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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 05:29:54 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 05:29:54 -0700 |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/7554-h.zip b/7554-h.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c14e411 --- /dev/null +++ b/7554-h.zip diff --git a/7554-h/7554-h.htm b/7554-h/7554-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..55f8e23 --- /dev/null +++ b/7554-h/7554-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,2731 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="us-ascii"?> + +<!DOCTYPE html + PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" > + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> + <head> + <meta name="linkgenerator" content="HTML-Kit Tools HTML Tidy plugin" /> + <title> + QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM THE DIARY OF PEPYS + </title> + <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve"> + + body { margin:5%; background:#faebd7; text-align:justify} + P { text-indent: 2em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; } + H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; } + hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;} + .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; } + blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;} + .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;} + .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;} + .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;} + div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; } + .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;} + .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;} + pre { font-family: Times; font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;} + +</style> + </head> + <body> + <h2> + QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM THE DIARY OF PEPYS + </h2> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quotes and Images From The Diary of Samuel +Pepys, by Samuel Pepys, Edited and Arranged by David Widger + +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: Quotes and Images From The Diary of Samuel Pepys + +Author: Samuel Pepys + +Editor: David Widger + +Release Date: September 3, 2004 [EBook #7554] +Last Updated: October 26, 2012 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FOR PEPYS *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +</pre> + <div class="mynote"> + <i><a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/7554/old/orig7554-h/main.htm"> + LINK TO THE ORIGINAL HTML FILE: This Ebook Has Been Reformatted For Better + Appearance In Mobile Viewers Such As Kindles And Others. The Original + Format, Which The Editor Believes Has A More Attractive Appearance For + Laptops And Other Computers, May Be Viewed By Clicking On This Box.</a></i> + </div> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <h1> + THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS + </h1> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <h2> + By Samuel Pepys + </h2> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="medallion.jpg (35K)" src="images/medallion.jpg" width="100%" /><br /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="titlepage.jpg (33K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100%" /><br /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="pepys1.jpg (25K)" src="images/pepys1.jpg" width="100%" /><br /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="pepys2.jpg (23K)" src="images/pepys2.jpg" width="100%" /><br /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="pepys3.jpg (40K)" src="images/pepys3.jpg" width="100%" /><br /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="pepys4.jpg (22K)" src="images/pepys4.jpg" width="100%" /><br /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="pepys5.jpg (75K)" src="images/pepys5.jpg" width="100%" /><br /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="wife.jpg (42K)" src="images/wife.jpg" width="100%" /><br /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + + +20s. in money, and what wine she +needed, for the burying him + +A good handsome wench I kissed, the +first that I have seen + +A fair salute on horseback, in +Rochester streets, of the lady + +A most conceited fellow and not over +much in him + +A conceited man, but of no Logique in +his head at all + +A pretty man, I would be content to +break a commandment with him + +A lady spit backward upon me by a +mistake + +A play not very good, though commended +much + +A cat will be a cat still + +A book the Bishops will not let be +printed again + +A most tedious, unreasonable, and +impertinent sermon + +About two o'clock, too late and too +soon to go home to bed + +Academy was dissolved by order of the +Pope + +Act of Council passed, to put out all +Papists in office + +Advantage a man of the law hath over +all other people + +Afeard of being louzy + + +After taking leave of my wife, which we +could hardly do kindly + +After awhile I caressed her and parted +seeming friends + +After many protestings by degrees I did +arrive at what I would + +After oysters, at first course, a hash +of rabbits, a lamb + +After a harsh word or two my wife and I +good friends + +All ended in love + +All made much worse in their report +among people than they are + +All the fleas came to him and not to me + +All divided that were bred so long at +school together + +All may see how slippery places all +courtiers stand in + +All things to be managed with faction + +All the towne almost going out of towne +(Plague panic) + +Ambassador—that he is an honest man +sent to lie abroad + +Among many lazy people that the +diligent man becomes necessary + +An exceeding pretty lass, and right for +the sport + +An offer of L500 for a Baronet's +dignity + +And for his beef, says he, "Look how +fat it is" + +And if ever I fall on it again, I +deserve to be undone + +And a deal of do of which I am weary + +And they did lay pigeons to his feet + +And there, did what I would with her + +And so to sleep till the morning, but +was bit cruelly + +And so to bed and there entertained her +with great content + +And feeling for a chamber-pott, there +was none + +And with the great men in curing of +their claps + +And so by coach, though hard to get it, +being rainy, home + +Angry, and so continued till bed, and +did not sleep friends + +Aptness I have to be troubled at any +thing that crosses me + +Archbishop is a wencher, and known to +be so + +As much his friend as his interest will +let him + +As very a gossip speaking of her +neighbours as any body + +As all other women, cry, and yet talk +of other things + +As he called it, the King's seventeenth +whore abroad + +As all things else did not come up to +my expectations + +Asleep, while the wench sat mending my +breeches by my bedside + +At least 12 or 14,000 people in the +street (to see the hanging) + +At a loss whether it will be better for +me to have him die + +Badge of slavery upon the whole people +(taxes) + +Baker's house in Pudding Lane, where +the late great fire begun + +Baseness and looseness of the Court + +Bath at the top of his house + +Beare-garden + +Because I would not be over sure of any +thing + +Before I sent my boy out with them, I +beat him for a lie + +Begun to smell, and so I caused it to +be set forth (corpse) + +Being there, and seeming to do +something, while we do not + +Being cleansed of lice this day by my +wife + +Being very poor and mean as to the +bearing with trouble + +Being taken with a Psalmbook or +Testament + +Below what people think these great +people say and do + +Best fence against the Parliament's +present fury is delay + +Better now than never + +Bewailing the vanity and disorders of +the age + +Bite at the stone, and not at the hand +that flings it + +Bleeding behind by leeches will cure +him + +Bold to deliver what he thinks on every +occasion + +Book itself, and both it and them not +worth a turd + +Bookseller's, and there looked for +Montaigne's Essays + +Bottle of strong water; whereof now and +then a sip did me good + +Bought for the love of the binding +three books + +Bought Montaigne's Essays, in English + +Bowling-ally (where lords and ladies +are now at bowles) + +Boy up to-night for his sister to teach +him to put me to bed + +Bring me a periwig, but it was full of +nits + +Bringing over one discontented man, you +raise up three + +Bristol milk (the sherry) in the vaults + +Broken sort of people, that have not +much to lose + +Burned it, that it might not be among +my books to my shame + +Business of abusing the Puritans begins +to grow stale + +But a woful rude rabble there was, and +such noises + +But so fearful I am of discontenting my +wife + +But I think I am not bound to discover +myself + +But we were friends again as we are +always + +But this the world believes, and so let +them + +But if she will ruin herself, I cannot +help it + +But my wife vexed, which vexed me + +Buy some roll-tobacco to smell to and +chaw + +Buying up of goods in case there should +be war + +Buying his place of my Lord Barkely + +By his many words and no understanding, +confound himself + +By chewing of tobacco is become very +fat and sallow + +By and by met at her chamber, and there +did what I would + +By her wedding-ring, I suppose he hath +married her at last + +Called at a little ale-house, and had +an eele pye + +Came to bed to me, but all would not +make me friends + +Cannot bring myself to mind my business + +Cannot be clean to go so many bodies +together in the same water + +Cast stones with his horne crooke + +Castlemayne is sicke again, people +think, slipping her filly + +Catched cold yesterday by putting off +my stockings + +Catholiques are everywhere and bold + +Cavaliers have now the upper hand clear +of the Presbyterians + +Charles Barkeley's greatness is only +his being pimp to the King + +Chocolate was introduced into England +about the year 1652 + +Church, where a most insipid young +coxcomb preached + +City to be burned, and the Papists to +cut our throats + +Clap of the pox which he got about +twelve years ago + +Clean myself with warm water; my wife +will have me + +Comb my head clean, which I found so +foul with powdering + +Come to see them in bed together, on +their wedding-night + +Come to us out of bed in his furred +mittens and furred cap + +Comely black woman.—[The old +expression for a brunette.] + +Coming to lay out a great deal of money +in clothes for my wife + +Commons, where there is nothing done +but by passion, and faction + +Compliment from my aunt, which I take +kindly as it is unusual + +Confidence, and vanity, and disparages +everything + +Confusion of years in the case of the +months of January (etc.) + +Consult my pillow upon that and every +great thing of my life + +Content as to be at our own home, after +being abroad awhile + +Contracted for her as if he had been +buying a horse + +Convenience of periwiggs is so great + +Could not saw above 4 inches of the +stone in a day + +Counterfeit mirthe and pleasure with +them, but had but little + +Court is in a way to ruin all for their +pleasures + +Court attendance infinite tedious + +Craft and cunning concerning the buying +and choosing of horses + +Credit of this office hath received by +this rogue's occasion + +Cruel custom of throwing at cocks on +Shrove Tuesday + +Cure of the King's evil, which he do +deny altogether + +Dare not oppose it alone for making an +enemy and do no good + +Declared he will never have another +public mistress again + +Delight to see these poor fools decoyed +into our condition + +Deliver her from the hereditary curse +of child-bearing + +Desk fastened to one of the armes of +his chayre + +Did dig another, and put our wine in +it; and I my Parmazan cheese + +Did extremely beat him, and though it +did trouble me to do it + +Did so watch to see my wife put on +drawers, which (she did) + +Did take me up very prettily in one or +two things that I said + +Did much insist upon the sin of +adultery + +Did go to Shoe Lane to see a +cocke-fighting at a new pit there + +Did find none of them within, which I +was glad of + +Did tumble them all the afternoon as I +pleased + +Did trouble me very much to be at +charge to no purpose + +Did see the knaveries and tricks of +jockeys + +Did not like that Clergy should meddle +with matters of state + +Did put evil thoughts in me, but +proceeded no further + +Dined with my wife on pease porridge +and nothing else + +Dined upon six of my pigeons, which my +wife has resolved to kill + +Dined at home alone, a good calves head +boiled and dumplings + +Dinner, an ill and little mean one, +with foul cloth and dishes + +Discontented at the pride and luxury of +the Court + +Discontented that my wife do not go +neater now she has two maids + +Discourse of Mr. Evelyn touching all +manner of learning + +Discoursed much against a man's lying +with his wife in Lent + +Discoursing upon the sad condition of +the times + +Disease making us more cruel to one +another than if we are doggs + +Disorder in the pit by its raining in, +from the cupola + +Disquiet all night, telling of the +clock till it was daylight + +Do outdo the Lords infinitely (debates +in the Commons) + +Do look upon me as a remembrancer of +his former vanity + +Do bury still of the plague seven or +eight in a day + +Doe from Cobham, when the season comes, +bucks season being past + +Dog attending us, which made us all +merry again + +Dog, that would turn a sheep any way +which + +Doubtfull of himself, and easily be +removed from his own opinion + +Down to the Whey house and drank some +and eat some curds + +Dr. Calamy is this day sent to Newgate +for preaching + +Drink a dish of coffee + +Driven down again with a stinke by Sir +W. Pen's shying of a pot + +Duke of York and Mrs. Palmer did talk +to one another very wanton + +Duodecimal arithmetique + +Durst not take notice of her, her +husband being there + +Dying this last week of the plague 112, +from 43 the week before + +Eat some of the best cheese-cakes that +ever I eat in my life + +Eat of the best cold meats that ever I +eat on in all my life + +Eat a mouthful of pye at home to stay +my stomach + +Eat some butter and radishes + +Enough existed to build a ship (Pieces +of the true Cross) + +Enquiring into the selling of places do +trouble a great many + +Erasmus "de scribendis epistolis" + +Even to the having bad words with my +wife, and blows too + +Every man looking after himself, and +his owne lust and luxury + +Every small thing is enough now-a-days +to bring a difference + +Every body leads, and nobody follows + +Every body is at a great losse and +nobody can tell + +Every body's looks, and discourse in +the street is of death + +Exceeding kind to me, more than usual, +which makes me afeard + +Exclaiming against men's wearing their +hats on in the church + +Excommunications, which they send upon +the least occasions + +Expectation of profit will have its +force + +Expected musique, the missing of which +spoiled my dinner + +Faced white coat, made of one of my +wife's pettycoates + +Familiarity with her other servants is +it that spoils them all + +Fanatiques do say that the end of the +world is at hand + +Fashionable and black spots + +Fear all his kindness is but only his +lust to her + +Fear that the goods and estate would be +seized (after suicide) + +Fear it may do him no good, but me hurt + +Fear I shall not be able to wipe my +hands of him again + +Fear she should prove honest and refuse +and then tell my wife + +Feared I might meet with some people +that might know me + +Fearful that I might not go far enough +with my hat off + +Fears some will stand for the +tolerating of Papists + +Fell to sleep as if angry + +Fell a-crying for joy, being all +maudlin and kissing one another + +Fell to dancing, the first time that +ever I did in my life + +Fetch masts from New England + +Feverish, and hath sent for Mr. Pierce +to let him blood + +Few in any age that do mind anything +that is abstruse + +Find that now and then a little +difference do no hurte + +Find it a base copy of a good +originall, that vexed me + +Find myself to over-value things when a +child + +Finding my wife not sick, but yet out +of order + +Finding my wife's clothes lie +carelessly laid up + +Fire grow; and, as it grew darker, +appeared more and more + +First time that ever I heard the organs +in a cathedral + +First their apes, that they may be +afterwards their slaves + +First thing of that nature I did ever +give her (L10 ring) + +First time I had given her leave to +wear a black patch + +Fixed that the year should commence in +January instead of March + +Fool's play with which all publick +things are done + +For my quiet would not enquire into it + +For, for her part, she should not be +buried in the commons + +For a land-tax and against a general +excise + +For I will not be inward with him that +is open to another + +For I will be hanged before I seek to +him, unless I see I need + +Force a man to swear against himself + +Forced to change gold, 8s. 7d.; +servants and poor, 1s. 6d. + +Forgetting many things, which her +master beat her for + +Formerly say that the King was a +bastard and his mother a whore + +Found my brother John at eight o'clock +in bed, which vexed me + +Found him a fool, as he ever was, or +worse + +Found him not so ill as I thought that +he had been ill + +Found in my head and body about twenty +lice, little and great + +Found to be with child, do never stir +out of their beds + +Found guilty, and likely will be hanged +(for stealing spoons) + +France, which is accounted the best +place for bread + +Frequent trouble in things we deserve +best in + +Frogs and many insects do often fall +from the sky, ready formed + +From some fault in the meat to complain +of my maid's sluttery + +Gadding abroad to look after beauties + +Galileo's air thermometer, made before +1597 + +Gamester's life, which I see is very +miserable, and poor + +Gave him his morning draft + +Generally with corruption, but most +indeed with neglect + +Gentlewomen did hold up their heads to +be kissed by the King + +Get his lady to trust herself with him +into the tavern + +Give the King of France Nova Scotia, +which he do not like + +Give her a Lobster and do so touse her +and feel her all over + +Give the other notice of the future +state, if there was any + +Glad to be at friendship with me, +though we hate one another + +Gladder to have just now received it +(than a promise) + +God knows that I do not find honesty +enough in my own mind + +God forgive me! what thoughts and +wishes I had + +God help him, he wants bread. + +God forgive me! what a mind I had to +her + +God! what an age is this, and what a +world is this + + +Going with her woman to a hot-house to +bathe herself + +Gold holds up its price still + +Goldsmiths in supplying the King with +money at dear rates + +Good sport of the bull's tossing of the +dogs + +Good wine, and anchovies, and pickled +oysters (for breakfast) + +Good purpose of fitting ourselves for +another war (A Peace) + +Good writers are not admired by the +present + +Got her upon my knee (the coach being +full) and played with her + +Great thaw it is not for a man to walk +the streets + +Great newes of the Swedes declaring for +us against the Dutch + +Great deale of tittle tattle discourse +to little purpose + +Great many silly stories they tell of +their sport + +Greater number of Counsellors is, the +more confused the issue + +Greatest businesses are done so +superficially + +Had no more manners than to invite me +and to let me pay + +Had his hand cut off, and was hanged +presently! + + +Had what pleasure almost I would with +her + +Had the umbles of it for dinner + +Half a pint of Rhenish wine at the +Still-yard, mixed with beer + +Hanged with a silken halter + +Hanging jack to roast birds on + +Hard matter to settle to business after +so much leisure + +Hate in others, and more in myself, to +be careless of keys + +Hates to have any body mention what he +had done the day before + +Hath not a liberty of begging till he +hath served three years + +Hath a good heart to bear, or a cunning +one to conceal his evil + +Hath given her the pox, but I hope it +is not so + +Have not known her this fortnight +almost, which is a pain to me + +Have not any awe over them from the +King's displeasure (Commons) + +Have not much to lose, and therefore +will venture all + +Have been so long absent that I am +ashamed to go + +Having some experience, but greater +conceit of it than is fit + +He that will not stoop for a pin, will +never be worth a pound + +He made but a poor sermon, but long + +He has been inconvenienced by being too +free in discourse + +He having made good promises, though I +fear his performance + +He hoped he should live to see her +"ugly and willing" + +He is too wise to be made a friend of + +He was fain to lie in the priest's hole +a good while + +He was charged with making himself +popular + +He is, I perceive, wholly sceptical, as +well as I + +He is a man of no worth in the world +but compliment + +He is not a man fit to be told what one +hears + +Heard noises over their head upon the +leads + +Heeling her on one side to make her +draw little water + +Helping to slip their calfes when there +is occasion + +Her months upon her is gone to bed + +Here I first saw oranges grow + +Hired her to procure this poor soul for +him + +His enemies have done him as much good +as he could wish + +His readiness to speak spoilt all + +His satisfaction is nothing worth, it +being easily got + +His company ever wearys me + +Holes for me to see from my closet into +the great office + +Hopes to have had a bout with her +before she had gone + +Houses marked with a red cross upon the +doors + +How the Presbyterians would be angry if +they durst + +How highly the Presbyters do talk in +the coffeehouses still + +How little merit do prevail in the +world, but only favour + +How little heed is had to the prisoners +and sicke and wounded + +How unhappily a man may fall into a +necessity of bribing people + +How natural it is for us to slight +people out of power + +How little to be presumed of in our +greatest undertakings + +Hugged, it being cold now in the +mornings . . . . + +I took occasion to be angry with him + +I could not forbear to love her +exceedingly + +I do not value her, or mind her as I +ought + +I did what I would, and might have done +anything else + +I have itched mightily these 6 or 7 +days + +I know not whether to be glad or sorry + +I was as merry as I could counterfeit +myself to be + +I could have answered, but forbore + +I have a good mind to have the +maidenhead of this girl + +I know not how in the world to abstain +from reading + +I fear that it must be as it can, and +not as I would + +I had six noble dishes for them, +dressed by a man-cook + +I find her painted, which makes me +loathe her (cosmetics) + +I did get her hand to me under my cloak + +I perceive no passion in a woman can be +lasting long + +I having now seen a play every day this +week + +I was very angry, and resolve to beat +him to-morrow + +I know not yet what that is, and am +ashamed to ask + +I do not like his being angry and in +debt both together to me + +I will not by any over submission make +myself cheap + +I slept soundly all the sermon + +I and she never were so heartily angry +in our lives as to-day + +I calling her beggar, and she me +pricklouse, which vexed me + +I love the treason I hate the traitor + +I would not enquire into anything, but +let her talk + +I kissed the bride in bed, and so the +curtaines drawne + +I have promised, but know not when I +shall perform + +I met a dead corps of the plague, in +the narrow ally + +I am a foole to be troubled at it, +since I cannot helpe it + +I was exceeding free in dallying with +her, and she not unfree + +I was a great Roundhead when I was a +boy + +I pray God to make me able to pay for +it. + +I took a broom and basted her till she +cried extremely + +I was demanded L100, for the fee of the +office at 6d. a pound + +I never designed to be a witness +against any man + +I fear is not so good as she should be + +If the exportations exceed importations + +If it should come in print my name +maybe at it + +Ill from my late cutting my hair so +close to my head + +Ill all this day by reason of the last +night's debauch + +Ill sign when we are once to come to +study how to excuse + +Ill humour to be so against that which +all the world cries up + +Ill-bred woman, would take exceptions +at anything any body said + +In my nature am mighty unready to +answer no to anything + +In men's clothes, and had the best legs +that ever I saw + +In our graves (as Shakespeere resembles +it) we could dream + +In discourse he seems to be wise and +say little + +In perpetual trouble and vexation that +need it least + +In comes Mr. North very sea-sick from +shore + +In a hackney and full of people, was +ashamed to be seen + +In my dining-room she was doing +something upon the pott + +Inconvenience that do attend the +increase of a man's fortune + +Inoffensive vanity of a man who loved +to see himself in the glass + +Instructed by Shakespeare himself + +Irish in Ireland, whom Cromwell had +settled all in one corner + +It not being handsome for our servants +to sit so equal with us + +Justice of God in punishing men for the +sins of their ancestors + +Justice of proceeding not to condemn a +man unheard + +Keep at interest, which is a good, +quiett, and easy profit + +King is at the command of any woman +like a slave + +King shall not be able to whip a cat + +King was gone to play at Tennis + +King hath lost his power, by submitting +himself to this way + +King do resolve to declare the Duke of +Monmouth legitimate + +King himself minding nothing but his +ease + +King is not at present in purse to do + +King is mighty kind to these his +bastard children + +King the necessity of having, at least, +a show of religion + +King be desired to put all Catholiques +out of employment + +King still do doat upon his women, even +beyond all shame + +King is offended with the Duke of +Richmond's marrying + +King of France did think other princes +fit for nothing + +King governed by his lust, and women, +and rogues about him + +King do tire all his people that are +about him with early rising + +King's service is undone, and those +that trust him perish + +King's Proclamation against drinking, +swearing, and debauchery + +Kingdom will fall back again to a +commonwealth + +Kiss my Parliament, instead of "Kiss my +[rump]" + +Know yourself to be secure, in being +necessary to the office + +L'escholle des filles, a lewd book + +Lady Castlemayne is compounding with +the King for a pension + +Lady Duchesse the veryest slut and +drudge + +Lady Batten to give me a spoonful of +honey for my cold + +Lady Castlemaine is still as great with +the King + +Lady Castlemayne's nose out of joynt + +Lady Castlemayne is now in a higher +command over the King + +Lady Castlemayne do rule all at this +time as much as ever + +Laissez nous affaire—Colbert + +Last day of their doubtfulness touching +her being with child + +Last act of friendship in telling me of +my faults also + +Laughing and jeering at every thing +that looks strange + +Lay long caressing my wife and talking + +Lay long in bed talking and pleasing +myself with my wife + +Lay chiding, and then pleased with my +wife in bed + +Lay with her to-night, which I have not +done these eight (days) + +Learned the multiplication table for +the first time in 1661 + +Learnt a pretty trick to try whether a +woman be a maid or no + +Lechery will never leave him + +Let me blood, about sixteen ounces, I +being exceedingly full + +Let her brew as she has baked + +Lewdness and beggary of the Court + +Liability of a husband to pay for goods +supplied his wife + +Liberty of speech in the House + +Listening to no reasoning for it, be it +good or bad + +Little content most people have in the +peace + +Little children employed, every one to +do something + +Little worth of this world, to buy it +with so much pain + +Long cloaks being now quite out + +Look askew upon my wife, because my +wife do not buckle to them + +Lord! to see the absurd nature of +Englishmen + +Lord! in the dullest insipid manner +that ever lover did + +Lust and wicked lives of the nuns +heretofore in England + +Luxury and looseness of the times + +Lying a great while talking and +sporting in bed with my wife + +Made a lazy sermon, like a Presbyterian + +Made to drink, that they might know him +not to be a Roundhead + +Made him admire my drawing a thing +presently in shorthand + +Magnifying the graces of the nobility +and prelates + +Make a man wonder at the good fortune +of such a fool + +Man cannot live without playing the +knave and dissimulation +Matters in Ireland are full of +discontent + +Meazles, we fear, or, at least, of a +scarlett feavour + +Methought very ill, or else I am grown +worse to please + +Milke, which I drank to take away, my +heartburne + +Mirrors which makes the room seem both +bigger and lighter + +Money I have not, nor can get + +Money, which sweetens all things + +Montaigne is conscious that we are +looking over his shoulder + +Most flat dead sermon, both for matter +and manner of delivery + +Most homely widow, but young, and +pretty rich, and good natured + +Mr. William Pen a Quaker again + +Much discourse, but little to be +learned + +Musique in the morning to call up our +new-married people + +Muske Millon + +My wife, coming up suddenly, did find +me embracing the girl + +My wife hath something in her gizzard, +that only waits + +My heart beginning to falsify in this +business + +My old folly and childishnesse hangs +upon me still + +My new silk suit, the first that ever I +wore in my life + +My Lord, who took physic to-day and was +in his chamber + +My wife will keep to one another and +let the world go hang + +My wife this night troubled at my +leaving her alone so much + +My wife was making of her tarts and +larding of her pullets + +My head was not well with the wine that +I drank to-day + +My first attempt being to learn the +multiplication-table + +My intention to learn to trill + +Necessary, and yet the peace is so bad +in its terms + +Never laughed so in all my life. I +laughed till my head ached + +Never, while he lives, truckle under +any body or any faction + +Never to trust too much to any man in +the world + +Never was known to keep two mistresses +in his life (Charles II.) + +Never could man say worse himself nor +have worse said + +New Netherlands to English rule, under +the title of New York + +No Parliament can, as he says, be kept +long good + +No manner of means used to quench the +fire + +No pleasure—only the variety of it + +No money to do it with, nor anybody to +trust us without it + +No man is wise at all times + +No man was ever known to lose the first +time + +No man knowing what to do, whether to +sell or buy + +No sense nor grammar, yet in as good +words that ever I saw + +No good by taking notice of it, for the +present she forbears + +Nonconformists do now preach openly in +houses + +None will sell us any thing without our +personal security given + +Nor would become obliged too much to +any + +Nor will yield that the Papists have +any ground given them + +Nor was there any pretty woman that I +did see, but my wife + +Nor offer anything, but just what is +drawn out of a man + +Not well, and so had no pleasure at all +with my poor wife + +Not eat a bit of good meat till he has +got money to pay the men + +Not the greatest wits, but the steady +man + +Not when we can, but when we list + +Not to be censured if their necessities +drive them to bad + +Not more than I expected, nor so much +by a great deal as I ought + +Not thinking them safe men to receive +such a gratuity + +Not permit her begin to do so, lest +worse should follow + +Nothing in the world done with true +integrity + +Nothing in it approaching that single +page in St. Simon + +Nothing of the memory of a man, an +houre after he is dead! + +Nothing is to be got without offending +God and the King + +Nothing of any truth and sincerity, but +mere envy and design + +Now above six months since (smoke from +the cellars) + +Offer me L500 if I would desist from +the Clerk of the Acts place + +Offered to stop the fire near his house +for such a reward + +Officers are four years behind-hand +unpaid + +Once a week or so I know a gentleman +must go . . . . + +Opening his mind to him as of one that +may hereafter be his foe + +Ordered him L2000, and he paid me my +quantum out of it + +Ordered in the yarde six or eight +bargemen to be whipped + +Origin in the use of a plane against +the grain of the wood + +Out also to and fro, to see and be seen + +Painful to keep money, as well as to +get it + +Parliament being vehement against the +Nonconformists + +Parliament hath voted 2s. per annum for +every chimney in England + +Parliament do agree to throw down +Popery + +Parson is a cunning fellow he is as any +of his coat + +Peace with France, which, as a +Presbyterian, he do not like + +Pen was then turned Quaker + +Periwigg he lately made me cleansed of +its nits + +Peruques of hair, as the fashion now is +for ladies to wear + +Pest coaches and put her into it to +carry her to a pest house + +Petition against hackney coaches + +Pit, where the bears are baited + +Plague claimed 68,596 victims (in 1665) + +Plague is much in Amsterdam, and we in +fears of it here + +Plague, forty last night, the bell +always going + +Play good, but spoiled with the ryme, +which breaks the sense + +Pleases them mightily, and me not at +all + +Poor seamen that lie starving in the +streets + +Posies for Rings, Handkerchers and +Gloves + +Pray God give me a heart to fear a +fall, and to prepare for it! + +Presbyterians against the House of +Lords + +Presse seamen, without which we cannot +really raise men + +Pressing in it as if none of us had +like care with him + +Pretends to a resolution of being +hereafter very clean + +Pretty sayings, which are generally +like paradoxes + +Pretty to see the young pretty ladies +dressed like men + +Pride of some persons and vice of most +was but a sad story + +Pride and debauchery of the present +clergy + +Protestants as to the Church of Rome +are wholly fanatiques + +Providing against a foule day to get as +much money into my hands + +Put up with too much care, that I have +forgot where they are + +Quakers being charmed by a string about +their wrists + +Quakers do still continue, and rather +grow than lessen + +Quakers and others that will not have +any bell ring for them + +Rabbit not half roasted, which made me +angry with my wife + +Raising of our roofs higher to enlarge +our houses + +Reading to my wife and brother +something in Chaucer + +Reading over my dear "Faber fortunae," +of my Lord Bacon's + +Receive the applications of people, and +hath presents + +Reckon nothing money but when it is in +the bank + +Reduced the Dutch settlement of New +Netherlands to English rule + +Rejoiced over head and ears in this +good newes + +Removing goods from one burned house to +another + +Reparation for what we had embezzled + +Requisite I be prepared against the +man's friendship + +Resolve to have the doing of it +himself, or else to hinder it + +Resolve to live well and die a beggar + +Resolved to go through it, and it is +too late to help it now + +Resolving not to be bribed to dispatch +business + +Ridiculous nonsensical book set out by +Will. Pen, for the Quaker + +Rotten teeth and false, set in with +wire + +Sad sight it was: the whole City almost +on fire + +Sad for want of my wife, whom I love +with all my heart + +Said to die with the cleanest hands +that ever any Lord Treasurer + +Saw "Mackbeth," to our great content + +Saw two battles of cocks, wherein is no +great sport + +Saw his people go up and down louseing +themselves + +Saying, that for money he might be got +to our side + +Says, of all places, if there be hell, +it is here + +Says of wood, that it is an excrescence +of the earth + +Sceptic in all things of religion + +Scotch song of "Barbary Allen" + +Searchers with their rods in their +hands + +See whether my wife did wear drawers +to-day as she used to do + +See how a good dinner and feasting +reconciles everybody + +See how time and example may alter a +man + +Sent my wife to get a place to see +Turner hanged + +Sent me last night, as a bribe, a +barrel of sturgeon + +Sermon without affectation or study + +Sermon ended, and the church broke up, +and my amours ended also + +Sermon upon Original Sin, neither +understood by himself + +Sermon; but, it being a Presbyterian +one, it was so long + +Shakespeare's plays + +Shame such a rogue should give me and +all of us this trouble + +She is conceited that she do well +already + +She used the word devil, which vexed me + +She was so ill as to be shaved and +pidgeons put to her feet + +She begins not at all to take pleasure +in me or study to please + +She is a very good companion as long as +she is well + +She also washed my feet in a bath of +herbs, and so to bed + +She had got and used some puppy-dog +water + +She hath got her teeth new done by La +Roche + +She loves to be taken dressing herself, +as I always find her + +She so cruel a hypocrite that she can +cry when she pleases + +She finds that I am lousy + +Short of what I expected, as for the +most part it do fall out + +Shy of any warr hereafter, or to +prepare better for it + +Sick of it and of him for it + +Sicke men that are recovered, they +lying before our office doors + +Silence; it being seldom any wrong to a +man to say nothing + +Singing with many voices is not singing + +Sir W. Pen was so fuddled that we could +not try him to play + +Sir W. Pen did it like a base raskall, +and so I shall remember + +Sit up till 2 o'clock that she may call +the wench up to wash + +Slabbering my band sent home for +another + +Smoke jack consists of a wind-wheel +fixed in the chimney + +So home to supper, and to bed, it being +my wedding night + +So great a trouble is fear + +So to bed, to be up betimes by the +helpe of a larum watch + +So much is it against my nature to owe +anything to any body + +So home, and after supper did wash my +feet, and so to bed + +So home to prayers and to bed + +So I took occasion to go up and to bed +in a pet + +So to bed in some little discontent, +but no words from me + +So home and to supper with beans and +bacon and to bed + +So we went to bed and lay all night in +a quarrel + +So much wine, that I was even almost +foxed + +So good a nature that he cannot deny +any thing + +So time do alter, and do doubtless the +like in myself + +So home and to bed, where my wife had +not lain a great while + +So out, and lost our way, which made me +vexed + +So every thing stands still for money + +Softly up to see whether any of the +beds were out of order or no + +Some merry talk with a plain bold maid +of the house + +Some ends of my own in what advice I do +give her + +Sorry in some respect, glad in my +expectations in another respect + +Sorry for doing it now, because of +obliging me to do the like + +Sorry thing to be a poor King + +Spares not to blame another to defend +himself + +Sparrowgrass + +Speaks rarely, which pleases me +mightily + +Spends his time here most, playing at +bowles + +Sport to me to see him so earnest on so +little occasion + +Staid two hours with her kissing her, +but nothing more + +Statute against selling of offices + +Staying out late, and painting in the +absence of her husband + +Strange things he has been found guilty +of, not fit to name + +Strange the folly of men to lay and +lose so much money + +Strange how civil and tractable he was +to me + +Street ordered to be continued, forty +feet broad, from Paul's + +Subject to be put into a disarray upon +very small occasions + +Such open flattery is beastly + +Suffered her humour to spend, till we +begun to be very quiet + +Supper and to bed without one word one +to another + +Suspect the badness of the peace we +shall make + +Swear they will not go to be killed and +have no pay + +Take pins out of her pocket to prick me +if I should touch her + +Talk very highly of liberty of +conscience + +Taught my wife some part of subtraction + +Tax the same man in three or four +several capacities + +Tear all that I found either boyish or +not to be worth keeping + +Tell me that I speak in my dreams + +That I might not seem to be afeared + +That I may have nothing by me but what +is worth keeping + +That I may look as a man minding +business + +The unlawfull use of lawfull things + +The devil being too cunning to +discourage a gamester + +The most ingenious men may sometimes be +mistaken + +"The Alchymist,"—[Comedy by Ben Jonson] + +The barber came to trim me and wash me + +The present Irish pronunciation of +English + +The world do not grow old at all + +The ceremonies did not please me, they +do so overdo them + +The rest did give more, and did believe +that I did so too + +Thence by coach, with a mad coachman, +that drove like mad + +Thence to Mrs. Martin's, and did what I +would with her + +There is no passing but by coach in the +streets, and hardly that + +There eat and drank, and had my +pleasure of her twice + +There did 'tout ce que je voudrais +avec' her + +There setting a poor man to keep my +place + +There is no man almost in the City +cares a turd for him + +There being ten hanged, drawn, and +quartered + +These young Lords are not fit to do any +service abroad + +These Lords are hard to be trusted + +They were so false spelt that I was +ashamed of them + +They want where to set their feet, to +begin to do any thing + +This day churched, her month of +childbed being out + +This absence makes us a little strange +instead of more fond + +This week made a vow to myself to drink +no wine this week + +This day I began to put on buckles to +my shoes + +This unhappinesse of ours do give them +heart + +This kind of prophane, mad +entertainment they give themselves + +Those absent from prayers were to pay a +forfeit + +Those bred in the North among the +colliers are good for labour + +Though he knows, if he be not a fool, +that I love him not + +Thus it was my chance to see the King +beheaded at White Hall + +Tied our men back to back, and thrown +them all into the sea + +To Mr. Holliard's in the morning, +thinking to be let blood + +To be enjoyed while we are young and +capable of these joys + +To see Major-general Harrison hanged, +drawn; and quartered + +To the Swan and drank our morning draft + +To see the bride put to bed + +Too much of it will make her know her +force too much + +Took physique, and it did work very +well + +Tory—The term was not used politically +until about 1679 + +Tried the effect of my silence and not +provoking her + +Trouble, and more money, to every +Watch, to them to drink + +Troubled me, to see the confidence of +the vice of the age + +Trumpets were brought under the +scaffold that he not be heard + +Turn out every man that will be drunk, +they must turn out all + +Two shops in three, if not more, +generally shut up + +Uncertainty of all history + +Uncertainty of beauty + +Unless my too-much addiction to +pleasure undo me + +Unquiet which her ripping up of old +faults will give me + +Up, leaving my wife in bed, being sick +of her months + +Up, finding our beds good, but lousy; +which made us merry + +Up and took physique, but such as to go +abroad with + +Upon a very small occasion had a +difference again broke out + +Venison-pasty that we have for supper +to-night to the cook's + +Very angry we were, but quickly friends +again + +Very great tax; but yet I do think it +is so perplexed + +Vexed at my wife's neglect in leaving +of her scarf + +Vexed me, but I made no matter of it, +but vexed to myself + +Vices of the Court, and how the pox is +so common there + +Voyage to Newcastle for coles + +Waked this morning between four and +five by my blackbird + +Was kissing my wife, which I did not +like + +We are to go to law never to revenge, +but only to repayre + +We had a good surloyne of rost beefe + +Weary of it; but it will please the +citizens +Weather being very wet and hot to keep +meat in. + +What way a man could devise to lose so +much in so little time + +What I said would not hold water + +What I had writ foule in short hand + +What they all, through profit or fear, +did promise + +What a sorry dispatch these great +persons give to business + +What is there more to be had of a woman +than the possessing her + +Where money is free, there is great +plenty + +Where I find the worst very good + +Where a piece of the Cross is + +Where a trade hath once been and do +decay, it never recovers + +Where I expect most I find least +satisfaction + +Wherein every party has laboured to +cheat another + +Which he left him in the lurch + +Which I did give him some hope of, +though I never intend it + +Whip this child till the blood come, if +it were my child! + +Whip a boy at each place they stop at +in their procession + +Who is the most, and promises the +least, of any man + +Who we found ill still, but he do make +very much of it + +Who must except against every thing and +remedy nothing + +Whose red nose makes me ashamed to be +seen with him + +Willing to receive a bribe if it were +offered me + +Wine, new and old, with labells pasted +upon each bottle + +Wise man's not being wise at all times + +Wise men do prepare to remove abroad +what they have + +With much ado in an hour getting a +coach home + +With a shower of hail as big as walnuts + +Wonders that she cannot be as good +within as she is fair without + +World sees now the use of them for +shelter of men (fore-castles) + +Would make a dogg laugh + +Would either conform, or be more wise, +and not be catched! + +Would not make my coming troublesome to +any + +Wretch, n., often used as an expression +of endearment + +Wronged by my over great expectations + +Ye pulling down of houses, in ye way of +ye fire + + +</pre> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <p> + If you wish to read the entire context of any of these quotations, select + a short segment and copy it into your clipboard memory—then open the + appropriate eBook and paste the phrase into your computer's find or search + operation. + </p> + <h3> + <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/4/2/0/4200/4200.txt">The Diaries of + Samuel Pepys, Complete, In Plain Text</a> + </h3> + <p> + <br /> Or:<br /> + </p> + <h3> + <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4200/4200-h/4200-h.htm">The + Diaries of Samuel Pepys, Complete, Illustrated in HTML</a> + </h3> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <blockquote> + <p> + These quotations were collected from the eight volumes of the Diary of + Samuel Pepys by <a href="mailto:cdwidger@gmail.com">David Widger</a> + while preparing etexts for Project Gutenberg. 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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: Quotes and Images From The Diary of Samuel Pepys + +Author: Samuel Pepys + Edited and Arranged by David Widger + +Release Date: September 3, 2004 [EBook #7554] +[Last updated on February 19, 2007] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FOR PEPYS *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + +QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM THE DIARY OF PEPYS + + + + +THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS + + +By Samuel Pepys + + + + + + +20s. in money, and what wine she +needed, for the burying him + +A good handsome wench I kissed, the +first that I have seen + +A fair salute on horseback, in +Rochester streets, of the lady + +A most conceited fellow and not over +much in him + +A conceited man, but of no Logique in +his head at all + +A pretty man, I would be content to +break a commandment with him + +A lady spit backward upon me by a +mistake + +A play not very good, though commended +much + +A cat will be a cat still + +A book the Bishops will not let be +printed again + +A most tedious, unreasonable, and +impertinent sermon + +About two o'clock, too late and too +soon to go home to bed + +Academy was dissolved by order of the +Pope + +Act of Council passed, to put out all +Papists in office + +Advantage a man of the law hath over +all other people + +Afeard of being louzy + +After taking leave of my wife, which we +could hardly do kindly + +After awhile I caressed her and parted +seeming friends + +After many protestings by degrees I did +arrive at what I would + +After oysters, at first course, a hash +of rabbits, a lamb + +After a harsh word or two my wife and I +good friends + +All ended in love + +All made much worse in their report +among people than they are + +All the fleas came to him and not to me + +All divided that were bred so long at +school together + +All may see how slippery places all +courtiers stand in + +All things to be managed with faction + +All the towne almost going out of towne +(Plague panic) + +Ambassador--that he is an honest man +sent to lie abroad + +Among many lazy people that the +diligent man becomes necessary + +An exceeding pretty lass, and right for +the sport + +An offer of L500 for a Baronet's +dignity + +And for his beef, says he, "Look how +fat it is" + +And if ever I fall on it again, I +deserve to be undone + +And a deal of do of which I am weary + +And they did lay pigeons to his feet + +And there, did what I would with her + +And so to sleep till the morning, but +was bit cruelly + +And so to bed and there entertained her +with great content + +And feeling for a chamber-pott, there +was none + +And with the great men in curing of +their claps + +And so by coach, though hard to get it, +being rainy, home + +Angry, and so continued till bed, and +did not sleep friends + +Aptness I have to be troubled at any +thing that crosses me + +Archbishop is a wencher, and known to +be so + +As much his friend as his interest will +let him + +As very a gossip speaking of her +neighbours as any body + +As all other women, cry, and yet talk +of other things + +As he called it, the King's seventeenth +whore abroad + +As all things else did not come up to +my expectations + +Asleep, while the wench sat mending my +breeches by my bedside + +At least 12 or 14,000 people in the +street (to see the hanging) + +At a loss whether it will be better for +me to have him die + +Badge of slavery upon the whole people +(taxes) + +Baker's house in Pudding Lane, where +the late great fire begun + +Baseness and looseness of the Court + +Bath at the top of his house + +Beare-garden + +Because I would not be over sure of any +thing + +Before I sent my boy out with them, I +beat him for a lie + +Begun to smell, and so I caused it to +be set forth (corpse) + +Being there, and seeming to do +something, while we do not + +Being cleansed of lice this day by my +wife + +Being very poor and mean as to the +bearing with trouble + +Being taken with a Psalmbook or +Testament + +Below what people think these great +people say and do + +Best fence against the Parliament's +present fury is delay + +Better now than never + +Bewailing the vanity and disorders of +the age + +Bite at the stone, and not at the hand +that flings it + +Bleeding behind by leeches will cure +him + +Bold to deliver what he thinks on every +occasion + +Book itself, and both it and them not +worth a turd + +Bookseller's, and there looked for +Montaigne's Essays + +Bottle of strong water; whereof now and +then a sip did me good + +Bought for the love of the binding +three books + +Bought Montaigne's Essays, in English + +Bowling-ally (where lords and ladies +are now at bowles) + +Boy up to-night for his sister to teach +him to put me to bed + +Bring me a periwig, but it was full of +nits + +Bringing over one discontented man, you +raise up three + +Bristol milk (the sherry) in the vaults + +Broken sort of people, that have not +much to lose + +Burned it, that it might not be among +my books to my shame + +Business of abusing the Puritans begins +to grow stale + +But a woful rude rabble there was, and +such noises + +But so fearful I am of discontenting my +wife + +But I think I am not bound to discover +myself + +But we were friends again as we are +always + +But this the world believes, and so let +them + +But if she will ruin herself, I cannot +help it + +But my wife vexed, which vexed me + +Buy some roll-tobacco to smell to and +chaw + +Buying up of goods in case there should +be war + +Buying his place of my Lord Barkely + +By his many words and no understanding, +confound himself + +By chewing of tobacco is become very +fat and sallow + +By and by met at her chamber, and there +did what I would + +By her wedding-ring, I suppose he hath +married her at last + +Called at a little ale-house, and had +an eele pye + +Came to bed to me, but all would not +make me friends + +Cannot bring myself to mind my business + +Cannot be clean to go so many bodies +together in the same water + +Cast stones with his horne crooke + +Castlemayne is sicke again, people +think, slipping her filly + +Catched cold yesterday by putting off +my stockings + +Catholiques are everywhere and bold + +Cavaliers have now the upper hand clear +of the Presbyterians + +Charles Barkeley's greatness is only +his being pimp to the King + +Chocolate was introduced into England +about the year 1652 + +Church, where a most insipid young +coxcomb preached + +City to be burned, and the Papists to +cut our throats + +Clap of the pox which he got about +twelve years ago + +Clean myself with warm water; my wife +will have me + +Comb my head clean, which I found so +foul with powdering + +Come to see them in bed together, on +their wedding-night + +Come to us out of bed in his furred +mittens and furred cap + +Comely black woman.--[The old +expression for a brunette.] + +Coming to lay out a great deal of money +in clothes for my wife + +Commons, where there is nothing done +but by passion, and faction + +Compliment from my aunt, which I take +kindly as it is unusual + +Confidence, and vanity, and disparages +everything + +Confusion of years in the case of the +months of January (etc.) + +Consult my pillow upon that and every +great thing of my life + +Content as to be at our own home, after +being abroad awhile + +Contracted for her as if he had been +buying a horse + +Convenience of periwiggs is so great + +Could not saw above 4 inches of the +stone in a day + +Counterfeit mirthe and pleasure with +them, but had but little + +Court is in a way to ruin all for their +pleasures + +Court attendance infinite tedious + +Craft and cunning concerning the buying +and choosing of horses + +Credit of this office hath received by +this rogue's occasion + +Cruel custom of throwing at cocks on +Shrove Tuesday + +Cure of the King's evil, which he do +deny altogether + +Dare not oppose it alone for making an +enemy and do no good + +Declared he will never have another +public mistress again + +Delight to see these poor fools decoyed +into our condition + +Deliver her from the hereditary curse +of child-bearing + +Desk fastened to one of the armes of +his chayre + +Did dig another, and put our wine in +it; and I my Parmazan cheese + +Did extremely beat him, and though it +did trouble me to do it + +Did so watch to see my wife put on +drawers, which (she did) + +Did take me up very prettily in one or +two things that I said + +Did much insist upon the sin of +adultery + +Did go to Shoe Lane to see a +cocke-fighting at a new pit there + +Did find none of them within, which I +was glad of + +Did tumble them all the afternoon as I +pleased + +Did trouble me very much to be at +charge to no purpose + +Did see the knaveries and tricks of +jockeys + +Did not like that Clergy should meddle +with matters of state + +Did put evil thoughts in me, but +proceeded no further + +Dined with my wife on pease porridge +and nothing else + +Dined upon six of my pigeons, which my +wife has resolved to kill + +Dined at home alone, a good calves head +boiled and dumplings + +Dinner, an ill and little mean one, +with foul cloth and dishes + +Discontented at the pride and luxury of +the Court + +Discontented that my wife do not go +neater now she has two maids + +Discourse of Mr. Evelyn touching all +manner of learning + +Discoursed much against a man's lying +with his wife in Lent + +Discoursing upon the sad condition of +the times + +Disease making us more cruel to one +another than if we are doggs + +Disorder in the pit by its raining in, +from the cupola + +Disquiet all night, telling of the +clock till it was daylight + +Do outdo the Lords infinitely (debates +in the Commons) + +Do look upon me as a remembrancer of +his former vanity + +Do bury still of the plague seven or +eight in a day + +Doe from Cobham, when the season comes, +bucks season being past + +Dog attending us, which made us all +merry again + +Dog, that would turn a sheep any way +which + +Doubtfull of himself, and easily be +removed from his own opinion + +Down to the Whey house and drank some +and eat some curds + +Dr. Calamy is this day sent to Newgate +for preaching + +Drink a dish of coffee + +Driven down again with a stinke by Sir +W. Pen's shying of a pot + +Duke of York and Mrs. Palmer did talk +to one another very wanton + +Duodecimal arithmetique + +Durst not take notice of her, her +husband being there + +Dying this last week of the plague 112, +from 43 the week before + +Eat some of the best cheese-cakes that +ever I eat in my life + +Eat of the best cold meats that ever I +eat on in all my life + +Eat a mouthful of pye at home to stay +my stomach + +Eat some butter and radishes + +Enough existed to build a ship (Pieces +of the true Cross) + +Enquiring into the selling of places do +trouble a great many + +Erasmus "de scribendis epistolis" + +Even to the having bad words with my +wife, and blows too + +Every man looking after himself, and +his owne lust and luxury + +Every small thing is enough now-a-days +to bring a difference + +Every body leads, and nobody follows + +Every body is at a great losse and +nobody can tell + +Every body's looks, and discourse in +the street is of death + +Exceeding kind to me, more than usual, +which makes me afeard + +Exclaiming against men's wearing their +hats on in the church + +Excommunications, which they send upon +the least occasions + +Expectation of profit will have its +force + +Expected musique, the missing of which +spoiled my dinner + +Faced white coat, made of one of my +wife's pettycoates + +Familiarity with her other servants is +it that spoils them all + +Fanatiques do say that the end of the +world is at hand + +Fashionable and black spots + +Fear all his kindness is but only his +lust to her + +Fear that the goods and estate would be +seized (after suicide) + +Fear it may do him no good, but me hurt + +Fear I shall not be able to wipe my +hands of him again + +Fear she should prove honest and refuse +and then tell my wife + +Feared I might meet with some people +that might know me + +Fearful that I might not go far enough +with my hat off + +Fears some will stand for the +tolerating of Papists + +Fell to sleep as if angry + +Fell a-crying for joy, being all +maudlin and kissing one another + +Fell to dancing, the first time that +ever I did in my life + +Fetch masts from New England + +Feverish, and hath sent for Mr. Pierce +to let him blood + +Few in any age that do mind anything +that is abstruse + +Find that now and then a little +difference do no hurte + +Find it a base copy of a good +originall, that vexed me + +Find myself to over-value things when a +child + +Finding my wife not sick, but yet out +of order + +Finding my wife's clothes lie +carelessly laid up + +Fire grow; and, as it grew darker, +appeared more and more + +First time that ever I heard the organs +in a cathedral + +First their apes, that they may be +afterwards their slaves + +First thing of that nature I did ever +give her (L10 ring) + +First time I had given her leave to +wear a black patch + +Fixed that the year should commence in +January instead of March + +Fool's play with which all publick +things are done + +For my quiet would not enquire into it + +For, for her part, she should not be +buried in the commons + +For a land-tax and against a general +excise + +For I will not be inward with him that +is open to another + +For I will be hanged before I seek to +him, unless I see I need + +Force a man to swear against himself + +Forced to change gold, 8s. 7d.; +servants and poor, 1s. 6d. + +Forgetting many things, which her +master beat her for + +Formerly say that the King was a +bastard and his mother a whore + +Found my brother John at eight o'clock +in bed, which vexed me + +Found him a fool, as he ever was, or +worse + +Found him not so ill as I thought that +he had been ill + +Found in my head and body about twenty +lice, little and great + +Found to be with child, do never stir +out of their beds + +Found guilty, and likely will be hanged +(for stealing spoons) + +France, which is accounted the best +place for bread + +Frequent trouble in things we deserve +best in + +Frogs and many insects do often fall +from the sky, ready formed + +From some fault in the meat to complain +of my maid's sluttery + +Gadding abroad to look after beauties + +Galileo's air thermometer, made before +1597 + +Gamester's life, which I see is very +miserable, and poor + +Gave him his morning draft + +Generally with corruption, but most +indeed with neglect + +Gentlewomen did hold up their heads to +be kissed by the King + +Get his lady to trust herself with him +into the tavern + +Give the King of France Nova Scotia, +which he do not like + +Give her a Lobster and do so touse her +and feel her all over + +Give the other notice of the future +state, if there was any + +Glad to be at friendship with me, +though we hate one another + +Gladder to have just now received it +(than a promise) + +God knows that I do not find honesty +enough in my own mind + +God forgive me! what thoughts and +wishes I had + +God help him, he wants bread. + +God forgive me! what a mind I had to +her + +God! what an age is this, and what a +world is this + +Going with her woman to a hot-house to +bathe herself + +Gold holds up its price still + +Goldsmiths in supplying the King with +money at dear rates + +Good sport of the bull's tossing of the +dogs + +Good wine, and anchovies, and pickled +oysters (for breakfast) + +Good purpose of fitting ourselves for +another war (A Peace) + +Good writers are not admired by the +present + +Got her upon my knee (the coach being +full) and played with her + +Great thaw it is not for a man to walk +the streets + +Great newes of the Swedes declaring for +us against the Dutch + +Great deale of tittle tattle discourse +to little purpose + +Great many silly stories they tell of +their sport + +Greater number of Counsellors is, the +more confused the issue + +Greatest businesses are done so +superficially + +Had no more manners than to invite me +and to let me pay + +Had his hand cut off, and was hanged +presently! + +Had what pleasure almost I would with +her + +Had the umbles of it for dinner + +Half a pint of Rhenish wine at the +Still-yard, mixed with beer + +Hanged with a silken halter + +Hanging jack to roast birds on + +Hard matter to settle to business after +so much leisure + +Hate in others, and more in myself, to +be careless of keys + +Hates to have any body mention what he +had done the day before + +Hath not a liberty of begging till he +hath served three years + +Hath a good heart to bear, or a cunning +one to conceal his evil + +Hath given her the pox, but I hope it +is not so + +Have not known her this fortnight +almost, which is a pain to me + +Have not any awe over them from the +King's displeasure (Commons) + +Have not much to lose, and therefore +will venture all + +Have been so long absent that I am +ashamed to go + +Having some experience, but greater +conceit of it than is fit + +He that will not stoop for a pin, will +never be worth a pound + +He made but a poor sermon, but long + +He has been inconvenienced by being too +free in discourse + +He having made good promises, though I +fear his performance + +He hoped he should live to see her +"ugly and willing" + +He is too wise to be made a friend of + +He was fain to lie in the priest's hole +a good while + +He was charged with making himself +popular + +He is, I perceive, wholly sceptical, as +well as I + +He is a man of no worth in the world +but compliment + +He is not a man fit to be told what one +hears + +Heard noises over their head upon the +leads + +Heeling her on one side to make her +draw little water + +Helping to slip their calfes when there +is occasion + +Her months upon her is gone to bed + +Here I first saw oranges grow + +Hired her to procure this poor soul for +him + +His enemies have done him as much good +as he could wish + +His readiness to speak spoilt all + +His satisfaction is nothing worth, it +being easily got + +His company ever wearys me + +Holes for me to see from my closet into +the great office + +Hopes to have had a bout with her +before she had gone + +Houses marked with a red cross upon the +doors + +How the Presbyterians would be angry if +they durst + +How highly the Presbyters do talk in +the coffeehouses still + +How little merit do prevail in the +world, but only favour + +How little heed is had to the prisoners +and sicke and wounded + +How unhappily a man may fall into a +necessity of bribing people + +How natural it is for us to slight +people out of power + +How little to be presumed of in our +greatest undertakings + +Hugged, it being cold now in the +mornings . . . . + +I took occasion to be angry with him + +I could not forbear to love her +exceedingly + +I do not value her, or mind her as I +ought + +I did what I would, and might have done +anything else + +I have itched mightily these 6 or 7 +days + +I know not whether to be glad or sorry + +I was as merry as I could counterfeit +myself to be + +I could have answered, but forbore + +I have a good mind to have the +maidenhead of this girl + +I know not how in the world to abstain +from reading + +I fear that it must be as it can, and +not as I would + +I had six noble dishes for them, +dressed by a man-cook + +I find her painted, which makes me +loathe her (cosmetics) + +I did get her hand to me under my cloak + +I perceive no passion in a woman can be +lasting long + +I having now seen a play every day this +week + +I was very angry, and resolve to beat +him to-morrow + +I know not yet what that is, and am +ashamed to ask + +I do not like his being angry and in +debt both together to me + +I will not by any over submission make +myself cheap + +I slept soundly all the sermon + +I and she never were so heartily angry +in our lives as to-day + +I calling her beggar, and she me +pricklouse, which vexed me + +I love the treason I hate the traitor + +I would not enquire into anything, but +let her talk + +I kissed the bride in bed, and so the +curtaines drawne + +I have promised, but know not when I +shall perform + +I met a dead corps of the plague, in +the narrow ally + +I am a foole to be troubled at it, +since I cannot helpe it + +I was exceeding free in dallying with +her, and she not unfree + +I was a great Roundhead when I was a +boy + +I pray God to make me able to pay for +it. + +I took a broom and basted her till she +cried extremely + +I was demanded L100, for the fee of the +office at 6d. a pound + +I never designed to be a witness +against any man + +I fear is not so good as she should be + +If the exportations exceed importations + +If it should come in print my name +maybe at it + +Ill from my late cutting my hair so +close to my head + +Ill all this day by reason of the last +night's debauch + +Ill sign when we are once to come to +study how to excuse + +Ill humour to be so against that which +all the world cries up + +Ill-bred woman, would take exceptions +at anything any body said + +In my nature am mighty unready to +answer no to anything + +In men's clothes, and had the best legs +that ever I saw + +In our graves (as Shakespeere resembles +it) we could dream + +In discourse he seems to be wise and +say little + +In perpetual trouble and vexation that +need it least + +In comes Mr. North very sea-sick from +shore + +In a hackney and full of people, was +ashamed to be seen + +In my dining-room she was doing +something upon the pott + +Inconvenience that do attend the +increase of a man's fortune + +Inoffensive vanity of a man who loved +to see himself in the glass + +Instructed by Shakespeare himself + +Irish in Ireland, whom Cromwell had +settled all in one corner + +It not being handsome for our servants +to sit so equal with us + +Justice of God in punishing men for the +sins of their ancestors + +Justice of proceeding not to condemn a +man unheard + +Keep at interest, which is a good, +quiett, and easy profit + +King is at the command of any woman +like a slave + +King shall not be able to whip a cat + +King was gone to play at Tennis + +King hath lost his power, by submitting +himself to this way + +King do resolve to declare the Duke of +Monmouth legitimate + +King himself minding nothing but his +ease + +King is not at present in purse to do + +King is mighty kind to these his +bastard children + +King the necessity of having, at least, +a show of religion + +King be desired to put all Catholiques +out of employment + +King still do doat upon his women, even +beyond all shame + +King is offended with the Duke of +Richmond's marrying + +King of France did think other princes +fit for nothing + +King governed by his lust, and women, +and rogues about him + +King do tire all his people that are +about him with early rising + +King's service is undone, and those +that trust him perish + +King's Proclamation against drinking, +swearing, and debauchery + +Kingdom will fall back again to a +commonwealth + +Kiss my Parliament, instead of "Kiss my +[rump]" + +Know yourself to be secure, in being +necessary to the office + +L'escholle des filles, a lewd book + +Lady Castlemayne is compounding with +the King for a pension + +Lady Duchesse the veryest slut and +drudge + +Lady Batten to give me a spoonful of +honey for my cold + +Lady Castlemaine is still as great with +the King + +Lady Castlemayne's nose out of joynt + +Lady Castlemayne is now in a higher +command over the King + +Lady Castlemayne do rule all at this +time as much as ever + +Laissez nous affaire--Colbert + +Last day of their doubtfulness touching +her being with child + +Last act of friendship in telling me of +my faults also + +Laughing and jeering at every thing +that looks strange + +Lay long caressing my wife and talking + +Lay long in bed talking and pleasing +myself with my wife + +Lay chiding, and then pleased with my +wife in bed + +Lay with her to-night, which I have not +done these eight (days) + +Learned the multiplication table for +the first time in 1661 + +Learnt a pretty trick to try whether a +woman be a maid or no + +Lechery will never leave him + +Let me blood, about sixteen ounces, I +being exceedingly full + +Let her brew as she has baked + +Lewdness and beggary of the Court + +Liability of a husband to pay for goods +supplied his wife + +Liberty of speech in the House + +Listening to no reasoning for it, be it +good or bad + +Little content most people have in the +peace + +Little children employed, every one to +do something + +Little worth of this world, to buy it +with so much pain + +Long cloaks being now quite out + +Look askew upon my wife, because my +wife do not buckle to them + +Lord! to see the absurd nature of +Englishmen + +Lord! in the dullest insipid manner +that ever lover did + +Lust and wicked lives of the nuns +heretofore in England + +Luxury and looseness of the times + +Lying a great while talking and +sporting in bed with my wife + +Made a lazy sermon, like a Presbyterian + +Made to drink, that they might know him +not to be a Roundhead + +Made him admire my drawing a thing +presently in shorthand + +Magnifying the graces of the nobility +and prelates + +Make a man wonder at the good fortune +of such a fool + +Man cannot live without playing the +knave and dissimulation +Matters in Ireland are full of +discontent + +Meazles, we fear, or, at least, of a +scarlett feavour + +Methought very ill, or else I am grown +worse to please + +Milke, which I drank to take away, my +heartburne + +Mirrors which makes the room seem both +bigger and lighter + +Money I have not, nor can get + +Money, which sweetens all things + +Montaigne is conscious that we are +looking over his shoulder + +Most flat dead sermon, both for matter +and manner of delivery + +Most homely widow, but young, and +pretty rich, and good natured + +Mr. William Pen a Quaker again + +Much discourse, but little to be +learned + +Musique in the morning to call up our +new-married people + +Muske Millon + +My wife, coming up suddenly, did find +me embracing the girl + +My wife hath something in her gizzard, +that only waits + +My heart beginning to falsify in this +business + +My old folly and childishnesse hangs +upon me still + +My new silk suit, the first that ever I +wore in my life + +My Lord, who took physic to-day and was +in his chamber + +My wife will keep to one another and +let the world go hang + +My wife this night troubled at my +leaving her alone so much + +My wife was making of her tarts and +larding of her pullets + +My head was not well with the wine that +I drank to-day + +My first attempt being to learn the +multiplication-table + +My intention to learn to trill + +Necessary, and yet the peace is so bad +in its terms + +Never laughed so in all my life. I +laughed till my head ached + +Never, while he lives, truckle under +any body or any faction + +Never to trust too much to any man in +the world + +Never was known to keep two mistresses +in his life (Charles II.) + +Never could man say worse himself nor +have worse said + +New Netherlands to English rule, under +the title of New York + +No Parliament can, as he says, be kept +long good + +No manner of means used to quench the +fire + +No pleasure--only the variety of it + +No money to do it with, nor anybody to +trust us without it + +No man is wise at all times + +No man was ever known to lose the first +time + +No man knowing what to do, whether to +sell or buy + +No sense nor grammar, yet in as good +words that ever I saw + +No good by taking notice of it, for the +present she forbears + +Nonconformists do now preach openly in +houses + +None will sell us any thing without our +personal security given + +Nor would become obliged too much to +any + +Nor will yield that the Papists have +any ground given them + +Nor was there any pretty woman that I +did see, but my wife + +Nor offer anything, but just what is +drawn out of a man + +Not well, and so had no pleasure at all +with my poor wife + +Not eat a bit of good meat till he has +got money to pay the men + +Not the greatest wits, but the steady +man + +Not when we can, but when we list + +Not to be censured if their necessities +drive them to bad + +Not more than I expected, nor so much +by a great deal as I ought + +Not thinking them safe men to receive +such a gratuity + +Not permit her begin to do so, lest +worse should follow + +Nothing in the world done with true +integrity + +Nothing in it approaching that single +page in St. Simon + +Nothing of the memory of a man, an +houre after he is dead! + +Nothing is to be got without offending +God and the King + +Nothing of any truth and sincerity, but +mere envy and design + +Now above six months since (smoke from +the cellars) + +Offer me L500 if I would desist from +the Clerk of the Acts place + +Offered to stop the fire near his house +for such a reward + +Officers are four years behind-hand +unpaid + +Once a week or so I know a gentleman +must go . . . . + +Opening his mind to him as of one that +may hereafter be his foe + +Ordered him L2000, and he paid me my +quantum out of it + +Ordered in the yarde six or eight +bargemen to be whipped + +Origin in the use of a plane against +the grain of the wood + +Out also to and fro, to see and be seen + +Painful to keep money, as well as to +get it + +Parliament being vehement against the +Nonconformists + +Parliament hath voted 2s. per annum for +every chimney in England + +Parliament do agree to throw down +Popery + +Parson is a cunning fellow he is as any +of his coat + +Peace with France, which, as a +Presbyterian, he do not like + +Pen was then turned Quaker + +Periwigg he lately made me cleansed of +its nits + +Peruques of hair, as the fashion now is +for ladies to wear + +Pest coaches and put her into it to +carry her to a pest house + +Petition against hackney coaches + +Pit, where the bears are baited + +Plague claimed 68,596 victims (in 1665) + +Plague is much in Amsterdam, and we in +fears of it here + +Plague, forty last night, the bell +always going + +Play good, but spoiled with the ryme, +which breaks the sense + +Pleases them mightily, and me not at +all + +Poor seamen that lie starving in the +streets + +Posies for Rings, Handkerchers and +Gloves + +Pray God give me a heart to fear a +fall, and to prepare for it! + +Presbyterians against the House of +Lords + +Presse seamen, without which we cannot +really raise men + +Pressing in it as if none of us had +like care with him + +Pretends to a resolution of being +hereafter very clean + +Pretty sayings, which are generally +like paradoxes + +Pretty to see the young pretty ladies +dressed like men + +Pride of some persons and vice of most +was but a sad story + +Pride and debauchery of the present +clergy + +Protestants as to the Church of Rome +are wholly fanatiques + +Providing against a foule day to get as +much money into my hands + +Put up with too much care, that I have +forgot where they are + +Quakers being charmed by a string about +their wrists + +Quakers do still continue, and rather +grow than lessen + +Quakers and others that will not have +any bell ring for them + +Rabbit not half roasted, which made me +angry with my wife + +Raising of our roofs higher to enlarge +our houses + +Reading to my wife and brother +something in Chaucer + +Reading over my dear "Faber fortunae," +of my Lord Bacon's + +Receive the applications of people, and +hath presents + +Reckon nothing money but when it is in +the bank + +Reduced the Dutch settlement of New +Netherlands to English rule + +Rejoiced over head and ears in this +good newes + +Removing goods from one burned house to +another + +Reparation for what we had embezzled + +Requisite I be prepared against the +man's friendship + +Resolve to have the doing of it +himself, or else to hinder it + +Resolve to live well and die a beggar + +Resolved to go through it, and it is +too late to help it now + +Resolving not to be bribed to dispatch +business + +Ridiculous nonsensical book set out by +Will. Pen, for the Quaker + +Rotten teeth and false, set in with +wire + +Sad sight it was: the whole City almost +on fire + +Sad for want of my wife, whom I love +with all my heart + +Said to die with the cleanest hands +that ever any Lord Treasurer + +Saw "Mackbeth," to our great content + +Saw two battles of cocks, wherein is no +great sport + +Saw his people go up and down louseing +themselves + +Saying, that for money he might be got +to our side + +Says, of all places, if there be hell, +it is here + +Says of wood, that it is an excrescence +of the earth + +Sceptic in all things of religion + +Scotch song of "Barbary Allen" + +Searchers with their rods in their +hands + +See whether my wife did wear drawers +to-day as she used to do + +See how a good dinner and feasting +reconciles everybody + +See how time and example may alter a +man + +Sent my wife to get a place to see +Turner hanged + +Sent me last night, as a bribe, a +barrel of sturgeon + +Sermon without affectation or study + +Sermon ended, and the church broke up, +and my amours ended also + +Sermon upon Original Sin, neither +understood by himself + +Sermon; but, it being a Presbyterian +one, it was so long + +Shakespeare's plays + +Shame such a rogue should give me and +all of us this trouble + +She is conceited that she do well +already + +She used the word devil, which vexed me + +She was so ill as to be shaved and +pidgeons put to her feet + +She begins not at all to take pleasure +in me or study to please + +She is a very good companion as long as +she is well + +She also washed my feet in a bath of +herbs, and so to bed + +She had got and used some puppy-dog +water + +She hath got her teeth new done by La +Roche + +She loves to be taken dressing herself, +as I always find her + +She so cruel a hypocrite that she can +cry when she pleases + +She finds that I am lousy + +Short of what I expected, as for the +most part it do fall out + +Shy of any warr hereafter, or to +prepare better for it + +Sick of it and of him for it + +Sicke men that are recovered, they +lying before our office doors + +Silence; it being seldom any wrong to a +man to say nothing + +Singing with many voices is not singing + +Sir W. Pen was so fuddled that we could +not try him to play + +Sir W. Pen did it like a base raskall, +and so I shall remember + +Sit up till 2 o'clock that she may call +the wench up to wash + +Slabbering my band sent home for +another + +Smoke jack consists of a wind-wheel +fixed in the chimney + +So home to supper, and to bed, it being +my wedding night + +So great a trouble is fear + +So to bed, to be up betimes by the +helpe of a larum watch + +So much is it against my nature to owe +anything to any body + +So home, and after supper did wash my +feet, and so to bed + +So home to prayers and to bed + +So I took occasion to go up and to bed +in a pet + +So to bed in some little discontent, +but no words from me + +So home and to supper with beans and +bacon and to bed + +So we went to bed and lay all night in +a quarrel + +So much wine, that I was even almost +foxed + +So good a nature that he cannot deny +any thing + +So time do alter, and do doubtless the +like in myself + +So home and to bed, where my wife had +not lain a great while + +So out, and lost our way, which made me +vexed + +So every thing stands still for money + +Softly up to see whether any of the +beds were out of order or no + +Some merry talk with a plain bold maid +of the house + +Some ends of my own in what advice I do +give her + +Sorry in some respect, glad in my +expectations in another respect + +Sorry for doing it now, because of +obliging me to do the like + +Sorry thing to be a poor King + +Spares not to blame another to defend +himself + +Sparrowgrass + +Speaks rarely, which pleases me +mightily + +Spends his time here most, playing at +bowles + +Sport to me to see him so earnest on so +little occasion + +Staid two hours with her kissing her, +but nothing more + +Statute against selling of offices + +Staying out late, and painting in the +absence of her husband + +Strange things he has been found guilty +of, not fit to name + +Strange the folly of men to lay and +lose so much money + +Strange how civil and tractable he was +to me + +Street ordered to be continued, forty +feet broad, from Paul's + +Subject to be put into a disarray upon +very small occasions + +Such open flattery is beastly + +Suffered her humour to spend, till we +begun to be very quiet + +Supper and to bed without one word one +to another + +Suspect the badness of the peace we +shall make + +Swear they will not go to be killed and +have no pay + +Take pins out of her pocket to prick me +if I should touch her + +Talk very highly of liberty of +conscience + +Taught my wife some part of subtraction + +Tax the same man in three or four +several capacities + +Tear all that I found either boyish or +not to be worth keeping + +Tell me that I speak in my dreams + +That I might not seem to be afeared + +That I may have nothing by me but what +is worth keeping + +That I may look as a man minding +business + +The unlawfull use of lawfull things + +The devil being too cunning to +discourage a gamester + +The most ingenious men may sometimes be +mistaken + +"The Alchymist,"--[Comedy by Ben Jonson] + +The barber came to trim me and wash me + +The present Irish pronunciation of +English + +The world do not grow old at all + +The ceremonies did not please me, they +do so overdo them + +The rest did give more, and did believe +that I did so too + +Thence by coach, with a mad coachman, +that drove like mad + +Thence to Mrs. Martin's, and did what I +would with her + +There is no passing but by coach in the +streets, and hardly that + +There eat and drank, and had my +pleasure of her twice + +There did 'tout ce que je voudrais +avec' her + +There setting a poor man to keep my +place + +There is no man almost in the City +cares a turd for him + +There being ten hanged, drawn, and +quartered + +These young Lords are not fit to do any +service abroad + +These Lords are hard to be trusted + +They were so false spelt that I was +ashamed of them + +They want where to set their feet, to +begin to do any thing + +This day churched, her month of +childbed being out + +This absence makes us a little strange +instead of more fond + +This week made a vow to myself to drink +no wine this week + +This day I began to put on buckles to +my shoes + +This unhappinesse of ours do give them +heart + +This kind of prophane, mad +entertainment they give themselves + +Those absent from prayers were to pay a +forfeit + +Those bred in the North among the +colliers are good for labour + +Though he knows, if he be not a fool, +that I love him not + +Thus it was my chance to see the King +beheaded at White Hall + +Tied our men back to back, and thrown +them all into the sea + +To Mr. Holliard's in the morning, +thinking to be let blood + +To be enjoyed while we are young and +capable of these joys + +To see Major-general Harrison hanged, +drawn; and quartered + +To the Swan and drank our morning draft + +To see the bride put to bed + +Too much of it will make her know her +force too much + +Took physique, and it did work very +well + +Tory--The term was not used politically +until about 1679 + +Tried the effect of my silence and not +provoking her + +Trouble, and more money, to every +Watch, to them to drink + +Troubled me, to see the confidence of +the vice of the age + +Trumpets were brought under the +scaffold that he not be heard + +Turn out every man that will be drunk, +they must turn out all + +Two shops in three, if not more, +generally shut up + +Uncertainty of all history + +Uncertainty of beauty + +Unless my too-much addiction to +pleasure undo me + +Unquiet which her ripping up of old +faults will give me + +Up, leaving my wife in bed, being sick +of her months + +Up, finding our beds good, but lousy; +which made us merry + +Up and took physique, but such as to go +abroad with + +Upon a very small occasion had a +difference again broke out + +Venison-pasty that we have for supper +to-night to the cook's + +Very angry we were, but quickly friends +again + +Very great tax; but yet I do think it +is so perplexed + +Vexed at my wife's neglect in leaving +of her scarf + +Vexed me, but I made no matter of it, +but vexed to myself + +Vices of the Court, and how the pox is +so common there + +Voyage to Newcastle for coles + +Waked this morning between four and +five by my blackbird + +Was kissing my wife, which I did not +like + +We are to go to law never to revenge, +but only to repayre + +We had a good surloyne of rost beefe + +Weary of it; but it will please the +citizens +Weather being very wet and hot to keep +meat in. + +What way a man could devise to lose so +much in so little time + +What I said would not hold water + +What I had writ foule in short hand + +What they all, through profit or fear, +did promise + +What a sorry dispatch these great +persons give to business + +What is there more to be had of a woman +than the possessing her + +Where money is free, there is great +plenty + +Where I find the worst very good + +Where a piece of the Cross is + +Where a trade hath once been and do +decay, it never recovers + +Where I expect most I find least +satisfaction + +Wherein every party has laboured to +cheat another + +Which he left him in the lurch + +Which I did give him some hope of, +though I never intend it + +Whip this child till the blood come, if +it were my child! + +Whip a boy at each place they stop at +in their procession + +Who is the most, and promises the +least, of any man + +Who we found ill still, but he do make +very much of it + +Who must except against every thing and +remedy nothing + +Whose red nose makes me ashamed to be +seen with him + +Willing to receive a bribe if it were +offered me + +Wine, new and old, with labells pasted +upon each bottle + +Wise man's not being wise at all times + +Wise men do prepare to remove abroad +what they have + +With much ado in an hour getting a +coach home + +With a shower of hail as big as walnuts + +Wonders that she cannot be as good +within as she is fair without + +World sees now the use of them for +shelter of men (fore-castles) + +Would make a dogg laugh + +Would either conform, or be more wise, +and not be catched! + +Would not make my coming troublesome to +any + +Wretch, n., often used as an expression +of endearment + +Wronged by my over great expectations + +Ye pulling down of houses, in ye way of +ye fire + + + + +If you wish to read the entire context of any of these quotations, +select a short segment and copy it into your clipboard memory--then open +the following eBook and paste the phrase into your computer's find or +search operation. + +The Diaries of Samuel Pepys, Complete +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext03/sp85g10.txt + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Quotes and Images From The Diary of +Samuel Pepys, by Samuel Pepys, Edited and Arranged by David Widger + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FOR PEPYS *** + +***** This file should be named 7554.txt or 7554.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/7/5/5/7554/ + +Produced by David Widger + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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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.net + + +Title: Quotes and Images From The Diary of Samuel Pepys + +Author: Samuel Pepys + Edited and Arranged by David Widger + +Release Date: September 3, 2004 [EBook #7554] +[Last updated on February 17, 2007] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FOR PEPYS *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +</pre> + + + + + + +<br> +<hr> +<br><br><br><br><br><br> + + + +<center><h1>THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS</h1></center> +<br><br> +<center><h2>By Samuel Pepys</h2></center> +<br><br><br><br> + +<center><img alt="medallion.jpg (35K)" src="images/medallion.jpg" height="809" width="589"> +</center> + + + +<br><br><br><br> + +<center><img alt="titlepage.jpg (33K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" height="903" width="650"> +</center> + +<br><br><br><br> + + +<center> +<table summary="Columbus"> +<tr> +<td><img alt="pepys1.jpg (25K)" src="images/pepys1.jpg" height="571" width="400"> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<img alt="pepys2.jpg (23K)" src="images/pepys2.jpg" height="726" width="400"> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<img alt="pepys3.jpg (40K)" src="images/pepys3.jpg" height="522" width="400"> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<img alt="pepys4.jpg (22K)" src="images/pepys4.jpg" height="641" width="400"> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<img alt="pepys5.jpg (75K)" src="images/pepys5.jpg" height="648" width="400"> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br> +<img alt="wife.jpg (42K)" src="images/wife.jpg" height="600" width="400"> + +<td> +<pre> + + +20s. in money, and what wine she +needed, for the burying him + +A good handsome wench I kissed, the +first that I have seen + +A fair salute on horseback, in +Rochester streets, of the lady + +A most conceited fellow and not over +much in him + +A conceited man, but of no Logique in +his head at all + +A pretty man, I would be content to +break a commandment with him + +A lady spit backward upon me by a +mistake + +A play not very good, though commended +much + +A cat will be a cat still + +A book the Bishops will not let be +printed again + +A most tedious, unreasonable, and +impertinent sermon + +About two o'clock, too late and too +soon to go home to bed + +Academy was dissolved by order of the +Pope + +Act of Council passed, to put out all +Papists in office + +Advantage a man of the law hath over +all other people + +Afeard of being louzy + + +After taking leave of my wife, which we +could hardly do kindly + +After awhile I caressed her and parted +seeming friends + +After many protestings by degrees I did +arrive at what I would + +After oysters, at first course, a hash +of rabbits, a lamb + +After a harsh word or two my wife and I +good friends + +All ended in love + +All made much worse in their report +among people than they are + +All the fleas came to him and not to me + +All divided that were bred so long at +school together + +All may see how slippery places all +courtiers stand in + +All things to be managed with faction + +All the towne almost going out of towne +(Plague panic) + +Ambassador—that he is an honest man +sent to lie abroad + +Among many lazy people that the +diligent man becomes necessary + +An exceeding pretty lass, and right for +the sport + +An offer of L500 for a Baronet's +dignity + +And for his beef, says he, "Look how +fat it is" + +And if ever I fall on it again, I +deserve to be undone + +And a deal of do of which I am weary + +And they did lay pigeons to his feet + +And there, did what I would with her + +And so to sleep till the morning, but +was bit cruelly + +And so to bed and there entertained her +with great content + +And feeling for a chamber-pott, there +was none + +And with the great men in curing of +their claps + +And so by coach, though hard to get it, +being rainy, home + +Angry, and so continued till bed, and +did not sleep friends + +Aptness I have to be troubled at any +thing that crosses me + +Archbishop is a wencher, and known to +be so + +As much his friend as his interest will +let him + +As very a gossip speaking of her +neighbours as any body + +As all other women, cry, and yet talk +of other things + +As he called it, the King's seventeenth +whore abroad + +As all things else did not come up to +my expectations + +Asleep, while the wench sat mending my +breeches by my bedside + +At least 12 or 14,000 people in the +street (to see the hanging) + +At a loss whether it will be better for +me to have him die + +Badge of slavery upon the whole people +(taxes) + +Baker's house in Pudding Lane, where +the late great fire begun + +Baseness and looseness of the Court + +Bath at the top of his house + +Beare-garden + +Because I would not be over sure of any +thing + +Before I sent my boy out with them, I +beat him for a lie + +Begun to smell, and so I caused it to +be set forth (corpse) + +Being there, and seeming to do +something, while we do not + +Being cleansed of lice this day by my +wife + +Being very poor and mean as to the +bearing with trouble + +Being taken with a Psalmbook or +Testament + +Below what people think these great +people say and do + +Best fence against the Parliament's +present fury is delay + +Better now than never + +Bewailing the vanity and disorders of +the age + +Bite at the stone, and not at the hand +that flings it + +Bleeding behind by leeches will cure +him + +Bold to deliver what he thinks on every +occasion + +Book itself, and both it and them not +worth a turd + +Bookseller's, and there looked for +Montaigne's Essays + +Bottle of strong water; whereof now and +then a sip did me good + +Bought for the love of the binding +three books + +Bought Montaigne's Essays, in English + +Bowling-ally (where lords and ladies +are now at bowles) + +Boy up to-night for his sister to teach +him to put me to bed + +Bring me a periwig, but it was full of +nits + +Bringing over one discontented man, you +raise up three + +Bristol milk (the sherry) in the vaults + +Broken sort of people, that have not +much to lose + +Burned it, that it might not be among +my books to my shame + +Business of abusing the Puritans begins +to grow stale + +But a woful rude rabble there was, and +such noises + +But so fearful I am of discontenting my +wife + +But I think I am not bound to discover +myself + +But we were friends again as we are +always + +But this the world believes, and so let +them + +But if she will ruin herself, I cannot +help it + +But my wife vexed, which vexed me + +Buy some roll-tobacco to smell to and +chaw + +Buying up of goods in case there should +be war + +Buying his place of my Lord Barkely + +By his many words and no understanding, +confound himself + +By chewing of tobacco is become very +fat and sallow + +By and by met at her chamber, and there +did what I would + +By her wedding-ring, I suppose he hath +married her at last + +Called at a little ale-house, and had +an eele pye + +Came to bed to me, but all would not +make me friends + +Cannot bring myself to mind my business + +Cannot be clean to go so many bodies +together in the same water + +Cast stones with his horne crooke + +Castlemayne is sicke again, people +think, slipping her filly + +Catched cold yesterday by putting off +my stockings + +Catholiques are everywhere and bold + +Cavaliers have now the upper hand clear +of the Presbyterians + +Charles Barkeley's greatness is only +his being pimp to the King + +Chocolate was introduced into England +about the year 1652 + +Church, where a most insipid young +coxcomb preached + +City to be burned, and the Papists to +cut our throats + +Clap of the pox which he got about +twelve years ago + +Clean myself with warm water; my wife +will have me + +Comb my head clean, which I found so +foul with powdering + +Come to see them in bed together, on +their wedding-night + +Come to us out of bed in his furred +mittens and furred cap + +Comely black woman.—[The old +expression for a brunette.] + +Coming to lay out a great deal of money +in clothes for my wife + +Commons, where there is nothing done +but by passion, and faction + +Compliment from my aunt, which I take +kindly as it is unusual + +Confidence, and vanity, and disparages +everything + +Confusion of years in the case of the +months of January (etc.) + +Consult my pillow upon that and every +great thing of my life + +Content as to be at our own home, after +being abroad awhile + +Contracted for her as if he had been +buying a horse + +Convenience of periwiggs is so great + +Could not saw above 4 inches of the +stone in a day + +Counterfeit mirthe and pleasure with +them, but had but little + +Court is in a way to ruin all for their +pleasures + +Court attendance infinite tedious + +Craft and cunning concerning the buying +and choosing of horses + +Credit of this office hath received by +this rogue's occasion + +Cruel custom of throwing at cocks on +Shrove Tuesday + +Cure of the King's evil, which he do +deny altogether + +Dare not oppose it alone for making an +enemy and do no good + +Declared he will never have another +public mistress again + +Delight to see these poor fools decoyed +into our condition + +Deliver her from the hereditary curse +of child-bearing + +Desk fastened to one of the armes of +his chayre + +Did dig another, and put our wine in +it; and I my Parmazan cheese + +Did extremely beat him, and though it +did trouble me to do it + +Did so watch to see my wife put on +drawers, which (she did) + +Did take me up very prettily in one or +two things that I said + +Did much insist upon the sin of +adultery + +Did go to Shoe Lane to see a +cocke-fighting at a new pit there + +Did find none of them within, which I +was glad of + +Did tumble them all the afternoon as I +pleased + +Did trouble me very much to be at +charge to no purpose + +Did see the knaveries and tricks of +jockeys + +Did not like that Clergy should meddle +with matters of state + +Did put evil thoughts in me, but +proceeded no further + +Dined with my wife on pease porridge +and nothing else + +Dined upon six of my pigeons, which my +wife has resolved to kill + +Dined at home alone, a good calves head +boiled and dumplings + +Dinner, an ill and little mean one, +with foul cloth and dishes + +Discontented at the pride and luxury of +the Court + +Discontented that my wife do not go +neater now she has two maids + +Discourse of Mr. Evelyn touching all +manner of learning + +Discoursed much against a man's lying +with his wife in Lent + +Discoursing upon the sad condition of +the times + +Disease making us more cruel to one +another than if we are doggs + +Disorder in the pit by its raining in, +from the cupola + +Disquiet all night, telling of the +clock till it was daylight + +Do outdo the Lords infinitely (debates +in the Commons) + +Do look upon me as a remembrancer of +his former vanity + +Do bury still of the plague seven or +eight in a day + +Doe from Cobham, when the season comes, +bucks season being past + +Dog attending us, which made us all +merry again + +Dog, that would turn a sheep any way +which + +Doubtfull of himself, and easily be +removed from his own opinion + +Down to the Whey house and drank some +and eat some curds + +Dr. Calamy is this day sent to Newgate +for preaching + +Drink a dish of coffee + +Driven down again with a stinke by Sir +W. Pen's shying of a pot + +Duke of York and Mrs. Palmer did talk +to one another very wanton + +Duodecimal arithmetique + +Durst not take notice of her, her +husband being there + +Dying this last week of the plague 112, +from 43 the week before + +Eat some of the best cheese-cakes that +ever I eat in my life + +Eat of the best cold meats that ever I +eat on in all my life + +Eat a mouthful of pye at home to stay +my stomach + +Eat some butter and radishes + +Enough existed to build a ship (Pieces +of the true Cross) + +Enquiring into the selling of places do +trouble a great many + +Erasmus "de scribendis epistolis" + +Even to the having bad words with my +wife, and blows too + +Every man looking after himself, and +his owne lust and luxury + +Every small thing is enough now-a-days +to bring a difference + +Every body leads, and nobody follows + +Every body is at a great losse and +nobody can tell + +Every body's looks, and discourse in +the street is of death + +Exceeding kind to me, more than usual, +which makes me afeard + +Exclaiming against men's wearing their +hats on in the church + +Excommunications, which they send upon +the least occasions + +Expectation of profit will have its +force + +Expected musique, the missing of which +spoiled my dinner + +Faced white coat, made of one of my +wife's pettycoates + +Familiarity with her other servants is +it that spoils them all + +Fanatiques do say that the end of the +world is at hand + +Fashionable and black spots + +Fear all his kindness is but only his +lust to her + +Fear that the goods and estate would be +seized (after suicide) + +Fear it may do him no good, but me hurt + +Fear I shall not be able to wipe my +hands of him again + +Fear she should prove honest and refuse +and then tell my wife + +Feared I might meet with some people +that might know me + +Fearful that I might not go far enough +with my hat off + +Fears some will stand for the +tolerating of Papists + +Fell to sleep as if angry + +Fell a-crying for joy, being all +maudlin and kissing one another + +Fell to dancing, the first time that +ever I did in my life + +Fetch masts from New England + +Feverish, and hath sent for Mr. Pierce +to let him blood + +Few in any age that do mind anything +that is abstruse + +Find that now and then a little +difference do no hurte + +Find it a base copy of a good +originall, that vexed me + +Find myself to over-value things when a +child + +Finding my wife not sick, but yet out +of order + +Finding my wife's clothes lie +carelessly laid up + +Fire grow; and, as it grew darker, +appeared more and more + +First time that ever I heard the organs +in a cathedral + +First their apes, that they may be +afterwards their slaves + +First thing of that nature I did ever +give her (L10 ring) + +First time I had given her leave to +wear a black patch + +Fixed that the year should commence in +January instead of March + +Fool's play with which all publick +things are done + +For my quiet would not enquire into it + +For, for her part, she should not be +buried in the commons + +For a land-tax and against a general +excise + +For I will not be inward with him that +is open to another + +For I will be hanged before I seek to +him, unless I see I need + +Force a man to swear against himself + +Forced to change gold, 8s. 7d.; +servants and poor, 1s. 6d. + +Forgetting many things, which her +master beat her for + +Formerly say that the King was a +bastard and his mother a whore + +Found my brother John at eight o'clock +in bed, which vexed me + +Found him a fool, as he ever was, or +worse + +Found him not so ill as I thought that +he had been ill + +Found in my head and body about twenty +lice, little and great + +Found to be with child, do never stir +out of their beds + +Found guilty, and likely will be hanged +(for stealing spoons) + +France, which is accounted the best +place for bread + +Frequent trouble in things we deserve +best in + +Frogs and many insects do often fall +from the sky, ready formed + +From some fault in the meat to complain +of my maid's sluttery + +Gadding abroad to look after beauties + +Galileo's air thermometer, made before +1597 + +Gamester's life, which I see is very +miserable, and poor + +Gave him his morning draft + +Generally with corruption, but most +indeed with neglect + +Gentlewomen did hold up their heads to +be kissed by the King + +Get his lady to trust herself with him +into the tavern + +Give the King of France Nova Scotia, +which he do not like + +Give her a Lobster and do so touse her +and feel her all over + +Give the other notice of the future +state, if there was any + +Glad to be at friendship with me, +though we hate one another + +Gladder to have just now received it +(than a promise) + +God knows that I do not find honesty +enough in my own mind + +God forgive me! what thoughts and +wishes I had + +God help him, he wants bread. + +God forgive me! what a mind I had to +her + +God! what an age is this, and what a +world is this + + +Going with her woman to a hot-house to +bathe herself + +Gold holds up its price still + +Goldsmiths in supplying the King with +money at dear rates + +Good sport of the bull's tossing of the +dogs + +Good wine, and anchovies, and pickled +oysters (for breakfast) + +Good purpose of fitting ourselves for +another war (A Peace) + +Good writers are not admired by the +present + +Got her upon my knee (the coach being +full) and played with her + +Great thaw it is not for a man to walk +the streets + +Great newes of the Swedes declaring for +us against the Dutch + +Great deale of tittle tattle discourse +to little purpose + +Great many silly stories they tell of +their sport + +Greater number of Counsellors is, the +more confused the issue + +Greatest businesses are done so +superficially + +Had no more manners than to invite me +and to let me pay + +Had his hand cut off, and was hanged +presently! + + +Had what pleasure almost I would with +her + +Had the umbles of it for dinner + +Half a pint of Rhenish wine at the +Still-yard, mixed with beer + +Hanged with a silken halter + +Hanging jack to roast birds on + +Hard matter to settle to business after +so much leisure + +Hate in others, and more in myself, to +be careless of keys + +Hates to have any body mention what he +had done the day before + +Hath not a liberty of begging till he +hath served three years + +Hath a good heart to bear, or a cunning +one to conceal his evil + +Hath given her the pox, but I hope it +is not so + +Have not known her this fortnight +almost, which is a pain to me + +Have not any awe over them from the +King's displeasure (Commons) + +Have not much to lose, and therefore +will venture all + +Have been so long absent that I am +ashamed to go + +Having some experience, but greater +conceit of it than is fit + +He that will not stoop for a pin, will +never be worth a pound + +He made but a poor sermon, but long + +He has been inconvenienced by being too +free in discourse + +He having made good promises, though I +fear his performance + +He hoped he should live to see her +"ugly and willing" + +He is too wise to be made a friend of + +He was fain to lie in the priest's hole +a good while + +He was charged with making himself +popular + +He is, I perceive, wholly sceptical, as +well as I + +He is a man of no worth in the world +but compliment + +He is not a man fit to be told what one +hears + +Heard noises over their head upon the +leads + +Heeling her on one side to make her +draw little water + +Helping to slip their calfes when there +is occasion + +Her months upon her is gone to bed + +Here I first saw oranges grow + +Hired her to procure this poor soul for +him + +His enemies have done him as much good +as he could wish + +His readiness to speak spoilt all + +His satisfaction is nothing worth, it +being easily got + +His company ever wearys me + +Holes for me to see from my closet into +the great office + +Hopes to have had a bout with her +before she had gone + +Houses marked with a red cross upon the +doors + +How the Presbyterians would be angry if +they durst + +How highly the Presbyters do talk in +the coffeehouses still + +How little merit do prevail in the +world, but only favour + +How little heed is had to the prisoners +and sicke and wounded + +How unhappily a man may fall into a +necessity of bribing people + +How natural it is for us to slight +people out of power + +How little to be presumed of in our +greatest undertakings + +Hugged, it being cold now in the +mornings . . . . + +I took occasion to be angry with him + +I could not forbear to love her +exceedingly + +I do not value her, or mind her as I +ought + +I did what I would, and might have done +anything else + +I have itched mightily these 6 or 7 +days + +I know not whether to be glad or sorry + +I was as merry as I could counterfeit +myself to be + +I could have answered, but forbore + +I have a good mind to have the +maidenhead of this girl + +I know not how in the world to abstain +from reading + +I fear that it must be as it can, and +not as I would + +I had six noble dishes for them, +dressed by a man-cook + +I find her painted, which makes me +loathe her (cosmetics) + +I did get her hand to me under my cloak + +I perceive no passion in a woman can be +lasting long + +I having now seen a play every day this +week + +I was very angry, and resolve to beat +him to-morrow + +I know not yet what that is, and am +ashamed to ask + +I do not like his being angry and in +debt both together to me + +I will not by any over submission make +myself cheap + +I slept soundly all the sermon + +I and she never were so heartily angry +in our lives as to-day + +I calling her beggar, and she me +pricklouse, which vexed me + +I love the treason I hate the traitor + +I would not enquire into anything, but +let her talk + +I kissed the bride in bed, and so the +curtaines drawne + +I have promised, but know not when I +shall perform + +I met a dead corps of the plague, in +the narrow ally + +I am a foole to be troubled at it, +since I cannot helpe it + +I was exceeding free in dallying with +her, and she not unfree + +I was a great Roundhead when I was a +boy + +I pray God to make me able to pay for +it. + +I took a broom and basted her till she +cried extremely + +I was demanded L100, for the fee of the +office at 6d. a pound + +I never designed to be a witness +against any man + +I fear is not so good as she should be + +If the exportations exceed importations + +If it should come in print my name +maybe at it + +Ill from my late cutting my hair so +close to my head + +Ill all this day by reason of the last +night's debauch + +Ill sign when we are once to come to +study how to excuse + +Ill humour to be so against that which +all the world cries up + +Ill-bred woman, would take exceptions +at anything any body said + +In my nature am mighty unready to +answer no to anything + +In men's clothes, and had the best legs +that ever I saw + +In our graves (as Shakespeere resembles +it) we could dream + +In discourse he seems to be wise and +say little + +In perpetual trouble and vexation that +need it least + +In comes Mr. North very sea-sick from +shore + +In a hackney and full of people, was +ashamed to be seen + +In my dining-room she was doing +something upon the pott + +Inconvenience that do attend the +increase of a man's fortune + +Inoffensive vanity of a man who loved +to see himself in the glass + +Instructed by Shakespeare himself + +Irish in Ireland, whom Cromwell had +settled all in one corner + +It not being handsome for our servants +to sit so equal with us + +Justice of God in punishing men for the +sins of their ancestors + +Justice of proceeding not to condemn a +man unheard + +Keep at interest, which is a good, +quiett, and easy profit + +King is at the command of any woman +like a slave + +King shall not be able to whip a cat + +King was gone to play at Tennis + +King hath lost his power, by submitting +himself to this way + +King do resolve to declare the Duke of +Monmouth legitimate + +King himself minding nothing but his +ease + +King is not at present in purse to do + +King is mighty kind to these his +bastard children + +King the necessity of having, at least, +a show of religion + +King be desired to put all Catholiques +out of employment + +King still do doat upon his women, even +beyond all shame + +King is offended with the Duke of +Richmond's marrying + +King of France did think other princes +fit for nothing + +King governed by his lust, and women, +and rogues about him + +King do tire all his people that are +about him with early rising + +King's service is undone, and those +that trust him perish + +King's Proclamation against drinking, +swearing, and debauchery + +Kingdom will fall back again to a +commonwealth + +Kiss my Parliament, instead of "Kiss my +[rump]" + +Know yourself to be secure, in being +necessary to the office + +L'escholle des filles, a lewd book + +Lady Castlemayne is compounding with +the King for a pension + +Lady Duchesse the veryest slut and +drudge + +Lady Batten to give me a spoonful of +honey for my cold + +Lady Castlemaine is still as great with +the King + +Lady Castlemayne's nose out of joynt + +Lady Castlemayne is now in a higher +command over the King + +Lady Castlemayne do rule all at this +time as much as ever + +Laissez nous affaire—Colbert + +Last day of their doubtfulness touching +her being with child + +Last act of friendship in telling me of +my faults also + +Laughing and jeering at every thing +that looks strange + +Lay long caressing my wife and talking + +Lay long in bed talking and pleasing +myself with my wife + +Lay chiding, and then pleased with my +wife in bed + +Lay with her to-night, which I have not +done these eight (days) + +Learned the multiplication table for +the first time in 1661 + +Learnt a pretty trick to try whether a +woman be a maid or no + +Lechery will never leave him + +Let me blood, about sixteen ounces, I +being exceedingly full + +Let her brew as she has baked + +Lewdness and beggary of the Court + +Liability of a husband to pay for goods +supplied his wife + +Liberty of speech in the House + +Listening to no reasoning for it, be it +good or bad + +Little content most people have in the +peace + +Little children employed, every one to +do something + +Little worth of this world, to buy it +with so much pain + +Long cloaks being now quite out + +Look askew upon my wife, because my +wife do not buckle to them + +Lord! to see the absurd nature of +Englishmen + +Lord! in the dullest insipid manner +that ever lover did + +Lust and wicked lives of the nuns +heretofore in England + +Luxury and looseness of the times + +Lying a great while talking and +sporting in bed with my wife + +Made a lazy sermon, like a Presbyterian + +Made to drink, that they might know him +not to be a Roundhead + +Made him admire my drawing a thing +presently in shorthand + +Magnifying the graces of the nobility +and prelates + +Make a man wonder at the good fortune +of such a fool + +Man cannot live without playing the +knave and dissimulation +Matters in Ireland are full of +discontent + +Meazles, we fear, or, at least, of a +scarlett feavour + +Methought very ill, or else I am grown +worse to please + +Milke, which I drank to take away, my +heartburne + +Mirrors which makes the room seem both +bigger and lighter + +Money I have not, nor can get + +Money, which sweetens all things + +Montaigne is conscious that we are +looking over his shoulder + +Most flat dead sermon, both for matter +and manner of delivery + +Most homely widow, but young, and +pretty rich, and good natured + +Mr. William Pen a Quaker again + +Much discourse, but little to be +learned + +Musique in the morning to call up our +new-married people + +Muske Millon + +My wife, coming up suddenly, did find +me embracing the girl + +My wife hath something in her gizzard, +that only waits + +My heart beginning to falsify in this +business + +My old folly and childishnesse hangs +upon me still + +My new silk suit, the first that ever I +wore in my life + +My Lord, who took physic to-day and was +in his chamber + +My wife will keep to one another and +let the world go hang + +My wife this night troubled at my +leaving her alone so much + +My wife was making of her tarts and +larding of her pullets + +My head was not well with the wine that +I drank to-day + +My first attempt being to learn the +multiplication-table + +My intention to learn to trill + +Necessary, and yet the peace is so bad +in its terms + +Never laughed so in all my life. I +laughed till my head ached + +Never, while he lives, truckle under +any body or any faction + +Never to trust too much to any man in +the world + +Never was known to keep two mistresses +in his life (Charles II.) + +Never could man say worse himself nor +have worse said + +New Netherlands to English rule, under +the title of New York + +No Parliament can, as he says, be kept +long good + +No manner of means used to quench the +fire + +No pleasure—only the variety of it + +No money to do it with, nor anybody to +trust us without it + +No man is wise at all times + +No man was ever known to lose the first +time + +No man knowing what to do, whether to +sell or buy + +No sense nor grammar, yet in as good +words that ever I saw + +No good by taking notice of it, for the +present she forbears + +Nonconformists do now preach openly in +houses + +None will sell us any thing without our +personal security given + +Nor would become obliged too much to +any + +Nor will yield that the Papists have +any ground given them + +Nor was there any pretty woman that I +did see, but my wife + +Nor offer anything, but just what is +drawn out of a man + +Not well, and so had no pleasure at all +with my poor wife + +Not eat a bit of good meat till he has +got money to pay the men + +Not the greatest wits, but the steady +man + +Not when we can, but when we list + +Not to be censured if their necessities +drive them to bad + +Not more than I expected, nor so much +by a great deal as I ought + +Not thinking them safe men to receive +such a gratuity + +Not permit her begin to do so, lest +worse should follow + +Nothing in the world done with true +integrity + +Nothing in it approaching that single +page in St. Simon + +Nothing of the memory of a man, an +houre after he is dead! + +Nothing is to be got without offending +God and the King + +Nothing of any truth and sincerity, but +mere envy and design + +Now above six months since (smoke from +the cellars) + +Offer me L500 if I would desist from +the Clerk of the Acts place + +Offered to stop the fire near his house +for such a reward + +Officers are four years behind-hand +unpaid + +Once a week or so I know a gentleman +must go . . . . + +Opening his mind to him as of one that +may hereafter be his foe + +Ordered him L2000, and he paid me my +quantum out of it + +Ordered in the yarde six or eight +bargemen to be whipped + +Origin in the use of a plane against +the grain of the wood + +Out also to and fro, to see and be seen + +Painful to keep money, as well as to +get it + +Parliament being vehement against the +Nonconformists + +Parliament hath voted 2s. per annum for +every chimney in England + +Parliament do agree to throw down +Popery + +Parson is a cunning fellow he is as any +of his coat + +Peace with France, which, as a +Presbyterian, he do not like + +Pen was then turned Quaker + +Periwigg he lately made me cleansed of +its nits + +Peruques of hair, as the fashion now is +for ladies to wear + +Pest coaches and put her into it to +carry her to a pest house + +Petition against hackney coaches + +Pit, where the bears are baited + +Plague claimed 68,596 victims (in 1665) + +Plague is much in Amsterdam, and we in +fears of it here + +Plague, forty last night, the bell +always going + +Play good, but spoiled with the ryme, +which breaks the sense + +Pleases them mightily, and me not at +all + +Poor seamen that lie starving in the +streets + +Posies for Rings, Handkerchers and +Gloves + +Pray God give me a heart to fear a +fall, and to prepare for it! + +Presbyterians against the House of +Lords + +Presse seamen, without which we cannot +really raise men + +Pressing in it as if none of us had +like care with him + +Pretends to a resolution of being +hereafter very clean + +Pretty sayings, which are generally +like paradoxes + +Pretty to see the young pretty ladies +dressed like men + +Pride of some persons and vice of most +was but a sad story + +Pride and debauchery of the present +clergy + +Protestants as to the Church of Rome +are wholly fanatiques + +Providing against a foule day to get as +much money into my hands + +Put up with too much care, that I have +forgot where they are + +Quakers being charmed by a string about +their wrists + +Quakers do still continue, and rather +grow than lessen + +Quakers and others that will not have +any bell ring for them + +Rabbit not half roasted, which made me +angry with my wife + +Raising of our roofs higher to enlarge +our houses + +Reading to my wife and brother +something in Chaucer + +Reading over my dear "Faber fortunae," +of my Lord Bacon's + +Receive the applications of people, and +hath presents + +Reckon nothing money but when it is in +the bank + +Reduced the Dutch settlement of New +Netherlands to English rule + +Rejoiced over head and ears in this +good newes + +Removing goods from one burned house to +another + +Reparation for what we had embezzled + +Requisite I be prepared against the +man's friendship + +Resolve to have the doing of it +himself, or else to hinder it + +Resolve to live well and die a beggar + +Resolved to go through it, and it is +too late to help it now + +Resolving not to be bribed to dispatch +business + +Ridiculous nonsensical book set out by +Will. Pen, for the Quaker + +Rotten teeth and false, set in with +wire + +Sad sight it was: the whole City almost +on fire + +Sad for want of my wife, whom I love +with all my heart + +Said to die with the cleanest hands +that ever any Lord Treasurer + +Saw "Mackbeth," to our great content + +Saw two battles of cocks, wherein is no +great sport + +Saw his people go up and down louseing +themselves + +Saying, that for money he might be got +to our side + +Says, of all places, if there be hell, +it is here + +Says of wood, that it is an excrescence +of the earth + +Sceptic in all things of religion + +Scotch song of "Barbary Allen" + +Searchers with their rods in their +hands + +See whether my wife did wear drawers +to-day as she used to do + +See how a good dinner and feasting +reconciles everybody + +See how time and example may alter a +man + +Sent my wife to get a place to see +Turner hanged + +Sent me last night, as a bribe, a +barrel of sturgeon + +Sermon without affectation or study + +Sermon ended, and the church broke up, +and my amours ended also + +Sermon upon Original Sin, neither +understood by himself + +Sermon; but, it being a Presbyterian +one, it was so long + +Shakespeare's plays + +Shame such a rogue should give me and +all of us this trouble + +She is conceited that she do well +already + +She used the word devil, which vexed me + +She was so ill as to be shaved and +pidgeons put to her feet + +She begins not at all to take pleasure +in me or study to please + +She is a very good companion as long as +she is well + +She also washed my feet in a bath of +herbs, and so to bed + +She had got and used some puppy-dog +water + +She hath got her teeth new done by La +Roche + +She loves to be taken dressing herself, +as I always find her + +She so cruel a hypocrite that she can +cry when she pleases + +She finds that I am lousy + +Short of what I expected, as for the +most part it do fall out + +Shy of any warr hereafter, or to +prepare better for it + +Sick of it and of him for it + +Sicke men that are recovered, they +lying before our office doors + +Silence; it being seldom any wrong to a +man to say nothing + +Singing with many voices is not singing + +Sir W. Pen was so fuddled that we could +not try him to play + +Sir W. Pen did it like a base raskall, +and so I shall remember + +Sit up till 2 o'clock that she may call +the wench up to wash + +Slabbering my band sent home for +another + +Smoke jack consists of a wind-wheel +fixed in the chimney + +So home to supper, and to bed, it being +my wedding night + +So great a trouble is fear + +So to bed, to be up betimes by the +helpe of a larum watch + +So much is it against my nature to owe +anything to any body + +So home, and after supper did wash my +feet, and so to bed + +So home to prayers and to bed + +So I took occasion to go up and to bed +in a pet + +So to bed in some little discontent, +but no words from me + +So home and to supper with beans and +bacon and to bed + +So we went to bed and lay all night in +a quarrel + +So much wine, that I was even almost +foxed + +So good a nature that he cannot deny +any thing + +So time do alter, and do doubtless the +like in myself + +So home and to bed, where my wife had +not lain a great while + +So out, and lost our way, which made me +vexed + +So every thing stands still for money + +Softly up to see whether any of the +beds were out of order or no + +Some merry talk with a plain bold maid +of the house + +Some ends of my own in what advice I do +give her + +Sorry in some respect, glad in my +expectations in another respect + +Sorry for doing it now, because of +obliging me to do the like + +Sorry thing to be a poor King + +Spares not to blame another to defend +himself + +Sparrowgrass + +Speaks rarely, which pleases me +mightily + +Spends his time here most, playing at +bowles + +Sport to me to see him so earnest on so +little occasion + +Staid two hours with her kissing her, +but nothing more + +Statute against selling of offices + +Staying out late, and painting in the +absence of her husband + +Strange things he has been found guilty +of, not fit to name + +Strange the folly of men to lay and +lose so much money + +Strange how civil and tractable he was +to me + +Street ordered to be continued, forty +feet broad, from Paul's + +Subject to be put into a disarray upon +very small occasions + +Such open flattery is beastly + +Suffered her humour to spend, till we +begun to be very quiet + +Supper and to bed without one word one +to another + +Suspect the badness of the peace we +shall make + +Swear they will not go to be killed and +have no pay + +Take pins out of her pocket to prick me +if I should touch her + +Talk very highly of liberty of +conscience + +Taught my wife some part of subtraction + +Tax the same man in three or four +several capacities + +Tear all that I found either boyish or +not to be worth keeping + +Tell me that I speak in my dreams + +That I might not seem to be afeared + +That I may have nothing by me but what +is worth keeping + +That I may look as a man minding +business + +The unlawfull use of lawfull things + +The devil being too cunning to +discourage a gamester + +The most ingenious men may sometimes be +mistaken + +"The Alchymist,"—[Comedy by Ben Jonson] + +The barber came to trim me and wash me + +The present Irish pronunciation of +English + +The world do not grow old at all + +The ceremonies did not please me, they +do so overdo them + +The rest did give more, and did believe +that I did so too + +Thence by coach, with a mad coachman, +that drove like mad + +Thence to Mrs. Martin's, and did what I +would with her + +There is no passing but by coach in the +streets, and hardly that + +There eat and drank, and had my +pleasure of her twice + +There did 'tout ce que je voudrais +avec' her + +There setting a poor man to keep my +place + +There is no man almost in the City +cares a turd for him + +There being ten hanged, drawn, and +quartered + +These young Lords are not fit to do any +service abroad + +These Lords are hard to be trusted + +They were so false spelt that I was +ashamed of them + +They want where to set their feet, to +begin to do any thing + +This day churched, her month of +childbed being out + +This absence makes us a little strange +instead of more fond + +This week made a vow to myself to drink +no wine this week + +This day I began to put on buckles to +my shoes + +This unhappinesse of ours do give them +heart + +This kind of prophane, mad +entertainment they give themselves + +Those absent from prayers were to pay a +forfeit + +Those bred in the North among the +colliers are good for labour + +Though he knows, if he be not a fool, +that I love him not + +Thus it was my chance to see the King +beheaded at White Hall + +Tied our men back to back, and thrown +them all into the sea + +To Mr. Holliard's in the morning, +thinking to be let blood + +To be enjoyed while we are young and +capable of these joys + +To see Major-general Harrison hanged, +drawn; and quartered + +To the Swan and drank our morning draft + +To see the bride put to bed + +Too much of it will make her know her +force too much + +Took physique, and it did work very +well + +Tory—The term was not used politically +until about 1679 + +Tried the effect of my silence and not +provoking her + +Trouble, and more money, to every +Watch, to them to drink + +Troubled me, to see the confidence of +the vice of the age + +Trumpets were brought under the +scaffold that he not be heard + +Turn out every man that will be drunk, +they must turn out all + +Two shops in three, if not more, +generally shut up + +Uncertainty of all history + +Uncertainty of beauty + +Unless my too-much addiction to +pleasure undo me + +Unquiet which her ripping up of old +faults will give me + +Up, leaving my wife in bed, being sick +of her months + +Up, finding our beds good, but lousy; +which made us merry + +Up and took physique, but such as to go +abroad with + +Upon a very small occasion had a +difference again broke out + +Venison-pasty that we have for supper +to-night to the cook's + +Very angry we were, but quickly friends +again + +Very great tax; but yet I do think it +is so perplexed + +Vexed at my wife's neglect in leaving +of her scarf + +Vexed me, but I made no matter of it, +but vexed to myself + +Vices of the Court, and how the pox is +so common there + +Voyage to Newcastle for coles + +Waked this morning between four and +five by my blackbird + +Was kissing my wife, which I did not +like + +We are to go to law never to revenge, +but only to repayre + +We had a good surloyne of rost beefe + +Weary of it; but it will please the +citizens +Weather being very wet and hot to keep +meat in. + +What way a man could devise to lose so +much in so little time + +What I said would not hold water + +What I had writ foule in short hand + +What they all, through profit or fear, +did promise + +What a sorry dispatch these great +persons give to business + +What is there more to be had of a woman +than the possessing her + +Where money is free, there is great +plenty + +Where I find the worst very good + +Where a piece of the Cross is + +Where a trade hath once been and do +decay, it never recovers + +Where I expect most I find least +satisfaction + +Wherein every party has laboured to +cheat another + +Which he left him in the lurch + +Which I did give him some hope of, +though I never intend it + +Whip this child till the blood come, if +it were my child! + +Whip a boy at each place they stop at +in their procession + +Who is the most, and promises the +least, of any man + +Who we found ill still, but he do make +very much of it + +Who must except against every thing and +remedy nothing + +Whose red nose makes me ashamed to be +seen with him + +Willing to receive a bribe if it were +offered me + +Wine, new and old, with labells pasted +upon each bottle + +Wise man's not being wise at all times + +Wise men do prepare to remove abroad +what they have + +With much ado in an hour getting a +coach home + +With a shower of hail as big as walnuts + +Wonders that she cannot be as good +within as she is fair without + +World sees now the use of them for +shelter of men (fore-castles) + +Would make a dogg laugh + +Would either conform, or be more wise, +and not be catched! + +Would not make my coming troublesome to +any + +Wretch, n., often used as an expression +of endearment + +Wronged by my over great expectations + +Ye pulling down of houses, in ye way of +ye fire +</pre> +</td> +</tr> +</table> +</center> + + +<br><br> +<p>If you wish to read the entire context of any of these quotations, select a short segment and +copy it into your clipboard memory—then open the appropriate eBook and paste the phrase +into your computer's find or search operation.</p> + +<h3> +<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/4/2/0/4200/4200.txt">The Diaries of Samuel Pepys, Complete</a> +</h3> + + +<br> +<blockquote><blockquote><blockquote> + +<p>These quotations were collected from the eight volumes of the Diary of Samuel Pepys by +<a href="mailto:widger@cecomet.net">David Widger</a> while preparing etexts +for Project Gutenberg. 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