eyes in the keeping
of my journal, I being not able to do it any longer,
having done now so long as to undo my eyes almost every
time that I take a pen in my hand; and, therefore,
whatever comes of it, I must forbear: and, therefore,
resolve, from this time forward, to have it kept by
my people in long-hand, and must therefore be contented
to set down no more than is fit for them and all the
world to know; or, if there be any thing, which cannot
be much, now my amours to Deb. are past, and my eyes
hindering me in almost all other pleasures, I must
endeavour to keep a margin in my book open, to add,
here and there, a note in short-hand with my own hand.
And so I betake myself to that course,
which is almost as much as to see myself go into my
grave: for which, and all the discomforts that
will accompany my being blind, the good God prepare
me!
May 31, 1669.