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+Project Gutenberg's Diary of Samuel Pepys, June/July 1668, by Samuel Pepys
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Diary of Samuel Pepys, June/July 1668
+
+Author: Samuel Pepys
+
+Release Date: December 1, 2004 [EBook #4190]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS, ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS M.A. F.R.S.
+
+ CLERK OF THE ACTS AND SECRETARY TO THE ADMIRALTY
+
+ TRANSCRIBED FROM THE SHORTHAND MANUSCRIPT IN THE PEPYSIAN LIBRARY
+ MAGDALENE COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE BY THE REV. MYNORS BRIGHT M.A. LATE FELLOW
+ AND PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
+
+ (Unabridged)
+
+ WITH LORD BRAYBROOKE'S NOTES
+
+ EDITED WITH ADDITIONS BY
+
+ HENRY B. WHEATLEY F.S.A.
+
+ DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS.
+ JUNE & JULY
+ 1668
+
+June 1st. Up and with Sir J. Minnes to Westminster, and in the Hall there
+I met with Harris and Rolt, and carried them to the Rhenish wine-house,
+where I have not been in a morning--nor any tavern, I think, these seven
+years and more. Here I did get the words of a song of Harris that I
+wanted. Here also Mr. Young and Whistler by chance met us, and drank with
+us. Thence home, and to prepare business against the afternoon, and did
+walk an hour in the garden with Sir W. Warren, who do tell me of the great
+difficulty he is under in the business of his accounts with the
+Commissioners of Parliament, and I fear some inconveniences and troubles
+may be occasioned thereby to me. So to dinner, and then with Sir J.
+Minnes to White Hall, and there attended the Lords of the Treasury and
+also a committee of Council with the Duke of York about the charge of this
+year's fleete, and thence I to Westminster and to Mrs. Martin's, and did
+hazer what je would con her, and did once toker la thigh de su landlady,
+and thence all alone to Fox Hall, and walked and saw young Newport, and
+two more rogues of the town, seize on two ladies, who walked with them an
+hour with their masks on; perhaps civil ladies; and there I left them, and
+so home, and thence to Mr. Mills's, where I never was before, and here
+find, whom I indeed saw go in, and that did make me go thither, Mrs.
+Hallworthy and Mrs. Andrews, and here supped, and, extraordinary merry
+till one in the morning, Mr. Andrews coming to us: and mightily pleased
+with this night's company and mirth I home to bed. Mrs. Turner, too, was
+with us.
+
+2nd. Up, and to the office, where all the morning. At noon home to
+dinner, and there dined with me, besides my own people, W. Batelier and
+Mercer, and we very merry. After dinner, they gone, only Mercer and I to
+sing a while, and then parted, and I out and took a coach, and called
+Mercer at their back-door, and she brought with her Mrs. Knightly, a
+little pretty sober girl, and I carried them to Old Ford, a town by Bow,
+where I never was before, and there walked in the fields very pleasant,
+and sang: and so back again, and stopped and drank at the Gun, at Mile
+End, and so to the Old Exchange door, and did buy them a pound of
+cherries, cost me 2s., and so set them down again; and I to my little
+mercer's Finch, that lives now in the Minories, where I have left my
+cloak, and did here baiser su moher, a belle femme, and there took my
+cloak which I had left there, and so by water, it being now about nine
+o'clock, down to Deptford, where I have not been many a day, and there it
+being dark I did by agreement aller a la house de Bagwell, and there after
+a little playing and baisando we did go up in the dark a su camera . . .
+and to my boat again, and against the tide home. Got there by twelve
+o'clock, taking into my boat, for company, a man that desired a passage--a
+certain western bargeman, with whom I had good sport, talking of the old
+woman of Woolwich, and telling him the whole story.
+
+3rd. Up, and to the office, where busy till g o'clock, and then to White
+Hall, to the Council-chamber, where I did present the Duke of York with an
+account of the charge of the present fleete, to his satisfaction; and this
+being done, did ask his leave for my going out of town five or six days,
+which he did give me, saying, that my diligence in the King's business was
+such, that I ought not to be denied when my own business called me any
+whither. Thence with Sir D. Gawden to Westminster, where I did take a
+turn or two, and met Roger Pepys, who is mighty earnest for me to stay
+from going into the country till he goes, and to bring my people thither
+for some time: but I cannot, but will find another time this summer for
+it. Thence with him home, and there to the office till noon, and then
+with Lord Brouncker, Sir J. Minnes, and Sir G. Carteret, upon whose
+accounts they have been this day to the Three Tuns to dinner, and thence
+back again home, and after doing a little business I by coach to the
+King's house, and there saw good, part of "The Scornfull Lady," and that
+done, would have takn out Knepp, but she was engaged, and so to my Lord
+Crew's to visit him; from whom I learn nothing but that there hath been
+some controversy at the Council-table, about my Lord Sandwich's signing,
+where some would not have had him, in the treaty with Portugall; but all,
+I think, is over in it. Thence by coach to Westminster to the Hall, and
+thence to the Park, where much good company, and many fine ladies; and in
+so handsome a hackney I was, that I believe Sir W. Coventry and others,
+who looked on me, did take me to be in one of my own, which I was a little
+troubled for. So to the lodge, and drank a cup of new milk, and so home,
+and there to Mrs. Turner's, and sat and talked with her, and then home to
+bed, having laid my business with W. Hewer to go out of town Friday next,
+with hopes of a great deal of pleasure.
+
+4th. Up, and to the office, where all the morning, and at noon home to
+dinner, where Mr. Clerke, the solicitor, dined with me and my clerks.
+After dinner I carried and set him down at the Temple, he observing to me
+how St. Sepulchre's church steeple is repaired already a good deal, and
+the Fleet Bridge is contracted for by the City to begin to be built this
+summer, which do please me mightily. I to White Hall, and walked through
+the Park for a little ayre; and so back to the Council-chamber, to the
+Committee of the Navy, about the business of fitting the present fleete,
+suitable to the money given, which, as the King orders it, and by what
+appears, will be very little; and so as I perceive the Duke of York will
+have nothing to command, nor can intend to go abroad. But it is pretty to
+see how careful these great men are to do every thing so as they may
+answer it to the Parliament, thinking themselves safe in nothing but where
+the judges, with whom they often advise, do say the matter is doubtful;
+and so they take upon themselves then to be the chief persons to interpret
+what is doubtful. Thence home, and all the evening to set matters in
+order against my going to Brampton to-morrow, being resolved upon my
+journey, and having the Duke of York's leave again to-day; though I do
+plainly see that I can very ill be spared now, there being much business,
+especially about this, which I have attended the Council about, and I the
+man that am alone consulted with; and, besides, my Lord Brouncker is at
+this time ill, and Sir W. Pen. So things being put in order at the
+Office, I home to do the like there; and so to bed.
+
+5th (Friday).
+
+ [The rough notes for the journal from this time to the 17th of June
+ are contained on five leaves, inserted in the book; and after them
+ follow several pages left blank for the fair copy which was never
+ made.]
+
+At Barnet, for milk, 6d. On the highway, to menders of the highway, 6d.
+Dinner at Stevenage, 5s. 6d.
+
+6th (Saturday). Spent at Huntingdon with Bowles, and Appleyard, and
+Shepley, 2s.
+
+7th (Sunday). My father, for money lent, and horse-hire L1 11s.
+
+8th (Monday). Father's servants (father having in the garden told me bad
+stories of my wife's ill words), 14s.; one that helped at the horses, 2s.;
+menders of the highway, 2s. Pleasant country to Bedford, where, while
+they stay, I rode through the town; and a good country-town; and there,
+drinking, 1s. We on to Newport; and there 'light, and I and W. Hewer to
+the Church, and there give the boy 1s. So to Buckingham, a good old town.
+Here I to see the Church, which very good, and the leads, and a school in
+it: did give the sexton's boy 1s. A fair bridge here, with many arches:
+vexed at my people's making me lose so much time; reckoning, 13s. 4d.
+Mighty pleased with the pleasure of the ground all the day. At night to
+Newport Pagnell; and there a good pleasant country-town, but few people in
+it. A very fair--and like a Cathedral--Church; and I saw the leads, and a
+vault that goes far under ground, and here lay with Betty Turner's
+sparrow: the town, and so most of this country, well watered. Lay here
+well, and rose next day by four o'clock: few people in the town: and so
+away. Reckoning for supper, 19s. 6d.; poor, 6d. Mischance to the coach,
+but no time lost.
+
+9th (Tuesday). When come to Oxford, a very sweet place: paid our guide,
+L1 2s. 6d.; barber, 2s. 6d.; book, Stonage, 4s.
+
+ [This must have been either Inigo Jones's "The most notable
+ Antiquity of Great Britain vulgarly called Stonehenge," printed in
+ 1655, or "Chorea Gigantum, or the most famous Antiquity of Great
+ Britain, vulgarly called Stones Heng, standing on Salisbury Plain,
+ restor'd to the Danes," by Walter Charleton, M.D., and published in
+ 1663.]
+
+To dinner; and then out with my wife and people, and landlord: and to him
+that showed us the schools and library, 10s.; to him that showed us All
+Souls' College, and Chichly's picture, 5s. So to see Christ Church with
+my wife, I seeing several others very fine alone, with W. Hewer, before
+dinner, and did give the boy that went with me 1s. Strawberries, 1s. 2d.
+Dinner and servants, L1 0s. 6d. After come home from the schools, I out
+with the landlord to Brazen-nose College;--to the butteries, and in the
+cellar find the hand of the Child of Hales, . . . long. Butler, 2s.
+Thence with coach and people to Physic-garden, 1s. So to Friar Bacon's
+study: I up and saw it, and give the man 1s. Bottle of sack for landlord,
+2s. Oxford mighty fine place; and well seated, and cheap entertainment.
+At night come to Abingdon, where had been a fair of custard; and met many
+people and scholars going home; and there did get some pretty good musick,
+and sang and danced till supper: 5s.
+
+10th (Wednesday). Up, and walked to the Hospitall:--[Christ's
+Hospital]--very large and fine; and pictures of founders, and the History'
+of the Hospitall; and is said to be worth; L700 per annum; and that Mr.
+Foly was here lately to see how their lands were settled; and here, in old
+English, the story of the occasion of it, and a rebus at the bottom. So
+did give the poor, which they would not take but in their box, 2s. 6d. So
+to the inn, and paid the reckoning and what not, 13s. So forth towards
+Hungerford, led this good way by our landlord, one Heart, an old but very
+civil and well-spoken man, more than I ever heard, of his quality. He
+gone, we forward; and I vexed at my people's not minding the way. So come
+to Hungerford, where very good trouts, eels, and crayfish. Dinner: a mean
+town. At dinner there, 12s. Thence set out with a guide, who saw us to
+Newmarket-heath, and then left us, 3s. 6d. So all over the Plain by the
+sight of the steeple, the Plain high and low, to Salisbury, by night; but
+before I come to the town, I saw a great fortification, and there 'light,
+and to it and in it; and find it prodigious, so as to frighten me to be in
+it all alone at that time of night, it being dark. I understand, since,
+it to be that, that is called Old Sarum. Come to the George Inne, where
+lay in a silk bed; and very good diet. To supper; then to bed.
+
+11th (Thursday). Up, and W. Hewer and I up and down the town, and find it
+a very brave place. The river goes through every street; and a most
+capacious market-place. The city great, I think greater than Hereford.
+But the Minster most admirable; as big, I think, and handsomer than
+Westminster: and a most large Close about it, and houses for the Officers
+thereof, and a fine palace for the Bishop. So to my lodging back, and
+took out my wife and people to shew them the town and Church; but they
+being at prayers, we could not be shown the Quire. A very good organ; and
+I looked in, and saw the Bishop, my friend Dr. Ward. Thence to the inne;
+and there not being able to hire coach-horses, and not willing to use our
+own, we got saddle-horses, very dear. Boy that went to look for them, 6d.
+So the three women behind W. Hewer, Murford, and our guide, and I single
+to Stonage; over the Plain and some great hills, even to fright us. Come
+thither, and find them as prodigious as any tales I ever heard of them,
+and worth going this journey to see. God knows what their use was! they
+are hard to tell, but yet maybe told. Give the shepherd-woman, for
+leading our horses, 4d. So back by Wilton, my Lord Pembroke's house,
+which we could not see, he being just coming to town; but the situation I
+do not like, nor the house promise much, it being in a low but rich
+valley. So back home; and there being 'light, we to the Church, and there
+find them at prayers again, so could not see the Quire; but I sent the
+women home, and I did go in, and saw very many fine tombs, and among the
+rest some very ancient, of the Montagus.
+
+ [The Montacutes, from whom Lord Sandwich's family claimed descent:
+ --B.]
+
+So home to dinner; and, that being done, paid the reckoning, which was so
+exorbitant; and particular in rate of my horses, and 7s. 6d. for bread and
+beer, that I was mad, and resolve to trouble the master about it, and get
+something for the poor; and come away in that humour: L2 5s. 6d. Servants,
+1s. 6d.; poor, 1s.; guide to the Stones, 2s.; poor woman in the street,
+1s.; ribbands, 9d.; washwoman, 1s.; sempstress for W. Hewer, 3s.; lent W.
+Hewer, 3s. Thence about six o'clock, and with a guide went over the
+smooth Plain indeed till night; and then by a happy mistake, and that
+looked like an adventure, we were carried out of our way to a town where
+we would lye, since we could not go so far as we would. And there with
+great difficulty come about ten at night to a little inn, where we were
+fain to go into a room where a pedlar was in bed, and made him rise; and
+there wife and I lay, and in a truckle-bed Betty Turner and Willett. But
+good beds, and the master of the house a sober, understanding man, and I
+had good discourse with him about this country's matters, as wool, and
+corne, and other things. And he also merry, and made us mighty merry at
+supper, about manning the new ship, at Bristol, with none but men whose
+wives do master them; and it seems it is become in reproach to some men of
+estate that are such hereabouts, that this is become common talk. By and
+by to bed, glad of this mistake, because, it seems, had we gone on as we
+intended, we could not have passed with our coach, and must have lain on
+the Plain all night. This day from Salisbury I wrote by the post my
+excuse for not coming home, which I hope will do, for I am resolved to see
+the Bath, and, it may be, Bristol.
+
+12th (Friday). Up, finding our beds good, but lousy; which made us merry.
+We set out, the reckoning and servants coming to 9s. 6d.; my guide
+thither, 2s.; coachman, advanced, 10s. So rode a very good way, led to my
+great content by our landlord to Philips-Norton, with great pleasure,
+being now come into Somersetshire; where my wife and Deb. mightily joyed
+thereat,--[They were natives of that county.-B.]--I commending the
+country, as indeed it deserves. And the first town we came to was
+Brekington, where, we stopping for something for the horses, we called two
+or three little boys to us, and pleased ourselves with their manner of
+speech, and did make one of them kiss Deb., and another say the Lord's
+Prayer (hallowed be thy kingdom come). At Philips-Norton I walked to the
+Church, and there saw a very ancient tomb of some Knight Templar, I think;
+and here saw the tombstone whereon there were only two heads cut, which,
+the story goes, and credibly, were two sisters, called the Fair Maids of
+Foscott, that had two bodies upward and one belly, and there lie buried.
+Here is also a very fine ring of six bells, and they mighty tuneable.
+Having dined very well, 10s., we come before night to the Bath; where I
+presently stepped out with my landlord, and saw the baths, with people in
+them. They are not so large as I expected, but yet pleasant; and the town
+most of stone, and clean, though the streets generally narrow. I home,
+and being weary, went to bed without supper; the rest supping.
+
+13th (Saturday). Up at four o'clock, being by appointment called up to
+the Cross Bath, where we were carried one after one another, myself, and
+wife, and Betty Turner, Willet, and W. Hewer. And by and by, though we
+designed to have done before company come, much company come; very fine
+ladies; and the manner pretty enough, only methinks it cannot be clean to
+go so many bodies together in the same water. Good conversation among
+them that are acquainted here, and stay together. Strange to see how hot
+the water is; and in some places, though this is the most temperate bath,
+the springs so hot as the feet not able to endure. But strange to see,
+when women and men herein, that live all the season in these waters, that
+cannot but be parboiled, and look like the creatures of the bath! Carried
+away, wrapped in a sheet, and in a chair, home; and there one after
+another thus carried, I staying above two hours in the water, home to bed,
+sweating for an hour; and by and by, comes musick to play to me,
+extraordinary good as ever I heard at London almost, or anywhere: 5s. Up,
+to go to Bristol, about eleven o'clock, and paying my landlord that was
+our guide from Chiltern, 10s., and the serjeant of the bath, 10s., and the
+man that carried us in chairs, 3s. 6d. Set out towards Bristoll, and come
+thither (in a coach hired to spare our own horses); the way bad, but
+country good, about two o'clock, where set down at the Horse'shoe, and
+there, being trimmed by a very handsome fellow, 2s., walked with my wife
+and people through the city, which is in every respect another London,
+that one can hardly know it, to stand in the country, no more than that.
+No carts, it standing generally on vaults, only dog-carts.
+
+ ["They draw all their heavy goods here on sleds, or sledges, which
+ they call 'gee hoes,' without wheels, which kills a multitude of
+ horses." Another writer says, "They suffer no carts to be used in
+ the city, lest, as some say, the shake occasioned by them on the
+ pavement should affect the Bristol milk (the sherry) in the vaults,
+ which is certainly had here in the greatest perfection." An order
+ of Common Council occurs in 1651 to prohibit the use of carts and
+ waggons-only suffering drays. "Camden in giving our city credit for
+ its cleanliness in forming 'goutes,' says they use sledges here
+ instead of carts, lest they destroy the arches beneath which are the
+ goutes."--Chilcott's New Guide to Bristol, &c.,]
+
+So to the Three ..Crowns Tavern I was directed; but, when I come in, the
+master told me that he had newly given over the selling of wine; it seems,
+grown rich; and so went to the Sun; and there Deb. going with W. Hewer and
+Betty Turner to see her uncle [Butts], and leaving my wife with the
+mistress of the house, I to see the quay, which is a most large and noble
+Vlace; and to see the new ship building by Bally, neither he nor Furzer
+being in town. It will be a fine ship. Spoke with the foreman, and did
+give the boys that kept the cabin 2s. Walked back to the Sun, where I
+find Deb. come back, and with her, her uncle, a sober merchant, very good
+company, and so like one of our sober, wealthy, London merchants, as
+pleased me mightily. Here we dined, and much good talk with him, 7s. 6d.:
+a messenger to Sir John Knight, who was not at home, 6d. Then walked with
+him [Butts] and my wife and company round the quay, and to the ship; and
+he shewed me the Custom-house, and made me understand many things of the
+place, and led us through Marsh Street, where our girl was born. But,
+Lord! the joy that was among the old poor people of the place, to see
+Mrs. Willet's daughter, it seems her mother being a brave woman and
+mightily beloved! And so brought us a back way by surprize to his house,
+where a substantial good house, and well furnished; and did give us good
+entertainment of strawberries, a whole venison-pasty, cold, and plenty of
+brave wine, and above all Bristoll milk,
+
+ [A sort of rum punch (milk punch), which, and turtle, were products
+ of the trade of Bristol with the West Indies. So Byron says in the
+ first edition of his "English Bards and Scotch Reviewers"
+
+ "Too much in turtle Bristol's sons delight,
+ Too much oer bowls of rack prolong the night."
+
+ These lines will not be found in the modern editions; but the
+ following are substituted:
+
+ "Four turtle feeder's verse must needs he flat,
+ Though Bristol bloat him with the verdant fat."
+
+ Lord Macaulay says of the collations with which the sugar-refiners
+ of Bristol regaled their visitors: "The repast was dressed in the
+ furnace, And was accompanied by a rich brewage made of the best
+ Spanish wine, and celebrated over the whole kingdom as Bristol milk"
+ ("Hist. of England," vol. i., p. 335)--B.]
+
+where comes in another poor woman, who, hearing that Deb. was here, did
+come running hither, and with her eyes so lull of tears, and heart so full
+of joy, that she could not speak when she come in, that it made me weep
+too: I protest that I was not able to speak to her, which I would have
+done, to have diverted her tears. His wife a good woman, and so sober and
+substantiall as I was never more pleased anywhere. Servant-maid, 2s. So
+thence took leave, and he with us through the city, where in walking I
+find the city pay him great respect, and he the like to the meanest, which
+pleased me mightily. He shewed us the place where the merchants meet
+here, and a fine Cross yet standing, like Cheapside. And so to the
+Horseshoe, where paid the reckoning, 2s. 6d. We back, and by moonshine to
+the Bath again, about ten-o'clock: bad way; and giving the coachman 1s.,
+went all of us to bed.
+
+14th (Sunday). Up, and walked up and down the town, and saw a pretty good
+market-place, and many good streets, and very fair stone-houses. And so to
+the great Church, and there saw Bishop Montagu's tomb;
+
+ [James Montagu, Bishop of Bath and Wells in 1608, and of Winchester
+ in 1616--died 1618. He was uncle to the Earl of Sandwich, whose
+ mother was Pepys's aunt. Hence Pepys's curiosity respecting the
+ tomb.--B.]
+
+and, when placed, did there see many brave people come, and, among others,
+two men brought in, in litters, and set down in the chancel to hear: but I
+did not know one face. Here a good organ; but a vain, pragmatical fellow
+preached a ridiculous, affected sermon, that made me angry, and some
+gentlemen that sat next me, and sang well. So home, walking round the
+walls of the City, which are good, and the battlements all whole. The
+sexton of the church is. So home to dinner, and after dinner comes Mr.
+Butts again to see me, and he and I to church, where the same idle fellow
+preached; and I slept most of the sermon. Thence home, and took my wife
+out and the girls, and come to this church again, to see it, and look over
+the monuments, where, among others, Dr. Venner and Pelting, and a lady of
+Sir W. Walter's; he lying with his face broken. So to the fields a little
+and walked, and then home and had my head looked [at], and so to supper,
+and then comes my landlord to me, a sober understanding man, and did give
+me a good account of the antiquity of this town and Wells; and of two
+Heads, on two pillars, in Wells church. But he a Catholick. So he gone, I
+to bed.
+
+15th (Monday). Up, and with Mr. Butts to look into the baths, and find
+the King and Queen's full of a mixed sort, of good and bad, and the Cross
+only almost for the gentry. So home and did the like with my wife, and
+did pay my guides, two women, 5s.; one man, 2s. 6d.; poor, 6d.; woman to
+lay my foot-cloth, 1s. So to our inne, and there eat and paid reckoning,
+L1 8s. 6d.; servants, 3s.; poor, 1s.; lent the coach man, 10s. Before I
+took coach, I went to make a boy dive in the King's bath, 1s. I paid also
+for my coach and a horse to Bristol, L1 1s. 6d. Took coach, and away,
+without any of the company of the other stage-coaches, that go out of this
+town to-day; and rode all day with some trouble, for fear of being out of
+our way, over the Downes, where the life of the shepherds is, in fair
+weather only, pretty. In the afternoon come to Abebury, where, seeing
+great stones like those of Stonage standing up, I stopped, and took a
+countryman of that town, and he carried me and shewed me a place trenched
+in, like Old Sarum almost, with great stones pitched in it, some bigger
+than those at Stonage in figure, to my great admiration: and he told me
+that most people of learning, coming by, do come and view them, and that
+the King did so: and that the Mount cast hard by is called Selbury, from
+one King Seall buried there, as tradition says. I did give this man 1s.
+So took coach again, seeing one place with great high stones pitched
+round, which, I believe, was once some particular building, in some
+measure like that of Stonage. But, about a mile off, it was prodigious to
+see how full the Downes are of great stones; and all along the vallies,
+stones of considerable bigness, most of them growing certainly out of the
+ground so thick as to cover the ground, which makes me think the less of
+the wonder of Stonage, for hence they might undoubtedly supply themselves
+with stones, as well as those at Abebury. In my way did give to the poor
+and menders of the highway 3s. Before night, come to Marlborough, and
+lay at the Hart; a good house, and a pretty fair town for a street or two;
+and what is most singular is, their houses on one side having their
+pent-houses supported with pillars, which makes it a good walk. My wife
+pleased with all, this evening reading of "Mustapha" to me till supper,
+and then to supper, and had musique whose innocence pleased me, and I did
+give them 3s. So to bed, and lay well all night, and long, so as all the
+five coaches that come this day from Bath, as well as we, were gone out of
+the town before six.
+
+16th (Tuesday). So paying the reckoning, 14s. 4d., and servants, 2s.,
+poor 1s., set out; and overtook one coach and kept a while company with
+it, till one of our horses losing a shoe, we stopped and drank and spent
+1s. So on, and passing through a good part of this county of Wiltshire,
+saw a good house of Alexander Popham's, and another of my Lord Craven's, I
+think in Barkeshire. Come to Newbery, and there dined, which cost me, and
+musick, which a song of the old courtier of Queen Elizabeth's, and how he
+was changed upon the coming in of the King, did please me mightily, and I
+did cause W. Hewer to write it out, 3s. 6d. Then comes the reckoning,
+forced to change gold, 8s. 7d.; servants and poor, 1s. 6d. So out, and
+lost our way, which made me vexed, but come into it again; and in the
+evening betimes come to Reading, and there heard my wife read more of
+"Mustapha," and then to supper, and then I to walk about the town, which
+is a very great one, I think bigger than Salsbury: a river runs through
+it, in seven branches, and unite in one, in one part of the town, and runs
+into the Thames half-a-mile off one odd sign of the Broad Face. W. Hewer
+troubled with the headake we had none of his company last night, nor all
+this day nor night to talk. Then to my inn, and so to bed.
+
+17th (Wednesday). Rose, and paying the reckoning, 12s. 6d.; servants and
+poor, 2s. 6d.; musick, the worst we have had, coming to our chamber-door,
+but calling us by wrong names, we lay; so set out with one coach in
+company, and through Maydenhead, which I never saw before, to Colebrooke
+by noon; the way mighty good; and there dined, and fitted ourselves a
+little to go through London, anon. Somewhat out of humour all day,
+reflecting on my wife's neglect of things, and impertinent humour got by
+this liberty of being from me, which she is never to be trusted with; for
+she is a fool. Thence pleasant way to London, before night, and find all
+very well, to great content; and there to talk with my wife, and saw Sir
+W. Pen, who is well again. I hear of the ill news by the great fire at
+Barbados. By and by home, and there with my people to supper, all in
+pretty good humour, though I find my wife hath something in her gizzard,
+that only waits an opportunity of being provoked to bring up; but I will
+not, for my content-sake, give it. So I to bed, glad to find all so well
+here, and slept well.
+
+ [The rough notes end here.]
+
+18th. Up betimes and to the office, there to set my papers in order and
+books, my office having been new whited and windows made clean, and so to
+sit, where all the morning, and did receive a hint or two from my Lord
+Anglesey, as if he thought much of my taking the ayre as I have done; but
+I care not a turd; but whatever the matter is, I think he hath some
+ill-will to me, or at least an opinion that I am more the servant of the
+Board than I am. At noon home to dinner, where my wife still in a
+melancholy, fusty humour, and crying, and do not tell me plainly what it
+is; but I by little words find that she hath heard of my going to plays,
+and carrying people abroad every day, in her absence; and that I cannot
+help but the storm will break out, I think, in a little time. After
+dinner carried her by coach to St. James's, where she sat in the coach
+till I to my Lady Peterborough's, who tells me, among other things, her
+Lord's good words to the Duke of York lately, about my Lord Sandwich, and
+that the Duke of York is kind to my Lord Sandwich, which I am glad to
+hear: my business here was about her Lord's pension from Tangier. Here
+met with Povy, who tells me how hard Creed is upon him, though he did give
+him, about six months since, I think he said, fifty pieces in gold; and
+one thing there is in his accounts that I fear may touch me, but I shall
+help it, I hope. So my wife not speaking a word, going nor coming, nor
+willing to go to a play, though a new one, I to the Office, and did much
+business. At night home, where supped Mr. Turner and his wife, and Betty
+and Mercer and Pelling, as merry as the ill, melancholy humour that my
+wife was in, would let us, which vexed me; but I took no notice of it,
+thinking that will be the best way, and let it wear away itself. After
+supper, parted, and to bed; and my wife troubled all night, and about one
+o'clock goes out of the bed to the girl's bed, which did trouble me, she
+crying and sobbing, without telling the cause. By and by she comes back
+to me, and still crying; I then rose, and would have sat up all night, but
+she would have me come to bed again; and being pretty well pacified, we to
+sleep.
+
+19th. When between two and three in the morning we were waked with my
+maids crying out, "Fire, fire, in Markelane!" So I rose and looked out,
+and it was dreadful; and strange apprehensions in me, and us all, of being
+presently burnt. So we all rose; and my care presently was to secure my
+gold, and plate, and papers, and could quickly have done it, but I went
+forth to see where it was; and the whole town was presently in the
+streets; and I found it in a new-built house that stood alone in
+Minchin-lane, over against the Cloth-workers'-hall, which burned
+furiously: the house not yet quite finished; and the benefit of brick was
+well seen, for it burnt all inward, and fell down within itself; so no
+fear of doing more hurt. So homeward, and stopped at Mr. Mills's, where
+he and she at the door, and Mrs. Turner, and Betty, and Mrs. Hollworthy,
+and there I stayed and talked, and up to the church leads, and saw the
+fire, which spent itself, till all fear over. I home, and there we to bed
+again, and slept pretty well, and about nine rose, and then my wife fell
+into her blubbering again, and at length had a request to make to me,
+which was, that she might go into France, and live there, out of trouble;
+and then all come out, that I loved pleasure and denied her any, and a
+deal of do; and I find that there have been great fallings out between my
+father and her, whom, for ever hereafter, I must keep asunder, for they
+cannot possibly agree. And I said nothing, but, with very mild words and
+few, suffered her humour to spend, till we begun to be very quiet, and I
+think all will be over, and friends, and so I to the office, where all the
+morning doing business. Yesterday I heard how my Lord Ashly is like to
+die, having some imposthume in his breast, that he hath been fain to be
+cut into the body.
+
+ ["Such an operation was performed in this year, after a consultation
+ of medical men, and chiefly by Locke's advice, and the wound was
+ afterwards always kept open, a silver pipe being inserted. This
+ saved Lord Ashley's life, and gave him health"--Christie's Life of
+ the first Earl of Shaftesbury, vol. ii., p. 34. 'Tapski' was a name
+ given to Shaftesbury in derision, and vile defamers described the
+ abscess, which had originated in a carriage accident in Holland, as
+ the result of extreme dissipation. Lines by Duke, a friend and
+ imitator of Dryden:
+
+ "The working ferment of his active mind,
+ In his weak body's cask with pain confined,
+ Would burst the rotten vessel where 'tis pent,
+ But that 'tis tapt to give the treason vent."]
+
+At noon home to dinner, and thence by coach to White Hall, where we
+attended the Duke of York in his closet, upon our usual business. And
+thence out, and did see many of the Knights of the Garter, with the King
+and Duke of York, going into the Privychamber, to elect the Elector of
+Saxony into that Order, who, I did hear the Duke of York say, was a good
+drinker: I know not upon what score this compliment is done him. Thence
+with W. Pen, who is in great pain of the gowte, by coach round by Holborne
+home, he being at every kennel full of pain. Thence home, and by and by
+comes my wife and Deb. home, have been at the King's playhouse to-day,
+thinking to spy me there; and saw the new play, "Evening Love," of
+Dryden's, which, though the world commends, she likes not. So to supper
+and talk, and all in good humour, and then to bed, where I slept not well,
+from my apprehensions of some trouble about some business of Mr. Povy's he
+told me of the other day.
+
+20th. Up, and talked with my wife all in good humour, and so to the
+office, where all the morning, and then home to dinner, and so she and I
+alone to the King's house, and there I saw this new play my wife saw
+yesterday, and do not like it, it being very smutty, and nothing so good
+as "The Maiden Queen," or "The Indian Emperour," of his making, that I was
+troubled at it; and my wife tells me wholly (which he confesses a little
+in the epilogue) taken out of the "Illustre Bassa." So she to Unthanke's
+and I to Mr. Povy, and there settled some business; and here talked of
+things, and he thinks there will be great revolutions, and that Creed will
+be a great man, though a rogue, he being a man of the old strain, which
+will now be up again. So I took coach, and set Povy down at Charing
+Cross, and took my wife up, and calling at the New Exchange at Smith's
+shop, and kissed her pretty hand, and so we home, and there able to do
+nothing by candlelight, my eyes being now constantly so bad that I must
+take present advice or be blind. So to supper, grieved for my eyes, and
+to bed.
+
+21st (Lord's day). Up, and to church, and home and dined with my wife and
+Deb. alone, but merry and in good humour, which is, when all is done, the
+greatest felicity of all, and after dinner she to read in the "Illustre
+Bassa" the plot of yesterday's play, which is most exactly the same, and
+so to church I alone, and thence to see Sir W. Pen, who is ill again, and
+then home, and there get my wife to read to me till supper, and then to
+bed.
+
+22nd. Up, and with Balty to St. James's, and there presented him to Mr.
+Wren about his being Muster-Master this year, which will be done. So up
+to wait on the Duke of York, and thence, with W. Coventry, walked to White
+Hall good discourse about the Navy, where want of money undoes us. Thence
+to the Harp and Ball I to drink, and so to the Coffee-house in Covent
+Garden; but met with nobody but Sir Philip Howard, who shamed me before
+the whole house there, in commendation of my speech in Parliament, and
+thence I away home to dinner alone, my wife being at her tailor's, and
+after dinner comes Creed, whom I hate, to speak with me, and before him
+comes Mrs. Daniel about business . . . . She gone, Creed and I to the
+King's playhouse, and saw an act or two of the new play ["Evening's Love"]
+again, but like it not. Calling this day at Herringman's, he tells me
+Dryden do himself call it but a fifth-rate play. Thence with him to my
+Lord Brouncker's, where a Council of the Royall Society; and there heard
+Mr. Harry Howard's' noble offers about ground for our College, and his
+intentions of building his own house there most nobly. My business was to
+meet Mr. Boyle, which I did, and discoursed about my eyes; and he did give
+me the best advice he could, but refers me to one Turberville, of
+Salsbury, lately come to town, which I will go to.
+
+ [Daubigny Turberville, of Oriel College; created M.D. at
+ Oxford,1660. He was a physician of some eminence, and, dying at
+ Salisbury on the 21st April, 1696, aged eighty-five, he was buried
+ in the cathedral, where his monument remains. Cassan, in his "Lives
+ of the Bishops of Sarum," part iii., p. 103, has reprinted an
+ interesting account of Turberville, from the "Memoir of Bishop Seth
+ Ward," published in 1697, by Dr. Walter Pope. Turberville was born
+ at Wayford, co. Somerset, in 1612, and became an expert oculist; and
+ probably Pepys received great benefit from his advice, as his vision
+ does not appear to have failed during the many years that he lived
+ after discontinuing the Diary. The doctor died rich, and
+ subsequently to his decease his sister Mary, inheriting all his
+ prescriptions, and knowing how to use them, practised as an oculist
+ in London with good reputation.--B.]
+
+Thence home, where the streets full, at our end of the town, removing
+their wine against the Act begins, which will be two days hence, to raise
+the price. I did get my store in of Batelier this night. So home to
+supper and to bed.
+
+23rd. Up, and all the morning at the office. At noon home to dinner, and
+so to the office again all the afternoon, and then to Westminster to Dr.
+Turberville about my eyes, whom I met with: and he did discourse, I
+thought, learnedly about them; and takes time before he did prescribe me
+any thing, to think of it. So I away with my wife and Deb., whom I left
+at Unthanke's, and so to Hercules Pillars, and there we three supped on
+cold powdered beef, and thence home and in the garden walked a good while
+with Deane, talking well of the Navy miscarriages and faults. So home to
+bed.
+
+24th. Up, and Creed and Colonell Atkins come to me about sending coals to
+Tangier: and upon that most of the morning. Thence Creed and I to
+Alderman Backewell's about Tangier business of money, and thence I by
+water (calling and drinking, but not baisado, at Michell's) to
+Westminster, but it being holyday did no business, only to Martin's . . .
+and so home again by water, and busy till dinner, and then with wife,
+Mercer, Deb., and W. Hewer to the Duke of York's playhouse, and there saw
+"The Impertinents," a pretty good play; and so by water to Spring Garden,
+and there supped, and so home, not very merry, only when we come home,
+Mercer and I sat and sung in the garden a good while, and so to bed.
+
+25th. Up, and to the office all the morning, and after dinner at home to
+the office again, and there all the afternoon very busy till night, and
+then home to supper and to bed.
+
+26th. All the morning doing business at the office. At noon, with my
+Fellow-Officers, to the Dolphin, at Sir G. Carteret's charge, to dinner,
+he having some accounts examined this morning. All the afternoon we all
+at Sir W. Pen's with him about the Victuallers' accounts, and then in the
+evening to Charing Cross, and there took up my wife at her tailor's, and
+so home and to walk in the garden, and then to sup and to bed.
+
+27th. At the office all the morning, at noon dined at home, and then my
+wife, and Deb., and I to the King's playhouse, and saw "The Indian
+Queene," but do not doat upon Nan Marshall's acting therein, as the world
+talks of her excellence therein. Thence with my wife to buy some linnen,
+L13 worth, for sheets, &c., at the new shop over against the New Exchange;
+[and the master, who is] come out of London--[To the Strand.]--since the
+fire, says his and other tradesmen's retail trade is so great here, and
+better than it was in London, that they believe they shall not return, nor
+the city be ever so great for retail as heretofore. So home and to my
+business, and to bed.
+
+28th (Lord's day). Up, and to church, and then home to dinner, where
+Betty Turner, Mercer, and Captain Deane, and after dinner to sing, Mr.
+Pelting coming. Then, they gone, Deane and I all the afternoon till night
+to talk of navy matters and ships with great pleasure, and so at night, he
+gone, I to supper, Pelling coming again and singing a while, then to bed.
+Much talk of the French setting out their fleete afresh; but I hear
+nothing that our King is alarmed at it, at all, but rather making his
+fleete less.
+
+29th. Called up by my Lady Peterborough's servant about some business of
+hers, and so to the office. Thence by and by with Sir J. Minnes toward
+St. James's, and I stop at Dr. Turberville's, and there did receive a
+direction for some physic, and also a glass of something to drop into my
+eyes: who gives me hopes that I may do well. Thence to St. James's, and
+thence to White Hall, where I find the Duke of York in the
+Council-chamber; where the Officers of the Navy were called in about Navy
+business, about calling in of more ships; the King of France having, as
+the Duke of York says, ordered his fleete to come in, notwithstanding what
+he had lately ordered for their staying abroad. Thence to the Chapel, it
+being St. Peter's day, and did hear an anthem of Silas Taylor's making; a
+dull, old-fashioned thing, of six and seven parts, that nobody could
+understand: and the Duke of York, when he come out, told me that he was a
+better store-keeper than anthem-maker, and that was bad enough, too. This
+morning Mr. May' shewed me the King's new buildings at White Hall, very
+fine; and among other things, his ceilings, and his houses of office. So
+home to dinner, and then with my wife to the King's playhouse--"The
+Mulberry Garden," which she had not seen. So by coach to Islington, and
+round by Hackney home with much pleasure, and to supper and bed.
+
+30th. Up, and at the Office all the morning: then home to dinner, where a
+stinking leg of mutton, the weather being very wet and hot to keep meat
+in. Then to the Office again, all the afternoon: we met about the
+Victualler's new contract. And so up, and to walk all the evening with my
+wife and Mrs. Turner in the garden, till supper, about eleven at night;
+and so, after supper, parted, and to bed, my eyes bad, but not worse, only
+weary with working. But, however, I very melancholy under the fear of my
+eyes being spoiled, and not to be recovered; for I am come that I am not
+able to readout a small letter, and yet my sight good for the little while
+I can read, as ever they were, I think.
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS M.A. F.R.S.
+
+ CLERK OF THE ACTS AND SECRETARY TO THE ADMIRALTY
+
+ TRANSCRIBED FROM THE SHORTHAND MANUSCRIPT IN THE PEPYSIAN LIBRARY
+MAGDALENE COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE BY THE REV. MYNORS BRIGHT M.A. LATE FELLOW
+ AND PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
+
+ (Unabridged)
+
+ WITH LORD BRAYBROOKE'S NOTES
+
+ EDITED WITH ADDITIONS BY
+
+ HENRY B. WHEATLEY F.S.A.
+
+ DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS.
+ JULY
+ 1668
+
+July 1st. Up; and all the morning we met at the office about the
+Victualler's contract. At noon home to dinner, my Cozen Roger, come newly
+to town, dined with us, and mighty importunate for our coming down to
+Impington, which I think to do, this Sturbridge fair. Thence I set him
+down at the Temple, and Commissioner Middleton dining the first time with
+me, he and I to White Hall, and so to St. James's, where we met; and much
+business with the Duke of York. And I find the Duke of York very hot for
+regulations in the Navy; and, I believe, is put on it by W. Coventry; and
+I am glad of it; and particularly, he falls heavy on Chatham-yard,, and is
+vexed that Lord Anglesey did, the other day, complain at the Council-table
+of disorders in the Navy, and not to him. So I to White Hall to a
+Committee of Tangier; and there vexed, with the importunity and clamours
+of Alderman Backewell, for my acquittance for money supplied by him to the
+garrison, before I have any order for paying it: so home, calling at
+several places-among others, the 'Change, and on Cooper, to know when my
+wife shall come to sit for her picture, which will be next week, and so
+home and to walk with my wife, and then to supper and to bed.
+
+2nd. Called up by a letter from W. Coventry telling me that the
+Commissioners of Accounts intend to summons me about Sir W. Warren's
+Hamburg contract, and so I up and to W. Coventry's (he and G. Carteret
+being the party concerned in it), and after conference with him about it
+to satisfaction I home again to the office. At noon home to dinner, and
+then all the afternoon busy to prepare an answer to this demand of the
+Commissioners of Accounts, and did discourse with Sir W. Warren about it,
+and so in the evening with my wife and Deb. by coach to take ayre to
+Mile-end, and so home and I to bed, vexed to be put to this frequent
+trouble in things we deserve best in.
+
+3rd. Betimes to the office, my head full of this business. Then by coach
+to the Commissioners of Accounts at Brooke House, the first time I was
+ever there, and there Sir W. Turner in the chair; and present, Lord
+Halifax, Thoms[on], Gregory, Dunster, and Osborne. I long with them, and
+see them hot set on this matter; but I did give them proper and safe
+answers. Halifax, I perceive, was industrious on my side, in behalf of
+his uncle Coventry, it being the business of fir W. Warren. Vexed only at
+their denial of a copy of what I set my hand to, and swore. Here till
+almost two o'clock, and then home to dinner, and set down presently what I
+had done and said this day, and so abroad by water to Eagle Court in the
+Strand, and there to an alehouse: met Mr. Pierce, the Surgeon, and Dr.
+Clerke, Waldron, Turberville, my physician for the eyes, and Lowre, to
+dissect several eyes of sheep and oxen, with great pleasure, and to my
+great information. But strange that this Turberville should be so great a
+man, and yet, to this day, had seen no eyes dissected, or but once, but
+desired this Dr. Lowre to give him the opportunity to see him dissect
+some. Thence to Unthanke's, to my wife, and carried her home, and there
+walked in the garden, and so to supper and to bed.
+
+4th. Up, and to see Sir W. Coventry, and give him account of my doings
+yesterday, which he well liked of, and was told thereof by my Lord Halifax
+before; but I do perceive he is much concerned for this business. Gives me
+advice to write a smart letter to the Duke of York about the want of money
+in the Navy, and desire him to communicate it to the Commissioners of the
+Treasury; for he tells me he hath hot work sometimes to contend with the
+rest for the Navy, they being all concerned for some other part of the
+King's expenses, which they would prefer to this, of the Navy. He shewed
+me his closet, with his round table, for him to sit in the middle, very
+convenient; and I borrowed several books of him, to collect things out of
+the Navy, which I have not, and so home, and there busy sitting all the
+morning, and at noon dined, and then all the afternoon busy, till night,
+and then to Mile-End with my wife and girl, and there drank and eat a joie
+of salmon, at the Rose and Crown, our old house; and so home to bed.
+
+5th (Lord's day). About four in the morning took four pills of Dr.
+Turberville's prescribing, for my eyes, and they wrought pretty well most
+of the morning, and I did get my wife to spend the morning reading of
+Wilkins's Reall Character. At noon comes W. Hewer and Pelling, and young
+Michell and his wife, and dined with us, and most of the afternoon
+talking; and then at night my wife to read again, and to supper and to
+bed.
+
+6th. Up, and to St. James's, and there attended the Duke of York, and was
+there by himself told how angry he was, and did declare to my Lord
+Anglesey, about his late complaining of things of the Navy to the King in
+Council, and not to him; and I perceive he is mightily concerned at it,
+and resolved to reform things therein. Thence with W. Coventry walked in
+the Park together a good while, he mighty kind to me. And hear many
+pretty stories of my Lord Chancellor's being heretofore made sport of by
+Peter Talbot the priest, in his story of the death of Cardinall Bleau;
+
+ [It is probable these stories, in ridicule of Clarendon, are nowhere
+ recorded. Cardinal Jean Balue was the minister of Louis XI. of
+ France. The reader will remember him in Sir W. Scott's "Quentin
+ Durward." He was confined for eleven years in an iron cage invented
+ by himself in the Chateau de Loches, and died soon after he regained
+ his liberty.--B.]
+
+by Lord Cottington, in his 'Dolor de las Tyipas';
+
+ [Gripes. It was a joke against Lord Cottington that whenever he was
+ seriously ill he declared himself a Roman Catholic, when he was well
+ again he returned to the Protestant faith.]
+
+and Tom Killigrew, in his being bred in Ram Ally, and now bound prentice
+to Lord Cottington, going to Spain with L1000, and two suits of clothes.
+Thence home to dinner, and thence to Mr. Cooper's, and there met my wife
+and W. Hewer and Deb.; and there my wife first sat for her picture: but he
+is a most admirable workman, and good company. Here comes Harris, and
+first told us how Betterton is come again upon the stage: whereupon my
+wife and company to the [Duke's] house to see "Henry the Fifth;" while I
+to attend the Duke of York at the Committee of the Navy, at the Council,
+where some high dispute between him and W. Coventry about settling
+pensions upon all Flag-Officers, while unemployed: W. Coventry against it,
+and, I think, with reason. Thence I to the playhouse, and saw a piece of
+the play, and glad to see Betterton; and so with wife and Deb. to
+Spring-garden, and eat a lobster, and so home in the evening and to bed.
+Great doings at Paris, I hear, with their triumphs for their late
+conquests! The Duchesse of Richmond sworn last week of the queen's
+Bedchamber, and the King minding little else but what he used to do--about
+his women.
+
+7th. Up, and to the office, where Kate Joyce come to me about some
+tickets of hers, but took no notice to me of her being married, but seemed
+mighty pale, and doubtful what to say or do, expecting, I believe, that I
+should begin; and not finding me beginning, said nothing, but, with
+trouble in her face, went away. At the office all the morning, and after
+dinner also all the afternoon, and in the evening with my wife and Deb.
+and Betty Turner to Unthanke's, where we are fain to go round by Newgate,
+because of Fleet Bridge being under rebuilding. They stayed there, and I
+about some business, and then presently back and brought them home and
+supped and Mrs. Turner, the mother, comes to us, and there late, and so to
+bed.
+
+8th. Betimes by water to Sir W. Coventry, and there discoursed of several
+things; and I find him much concerned in the present enquiries now on foot
+of the Commissioners of Accounts, though he reckons himself and the rest
+very safe, but vexed to see us liable to these troubles, in things wherein
+we have laboured to do best. Thence, he being to go out of town
+to-morrow, to drink Banbury waters, I to the Duke of York, to attend him
+about business of the Office; and find him mighty free to me, and how he
+is concerned to mend things in the Navy himself, and not leave it to other
+people. So home to dinner; and then with my wife to Cooper's, and there
+saw her sit; and he do do extraordinary things indeed. So to White Hall;
+and there by and by the Duke of York comes to the Robe-chamber, and spent
+with us three hours till night, in hearing the business of the
+Master-Attendants of Chatham, and the Store-keeper of Woolwich; and
+resolves to displace them all; so hot he is of giving proofs of his
+justice at this time, that it is their great fate now, to come to be
+questioned at such a time as this. Thence I to Unthanke's, and took my
+wife and Deb. home, and to supper and to bed.
+
+9th. Up, and to the office, where sat all the morning, and after noon to
+the office again till night, mighty busy getting Mr. Fist to come and help
+me, my own clerks all busy, and so in the evening to ease my eyes, and
+with my wife and Deb. and Betty Turner, by coach to Unthanke's and back
+again, and then to supper and to bed.
+
+10th. Up, and to attend the Council, but all in vain, the Council
+spending all the morning upon a business about the printing of the
+Critickes, a dispute between the first Printer, one Bee that is dead, and
+the Abstractor, who would now print his Abstract, one Poole. So home to
+dinner, and thence to Haward's to look upon an Espinette, and I did come
+near the buying one, but broke off. I have a mind to have one. So to
+Cooper's; and there find my wife and W. Hewer and Deb., sitting, and
+painting; and here he do work finely, though I fear it will not be so like
+as I expected: but now I understand his great skill in musick, his playing
+and setting to the French lute most excellently; and speaks French, and
+indeed is an excellent man. Thence, in the evening, with my people in a
+glass hackney-coach to the park, but was ashamed to be seen. So to the
+lodge, and drank milk, and so home to supper and to bed.
+
+11th. At the office all the morning. After dinner to the King's
+playhouse, to see an old play of Shirly's, called "Hide Parker" the first
+day acted; where horses are brought upon the stage but it is but a very
+moderate play, only an excellent epilogue spoke by Beck Marshall. Thence
+home and to my office, and then to supper and to bed, and overnight took
+some pills,
+
+12th. Which work with me pretty betimes, being Lord's day, and so I
+within all day. Busy all the morning upon some accounts with W. Hewer,
+and at noon, an excellent dinner, comes Pelling and W. Howe, and the
+latter staid and talked with me all the afternoon, and in the evening
+comes Mr. Mills and his wife and supped and talked with me, and so to bed.
+This last night Betty Michell about midnight cries out, and my wife goes
+to her, and she brings forth a girl, and this afternoon the child is
+christened, and my wife godmother again to a Betty.
+
+13th. Up, and to my office, and thence by water to White Hall to attend
+the Council, but did not, and so home to dinner, and so out with my wife,
+and Deb., and W. Hewer towards Cooper's, but I 'light and walked to Ducke
+Lane, and there to the bookseller's; at the Bible, whose moher je have a
+mind to, but elle no erat dentro, but I did there look upon and buy some
+books, and made way for coming again to the man, which pleases me. Thence
+to Reeves's, and there saw some, and bespoke a little perspective, and was
+mightily pleased with seeing objects in a dark room. And so to Cooper's,
+and spent the afternoon with them; and it will be an excellent picture.
+Thence my people all by water to Deptford, to see Balty, while I to buy my
+espinette,
+
+ [Espinette is the French term for a small harpsichord, at that time
+ called in England a spinet. It was named from a fancied resemblance
+ of its quill plectra to spines or thorns.]
+
+which I did now agree for, and did at Haward's meet with Mr. Thacker, and
+heard him play on the harpsicon, so as I never heard man before, I think.
+So home, it being almost night, and there find in the garden Pelling, who
+hath brought Tempest, Wallington, and Pelham, to sings and there had most
+excellent musick late, in the dark, with great pleasure. Made them drink
+and eat; and so with much pleasure to bed, but above all with little
+Wallington. This morning I was let blood, and did bleed about fourteen
+ounces, towards curing my eyes.
+
+14th. Up, and to my office, where sat all the morning. At noon home to
+dinner, and thence all the afternoon hard at the office, we meeting about
+the Victualler's new contract; and so into the garden, my Lady Pen, Mrs.
+Turner and her daughter, my wife and I, and there supped in the dark and
+were merry, and so to bed. This day Bossc finished his copy of my
+picture, which I confess I do not admire, though my wife prefers him to
+Browne; nor do I think it like. He do it for W. Hewer, who hath my wife's
+also, which I like less. This afternoon my Lady Pickering come to see us:
+I busy, saw her not. But how natural it is for us to slight people out of
+power, and for people out of power to stoop to see those that while in
+power they contemned!
+
+15th. Up, and all the morning busy at the office to my great content,
+attending to the settling of papers there that I may have the more rest in
+winter for my eyes by how much I do the more in the settling of all things
+in the summer by daylight. At noon home to dinner, where is brought home
+the espinette I bought the other day of Haward; costs me L5. So to St.
+James's, where did our ordinary business with the Duke of York. So to
+Unthanke's to my wife, and with her and Deb. to visit Mrs. Pierce, whom I
+do not now so much affect, since she paints. But stayed here a while, and
+understood from her how my Lady Duchesse of Monmouth is still lame, and
+likely always to be so, which is a sad chance for a young [lady] to get,
+only by trying of tricks in dancing. So home, and there Captain Deane
+come and spent the evening with me, to draw some finishing lines on his
+fine draught of "The Resolution," the best ship, by all report, in the
+world, and so to bed. Wonderful hot all day and night, and this the first
+night that I remember in my life that ever I could lie with only a sheet
+and one rug. So much I am now stronger than ever I remember myself, at
+least since before I had the stone.
+
+16th. Up, and to the office, where Yeabsly and Lanyon come to town and to
+speak with me about a matter wherein they are accused of cheating the King
+before the Lords' Commissioners of Tangier, and I doubt it true, but I
+have no hand in it, but will serve them what I can. All the morning at
+the office, and at noon dined at home, and then to the office again, where
+we met to finish the draft of the Victualler's contract, and so I by water
+with my Lord Brouncker to Arundell House, to the Royall Society, and there
+saw an experiment of a dog's being tied through the back, about the spinal
+artery, and thereby made void of all motion; and the artery being loosened
+again, the dog recovers. Thence to Cooper's, and saw his advance on my
+wife's picture, which will be indeed very fine. So with her to the
+'Change, to buy some things, and here I first bought of the sempstress
+next my bookseller's, where the pretty young girl is, that will be a great
+beauty. So home, and to supper with my wife in the garden, it being these
+two days excessively hot, and so to bed.
+
+17th. Up, and fitted myself to discourse before the Council about
+business of tickets. So to White Hall, where waited on the Duke of York,
+and then the Council about that business; and I did discourse to their
+liking, only was too high to assert that nothing could be invented to
+secure the King more in the business of tickets than there is; which the
+Duke of Buckingham did except against, and I could have answered, but
+forbore; but all liked very well. Thence home, and with my wife and Deb.
+to the King's House to see a play revived called The------, a sorry mean
+play, that vexed us to sit in so much heat of the weather to hear it.
+Thence to see Betty Michell newly lain in, and after a little stay we took
+water and to Spring Garden, and there walked, and supped, and staid late,
+and with much pleasure, and to bed. The weather excessive hot, so as we
+were forced to lie in two beds, and I only with a sheet and rug, which is
+colder than ever I remember I could bear.
+
+18th. At the office all the morning. At noon dined at home and Creed
+with me, who I do really begin to hate, and do use him with some
+reservedness. Here was also my old acquaintance, Will Swan, to see me,
+who continues a factious fanatick still, and I do use him civilly, in
+expectation that those fellows may grow great again. Thence to the
+office, and then with my wife to the 'Change and Unthanke's, after having
+been at Cooper's and sat there for her picture, which will be a noble
+picture, but yet I think not so like as Hales's is. So home and to my
+office, and then to walk in the garden, and home to supper and to bed.
+They say the King of France is making a war again, in Flanders, with the
+King of Spain; the King of Spain refusing to give him all that he says was
+promised him in the treaty. Creed told me this day how when the King was
+at my Lord Cornwallis's when he went last to Newmarket, that being there
+on a Sunday, the Duke of Buckingham did in the afternoon to please the
+King make a bawdy sermon to him out of Canticles, and that my Lord
+Cornwallis did endeavour to get the King a whore, and that must be a
+pretty girl the daughter of the parson of the place, but that she did get
+away, and leaped off of some place and killed herself, which if true is
+very sad.
+
+19th (Lord's day). Up, and to my chamber, and there I up and down in the
+house spent the morning getting things ready against noon, when come Mr.
+Cooper, Hales, Harris, Mr. Butler, that wrote Hudibras, and Mr. Cooper's
+cozen Jacke; and by and by comes Mr. Reeves and his wife, whom I never saw
+before: and there we dined: a good dinner, and company that pleased me
+mightily, being all eminent men in their way. Spent all the afternoon in
+talk and mirth, and in the evening parted, and then my wife and I to walk
+in the garden, and so home to supper, Mrs. Turner and husband and daughter
+with us, and then to bed.
+
+20th. Up, and to the office, where Mrs. Daniel comes. . . . All the
+morning at the office. Dined at home, then with Mr. Colvill to the new
+Excise Office in Aldersgate Street, and thence back to the Old Exchange,
+to see a very noble fine lady I spied as I went through, in coming; and
+there took occasion to buy some gloves, and admire her, and a mighty fine
+fair lady indeed she was. Thence idling all the afternoon to Duck Lane,
+and there saw my bookseller's moher, but get no ground there yet; and here
+saw Mrs. Michell's daughter married newly to a bookseller, and she proves
+a comely little grave woman. So to visit my Lord Crew, who is very sick,
+to great danger, by an irisipulus;--[Erysipelas.]--the first day I heard
+of it, and so home, and took occasion to buy a rest for my espinette at
+the ironmonger's by Holborn Conduit, where the fair pretty woman is that I
+have lately observed there, and she is pretty, and je credo vain enough.
+Thence home and busy till night, and so to bed.
+
+21st. Up, and to St. James's, but lost labour, the Duke abroad. So home
+to the office, where all the morning, and so to dinner, and then all the
+afternoon at the office, only went to my plate-maker's, and there spent an
+hour about contriving my little plates,
+
+ [This passage has been frequently quoted as referring to Pepys's.
+ small bookplate, with his initials S. P. and two anchors and ropes
+ entwined; but if looked at carefully with the further reference on
+ the 27th, it will be seen that it merely describes the preparation
+ of engravings of the four dockyards.]
+
+for my books of the King's four Yards. At night walked in the garden, and
+supped and to bed, my eyes bad.
+
+22nd. All the morning at the office. Dined at home, and then to White
+Hall with Symson the joyner, and after attending at the Committee of the
+Navy about the old business of tickets, where the only expedient they have
+found is to bind the Commanders and Officers by oaths. The Duke of York
+told me how the Duke of Buckingham, after the Council the other day, did
+make mirth at my position, about the sufficiency of present rules in the
+business of tickets; and here I took occasion to desire a private
+discourse with the Duke of York, and he granted it to me on Friday next.
+So to shew Symson the King's new lodgings for his chimnies, which I desire
+to have one built in that mode, and so I home, and with little supper, to
+bed. This day a falling out between my wife and Deb., about a hood lost,
+which vexed me.
+
+23rd. Up, and all day long, but at dinner, at the Office, at work, till I
+was almost blind, which makes my heart sad.
+
+24th. Up, and by water to St. James's, having, by the way, shewn Symson
+Sir W. Coventry's chimney-pieces, in order to the making me one; and
+there, after the Duke of York was ready, he called me to his closet; and
+there I did long and largely show him the weakness of our Office, and did
+give him advice to call us to account for our duties, which he did take
+mighty well, and desired me to draw up what I would have him write to the
+Office. I did lay open the whole failings of the Office, and how it was
+his duty to find them, and to find fault with them, as Admiral, especially
+at this time, which he agreed to, and seemed much to rely on what I said.
+Thence to White Hall, and there waited to attend the Council, but was not
+called in, and so home, and after dinner back with Sir J. Minnes by coach,
+and there attended, all of us, the Duke of York, and had the hearing of
+Mr. Pett's business, the Master-Shipwright at Chatham, and I believe he
+will be put out. But here Commissioner. Middleton did, among others, shew
+his good-nature and easiness to the Masters-Attendants, by mitigating
+their faults, so as, I believe, they will come in again. So home, and to
+supper and to bed, the Duke of York staying with us till almost night.
+
+25th. Up, and at the Office all the morning; and at noon, after dinner,
+to Cooper's, it being a very rainy day, and there saw my wife's picture go
+on, which will be very fine indeed. And so home again to my letters, and
+then to supper and to bed.
+
+26th (Lord's day). Up, and all the morning and after dinner, the
+afternoon also, with W. Hewer in my closet, setting right my Tangier
+Accounts, which I have let alone these six months and more, but find them
+very right, and is my great comfort. So in the evening to walk with my
+wife, and to supper and to bed.
+
+27th. Busy all the morning at my office. At noon dined, and then I out
+of doors to my bookseller in Duck Lane, but su moher not at home, and it
+was pretty here to see a pretty woman pass by with a little wanton look,
+and je did sequi her round about the street from Duck Lane to Newgate
+Market, and then elle did turn back, and je did lose her. And so to see
+my Lord Crew, whom I find up; and did wait on him; but his face sore, but
+in hopes to do now very well again. Thence to Cooper's, where my wife's
+picture almost done, and mighty fine indeed. So over the water with my
+wife, and Deb., and Mercer, to Spring-Garden, and there eat and walked;
+and observe how rude some of the young gallants of the town are become, to
+go into people's arbours where there are not men, and almost force the
+women; which troubled me, to see the confidence of the vice of the age:
+and so we away by water, with much pleasure home. This day my plate-maker
+comes with my four little plates of the four Yards, cost me L5, which
+troubles me, but yet do please me also.
+
+28th. All the morning at the office, and after dinner with my wife and
+Deb. to the Duke of York's playhouse, and there saw "The Slighted Maid,"
+but a mean play; and thence home, there being little pleasure now in a
+play, the company being but little. Here we saw Gosnell, who is become
+very homely, and sings meanly, I think, to what I thought she did.
+
+29th. Busy all the morning at the office. So home to dinner, where
+Mercer, and there comes Mr. Swan, my old acquaintance, and dines with me,
+and tells me, for a certainty, that Creed is to marry Betty Pickering, and
+that the thing is concluded, which I wonder at, and am vexed for. So he
+gone I with my wife and two girls to the King's house, and saw "The Mad
+Couple," a mean play altogether, and thence to Hyde Parke, where but few
+coaches, and so to the New Exchange, and thence by water home, with much
+pleasure, and then to sing in the garden, and so home to bed, my eyes for
+these four days being my trouble, and my heart thereby mighty sad.
+
+30th. Up, and by water to White Hall. There met with Mr. May, who was
+giving directions about making a close way for people to go dry from the
+gate up into the House, to prevent their going through the galleries;
+which will be very good. I staid and talked with him about the state of
+the King's Offices in general, and how ill he is served, and do still find
+him an excellent person, and so back to the office. So close at my office
+all the afternoon till evening, and then out with my wife to the New
+Exchange, and so back again.
+
+31st. Up, and at my office all the morning. About noon with Mr.
+Ashburnham to the new Excise Office, and there discoursed about our
+business, and I made him admire my drawing a thing presently in shorthand:
+but, God knows! I have paid dear for it, in my eyes. Home and to dinner,
+and then my wife and Deb. and I, with Sir J. Minnes, to White Hall, she
+going hence to the New Exchange, and the Duke of York not being in the
+way, Sir J. Minnes and I to her and took them two to the King's house, to
+see the first day of Lacy's "Monsieur Ragou," now new acted. The King and
+Court all there, and mighty merry--a farce. Thence Sir J. Minnes giving
+us, like a gentleman, his coach, hearing we had some business, we to the
+Park, and so home. Little pleasure there, there being little company, but
+mightily taken with a little chariot that we saw in the street, and which
+we are resolved to have ours like it. So home to walk in the garden a
+little, and then to bed. The month ends mighty sadly with me, my eyes
+being now past all use almost; and I am mighty hot upon trying the late
+printed experiment of paper tubes.
+
+ [An account of these tubulous spectacles ("An easy help for decayed
+ sight") is given in "The Philosophical Transactions," No. 37, pp.
+ 727,731 (Hutton's Abridgment, vol. i., p. 266). See Diary, August
+ 12th and 23rd, post.]
+
+
+
+
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ At work, till I was almost blind, which makes my heart sad
+ Bristol milk (the sherry) in the vaults
+ But get no ground there yet
+ Cannot be clean to go so many bodies together in the same water
+ City pay him great respect, and he the like to the meanest
+ Cost me L5, which troubles me, but yet do please me also
+ Espinette is the French term for a small harpsichord
+ Forced to change gold, 8s. 7d.; servants and poor, 1s. 6d.
+ Frequent trouble in things we deserve best in
+ How natural it is for us to slight people out of power
+ I could have answered, but forbore
+ Little pleasure now in a play, the company being but little
+ Made him admire my drawing a thing presently in shorthand
+ My wife hath something in her gizzard, that only waits
+ My wife's neglect of things, and impertinent humour
+ So out, and lost our way, which made me vexed
+ Suffered her humour to spend, till we begun to be very quiet
+ Troubled me, to see the confidence of the vice of the age
+ Up, finding our beds good, but lousy; which made us merry
+ Weather being very wet and hot to keep meat in.
+ When he was seriously ill he declared himself a Roman Catholic
+ Where a pedlar was in bed, and made him rise
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Diary of Samuel Pepys, June/July 1668
+by Samuel Pepys
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Diary of Samuel Pepys, Jun/Jul 1668
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+Title: Diary of Samuel Pepys, Jun/Jul 1668
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+Author: Samuel Pepys
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+
+ THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS M.A. F.R.S.
+
+ CLERK OF THE ACTS AND SECRETARY TO THE ADMIRALTY
+
+ TRANSCRIBED FROM THE SHORTHAND MANUSCRIPT IN THE PEPYSIAN LIBRARY
+MAGDALENE COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE BY THE REV. MYNORS BRIGHT M.A. LATE FELLOW
+ AND PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
+
+ (Unabridged)
+
+ WITH LORD BRAYBROOKE'S NOTES
+
+ EDITED WITH ADDITIONS BY
+
+ HENRY B. WHEATLEY F.S.A.
+
+
+
+ DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS.
+ JUNE & JULY
+ 1668
+
+
+June 1st. Up and with Sir J. Minnes to Westminster, and in the Hall
+there I met with Harris and Rolt, and carried them to the Rhenish wine-
+house, where I have not been in a morning--nor any tavern, I think, these
+seven years and more. Here I did get the words of a song of Harris that
+I wanted. Here also Mr. Young and Whistler by chance met us, and drank
+with us. Thence home, and to prepare business against the afternoon, and
+did walk an hour in the garden with Sir W. Warren, who do tell me of the
+great difficulty he is under in the business of his accounts with the
+Commissioners of Parliament, and I fear some inconveniences and troubles
+may be occasioned thereby to me. So to dinner, and then with Sir J.
+Minnes to White Hall, and there attended the Lords of the Treasury and
+also a committee of Council with the Duke of York about the charge of
+this year's fleete, and thence I to Westminster and to Mrs. Martin's,
+and did hazer what je would con her, and did once toker la thigh de su
+landlady, and thence all alone to Fox Hall, and walked and saw young
+Newport, and two more rogues of the town, seize on two ladies, who walked
+with them an hour with their masks on; perhaps civil ladies; and there I
+left them, and so home, and thence to Mr. Mills's, where I never was
+before, and here find, whom I indeed saw go in, and that did make me go
+thither, Mrs. Hallworthy and Mrs. Andrews, and here supped, and,
+extraordinary merry till one in the morning, Mr. Andrews coming to us:
+and mightily pleased with this night's company and mirth I home to bed.
+Mrs. Turner, too, was with us.
+
+
+
+2nd. Up, and to the office, where all the morning. At noon home to
+dinner, and there dined with me, besides my own people, W. Batelier and
+Mercer, and we very merry. After dinner, they gone, only Mercer and I to
+sing a while, and then parted, and I out and took a coach, and called
+Mercer at their back-door, and she brought with her Mrs. Knightly, a
+little pretty sober girl, and I carried them to Old Ford, a town by Bow,
+where I never was before, and there walked in the fields very pleasant,
+and sang: and so back again, and stopped and drank at the Gun, at Mile
+End, and so to the Old Exchange door, and did buy them a pound of
+cherries, cost me 2s., and so set them down again; and I to my little
+mercer's Finch, that lives now in the Minories, where I have left my
+cloak, and did here baiser su moher, a belle femme, and there took my
+cloak which I had left there, and so by water, it being now about nine
+o'clock, down to Deptford, where I have not been many a day, and there it
+being dark I did by agreement aller a la house de Bagwell, and there
+after a little playing and baisando we did go up in the dark a su camera
+. . . . and to my boat again, and against the tide home. Got there
+by twelve o'clock, taking into my boat, for company, a man that desired a
+passage--a certain western bargeman, with whom I had good sport, talking
+of the old woman of Woolwich, and telling him the whole story.
+
+
+
+3rd. Up, and to the office, where busy till g o'clock, and then to White
+Hall, to the Council-chamber, where I did present the Duke of York with
+an account of the charge of the present fleete, to his satisfaction; and
+this being done, did ask his leave for my going out of town five or six
+days, which he did give me, saying, that my diligence in the King's
+business was such, that I ought not to be denied when my own business
+called me any whither. Thence with Sir D. Gawden to Westminster, where I
+did take a turn or two, and met Roger Pepys, who is mighty earnest for me
+to stay from going into the country till he goes, and to bring my people
+thither for some time: but I cannot, but will find another time this
+summer for it. Thence with him home, and there to the office till noon,
+and then with Lord Brouncker, Sir J. Minnes, and Sir G. Carteret, upon
+whose accounts they have been this day to the Three Tuns to dinner, and
+thence back again home, and after doing a little business I by coach to
+the King's house, and there saw good, part of "The Scornfull Lady," and
+that done, would have takn out Knepp, but she was engaged, and so to my
+Lord Crew's to visit him; from whom I learn nothing but that there hath
+been some controversy at the Council-table, about my Lord Sandwich's
+signing, where some would not have had him, in the treaty with Portugall;
+but all, I think, is over in it. Thence by coach to Westminster to the
+Hall, and thence to the Park, where much good company, and many fine
+ladies; and in so handsome a hackney I was, that I believe Sir W.
+Coventry and others, who looked on me, did take me to be in one of my
+own, which I was a little troubled for. So to the lodge, and drank a cup
+of new milk, and so home, and there to Mrs. Turner's, and sat and talked
+with her, and then home to bed, having laid my business with W. Hewer to
+go out of town Friday next, with hopes of a great deal of pleasure.
+
+
+
+4th. Up, and to the office, where all the morning, and at noon home to
+dinner, where Mr. Clerke, the solicitor, dined with me and my clerks.
+After dinner I carried and set him down at the Temple, he observing to me
+how St. Sepulchre's church steeple is repaired already a good deal, and
+the Fleet Bridge is contracted for by the City to begin to be built this
+summer, which do please me mightily. I to White Hall, and walked through
+the Park for a little ayre; and so back to the Council-chamber, to the
+Committee of the Navy, about the business of fitting the present fleete,
+suitable to the money given, which, as the King orders it, and by what
+appears, will be very little; and so as I perceive the Duke of York will
+have nothing to command, nor can intend to go abroad. But it is pretty
+to see how careful these great men are to do every thing so as they may
+answer it to the Parliament, thinking themselves safe in nothing but
+where the judges, with whom they often advise, do say the matter is
+doubtful; and so they take upon themselves then to be the chief persons
+to interpret what is doubtful. Thence home, and all the evening to set
+matters in order against my going to Brampton to-morrow, being resolved
+upon my journey, and having the Duke of York's leave again to-day; though
+I do plainly see that I can very ill be spared now, there being much
+business, especially about this, which I have attended the Council about,
+and I the man that am alone consulted with; and, besides, my Lord
+Brouncker is at this time ill, and Sir W. Pen. So things being put in
+order at the Office, I home to do the like there; and so to bed.
+
+
+
+5th (Friday).
+
+ [The rough notes for the journal from this time to the 17th of June
+ are contained on five leaves, inserted in the book; and after them
+ follow several pages left blank for the fair copy which was never
+ made.]
+
+At Barnet, for milk, 6d. On the highway, to menders of the highway, 6d.
+Dinner at Stevenage, 5s. 6d.
+
+
+
+6th (Saturday). Spent at Huntingdon with Bowles, and Appleyard, and
+Shepley, 2s.
+
+
+
+7th (Sunday). My father, for money lent, and horse-hire L1 11s.
+
+
+
+8th (Monday). Father's servants (father having in the garden told me bad
+stories of my wife's ill words), 14s.; one that helped at the horses,
+2s.; menders of the highway, 2s. Pleasant country to Bedford, where,
+while they stay, I rode through the town; and a good country-town; and
+there, drinking, 1s. We on to Newport; and there 'light, and I and
+W. Hewer to the Church, and there give the boy 1s. So to Buckingham, a
+good old town. Here I to see the Church, which very good, and the leads,
+and a school in it: did give the sexton's boy 1s. A fair bridge here,
+with many arches: vexed at my people's making me lose so much time;
+reckoning, 13s. 4d. Mighty pleased with the pleasure of the ground all
+the day. At night to Newport Pagnell; and there a good pleasant country-
+town, but few people in it. A very fair--and like a Cathedral--Church;
+and I saw the leads, and a vault that goes far under ground, and here lay
+with Betty Turner's sparrow: the town, and so most of this country, well
+watered. Lay here well, and rose next day by four o'clock: few people in
+the town: and so away. Reckoning for supper, 19s. 6d.; poor, 6d.
+Mischance to the coach, but no time lost.
+
+
+
+9th (Tuesday). When come to Oxford, a very sweet place: paid our guide,
+L1 2s. 6d.; barber, 2s. 6d.; book, Stonage, 4s.
+
+ [This must have been either Inigo Jones's "The most notable
+ Antiquity of Great Britain vulgarly called Stonehenge," printed in
+ 1655, or "Chorea Gigantum, or the most famous Antiquity of Great
+ Britain, vulgarly called Stones Heng, standing on Salisbury Plain,
+ restor'd to the Danes," by Walter Charleton, M.D., and published in
+ 1663.]
+
+To dinner; and then out with my wife and people, and landlord: and to him
+that showed us the schools and library, 10s.; to him that showed us All
+Souls' College, and Chichly's picture, 5s. So to see Christ Church with
+my wife, I seeing several others very fine alone, with W. Hewer, before
+dinner, and did give the boy that went with me 1s. Strawberries, 1s. 2d.
+Dinner and servants, L1 0s. 6d. After come home from the schools, I out
+with the landlord to Brazen-nose College;--to the butteries, and in the
+cellar find the hand of the Child of Hales, . . . long. Butler, 2s.
+Thence with coach and people to Physic-garden, 1s. So to Friar Bacon's
+study: I up and saw it, and give the man 1s. Bottle of sack for
+landlord, 2s. Oxford mighty fine place; and well seated, and cheap
+entertainment. At night come to Abingdon, where had been a fair of
+custard; and met many people and scholars going home; and there did get
+some pretty good musick, and sang and danced till supper: 5s.
+
+
+
+10th (Wednesday). Up, and walked to the Hospitall:--[Christ's Hospital]
+--very large and fine; and pictures of founders, and the History' of the
+Hospitall; and is said to be worth; L700 per annum; and that Mr. Foly
+was here lately to see how their lands were settled; and here, in old
+English, the story of the occasion of it, and a rebus at the bottom.
+So did give the poor, which they would not take but in their box, 2s.
+6d. So to the inn, and paid the reckoning and what not, 13s. So forth
+towards Hungerford, led this good way by our landlord, one Heart, an old
+but very civil and well-spoken man, more than I ever heard, of his
+quality. He gone, we forward; and I vexed at my people's not minding the
+way. So come to Hungerford, where very good trouts, eels, and crayfish.
+Dinner: a mean town. At dinner there, 12s. Thence set out with a
+guide, who saw us to Newmarket-heath, and then left us, 3s. 6d. So all
+over the Plain by the sight of the steeple, the Plain high and low, to
+Salisbury, by night; but before I come to the town, I saw a great
+fortification, and there 'light, and to it and in it; and find it
+prodigious, so as to frighten me to be in it all alone at that time of
+night, it being dark. I understand, since, it to be that, that is called
+Old Sarum. Come to the George Inne, where lay in a silk bed; and very
+good diet. To supper; then to bed.
+
+
+
+11th (Thursday). Up, and W. Hewer and I up and down the town, and find
+it a very brave place. The river goes through every street; and a most
+capacious market-place. The city great, I think greater than Hereford.
+But the Minster most admirable; as big, I think, and handsomer than
+Westminster: and a most large Close about it, and houses for the Officers
+thereof, and a fine palace for the Bishop. So to my lodging back, and
+took out my wife and people to shew them the town and Church; but they
+being at prayers, we could not be shown the Quire. A very good organ;
+and I looked in, and saw the Bishop, my friend Dr. Ward. Thence to the
+inne; and there not being able to hire coach-horses, and not willing to
+use our own, we got saddle-horses, very dear. Boy that went to look for
+them, 6d. So the three women behind W. Hewer, Murford, and our guide,
+and I single to Stonage; over the Plain and some great hills, even to
+fright us. Come thither, and find them as prodigious as any tales I ever
+heard of them, and worth going this journey to see. God knows what their
+use was! they are hard to tell, but yet maybe told. Give the shepherd-
+woman, for leading our horses, 4d. So back by Wilton, my Lord Pembroke's
+house, which we could not see, he being just coming to town; but the
+situation I do not like, nor the house promise much, it being in a low
+but rich valley. So back home; and there being 'light, we to the Church,
+and there find them at prayers again, so could not see the Quire; but I
+sent the women home, and I did go in, and saw very many fine tombs, and
+among the rest some very ancient, of the Montagus.
+
+ [The Montacutes, from whom Lord Sandwich's family claimed descent:
+ --B.]
+
+So home to dinner; and, that being done, paid the reckoning, which was so
+exorbitant; and particular in rate of my horses, and 7s. 6d. for bread
+and beer, that I was mad, and resolve to trouble the master about it, and
+get something for the poor; and come away in that humour: L2 5s. 6d.
+Servants, 1s. 6d.; poor, 1s.; guide to the Stones, 2s.; poor woman in the
+street, 1s.; ribbands, 9d.; washwoman, 1s.; sempstress for W. Hewer, 3s.;
+lent W. Hewer, 3s. Thence about six o'clock, and with a guide went over
+the smooth Plain indeed till night; and then by a happy mistake, and that
+looked like an adventure, we were carried out of our way to a town where
+we would lye, since we could not go so far as we would. And there with
+great difficulty come about ten at night to a little inn, where we were
+fain to go into a room where a pedlar was in bed, and made him rise; and
+there wife and I lay, and in a truckle-bed Betty Turner and Willett. But
+good beds, and the master of the house a sober, understanding man, and I
+had good discourse with him about this country's matters, as wool, and
+corne, and other things. And he also merry, and made us mighty merry at
+supper, about manning the new ship, at Bristol, with none but men whose
+wives do master them; and it seems it is become in reproach to some men
+of estate that are such hereabouts, that this is become common talk. By
+and by to bed, glad of this mistake, because, it seems, had we gone on as
+we intended, we could not have passed with our coach, and must have lain
+on the Plain all night. This day from Salisbury I wrote by the post my
+excuse for not coming home, which I hope will do, for I am resolved to
+see the Bath, and, it may be, Bristol.
+
+
+
+12th (Friday). Up, finding our beds good, but lousy; which made us
+merry. We set out, the reckoning and servants coming to 9s. 6d.; my
+guide thither, 2s.; coachman, advanced, 10s. So rode a very good way,
+led to my great content by our landlord to Philips-Norton, with great
+pleasure, being now come into Somersetshire; where my wife and Deb.
+mightily joyed thereat,--[They were natives of that county.-B.]--
+I commending the country, as indeed it deserves. And the first town we
+came to was Brekington, where, we stopping for something for the horses,
+we called two or three little boys to us, and pleased ourselves with
+their manner of speech, and did make one of them kiss Deb., and another
+say the Lord's Prayer (hallowed be thy kingdom come). At Philips-Norton
+I walked to the Church, and there saw a very ancient tomb of some Knight
+Templar, I think; and here saw the tombstone whereon there were only two
+heads cut, which, the story goes, and credibly, were two sisters, called
+the Fair Maids of Foscott, that had two bodies upward and one belly, and
+there lie buried. Here is also a very fine ring of six bells, and they
+mighty tuneable. Having dined very well, 10s., we come before night to
+the Bath; where I presently stepped out with my landlord, and saw the
+baths, with people in them. They are not so large as I expected, but yet
+pleasant; and the town most of stone, and clean, though the streets
+generally narrow. I home, and being weary, went to bed without supper;
+the rest supping.
+
+
+
+13th (Saturday). Up at four o'clock, being by appointment called up to
+the Cross Bath, where we were carried one after one another, myself, and
+wife, and Betty Turner, Willet, and W. Hewer. And by and by, though we
+designed to have done before company come, much company come; very fine
+ladies; and the manner pretty enough, only methinks it cannot be clean to
+go so many bodies together in the same water. Good conversation among
+them that are acquainted here, and stay together. Strange to see how hot
+the water is; and in some places, though this is the most temperate bath,
+the springs so hot as the feet not able to endure. But strange to see,
+when women and men herein, that live all the season in these waters, that
+cannot but be parboiled, and look like the creatures of the bath!
+Carried away, wrapped in a sheet, and in a chair, home; and there one
+after another thus carried, I staying above two hours in the water, home
+to bed, sweating for an hour; and by and by, comes musick to play to me,
+extraordinary good as ever I heard at London almost, or anywhere: 5s.
+Up, to go to Bristol, about eleven o'clock, and paying my landlord that
+was our guide from Chiltern, 10s., and the serjeant of the bath, 10s.,
+and the man that carried us in chairs, 3s. 6d. Set out towards Bristoll,
+and come thither (in a coach hired to spare our own horses); the way bad,
+but country good, about two o'clock, where set down at the Horse'shoe,
+and there, being trimmed by a very handsome fellow, 2s., walked with my
+wife and people through the city, which is in every respect another
+London, that one can hardly know it, to stand in the country, no more
+than that. No carts, it standing generally on vaults, only dog-carts.
+
+ ["They draw all their heavy goods here on sleds, or sledges, which
+ they call 'gee hoes,' without wheels, which kills a multitude of
+ horses." Another writer says, "They suffer no carts to be used in
+ the city, lest, as some say, the shake occasioned by them on the
+ pavement should affect the Bristol milk (the sherry) in the vaults,
+ which is certainly had here in the greatest perfection." An order
+ of Common Council occurs in 1651 to prohibit the use of carts and
+ waggons-only suffering drays. "Camden in giving our city credit for
+ its cleanliness in forming 'goutes,' says they use sledges here
+ instead of carts, lest they destroy the arches beneath which are the
+ goutes."--Chilcott's New Guide to Bristol, &c.,]
+
+So to the Three ..Crowns Tavern I was directed; but, when I come in, the
+master told me that he had newly given over the selling of wine; it
+seems, grown rich; and so went to the Sun; and there Deb. going with
+W. Hewer and Betty Turner to see her uncle [Butts], and leaving my wife
+with the mistress of the house, I to see the quay, which is a most large
+and noble Vlace; and to see the new ship building by Bally, neither he
+nor Furzer being in town. It will be a fine ship. Spoke with the
+foreman, and did give the boys that kept the cabin 2s. Walked back to
+the Sun, where I find Deb. come back, and with her, her uncle, a sober
+merchant, very good company, and so like one of our sober, wealthy,
+London merchants, as pleased me mightily. Here we dined, and much good
+talk with him, 7s. 6d.: a messenger to Sir John Knight, who was not at
+home, 6d. Then walked with him [Butts] and my wife and company round the
+quay, and to the ship; and he shewed me the Custom-house, and made me
+understand many things of the place, and led us through Marsh Street,
+where our girl was born. But, Lord! the joy that was among the old poor
+people of the place, to see Mrs. Willet's daughter, it seems her mother
+being a brave woman and mightily beloved! And so brought us a back way
+by surprize to his house, where a substantial good house, and well
+furnished; and did give us good entertainment of strawberries, a whole
+venison-pasty, cold, and plenty of brave wine, and above all Bristoll
+milk,
+
+ [A sort of rum punch (milk punch), which, and turtle, were products
+ of the trade of Bristol with the West Indies. So Byron says in the
+ first edition of his "English Bards and Scotch Reviewers"
+
+ "Too much in turtle Bristol's sons delight,
+ Too much oer bowls of rack prolong the night."
+
+ These lines will not be found in the modern editions; but the
+ following are substituted:
+
+ "Four turtle feeder's verse must needs he flat,
+ Though Bristol bloat him with the verdant fat."
+
+ Lord Macaulay says of the collations with which the sugar-refiners
+ of Bristol regaled their visitors: "The repast was dressed in the
+ furnace, And was accompanied by a rich brewage made of the best
+ Spanish wine, and celebrated over the whole kingdom as Bristol milk"
+ ("Hist. of England," vol. i., p. 335)--B.]
+
+where comes in another poor woman, who, hearing that Deb. was here, did
+come running hither, and with her eyes so lull of tears, and heart so
+full of joy, that she could not speak when she come in, that it made me
+weep too: I protest that I was not able to speak to her, which I would
+have done, to have diverted her tears. His wife a good woman, and so
+sober and substantiall as I was never more pleased anywhere. Servant-
+maid, 2s. So thence took leave, and he with us through the city, where
+in walking I find the city pay him great respect, and he the like to the
+meanest, which pleased me mightily. He shewed us the place where the
+merchants meet here, and a fine Cross yet standing, like Cheapside. And
+so to the Horseshoe, where paid the reckoning, 2s. 6d. We back, and by
+moonshine to the Bath again, about ten-o'clock: bad way; and giving the
+coachman 1s., went all of us to bed.
+
+
+
+14th (Sunday). Up, and walked up and down the town, and saw a pretty
+good market-place, and many good streets, and very fair stone-houses.
+And so to the great Church, and there saw Bishop Montagu's tomb;
+
+ [James Montagu, Bishop of Bath and Wells in 1608, and of Winchester
+ in 1616--died 1618. He was uncle to the Earl of Sandwich, whose
+ mother was Pepys's aunt. Hence Pepys's curiosity respecting the
+ tomb.--B.]
+
+and, when placed, did there see many brave people come, and, among
+others, two men brought in, in litters, and set down in the chancel to
+hear: but I did not know one face. Here a good organ; but a vain,
+pragmatical fellow preached a ridiculous, affected sermon, that made me
+angry, and some gentlemen that sat next me, and sang well. So home,
+walking round the walls of the City, which are good, and the battlements
+all whole. The sexton of the church is. So home to dinner, and after
+dinner comes Mr. Butts again to see me, and he and I to church, where the
+same idle fellow preached; and I slept most of the sermon. Thence home,
+and took my wife out and the girls, and come to this church again, to see
+it, and look over the monuments, where, among others, Dr. Venner and
+Pelting, and a lady of Sir W. Walter's; he lying with his face broken.
+So to the fields a little and walked, and then home and had my head
+looked [at], and so to supper, and then comes my landlord to me, a sober
+understanding man, and did give me a good account of the antiquity of
+this town and Wells; and of two Heads, on two pillars, in Wells church.
+But he a Catholick. So he gone, I to bed.
+
+
+
+15th (Monday). Up, and with Mr. Butts to look into the baths, and find
+the King and Queen's full of a mixed sort, of good and bad, and the Cross
+only almost for the gentry. So home and did the like with my wife, and
+did pay my guides, two women, 5s.; one man, 2s. 6d.; poor, 6d.; woman to
+lay my foot-cloth, 1s. So to our inne, and there eat and paid reckoning,
+L1 8s. 6d.; servants, 3s.; poor, 1s.; lent the coach man, 10s. Before I
+took coach, I went to make a boy dive in the King's bath, 1s. I paid
+also for my coach and a horse to Bristol, L1 1s. 6d. Took coach, and
+away, without any of the company of the other stage-coaches, that go out
+of this town to-day; and rode all day with some trouble, for fear of
+being out of our way, over the Downes, where the life of the shepherds
+is, in fair weather only, pretty. In the afternoon come to Abebury,
+where, seeing great stones like those of Stonage standing up, I stopped,
+and took a countryman of that town, and he carried me and shewed me a
+place trenched in, like Old Sarum almost, with great stones pitched in
+it, some bigger than those at Stonage in figure, to my great admiration:
+and he told me that most people of learning, coming by, do come and view
+them, and that the King did so: and that the Mount cast hard by is called
+Selbury, from one King Seall buried there, as tradition says. I did give
+this man 1s. So took coach again, seeing one place with great high
+stones pitched round, which, I believe, was once some particular
+building, in some measure like that of Stonage. But, about a mile off,
+it was prodigious to see how full the Downes are of great stones; and all
+along the vallies, stones of considerable bigness, most of them growing
+certainly out of the ground so thick as to cover the ground, which makes
+me think the less of the wonder of Stonage, for hence they might
+undoubtedly supply themselves with stones, as well as those at Abebury.
+In my way did give to the poor and menders of the highway 3s. Before
+night, come to Marlborough, and lay at the Hart; a good house, and a
+pretty fair town for a street or two; and what is most singular is, their
+houses on one side having their pent-houses supported with pillars, which
+makes it a good walk. My wife pleased with all, this evening reading of
+"Mustapha" to me till supper, and then to supper, and had musique whose
+innocence pleased me, and I did give them 3s. So to bed, and lay well
+all night, and long, so as all the five coaches that come this day from
+Bath, as well as we, were gone out of the town before six.
+
+
+
+16th (Tuesday). So paying the reckoning, 14s. 4d., and servants, 2s.,
+poor 1s., set out; and overtook one coach and kept a while company with
+it, till one of our horses losing a shoe, we stopped and drank and spent
+1s. So on, and passing through a good part of this county of Wiltshire,
+saw a good house of Alexander Popham's, and another of my Lord Craven's,
+I think in Barkeshire. Come to Newbery, and there dined, which cost me,
+and musick, which a song of the old courtier of Queen Elizabeth's, and
+how he was changed upon the coming in of the King, did please me
+mightily, and I did cause W. Hewer to write it out, 3s. 6d. Then comes
+the reckoning, forced to change gold, 8s. 7d.; servants and poor, 1s.
+6d. So out, and lost our way, which made me vexed, but come into it
+again; and in the evening betimes come to Reading, and there heard my
+wife read more of "Mustapha," and then to supper, and then I to walk
+about the town, which is a very great one, I think bigger than Salsbury:
+a river runs through it, in seven branches, and unite in one, in one part
+of the town, and runs into the Thames half-a-mile off one odd sign of the
+Broad Face. W. Hewer troubled with the headake we had none of his
+company last night, nor all this day nor night to talk. Then to my inn,
+and so to bed.
+
+
+
+17th (Wednesday). Rose, and paying the reckoning, 12s. 6d.; servants and
+poor, 2s. 6d.; musick, the worst we have had, coming to our chamber-door,
+but calling us by wrong names, we lay; so set out with one coach in
+company, and through Maydenhead, which I never saw before, to Colebrooke
+by noon; the way mighty good; and there dined, and fitted ourselves a
+little to go through London, anon. Somewhat out of humour all day,
+reflecting on my wife's neglect of things, and impertinent humour got by
+this liberty of being from me, which she is never to be trusted with; for
+she is a fool. Thence pleasant way to London, before night, and find all
+very well, to great content; and there to talk with my wife, and saw Sir
+W. Pen, who is well again. I hear of the ill news by the great fire at
+Barbados. By and by home, and there with my people to supper, all in
+pretty good humour, though I find my wife hath something in her gizzard,
+that only waits an opportunity of being provoked to bring up; but I will
+not, for my content-sake, give it. So I to bed, glad to find all so well
+here, and slept well.
+
+ [The rough notes end here.]
+
+
+
+18th. Up betimes and to the office, there to set my papers in order and
+books, my office having been new whited and windows made clean, and so to
+sit, where all the morning, and did receive a hint or two from my Lord
+Anglesey, as if he thought much of my taking the ayre as I have done; but
+I care not a turd; but whatever the matter is, I think he hath some ill-
+will to me, or at least an opinion that I am more the servant of the
+Board than I am. At noon home to dinner, where my wife still in a
+melancholy, fusty humour, and crying, and do not tell me plainly what it
+is; but I by little words find that she hath heard of my going to plays,
+and carrying people abroad every day, in her absence; and that I cannot
+help but the storm will break out, I think, in a little time. After
+dinner carried her by coach to St. James's, where she sat in the coach
+till I to my Lady Peterborough's, who tells me, among other things, her
+Lord's good words to the Duke of York lately, about my Lord Sandwich, and
+that the Duke of York is kind to my Lord Sandwich, which I am glad to
+hear: my business here was about her Lord's pension from Tangier. Here
+met with Povy, who tells me how hard Creed is upon him, though he did
+give him, about six months since, I think he said, fifty pieces in gold;
+and one thing there is in his accounts that I fear may touch me, but I
+shall help it, I hope. So my wife not speaking a word, going nor coming,
+nor willing to go to a play, though a new one, I to the Office, and did
+much business. At night home, where supped Mr. Turner and his wife, and
+Betty and Mercer and Pelling, as merry as the ill, melancholy humour that
+my wife was in, would let us, which vexed me; but I took no notice of it,
+thinking that will be the best way, and let it wear away itself. After
+supper, parted, and to bed; and my wife troubled all night, and about one
+o'clock goes out of the bed to the girl's bed, which did trouble me, she
+crying and sobbing, without telling the cause. By and by she comes back
+to me, and still crying; I then rose, and would have sat up all night,
+but she would have me come to bed again; and being pretty well pacified,
+we to sleep.
+
+
+
+19th. When between two and three in the morning we were waked with my
+maids crying out, "Fire, fire, in Markelane!" So I rose and looked out,
+and it was dreadful; and strange apprehensions in me, and us all, of
+being presently burnt. So we all rose; and my care presently was to
+secure my gold, and plate, and papers, and could quickly have done it,
+but I went forth to see where it was; and the whole town was presently in
+the streets; and I found it in a new-built house that stood alone in
+Minchin-lane, over against the Cloth-workers'-hall, which burned
+furiously: the house not yet quite finished; and the benefit of brick was
+well seen, for it burnt all inward, and fell down within itself; so no
+fear of doing more hurt. So homeward, and stopped at Mr. Mills's, where
+he and she at the door, and Mrs. Turner, and Betty, and Mrs. Hollworthy,
+and there I stayed and talked, and up to the church leads, and saw the
+fire, which spent itself, till all fear over. I home, and there we to
+bed again, and slept pretty well, and about nine rose, and then my wife
+fell into her blubbering again, and at length had a request to make to
+me, which was, that she might go into France, and live there, out of
+trouble; and then all come out, that I loved pleasure and denied her any,
+and a deal of do; and I find that there have been great fallings out
+between my father and her, whom, for ever hereafter, I must keep asunder,
+for they cannot possibly agree. And I said nothing, but, with very mild
+words and few, suffered her humour to spend, till we begun to be very
+quiet, and I think all will be over, and friends, and so I to the office,
+where all the morning doing business. Yesterday I heard how my Lord
+Ashly is like to die, having some imposthume in his breast, that he hath
+been fain to be cut into the body.
+
+ ["Such an operation was performed in this year, after a consultation
+ of medical men, and chiefly by Locke's advice, and the wound was
+ afterwards always kept open, a silver pipe being inserted. This
+ saved Lord Ashley's life, and gave him health"--Christie's Life of
+ the first Earl of Shaftesbury, vol. ii., p. 34. 'Tapski' was a name
+ given to Shaftesbury in derision, and vile defamers described the
+ abscess, which had originated in a carriage accident in Holland, as
+ the result of extreme dissipation. Lines by Duke, a friend and
+ imitator of Dryden:
+
+ "The working ferment of his active mind,
+ In his weak body's cask with pain confined,
+ Would burst the rotten vessel where 'tis pent,
+ But that 'tis tapt to give the treason vent."]
+
+At noon home to dinner, and thence by coach to White Hall, where we
+attended the Duke of York in his closet, upon our usual business. And
+thence out, and did see many of the Knights of the Garter, with the King
+and Duke of York, going into the Privychamber, to elect the Elector of
+Saxony into that Order, who, I did hear the Duke of York say, was a good
+drinker: I know not upon what score this compliment is done him. Thence
+with W. Pen, who is in great pain of the gowte, by coach round by
+Holborne home, he being at every kennel--[?? D.W.]--full of pain.
+Thence home, and by and by comes my wife and Deb. home, have been at the
+King's playhouse to-day, thinking to spy me there; and saw the new play,
+"Evening Love," of Dryden's, which, though the world commends, she likes
+not. So to supper and talk, and all in good humour, and then to bed,
+where I slept not well, from my apprehensions of some trouble about some
+business of Mr. Povy's he told me of the other day.
+
+
+
+20th. Up, and talked with my wife all in good humour, and so to the
+office, where all the morning, and then home to dinner, and so she and I
+alone to the King's house, and there I saw this new play my wife saw
+yesterday, and do not like it, it being very smutty, and nothing so good
+as "The Maiden Queen," or "The Indian Emperour," of his making, that I
+was troubled at it; and my wife tells me wholly (which he confesses a
+little in the epilogue) taken out of the "Illustre Bassa." So she to
+Unthanke's and I to Mr. Povy, and there settled some business; and here
+talked of things, and he thinks there will be great revolutions, and that
+Creed will be a great man, though a rogue, he being a man of the old
+strain, which will now be up again. So I took coach, and set Povy down
+at Charing Cross, and took my wife up, and calling at the New Exchange at
+Smith's shop, and kissed her pretty hand, and so we home, and there able
+to do nothing by candlelight, my eyes being now constantly so bad that I
+must take present advice or be blind. So to supper, grieved for my eyes,
+and to bed.
+
+
+
+21st (Lord's day). Up, and to church, and home and dined with my wife
+and Deb. alone, but merry and in good humour, which is, when all is done,
+the greatest felicity of all, and after dinner she to read in the
+"Illustre Bassa" the plot of yesterday's play, which is most exactly the
+same, and so to church I alone, and thence to see Sir W. Pen, who is ill
+again, and then home, and there get my wife to read to me till supper,
+and then to bed.
+
+
+
+22nd. Up, and with Balty to St. James's, and there presented him to Mr.
+Wren about his being Muster-Master this year, which will be done. So up
+to wait on the Duke of York, and thence, with W. Coventry, walked to
+White Hall good discourse about the Navy, where want of money undoes us.
+Thence to the Harp and Ball I to drink, and so to the Coffee-house in
+Covent Garden; but met with nobody but Sir Philip Howard, who shamed me
+before the whole house there, in commendation of my speech in Parliament,
+and thence I away home to dinner alone, my wife being at her tailor's,
+and after dinner comes Creed, whom I hate, to speak with me, and before
+him comes Mrs. Daniel about business . . . . She gone, Creed and I to
+the King's playhouse, and saw an act or two of the new play ["Evening's
+Love"] again, but like it not. Calling this day at Herringman's, he
+tells me Dryden do himself call it but a fifth-rate play. Thence with
+him to my Lord Brouncker's, where a Council of the Royall Society; and
+there heard Mr. Harry Howard's' noble offers about ground for our
+College, and his intentions of building his own house there most nobly.
+My business was to meet Mr. Boyle, which I did, and discoursed about my
+eyes; and he did give me the best advice he could, but refers me to one
+Turberville, of Salsbury, lately come to town, which I will go to.
+
+ [Daubigny Turberville, of Oriel College; created M.D. at
+ Oxford,1660. He was a physician of some eminence, and, dying at
+ Salisbury on the 21st April, 1696, aged eighty-five, he was buried
+ in the cathedral, where his monument remains. Cassan, in his "Lives
+ of the Bishops of Sarum," part iii., p. 103, has reprinted an
+ interesting account of Turberville, from the "Memoir of Bishop Seth
+ Ward," published in 1697, by Dr. Walter Pope. Turberville was born
+ at Wayford, co. Somerset, in 1612, and became an expert oculist; and
+ probably Pepys received great benefit from his advice, as his vision
+ does not appear to have failed during the many years that he lived
+ after discontinuing the Diary. The doctor died rich, and
+ subsequently to his decease his sister Mary, inheriting all his
+ prescriptions, and knowing how to use them, practised as an oculist
+ in London with good reputation.--B.]
+
+Thence home, where the streets full, at our end of the town, removing
+their wine against the Act begins, which will be two days hence, to raise
+the price. I did get my store in of Batelier this night. So home to
+supper and to bed.
+
+
+
+23rd. Up, and all the morning at the office. At noon home to dinner,
+and so to the office again all the afternoon, and then to Westminster to
+Dr. Turberville about my eyes, whom I met with: and he did discourse,
+I thought, learnedly about them; and takes time before he did prescribe
+me any thing, to think of it. So I away with my wife and Deb., whom I
+left at Unthanke's, and so to Hercules Pillars, and there we three supped
+on cold powdered beef, and thence home and in the garden walked a good
+while with Deane, talking well of the Navy miscarriages and faults. So
+home to bed.
+
+
+
+24th. Up, and Creed and Colonell Atkins come to me about sending coals
+to Tangier: and upon that most of the morning. Thence Creed and I to
+Alderman Backewell's about Tangier business of money, and thence I by
+water (calling and drinking, but not baisado, at Michell's) to
+Westminster, but it being holyday did no business, only to Martin's . .
+. . and so home again by water, and busy till dinner, and then with
+wife, Mercer, Deb., and W. Hewer to the Duke of York's playhouse, and
+there saw "The Impertinents," a pretty good play; and so by water to
+Spring Garden, and there supped, and so home, not very merry, only when
+we come home, Mercer and I sat and sung in the garden a good while, and
+so to bed.
+
+
+
+25th. Up, and to the office all the morning, and after dinner at home to
+the office again, and there all the afternoon very busy till night, and
+then home to supper and to bed.
+
+
+
+26th. All the morning doing business at the office. At noon, with my
+Fellow-Officers, to the Dolphin, at Sir G. Carteret's charge, to dinner,
+he having some accounts examined this morning. All the afternoon we all
+at Sir W. Pen's with him about the Victuallers' accounts, and then in the
+evening to Charing Cross, and there took up my wife at her tailor's, and
+so home and to walk in the garden, and then to sup and to bed.
+
+
+
+27th. At the office all the morning, at noon dined at home, and then my
+wife, and Deb., and I to the King's playhouse, and saw "The Indian
+Queene," but do not doat upon Nan Marshall's acting therein, as the world
+talks of her excellence therein. Thence with my wife to buy some linnen,
+L13 worth, for sheets, &c., at the new shop over against the New
+Exchange; [and the master, who is] come out of London--[To the Strand.]
+--since the fire, says his and other tradesmen's retail trade is so great
+here, and better than it was in London, that they believe they shall not
+return, nor the city be ever so great for retail as heretofore. So home
+and to my business, and to bed.
+
+
+
+28th (Lord's day). Up, and to church, and then home to dinner, where
+Betty Turner, Mercer, and Captain Deane, and after dinner to sing, Mr.
+Pelting coming. Then, they gone, Deane and I all the afternoon till
+night to talk of navy matters and ships with great pleasure, and so at
+night, he gone, I to supper, Pelling coming again and singing a while,
+then to bed. Much talk of the French setting out their fleete afresh;
+but I hear nothing that our King is alarmed at it, at all, but rather
+making his fleete less.
+
+
+
+29th. Called up by my Lady Peterborough's servant about some business of
+hers, and so to the office. Thence by and by with Sir J. Minnes toward
+St. James's, and I stop at Dr. Turberville's, and there did receive a
+direction for some physic, and also a glass of something to drop into my
+eyes: who gives me hopes that I may do well. Thence to St. James's, and
+thence to White Hall, where I find the Duke of York in the Council-
+chamber; where the Officers of the Navy were called in about Navy
+business, about calling in of more ships; the King of France having, as
+the Duke of York says, ordered his fleete to come in, notwithstanding
+what he had lately ordered for their staying abroad. Thence to the
+Chapel, it being St. Peter's day, and did hear an anthem of Silas
+Taylor's making; a dull, old-fashioned thing, of six and seven parts,
+that nobody could understand: and the Duke of York, when he come out,
+told me that he was a better store-keeper than anthem-maker, and that was
+bad enough, too. This morning Mr. May' shewed me the King's new
+buildings at White Hall, very fine; and among other things, his ceilings,
+and his houses of office. So home to dinner, and then with my wife to
+the King's playhouse--"The Mulberry Garden," which she had not seen. So
+by coach to Islington, and round by Hackney home with much pleasure, and
+to supper and bed.
+
+
+
+30th. Up, and at the Office all the morning: then home to dinner, where
+a stinking leg of mutton, the weather being very wet and hot to keep meat
+in. Then to the Office again, all the afternoon: we met about the
+Victualler's new contract. And so up, and to walk all the evening with
+my wife and Mrs. Turner in the garden, till supper, about eleven at
+night; and so, after supper, parted, and to bed, my eyes bad, but not
+worse, only weary with working. But, however, I very melancholy under
+the fear of my eyes being spoiled, and not to be recovered; for I am come
+that I am not able to readout a small letter, and yet my sight good for
+the little while I can read, as ever they were, I think.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS M.A. F.R.S.
+
+ CLERK OF THE ACTS AND SECRETARY TO THE ADMIRALTY
+
+ TRANSCRIBED FROM THE SHORTHAND MANUSCRIPT IN THE PEPYSIAN LIBRARY
+MAGDALENE COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE BY THE REV. MYNORS BRIGHT M.A. LATE FELLOW
+ AND PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE
+
+ (Unabridged)
+
+ WITH LORD BRAYBROOKE'S NOTES
+
+ EDITED WITH ADDITIONS BY
+
+ HENRY B. WHEATLEY F.S.A.
+
+
+
+ DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS.
+ JULY
+ 1668
+
+
+July 1st. Up; and all the morning we met at the office about the
+Victualler's contract. At noon home to dinner, my Cozen Roger, come
+newly to town, dined with us, and mighty importunate for our coming down
+to Impington, which I think to do, this Sturbridge fair. Thence I set
+him down at the Temple, and Commissioner Middleton dining the first time
+with me, he and I to White Hall, and so to St. James's, where we met;
+and much business with the Duke of York. And I find the Duke of York
+very hot for regulations in the Navy; and, I believe, is put on it by
+W. Coventry; and I am glad of it; and particularly, he falls heavy on
+Chatham-yard,, and is vexed that Lord Anglesey did, the other day,
+complain at the Council-table of disorders in the Navy, and not to him.
+So I to White Hall to a Committee of Tangier; and there vexed, with the
+importunity and clamours of Alderman Backewell, for my acquittance for
+money supplied by him to the garrison, before I have any order for paying
+it: so home, calling at several places-among others, the 'Change, and on
+Cooper, to know when my wife shall come to sit for her picture, which
+will be next week, and so home and to walk with my wife, and then to
+supper and to bed.
+
+
+
+2nd. Called up by a letter from W. Coventry telling me that the
+Commissioners of Accounts intend to summons me about Sir W. Warren's
+Hamburg contract, and so I up and to W. Coventry's (he and G. Carteret
+being the party concerned in it), and after conference with him about it
+to satisfaction I home again to the office. At noon home to dinner, and
+then all the afternoon busy to prepare an answer to this demand of the
+Commissioners of Accounts, and did discourse with Sir W. Warren about it,
+and so in the evening with my wife and Deb. by coach to take ayre to
+Mile-end, and so home and I to bed, vexed to be put to this frequent
+trouble in things we deserve best in.
+
+
+
+3rd. Betimes to the office, my head full of this business. Then by
+coach to the Commissioners of Accounts at Brooke House, the first time I
+was ever there, and there Sir W. Turner in the chair; and present, Lord
+Halifax, Thoms[on], Gregory, Dunster, and Osborne. I long with them,
+and see them hot set on this matter; but I did give them proper and safe
+answers. Halifax, I perceive, was industrious on my side, in behalf of
+his uncle Coventry, it being the business of fir W. Warren. Vexed only
+at their denial of a copy of what I set my hand to, and swore. Here till
+almost two o'clock, and then home to dinner, and set down presently what
+I had done and said this day, and so abroad by water to Eagle Court in
+the Strand, and there to an alehouse: met Mr. Pierce, the Surgeon, and
+Dr. Clerke, Waldron, Turberville, my physician for the eyes, and Lowre,
+to dissect several eyes of sheep and oxen, with great pleasure, and to my
+great information. But strange that this Turberville should be so great
+a man, and yet, to this day, had seen no eyes dissected, or but once, but
+desired this Dr. Lowre to give him the opportunity to see him dissect
+some. Thence to Unthanke's, to my wife, and carried her home, and there
+walked in the garden, and so to supper and to bed.--[Mr. Unthanke was
+Mrs. Pepys tailor. D.W.]
+
+
+
+4th. Up, and to see Sir W. Coventry, and give him account of my doings
+yesterday, which he well liked of, and was told thereof by my Lord
+Halifax before; but I do perceive he is much concerned for this business.
+Gives me advice to write a smart letter to the Duke of York about the
+want of money in the Navy, and desire him to communicate it to the
+Commissioners of the Treasury; for he tells me he hath hot work sometimes
+to contend with the rest for the Navy, they being all concerned for some
+other part of the King's expenses, which they would prefer to this, of
+the Navy. He shewed me his closet, with his round table, for him to sit
+in the middle, very convenient; and I borrowed several books of him, to
+collect things out of the Navy, which I have not, and so home, and there
+busy sitting all the morning, and at noon dined, and then all the
+afternoon busy, till night, and then to Mile-End with my wife and girl,
+and there drank and eat a joie of salmon, at the Rose and Crown, our old
+house; and so home to bed.
+
+
+
+5th (Lord's day). About four in the morning took four pills of Dr.
+Turberville's prescribing, for my eyes, and they wrought pretty well most
+of the morning, and I did get my wife to spend the morning reading of
+Wilkins's Reall Character. At noon comes W. Hewer and Pelling, and young
+Michell and his wife, and dined with us, and most of the afternoon
+talking; and then at night my wife to read again, and to supper and to
+bed.
+
+
+
+6th. Up, and to St. James's, and there attended the Duke of York, and
+was there by himself told how angry he was, and did declare to my Lord
+Anglesey, about his late complaining of things of the Navy to the King in
+Council, and not to him; and I perceive he is mightily concerned at it,
+and resolved to reform things therein. Thence with W. Coventry walked in
+the Park together a good while, he mighty kind to me. And hear many
+pretty stories of my Lord Chancellor's being heretofore made sport of by
+Peter Talbot the priest, in his story of the death of Cardinall Bleau;
+
+ [It is probable these stories, in ridicule of Clarendon, are nowhere
+ recorded. Cardinal Jean Balue was the minister of Louis XI. of
+ France. The reader will remember him in Sir W. Scott's "Quentin
+ Durward." He was confined for eleven years in an iron cage invented
+ by himself in the Chateau de Loches, and died soon after he regained
+ his liberty.--B.]
+
+by Lord Cottington, in his 'Dolor de las Tyipas';
+
+ [Gripes. It was a joke against Lord Cottington that whenever he was
+ seriously ill he declared himself a Roman Catholic, when he was well
+ again he returned to the Protestant faith.]
+
+and Tom Killigrew, in his being bred in Ram Ally, and now bound prentice
+to Lord Cottington, going to Spain with L1000, and two suits of clothes.
+Thence home to dinner, and thence to Mr. Cooper's, and there met my wife
+and W. Hewer and Deb.; and there my wife first sat for her picture: but
+he is a most admirable workman, and good company. Here comes Harris, and
+first told us how Betterton is come again upon the stage: whereupon my
+wife and company to the [Duke's] house to see "Henry the Fifth;" while I
+to attend the Duke of York at the Committee of the Navy, at the Council,
+where some high dispute between him and W. Coventry about settling
+pensions upon all Flag-Officers, while unemployed: W. Coventry against
+it, and, I think, with reason. Thence I to the playhouse, and saw a
+piece of the play,
+and glad to see Betterton; and so with wife and Deb. to Spring-garden,
+and eat a lobster, and so home in the evening and to bed. Great doings
+at Paris, I hear, with their triumphs for their late conquests! The
+Duchesse of Richmond sworn last week of the queen's Bedchamber, and the
+King minding little else but what he used to do--about his women.
+
+
+
+7th. Up, and to the office, where Kate Joyce come to me about some
+tickets of hers, but took no notice to me of her being married, but
+seemed mighty pale, and doubtful what to say or do, expecting, I believe,
+that I should begin; and not finding me beginning, said nothing, but,
+with trouble in her face, went away. At the office all the morning, and
+after dinner also all the afternoon, and in the evening with my wife and
+Deb. and Betty Turner to Unthanke's, where we are fain to go round by
+Newgate, because of Fleet Bridge being under rebuilding. They stayed
+there, and I about some business, and then presently back and brought
+them home and supped and Mrs. Turner, the mother, comes to us, and there
+late, and so to bed.
+
+
+
+8th. Betimes by water to Sir W. Coventry, and there discoursed of
+several things; and I find him much concerned in the present enquiries
+now on foot of the Commissioners of Accounts, though he reckons himself
+and the rest very safe, but vexed to see us liable to these troubles, in
+things wherein we have laboured to do best. Thence, he being to go out
+of town to-morrow, to drink Banbury waters, I to the Duke of York, to
+attend him about business of the Office; and find him mighty free to me,
+and how he is concerned to mend things in the Navy himself, and not leave
+it to other people. So home to dinner; and then with my wife to
+Cooper's, and there saw her sit; and he do do extraordinary things
+indeed. So to White Hall; and there by and by the Duke of York comes to
+the Robe-chamber, and spent with us three hours till night, in hearing
+the business of the Master-Attendants of Chatham, and the Store-keeper of
+Woolwich; and resolves to displace them all; so hot he is of giving
+proofs of his justice at this time, that it is their great fate now, to
+come to be questioned at such a time as this. Thence I to Unthanke's,
+and took my wife and Deb. home, and to supper and to bed.
+
+
+
+9th. Up, and to the office, where sat all the morning, and after noon to
+the office again till night, mighty busy getting Mr. Fist to come and
+help me, my own clerks all busy, and so in the evening to ease my eyes,
+and with my wife and Deb. and Betty Turner, by coach to Unthanke's and
+back again, and then to supper and to bed.
+
+
+
+10th. Up, and to attend the Council, but all in vain, the Council
+spending all the morning upon a business about the printing of the
+Critickes, a dispute between the first Printer, one Bee that is dead,
+and the Abstractor, who would now print his Abstract, one Poole. So home
+to dinner, and thence to Haward's to look upon an Espinette, and I did
+come near the buying one, but broke off. I have a mind to have one.
+So to Cooper's; and there find my wife and W. Hewer and Deb., sitting,
+and painting; and here he do work finely, though I fear it will not be so
+like as I expected: but now I understand his great skill in musick, his
+playing and setting to the French lute most excellently; and speaks
+French, and indeed is an excellent man. Thence, in the evening, with my
+people in a glass hackney-coach to the park, but was ashamed to be seen.
+So to the lodge, and drank milk, and so home to supper and to bed.
+
+
+
+11th. At the office all the morning. After dinner to the King's
+playhouse, to see an old play of Shirly's, called "Hide Parker" the first
+day acted; where horses are brought upon the stage but it is but a very
+moderate play, only an excellent epilogue spoke by Beck Marshall. Thence
+home and to my office, and then to supper and to bed, and overnight took
+some pills,
+
+
+
+12th. Which work with me pretty betimes, being Lord's day, and so I
+within all day. Busy all the morning upon some accounts with W. Hewer,
+and at noon, an excellent dinner, comes Pelling and W. Howe, and the
+latter staid and talked with me all the afternoon, and in the evening
+comes Mr. Mills and his wife and supped and talked with me, and so to
+bed. This last night Betty Michell about midnight cries out, and my wife
+goes to her, and she brings forth a girl, and this afternoon the child is
+christened, and my wife godmother again to a Betty.
+
+
+
+13th. Up, and to my office, and thence by water to White Hall to attend
+the Council, but did not, and so home to dinner, and so out with my wife,
+and Deb., and W. Hewer towards Cooper's, but I 'light and walked to Ducke
+Lane, and there to the bookseller's; at the Bible, whose moher je have a
+mind to, but elle no erat dentro, but I did there look upon and buy some
+books, and made way for coming again to the man, which pleases me.
+Thence to Reeves's, and there saw some, and bespoke a little perspective,
+and was mightily pleased with seeing objects in a dark room. And so to
+Cooper's, and spent the afternoon with them; and it will be an excellent
+picture. Thence my people all by water to Deptford, to see Balty, while
+I to buy my espinette,
+
+ [Espinette is the French term for a small harpsichord, at that time
+ called in England a spinet. It was named from a fancied resemblance
+ of its quill plectra to spines or thorns.]
+
+which I did now agree for, and did at Haward's meet with Mr. Thacker, and
+heard him play on the harpsicon, so as I never heard man before, I think.
+So home, it being almost night, and there find in the garden Pelling, who
+hath brought Tempest, Wallington, and Pelham, to sings and there had most
+excellent musick late, in the dark, with great pleasure. Made them drink
+and eat; and so with much pleasure to bed, but above all with little
+Wallington. This morning I was let blood, and did bleed about fourteen
+ounces, towards curing my eyes.
+
+
+
+14th. Up, and to my office, where sat all the morning. At noon home to
+dinner, and thence all the afternoon hard at the office, we meeting about
+the Victualler's new contract; and so into the garden, my Lady Pen, Mrs.
+Turner and her daughter, my wife and I, and there supped in the dark and
+were merry, and so to bed. This day Bossc finished his copy of my
+picture, which I confess I do not admire, though my wife prefers him to
+Browne; nor do I think it like. He do it for W. Hewer, who hath my
+wife's also, which I like less. This afternoon my Lady Pickering come to
+see us: I busy, saw her not. But how natural it is for us to slight
+people out of power, and for people out of power to stoop to see those
+that while in power they contemned!
+
+
+
+15th. Up, and all the morning busy at the office to my great content,
+attending to the settling of papers there that I may have the more rest
+in winter for my eyes by how much I do the more in the settling of all
+things in the summer by daylight. At noon home to dinner, where is
+brought home the espinette I bought the other day of Haward; costs me L5.
+So to St. James's, where did our ordinary business with the Duke of York.
+So to Unthanke's to my wife, and with her and Deb. to visit Mrs. Pierce,
+whom I do not now so much affect, since she paints. But stayed here a
+while, and understood from her how my Lady Duchesse of Monmouth is still
+lame, and likely always to be so, which is a sad chance for a young
+[lady] to get, only by trying of tricks in dancing. So home, and there
+Captain Deane come and spent the evening with me, to draw some finishing
+lines on his fine draught of "The Resolution," the best ship, by all
+report, in the world, and so to bed. Wonderful hot all day and night,
+and this the first night that I remember in my life that ever I could lie
+with only a sheet and one rug. So much I am now stronger than ever I
+remember myself, at least since before I had the stone.
+
+
+
+16th. Up, and to the office, where Yeabsly and Lanyon come to town and
+to speak with me about a matter wherein they are accused of cheating the
+King before the Lords' Commissioners of Tangier, and I doubt it true, but
+I have no hand in it, but will serve them what I can. All the morning at
+the office, and at noon dined at home, and then to the office again,
+where we met to finish the draft of the Victualler's contract, and so I
+by water with my Lord Brouncker to Arundell House, to the Royall Society,
+and there saw an experiment of a dog's being tied through the back, about
+the spinal artery, and thereby made void of all motion; and the artery
+being loosened again, the dog recovers. Thence to Cooper's, and saw his
+advance on my wife's picture, which will be indeed very fine. So with
+her to the 'Change, to buy some things, and here I first bought of the
+sempstress next my bookseller's, where the pretty young girl is, that
+will be a great beauty. So home, and to supper with my wife in the
+garden, it being these two days excessively hot, and so to bed.
+
+
+
+17th. Up, and fitted myself to discourse before the Council about
+business of tickets. So to White Hall, where waited on the Duke of York,
+and then the Council about that business; and I did discourse to their
+liking, only was too high to assert that nothing could be invented to
+secure the King more in the business of tickets than there is; which the
+Duke of Buckingham did except against, and I could have answered, but
+forbore; but all liked very well. Thence home, and with my wife and Deb.
+to the King's House to see a play revived called The ------, a sorry mean
+play, that vexed us to sit in so much heat of the weather to hear it.
+Thence to see Betty Michell newly lain in, and after a little stay we
+took water and to Spring Garden, and there walked, and supped, and staid
+late, and with much pleasure, and to bed. The weather excessive hot, so
+as we were forced to lie in two beds, and I only with a sheet and rug,
+which is colder than ever I remember I could bear.
+
+
+
+18th. At the office all the morning. At noon dined at home and Creed
+with me, who I do really begin to hate, and do use him with some
+reservedness. Here was also my old acquaintance, Will Swan, to see me,
+who continues a factious fanatick still, and I do use him civilly, in
+expectation that those fellows may grow great again. Thence to the
+office, and then with my wife to the 'Change and Unthanke's, after having
+been at Cooper's and sat there for her picture, which will be a noble
+picture, but yet I think not so like as Hales's is. So home and to my
+office, and then to walk in the garden, and home to supper and to bed.
+They say the King of France is making a war again, in Flanders, with the
+King of Spain; the King of Spain refusing to give him all that he says
+was promised him in the treaty. Creed told me this day how when the King
+was at my Lord Cornwallis's when he went last to Newmarket, that being
+there on a Sunday, the Duke of Buckingham did in the afternoon to please
+the King make a bawdy sermon to him out of Canticles, and that my Lord
+Cornwallis did endeavour to get the King a whore, and that must be a
+pretty girl the daughter of the parson of the place, but that she did get
+away, and leaped off of some place and killed herself, which if true is
+very sad.
+
+
+
+19th (Lord's day). Up, and to my chamber, and there I up and down in the
+house spent the morning getting things ready against noon, when come Mr.
+Cooper, Hales, Harris, Mr. Butler, that wrote Hudibras, and Mr. Cooper's
+cozen Jacke; and by and by comes Mr. Reeves and his wife, whom I never
+saw before: and there we dined: a good dinner, and company that pleased
+me mightily, being all eminent men in their way. Spent all the afternoon
+in talk and mirth, and in the evening parted, and then my wife and I to
+walk in the garden, and so home to supper, Mrs. Turner and husband and
+daughter with us, and then to bed.
+
+
+
+20th. Up, and to the office, where Mrs. Daniel comes. . . . All the
+morning at the office. Dined at home, then with Mr. Colvill to the new
+Excise Office in Aldersgate Street, and thence back to the Old Exchange,
+to see a very noble fine lady I spied as I went through, in coming; and
+there took occasion to buy some gloves, and admire her, and a mighty fine
+fair lady indeed she was. Thence idling all the afternoon to Duck Lane,
+and there saw my bookseller's moher, but get no ground there yet; and
+here saw Mrs. Michell's daughter married newly to a bookseller, and she
+proves a comely little grave woman. So to visit my Lord Crew, who is
+very sick, to great danger, by an irisipulus;--[Erysipelas.]--the first
+day I heard of it, and so home, and took occasion to buy a rest for my
+espinette at the ironmonger's by Holborn Conduit, where the fair pretty
+woman is that I have lately observed there, and she is pretty, and je
+credo vain enough. Thence home and busy till night, and so to bed.
+
+
+
+21st. Up, and to St. James's, but lost labour, the Duke abroad. So home
+to the office, where all the morning, and so to dinner, and then all the
+afternoon at the office, only went to my plate-maker's, and there spent
+an hour about contriving my little plates,
+
+ [This passage has been frequently quoted as referring to Pepys's.
+ small bookplate, with his initials S. P. and two anchors and ropes
+ entwined; but if looked at carefully with the further reference on
+ the 27th, it will be seen that it merely describes the preparation
+ of engravings of the four dockyards.]
+
+for my books of the King's four Yards. At night walked in the garden,
+and supped and to bed, my eyes bad.
+
+
+
+22nd. All the morning at the office. Dined at home, and then to White
+Hall with Symson the joyner, and after attending at the Committee of the
+Navy about the old business of tickets, where the only expedient they
+have found is to bind the Commanders and Officers by oaths. The Duke of
+York told me how the Duke of Buckingham, after the Council the other day,
+did make mirth at my position, about the sufficiency of present rules in
+the business of tickets; and here I took occasion to desire a private
+discourse with the Duke of York, and he granted it to me on Friday next.
+So to shew Symson the King's new lodgings for his chimnies, which I
+desire to have one built in that mode, and so I home, and with little
+supper, to bed. This day a falling out between my wife and Deb., about a
+hood lost, which vexed me.
+
+
+
+23rd. Up, and all day long, but at dinner, at the Office, at work, till
+I was almost blind, which makes my heart sad.
+
+
+
+24th. Up, and by water to St. James's, having, by the way, shewn Symson
+Sir W. Coventry's chimney-pieces, in order to the making me one; and
+there, after the Duke of York was ready, he called me to his closet; and
+there I did long and largely show him the weakness of our Office, and did
+give him advice to call us to account for our duties, which he did take
+mighty well, and desired me to draw up what I would have him write to the
+Office. I did lay open the whole failings of the Office, and how it was
+his duty to find them, and to find fault with them, as Admiral,
+especially at this time, which he agreed to, and seemed much to rely on
+what I said. Thence to White Hall, and there waited to attend the
+Council, but was not called in, and so home, and after dinner back with
+Sir J. Minnes by coach, and there attended, all of us, the Duke of York,
+and had the hearing of Mr. Pett's business, the Master-Shipwright at
+Chatham, and I believe he will be put out. But here Commissioner.
+Middleton did, among others, shew his good-nature and easiness to the
+Masters-Attendants, by mitigating their faults, so as, I believe, they
+will come in again. So home, and to supper and to bed, the Duke of York
+staying with us till almost night.
+
+
+
+25th. Up, and at the Office all the morning; and at noon, after dinner,
+to Cooper's, it being a very rainy day, and there saw my wife's picture
+go on, which will be very fine indeed. And so home again to my letters,
+and then to supper and to bed.
+
+
+
+26th (Lord's day). Up, and all the morning and after dinner, the
+afternoon also, with W. Hewer in my closet, setting right my Tangier
+Accounts, which I have let alone these six months and more, but find them
+very right, and is my great comfort. So in the evening to walk with my
+wife, and to supper and to bed.
+
+
+
+27th. Busy all the morning at my office. At noon dined, and then I out
+of doors to my bookseller in Duck Lane, but su moher not at home, and it
+was pretty here to see a pretty woman pass by with a little wanton look,
+and je did sequi her round about the street from Duck Lane to Newgate
+Market, and then elle did turn back, and je did lose her. And so to see
+my Lord Crew, whom I find up; and did wait on him; but his face sore, but
+in hopes to do now very well again. Thence to Cooper's, where my wife's
+picture almost done, and mighty fine indeed. So over the water with my
+wife, and Deb., and Mercer, to Spring-Garden, and there eat and walked;
+and observe how rude some of the young gallants of the town are become,
+to go into people's arbours where there are not men, and almost force the
+women; which troubled me, to see the confidence of the vice of the age:
+and so we away by water, with much pleasure home. This day my plate-
+maker comes with my four little plates of the four Yards, cost me L5,
+which troubles me, but yet do please me also.
+
+
+
+28th. All the morning at the office, and after dinner with my wife and
+Deb. to the Duke of York's playhouse, and there saw "The Slighted Maid,"
+but a mean play; and thence home, there being little pleasure now in a
+play, the company being but little. Here we saw Gosnell, who is become
+very homely, and sings meanly, I think, to what I thought she did.
+
+
+
+29th. Busy all the morning at the office. So home to dinner, where
+Mercer, and there comes Mr. Swan, my old acquaintance, and dines with me,
+and tells me, for a certainty, that Creed is to marry Betty Pickering,
+and that the thing is concluded, which I wonder at, and am vexed for.
+So he gone I with my wife and two girls to the King's house, and saw
+"The Mad Couple," a mean play altogether, and thence to Hyde Parke, where
+but few coaches, and so to the New Exchange, and thence by water home,
+with much pleasure, and then to sing in the garden, and so home to bed,
+my eyes for these four days being my trouble, and my heart thereby mighty
+sad.
+
+
+
+30th. Up, and by water to White Hall. There met with Mr. May, who was
+giving directions about making a close way for people to go dry from the
+gate up into the House, to prevent their going through the galleries;
+which will be very good. I staid and talked with him about the state of
+the King's Offices in general, and how ill he is served, and do still
+find him an excellent person, and so back to the office. So close at my
+office all the afternoon till evening, and then out with my wife to the
+New Exchange, and so back again.
+
+
+
+31st. Up, and at my office all the morning. About noon with Mr.
+Ashburnham to the new Excise Office, and there discoursed about our
+business, and I made him admire my drawing a thing presently in
+shorthand: but, God knows! I have paid dear for it, in my eyes.
+Home and to dinner, and then my wife and Deb. and I, with Sir J. Minnes,
+to White Hall, she going hence to the New Exchange, and the Duke of York
+not being in the way, Sir J. Minnes and I to her and took them two to the
+King's house, to see the first day of Lacy's "Monsieur Ragou," now new
+acted. The King and Court all there, and mighty merry--a farce. Thence
+Sir J. Minnes giving us, like a gentleman, his coach, hearing we had some
+business, we to the Park, and so home. Little pleasure there, there
+being little company, but mightily taken with a little chariot that we
+saw in the street, and which we are resolved to have ours like it.
+So home to walk in the garden a little, and then to bed. The month ends
+mighty sadly with me, my eyes being now past all use almost; and I am
+mighty hot upon trying the late printed experiment of paper tubes.
+
+ [An account of these tubulous spectacles ("An easy help for decayed
+ sight") is given in "The Philosophical Transactions," No. 37, pp.
+ 727,731 (Hutton's Abridgment, vol. i., p. 266). See Diary, August
+ 12th and 23rd, post.]
+
+
+
+
+ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+At work, till I was almost blind, which makes my heart sad
+Bristol milk (the sherry) in the vaults
+But get no ground there yet
+Cannot be clean to go so many bodies together in the same water
+City pay him great respect, and he the like to the meanest
+Cost me L5, which troubles me, but yet do please me also
+Espinette is the French term for a small harpsichord
+Forced to change gold, 8s. 7d.; servants and poor, 1s. 6d.
+Frequent trouble in things we deserve best in
+How natural it is for us to slight people out of power
+I could have answered, but forbore
+Little pleasure now in a play, the company being but little
+Made him admire my drawing a thing presently in shorthand
+My wife hath something in her gizzard, that only waits
+My wife's neglect of things, and impertinent humour
+So out, and lost our way, which made me vexed
+Suffered her humour to spend, till we begun to be very quiet
+Troubled me, to see the confidence of the vice of the age
+Up, finding our beds good, but lousy; which made us merry
+Weather being very wet and hot to keep meat in.
+When he was seriously ill he declared himself a Roman Catholic
+Where a pedlar was in bed, and made him rise
+
+
+
+
+End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of The Diary of Samuel Pepys, v74
+by Samuel Pepys, Unabridged, transcribed by Bright, edited by Wheatley
+
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