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+Project Gutenberg's Diary of Samuel Pepys, January 1668/69, 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, January 1668/69
+
+Author: Samuel Pepys
+
+Release Date: November 28, 2004 [EBook #4196]
+
+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.
+
+ 1669 N.S.
+
+ JANUARY
+ 1668-1669
+
+January 1st. Up, and presented from Captain Beckford with a noble silver
+warming-pan, which I am doubtful whether to take or no. Up, and with W.
+Hewer to the New Exchange, and then he and I to the cabinet-shops, to look
+out, and did agree, for a cabinet to give my wife for a New-year's gift;
+and I did buy one cost me L11, which is very pretty, of walnutt-tree, and
+will come home to-morrow. So back to the old Exchange, and there met my
+uncle Wight; and there walked, and met with the Houblons, and talked with
+them--gentlemen whom I honour mightily: and so to my uncle's, and met my
+wife; and there, with W. Hewer, we dined with our family, and had a very
+good dinner, and pretty merry and after dinner, my wife and I with our
+coach to the King's playhouse, and there in a box saw "The Mayden Queene."
+Knepp looked upon us, but I durst not shew her any countenance; and, as
+well as I could carry myself, I found my wife uneasy there, poor wretch!
+therefore, I shall avoid that house as much as I can. So back to my
+aunt's, and there supped and talked, and staid pretty late, it being dry
+and moonshine, and so walked home, and to bed in very good humour.
+
+2nd. Up, at the office all the morning, and at noon home to dinner, where
+I find my cabinet come home, and paid for it, and it pleases me and my
+wife well. So after dinner busy late at the office, and so home and to
+bed.
+
+3rd (Lord's day). Up, and busy all the morning, getting rooms and dinner
+ready for my guests, which were my uncle and aunt Wight, and two of their
+cousins, and an old woman, and Mr. Mills and his wife; and a good dinner,
+and all our plate out, and mighty fine and merry, only I a little vexed at
+burning a new table-cloth myself, with one of my trencher-salts. Dinner
+done, I out with W. Hewer and Mr. Spong, who by accident come to dine with
+me, and good talk with him: to White Hall by coach, and there left him,
+and I with my Lord Brouncker to attend the Duke of York, and then up and
+down the House till the evening, hearing how the King do intend this
+frosty weather, it being this day the first, and very hard frost, that
+hath come this year, and very cold it is. So home; and to supper and
+read; and there my wife and I treating about coming to an allowance to my
+wife for clothes; and there I, out of my natural backwardness, did hang
+off, which vexed her, and did occasion some discontented talk in bed, when
+we went to bed; and also in the morning, but I did recover all in the
+morning.
+
+4th. Lay long, talking with my wife, and did of my own accord come to an
+allowance of her of L30 a-year for all expences, clothes and everything,
+which she was mightily pleased with, it being more than ever she asked or
+expected, and so rose, with much content, and up with W. Hewer to White
+Hall, there to speak with Mr. Wren, which I did about several things of
+the office entered in my memorandum books, and so about noon, going
+homeward with W. Hewer, he and I went in and saw the great tall woman that
+is to be seen, who is but twenty-one years old, and I do easily stand
+under her arms. Then, going further, The. Turner called me, out of her
+coach where her mother, &c., was, and invited me by all means to dine with
+them, at my cozen Roger's mistress's, the widow Dickenson! So, I went to
+them afterwards, and dined with them, and mighty handsomely treated, and
+she a wonderful merry, good-humoured, fat, but plain woman, but I believe
+a very good woman, and mighty civil to me. Mrs. Turner, the mother, and
+Mrs. Dyke, and The., and Betty was the company, and a gentleman of their
+acquaintance. Betty I did long to see, and she is indifferent pretty, but
+not what the world did speak of her; but I am mighty glad to have one so
+pretty of our kindred. After dinner, I walked with them, to shew them the
+great woman, which they admire, as well they may; and so back with them,
+and left them; and I to White Hall, where a Committee of Tangier met, but
+little to do there, but I did receive an instance of the Duke of York's
+kindness to me, and the whole Committee, that they would not order any
+thing about the Treasurer for the Corporation now in establishing, without
+my assent, and considering whether it would be to my wrong or no. Thence
+up and down the house, and to the Duke of York's side, and there in the
+Duchess's presence; and was mightily complimented by my Lady Peterborough,
+in my Lord Sandwich's presence, whom she engaged to thank me for my
+kindness to her and her Lord. . . . By and by I met my Lord Brouncker;
+and he and I to the Duke of York alone, and discoursed over the carriage
+of the present Treasurers, in opposition to, or at least independency of,
+the Duke of York, or our Board, which the Duke of York is sensible of, and
+all remember, I believe; for they do carry themselves very respectlessly
+of him and us. We also declared our minds together to the Duke of York
+about Sir John Minnes's incapacity to do any service in the Office, and
+that it is but to betray the King to have any business of trust committed
+to his weakness. So the Duke of York was very sensible of it and promised
+to speak to the King about it. That done, I with W. Hewer took up my wife
+at Unthank's, and so home, and there with pleasure to read and talk, and
+so to supper, and put into writing, in merry terms, our agreement between
+my wife and me, about L30 a-year, and so to bed. This was done under both
+our hands merrily, and put into W. Hewer's to keep.
+
+5th. Up, and to the office all the morning, the frost and cold
+continuing. At noon home with my people to dinner; and so to work at the
+office again; in the evening comes Creed to me, and tells me his wife is
+at my house. So I in, and spent an hour with them, the first time she
+hath been here, or I have seen her, since she was married. She is not
+overhandsome, though a good lady, and one I love. So after some pleasant
+discourse, they gone, I to the Office again, and there late, and then home
+to supper to my wife, who is not very well of those, and so sat talking
+till past one in the morning, and then to bed.
+
+6th (Twelfth day). Up, and to look after things against dinner to-day for
+my guests, and then to the Office to write down my journall for five or
+six days backward, and so home to look after dinner, it being now almost
+noon. At noon comes Mrs. Turner and Dyke, and Mrs. Dickenson, and then
+comes The. and Betty Turner, the latter of which is a very pretty girl;
+and then Creed and his wife, whom I sent for, by my coach. These were my
+guests, and Mrs. Turner's friend, whom I saw the other day, Mr. Wicken,
+and very merry we were at dinner, and so all the afternoon, talking, and
+looking up and down my house; and in the evening I did bring out my
+cake--a noble cake, and there cut it into pieces, with wine and good
+drink: and after a new fashion, to prevent spoiling the cake, did put so
+many titles into a hat, and so drew cuts; and I was the Queene; and The.
+Turner, King--Creed, Sir Martin Marr-all; and Betty, Mrs. Millicent: and
+so we were mighty merry till it was night; and then, being moonshine and
+fine frost, they went home, I lending some of them my coach to help to
+carry them, and so my wife and I spent the rest of the evening in talk and
+reading, and so with great pleasure to bed.
+
+7th. Up, and to the office, where busy all the morning, and then at noon
+home to dinner, and thence my wife and I to the King's playhouse, and
+there saw "The Island Princesse," the first time I ever saw it; and it is
+a pretty good play, many good things being in it, and a good scene of a
+town on fire. We sat in an upper box, and the jade Nell come and sat in
+the next box; a bold merry slut, who lay laughing there upon people; and
+with a comrade of hers of the Duke's house, that come in to see the play.
+Thence home and to the office to do some business, and so home to supper
+and to bed.
+
+8th. Up, and with Colonel Middleton, in his coach, and Mr. Tippets to
+White Hall; and there attended the Duke of York with the rest, where the
+Duke was mighty plain with the Treasurers, according to the advice my Lord
+Brouncker and I did give him the other night, and he did it fully; and so
+as, I believe, will make the Treasurers carefull of themselves, unless
+they do resolve upon defying the Duke of York. Thence with W. Hewer home,
+and to dinner, and so out again, my wife and I and Mr. Hater to White
+Hall, where she set us down, and she up and down to buy things, while we
+at the Treasury-Chamber, where I alone did manage the business of "The
+Leopard" against the whole Committee of the East India Company, with Mr.
+Blackburne with them; and to the silencing of them all, to my no great
+content. Thence walked to my wife, and so set out for home in our coach,
+it being very cold weather, and so to the office to do a little business,
+and then home to my wife's chamber, my people having laid the cloth, and
+got the rooms all clean above-stairs to-night for our dinner to-morrow,
+and therefore I to bed.
+
+9th. Up, and at the office all the morning, and at noon, my Lord
+Brouncker, Mr. Wren, Joseph Williamson, and Captain Cocke, dined with me;
+and, being newly sat down, comes in, by invitation of Williamson's, the
+Lieutenant of the Tower, and he brings in with him young Mr. Whore, whose
+father, of the Tower, I know.--And here I had a neat dinner, and all in so
+good manner and fashion, and with so good company, and everything to my
+mind, as I never had more in my life--the company being to my heart's
+content, and they all well pleased. So continued, looking over my books
+and closet till the evening, and so I to the Office and did a good deal of
+business, and so home to supper and to bed with my mind mightily pleased
+with this day's management, as one of the days of my life of fullest
+content.
+
+10th (Lord's day). Accidentally talking of our maids before we rose, I
+said a little word that did give occasion to my wife to fall out; and she
+did most vexatiously, almost all the morning, but ended most perfect good
+friends; but the thoughts of the unquiet which her ripping up of old
+faults will give me, did make me melancholy all day long. So about noon,
+past 12, we rose, and to dinner, and then to read and talk, my wife and I
+alone, for Balty was gone, who come to dine with us, and then in the
+evening comes Pelting to sit and talk with us, and so to supper and pretty
+merry discourse, only my mind a little vexed at the morning's work, but
+yet without any appearance. So after supper to bed.
+
+11th. Up, and with W. Hewer, my guard, to White Hall, where no Committee
+of Tangier met, so up and down the House talking with this and that man,
+and so home, calling at the New Exchange for a book or two to send to Mr.
+Shepley and thence home, and thence to the 'Change, and there did a little
+business, and so walked home to dinner, and then abroad with my wife to
+the King's playhouse, and there saw "The Joviall Crew," but ill acted to
+what it was heretofore, in Clun's time, and when Lacy could dance. Thence
+to the New Exchange, to buy some things; and, among others, my wife did
+give me my pair of gloves, which, by contract, she is to give me in her
+L30 a-year. Here Mrs. Smith tells us of the great murder thereabouts, on
+Saturday last, of one Captain Bumbridge, by one Symons, both of her
+acquaintance; and hectors that were at play, and in drink: the former is
+killed, and is kinsman to my Lord of Ormond, which made him speak of it
+with so much passion, as I overheard him this morning, but could not make
+anything of it till now, but would they would kill more of them. So home;
+and there at home all the evening; and made Tom to prick down some little
+conceits and notions of mine, in musique, which do mightily encourage me
+to spend some more thoughts about it; for I fancy, upon good reason, that
+I am in the right way of unfolding the mystery of this matter, better than
+ever yet.
+
+12th. Up, and to the Office, where, by occasion of a message from the
+Treasurers that their Board found fault with Commissioner Middleton, I
+went up from our Board to the Lords of the Treasury to meet our
+Treasurers, and did, and there did dispute the business, it being about
+the matter of paying a little money to Chatham Yard, wherein I find the
+Treasurers mighty supple, and I believe we shall bring them to reason,
+though they begun mighty upon us, as if we had no power of directing them,
+but they, us. Thence back presently home, to dinner, where I discern my
+wife to have been in pain about where I have been, but said nothing to me,
+but I believe did send W. Hewer to seek me, but I take no notice of it,
+but am vexed. So to dinner with my people, and then to the Office, where
+all the afternoon, and did much business, and at it late, and so home to
+supper, and to bed. This day, meeting Mr. Pierce at White Hall, he tells
+me that his boy hath a great mind to see me, and is going to school again;
+and Dr. Clerke, being by, do tell me that he is a fine boy; but I durst
+not answer anything, because I durst not invite him to my house, for fear
+of my wife; and therefore, to my great trouble, was forced to neglect that
+discourse. But here Mr. Pierce, I asking him whither he was going, told
+me as a great secret that he was going to his master's mistress, Mrs.
+Churchill, with some physic; meaning for the pox I suppose, or else that
+she is got with child. This evening I observed my wife mighty dull, and I
+myself was not mighty fond, because of some hard words she did give me at
+noon, out of a jealousy at my being abroad this morning, which, God knows,
+it was upon the business of the Office unexpectedly: but I to bed, not
+thinking but she would come after me. But waking by and by out of a
+slumber, which I usually fall into presently after my coming into the bed,
+I found she did not prepare to come to bed, but got fresh candles, and
+more wood for her fire, it being mighty cold, too. At this being
+troubled, I after a while prayed her to come to bed, all my people being
+gone to bed; so, after an hour or two, she silent, and I now and then
+praying her to come to bed, she fell out into a fury, that I was a rogue,
+and false to her. But yet I did perceive that she was to seek what to
+say, only she invented, I believe, a business that I was seen in a hackney
+coach with the glasses up with Deb., but could not tell the time, nor was
+sure I was he. I did, as I might truly, deny it, and was mightily
+troubled, but all would not serve. At last, about one o'clock, she come to
+my side of the bed, and drew my curtaine open, and with the tongs red hot
+at the ends, made as if she did design to pinch me with them, at which, in
+dismay, I rose up, and with a few words she laid them down; and did by
+little and, little, very sillily, let all the discourse fall; and about
+two, but with much seeming difficulty, come to bed, and there lay well all
+night, and long in bed talking together, with much pleasure, it being, I
+know, nothing but her doubt of my going out yesterday, without telling her
+of my going, which did vex her, poor wretch! last night, and I cannot
+blame her jealousy, though it do vex me to the heart.
+
+13th. So up and by coach to Sir W. Coventry's, but he gone out, so I to
+White Hall, and thence walked out into the Park, all in the snow, with the
+Duke of York and the rest, and so home, after visiting my Lady
+Peterborough, and there by invitation find Mr. Povy, and there was also
+Talbot Pepys, newly come from Impington, and dined with me; and after
+dinner and a little talk with Povy about publick matters, he gone, and I
+and my wife and Talbot towards the Temple, and there to the King's
+playhouse, and there saw, I think, "The Maiden Queene," and so home and to
+supper and read, and to bed. This day come home the instrument I have so
+long longed for, the Parallelogram.
+
+14th. Up and to the office, where all the morning busy, and so home to
+dinner, where Goodgroome with us, and after dinner a song, and then to the
+office, where busy till night, and then home to work there with W. Hewer
+to get ready some Tangier papers against to-morrow, and so to supper and
+to bed.
+
+15th. Up, and by coach to Sir W. Coventry, where with him a good while in
+his chamber, talking of one thing or another; among others, he told me of
+the great factions at Court at this day, even to the sober engaging of
+great persons, and differences, and making the King cheap and ridiculous.
+It is about my Lady Harvy's being offended at Doll Common's acting of
+Sempronia, to imitate her; for which she got my Lord Chamberlain, her
+kinsman, to imprison Doll: when my Lady Castlemayne made the King to
+release her, and to order her to act it again, worse than ever, the other
+day, where the King himself was: and since it was acted again, and my Lady
+Harvy provided people to hiss her and fling oranges at her: but, it seems
+the heat is come to a great height, and real troubles at Court about it.
+Thence he and I out of doors, but he to Sir J. Duncomb, and I to White
+Hall through the Park, where I met the King and the Duke of York, and so
+walked with them, and so to White Hall, where the Duke of York met the
+office and did a little business; and I did give him thanks for his favour
+to me yesterday, at the Committee of Tangier, in my absence, Mr. Povy
+having given me advice of it, of the discourse there of doing something as
+to the putting the payment of the garrison into some undertaker's hand,
+Alderman Backewell, which the Duke of York would not suffer to go on,
+without my presence at the debate. And he answered me just thus: that he
+ought to have a care of him that do the King's business in the manner that
+I do, and words of more force than that. Then down with Lord Brouncker to
+Sir R. Murray, into the King's little elaboratory, under his closet, a
+pretty place; and there saw a great many chymical glasses and things, but
+understood none of them. So I home and to dinner, and then out again and
+stop with my wife at my cozen Turner's where I staid and sat a while, and
+carried The. and my wife to the Duke of York's house, to "Macbeth," and
+myself to White Hall, to the Lords of the Treasury, about Tangier
+business; and there was by at much merry discourse between them and my
+Lord Anglesey, who made sport of our new Treasurers, and called them his
+deputys, and much of that kind. And having done my own business, I away
+back, and carried my cozen Turner and sister Dyke to a friend's house,
+where they were to sup, in Lincoln's Inn Fields; and I to the Duke of
+York's house and saw the last two acts, and so carried The. thither, and
+so home with my wife, who read to me late, and so to supper and to bed.
+This day The. Turner shewed me at the play my Lady Portman, who has grown
+out of my knowledge.
+
+16th. Up, and to the office all the morning, dined at home with my
+people, and so all the afternoon till night at the office busy, and so
+home to supper and to bed. This morning Creed, and in the afternoon comes
+Povy, to advise with me about my answer to the Lords [Commissioners] of
+Tangier, about the propositions for the Treasurership there, which I am
+not much concerned for. But the latter, talking of publick things, told
+me, as Mr. Wren also did, that the Parliament is likely to meets again,
+the King being frighted with what the Speaker hath put him in mind of--his
+promise not to prorogue, but only to adjourne them. They speak mighty
+freely of the folly of the King in this foolish woman's business, of my
+Lady Harvy. Povy tells me that Sir W. Coventry was with the King alone,
+an hour this day; and that my Lady Castlemayne is now in a higher command
+over the King than ever--not as a mistress, for she scorns him, but as a
+tyrant, to command him: and says that the Duchess of York and the Duke of
+York are mighty great with her, which is a great interest to my Lord
+Chancellor's' family; and that they do agree to hinder all they can the
+proceedings of the Duke of Buckingham and Arlington: and so we are in the
+old mad condition, or rather worse than any; no man knowing what the
+French intend to do the next summer.
+
+17th (Lord's day). To church myself after seeing every thing fitted for
+dinner, and so, after church, home, and thither comes Mrs. Batelier and
+her two daughters to dinner to us; and W. Hewer and his mother, and Mr.
+Spong. We were very civilly merry, and Mrs. Batelier a very discreet
+woman, but mighty fond in the stories she tells of her son Will. After
+dinner, Mr. Spong and I to my closet, there to try my instrument
+Parallelogram, which do mighty well, to my full content; but only a little
+stiff, as being new. Thence, taking leave of my guests, he and I and W.
+Hewer to White Hall, and there parting with Spong, a man that I mightily
+love for his plainness and ingenuity, I into the Court, and there up and
+down and spoke with my Lords Bellassis and Peterborough about the business
+now in dispute, about my deputing a Treasurer to pay the garrison at
+Tangier, which I would avoid, and not be accountable, and they will serve
+me therein. Here I met Hugh May, and he brings me to the knowledge of Sir
+Henry Capell, a Member of Parliament, and brother of my Lord of Essex, who
+hath a great value, it seems, for me; and they appoint a day to come and
+dine with me, and see my books, and papers of the Office, which I shall be
+glad to shew them, and have opportunity to satisfy them therein. Here all
+the discourse is, that now the King is of opinion to have the Parliament
+called, notwithstanding his late resolutions for proroguing them; so
+unstable are his councils, and those about him. So staying late talking
+in the Queen's side, I away, with W. Hewer home, and there to read and
+talk with my wife, and so to bed.
+
+18th. Up by candlelight, and with W. Hewer walked to the Temple, and
+thence took coach and to Sir William Coventry's, and there discoursed the
+business of my Treasurer's place, at Tangier, wherein he consents to my
+desire, and concurs therein, which I am glad of, that I may not be
+accountable for a man so far off. And so I to my Lord Sandwich's, and
+there walk with him through the garden, to White Hall, where he tells me
+what he had done about this Treasurer's place, and I perceive the whole
+thing did proceed from him: that finding it would be best to have the
+Governor have nothing to do with the pay of the garrison, he did propose
+to the Duke of York alone that a pay-master should be there; and that
+being desirous to do a courtesy to Sir Charles Harbord, and to prevent the
+Duke of York's looking out for any body else, he did name him to the Duke
+of York. That when he come the other day to move this to the Board of
+Tangier, the Duke of York, it seems, did readily reply, that it was fit to
+have Mr. Pepys satisfied therein first, and that it was not good to make
+places for persons. This my Lord in great confidence tells me, that he do
+take very ill from the Duke of York, though nobody knew the meaning of
+these words but him; and that he did take no notice of them, but bit his
+lip, being satisfied that the Duke of York's care of me was as desirable
+to him, as it could be to have Sir Charles Harbord: and did seem
+industrious to let me see that he was glad that the Duke of York and he
+might come to contend who shall be the kindest to me, which I owned as his
+great love, and so I hope and believe it is, though my Lord did go a
+little too far in this business, to move it so far, without consulting me.
+But I took no notice of that, but was glad to see this competition come
+about, that my Lord Sandwich is apparently jealous of my thinking that the
+Duke of York do mean me more kindness than him. So we walked together,
+and I took this occasion to invite him to dinner one day to my house, and
+he readily appointed Friday next, which I shall be glad to have over to
+his content, he having never yet eat a bit of my bread. Thence to the Duke
+of York on the King's side, with our Treasurers of the Navy, to discourse
+some business of the Navy, about the pay of the yards, and there I was
+taken notice of, many Lords being there in the room, of the Duke of York's
+conference with me; and so away, and meeting Mr. Sidney Montagu and
+Sheres, a small invitation served their turn to carry them to London,
+where I paid Sheres his L100, given him for his pains in drawing the plate
+of Tangier fortifications, &c., and so home to my house to dinner, where I
+had a pretty handsome sudden dinner, and all well pleased; and thence we
+three and my wife to the Duke of York's playhouse, and there saw "The
+Witts," a medley of things, but some similes mighty good, though ill
+mixed; and thence with my wife to the Exchange and bought some things, and
+so home, after I had been at White Hall, and there in the Queen's
+withdrawing-room invited my Lord Peterborough to dine with me, with my
+Lord Sandwich, who readily accepted it. Thence back and took up my wife
+at the 'Change, and so home. This day at noon I went with my young
+gentlemen (thereby to get a little time while W. Hewer went home to bid
+them get a dinner ready) to the Pope's Head tavern, there to see the fine
+painted room which Rogerson told me of, of his doing; but I do not like it
+at all, though it be good for such a publick room.
+
+19th. Up, and at the office all the morning. At noon eat a mouthful, and
+so with my wife to Madam Turner's, and find her gone, but The. staid for
+us; and so to the King's house, to see "Horace;" this the third day of its
+acting--a silly tragedy; but Lacy hath made a farce of several
+dances--between each act, one: but his words are but silly, and invention
+not extraordinary, as to the dances; only some Dutchmen come out of the
+mouth and tail of a Hamburgh sow. Thence, not much pleased with the play,
+set them at home in the Strand; and my wife and I home, and there to do a
+little business at the Office, and so home to supper and to bed.
+
+20th. Up; and my wife, and I, and W. Hewer to White Hall, where she set
+us down; and there I spoke with my Lord Peterborough, to tell him of the
+day for his dining with me being altered by my Lord Sandwich from Friday
+to Saturday next. And thence heard at the Council-board the City, by
+their single counsel Symson, and the company of Strangers Merchants, a
+debate the business of water-baylage; a tax demanded upon all goods, by
+the City, imported and exported: which these Merchants oppose, and
+demanding leave to try the justice of the City's demand by a Quo Warranto,
+which the City opposed, the Merchants did quite lay the City on their
+backs with great triumph, the City's cause being apparently too weak: but
+here I observed Mr. Gold, the merchant, to speak very well, and very
+sharply, against the City. Thence to my wife at Unthanke's, and with her
+and W. Hewer to Hercules Pillars, calling to do two or three things by the
+way, end there dined, and thence to the Duke of York's house, and saw
+"Twelfth Night," as it is now revived; but, I think, one of the weakest
+plays that ever I saw on the stage. This afternoon, before the play, I
+called with my wife at Dancre's, the great landscape-painter, by Mr.
+Povy's advice; and have bespoke him to come to take measure of my
+dining-room panels, and there I met with the pretty daughter of the
+coalseller's, that lived in Cheapside, and now in Covent Garden, who hath
+her picture drawn here, but very poorly; but she is a pretty woman, and
+now, I perceive, married, a very pretty black woman. So, the play done, we
+home, my wife letting fall some words of her observing my eyes to be
+mightily employed in the playhouse, meaning upon women, which did vex me;
+but, however, when we come home, we were good friends; and so to read, and
+to supper, and so to bed.
+
+21st. Up, and walked to the Temple, it being frosty, and there took coach,
+my boy Tom with me, and so to White Hall to a Committee of Tangier, where
+they met, and by and by and till twelve at noon upon business, among
+others mine, where my desire about being eased of appointing and standing
+accountable for a Treasurer there was well accepted, and they will think
+of some other way. This I was glad of, finding reason to doubt that I
+might in this (since my Lord Sandwich made me understand what he had said
+to the Duke of York herein) fear to offend either the Duke of York by
+denying it, for he seemed on Sunday night last, when I first made known my
+desire to him herein to be a little amused at it, though I knew not then
+the reason, or else offend my Lord Sandwich by accepting it, or denying it
+in a manner that might not forward his desire for Sir Charles Harbord, but
+I thank God I did it to my great content without any offence, I think, to
+either. Thence in my own coach home, where I find Madam Turner, Dyke, and
+The., and had a good dinner for them, and merry; and so carried them to
+the Duke of York's house, all but Dyke, who went away on other business;
+and there saw "The Tempest;" but it is but ill done by Gosnell, in lieu of
+Moll Davis. Thence set them at home, and my wife and I to the 'Change, and
+so home, where my wife mighty dogged, and I vexed to see it, being
+mightily troubled, of late, at her being out of humour, for fear of her
+discovering any new matter of offence against me, though I am conscious of
+none; but do hate to be unquiet at home. So, late up, silent, and not
+supping, but hearing her utter some words of discontent to me with
+silence, and so to bed, weeping to myself for grief, which she discerning,
+come to bed, and mighty kind, and so with great joy on both sides to
+sleep.
+
+22nd. Up, and with W. Hewer to White Hall, and there attended the Duke of
+York, and thence to the Exchange, in the way calling at several places on
+occasions relating to my feast to-morrow, on which my mind is now set; as
+how to get a new looking-glass for my dining-room, and some pewter, and
+good wine, against to-morrow; and so home, where I had the looking-glass
+set up, cost me L6 7s. 6d. And here at the 'Change I met with Mr.
+Dancre, the famous landscape painter, with whom I was on Wednesday; and he
+took measure of my panels in my dining-room, where, in the four, I intend
+to have the four houses of the King, White Hall, Hampton Court, Greenwich,
+and Windsor. He gone, I to dinner with my people, and so to my office to
+dispatch a little business, and then home to look after things against
+to-morrow, and among other things was mightily pleased with the fellow
+that come to lay the cloth, and fold the napkins, which I like so well, as
+that I am resolved to give him 40s. to teach my wife to do it. So to
+supper, with much kindness between me and my wife, which, now-a-days, is
+all my care, and so to bed.
+
+23rd. Up, and again to look after the setting things right against
+dinner, which I did to very good content. So to the office, where all the
+morning till noon, when word brought me to the Board that my Lord Sandwich
+was come; so I presently rose, leaving the Board ready to rise, and there
+I found my Lord Sandwich, Peterborough, and Sir Charles Harbord; and
+presently after them comes my Lord Hinchingbroke, Mr. Sidney, and Sir
+William Godolphin. And after greeting them, and some time spent in talk,
+dinner was brought up, one dish after another, but a dish at a time, but
+all so good; but, above all things, the variety of wines, and excellent of
+their kind, I had for them, and all in so good order, that they were
+mightily pleased, and myself full of content at it: and indeed it was, of
+a dinner of about six or eight dishes, as noble as any man need to have, I
+think; at least, all was done in the noblest manner that ever I had any,
+and I have rarely seen in my life better anywhere else, even at the Court.
+After dinner, my Lords to cards, and the rest of us sitting about them and
+talking, and looking on my books and pictures, and my wife's drawings,
+which they commend mightily; and mighty merry all day long, with exceeding
+great content, and so till seven at night; and so took their leaves, it
+being dark and foul weather. Thus was this entertainment over, the best
+of its kind, and the fullest of honour and content to me, that ever I had
+in my life: and shall not easily have so good again. The truth is, I have
+some fear that I am more behind-hand in the world for these last two
+years, since I have not, or for some time could not, look after my
+accounts, which do a little allay my pleasure. But I do trust in God I am
+pretty well yet, and resolve, in a very little time, to look into my
+accounts, and see how they stand. So to my wife's chamber, and there
+supped, and got her cut my hair and look my shirt, for I have itched
+mightily these 6 or 7 days, and when all comes to all she finds that I am
+lousy, having found in my head and body about twenty lice, little and
+great, which I wonder at, being more than I have had I believe these 20
+years. I did think I might have got them from the little boy, but they
+did presently look him, and found none. So how they come I know not, but
+presently did shift myself, and so shall be rid of them, and cut my hair
+close to my head, and so with much content to bed.
+
+24th (Lord's day). An order brought me in bed, for the Principal Officers
+to attend the King at my Lord Keeper's this afternoon, it being resolved
+late the last night; and, by the warrant, I find my Lord Keeper did not
+then know the cause of it, the messenger being ordered to call upon him,
+to tell it him by the way, as he come to us. So I up, and to my Office to
+set down my Journall for yesterday, and so home, and with my wife to
+Church, and then home, and to dinner, and after dinner out with my wife by
+coach, to cozen Turner's, where she and The. gone to church, but I left my
+wife with Mrs. Dyke and Joyce Norton, whom I have not seen till now since
+their coming to town: she is become an old woman, and with as cunning a
+look as ever, and thence I to White Hall, and there walked up and down
+till the King and Duke of York were ready to go forth; and here I met
+Will. Batelier, newly come post from France, his boots all dirty. He
+brought letters to the King, and I glad to see him, it having been
+reported that he was drowned, for some days past, and then, he being gone,
+I to talk with Tom Killigrew, who told me and others, talking about the
+playhouse, that he is fain to keep a woman on purpose at 20s. a week to
+satisfy 8 or 10 of the young men of his house, whom till he did so he
+could never keep to their business, and now he do. By and by the King
+comes out, and so I took coach, and followed his coaches to my Lord
+Keeper's, at Essex House, where I never was before, since I saw my old
+Lord Essex lie in state when he was dead; a large, but ugly house. Here
+all the Officers of the Navy attended, and by and by were called in to the
+King and Cabinet, where my Lord, who was ill, did lie upon the bed, as my
+old Lord Treasurer, or Chancellor, heretofore used to; and the business
+was to know in what time all the King's ships might be repaired, fit for
+service. The Surveyor answered, in two years, and not sooner. I did give
+them hopes that, with supplies of money suitable, we might have them all
+fit for sea some part of the summer after this. Then they demanded in
+what time we could set out forty ships. It was answered, as they might be
+chosen of the newest and most ready, we could, with money, get forty ready
+against May. The King seemed mighty full that we should have money to do
+all that we desired, and satisfied that, without it, nothing could be
+done: and so, without determining any thing, we were dismissed; and I
+doubt all will end in some little fleete this year, and those of hired
+merchant-men, which would indeed be cheaper to the King, and have many
+conveniences attending it, more than to fit out the King's own; and this,
+I perceive, is designed, springing from Sir W. Coventry's counsel; and the
+King and most of the Lords, I perceive, full of it, to get the King's
+fleete all at once in condition for service. Thence I with Mr. Wren in
+his coach to my cozen Turner's for discourse sake, and in our way he told
+me how the business of the Parliament is wholly laid aside, it being
+overruled now, that they shall not meet, but must be prorogued, upon this
+argument chiefly, that all the differences between the two Houses, and
+things on foot, that were matters of difference and discontent, may be
+laid aside, and must begin again, if ever the House shall have a mind to
+pursue them. They must begin all anew. Here he set me down, and I to my
+cozen Turner, and stayed and talked a little; and so took my wife, and
+home, and there to make her read, and then to supper, and to bed. At
+supper come W. Batelier and supped with us, and told us many pretty things
+of France, and the greatness of the present King.
+
+25th. Up, and to the Committee of Tangier, where little done, and thence
+I home by my own coach, and busy after dinner at my office all the
+afternoon till late at night, that my eyes were tired. So home, and my
+wife shewed me many excellent prints of Nanteuil's and others, which W.
+Batelier hath, at my desire, brought me out of France, of the King, and
+Colbert, and others, most excellent, to my great content. But he hath
+also brought a great many gloves perfumed, of several sorts; but all too
+big by half for her, and yet she will have two or three dozen of them,
+which vexed me, and made me angry. So she, at last, to please me, did
+come to take what alone I thought fit, which pleased me. So, after a
+little supper, to bed, my eyes being very bad.
+
+26th. Up, and to the office, where busy sitting all the morning. Then to
+the Office again, and then to White Hall, leaving my wife at Unthanke's;
+and I to the Secretary's chamber, where I was, by particular order, this
+day summoned to attend, as I find Sir D. Gawden also was. And here was the
+King and the Cabinet met; and, being called in, among the rest I find my
+Lord Privy Seale, whom I never before knew to be in so much play, as to be
+of the Cabinet. The business is, that the Algerines have broke the peace
+with us, by taking some Spaniards and goods out of an English ship, which
+had the Duke of York's pass, of which advice come this day; and the King
+is resolved to stop Sir Thomas Allen's fleete from coming home till he
+hath amends made him for this affront, and therefore sent for us to advise
+about victuals to be sent to that fleete, and some more ships; wherein I
+answered them to what they demanded of me, which was but some few mean
+things; but I see that on all these occasions they seem to rely most upon
+me. And so, this being done, I took coach and took up my wife and
+straight home, and there late at the office busy, and then home, and there
+I find W. Batelier hath also sent the books which I made him bring me out
+of France. Among others, L'Estat, de France, Marnix, &c., to my great
+content; and so I was well pleased with them, and shall take a time to
+look them over: as also one or two printed musick-books of songs; but my
+eyes are now too much out of tune to look upon them with any pleasure,
+therefore to supper and to bed.
+
+27th. Up, and with Sir John Minnes in his coach to White Hall, where
+first we waited on the Lords of the Treasury about finishing the
+Victualling Contract; and there also I was put to it to make good our
+letter complaining against my Lord Anglesey's failing us in the payment of
+the moneys assigned us upon the Customs, where Mr. Fenn was, and I know
+will tell my Lord; but it is no matter, I am over shy already, and
+therefore must not fear. Then we up to a Committee of the Council for the
+Navy, about a business of Sir D. Gawden's relating to the Victualling, and
+thence I by hackney to the Temple to the Auditor's man, and with him to a
+tavern to meet with another under-auditor to advise about the clearing of
+my Lord Bellasses' accounts without injuring myself and perplexing my
+accounts, and so thence away to my cozen Turner's, where I find Roger
+Pepys come last night to town, and here is his mistress, Mrs. Dickenson,
+and by and by comes in Mr. Turner, a worthy, sober, serious man--I honour
+him mightily. And there we dined, having but an ordinary dinner; and so,
+after dinner, she, and I, and Roger, and his mistress, to the Duke of
+York's playhouse, and there saw "The Five Hours' Adventure," which hath
+not been acted a good while before, but once, and is a most excellent
+play, I must confess. My wife and The. come after us, after they had been
+to buy some things abroad, and so after the play done we to see them home,
+and then home ourselves, and my wife to read to me, and so to supper and
+to bed.
+
+28th. Up, and to the office, where all the afternoon, also after dinner,
+and there late dispatching much business, and then home to supper with my
+wife, and to get her to read to me, and here I did find that Mr. Sheres
+hath, beyond his promise, not only got me a candlestick made me, after a
+form he remembers to have seen in Spain, for keeping the light from one's
+eyes, but hath got it done in silver very neat, and designs to give it me,
+in thanks for my paying him his L100 in money, for his service at Tangier,
+which was ordered him; but I do intend to force him to make me [pay] for
+it. But I yet, without his direction, cannot tell how it is to be made
+use of. So after a little reading to bed.
+
+29th. Up, and with W. Hewer in Colonel Middleton's coach to White Hall,
+and there to the Duke of York, to attend him, where among other things I
+did give a severe account of our proceedings, and what we found, in the
+business of Sir W. Jenings's demand of Supernumeraries. I thought it a
+good occasion to make an example of him, for he is a proud, idle fellow;
+and it did meet with the Duke of York's acceptance and well-liking; and he
+did call him in, after I had done, and did not only give him a soft
+rebuke, but condemns him to pay both their victuals and wages, or right
+himself of the purser. This I was glad of, and so were all the rest of
+us, though I know I have made myself an immortal enemy by it. Thence home
+by hackney, calling Roger Pepys at the Temple gate in the bookseller's
+shop, and to the Old Exchange, where I staid a little to invite my uncle
+Wight, and so home, and there find my aunt Wight and her husband come
+presently, and so to dinner; and after dinner Roger, and I, and my wife,
+and aunt, to see Mr. Cole; but he nor his wife was within, but we looked
+upon his picture of Cleopatra, which I went principally to see, being so
+much commended by my wife and aunt; but I find it a base copy of a good
+originall, that vexed me to hear so much commended. Thence to see Creed's
+wife, and did so, and staid a while, where both of them within; and here I
+met Mr. Bland, newly come from Gales [Cadiz] after his differences with
+Norwood. I think him a foolish, light-headed man; but certainly he hath
+been abused in this matter by Colonel Norwood. Here Creed shewed me a copy
+of some propositions, which Bland and others, in the name of the
+Corporation of Tangier, did present to Norwood, for his opinion in, in
+order to the King's service, which were drawn up very humbly, and were
+really good things; but his answer to them was in the most shitten proud,
+carping, insolent, and ironically-prophane stile, that ever I saw in my
+life, so as I shall never think the place can do well, while he is there.
+Here, after some talk, and Creed's telling us that he is upon taking the
+next house to his present lodgings, which is next to that that my cozen
+Tom Pepys once lived in, in Newport Street, in Covent Garden; and is in a
+good place, and then, I suppose, he will keep his coach. So, setting
+Roger down at the Temple, who tells me that he is now concluded in all
+matters with his widow, we home, and there hired my wife to make an end of
+Boyle's Book of Formes, to-night and to-morrow; and so fell to read and
+sup, and then to bed. This day, Mr. Ned Pickering brought his lady to see
+my wife, in acknowledgment of a little present of oranges and olives,
+which I sent her, for his kindness to me in the buying of my horses, which
+was very civil. She is old, but hath, I believe, been a pretty comely
+woman:
+
+30th. Lay long in bed, it being a fast-day for the murder of the late
+King; and so up and to church, where Dr. Hicks made a dull sermon; and so
+home, and there I find W. Batelier and Balty, and they dined with us, and
+I spent all the afternoon with my wife and W. Batelier talking, and then
+making them read, and particularly made an end of Mr. Boyle's Book of
+Formes, which I am glad to have over, and then fell to read a French
+discourse, which he hath brought over with him for me, to invite the
+people of France to apply themselves to Navigation, which it do very well,
+and is certainly their interest, and what will undo us in a few years, if
+the King of France goes on to fit up his Navy, and encrease it and his
+trade, as he hath begun. At night to supper, and after supper, and W.
+Batelier gone, my wife begun another book I lately bought, called "The
+State of England," which promises well, and is worth reading, and so after
+a while to bed.
+
+31st (Lord's day). Lay long talking with pleasure, and so up and I to
+church, and there did hear the Doctor that is lately turned Divine, I have
+forgot his name, I met him a while since at Sir D. Gawden's at dinner, Dr.
+Waterhouse! He preaches in a devout manner of way, not elegant nor very
+persuasive, but seems to mean well, and that he would preach holily; and
+was mighty passionate against people that make a scoff of religion. And,
+the truth is, I did observe Mrs. Hollworthy smile often, and many others
+of the parish, who, I perceive, have known him, and were in mighty
+expectation of hearing him preach, but could not forbear smiling, and she
+particularly upon me, and I on her. So home to dinner: and before dinner
+to my Office, to set down my journal for this week, and then home to
+dinner; and after dinner to get my wife and boy, one after another, to
+read to me: and so spent the afternoon and the evening, and so after
+supper to bed. And thus endeth this month, with many different days of
+sadness and mirth, from differences between me and my wife, from her
+remembrance of my late unkindness to her with Willet, she not being able
+to forget it, but now and then hath her passionate remembrance of it as
+often as prompted to it by any occasion; but this night we are at present
+very kind. And so ends this month.
+
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Dine with them, at my cozen Roger's mistress's
+ Dutchmen come out of the mouth and tail of a Hamburgh sow
+ Fain to keep a woman on purpose at 20s. a week
+ Find it a base copy of a good originall, that vexed me
+ Found in my head and body about twenty lice, little and great
+ I have itched mightily these 6 or 7 days
+ I know I have made myself an immortal enemy by it
+ Lady Castlemayne is now in a higher command over the King
+ Mighty fond in the stories she tells of her son Will
+ Observing my eyes to be mightily employed in the playhouse
+ Proud, carping, insolent, and ironically-prophane stile
+ She finds that I am lousy
+ Unquiet which her ripping up of old faults will give me
+ Up, and with W. Hewer, my guard, to White Hall
+ Weeping to myself for grief, which she discerning, come to bed
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Diary of Samuel Pepys, January 1668/69
+by Samuel Pepys
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