LIVED IN***


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SAMUEL PEPYS AND THE WORLD HE LIVED IN.


[Illustration: Nell Gywn]


SAMUEL PEPYS AND THE WORLD HE LIVED IN.

by

HENRY B. WHEATLEY, F.S.A.


   “His Diary is like a good sirloin, which requires only to be basted
   with its own drippings.”--_Athenæum_, 1848, page 551.


Second Edition.







[Illustration: Decoration]

London:
Bickers and Son, 1, Leicester Square.
1880.

Chiswick Press: Charles Whittingham and Co. Tooks Court, Chancery
Lane.




[Illustration: Decoration]




PREFACE.


This little book does not need any long Preface, as the title
sufficiently explains the object aimed at. Although the various
subjects referred to in the “Diary” are annotated in the different
editions, there is in none of these any complete analysis of the entire
work or of the incidents of Pepys’s life.

I have endeavoured in the following pages to draw together some of the
most interesting incidents of the “Diary” relating both to Pepys’s
life and to the manners of his time, and also to illustrate them from
other sources. I have used the best edition of the “Diary,” by the
Rev. Mynors Bright; but in order that this book may form a companion
to all editions I have referred to the date of the entries rather
than to the volume and page. It must therefore be understood that the
passages referred to when not met with in the other editions will be
found among the hitherto unpublished matter of that of Mr. Bright. It
has been my endeavour to illustrate the contents of this entertaining
work more completely than has previously been attempted, and several of
the circumstances of Pepys’s life are here brought prominently forward
for the first time. I may add that the whole of the present volume
was printed off before the appearance of the excellent article in the
July number of the “Edinburgh Review” (1880), as otherwise it might
be supposed that certain points had been suggested by that article. I
have, however, availed myself of its pages to make a correction of a
small matter in the Index.

Mr. T. C. Noble has kindly sent me, since the completion of this book,
a copy of Pepys’s original marriage certificate from the Registers of
St. Margaret’s Church, Westminster, and I therefore insert it here to
complete the account in Chapter I. “Samuell Peps of this parish Gent &
Elizabeth De Sⁿᵗ Michell of Martins in the ffeilds Spinster. Published
October 19ᵗʰ, 22ⁿᵈ, 29ᵗʰ [1655] and were married by Richard Sherwyn
Esqʳ one of the Justices of the Peace of the Cittie and Lyberties of
Westmʳ December 1ˢᵗ. (Signed) Ri. Sherwyn.”

The pronunciation of Pepys’s name has long been a disputed point, but
although the most usual form at the present day is _Peps_, there can
be little doubt that in his own time the name was pronounced as if
written _Peeps_. The reasons for this opinion are: (1) that the name
was sometimes so spelt phonetically by some of his contemporaries, as
in the Coffee-house paper quoted in the “Diary” (ed. Mynors Bright,
vol. vi. p. 292): “On Tuesday last Mr. Peeps went to Windsor,” &c.; (2)
that this pronunciation is still the received one at Magdalene College,
Cambridge; and (3) that the present bearers of the name so pronounce it.

In conclusion, it is my pleasing duty to express here my best thanks to
those friends who have kindly assisted me in my work. Chief among these
are Professor Newton, F.R.S., who, as Fellow of Magdalene College,
facilitated my inquiries respecting the Pepysian Library, Mr. Pattrick,
Senior Fellow and President of the College, Mr. Pepys Cockerell, Mr.
George Scharf, F.S.A., Mr. Richard B. Prosser, of the Patent Office,
who communicated the documents relating to Mrs. Pepys’s father, and
Colonel Pasley, whose List of the Secretaries of the Admiralty, &c., in
the Appendix will be found of great value, not merely in illustrating
Pepys’s life, but as a real addition to our information respecting the
history of the Navy.

  H. B. W.

  5, Minford Gardens, W.,
  September, 1880.

P.S. Since the first publication of this book I have received an
interesting letter from Mr. Walter Courtenay Pepys, a member of the
Cottenham branch of the Pepys family, who, while agreeing with the
statement above as to the Diarist’s pronunciation, reminds me that his
branch have pronounced the name as “Pep-pis” for at least one hundred
years. In favour of this pronunciation Mr. Pepys adds that the French
branch, which is now settled at La Rochelle, but came from Languedoc
and originally from Italy (where the name exists as “Peppi”), now spell
the name “Pepy.”




[Illustration: Decoration]




CONTENTS.


                                                      PAGE
  PREFACE                                                v

  CHAP.    I. PEPYS BEFORE THE DIARY                     1

    ″     II. PEPYS IN THE DIARY                        16

    ″    III. PEPYS AFTER THE DIARY                     46

    ″     IV. TANGIER                                   63

    ″      V. PEPYS’S BOOKS AND COLLECTIONS             77

    ″     VI. LONDON                                   100

    ″    VII. PEPYS’S RELATIONS, FRIENDS, AND
                 ACQUAINTANCES                         116

    ″   VIII. THE NAVY                                 128

    ″     IX. THE COURT                                159

    ″      X. PUBLIC CHARACTERS                        183

    ″     XI. MANNERS                                  199

    ″    XII. AMUSEMENTS                               217

    ″   XIII. CONCLUSION                               232

  APPENDIX I. PORTRAITS OF PEPYS                       237

      ″   II. SCHEMES OF ALEXANDER MARCHANT, SIEUR
                 DE ST. MICHEL (MRS. PEPYS’S FATHER)   241

      ″  III. PEPYS’S MANUSCRIPTS AT OXFORD            251

      ″   IV. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS                      252

      ″    V. PEPYS’S CORRESPONDENTS                   254

      ″   VI. LIST OF SECRETARIES OF THE ADMIRALTY,
                 CLERKS OF THE ACTS, &C., DRAWN UP BY
                 COLONEL PASLEY, R.E.                  266

      ″  VII. PLAYS WHICH PEPYS SAW ACTED  289

  INDEX                                                297




[Illustration: Decoration]




SAMUEL PEPYS AND THE WORLD HE LIVED IN.




CHAPTER I.

PEPYS BEFORE THE DIARY.

 “He was a _pollard_ man, without the _top_ (_i. e._ the reason as the
 source of ideas, or immediate yet not sensuous truths, having their
 evidence in themselves; or the imagination or idealizing power, by
 symbols mediating between the reason and the understanding), but on
 this account more broadly and luxuriantly branching out from the upper
 trunk.”--COLERIDGE’s MS. note in his copy of the “Diary” (_Notes and
 Queries_, 1st S. vol. vi. p. 215).


Samuel Pepys was the first of a well-established stock to make a
name in the outer world, but since his time the family can boast of
having had amongst its members a Court physician, a bishop, and a lord
chancellor.

The earliest recorded Pepys was named Thomas, and appears, on the
authority of the Court Rolls of the manor of Pelhams, in Cottenham, to
have been bailiff of the Abbot of Crowland’s lands in Cambridgeshire,
in the early part of the reign of Henry VI.[1] From that time the
family flourished, and there seems to be some reason for believing that
certain members enriched themselves with the spoils of the abbey lands
in the time of Henry VIII.

Before the Diarist became known, one of the most distinguished members
of the family was Richard Pepys, created Lord Chief Justice of Ireland
by Charles I. When the King was executed, Richard resigned his office;
but he enjoyed the favour of Cromwell, and resumed the place. As he did
not die until 1678, it is strange that there should be no allusion to
him in the “Diary.”

The branch from which Samuel was descended had not much money; and his
father, being a younger son, came to London and became a tailor. This
descent in the social scale has caused much misapprehension, and his
enemies did not forget to taunt him on his connection with tailoring;
but it is a well-accredited axiom that trade does not injure gentry.
Some remarks of Pepys himself upon his family have been greatly
misunderstood. Referring to the non-appearance of any account of the
Pepyses in Fuller’s “Worthies,” he writes:--“But I believe, indeed, our
family were never considerable.”[2] Dr. Doran paraphrased this into:
“Let others say of his family what they might: he, for his own part,
did not believe that it was of anything like gentle descent.”[3] This
is a pure blunder, for Pepys merely meant that none of the family had
made much mark; and he would have been very indignant had any one told
him that they were not gentle.

Samuel, the fifth child of John and Margaret Pepys, was born on
February 23rd, 1632, either at Brampton, a village near Huntingdon, or
in London. There is something to be said in favour of each supposition,
but, as the registers of Brampton church do not commence until the
year 1654,[4] the question cannot now be definitely settled. We have
Pepys’s own authority for the statement that his father and mother were
married at Newington, in Surrey, on October 15th, 1626.[5] The register
of marriages of St. Mary, Newington, has been searched, but the name
of Pepys occurs neither in the years 1625, 1626, nor in 1627,[6] and
Mrs. John Pepys’s maiden name is still unknown. In early youth, Samuel
went to a school at Huntingdon, as appears by a passage in the “Diary”
(March 15th, 1659–60), where he writes: “I met Tom Alcock, one that
went to school with me at Huntingdon, but I had not seen him this
sixteen years.” He seems to have spent his youth pretty equally between
town and country, for on one occasion, when he was walking over the
fields to Kingsland, he remembered the time when, as a boy, he lived
there, and “used to shoot with my bow and arrow in these fields.”[7]
When he left Huntingdon he entered St. Paul’s School, and remained
there until he had reached the age of seventeen. In after life, on
the occasion of an official visit to Mercers’ Hall, he remembered the
time when he was a petitioner for his exhibition.[8] He was a stout
Roundhead in his boyish days, and this fact was remarked upon, to his
great chagrin, in after years, by his friend and schoolfellow Mr.
Christmas. He went to see the execution of Charles I. at Whitehall,
and made himself conspicuous by saying on his return that, were he to
preach upon the event of the day, he should select as his text the
verse: “The memory of the wicked shall rot.” He was in some fear that
Mr. Christmas might remember this also, but he was happy to find that
that gentleman had left school before the incident occurred.[9] Pepys
always took a lively interest in the welfare of his school, to which
references are frequently made in the “Diary.”

In 1650, his name occurs as a sizar on the boards of Trinity College,
Cambridge; but before going to reside at the University, on March 5,
1650–51,[10] he was entered at Magdalene College, having probably been
led to make the change by the greater inducements held out to him by
the latter college. Here he was elected into one of Mr. Spendluffe’s
scholarships in the following month; and two years later, on October
14, 1653, he was preferred to one on Dr. John Smith’s foundation. His
father was at this time described as a citizen of London.

Little is known of Samuel’s academic career, during which he does not
appear to have gained much distinction; and remarks in various parts
of the “Diary” show that his conduct was not such as became a Puritan.
The College books can be brought as a witness against him, for we learn
from that source that, on October 21st, 1653, “Peapys and Hind were
solemnly admonished ... for having been scandalously over-served with
drink the night before.” Still, we must not jump to the conclusion that
his time was entirely wasted, for he evidently carried into his busy
life a good stock of classical learning. It was while he was at the
University that he made the acquaintance of the learned Selden, from
whom he borrowed the collection of ballads which formed the basis of
the famous Pepysian collection. He relates that, while at Cambridge, he
wrote a romance entitled, “Love a Cheate,” which he tore up on the 30th
of January, 1663–64. This work of destruction must have been performed
with some feelings of regret, for he tells us that he rather liked
the tale, and wondered that he had ever been able to write so well.
His previous literary performances had consisted in the concocting of
some anagrams upon Mrs. Elizabeth Whittle, afterwards the wife of Sir
Stephen Fox.[11] It is not recorded at what time Pepys left college,
but it must have been either in 1654 or 1655. He was made Master of
Arts by proxy, in June, 1660, the grace being passed on the 26th of
that month.

On the 1st of December, 1655,[12] when he was still without any settled
means of support, Pepys married Elizabeth St. Michel, a beautiful
and portionless girl of fifteen. Although there is extant a letter
from Balthasar St. Michel to Pepys (dated from Deal, February 8th,
1673–74), in which the history of Mrs. Pepys’s family is set forth,
Lord Braybrooke was contented with the information on her monument,
and merely added that she was educated in a convent, which in point
of fact she was not. The letter alluded to was printed as far back as
the year 1841,[13] and yet I cannot find that the history contained in
it has ever been used by the biographers of Pepys. What is even more
remarkable than Lord Braybrooke’s silence respecting it, is the fact
that the Rev. John Smith, who published the letter, overlooked it when
he wrote his introduction. Mons. St. Michel was of a good family in
Anjou, but having turned Huguenot at the age of twenty-one, when in the
German service, his father disinherited him, and he was left penniless.
He came over to England in the retinue of Henrietta Maria, on her
marriage with Charles I., as one of her Majesty’s gentleman carvers;
but the Queen dismissed him on finding out that he was a Protestant,
and did not go to mass. Being a handsome man with courtly manners, he
gained the affections of the daughter of Sir Francis Kingsmall (lately
left a widow by an Irish squire), who married him against the wishes
of her family, and, with _£_1,500 which they raised, the newly-married
couple started for France, in the hope of recovering, if possible, some
part of the family estates. Unhappily, they were taken prisoners at
sea, with all their goods, by the Dunkirkers, and when released they
settled at Bideford, in Devonshire. Here, or near by, Elizabeth and
Balthasar and the rest of the family were born.

In course of time they all went to France, and the father, in command
of a company of foot, assisted at the taking of Dunkirk. He occupied
his time with propositions of perpetual motion and other visionary
schemes, and consequently brought himself and all dependent upon him to
the brink of poverty. While he was away from Paris, some devout Roman
Catholics persuaded Madame St. Michel to place her daughter in the
nunnery of the Ursulines. The father was enraged at this action, but
managed to get Elizabeth out of the nunnery after she had been there
twelve days. Thinking that France was a dangerous place to live in, he
hurried his family back to England, and shortly afterwards Elizabeth
married Pepys. Her father was greatly pleased that she had become the
wife of a true Protestant; and she herself said to him, kissing his
eyes, “Dear father, though in my tender years I was by my low fortune
in this world deluded to popery by the fond dictates thereof, I have
now (joined with my riper years, which give me more understanding) a
man to my husband too wise, and one too religious in the Protestant
religion, to suffer my thoughts to bend that way any more.”

There are several references in the “Diary” to Mrs. Pepys’s father
and mother, who seem never to have risen out of the state of poverty
into which they had sunk. On May 2, 1662, Mons. St. Michel took out a
patent, in concert with Sir John Collidon and Sir Edward Ford,[14] for
the purpose of curing smoky chimneys; but this scheme could not have
been very successful, as a few months afterwards he was preparing to
go to Germany in order to fight against the Turks.[15] Pepys gave him
some work to do in 1666, and Mrs. Pepys carried the account-books that
he was to rule; but such jobs as these must have given him but a sorry
living, and in the following year he again proposed to go abroad. Pepys
sent him three jacobuses in gold to help him on his journey.[16] We
hear nothing more of either father or mother, with the exception of
an allusion to their pleasure at seeing the prosperous state of their
daughter[17]--a prosperity in which they certainly did not share.

This account of Mrs. Pepys’s parentage has led us away from the early
days of Pepys, when, with improvident passion, he married his young
wife; and we will therefore return to the year 1655. Early marriages
were then far from uncommon, and Mrs. Pepys’s beauty was considered
as forming a very valid excuse for the improvidence of the match.
There seems to be some reason for believing that she was of a dark
complexion, for her husband on one occasion was mad with her for
dressing herself according to the fashion in fair hair.[18] Sir Edward
Montagu, who was Pepys’s first cousin one remove (Samuel’s grandfather
and Sir Edward’s mother being brother and sister), gave a helping hand
to the imprudent couple, and allowed them to live in his house. The
Diarist alludes to this time, when, some years afterwards, he writes of
how his wife “used to make coal fires, and wash” his “foul clothes with
her own hand,” in their little room at Lord Sandwich’s.[19]

Samuel does not appear to have lived with his father after he had grown
up, and as old John Pepys was not a very thriving tradesman, it seems
likely that Montagu had previously assisted his young kinsman. Indeed,
it was probably under his patronage that Samuel went to the University.

The Diarist seems to have held some official position in the year 1656,
because on Thursday, August 7th, a pass was granted “to John Pepys
and his man with necessaries for Holland, being on the desire of Mr.
Samˡˡ. Pepys.”[20] John Pepys had probably long been in the habit of
going backwards and forwards to Holland, for Samuel writes (January
24th, 1665–66): “We went through Horslydowne, where I never was since
a little boy, that I went to enquire after my father, whom we did
give over for lost coming from Holland.” Whether these journeys were
undertaken in the way of business, or whether they had any connection
with Montagu’s affairs, we cannot now tell. That Samuel acted as a
sort of agent for Montagu, we have evidence; and among the Rawlinson
Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library is a memorandum of the payment to
him on General Montagu’s part for the ransom of the Marquis of Baydez
(22nd January, 1656–57).

On March 26th, 1658, he underwent an operation for the stone, a disease
that seems to have been inherited. The operation was successfully
performed, and ever after he made a practice of celebrating the
anniversary of this important event in his life with thanksgiving.

In 1659 he accompanied Sir Edward Montagu in the “Naseby,” when that
admiral made his expedition to the Sound; and he was very surprised
to learn afterwards how negotiations had been carried on of which at
the time he was quite ignorant. This is not the place for a history
of the various stages that led to the Restoration, but a passing
allusion to one of these may be allowed here, as the particulars are
given in the “Diary.” When Sir Edward Montagu left England for the
Sound, he said to the Protector Richard, on parting with him, that
“he should rejoice more to see him in his grave at his return home,
than that he should give way to such things as were then in hatching,
and afterwards did ruin him.”[21] Finding the condition of affairs
in England hopeless, Montagu took advantage of this expedition to
correspond with Charles II.; but he had to be careful and secret, for
his fellow-plenipotentiary, Algernon Sidney, who suspected him, was
an enemy.[22] Pepys’s remark on finding out what had been going on
under his nose was, “I do from this raise an opinion of him, to be one
of the most secret men in the world, which I was not so convinced of
before.”[23]

On Pepys’s return to England he was employed in the office of Mr.,
afterwards Sir George, Downing, as a clerk of the Exchequer connected
with the pay of the army, and soon afterwards commenced to keep the
“Diary” which we now possess.

The account of the incidents of Pepys’s early life must be more or
less fragmentary, as they can be obtained merely from occasional
allusions; and it is only in the next chapter, in which we see Pepys
in the “Diary,” that we can obtain any full idea of the man as painted
by himself. Before passing on to this part of our subject, it will be
well to set down a few notes on the “Diary” as a book. The book has
thrown such a flood of light upon the history and manners of the middle
of the seventeenth century, that we are apt to forget the fact that
before the year 1825 the world knew nothing of this man of gossip. Yet
so ungrateful are we to our benefactors, that the publication of the
“Diary” did an immense injury to the writer’s reputation. Previously he
was known as a staid, trustworthy, and conscientious man of business;
as a patron of science and literature, and as a President of the Royal
Society. Jeremy Collier says, he was “a philosopher of the severest
morality.” Since 1825 we have been too apt to forget the excellence
of his official life, and to think of him only as a busybody and a
_quidnunc_.

When Pepys’s library was presented to Magdalene College, Cambridge,
by his nephew, John Jackson, in 1724, there were, among the other
treasures, six small volumes of closely-written MS. in shorthand
(upwards of three thousand pages in all), which attracted little or
no notice until after the publication of Evelyn’s “Diary.” Then it
was that the Hon. and Rev. George Neville, Master of the College,
drew them out of their obscurity, and submitted them to his kinsman,
the well-known statesman, Lord Grenville, who had as a law student
practised shorthand. Lord Grenville deciphered a few of the pages, and
drew up an alphabet and list of arbitrary signs. These were handed to
John Smith, an undergraduate of St. John’s College, who undertook to
decipher the whole. He commenced his labours in the spring of 1819,
and completed them in April, 1822--having thus worked for nearly three
years, usually for twelve and fourteen hours a day.[24] What was
remarkable in all this was, that in the Pepysian library there rested
a little volume which contained the account of Charles II.’s escape
after the battle of Worcester, taken down in shorthand by Pepys from
the King’s dictation, and written out by himself in long-hand. Here,
therefore, was the key that would have unlocked the “Diary” quite
overlooked. Lord Braybrooke made the statement that the cipher used
by Pepys “greatly resembled that known by the name of Rich’s system;”
but this was misleading, as the system really adopted was the earlier
one of Thomas Shelton. Mr. J. E. Bailey, F.S.A., communicated a very
valuable paper, “On the Cipher of Pepys’s Diary,” to the Manchester
Literary Club in 1876, in which he gave particulars of the various old
systems of shorthand, and expressed the opinion that Pepys made himself
familiar with Shelton’s “Tachygraphy”[25] while a student at Cambridge.
The earliest edition of Rich’s “Pen’s Dexterity” was published in 1654,
while in 1642 Shelton could refer to twenty years’ experience as a
shorthand-writer. When the Rev. Mynors Bright was about to decipher
the “Diary” afresh, he consulted Shelton’s book, a copy of which,
with other works on shorthand, is preserved in the Pepysian Library.
Mr. Bright informs us that, “When Pepys wished to keep anything
_particularly concealed_, he wrote his cipher generally in French,
sometimes in Latin, or Greek, or Spanish. This gave me a great deal of
trouble. Afterwards he changed his plan and put in _dummy_ letters.
I was quite puzzled at this, and was nearly giving up in despair the
hope of finding out his device, but at last, by rejecting every other
letter, I made out the words. It would have been better for Pepys’s
credit if these passages could not have been deciphered, as all of them
are quite unfit for publication.”

Pepys was a great lover of shorthand, and he was always ready to invent
a character, as it was then called, for a friend. He used the art in
drafting his public and private letters; and although he was forced
to discontinue his “Diary” in 1669, on account of the weakness of his
eyesight, he continued its use throughout his life.

We learn from the “Diary” itself some particulars of how it was
written. The incidents of each day were dotted down in short, and then
the writer shut himself up in his office to fill up all the details.
Sometimes he was in arrear: thus we read, on January 1st, 1662–63,
“So to my office to set down these two or three days’ journal;” on
September 24th, 1665, “Then I in the cabin to writing down my journal
for these last seven days to my great content;” and on November 10th,
1665, “Up and entered all my journal since the 28th of October, having
every day’s passage well in my head, though it troubles me to remember
it.”

Lord Braybrooke, who first introduced the “Diary” to the public, had no
very accurate notions of the duties of an editor; and he treated his
manuscript in a very unsatisfactory manner. Large portions were omitted
without explanation, and apparently without reason; and although much
was added to succeeding editions, still the reader might well say--

   “That cruel something unpossess’d
   Corrodes and leavens all the rest.”

The third edition, published in 1848, contained a large mass of
restored passages, amounting, it is said, to not less than one-fourth
of the entire work. Some fresh notes were added to the fourth edition,
published in 1854; but no alteration of the text was made beyond
“the correction of a few verbal errors and corrupt passages hitherto
overlooked.” Subsequent editions have been mere reprints of these. In
1875 appeared the first volume of the Rev. Mynors Bright’s entirely new
edition, with about one-third of matter never yet published, all of
which was of the true Pepysian flavour. Here was a treat for the lovers
of the “Diary” which they little expected.

Having traced the particulars of Pepys’s life to the year 1659, and
described the way in which the “Diary” was written, and the means by
which it first saw the light, I will now pass on to notice, in the next
chapter, the chief personal incidents recorded in the book itself.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] “Diary,” ed. Mynors Bright, vol. iv. p. 366; vol. vi. p. 306.

[2] “Diary,” Feb. 10, 1661–62.

[3] “Habits and Men,” p. 300.

[4] I am indebted to the kindness of the Rev. Herbert Bree, Rector of
Brampton, for this information.

[5] “Diary,” Dec. 31, 1664.

[6] “Notes and Queries,” 1st S. vol. xii. p. 102.

[7] “Diary,” May 12, 1667.

[8] Jan. 22, 1660–61.

[9] Nov. 1, 1660.

[10] “Did put on my gown first, March 5, 1650–51,” Dec. 31, 1664 (note).

[11] “Diary,” Nov. 11, 1660.

[12] Lord Braybrooke says October, but the “Athenæum” (1848, p. 551)
says December 1st.

[13] “Life, Journals, and Correspondence of S. Pepys,” vol. i. p. 146.

[14] “Diary,” Sept. 22, 1663. In the original patent (No. 138) St.
Michel’s name appears as Alexander Merchant of St. Michaell. (See
Appendix.)

[15] Jan. 4, 1663–64.

[16] June 21, 1667.

[17] Dec. 28, 1668.

[18] “Diary,” May 11, 1667.

[19] Feb. 25, 1666–67.

[20] Entry-Book No. 105 of the Protector’s Council of State, p. 327
(_quoted_, “Notes and Queries,” 5th S. vol. v. p. 508).

[21] “Diary,” June 21, 1660.

[22] March 8, 1664–65.

[23] Nov. 7, 1660.

[24] Smith afterwards took orders, and was presented to the rectory of
Baldock in Hertfordshire by Lord Brougham in 1832, at the instigation
of Harriet Martineau. In 1841 he published two octavo volumes,
entitled, “The Life, Journals, and Correspondence of Samuel Pepys,
Esq., F.R.S.” This wretchedly edited book contains the Tangier “Diary”
and much valuable information; but I cannot find that the information
has been used by the successive editors of the “Diary.” He died in 1870.

[25] “Tachygraphy. The most exact and compendious methode of short and
swift writing that hath ever yet beene published by any. Composed by
Thomas Shelton, author and professor of the said art. Approued by both
Unyuersities. Ps. 45, 1, My tongue is as the pen of a swift writer.”
1641.




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER II.

PEPYS IN THE “DIARY.”

 “An exact Diary is a window into his heart that maketh it: and
 therefore pity it is that any should look therein but either the
 friends of the party or such ingenuous foes as will not, especially in
 things doubtful, make conjectural comments to his disgrace.”--PRYNNE’S
 _Remarks on Abp. Laud_.


On the 1st of January, 1659–60, Samuel Pepys (then in his
twenty-seventh year) commenced to write his famous “Diary.” If, as
seems more than probable, he had previously kept a journal of some
kind, all traces of it are now lost; and our earliest glimpses of the
circumstances of his life are to be obtained only from the “Diary,”
which is by far the most remarkable book of its kind in existence.
Other men have written diaries and confessions, but they have been
intended either for the public or at least for a small circle of
friends to see. This “Diary” was only intended for the writer’s eye. He
wrote it in secret, and when he unguardedly told Sir William Coventry
in the Tower that he kept a diary, he was sorry for his indiscretion
immediately afterwards. Pepys has been likened to the barber of King
Midas, who relieved his mind by communicating to a bundle of reeds the
fact that his master had the ears of an ass; and assuredly no other
writer has so unreservedly stripped his soul bare. It is, therefore,
only fair to bear in mind what is said in the motto at the head of
this chapter, and not to forget that very few could bear the accusing
witness of such a truthful record of thoughts as well as actions as is
here. The “Diary” extends over nearly ten eventful years in the history
of England, and contains a voluminous record of both public and private
events. The fascination of Pepys’s garrulity is so great, that most of
those who have written about him have found it difficult to restrain
their praise within bounds. A writer in the “Athenæum” (apparently
the late Peter Cunningham) was quite carried away by his subject when
he wrote--“He has the minuteness of Dee and Ashmole without their
tediousness, the playfulness of Swift in his best moments without his
prejudice and his party feelings, and a charm over Byron and Scott,
and, indeed, above all other memorialists that we can call to mind, in
that his Diary was kept without the slightest view to publication.”[26]

I will now first note some of the chief circumstances of Pepys’s life
during the period covered by the “Diary,” and then say something about
his character as it is painted by himself.

When we are first introduced to Pepys he is living in Axe Yard,
Westminster, with very small means of support, but making so good a
show that he is esteemed rich. His family consists of himself, his
wife, and servant Jane. During the frosty weather they have not a coal
in the house, and he is forced to dine at his father’s, or make himself
as comfortable as he can up in the garret. That the larder is not very
plentifully supplied is seen by the fact that, on the 1st of February,
he and his wife dine on pease pudding, and on nothing else. At one
time he has not money enough in the house to pay the rent, but soon
afterwards he finds himself worth _£_40 which he did not expect, and is
therefore afraid that he must have forgotten something. On the 16th of
January, Mr. Downing (in whose office he then was) asked our Diarist,
in a half-hearted way, whether he would go to Holland, and gave him
the impression that his services could be dispensed with. At this time
political affairs were in the greatest confusion, and no one knew what
opinions to hold with profit to himself. Thus, William Symons said that
“he had made shift to keep in, in good esteem and employment through
eight governments in one year, and then failed unhappy in the ninth,
viz., that of the King’s coming in.”[27]

As in times of anarchy every one wishes to talk, the Rota, or Coffee
Club founded by James Harrington, the author of “Oceana,” was found to
be a congenial resort by those who wished to express their opinions
on passing events. The principle of the club was political, and the
plan formed there for the government of the country was, that every
official should be chosen by ballot. Every year a third part of the
House of Commons were to “rote out by ballot,” and no magistrate
was to continue in his position more than three years. Other than
politicians attended the meetings, and many distinguished men, such
as Dr. Petty, Dr. Croon, Sir William Poultney, and Cyriack Skinner,
were to be found in the evening at the Turk’s Head, in the New Palace
Yard. The room was usually as full as it would hold, and Aubrey gives
it as his opinion that the arguments heard in Parliament were flat as
compared with those delivered at the Rota Club. The object of worship
was the ballot-box, and the company sat round an oval table, which had
a passage in the middle for Miles, the landlord, to deliver his coffee.
Pepys paid his eighteen-pence on becoming a member of the club, on the
9th of January, 1659–60, and he frequently attended after this. If the
following can be considered as a good illustration of proceedings,
there must have been considerable divergence in the opinions of the
members:--“I went to the Coffee Club and heard very good discourse;
it was in answer to Mr. Harrington’s answer, who said that the state
of the Roman government was not a settled government, and so it was no
wonder that the balance of property was in one hand, and the command
in another, it being therefore always in a posture of war; but it was
carried by ballot, that it was a steady government; so to-morrow it
is to be proved by the opponents that the balance lay in one hand and
the government in another.”[28] On the 20th of February, Pepys writes:
“After a small debate upon the question whether learned or unlearned
subjects are best, the club broke up very poorly, and I do not think
they will meet any more.” After the Restoration Harrington was put in
the Tower, and then removed to Portsea Castle. His imprisonment turned
him mad, so that he fancied his perspiration turned sometimes to flies
and sometimes to bees, but all his hallucinations were inoffensive. One
of the first steps taken by Monk towards obtaining a free Parliament
was the admission of the secluded members who had been previously
purged out. Pepys describes the marching-in of these men on the 21st
of February, and specially notices Prynne’s “old basket-hilt sword.”
The editors of the “Diary” might have illustrated this by an amusing
passage from Aubrey’s “Lives.” It appears that as the members were
going to the House, Prynne’s long rusty sword “ran between Sir William
Waller’s short legs, and threw him down;” which caused laughter, as
Aubrey takes care to add. About this time Pepys seems to have discerned
the signs of the times, for we find him, on a visit to Audley End,
drinking the health of the King down in a cellar.[29] Sir Edward
Montagu now comes to the front, and is intent upon benefiting his
kinsman. Pepys hopes to be made Clerk of the Peace for Westminster, but
finds the place already promised to another. Montagu offers him the
post of Secretary to the Generals at Sea, which he joyfully accepts;
and he receives his warrant on the 22nd of March. The following day
sees the party on board the “Swiftsure” at Longreach, where Pepys
receives a letter directed to “S. P., Esq.,” and this superscription
seems to have delighted him greatly, for he says, “of which God knows
I was not a little proud.” On the 30th inst. Montagu and his people
went on board the “Naseby,” which was the ship in which he had gone
to the Sound in the previous year. They remain for a time in the
neighbourhood of Deal, and on the 3rd of May the King’s declaration
and letter to the two generals is received by Montagu, who dictates to
Pepys the words in which he wishes the vote in favour of the King to be
couched. The captains all came on board the “Naseby,” and Pepys read
the letter and declaration to them; and while they were discoursing
on the subject he pretended to be drawing up the form of vote, which
Montagu had already settled. When the resolution was read, it passed
at once; and the seamen all cried out, “God bless King Charles!” a cry
that was echoed by the whole fleet. A little piece of Pepys’s vanity
(and perhaps shrewdness also) here peeps out, for he tells us that he
signed all the copies of the vote of the Council of War, so that if it
should by chance get into print his name might be attached to it.[30]
The English fleet lies off the Dutch coast about the middle of May, and
our Diarist avails himself of the opportunity to visit the Hague and
some of the chief towns of Holland. The Dukes of York and Gloucester
came on board the “Naseby” on the 22nd inst., and the King followed
them on the following day, when the opportunity of his visit was taken
to change the objectionable names of the ships. The “Naseby” became the
“Charles,” the “Richard” the “James,” the “Speaker” the “Mary,” and the
“Lambert” the “Henrietta.”

   “The Naseby now no longer England’s shame,
   But better to be lost in Charles his name.”[31]

Pepys takes the opportunity, when the Duke of York is on board, to
bespeak his favour; and is overjoyed at the Duke calling him Pepys.
On the 25th the King lands at Dover, and is received by Monk. Pepys
tells how the mayor presented the King with a handsome Bible, which he
received, and told the people that “it was the thing he loved above all
things in the world!”

The 5th of June was Pepys’s last day on board, and he was awoke about
three o’clock in the morning by the pouring into his mouth of the water
with which the people above were washing the deck; and he was forced
to rise and sleep leaning on the table. He returned to shore better
off than he had originally left it, as he took care to make use of his
opportunities by getting men made captains, and by obtaining gratuities
for the favours. Fortune continued to smile upon him, for he had not
been many days back in London when Sir Edward Montagu, now a Knight
of the Garter, and in high favour with the King, obtained for him the
promise of the place of Clerk of the Acts. On the 28th of June he
clears himself of his old office under Sir George Downing, and is glad
to part from this stingy fellow, as he calls him. On the following day
he gets his warrant, but is much cast down when he learns that his
predecessor, Mr. Barlow, is still alive, and coming up to town to look
after the place. General Monk’s wife wishes the clerkship to be given
to Mr. Turner, of the Navy Office; but Montagu’s influence secures it
for Pepys. Turner then offers to give Pepys _£_150 to be joined with
him in the patent, but this is refused. Pepys is kept in a great state
of excitement respecting Barlow for a time. He hears that he is a
sickly man, and on July 17th he agrees to give him _£_100 a year out
of his raised salary. This payment continued until February, 1664–65,
when Barlow died. Pepys’s remarks on the death are particularly
characteristic: “For which God knows my heart, I could be as sorry as
is possible for one to be for a stranger, by whose death he gets _£_100
per annum, he being a worthy honest man; but when I come to consider
the providence of God by this means unexpectedly to give me _£_100 a
year more in my estate, I have cause to bless God, and do it from the
bottom of my heart.”[32]

Now, our Diarist has become a man of importance, as one of the
principal Officers of the Navy, and Montagu consequently asks him to
dinner for the first time.[33] Yet he has not much faith in his power
to keep the place; and when a Mr. Man offers him _£_1,000 for it, his
mouth waters, and he would gladly take the money if his patron would
agree.[34] On the 23rd of July he takes the oaths as a Clerk of the
Privy Seal, which he does not expect to be a very profitable office;
but he soon finds himself making about _£_3 a day,[35] in addition
to his regular salary at the Navy Office. Being settled at his house
in Seething Lane, attached to the office, he is glad to get his
little house in Axe Yard off his hands, which he does on the 17th of
September, receiving _£_41 for his interest in it. About this time he
is sworn as a justice of the peace, and he is “mightily pleased” at
the honour, although he confesses that he is wholly ignorant of the
duties.[36]

There were great doings at the coronation of Charles II. in the
following year, and the “Diary” is full of particulars respecting it.
Pepys and a party went to a shop in Cornhill to see the procession when
the King passed from the Tower to Whitehall, and while they waited they
partook of “wine and good cake.”[37]

On the next day Pepys gets into Westminster Abbey to see the
coronation, and sits patiently in a scaffold from a little after four
until eleven. Afterwards he goes into Westminster Hall, sees the
banquet, and returns home to bed with the feeling that he will “never
see the like again in this world.” Next morning he wakes with his “head
in a sad taking through the last night’s drink.”[38]

Sometimes the Clerk of the Acts has a great deal of business to get
through, and he always sticks to his work manfully. By going to the
office early and staying late he was often able to spare the afternoons
for the theatre. Day after day he gets up and is at his desk at four
o’clock in the morning;[39] but this hard work is varied by some idle
days. On June the 5th the Officers of the Navy play at bowls and drink
and talk. Pepys takes his flageolet, and plays upon the leads. Sir
William Penn comes out in his shirt-sleeves, and there is more drinking
and talking, the result of which is, that Pepys goes to bed nearly
fuddled, and wakes up the next morning with an aching head.

A very important event in the life of the Diarist occurred in the
following month. His uncle, Robert Pepys, dies, and a small property at
Brampton, worth about _£_80 per annum,[40] comes into the possession of
old John Pepys, not, however, without some litigation on the part of
some members of the family. As his father has no money, Samuel takes
all the business affairs into his own hands, and seems to consider the
property as his own. When he learns the news, on the 6th of July,
1661, he posts down to Brampton, leaving London between eleven and
twelve o’clock in the morning, and arriving there about nine o’clock at
night. When he gets to his uncle’s house he is very uncomfortable, from
the badness of the food and drink, and the biting of the gnats; but
although he is nearly out of his wits, he appears contented, so as not
to trouble his father. He has much work of arrangement to get through,
and he remains nearly sixteen days away from London. When he returns he
gives out among his most distinguished friends and acquaintances that
he has had an estate of _£_200 a year in land left him, beside money,
“because he would put an esteem upon himself.”[41]

Pepys acknowledged to two weaknesses, of which he tried to cure himself
by means of vows--not, however, with a very successful result. The
first weakness was a too great addiction to the bottle, and the second
a too frequent attendance at theatres. On July 26th, 1661, we find
him making this confession: “Having the beginning of this week made a
vow to myself to drink no wine this week (finding it unfit me to look
after business), and this day breaking of it against my will, I am much
troubled for it; but I hope God will forgive me!” On Michaelmas Day,
1661, he took so much wine that he “was even almost foxed,” so that he
“durst not read prayers for fear of being perceived by my servants in
what case I was.” Next year, on the same day, he finds that his “oaths
for drinking of wine and going to plays are out,” and so he resolves
to take some liberty, “and then fall to them again.” On December 30th,
1662, we find him writing: “After dinner drinking five or six glasses
of wine, which liberty I now take till I begin my oathe again.”[42]

On October 29th, 1663, he drinks some hippocras, which consists of wine
mixed with sugar and spices, under the belief that he is not breaking
his vow, because it is “only a mixed compound drink, and not any wine.”
Sir Walter Scott likened this piece of casuistry to that of Fielding’s
Newgate chaplain, who preferred punch to wine because the former was a
liquor nowhere spoken against in Scripture.

It is necessary now to return to the date at which we broke off to
follow our hero’s vows. He sums up his blessings on February 23rd,
1661–62, in these words: “I am 29 years of age, and in very good
health, and like to live and get an estate; and if I have a heart to be
contented, I think I may reckon myself as happy a man as any is in the
world, for which God be praised.” Yet, on the next day, he is troubled
to part with _£_5 for five weeks’ music-lessons; and soon afterwards
he complains at his father spending _£_100 a year.[43] Although he was
of a saving turn, he could clearly see that it was wise to spend money
while he could enjoy the results of his spending, and alludes to this
on two separate occasions. On May 20th, 1662, he writes: “But though I
am much against too much spending, yet I do think it best to enjoy some
degree of pleasure now that we have health, money, and opportunity,
rather than to leave pleasures to old age or poverty when we cannot
have them so properly.” Four years after this we find the same idea
in other words: “The truth is I do indulge myself a little the more
in pleasure, knowing that this is the proper age of my life to do it;
and out of my observation that most men that do thrive in the world do
forget to take pleasure during the time that they are getting their
estate, but reserve that till they have got one, and then it is too
late for them to enjoy it with any pleasure.”[44]

About this time Pepys is sworn a younger brother of the Trinity House,
is made a burgess of Portsmouth, is troubled with a lawsuit by one
Field, signs warrants as a justice of the peace, and is appointed one
of the Commissioners for the Affairs of Tangier. This business with
Field, which was connected with the office, gives him much annoyance.
At one time he is in fear of being taken by the bailiffs,[45] and at
another he is in such terror that the falling of something behind a
door makes him start with fright.[46]

About the middle of the year 1662 he engages the services of Mr.
Cooper, mate of the “Royal George,” of whom he intends to learn
mathematics; but his early attempts do not appear to have been very
ambitious, for he begins by learning the multiplication-table. In the
following year, he and Mrs. Pepys learn to dance, and he thinks he
shall be able to manage the coranto well enough. He grudges the cost,
however, particularly as he is forced by his oath to give half as much
more to the poor.[47]

The mixture of extravagance and frugality that is constantly exhibited
in the “Diary” is most amusing, particularly in the case of clothes.
Thus, when he hears that the Queen is ill, he stops the making of his
velvet cloak until he sees whether she lives or dies.[48] In spite of
this forethought, he finds, on casting up his accounts, that he spent
_£_55 on his own clothes, although, as a set-off against this large
sum, Mrs. Pepys’s clothes only cost _£_12. This love of fine clothes is
continually peeping out, and it has been suggested that he inherited
it with the tailor blood of his father. A better reason, however, may
be found in the fact that at one time he was very poor, and “forced to
sneak like a beggar” for want of clothes; so that, now he is in funds,
he tries to make up for his former deficiency, and resolves to dress
himself handsomely.[49]

A few years after this he expresses himself as ashamed of the
shabbiness of his clothes, when he wished to speak to the King but did
not like to do so, because his linen was dirty and his clothes mean.[50]

At the end of the year 1663, Pepys performed a duty in a way that
did him great credit. Sir Edward Montagu, now Earl of Sandwich, is
taken ill, and, on his recovery, he goes for change of air to Chelsea.
After a time it gets abroad that he dotes upon one of the daughters
of his landlady, and neglects his duties. On the 9th of September,
1663, Mr. Pickering tells Pepys of all this, and we therefore read in
the “Diary:” “I am ashamed to see my lord so grossly play the fool,
to the flinging-off of all honour, friends, servants, and everything
and person that is good, with his carrying her abroad and playing on
his lute under her window, and forty other poor sordid things, which
I am grieved to hear.” Pepys determines to be silent, as he learns
that the Earl will not bear any allusion to his doings. Still his
mind continually reverts to the matter, and in the end he decides to
write a letter of counsel to his patron.[51] When this is sent, he
continues for some time to be anxious as to the manner in which the
Earl is likely to receive it. Nothing is, of course, said when the two
meet, and there is for a time a coldness between them; but at last
they return to their old relations with each other, and Lord Sandwich,
having left Chelsea, is seen in the world again.

Pepys’s habit of sitting up late, reading and writing by candlelight,
begins to tell upon his eyesight; and in January, 1663–64, he finds
it fail him for the first time. In October, 1664, he consults the
celebrated Mr. Cocker as to the best glass to save his eyes at night;
but they continue to trouble him, and he proposes to get some green
spectacles.[52] How the eyesight got weaker, so that the “Diary” had to
be discontinued, we all know to our great loss.

On one occasion Mr. Coventry talks with Pepys on the need for a
history of the navy of England, and then suggests that he should
write a history of the late Dutch war. Pepys likes the idea, as he
thinks it agrees with his genius, and would recommend him much to the
authorities;[53] but he succeeded in doing this without writing the
history. On the 10th of March, 1663–64, he was appointed one of the
assistants of the Corporation of the Royal Fishery, of which the Duke
of York was the Governor; his commission as Treasurer of the Tangier
Committee is signed on the 18th of April, 1665; and in October of
the same year he obtains the appointment of Surveyor-General of the
Victualling Office. Besides these tangible proofs of his success in
life were the expressions of esteem made use of in respect to him by
men in authority. The Duke of York told him that he highly valued his
services,[54] and the Duke of Albemarle said that he was the right hand
of the navy.[55]

Pepys quite deserved these words of praise, and moreover continued
to deserve them, for during the whole period of the Dutch war he did
his best to provide what was required for the navy, and while the
plague was devastating London he alone remained at his post. His
straightforward common-sense shows out strongly during the course of
the Great Fire. From the 2nd of September, 1666--when the servants
wake him to tell of the burning which they saw in the city--to the 7th,
when he visits the ruins, we have a lively picture of the whole scene
in the pages of the “Diary.” On the Sunday Pepys goes to Whitehall, and
tells the King and the Duke of York of what he had seen. He says that
unless his Majesty will command houses to be pulled down, nothing can
stop the fire. On hearing which, the King instructs him to go to the
Lord Mayor, and command him to pull down houses in every direction.
Sir Thomas Bludworth, the Lord Mayor, seems to have been but a poor
creature; and when he heard the King’s message, “he cried like a
fainting woman, ‘Lord! what can I do? I am spent: people will not obey
me. I have been pulling down houses, but the fire overtakes us faster
than we can do it.’” On the 4th inst. there seemed to be little hope
of saving the Navy Office, unless some extraordinary means were taken
with that object. Pepys therefore suggested that the workmen from
Woolwich and Deptford Dockyards should be sent for to pull down the
houses round them. Sir William Penn went to see after the men, and
Pepys wrote to Sir William Coventry for the Duke of York’s permission.
In the letter he remarks that the fire is very near them, both on the
Tower Street and Fenchurch sides; and that unless houses are pulled
down, there are little hopes of their escape. The next day Penn sends
up the men, who help greatly in the blowing-up of houses; and to this
action Pepys mainly attributes the stoppage of the fire. He then goes
up to the top of Barking church, and there he saw “the saddest sight of
desolation”--“everywhere great fires, oil-cellars, and brimstone and
other things burning.” He then walks through the town, the hot ground
almost burning his feet, till he comes to Moorfields, which he finds
full of people, “the poor wretches carrying their goods there, and
everybody keeping his goods together by themselves.”

During the period of fright, when he expected the office to be
destroyed, he sent off his money, plate, and best things to Sir W.
Rider, at Bethnal Green, and then he and Penn dug a hole in the garden,
in which they put their wine and Parmezan cheese. On the 10th of
September, Sir W. Rider lets it be known that, as the town is full of
the report respecting the wealth in his house, he will be glad if his
friends will provide for the safety of their property elsewhere.

About the time of the Great Fire, Pepys had saved a large sum of money,
and was making a good income; so we find his thoughts running on the
advantage of keeping a private coach, as he is ashamed to be seen in a
hackney coach.[56] It was not, however, until more than a year after
this that he actually bought his carriage, and we find that he spent
_£_53 on the coach,[57] and _£_50 on a fine pair of black horses.[58]
He was very proud of the appearance of his carriage, but his enemies
made some capital out of the proceeding, and protested that he throve
on the distresses of others.

In these days of banks and other means for the deposit of money, it
is not easy to realize the difficulties of men who possessed money in
the seventeenth century. Pepys sent some down to Brampton to be buried,
but his wife and father did the business entrusted to them so badly
that he was quite wild and uneasy with fears that it might be found by
others.[59] Therefore, at the first opportunity, he goes down himself
to see after his treasure; and the description of the hunt after it is
certainly one of the most entertaining passages in the “Diary.”[60] He
and his father and wife go out into the garden with a dark lantern,
and grope about a long time before they come on the trace. Then they
find that the bags are rotten, and gold and notes are all spread about
and covered with dirt, the latter being scarcely distinguishable. Then
there is a gathering of it up to be washed, and in the end not much is
lost, although throughout the proceedings Pepys is in dread that the
neighbours will see and hear what is going on.

We now come to the consideration of one of the most important incidents
in the life of the Diarist--that is, his great speech at the Bar of
the House of Commons. When peace was concluded with the Dutch, and
the people had time to think over the disgrace which this country had
suffered by the presence of De Ruyter’s fleet in the Medway, they
naturally looked round for someone to punish. It was the same feeling,
only in a much intensified degree, which found expression at the time
of the Crimean war in the cry, “Whom shall we hang?” A Parliamentary
Committee was appointed in October, 1667, to inquire into everything
relating to this business, at Chatham. Pepys is warned to prepare
himself, as there is a desire to lay the blame upon the Commissioners
of the Navy, and a resolution “to lay the fault heavy somewhere, and to
punish it.”[61] He therefore gives as clear a statement as possible,
and satisfies the Committee for a time; but for months afterwards he
is continually being summoned to answer some charge, so that he is
mad to “become the hackney of this Office in perpetual trouble and
vexation, that need it least.”[62] Then breaks out a storm in the
House of Commons against the Principal Officers of the Navy, and some
members demand that they be put out of their places. The result is,
that they are ordered to be heard in their own defence at the Bar of
the House. The whole labour of defence falls upon Pepys, and he sets
to work with a will to collect his evidence, and to display it in
the most satisfactory manner. He is somewhat annoyed that the other
officers can do little to help him; but he is proud that they, in
spite of themselves, must rely upon him. The eventful day (5th March,
1667–68) at last arrives, and, having first fortified himself with half
a pint of mulled sack and a dram of brandy, our Diarist stands at the
Bar with his fellow-officers. But here we must use his own words, for
it would be presumptuous to paraphrase the vivid account he himself
gives:--“After the Speaker had told us the dissatisfaction of the
House, and read the Report of the Committee, I began our defence most
acceptably and smoothly, and continued at it without any hesitation or
loss, but with full scope, and all my reason free about me, as if it
had been at my own table, from that time (about twelve o’clock) till
past three in the afternoon; and so ended without any interruption from
the Speaker; but we withdrew. And there all my Fellow-officers and all
the world that was within hearing, did congratulate me, and cry up my
speech as the best thing they ever heard; and my Fellow-officers were
overjoyed in it.” The orator was congratulated on every side, and the
flattery he received is set down in the “Diary” in all good faith.
Sir William Coventry addresses him the next day with the words, “Good
morrow, Mr. Pepys, that must be Speaker of the Parliament-house;”
and the Solicitor-General protests that he spoke the best of any man
in England. One man says that he would go twenty miles to hear such
another speech; and another, although he had sat six-and-twenty years
in Parliament, had never heard anything like it before; and there is
much more to the same effect.

I do not find that Pepys ever distinguished himself by another speech,
although he sat for several years in the House of Commons; and there is
therefore reason to doubt his oratorical powers. In fact, it is easy
to explain the secret of his success, for he was speaking on a subject
that he thoroughly understood to an audience that understood it but
imperfectly. Still we must give Pepys due credit for his achievement.
He had a bad case, and yet he seems to have converted his audience. It
was here that his clear-headedness and remarkable powers of arrangement
were brought into play, and having at the same time his whole soul in
the matter, he easily carried his hearers with him.

The praises he received raised up a strong desire in his breast
to become a Parliament-man. He hints at this design on the 5th of
December, 1668, and again, on the 19th of February, 1668–69, he opens
the matter to his friend, Sir William Coventry, who likes the idea
mightily, and promises to speak about it to the Duke of York. A few
more months, and his eyes--which already, as we have seen, had given
him trouble--become so much worse that he begins to think seriously
of taking rest. On the 16th of May, 1669, he draws up a rough copy of
a petition to the Duke of York for leave of absence for three or four
months. A few days after, the Duke takes him to the King, who expresses
his great concern at the state of his eyes, and gives him the leave
he desires.[63] On the 31st of May, 1669, the pen that has written
so much to amuse us is put to the paper for the last time; and the
“Diary” ends with these words of deep but subdued feeling:--“And thus
ends all that I doubt I shall ever be able to do with my own eyes in
the keeping of my Journal, I being not able to do it any longer, having
done now so long as to undo my eyes almost every time that I take a
pen in my hand; and therefore whatever comes of it I must forbear; and
therefore resolve, from this time forward to have it kept by my people
in longhand, and must be contented to set down no more than is fit for
them and all the world to know; or if there be any thing, which cannot
be much, now my amours are past, and my eyes hindering me in almost all
other pleasures, I must endeavour to keep a margin in my book open,
to add here and there, a note in short-hand with my own hand. And so
I betake myself to that course, which is almost as much as to see
myself go in to my grave: for which and all the discomforts that will
accompany my being blind, the good God prepare me!” The “Diary” is one
of the most curious of psychological studies, and surely no other man
has so relentlessly laid bare his secret motives. When he does a good
action from a good motive, he cannot forbear to add a dirty little
motive as well. There is no posing for effect, such as the writers of
confessions adopt, and herein consists the chief charm of the book.

I cannot pretend to draw the character of the Diarist, for he has
done that himself in his own vivid manner; but a few of his leading
characteristics may be set down here. Two of the most prominent of
these characteristics are his money-grubbing and his love of women.

1. _Money-grubbing._ His paramount anxiety is to get money, and we find
him constantly making up his accounts in order to see how much better
off he is this month than he was in the last. He takes care that no
opportunity of money-getting shall be allowed to slip, and he certainly
succeeds in his endeavours; for whereas, at the opening of the “Diary,”
he is only worth about _£_40, he makes _£_3,560 in the year 1665, while
his salary as Clerk of the Acts remains at _£_350. In the following
year he only made _£_2,986.[64]

The same prudent habits that made Pepys so careful in casting up his
accounts induced him to make a new will as changes were required. On
the 17th of March, 1659–60, he bequeathed all that he possessed (but
this was not very much at that time) to his wife, with his French
books, the other books being left to his brother John. Another will was
made on August 10th, 1665, because the town was so unhealthy “that a
man cannot depend upon living two days.” We have fuller particulars of
the will of May 27th, 1666, by which Pall Pepys, the Diarist’s sister,
was to have _£_500, his father _£_2,000, and his wife the rest of his
estate--“but to have _£_2,500 secured to her though by deducting out of
what I have given my father and sister.” Another will was prepared in
the following year, by which Pepys left all he possessed to be equally
divided between his wife and father.[65]

2. _Admiration for women._ Some of the oddest passages in the “Diary”
grew out of this trait in Pepys’s character; and one can only marvel
that he thought it well to set down such passages on paper. When he
came to Gravesend, after Charles II.’s landing, he kissed “a good
handsome wench,” because she was the first he had seen for a great
while;[66] and, at another time, the widow of a naval officer came to
see him, apparently on business, when he had “a kiss or two of her,
and a most modest woman she is.”[67] His gallantry was so great as
even to cause him to kiss the mouth of Katherine of Valois, whose body
was exposed at Westminster Abbey. He seems to have performed this act
with great content, for he notes particularly that on his birthday,
February 23rd, 1668–69 (being then thirty-six years of age), he “did
first kiss a queen.” Although he was always ready to kiss the ladies he
met, his admiration was often quite disinterested; this was peculiarly
the case with regard to the two Court beauties, the Duchess of Richmond
and the Countess of Castlemaine, to neither of whom, apparently, he
ever spoke. There is an odd little entry which he made on the 9th of
September, 1668, that well illustrates this feeling of his. The Duke of
Richmond wanted to consult Pepys about his yacht, and sent for him to
his lodgings in Whitehall. Pepys hoped to have seen the Duchess, but
found that she was in the country; so he adds, “I shall make much of
this acquaintance, that I may live to see his lady near.” But the Clerk
of the Acts’ chief admiration was lavished upon the worthless Countess
of Castlemaine. He is always delighted when he can get a glimpse of
her; and he usually finds the play to be insipid if she does not grace
the theatre with her presence. Even the sight of her clothes gives him
pleasure, for he tells us that one day, in passing the Privy Garden at
Whitehall, he saw her smocks and linen petticoats hanging out to dry,
and it did him good to look upon them.[68]

Pepys was a pretty regular attendant at church, and he seems to
have enjoyed a good sermon; but his chief delight was to look about
for pretty women: thus, on the 26th of May, 1667, he went (alone,
by-the-bye) to St. Margaret’s Church, Westminster, and there, he says,
“Did entertain myself with my perspective glass up and down the church,
by which I had the great pleasure of seeing and gazing at a great many
very fine women; and what with that, and sleeping, I passed away the
time till sermon was done.”

Our hero was very fond of pretty Betty Michell, and would take some
trouble to get a sight of her; and there is a most ludicrous passage
in the “Diary” in which he describes a mistake he made once at church.
He went again to St. Margaret’s, in hopes of seeing Betty, and stayed
for an hour in the crowd, thinking she was there “by the end of a
nose” that he saw; but at last, to his great disgust, the head turned
towards him, and it was only her mother; he naturally adds, “which
vexed me.”[69] Although he gave his wife much cause to be jealous,
he was inclined, without any cause, to be jealous of her; and, from
his own account, he seems often to have treated her in a very boorish
manner. One would have liked to have read the lady’s account of the
constant little squabbles which occurred; but Pepys was not of the same
opinion, for on one occasion, when he found a paper which his wife had
written on the “disagreeables” of her life, he burnt it, in spite of
her remonstrances.[70]

Pepys’s nature was singularly contradictory, and in summing up the
chief points of his character, we can do little more than make a
catalogue of his various qualities, giving the bad ones first, and
then enumerating the good ones as a set-off. Thus, he was unfaithful to
his wife, and a coward, yet he knew his faults, and could try to amend
them. He was vain, ignorant, credulous, and superstitious; yet he had
scholarly tastes, and his orderly and business habits were so marked
that they alone would point to him as a man out of the common run. He
was mean, and yet he was also generous. This seems a harsh verdict, but
it can easily be proved to be true, and we will proceed to notice the
several points _seriatim_.

As to his unfaithfulness, his own description of his conduct towards
several women makes it probable; but, in the instance of Deb Willett,
there can be no doubt. This episode, which occurred in October and
November, 1668, is by far the most painful one in the “Diary.”[71]
Pepys appears to have been infatuated, and, in spite of his struggles,
he fell. He repented, and prayed fervently in his chamber that he
might not fall again. He resolved not to give any new occasion for his
wife’s jealousy, and he found great peace in his mind by reason of this
resolution.[72]

He was a coward, for on one occasion he was so angry with the cookmaid
that he kicked her. He was not sorry for doing this, but he was vexed
that Sir William Penn’s footboy saw him, and would probably tell the
family.[73]

His vanity may be taken for granted, as every line of the “Diary” shows
it. He was ignorant of history, for he expected to find an account
of England’s dominion on the sea in “Domesday Book.”[74] As to his
credulity, he appears to have believed everything that was told him,
however absurd. His superstition is shown in his belief in charms
and in most of the popular delusions of his time; and also by his
subterfuges, as when he opens a letter, and does not look at it until
the money has fallen out, so that he may be able to say that he saw no
money in the paper, if he should be questioned about it.[75]

He was mean, for he grudges money for his wife, while he spends
liberally on himself; he is stingy to his father, and dislikes lending
money to the benefactor from whom all his prosperity originally came.
Yet he could be singularly generous at times. He gave _£_600 to his
sister Paulina as her marriage portion;[76] and, after quarrelling
with his wife because she had spent twenty-five shillings on a pair of
earrings without his leave,[77] he pays _£_80 for a necklace which he
presents her with.[78] Of his scholarly tastes and business habits we
shall have an opportunity of saying somewhat further on.

Perhaps, on the whole, the most remarkable characteristic of the man
was his total want of the imaginative faculty. Here was one who had
been well educated, and had kept up his learning through life; who had
an artistic taste, and was a thorough musician; who could not so much
as understand true wit or the higher poetry. “Midsummer Night’s Dream”
was insipid and ridiculous to him,[79] and he found “Hudibras” so silly
that he was ashamed of it.[80]

I must leave my readers to answer the question why it is that, in spite
of all that has been said, Pepys can stand the ordeal through which we
have passed him; and why it is that, with all his faults, we cannot put
his book down without some sort of affection for the man?

FOOTNOTES:

[26] “Athenæum,” 1848, p. 669.

[27] “Diary,” Jan. 8, 1663–64.

[28] “Diary,” Jan. 17, 1659–60.

[29] Feb. 27, 1659–60.

[30] “Diary,” May 4, 1660.

[31] Dryden, “Astræa Redux,” ll. 230–31.

[32] “Diary,” Feb. 9, 1664–65. Thomas Barlow was appointed in 1638
Clerk of the Acts, jointly with Dennis Fleming, who had held the
office for several years previously. Lord Braybrooke says in a note,
that “Barlow had previously been Secretary to Algernon, Earl of
Northumberland, when High Admiral;” but Colonel Pasley tells me this is
a mistake, for Barlow had been appointed Clerk of the Acts two months
before the Earl became Lord High Admiral. Barlow had, however, been in
his service at an earlier date, and the Earl had appointed him Muster
Master of the Fleet under his command in 1636.

[33] “Diary,” July 2, 1660.

[34] Aug. 6, 10, 1660.

[35] Aug. 10, 1660.

[36] Sept. 23, 1660.

[37] April 22, 1661.

[38] “Diary,” April 23, 1661.

[39] July 3, 1662; June 17, 1663.

[40] June 17, 1666.

[41] “Diary,” July 24, 1661.

[42] There are some amusing passages relating to the vow on
theatre-going under date of Feb. 23, 1662–63; Jan. 2, 1663–64.

[43] “Diary,” April 23, 1663.

[44] “Diary,” March 10, 1666.

[45] Feb. 21, 1662–63.

[46] Feb. 23, 1662–63.

[47] “Diary,” May 4, 1663.

[48] Oct. 22, 1663.

[49] Oct. 31, 1663.

[50] March 20, 1667.

[51] This letter is printed in the “Diary,” under date Nov. 18, 1663.

[52] “Diary,” Dec. 13, 1666.

[53] June 13, 1664.

[54] March 22, 1664–65.

[55] April 24, 1665.

[56] “Diary,” April 21, 1667.

[57] Oct. 24, 1668.

[58] Dec. 11, 1668.

[59] “Diary,” June 19, 1667.

[60] Oct. 10, 1667.

[61] “Diary,” Oct. 21, 1667.

[62] Feb. 11, 1667–68.

[63] “Diary,” May 24, 1669. “To Whitehall where I attended the Duke of
York and was by him led to the King.” To this passage Lord Braybrooke
added this note: “It seems doubtful whether the expression of being
led to the King has any reference to the defective state of Pepys’s
vision. Perhaps he might wish to make the most of this infirmity, in
the hope of strengthening his claim for leave of absence.” It is rather
too absurd to think that the Duke of York would lead Pepys by the hand
through the corridors of the palace. If a guide had been needed, the
services of a less august personage could surely have been obtained.

[64] The particulars of his accounts, as given in the “Diary,” are very
curious, and it may be worth while here to tabulate some of them.

  On June 3, 1660,  he was worth nearly _£_100
  ″  Dec. 31, 1660,          ″          _£_300
  ″  May 24, 1661,           ″          _£_500
  ″  Aug. 31, 1662,          ″          _£_686 19_s._ 2½_d._

About this time he appears to have made but little extra money, for his
monthly balances vary only a few pounds, sometimes more and sometimes
less:--

  Dec. 31, 1663                         _£_800
    (Of which _£_700 was in Lord Sandwich’s hands).
  March 31, 1664                        _£_900
  July 31, 1664                       _£_1,014
  Feb. 28, 1664–65                    _£_1,270
  Aug. 13, 1665                       _£_2,164

This year he made money by prizes and fees for victualling, so that by
Dec. 31 he had raised his estate to _£_4,400.

  April 30, 1666                      _£_5,200
  Dec. 31, 1666                       _£_6,200

After this he did not pay so much attention to these details, and on
Jan. 23, 1668–69, he says that he is two years behindhand.

[65] “Diary,” June 13, 1667.

[66] June 8, 1660.

[67] Dec. 21, 1665.

[68] “Diary,” May 20, 1662.

[69] “Diary,” Aug. 25, 1667.

[70] Jan. 9, 1662–63.

[71] See particularly “Diary,” Oct. 15, 1667; Oct. 25, Nov. 3, 13, 19,
20, 29, 1668.

[72] Dec. 5, 18, 1668.

[73] April 12, 1667.

[74] “Diary,” Dec. 21, 1661. Each count in the above indictment is
founded on many instances, but one will frequently be sufficient to
give. The reader will easily find others for himself.

[75] April 3, 1663. On July 19, 1662, he makes the following odd
remark: “Methought it lessened my esteem of a king, that he should not
be able to command the rain.”

[76] Feb. 10, 1667–68.

[77] July 4, 1664.

[78] April 30, 1666.

[79] “Diary,” Sept 29, 1662.

[80] Dec. 26, 1662.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER III.

PEPYS AFTER THE “DIARY.”

 “Truly may it be said that this was a greater and more grievous loss
 to the mind’s eye of his posterity, than to the bodily organs of Pepys
 himself. It makes me restless and discontented to think what a Diary,
 equal in minuteness and truth of portraiture to the preceding, from
 1669 to 1688 or 1690, would have been for the true causes, process,
 and character of the Revolution.”--COLERIDGE’S MS. note in his copy of
 the “Diary” (“Notes and Queries,” 1st S. vol. vi. p. 215).


We have seen in the previous chapter how Pepys wrote the last line of
his “Diary” on the 31st of May, 1669; and how, by the physical defect
which had then increased to alarming proportions, we have suffered
what Coleridge calls “this grievous loss.” In treating of Pepys’s life
after the “Diary,” we at once find the difference between dealing with
a few isolated facts and condensing from the living record of the man’s
own life. Moreover, Pepys as painted by his friends and as painted by
himself, appears like two different men. The question is--would the
highly-respected Secretary of the Admiralty and the dignified President
of the Royal Society have proved himself of the same nature as was the
officious Clerk of the Acts if the “Diary” had been continued for some
twenty or more years? or did time and domestic affliction mellow and
settle the somewhat turbulent affections of the Diarist? There seems
to be some reason for taking the latter view, and it is probable that,
when he attained a more mature age, the dross of meanness was refined
away, leaving the native ore of generosity pure and undefiled. When
Pepys had obtained his leave of absence, he set out on a tour through
France and Holland, accompanied by his wife. He carried with him on
his journey the love which he always evinced for the occupation of his
life, and he attempted to improve his knowledge of nautical affairs,
making at the time collections respecting the French and Dutch navies.
Some months after his return he spoke of his journey as having been
“full of health and content,” but no sooner had they returned to London
than his wife became seriously ill with a fever. The disease took a
fatal turn, and on the 10th of November, 1669, Elizabeth Pepys died, at
the early age of twenty-nine years, to the great grief of her husband.
She died at their house in Crutched Friars, and was buried in St.
Olave’s Church, where Pepys erected a tablet to her memory.

Mrs. Pepys occupies so prominent a position in the “Diary,” and her
husband, in spite of his faults, was so truly fond of her, that we
must believe her death gave him a shock from which he would be long
in recovering. He had no child nor near connection to be with him, and
therefore, after this sad event, the whole current of his home life
must have been changed.

In this same year, 1669, Sir Robert Brooke, member of Parliament for
the borough of Aldborough, in Suffolk, died, and Pepys came forward as
a candidate to fill his place. The Duke of York was favourable, and
used all his influence to obtain the return of the Clerk of the Acts,
but without success. When the election came on, Pepys was in distress,
and his loss prevented him from taking part in the proceedings; so
that, in spite of all that friends could do for him, he was defeated,
and John Bence was elected on the 9th of November. In the following
year he quarrelled with Sir James Barkman Leyenburg, the Swedish
Resident in this country, and a duel between them was only prevented by
an order from the King, given in a letter from Matthew Wren to Pepys,
commanding him not to send or receive a challenge. This incident is
not easy to be understood, as from what we know of Pepys he was not
a man who would be very wishful to rush into a hostile encounter.
Lord Braybrooke suggests that, as Leyenburg married the widow of Sir
William Batten, the quarrel may have related to some money which was
owed to Pepys by Batten, and for which the widow was liable; but this
suggestion can only be taken for what it is worth.

We do not know the exact date of Pepys’s appointment to the
Secretaryship of the Admiralty, but in a document found among his
manuscripts, and dated November 3, 1672, he is described as holding
that office.[81] When he was thus raised in his official position he
was able to obtain his old place of Clerk of the Acts for his own
clerk, Thomas Hayter, and his brother, John Pepys, who held it jointly.
The latter does not appear to have done much credit to Samuel. He
took holy orders in 1666,[82] and was appointed clerk to the Trinity
House in 1670. When he died, in 1677, he was in debt _£_300 to the
corporation, which Samuel had to pay.

[Illustration: _Engraved by R. Cooper._

THE Rᵗ. HON. FRANCIS NORTH,

LORD KEEPER, GUILDFORD.]

Pepys’s kind patron and kinsman the Earl of Sandwich died heroically
in the naval action in Solebay, and on June 24, 1672, his funeral was
performed with some pomp. There were eleven earls among the mourners,
and Pepys, as the first among “the six Bannerrolles,” walked in the
procession. This same year there was some talk of the elevation to
the peerage of Sir Robert Paston, M. P. for Castle Rising, and the
Duke of York at once thought of Pepys as a candidate for his seat. The
influence of Lord Howard, who had done what he could at Aldborough, was
pre-eminent at Castle Rising; and James at once spoke to him to obtain
his interest. Lord Howard was, however, in somewhat of a fix, for
according to a letter which Thomas Povey wrote Pepys on August 31st,
1672, “he stands engaged to the King for Sir Francis North, to the
Duchess of Cleveland for Sir John Trevor, her counsel and feoffee, and
to the Duke for” Pepys. Time, however, got the peer out of his dilemma.
First of all, Sir Robert Stewart, a Master of Chancery and the other
member for the borough, died, and Trevor was elected in his place;
then North was put in for King’s Lynn; and lastly, when Paston was
created Viscount Yarmouth, Pepys was chosen to succeed him, on the 4th
of November, 1673. Mr. Offley, his unsuccessful opponent, petitioned
against the return, and the Committee of Privilege determined the
election to be void; but Parliament being prorogued shortly afterwards,
before any decision had been come to by the House, Pepys was permitted
to retain his seat. The journals of the House[83] contain a full
account of the proceedings, which chiefly consisted of evidence
respecting a frivolous charge made against Pepys. It was reported
that a person of quality (who turned out to be Lord Shaftesbury) had
seen an altar with a crucifix upon it in his house. When called upon,
Shaftesbury denied that he had ever seen “an altar in Mr. Pepys’s
house or lodgings; as to the crucifix,” he said he had “some imperfect
memory of seeing somewhat which he conceived to be a crucifix.”[84]
Pepys stood up in his place and flatly denied “that he had ever had any
altar, or crucifix, or the image or picture of any saint whatsoever in
his home from the top to the bottom of it.”[85] He further explained
what might have given cause for the aspersion. “Because he could
not go much abroad, he has made his home as pleasant to himself as
he could, embellishing it with painting. He has a small table in his
closet, with a Bible and Common Prayer-book upon it, and ‘The Whole
Duty of Man,’ a bason and an ewer, and his wife’s picture over it, done
by Lombard. This is the whole thing talked of for an altar.”[86]

It appears from the endorsement of a letter from Balthasar St. Michel
to Pepys, to which allusion has already been made, that the latter
was actually charged with having turned Mrs. Pepys from a Protestant
to a Roman Catholic. Pepys therefore obtained from her brother an
account of the fortunes of their family, which shows the utter
absurdity of any such imputations.[87] He was always a true Protestant,
although there is some reason for believing that Mrs. Pepys was a
Catholic at heart.[88] On the passing of the Test Act, in 1673, the
Duke of York resigned all his employments; and the Admiralty being
put in commission, Pepys, as secretary, was brought in immediate
correspondence with Charles II.

In 1677[89] he was elected Master of the Clothworkers’ Company, when
he presented a richly-chased silver cup, which is still used at their
dinners. He was not long allowed to remain in peace, for the charge
of popery, which was first made in 1673, was frequently repeated,
and in 1679 he was accused, on the depositions of Colonel John Scott,
of betraying the navy, by sending secret particulars to the French
Government; and also of a design to dethrone the King and extirpate the
Protestant religion. He and Sir Anthony Deane were committed to the
Tower under the Speaker’s warrant on May 22nd, and Pepys’s place at the
Admiralty was filled up by the appointment of Thomas Hayter. When the
two prisoners were brought to the bar of the King’s Bench on the 2nd
of June, the Attorney-General refused bail; but subsequently they were
allowed to find security for _£_30,000. At length, after several months
of delay, it was found that Colonel Scott refused to acknowledge to
the truth of the original deposition; and the prisoners were relieved
from their bail on February 12th, 1679–80. Scott turned out to be a
blackguard. He is said to have cheated the States of Holland out of
_£_7,000, in consequence of which he was hanged in effigy at the Hague,
in 1672; and in 1681 he fled from England to escape from the law, as he
had been found guilty of wilful murder for killing a coachman. James,
a butler, previously in Pepys’s service, confessed on his deathbed, in
1680, that he had trumped up the whole story relating to his former
master’s change of religion at the instigation of Mr. Harbord, M.P. for
Launceston, a leading enemy of Pepys.[90]

Evelyn visited Pepys in the Tower, and expressed his belief in the
unjustness of the charge. While he was in custody Pepys kept up a
correspondence with the Duke of York, who was then abroad, and he
received an application from a Mr. D’Oyly for a loan of _£_50; but he
was obliged to answer that he himself had been forced to borrow _£_100
from friends, to pay his fees and defray his expenses while in durance.
It is impossible not to respect Pepys for his conduct towards James
when the Royal Duke was in disgrace. He certainly made enemies by his
action, and one of these was Andrew Marvell, who is reputed to have
published a “Black Book” entitled, “A List of the principal labourers
in the great design of Popery and arbitrary Power,” which contains the
following vituperative entry: “Castle Rising--Samuel Pepys Esquire,
once a taylor, then a serving man to Lord Sandwich, now Secretary to
the Admiralty, got by passes and other illegal wages _£_40,000.” We
know these assertions to be untrue, but they probably did the victim as
much harm as if they had been true.

Pepys was chosen by the electors of Harwich as their member in the
short Parliament that sat from March to July, 1679, his colleague
being Sir Anthony Deane; but both members were superseded in the next
Parliament, that met on the 17th of October, 1679.

In 1680 Pepys attended on Charles II. at Newmarket, and there he took
down, from the King’s own mouth, the narrative of his escape after the
Battle of Worcester, which now remains in the Pepysian Library, both in
shorthand and longhand.

Sir Thomas Page, the Provost of King’s College, Cambridge, died in
August, 1681; and S. Maryon, a Fellow of Clare, wrote at once,
suggesting that Pepys was a fit and proper person for the post, and
urging him to apply to the King for it. Pepys replied that he believed
Colonel Legge (afterwards Lord Dartmouth) wanted to get the office for
an old tutor. Although he pretended unfitness, he evidently liked the
idea; and in a letter to Legge, while recommending an early application
for the tutor, he expresses himself as willing to take the Provostship
if the tutor cannot get it. He also promises, if he should be chosen,
to give the whole profit of the first year, and at least half of that
of each succeeding year, to “be dedicated to the general and public use
of the college.”[91] In the end Dr. John Copleston was appointed to the
post.

In May, 1682, Pepys accompanied the Duke of York to Scotland, and
narrowly escaped shipwreck by the way. Before letters could arrive
in London to tell of his safety, the news came of the wreck of the
“Gloucester” (the Duke’s ship), and of the loss of many lives. His
friends’ anxiety was relieved by the arrival of a letter which Pepys
wrote from Edinburgh to Hewer on the 8th inst., in which he detailed
the particulars of the adventure. The Duke invited him to go on board
the “Gloucester,” but he preferred his own yacht, in which he had more
room, and in consequence of his resolution he saved himself from the
risk of drowning. On the 5th of May, about five in the morning, the
frigate struck upon the sand called “The Lemon and the Oar,” about
sixteen leagues from the mouth of the Humber, through the carelessness
of the pilot, it was said. The Duke and his party were all asleep at
the time, and after they were awoke it is supposed that they remained
so long on board in the hope of saving the ship, that more men were
drowned than otherwise need have been. It is said that the sinking
sailors gave a loud huzza for the Duke, although they perhaps owed
their deaths to an error of judgment on his part. Pepys writes that,
had the said wreck occurred two hours earlier, and the accompanying
yachts been at the distance they had previously been, not a soul would
have escaped. Pepys on his arrival in Edinburgh was allowed by the Duke
to attend one or two of the councils, and he was greatly struck with
the union of absoluteness and gentleness by which James maintained
his authority. He then made a tour through some of the Scottish towns
with Colonel Legge, being most pleased with the “beauty and trade” of
Glasgow. The people were not to his liking, for he writes to Hewer:
“The truth is, there is so universal a rooted nastiness hangs about the
person of every Scot (man and woman) that renders the finest show they
can make nauseous, even among those of the first quality.”[92]

The time was now coming when Pepys was to be again employed officially,
and on July 30, 1683, he left London for Portsmouth, in order to join
his old friend Colonel Legge (now Lord Dartmouth) in his expedition to
Tangier for the purpose of demolishing that place. Pepys kept a journal
of his proceedings, which is now in the Bodleian Library at Oxford,
and has been printed by the Rev. John Smith in his “Life, Journals,
&c., of Pepys.” As the next chapter is devoted particularly to Tangier,
it is not necessary to do more here than remark that, although this
journal is of considerable interest, it falls very far short of the
_naïveté_ and charm of the original “Diary.” On March 29th, 1684,
Lord Dartmouth and his party (including Pepys) arrived in the English
Channel.

Shortly after this, Charles II. made some further alterations at
the Admiralty, and appointed Pepys to his old place of Secretary,
possession of which he kept until the Revolution, when friends of the
banished prince were not likely to be in favour. This same year he was
elected President of the Royal Society, an office which he held for two
years, apparently with credit to himself and general satisfaction to
the Fellows. He certainly was not a scientific man, but at that period
most of the subjects discussed could be understood by an intelligent
man; and Pepys had a sincere love for curious learning which made him
peculiarly fitted to act the part of an imitation Mecænas. In 1685
Charles II. died, and James came to the throne. We have already seen
how Pepys was a spectator at Charles’s coronation, now he was to take
the position of an actor. We find that he marched in the procession at
James’s coronation, immediately behind the King’s canopy, as one of the
sixteen barons of the Cinque Ports. A Parliament was summoned to meet
on the 19th of May, and Pepys was elected both by the burgesses of
Harwich and by those of Sandwich. He chose to serve for Harwich, and
Sir Philip Parker, Bart., was elected to fill his place at Sandwich.
This Parliament was dissolved by proclamation, July 2nd, 1687, and
on August 24th, the King declared in Council that another Parliament
should be summoned for November 27th, 1688, the writs to bear date
September 5th; but they were recalled on news being received of the
Prince of Orange’s design. On December 10th, James ordered those writs
which had not been sent out to be burned; and the same night, on his
going away from Whitehall, he threw the Great Seal into the water. The
Rev. Alexander Mills, a friend of Pepys, wrote to him from Sandwich
in July, 1687, after the news of the dissolution had arrived, to say
that he thought that Pepys might again be chosen if he felt inclined to
stand for the town. In the next few months a great change had come over
public affairs, and when the Convention Parliament was called together
in January and February, 1689–90, Pepys found no place in it. In 1688
he had some correspondence with the Mayor of Harwich respecting the
removal of the Custom-house from Ipswich to Harwich, and his chances of
election seemed good at that time; but a few months changed all that,
and the corporation did not care to be represented by an official of
the late King: so when the election came on, someone called out in the
street, “No Tower men, no men out of the Tower!” His public career was
closed soon after this, for an order was made out by the Commissioners
of the Admiralty on the 9th of March, 1688–89, commanding him to give
up his books, &c., to Phineas Bowles, the newly-appointed Secretary
of the Admiralty. He still retained hopes of a return to public
life, and on the 8th of February, 1689–90, he wrote to the proud Sir
Edward Seymour for “his interest anywhere, by which I might compass
an election” for the new Parliament.[93] What Seymour’s answer was we
do not know, but we do know that a few months afterwards (June, 1690)
Pepys was committed to the Gate-house at Westminster, upon pretence of
his being affected to King James; but he was soon permitted to return
to his own home on account of ill-health. On this occasion four stanch
friends--Sir Peter Palavicini, Mr. James Houblon, Mr. Blackburne, and
Mr. Martin--were bail for him. Soon after, he published his “Memoirs of
the Navy,” to show what he had done for its improvement and government,
but although he was on all sides looked up to as the greatest authority
on naval affairs, he continued, even in 1692, to apprehend some fresh
persecution.

Pepys had never been a healthy man, and as years began to tell upon him
he suffered much. One day, when he was at Tangier, he was frightened
by the old swimming in the head coming over him, and this made him
melancholy.[94] In December, 1686, he was again troubled with pain
night and day, caused by the complaint for which he was successfully
operated upon before the “Diary” commences. In a letter to his
brother-in-law, St. Michel, he expresses the opinion that a general
decay of his stomach and system will soon bring his life to an end; but
he had several years still to live.

About this time Pepys secured the services of a Mrs. Fane as his
housekeeper, and of her he wrote, in 1689: “I do not believe that
a more knowing, faithful, or vigilant person, or a stricter keeper
at home (which is to me a great addition)--a person more useful in
sickness as well as health, than Mrs. Fane is, can anywhere be found.
As such I esteem and love her with all my heart, and should ever desire
to keep her acquaintance, friendship, and neighbourhood.” But--and this
is a very important reservation--Mrs. Fane had a very disagreeable
temper, as her victim goes on to say: “She hath a height of spirit,
captiousness of humour, and bitterness and noise of tongue, that of all
womankind I have hitherto had to do withal, do render her conversation
and comportment as a servant most insupportable.”[95] He parted with
her once, but Mrs. Skinner prevailed upon him to receive her again. At
last, after forbearance for three years and a-half, she was obliged to
leave finally. Mr. James Houblon pleaded for her, but when he heard the
above explanation, he was unable to say more.

In 1700, Pepys removed from York Buildings to what his friend Evelyn
calls his “Paradisian Clapham.” Here he lived with his old clerk and
friend, William Hewer, but his infirmities kept him constantly in the
house.

The eminent Dr. John Wallis, Savilian Professor of Geometry in the
University of Oxford, was highly esteemed by Pepys, who had known him
for many years as one of the most distinguished Fellows of the Royal
Society. In 1701, therefore, the Diarist matured a scheme which did
him the greatest credit. He sent Sir Godfrey Kneller down to Oxford to
paint the old man’s portrait; and, when it was finished, he presented
the picture to the University of Oxford, and received in exchange a
Latin diploma thanking him in gorgeous language for his munificence.
Pepys explained to Kneller that it had long been his wish to provide
from the painter’s hands a means of “immortalizing the memory of the
person--for his fame can never die--of that great man and my most
honoured friend, Dr. Wallis, to be lodged as an humble present of mine,
though a Cambridge man, to my dear aunt, the University of Oxford.”

So much for the donor. The painter, on his part, was proud of his work,
and assured Pepys that he had never done a better picture, if so good a
one, in his life before.

In the following year all was over with both Wallis and Pepys. On
the 26th of May, 1703, Samuel Pepys, after long-continued suffering,
breathed his last, in the presence of the learned Dr. George Hickes,
the non-juring Dean of Worcester, who writes as follows of the
death-bed: “The greatness of his behaviour, in his long and sharp
tryall before his death, was in every respect answerable to his great
life; and I believe no man ever went out of this world with greater
contempt of it, or a more lively faith in every thing that was revealed
of the world to come. I administered the Holy Sacrament twice in his
illnesse to him, and had administered it a third time but for a sudden
fit of illness that happened at the appointed time of administering of
it. Twice I gave him the absolution of the church, which he desired,
and received with all reverence and comfort, and I never attended any
sick or dying person that dyed with so much Christian greatnesse of
mind, or a more lively sense of immortality, or so much fortitude and
patience, in so long and sharp a tryall, or greater resignation to the
Will which he most devoutly acknowledged to be the wisdom of God: and I
doubt not but he is now a very blessed spirit, according to his motto,
_mens cujusque is est quisque_.”

It was found necessary to have a post-mortem examination of his body,
when a nest of seven stones, weighing about four and a-half ounces,
was found in the left kidney, which was entirely ulcerated. His
constitution generally, however, appears to have been strong. The body
was brought from Clapham, and buried in St. Olave’s Church, Crutched
Friars, on the 5th of June, at nine o’clock in the evening, in a vault
close by the monument erected to Mrs. Pepys.

John Jackson, Pepys’s nephew, sent a suit of mourning to Evelyn, and
expressed his sorrow that distance and his correspondent’s health would
prevent him from assisting at the holding-up of the pall.

It appears from a list printed at the end of Pepys’s correspondence,
that mourning was given to forty persons, and that forty-five rings at
20_s._, sixty-two at 15_s._, and sixteen at 10_s._ were distributed to
relations, godchildren, servants, and friends; also to representatives
of the Royal Society, of the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford, of
the Admiralty, and of the Navy Office. The bulk of the property was
bequeathed to John Jackson, the son of Mrs. Jackson, the Pall Pepys
of the “Diary;” but the money which was left was much less than might
have been expected. In spite of all his public services, which were
universally acknowledged, he received neither pension nor remuneration
of any kind after his enforced retirement at the Revolution. Public men
in those days, without private property, must have starved if they had
not taken fees, for the King had no idea of wasting his money by paying
salaries. At the time of Pepys’s death there was a balance of _£_28,007
2_s._ 1¼_d._ due to him from the Crown, and the original vouchers still
remain an heirloom in the family.

FOOTNOTES:

[81] Smith’s “Life, Journals, and Correspondence of S. Pepys,” 1841,
vol. i. p. 142.

[82] “Diary,” Feb. 21, 1665–66.

[83] Vol. ix.

[84] Vol. ix. p. 309.

[85] Vol. ix. p. 306.

[86] Grey’s “Debates.”

[87] Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. i. p. 147.

[88] “Diary,” Nov. 29, Dec. 6, 1668.

[89] In this year was published “The Portugal History: or a Relation of
the Troubles that happened in the court of Portugal in the year 1667
and 1668. By S. P. Esq. London (Richard Tonson),” 1677, which has been
attributed to Pepys. There is a copy in the Pepysian Library.

[90] Several letters relating to this affair will be found in Smith’s
“Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. i.

[91] Smith’s “Life, &c., of S. Pepys,” vol. i. pp. 265–72.

[92] Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. i. p. 295.

[93] Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. ii. p. 246.

[94] _Ibid._ vol. i. p. 452.

[95] Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. ii. p. 219.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER IV.

TANGIER.

   “And with asphaltick slime broad as the gate
   Deep to the roots of hell the gather’d beach
   They fasten’d: and the _mole_ immense wrought on
   Over the foaming deep high-arch’d: a bridge
   Of length prodigious.”--_Paradise Lost_, x. 298–302.


Pepys was so intimately connected with the government of Tangier during
the twenty-two years it remained in the possession of the English, that
it seems necessary, in a memoir of him, to give some account of the
history of the place during that period.

Tangier is a seaport, on a small bay or inlet of the Straits of
Gibraltar, which affords the only good harbour for shipping on the
sea-board of Morocco, an extent of coast of about 900 miles. The town
was early coveted by the Portuguese, and in 1437 their army attacked
it, but were defeated beneath the walls. On this occasion Dom Fernando,
the King’s brother, was left behind as a hostage. A treaty of peace
was concluded, but the stipulations not being executed, the Moors threw
Dom Fernando into prison, where he died. The prince’s body was treated
with insult, and hung up by the heels over the city walls. A few years
later this unworthy conduct was revenged, for in 1463, the Portuguese
being successful in battle, Alonzo V. took the town from the Moors.
For two centuries the Portuguese kept possession, but about the period
of our Restoration they found the place somewhat of an encumbrance,
and were anxious to obtain a desirable alliance against their enemies
the Spaniards, by transferring it to another power. In November,
1660, Thomas Maynard, British Consul at Lisbon, writing to Sir Edward
Nicholas, says, that the King of Portugal would part with Tangier to
England on reasonable terms.[96]

[Illustration: Katherine of Braganza]

Shortly afterwards the Portuguese ambassador in London proposed the
Infanta Katharine, daughter of that Duke of Braganza who became King
of Portugal as Joam IV., as a wife for Charles II., offering at
the same time a portion of half a million pounds sterling (“almost
double what any King [of England] had ever received in money by any
marriage”),[97] and in addition a grant of a free trade in Brazil
and the East Indies, and the possession of Tangier and the Island of
Bombay. The ambassador observed that these two places “might reasonably
be valued above the portion in money.”[98] It was supposed that the
possession of Tangier would be of infinite benefit to England and
a security to her trade, and the Earl of Sandwich and Sir John Lawson
were consulted respecting the proposed acquisition. Lord Sandwich said
that if the town were walled and fortified with brass, it would yet
repay the cost, but he only knew it from the sea. Lawson had been in
it, and said that it was a place of that importance, that if it were
in the hands of Hollanders they would quickly make a mole, which could
easily be done. Then ships would ride securely in all weathers, and
we could keep the place against the world, and give the law to the
trade of the Mediterranean.[99] The Portuguese were delighted at the
prospect of a marriage between the Infanta and Charles, and after a few
hitches the treaty was concluded, but some murmurs were heard against
the delivery of Tangier into the hands of heretics. Dom Fernando de
Menezes, the Governor, entreated the Queen Regent to spare him the
grief of handing over the city to the enemies of the Catholic faith. He
was given to understand that, if he obeyed instructions, a marquisate
would be conferred upon him, but if he continued to resist he would be
dismissed. Upon this, Dom Fernando threw up his command.

Lord Sandwich was instructed to take possession of Tangier, and
then convey the Infanta and her portion to England. Although the
Queen Regent sent a governor whom she had chosen as one devoted to
her interest, and sure to obey her commands, yet Clarendon affirms
that he went to his government with a contrary resolution.[100] This
resolution, however, was frustrated by the action of the Moors. A few
days only before Lord Sandwich arrived, the Governor marched out of the
town with all the horse and half the foot of the garrison, and fell
into an ambush. The whole party were cut off, and the Governor and many
of his chief men were killed. The town was so weak that, when Lord
Sandwich arrived at this conjuncture, he was hailed as a deliverer from
the Moors. He conveyed the remainder of the garrison into Portugal, and
Henry, second Earl of Peterborough, with the English garrison, entered
the town on the 30th of January, 1662, as the first Governor from
England.

Now began a system of mismanagement worthy of the disorganized
condition of public affairs. A commission was appointed for the
purpose of carrying on the government of Tangier in London, and
constant meetings were held. None of the commissioners knew anything
of the place, and they were quite at the mercy of the governors
and deputy-governors who were sent out. Pepys was placed upon the
commission by the influence of Lord Sandwich, and John Creed was
appointed secretary.[101] Thomas Povey, the treasurer, got his accounts
into so great a muddle, that he thought it wise to surrender his office
to Pepys, on condition of receiving half the profits, which he did on
March 20, 1664–65. This treasurership and the contract for victualling
the garrison of Tangier were sources of considerable profit to our
Diarist. At one of the earliest meetings of the committee, the project
of forming a mole or breakwater was entertained. A contract for the
work to be done at 13_s._ the cubical yard was accepted, although, as
Pepys writes, none of the committee knew whether they gave too much
or too little (February 16, 1662–63); and he signed the contract with
very ill will on that score (March 30, 1663). When the accounts were
looked into on April 3, 1663, it was found that the charge for one
year’s work would be as much as _£_13,000. Two years after this, the
committee agreed to pay 4_s._ a yard more, and the whole amount spent
upon the mole was found to be _£_36,000 (March 30, 1665). The wind and
sea exerted a very destructive influence over this structure, although
it was very strongly built, and Colonel Norwood reported in 1668 that a
breach had been made in the mole which would cost a considerable sum to
repair. As Norwood was an enemy of a friend of his, Pepys at once jumps
to the conclusion that he must be a bad man (February 22, 1668–69).
The second Earl of Carnarvon said that wood was an excrescence of the
earth, provided by God for the payment of debts, and Sir W. Coventry,
in a conversation with Pepys, applied this saying to Tangier and its
governors. It is not always safe to take for granted all that our
Diarist says against the persons he writes about, but there must have
been some truth in the indictment he drew up against all those who
undertook the government of Tangier. When Lord Peterborough received
the place from the Portuguese, a book was given to him which contained
a secret account of all the conduit-heads and heads of watercourses
in and about the town. This book was always given from one governor
to another, but was not to be looked at by anyone else. When Lord
Peterborough left, he took the book away with him, and on being asked
for it always answered that he had mislaid it and could not recover it.
Colonel Kirke told Pepys in 1683 that the supply of water was greatly
reduced by the want of this information.[102] In 1666 Pepys had applied
the adjective “ignoble” to Lord Peterborough’s name, on account of his
lordship’s conduct in regard to money matters. On December 15, 1662,
Andrew Lord Rutherford and Earl of Teviot, Governor of Dunkirk until
its surrender to the French, was appointed Governor of Tangier in
succession to Lord Peterborough, who was recalled. He was a brave but
rash man, and made a practice of going out of the town into the country
without taking proper precautions. In May, 1664, he was surveying his
lines after an attack by the Moors, when he and nineteen officers were
killed by a party of the enemy in ambush. Pepys called him a cunning
man, and said that had he lived he would have undone the place; but in
1683, Dr. Lawrence told Pepys that his death was a great misfortune,
for he took every opportunity of making the place great, but without
neglecting himself.[103] John Lord Bellassis was the next governor, and
he was said to be corrupt in his command.

The deputy-governors were no better than their superiors. Of Colonel
Fitzgerald, Pepys writes, on October 20th, 1664, he is “a man of no
honour nor presence, nor little honesty, and endeavours to raise the
Irish and suppress the English interest there, and offend every body.”
Certainly, when he sees him on August 7th, 1668, he is pleased with him
and his discourse. Pepys’s opinion of Colonel Norwood we have already
seen; but none of the governors rose to the height of villany exhibited
by Colonel Kirke, whose name is condemned to everlasting infamy in the
pages of Macaulay.

The further history of Tangier, previous to its final destruction, can
be put into a few words. In January, 1668–69, Lord Sandwich proposed
that a paymaster should be appointed at Tangier, and suggested Sir
Charles Harbord for the post; but the Duke of York said that nothing
could be done without Pepys’s consent, in case the arrangement should
injure him in his office of treasurer. Our Diarist was much pleased at
this instance of the kindness of the Duke, and of the whole committee
towards him.[104]

Henry Sheres, who accompanied Lord Sandwich to Spain, and afterwards
became a great friend of Pepys, was paid _£_100, on January 18th,
1668–69, for drawing a plate of the Tangier fortifications. In the
same year (1669), the great engraver, Hollar, was sent to Tangier by
the King to take views of the town and fortifications. Some of these
he afterwards engraved, and the original drawings are in the British
Museum.

In 1673 a new commission was appointed, and Pepys and Povey were among
the commissioners.[105] Two years afterwards the vessel in which Henry
Teonge was chaplain anchored in Tangier Bay; and in the “Diary” which
he left behind him he gives a description of the town as it appeared to
him. The mole was not then finished, and he found the old high walls
much decayed in places. He mentions “a pitiful palizado, not so good as
an old park pale (for you may anywhere almost thrust it down with your
foot);” but in this palisade were twelve forts, well supplied with good
guns.

In 1680, Tangier was besieged by the Emperor of Morocco, and Charles
II. applied to Parliament for money, so that the place might be
properly defended. The House of Commons expressed their dislike of
the management of the garrison, which they suspected to be a nursery
for a Popish army. Sir William Jones said: “Tangier may be of great
importance to trade, but I am afraid hath not been so managed as to be
any security to the Protestant religion;” and William Harbord, M.P. for
Thetford, added: “When we are assured we shall have a good Protestant
governor and garrison in Tangier, I shall heartily give my vote for
money for it.”[106]

A most unworthy action was at this time perpetrated by the Government.
Not having the support of Parliament, they were unable to defend
the place with an adequate force; and they chose the one man in
England whose brilliant career rivals those of the grand worthies of
Elizabeth’s reign to fight a losing game.

The Earl of Ossory, son of the Duke of Ormond, was appointed Governor
and General of the Forces; but, before he could embark, he fell ill
from brooding over the treatment he had received, and soon after died.
Lord Sunderland said in council that “Tangier must necessarily be lost;
but that it was fit Lord Ossory should be sent, that they might give
some account of it to the world.”

The Earl left his wife at their daughter’s house, and came up to
London. Here he made a confidant of John Evelyn, who records in his
“Diary” his opinion of the transaction. It was not only “an hazardous
adventure, but, in most men’s opinion, an impossibility, seeing there
was not to be above 3 or 400 horse, and 4000 foot for the garrison
and all, both to defend the town, form a camp, repulse the enemy, and
fortify what ground they should get in. This touch’d my Lord deeply
that he should be so little consider’d as to put him on a business in
which he should probably not only lose his reputation, but be charged
with all the miscarriages and ill success.”[107] It was on this man
that Ormond pronounced the beautiful eulogy, “I would not exchange my
dead son for any living son in Christendom!”

In August, 1683, Lord Dartmouth was constituted Captain-General of his
Majesty’s Forces in Africa, and Governor of Tangier, being sent with a
fleet of about twenty sail to demolish and blow up the works, destroy
the harbour, and bring home the garrison; but his instructions were
secret. Pepys received the King’s command to accompany Lord Dartmouth,
but without being informed of the object of the expedition. In a letter
to Evelyn, Pepys tells him, “What our work is I am not solicitous to
learn nor forward to make griefs at, it being handled by our masters
as a secret.” When they get to sea, Lord Dartmouth tells Pepys the
object of the voyage, which the latter says he never suspected, having
written the contrary to Mr. Houblon.[108] On September 17th they landed
at Tangier, having been about a month on their voyage. All the doings
on board ship, and the business transacted on shore, are related with
all Pepys’s vivid power of description in his “Tangier Journal.” The
writer, however, has become more sedate, and only once “the old man”
appears, when he remarks on the pleasure he had in “again seeing fine
Mrs. Kirke,”[109] the wife of the Governor. We are told that “the
tyranny and vice of Kirke is stupendous,”[110] and the “Journal” is
full of the various instances of his enormities. Macaulay, however,
with that power of characterization which he so eminently possessed,
has compressed them all into his picture of the leader of “Kirke’s
lambs.”

Pepys was now for the first time in the town with the government of
which he had been so long connected, and he was astonished at its
uselessness. Day by day he finds out new disadvantages; and he says
that the King was kept in ignorance of them, in order that successive
governors might reap the benefits of their position. He complains that
even Mr. Sheres was silent for his own profit, as he might have made
known the evils of the place ten years before.[111]

In a letter to Mr. Houblon, he gives his opinion that “at no time there
needed any more than the walking once round it by daylight to convince
any man (no better-sighted than I) of the impossibility of our ever
making it, under our circumstances of government, either tenable by, or
useful to, the crown of England.” He adds: “Therefore it seems to me a
matter much more unaccountable how the King was led to the reception,
and, afterwards, to so long and chargeable a maintaining, than, at this
day, to the deserting and extinguishing it.”[112]

On the other side Mr. Charles Russell wrote to Pepys from Cadiz,
deprecating the destruction of Tangier, and pointing out the advantages
of possessing it.[113] Sheres also showed Pepys a paper containing
the ordinary objections made against the mole, “improved the most he
could, to justify the King’s destroying it,” and added that he could
answer them all.[114]

When the work of destruction was begun, it was found that the masonry
had been so well constructed that it formed a protection as strong as
solid rock. The mining was undertaken piecemeal, and it took six months
to blow up the whole structure. The rubbish of the mole and the walls
was thrown into the harbour, so as to choke it up completely. Still the
ruined mole stands, and on one side the accumulated sand has formed a
dangerous reef.

On the 5th of March, 1683–84, Lord Dartmouth and Pepys sailed out of
Tangier Bay, and abandoned the place to the Moors. Shortly afterwards
the Emperor of Morocco (Muly Ismael) wrote to Captain Cloudesley
Shovel: “God be praised! you have quitted Tangier, and left it to us
to whom it did belong. From henceforward we shall manure it, for it
is the best part of our dominions. As for the captives, you may do
with them as you please, heaving them into the sea, or destroying them
otherways.” To which Shovel replied: “If they are to be disowned
because they are poor, the Lord help them! Your Majesty tells us we may
throw them overboard if we please. All this we very well know; but we
are Christians, and they bear the form of men, which is reason enough
for us not to do it. As to Tangier, our master kept it twenty-one
years; and, in spite of all your force, he could, if he had pleased,
have continued it to the world’s end; for he levelled your walls,
filled up your harbour, and demolished your houses, in the face of your
Alcade and his army; and when he had done, he left your barren country
without the loss of a man, for your own people to starve in.”[115]

According to Pepys’s account Tangier was a sink of corruption, and
England was well rid of the encumbrance. He describes the inhabitants
as given up to all kinds of vice, “swearing, cursing and drinking,”
the women being as bad as the men; and he says that a certain captain
belonging to the Ordnance told him that “he was quite ashamed of what
he had heard in their houses; worse a thousand times than in the worst
place in London he was ever in.” Dr. Balaam, a former Recorder, had so
poor an opinion of the people of the place, that he left his estate to
a servant, with the caution that if he married a woman of Tangier, or
one that ever had been there, he should lose it all.[116]

Yet Tangier was positively outdone in iniquity by Bombay, which
Sir John Wyborne calls “a cursed place.”[117] These were the two
acquisitions so highly rated when Charles II. married the Infanta of
Portugal.

In spite of all disadvantages, one of the greatest being that ships of
any size are forced to lie out far from shore, Tangier is still a place
of some importance as the port of North Morocco. The description of the
town given by Sir Joseph Hooker[118] answers in most particulars to
that written by Teonge two centuries before. It stands on the western
side of a shallow bay, on rocky ground that rises steeply from the
shore, and the cubical blocks of whitewashed masonry, with scarcely
an opening to represent a window, which rise one above the other on
the steep <DW72> of a recess in the hills, give the place a singular
appearance from the sea. On the summit of the hill is a massive gaunt
castle of forbidding aspect, and the zigzag walls which encompass
the city on all sides are pierced by three gates which are closed at
nightfall.

FOOTNOTES:

[96] Lister’s “Life of Clarendon,” vol. iii. p. 113.

[97] Clarendon’s Life, 1827, vol. i. p. 495.

[98] _Ibid._ p. 491.

[99] Clarendon’s Life, 1827, vol. i. p. 494.

[100] Clarendon’s Life, 1827, vol. ii. p. 161.

[101] “Diary,” Dec. 1, 1662. In Lord Braybrooke’s “Life of Pepys” it is
incorrectly stated that Pepys was secretary.

[102] “Tangier Diary” (Smith, vol. i. p. 444).

[103] “Tangier Diary” (Smith, vol. i. p. 444).

[104] “Diary,” Jan. 4, 1668–69.

[105] Sir Joseph Williamson’s “Letters” (Camden Soc.), vol. i. p. 149.

[106] Smith, vol. i. p. 390 (note).

[107] Evelyn’s “Diary,” July 26, 1680.

[108] Smith, vol. i. p. 331.

[109] P. 374.

[110] P. 403.

[111] Smith, vol. i. p. 403.

[112] P. 419.

[113] P. 385.

[114] Smith, vol. i. p. 383.

[115] Ockley’s “Account of South-West Barbary,” quoted in Smith’s
“Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. ii. p. 130 (note).

[116] Smith, vol. i. p. 446.

[117] Vol. ii. pp. 99–100.

[118] “Journal of a Tour in Marocco,” by Sir Joseph D. Hooker and John
Ball. London, 1878, p. 5.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER V.

PEPYS’S BOOKS AND COLLECTIONS.

   “A snapper-up of unconsidered trifles.”

   _Winter’s Tale_, act iv. sc. iii.


Pepys desired that his name might go down to posterity, but he could
little have foreseen the fame that it has attained in the nineteenth
century. The mode he took to keep it alive was the bequeathment of his
library and collections to a time-honoured foundation; and there is
every reason to believe that he would have strongly objected to the
publication of his “Diary.” Now that that book has been published, we
all see the full-length figure of the man; but his character might also
have been read in the Pepysian library at Magdalene College, Cambridge;
and this latter exhibition of him has been much longer before the
public. Comparatively little interest was, however, taken in it until
after the appearance of the deciphered “Diary,” when his name at once
sprang into fame.

The library was left, in the first instance, to the Diarist’s nephew,
John Jackson, but with a special proviso that it should on no account
be dispersed. Pepys refers in his memorandum to “the infinite pains and
time and cost employed in my collecting and reducing the same to the
state it now is” in. He is particularly solicitous “for its unalterable
preservation and perpetual security against the ordinary fate of such
collections, falling into the hands of an incompetent heir and thereby
being sold, dissipated or imbezzled.” Jackson was allowed a certain
latitude in the disposal of the collections after his death. They
were to be placed at one of the Universities, but Cambridge was to be
preferred to Oxford. A private college was to be chosen rather than the
Public Library, and of colleges Trinity or Magdalene were to be given
the preference over the others. Of these two colleges (on the boards
of each of which Pepys’s name had been entered), Magdalene, at which
he received his education, was to have the preference. The college
which did not receive the gift was appointed visitor, and if at the
annual inspection any breach of covenant occurred, the library became
forfeited to it.

A fair room was to be provided for the library, and no other books were
to be added, save those which Jackson might add in distinct presses.
The whole was to be called “Bibliotheca Pepysiana,” and the sole power
and custody over it was to be vested in the master of the college for
the time being.[119]

Magdalene College was founded by Lord Chancellor Audley, who vested for
ever the right of nominating to the mastership in the possessors of
Audley End. At the time that Pepys was a student the buildings were far
from extensive, and consisted of the first court alone. The foundation
of the second court was laid in 1677, and Pepys’s “Correspondence”
contains a letter from Dr. Hezekiah Burton, asking for the contribution
already promised towards the new buildings; and another from John
Maulyverer in 1679, thanking for money lent for the same purpose, and
referring to a bond. A fellow-collegian of Pepys was John Peachell,
afterwards Vicar of Stanwick, Prebendary of Carlisle, and Master of
the College in 1679. He does not appear to have been altogether an
estimable man, for in 1677 (May 3) Pepys felt half ashamed to be
seen in his company because of his red nose; and according to Lord
Dartmouth’s manuscript notes on Bishop Burnet’s “History of his own
Time,” there was cause for this rubicundity, as Archbishop Sancroft
rebuked him for setting an ill example in the University by drunkenness
and other loose behaviour. Dr. Peachell had his good points, however,
for in 1687 he was suspended from his mastership and deprived of his
vice-chancellorship for refusing to admit Alban Francis, a Benedictine
monk, to the degree of Master of Arts without taking the prescribed
oaths. It appears from a letter to Pepys that he greatly feared the
Earl of Suffolk, who was then owner of Audley End, would be content
to have him removed in order to obtain the privilege of nominating a
successor, but he was fortunate in being restored to his office in the
following year.

Pepys never forgot a friend, and a month before this restoration he
induced Lord Dartmouth, on his appointment to the command of the fleet,
to ask Peachell to be his chaplain, with authority over all the other
chaplains. In 1690 the Master of Magdalene died of starvation brought
about by a four days’ fast which he prescribed himself as a penance
after the archbishop’s admonition; and when he afterwards tried to eat
he could not.

The master at the period of Pepys’s death was Dr. Quadring, and in
the college chest are two letters written by Jackson to him to inform
him of the will of the deceased respecting the library. It was not,
however, until 1724, on the death of Jackson, that the three thousand
volumes of which the library consisted were, with the original
bookcases, removed to the college, and deposited in the new buildings
which Pepys had assisted to build. The old inscription, “Bibliotheca
Pepysiana,” which was set up at the time, is still to be seen on the
front in the second courtyard.

The library is of the greatest interest, and a mere enumeration of some
of the treasures contained in it is enough to whet the appetite of
the least ardent among the lovers of old books. To mention first the
manuscripts:--there are the various papers collected by Pepys for his
proposed “Navalia;” a “vast treasure of papers” lent by Evelyn, but
never returned to their owner; seventeen letters from Henry VIII. to
Anne Boleyn, copied at Rome from the originals in the Vatican, 1682; a
collection of papers relating to Charles II.’s escape from Worcester;
a journal of the proceedings of the Duke of Monmouth in his invading
of England, with the progress and issue of the rebellion attending it,
kept by Mr. Edward Dummer, then serving the train of artillery employed
by his Majesty for the suppression of the same; and a Survey (made by
order of the Admiralty) of buildings and encroachments on the River of
Thames, from London Bridge to Cuckold’s Point, 1684–1687. The Maitland
MS., which contains an excellent collection of Scottish poetry, and
is named after Sir Richard Maitland of Lethington, Lord Privy Seal
and Judge in the Court of Session (b. 1496, d. 1586), who formed it,
is also worthy of special mention. How the two volumes of which it
consists came into Pepys’s possession is not recorded. Selections from
them were printed by Pinkerton in 1786.

Among the choice articles that should have some notice, however
inadequate, are the pocket-book constantly used by Sir Francis Drake,
and that of James II., described as follows by Pepys himself:--“My
Royal master K. James yᵉ 2ᵈ. Pocket Book of Rates and Memorandums
during yᵉ whole time of his serving at yᵉ Seas as Lord High Admiral of
England, vizᵗ., from May, 1663, to his laying down his commission, May,
1673.” Another great curiosity is the original “Libro de Cargos as to
Provisions and Munic̃ons of the Proveedor of the Spanish Armada, 1588,”
with a hole right through, for the purpose of hanging it up in the
ship.

Besides all the papers on naval affairs in the Pepysian Library, there
is a series of fifty volumes of Pepys’s manuscripts in the Rawlinson
Collection in the Bodleian Library. How these papers came into the
possession of Rawlinson is not known.

What gives a special interest to the Library is the fact that it still
remains in exactly the same condition as Pepys left it, the books being
in the original cases, arranged in the order which he had fixed. There
are several entries in the “Diary” relating to the arrangement and
cataloguing of the books; thus on December 17th, 1666, we read:--“Spent
the evening in fitting my books, to have the number set upon each, in
order to my having an alphabet of my whole, which will be of great
ease to me.” He employs his brother John to write out the catalogue
“perfectly alphabeticall,”[120] but he afterwards finishes it off with
his own hand.[121] He was very particular as to the books he admitted
into his catalogue, so when he bought in the Strand “an idle rogueish
French book, ‘L’escholle des filles,’” he resolved, as soon as he had
read it, to burn it, “that it might not stand in the list of books
nor among them, to disgrace them if it should be found.”[122] He had,
at a later time, a similar feeling with regard to Lord Rochester’s
poems, and in a letter dated Nov. 2, 1680, he directs Hewer to leave
the volume in a drawer, as it is written in a style which he thought
unfitted it for mixing with his other books. He adds that as the
author (who had just died) was past writing any more poems so bad in
one sense, he despaired of any man surviving “to write so good in
another.”[123] When I was looking over the Library I made a point of
seeing whether this book had found a place at last on the shelves,
and I discovered it there; but with sad hypocrisy it stood in false
colours, for the lettering on the back was “Rochester’s Life.”

The books were numbered consecutively throughout the Library, and,
therefore, when re-arranged, they needed to be all renumbered. All
hands were pressed into this service; and we read that on the 15th of
February, 1667–68, Pepys himself, his wife, and Deb Willett, were busy
until near midnight “titleing” the books for the year, and setting them
in order. They all tired their backs, but the work was satisfactory,
though, on the whole, not quite so much so as the previous year’s job
had been.

On account of this constant changing, each book contains several
numbers, sometimes as many as six; and the last, which is the one by
which the books are still found, is in red ink.

The books are arranged in eleven curious old mahogany bookcases,
which are mentioned in the “Diary,” under date August 24th, 1666, and
which gave the Diarist so much pleasure, when they were sent home
quite new by Mr. Sympson, the joiner and cabinet-maker. The presses
are handsomely carved, and have handles fixed at each end; the doors
are formed of little panes of glass; and, in the lower divisions, the
glass windows are made to lift up. The books are all arranged in
double rows; but, by the ingenious plan of placing small books in front
of large ones, the letterings of all can be seen. Some have tickets on
the outside, and this practice is mentioned in the “Diary,” where we
read: “To my chamber, and there to ticket a good part of my books, in
order to the numbering of them for my easy finding them to read as I
have occasion.”[124]

The word “arranged” has been several times used in this chapter; but it
must not be understood as implying any kind of classification, for the
books are merely placed in order of size. This arrangement, however,
has been very carefully attended to; and, in one instance, some short
volumes have been raised to the required height by the help of wooden
stilts, gilt in front.

The classification was to be found in the catalogues; and, as Pepys
increased in substance, he employed experts to do this work for him.
One of these was Paul Lorrain, the author of several tracts and
sermons, who was employed in copying manuscripts, and making catalogues
of books and prints. A letter from this man, written on October 12th,
1700, to explain the nature of the work he then had in hand, is printed
in the correspondence of Pepys.

There are numerous entries in the “Diary” relating to the binding of
certain books; and a single glance at the Library as it now exists
would show any one experienced in the matter that Pepys paid great
attention to this most important point in the proper preservation
of a library. As early as May 15th, 1660, he showed this taste by
buying three books solely on account of the binding; and on January
18th, 1664–65, he went to his bookseller to give directions for the
new binding of a great many of his old books, in order that his whole
studyful should be uniform. Nearly all the books are bound in calf,
although some are in morocco and some in vellum.

Pepys came to the resolution in the year 1667 that he would not have
any more books than his cases would hold; so when, on the 2nd of
February, 1667–68, he found that the number of books had much increased
since the previous year, he was forced to weed out several inferior
ones to make room for better. He had previously written: “Whereas,
before, my delight was in multitude of books, and spending money in
that, and buying alway of other things, now that I am become a better
husband, and have left off buying, now my delight is in the neatness
of everything.”[125] This plan he continued to practise throughout his
life, generally to the improvement of the character of his library, but
not always so.

When I was allowed the privilege of looking through the Library, I
came upon a list of books headed “Deleta, 1700.” The entries in this
list are most curious. To each title is added a note, such as these:
“Ejected as a duplicate,” “Removed to a juster place,” “To give way to
the same reprinted,” “To give way to a fairer edition.”

As the “Diary” is full of notices of books purchased, I felt
interested to know which of them had been weeded out after they had
been bought, and which had been thought worthy to remain on to the end.

The following is the result of these inquiries in a few instances,
chosen from the poets:--On the 8th of July, 1664, Pepys went to his
bookseller about some books; from his shop he went on to the binder,
to give directions as to the binding of his “Chaucer;” “and thence to
the clasp-makers, to have it clasped and bossed.” Reposing in a quiet
corner of the Pepysian Library is Speght’s edition of 1602, which is
the identical copy referred to, and here, therefore, we have an example
of the books that remained. It is in a plain calf cover, unlettered,
“full neat enough,” with brass clasp and bosses.

This evident attempt to do honour to the memory of

             “That renownmed Poet
   Dan Chaucer, well of English undefyled,
   On Fame’s eternall beadroll worthie to be fyled,”

is an incident of the more interest, in that Chaucer is almost the
only great poet that Pepys was able to appreciate. Sir John Minnes,
the wit, taught him to love England’s grand old singer. These two men
were constantly brought together in the fulfilment of business duties,
and Pepys writes “among other things Sir J. Minnes brought many fine
expressions of Chaucer, which he doats on mightily.” To this he adds as
his own opinion, “and without doubt he is a very fine poet.”[126]

That this is not a mere passing remark is evident, for on August 10th,
1664, he actually quotes a line from “Troilus and Cressida,” a most
unusual practice with this “matter-of-fact” man. He goes to visit the
famous Cocker, and has an hour’s talk with him on various matters.
“He (Cocker) says that the best light for his life to do a very small
thing by (contrary to Chaucer’s words to the Sun, ‘that he should lend
his light to them that small seals grave’)[127] it should be by an
artificial light of a candle, set to advantage, as he could do it.”

I very much fear that the quotation did not spring up into Pepys’s own
mind, but that it was suggested by Cocker, who was “a great admirer,
and well read in all our English poets.” More than thirty years after
this, Pepys still remained one of Chaucer’s warmest admirers, and we
have it on the best authority that we owe Dryden’s modernization of the
“Character of a Good Parson” to his recommendation.[128]

To return, however, to the Pepysian Library. On the 7th of July, 1664
(the day before he went to the binder about Chaucer), Pepys bought
“Shakespeare’s Plays.” This probably was the third edition, which had
just appeared; though it might have been either the first folio of
1623, or the second folio of 1632; but whichever of these three it
happened to be, it was replaced in after years by the fourth folio of
1685, which is now in the collection. Although “Paradise Lost” was
first published in 1667, we find no notice either of it or of its
author in the “Diary.”

[Illustration: JOHN MILTON.

Engraved by _H. Meyer_ from a Drawing by Mʳ. Cipriani, in the
Possession of the Rev: Dʳ. Disney.

_Published April 16, 1810, by T. Cadell & W. Davies, Strand London._]

The Library contains the collected edition, in three folio volumes,
of Milton’s Works, published at London by John Toland in 1698, but
stated in the title-page to be published at Amsterdam. Pepys probably
thought it wise to have nothing to do with any of the publications of
so dangerous a man as Milton before the period of the Revolution; and
a curious letter from Daniel Skinner to Pepys, dated from Rotterdam,
November 19th, 1676, shows that a man might be injured in his public
career by the rumour that he had the works of Milton in his possession.
Skinner agreed with Daniel Elzevir, the last of that learned race, to
print at Amsterdam certain of Milton’s writings which the poet had left
to him. In the meantime a surreptitious edition of some State Letters
appears, or as Skinner puts it, “creeps out into the world.” When Sir
Joseph Williamson, the Secretary of State, is informed of this, and is
asked to give a licence for the proposed authentic edition, he replies
that “he could countenance nothing of that man’s (Milton) writings.”
Upon this, Skinner gives up his scheme, and lends the papers to
Williamson, but he gets shabby treatment in return, for on his arrival
in Holland he finds that those likely to employ him have been warned
against him as a dangerous character.[129]

The last instance of Pepys’s weeding-out process shall be “Hudibras,”
and it is the most curious of all. On the 26th of December, 1662, we
read in the “Diary:” “To the Wardrobe. Hither come Mr. Battersby;
and we falling into a discourse of a new book of drollery, in verse,
called ‘Hudebras,’ I would needs go find it out, and met with it at the
Temple: cost me 2_s._ 6_d._ But when I came to read it, it is so silly
an abuse of the Presbyter Knight going to the warrs, that I am ashamed
of it; and by and by meeting at Mr. Townsend’s at dinner, I sold it
to him for 18_d._” The book is dated 1663, and could only have been
published a few days when Pepys bought and sold it at a loss of one
shilling.

Warned by his previous experience, he would not buy the second part
when it came out, but borrowed it “to read, to see if it be as good as
the first, which the world cry so mightily up, though it hath not a
good liking in me, though I had tried but twice or three times reading
to bring myself to think it witty.”[130]

He still remained uneasy, and tried to appreciate the fashionable
poem, so that on December 10th, 1663, he thought it well to buy both
parts and place them in his library. Twenty years after this he was
still doing his best to find “where the wit lies,” for we find by the
“Tangier Diary” that he read the first two books on board ship during
the voyage out.[131]

The edition of “Hudibras” in the Library is that of 1689, so that the
earlier editions must have been exchanged for it.

It does not say much for the literary taste of the man who tried in
vain to appreciate “Hudibras,” that he found Cotton’s “Scarronides, or
Virgile Travestie,” “extraordinary good.”[132]

The Library contains many very valuable volumes; as, for instance,
there are nine Caxtons, and several Wynkyn de Wordes and Pynsons, but
the chief interest centres in the various collections.

First and foremost among these are the five folio volumes of old
English Ballads, which contain the largest series of broadside ballads
ever brought together; the next in size being the well-known Roxburghe
Collection, now in the British Museum.

Pepys has written on the title-page of his volumes: “Begun by Mr.
Selden: Improved by yᵉ addition of many Pieces elder thereto in Time,
and the whole continued down to the year, 1700, When the Form till
then peculiar thereto, vizᵗ., of the Black Letter, with Picturs, seems
(for cheapness sake) wholly laid aside, for that of the White Letter,
without Pictures.”

The Ballads are arranged under the following heads:--1. Devotion and
Morality. 2. History, true and fabulous. 3. Tragedy, viz. murders,
executions, judgements of God. 4. State and Times. 5. Love, pleasant.
6. Love, unfortunate. 7. Marriage, cuckoldry. 8. Sea: love, gallantry,
and actions. 9. Drinking and good fellowship. 10. Humorous frolics and
mirth. The total number of Ballads is 1800, of which 1376 are in black
letter. Besides these there are four little duodecimo volumes, lettered
as follows: Vol. 1. Penny Merriments. Vol. 2. Penny Witticisms. Vol. 3.
Penny Compliments; and Vol. 4. Penny Godlinesses.

Other collections are lettered “Old Novels,” “Loose Plays,” and
“Vulgaria.” There are six folio volumes of tracts on the Popish Plot,
four quarto volumes of Sea Tracts, and a collection of News-Pamphlets
for six years, that is, from January 1st, 1659–60, to January 1st,
1665–66, the time of the commencement of the Gazettes. Pepys was the
first person to collect prints and drawings in illustration of London
topography. These he left to his nephew, who added to the collection,
and two thick folio volumes therefore came to the College with the
other treasures.

Pepys’s collections have a special interest, because he collected his
books himself, knew all about them, and registered them with loving
care. His various catalogues and indexes are marvels of neatness,
and living as he did in a pre-bibliographical age, he deserves the
greatest credit for the judgment exercised in their production. In the
fifth volume of the little collection of books on Shorthand, there is
an index of authors, with dates of publication and references to the
volume in which each will be found; and the following, which is the
title of one of the appendixes to the catalogue, will show how much
labour was willingly expended in the production of these helps to
research: “A chronological Deductions of the Variations of Stile (to
be collected from yᵉ Alphabet of my books) in yᵉ language of England
between ann. 700 & yᵉ attempt last made towards its refinement by Sir
Philᵖ Sidney in his ‘Arcadia,’ between 1580 and 1590.”

Neatness and the love of accuracy were ruling passions with Pepys,
and when a catalogue was filled up with additional entries he had it
re-arranged and copied out. On “A Catalogue and Alphabet to my books
of Geography and Hydrography, 1693–95,” is the following memorandum:
“Before this Index be transcribed far to collect and alphabet the
particulars contained in the List of additional Books inserted at
the end, and that being done To incorporate both them and the four
particular Indexes preceding into the Principal, and so as to unite the
whole.”

This is an interesting list: “Bibliotheca Nautica, 1695. Catalogue of
Authors (the perfectest I can arrive at) upon the art and practice
of Navigation, with a Chronological Catalogue of the most eminent
Mathematicians of this Nation, Antient and Modern, to the year 1673.”
Some papers show how all this was arrived at, thus: “Memorandum,
to look over yᵉ Epistles and Prefaces to all the Bookes in this
Collection, of which I am not maister, and yᵉ other allsoe, and
apply what is usefull through yᵉ whole.” Mr. Mount, “son-in-law and
successor to the late Mr. Fisher, master of the ancient shopp and our
only magazine of English Books of Navigation at the Postern on Tower
Hill,” prepared a list, and tried to answer Pepys’s queries. The
Diarist was well known to all the booksellers, and he doubtless was a
good customer, although he must have troubled them sometimes with his
fastidiousness. A note intended for Mr. Mount may be looked upon as a
good sample of many more such memorandums, “To get me the ‘Invention of
yᵉ Art of Navigation,’ a fair one for yᵉ dirty one I bought of him.”

Robert Scott, the famous bookseller of Little Britain, when sending
Pepys four scarce books, the total cost of which was only _£_1 14_s._,
writes, “But without flattery I love to find a rare book for you.”
Herringman, of the “Blue Anchor,” at the New Exchange in the Strand,
Joseph Kirton, of St. Paul’s Churchyard, who was ruined by the Fire of
London, and Bagford, the title-robber, were some among the booksellers
with whom Pepys had dealings.

Pepys was not a producer of _marginalia_, but some of his books contain
an occasional note of interest; thus, in Cotton’s “Compleat Gamester”
(1674), “cocking” is described at page 206 as a “game of delight
and pleasure,” and Pepys added a manuscript note in the margin, “of
barbarity.” Not only does this give us Pepys’s opinion of the sport
very pithily, but it also illustrates a passage in the “Diary,” where
he describes his visit to the cock-fighting in Shoe Lane, and says he
soon had enough of it.[133]

All the books in the Library have a bookplate in the inside cover.
These are of different design, two having Pepys’s portrait (one large
and the other small), and one having S. P. and two anchors interlaced.
Dr. Diamond writes in “Notes and Queries,” that he once met with
a large quantity of these bookplates in four varieties. Two were
beautifully engraved by Faithorne, as is supposed, and two were by
White. Some of them had a rough margin, and others were cut close up to
the mantle on the arms.[134]

The motto which Pepys adopted, _Mens cujusque is est quisque_, was
criticized by some of the Admirals in 1690, and the Diarist desired
his friend Hewer to point out to them, through Mr. Southerne, that it
was a quotation from Cicero’s “Somnium Scipionis,” and that the thought
was derived from Plato and wrought upon by St. Paul. The whole passage
is, “Tu vero enitere, et sic habeto te non esse mortalem, sed Corpus
hoc. Nec enim is est quem forma ista declarat; sed _mens cujusque is
est quisque_, non ea figura quæ digito monstrari potest.”

In concluding this notice of the Pepysian Library, it will be necessary
to say a few words about the Musical collections. Pepys was not a mere
amateur in music, but understood both theory and practice thoroughly,
and he found consolation from it when troubles came upon him.[135] On
November 2nd, 1661, he tried “to make a song in praise of a liberal
genius,” which he took his own to be, but the result did not prove to
his mind; and on March 20th, 1668, he endeavoured to invent “a better
theory of music than hath yet been abroad.”

We have references in the “Diary” to four songs which he composed, and
a notice of one which he only attempted.[136] On January 30th, 1659–60,
he sang Montrose’s verses on the execution of Charles I. beginning,--

   “Great, good, and just, could I but rate,”

which he had set to music. He composed “Gaze not on Swans,” on the 11th
of February, 1661–62; but his grand achievement was the setting to
music of the song,

   “Beauty retire; thou doest my pitty move,
   Believe my pitty, and then trust my love,” &c.,

from Davenant’s Second Part of “The Siege of Rhodes,” (act iv. sc.
2). Mrs. Knipp sang the song so well that the composer is forced to
exclaim, that it seems to be a very fine song, and Captain Downing,
“who loves and understands music,” “extols it above everything he had
ever heard.”[137] Further evidence of the pride of the composer is seen
in the fact that he had his portrait painted with the music of “Beauty
retire” in his hand.

On April 6th, 1666, he began “putting notes” to Ben Jonson’s song,

   “It is decreed--nor shall thy fate, O Rome!
   Resist my vow, though hills were set on hills,”

but he did not finish it until November 11th, 1666. He thought himself
that it was even better than “Beauty retire,” but the opinion of others
is not given.

In the Pepysian Library is a volume of music, entitled, “Songs and
other Compositions, Light, Grave and Sacred, for a single voice
adjusted to the particular compass of mine; with a thorough base on
yᵉ ghitare, by Cesare Morelli,” which contains, among others, “Beauty
retire,” “It is decreed,” and “To be or not to be.” We find in the
“Diary” that on November 13th, 1664, Pepys was learning to recite this
speech of Hamlet.

In the present day, when few instruments besides the piano are heard
in private houses, it is somewhat surprising to find how many were
familiar to our ancestors in the seventeenth century, and a note of
some of these will perhaps be thought interesting.

The lute was a favourite instrument when Pepys was young, and a
good lutenist was in high esteem among his fellows. Lady Wright’s
butler gave Pepys a lesson or two, and in the first two years of the
“Diary,” there are several references to the hours the Diarist spent
in practising; but for a time he was unable to play, as his lute was
in pawn. Various forms of the violin were much used by Pepys, who rose
by candlelight on the 3rd of December, 1660, and spent his morning in
fiddling, till it was time to go to the office.

He and Mr. Hill were engaged for an hour or two in stringing a theorbo;
and, on another occasion, he had it mended at a cost of twenty-six
shillings. The flute and flageolet were always handy, as he could put
them in his pocket, and use them as occasion required, particularly if
he were in the neighbourhood of an echo. He mentions the guitar twice
in the “Diary,” but did not play on it, as he thought it a bauble. He
afterwards altered his opinion, for he expressly charges Morelli, the
arranger of his musical papers, to set a certain French song to the
guitar; and, as may be seen above, many others were treated in the same
way.[138] He is at one time angry with The. Turner because she will
not give him a lesson on the harpsichord; and afterwards he buys a
spinet.[139]

I here end the portion of this book which deals with the life of Pepys
himself.

The “Correspondence” discovers a more dignified character than the
“Diary,” but we cannot say for certain whether, if we had a diary of
the later years, we should not read such a confession as this on the
27th of January, 1666–67:--“Went down and sat in a low room (at Sir
Philip Warwick’s), reading ‘Erasmus de scribendis epistolis,’ a very
good book, especially one letter of advice to a courtier, most true and
good, which made me once resolve to tear out the two leaves that it was
writ in, but I forbore it.”

FOOTNOTES:

[119] Harl. MS. 7,031, pp. 208, 209. “Samuel Pepys, his disposition and
settlement of his Library.”

[120] “Diary,” Jan. 8, 1666–67.

[121] Feb. 4, 1666–67.

[122] Feb. 8, 1667–68.

[123] Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. i. p. 247.

[124] “Diary,” Dec. 19, 1666.

[125] “Diary,” Aug. 10, 1663.

[126] “Diary,” June 14, 1663.

[127] “Allas! what hath this lovers the agylte?
      Dispitous Day, thyn be the pyne of Helle!
      For many a lover hastow slayn, and wilt;
      Thi pourynge in wol nowher lat hem dwelle:
      What? profrestow thi light here for to selle?
      _Go selle it hem that smale seles grave_,
      We wol the nought, as nedeth no day have!”

      _Troylus and Cryseyde_, book iii. ll. 1408–14.

[128] This is so interesting a fact that I think Dryden’s letter to
Pepys on the subject may well appear in full at this place:--

  “July 14, 1699.

  “Padron Mio,

 “I remember last year when I had the honour of dining with you, you
 were pleased to recommend to me the character of Chaucer’s “Good
 Parson.” Any desire of yours is a command to me, and accordingly I
 have put it into my English, with such additions and alterations as I
 thought fit.

 “Having translated as many fables from Ovid, and as many novels from
 Boccace, and tales from Chaucer, as will make an indifferent large
 volume in folio, I intend them for the press in Michaelmas term next.
 In the mean time my Parson desires the favour of being known to you,
 and promises if you find any fault in his character, he will reform
 it. Whenever you please, he shall wait on you, and for the safer
 conveyance, I will carry him in my pocket, who am

  “My _Padron’s_ most obedient servant,

  “JOHN DRYDEN.

  “For Samuel Pepys, Esq.,

  At his house in York Street, These.”


“For Samuel Pepys, Esq.,

At his house in York Street, These.”

In Pepys’s answer, dated on the same day, he writes:
 “You truly have obliged me, and, possibly, in saying so, I am more in
 earnest than you can readily think, as verily hoping from this your
 copy of one ‘Good Parson’ to fancy some amends made me for the hourly
 offence I bear with from the sight of so many lewd originals.”--Smith’s
 “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. ii. pp. 254–55.

[129] Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. i. pp. 169–81.

[130] “Diary,” Nov. 28, 1663.

[131] Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. i. p. 343.

[132] “Diary,” March 2, 1663–64.

[133] “Diary,” Dec. 21, 1663.

[134] “Notes and Queries,” 1st S. vi. 534.

[135] “The little knowledge in music which I have, never was of more
use to me than it is now, under the molestations of mind which I have
at this time more than ordinary to contend with.”--Smith’s “Life, &c.,
of Pepys,” vol. i. p. 199.

[136] “Diary,” Nov. 30, 1667.

[137] “Diary,” Dec. 6, 1665; Feb. 23, 1665–66; Nov. 9, 1666.

[138] Letter dated Sept. 25, 1679, in Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,”
vol. i. p. 200.

[139] References to the “Diary” where the several instruments are
mentioned:--

_Lute_, Jan. 25, 31, Feb. 4, March 18, 1659–60; Oct. 21, Nov. 9, 21,
1660; May 26, 1662.

_Viol_, Jan. 4, March 4, 6, Feb. 17, 1662–63; Sept. 28, 1664.

_Lyre viol_, Nov. 17, 1660; Oct. 16, Nov. 20, 1666.

_Bass viol_, July 5, 1662; April 17, 1663.

_Arched viol_, Oct. 5, 1664.

_Treble_, April 23, 1660.

_Violin_, March 6, 1659–60; April 6, 10, Nov. 21, 1660; April 23, June
6, 1661; June 15, 1663.

_Theorbo_, March 5, 1569–60; Nov. 24, Dec. 30, 1660; Oct. 9, 28, Dec.
7, 1661; Aug. 21, 1663; July 30, 1666.

_Guitar_, June 8, 1660; July 27, 1661.

_Cittern_, June 5, 1660; Jan. 17, 1660–61.

_Bandore_, Oct. 15, 1662.

_Recorder_, April 8, 1668.

_Flageolet_, Jan. 16, 30, Feb. 8, 9, 27, 1659–60; May 14, June 21,
1660; June 5, 1661; Jan. 20, 1667–68.

_Triangle_, March 18, 1662–63; April 1, 15, June 21, 1663.

_Triangle virginal_, June 14, 1661.

_Virginals_, Dec. 8, 1660; Sept. 2, 1666.

_Spinet_ (espinette), April 4, July 10, 13, 1668.

_Harpsichord_, March 17, 1659–60; Feb. 26, 1660–61; April 31, June 18,
1661; Sept. 9, 1664; April 4, 1668.

_Dulcimer_, June 23, 1662.

_Trumpet marine_, Oct. 24, 1667.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER VI.

LONDON.

 “I have vow’d to spend all my life in London. People do really live
 no where else; they breathe and move and have a kind of insipid dull
 being, but there is no life but in London. I had rather be Countess of
 Puddle-dock than Queen of Sussex.”--T. SHADWELL’S _Epsom Wells_, 1676.


Having concluded that portion of our subject which relates more
particularly to the personal character of Pepys, we now pass on to the
general consideration of the component parts of the world he lived in.
As Pepys was a thorough Londoner, and as most of the circumstances
related in the “Diary” refer to London, I propose to commence with a
notice of some parts of the capital at the time of the Restoration.

The almost constant use of the River as a highway is a marked feature
of the habits of the time, which is illustrated by the fact that Pepys
makes a point of mentioning that he went to a place “by land,” when
from some cause or other he did not take a boat; thus, on March 8th,
1659–60, we read, “Home about two o’clock, and took my wife _by land_
to Paternoster Row, to buy some paragon for a petticoat, and so home
again.” When Pepys was appointed Clerk of the Acts, and he was settled
in his house in Seething Lane, he found that a constant communication
was necessary between the Navy Office in the City, and the Admiralty
at Whitehall. In his frequent journeys by boat from place to place,
he often stopped at Blackfriars, in order to visit Lord Sandwich at
the “Wardrobe,” where the royal clothes were kept. Sometimes, when
there were shows and pageants on the Thames, it was no easy matter to
get a boat, and on the occasion of the Queen’s coming to town from
Hampton Court, when her barge was attended by ten thousand barges
and boats, Pepys in vain tempted the watermen with a bribe of eight
shillings.[140] One of the chief dangers of boat traffic was found in
“shooting” London Bridge, and it was generally considered good policy
to get out of the boat and pass from side to side on foot instead
of going through the arches. One Sunday night,[141] however, our
Diarist passed through the “rapids,” and did not like the sensation he
experienced. “And so to Whitehall to Sir G. Carteret, and so to the
Chappell, where I challenged my pew as Clerke of the Privy Seale, and
had it, and then walked home with Mr. Blagrave, to his old house in the
Fishyard, and there he had a pretty kinswoman that sings, and we did
sing some holy things, and afterwards others came in, and so I left
them, and by water through the bridge (which did trouble me) home, and
so to bed.” It was not, however, much safer on the bridge than under
it, for on one occasion Pepys nearly broke his leg there. He had been
in Southwark, spending the evening at the well-known inn, the “Bear
at the bridge foot,” and when he wished to get home he could not find
his coach, so he was forced to go over the bridge through the darkness
and the dirt. His leg fell into a hole, although there was a constable
standing by to warn persons away from the dangerous spot. At first he
thought his leg was broken, but when he was pulled up he was found not
to be much hurt.[142]

One of the advantages which our forefathers possessed over us, was
to be found in the nearness of the fields and country lanes to their
offices and shops. Pepys often indulged himself in a walk or a romp
over the grass, in places that are now covered with bricks. On July
29th, 1669, he writes: “I dined, and in the afternoon, with Dick
Vines and his brother Payton, we walked to Lisson-greene and Marybone
and back again.” On October 9th, 1660, he says, “I met with Sir W.
Pen again, and so with him to Redriffe by water, and from thence
walked over the fields to Deptford, the first pleasant walk I have
had a great while.” One Sunday he goes to Clerkenwell Church, and
walks home across the fields.[143] At another time he takes the air
in the fields beyond St. Pancras.[144] There is, however, another
side to this pleasing picture; for these places were not always safe,
and the pleasure-seekers were sometimes alarmed. One day Pepys and
a friend were walking from Chelsea into town, when they were joined
by a companion, and we read that, “coming among some trees near the
Neate houses he began to whistle, which did give us some suspicion,
but it proved that he that answered him was Mr. Marsh (the Lutenist)
and his wife, and so we all walked to Westminster together.”[145] In
the following year Pepys walked from Woolwich to Rotherhithe on a
fine moonshiny night, but he was accompanied by three or four armed
men.[146] It gave him much satisfaction to be thought of enough
importance to have such an escort provided for him unasked.

So much for the country parts near the town, but the streets appear to
have been even less safe after dark. Those who wanted to find their
way had to carry links,[147] as those without them fared but badly.
The gates of the City were shut at night, but this had the effect of
shutting in some of the ill-disposed as well as in shutting out others.
Pepys and his party on coming home one night from the play found the
gates closed. He goes on to say in the “Diary,” “At Newgate we find
them in trouble, some thieves having this night broke open prison. So
we through and home; and our coachman was fain to drive hard from two
or three fellows which he said were rogues that he met at the end of
Blowbladder Street.”[148]

A London mob has never been famed for politeness, and we do not gain
a very pleasing view of those in Pepys’s day from some of the entries
in the “Diary.” On the 27th of November, 1662, the Russian Ambassador
entered the city, and the trained bands, the King’s Life Guards, and
wealthy citizens clad in black velvet coats with gold chains were ready
to receive him. Pepys did not see the Ambassador in his coach, but he
was pleased with the “attendants in their habits and fur caps, very
handsome, comely men, and most of them with hawks upon their fists to
present to the King.” He adds, however, “But, Lord! to see the absurd
nature of Englishmen, that cannot forbear laughing and jeering at
everything that looks strange.”

The high road of Newgate Street was formerly crowded in a most
inconvenient degree by the shambles of the butchers, and our Diarist
once got into trouble while driving past them. The account of this
adventure is amusing, from the ease with which he got out of his
difficulty. “My coach plucked down two pieces of beef into the dirt,
upon which the butchers stopped the horses, and a great rout of people
in the street, crying that he had done him 40_s._ and _£_5 worth of
hurt; but going down I saw that he had little or none; and so I give
them a shilling for it, and they were well contented.”[149]

The following is a good sample of the quarrels that were constantly
occurring; there being no authority to put a stop to such exhibitions.
“Great discourse of the fray yesterday in Moorfields; how the butchers
at first did beat the weavers (between whom there hath been ever an
old competition for mastery), but at last the weavers rallied and beat
them. At first the butchers knocked down all for weavers that had
green or blue aprons, till they were fain to pull them off and put
them in their breeches. At last the butchers were fain to pull off
their sleeves, that they might not be known, and were soundly beaten
out of the field, and some deeply wounded and bruised; till at last
the weavers went out triumphing, calling _£_100 for a butcher.”[150]
Moorfields, now occupied by Finsbury Square and Circus and the
surrounding streets, was at this time one of the chief recreation
grounds outside the City walls. It was partly given up to the
laundresses and bleachers; and boxers and cudgel-players found in it a
congenial sphere for their amusements. On an emergency, the troops were
mustered on the fenny ground.

None of Pepys’s days passed without a visit to some tavern, for a
morning draught, or a pint of wine after dinner. The notice of these
little jovialities has preserved to us the names of several old inns,
such as the Star, Half Moon, Harp and Ball, Swan, Bull Head, Plough,
Lion, Cock, Greyhound, Globe, Mitre, Cardinal’s Cap, King’s Head,
Hercules Pillars, Trumpet, &c. We read in the “Diary,” that on March
6th, 1659–60, there was a friendly meeting at one of these places:
“While we were drinking, in comes Mr. Day, a carpenter in Westminster,
to tell me that it was Shrove tuesday, and that I must go with him to
their yearly club upon this day, which, I confess, I had quite forgot.
So I went to the Bell, where were Mr. Eglin, Veezy, Vincent, a butcher,
one more, and Mr. Tanner, with whom I played upon a viall and viallin,
after dinner, and were very merry, with a special good dinner, a leg
of veal and bacon, two capons and fritters, with abundance of wine.”
On January 10th, 1659–60, Pepys “drank a pint of wine at the Star, in
Cheapside,” and on May 24th, 1662, he took his “morning draft” at the
same house. These entries show how rapidly our forefathers went from
place to place, and how little they thought of the distance between
the City and Westminster; this facility being evidently caused by the
water carriage. On a certain day Pepys starts from Axe Yard, drinks his
morning draught with a friend, at the Sun, in Chancery Lane, and then
goes to Westminster Hall. At noon he visits the Swan, in Fish Street;
then goes back to Westminster, looking in at the Coffee Club and the
Hall before going home.[151] The Swan, in Old Fish Street, is mentioned
in an inquisition held before the mayor and aldermen in 1413, as “The
Swan on the Hoop.” The house was destroyed in the Great Fire, but was
rebuilt and advertised to be let in the “Spectator” of April 25th, 1712.

King Street, Westminster, was full of inns. Pepys’s favourite haunt was
the Leg, where an ordinary was held. On December 6th, 1660, he and Mr.
Moore went there, and “dined together on a neat’s tongue and udder.”
Again, on April 6th, 1661, “with Mr. Creed and More to the Leg, in
the Palace, to dinner, which I gave them, and after dinner I saw the
girl of the house, being very pretty, go into a chamber, and I went in
after her and kissed her.” Two other King Street taverns were visited
by Pepys, in July and August, 1660--viz., the Sun and the Dog. These
houses of entertainment are both noted as haunts of Ben Jonson, in
Herrick’s Address to the Shade of “Glorious Ben.”

             “Ah, Ben!
   Say how or when
   Shall we, thy guests,
   Meet at these lyric feasts
   Made at the Sun,
   The Dog, the Triple Tun?
   Where we such clusters had
   As made us nobly wild, not mad!
   And yet such verse of thine
   Outdid the meat, outdid the frolic wine.”

Another Sun, that behind the Exchange, was a famous house frequented
by Pepys; it was rebuilt after the Fire by John Wadlow, the host of
the Devil Tavern, and son of the more famous Simon Wadlow whom Ben
Jonson dubbed “Old Sym, the King of Skinkers.” Pepys often went with
his colleagues to the Dolphin, and drank “a great quantity of sack”
there. On April 25th, 1661, he “went to an ordinary at the King’s
Head, in Tower Street, and there had a dirty dinner.” On June 21st,
of the same year, we read, “This morning, going to my father’s, I met
him, and so he and I went and drank our morning draft at the Samson,
in Paul’s Churchyard.” On October 9th, he went after the theatre “to
the Fleece tavern, in Covent Garden, where Luellin, and Blurton, and
my old friend, Frank Bagge, was to meet me, and there staid till late,
very merry.” This was the chief tavern in Covent Garden, but being the
resort of bullies, it obtained a very unenviable notoriety. The Green
Dragon, on Lambeth Hill, the Golden Lion, near Charing Cross, the Old
Three Tuns at the same place, and the Pope’s Head, in Chancery Lane,
are among the other taverns mentioned by Pepys. The Rhenish Wine-house,
in the Steelyard, Upper Thames Street, was a favourite resort, and is
frequently mentioned by the old dramatists. Pepys went there sometimes,
but he more often visited another house so called in Cannon Row. All
kinds of drinks were alike agreeable to our Diarist, and he did not
even disdain “mum,” a strong beer brewed from wheat, which was once
popular and sold at special mum-houses.

These constant visits to taverns were not very conducive to temperate
habits of life, and we therefore read much of the midday revellings of
the business men. One day, Pepys being a little more sober than Sir W.
Penn, has to lead that worthy knight home through the streets, and on
another occasion he resolves not to drink any more wine,--a rash vow
which he forthwith breaks. Sometimes with amusing casuistry he tries
to keep his vow to the letter while he breaks it in the spirit; thus,
to allude again to the characteristic entry, on October 29th, 1663, we
read, “Went into the Buttery, and there stayed and talked, and then
into the Hall again; and there wine was offered, and they drunk, I only
drinking some hypocras,[152] which do not break my vow, it being, to
the best of my present judgement, only a mixed compound drink, and not
any wine. If I am mistaken, God forgive me! but I hope and do think I
am not.”

We have seen Pepys dividing his time pretty equally between the City
and Westminster, and doing official work in both places. In Westminster
Hall he was on friendly terms with all the shopkeepers who formerly
kept their little stalls in that place, and most of the watermen at
the different stairs, who recognized his genial face, were emulous of
the honour of carrying him as a fare. There is an entry in the “Diary”
which records a curious custom amongst the stationers of the Hall.
Pepys went on January 30th, 1659–60, to “Westminster Hall, where Mrs.
Lane and the rest of the maids had their white scarfs, all having been
at the burial of a young bookseller.”

Two of the most important events in the history of Old London,--viz.,
the Plague and the Fire,--are very fully described in the “Diary.”

On the 7th of June, 1665, Pepys for the first time saw two or three
houses marked with the red cross, and the words “Lord have mercy upon
us” on the doors; and the sight made him feel so ill at ease that he
was forced to buy some roll tobacco to smell and chew. Then we read
of the rapid increase in the numbers of those struck down; of those
buried in the open Tuttle-fields at Westminster; and of the unfriendly
feelings that were engendered by fear.

Pepys remained either in town or in its neighbourhood during the whole
time of the raging of the pestilence; and on the 4th of September,
1665, he wrote an interesting letter to Lady Carteret, from Woolwich,
in which he said: “The absence of the court and emptiness of the city
takes away all occasion of news, save only such melancholy stories
as would rather sadden than find your ladyship any divertissement in
the hearing. I have stayed in the city till above 7,400 died in one
week, and of them above 6,000 of the plague, and little noise heard
day or night but tolling of bells; till I could walk Lumber Street and
not meet twenty persons from one end to the other, and not fifty upon
the Exchange; till whole families, ten and twelve together, have been
swept away; till my very physician, Dr. Burnet, who undertook to secure
me against any infection, having survived the month of his own house
being shut up, died himself of the plague; till the nights, though
much lengthened, are grown too short to conceal the burials of those
that died the day before, people being thereby constrained to borrow
daylight for that service; lastly, till I could find neither meat nor
drink safe, the butcheries being everywhere visited, my brewer’s house
shut up, and my baker, with his whole family, dead of the plague.”

He then relates a romantic incident which had just occurred, and a note
of which he also inserted in his “Diary:” “Greenwich begins apace to
be sickly; but we are, by the command of the king, taking all the care
we can to prevent its growth; and meeting to that purpose yesterday,
after sermon with the town officers, many doleful informations were
brought us, and, among others, this, which I shall trouble your
ladyship with the telling. Complaint was brought us against one in the
town for receiving into his house a child brought from an infected
house in London. Upon inquiry, we found that it was the child of a very
able citizen in Gracious Street, who, having lost already all the rest
of his children, and himself and wife being shut up, and in despair
of escaping, implored only the liberty of using the means for the
saving of this only babe, which, with difficulty, was allowed, and they
suffered to deliver it, stripped naked, out at a window, into the arms
of a friend, who, shifting into fresh cloathes, conveyed it thus to
Greenwich, where, upon this information from Alderman Hooker, we suffer
it to remain.”

On the 20th of this same month of September we read in the “Diary:”
“But, Lord! what a sad time it is to see no boats upon the River, and
grass grows all up and down White Hall court, and nobody but poor
wretches in the streets.” And on October 16th, Pepys is told that,
in Westminster, “there is never a physician, and but one apothecary
left,--all being dead.”

In the following January, the question of attending to the overcrowded
churchyards had begun to agitate the public mind; and those who lived
in their immediate neighbourhood were anxious that they should be
covered with lime.[153] Not many months after this the greater portion
of the city had become a void.

On the 2nd of September, 1666, Pepys was called up at three o’clock to
see a fire; but not thinking much of it, he went to bed again. When,
however, he got up, he found that about 300 houses had been burnt
in the night. All were now busy in moving their property from place
to place; and the women worked as hard as the men in doing what was
needed. Some almost incredible instances of meanness are recorded in
the “Diary,” respecting those rich men who gave shillings grudgingly to
those who saved their all. Alderman Starling, whose house was saved by
the Navy Office men, while the next house was burning, gave 2_s._ 6_d._
to be divided among thirty of them, and then quarrelled with some that
would remove the rubbish out of the way of the fire, on the score that
they came to steal. Sir William Coventry told Pepys of another case
which occurred in Holborn. An offer was made to one whose house was in
great danger, to stop the fire for a sum that came to about 2_s._ 6_d._
a man, but he would only give 1_s._ 6_d._[154]

Clothworkers’ Hall burnt for three days and nights, on account of the
oil in the cellars; and so intense was the heat caused by extension of
the fire over a large space, that the ground of the City continued to
smoke even in December.[155]

Moorfields was the chief resort of the houseless Londoners, and soon
paved streets and two-storey houses were seen in that swampy place, the
City having let the land on leases of seven years.

It was said that this national disaster had been foretold, and the
prophecies of Nostrodamus and Mother Shipton were referred to.

Sir Roger L’Estrange, the Licenser of Almanacs, told Sir Edward Walker
that most of those that came under his notice foretold the fire, but
that he had struck the prophecy out.[156] Lady Carteret told Pepys
a curious little fact, which was, that abundance of pieces of burnt
papers were driven by the wind as far as Cranborne, in Windsor Forest;
“and, among others, she took up one, or had one brought her to see,
which was a little bit of paper that had been printed, whereon there
remained no more nor less than these words: ‘Time is, it is done.’”[157]

It is well known that the unfortunate Roman Catholics were charged with
the crime of having set London on fire, and there appears to have been
a very sufficient reason why the people should persist in affirming
this fable. The judges determined, in the case of disputed liability
between landlord and tenant, that the tenants should bear the loss
in all casualties of fire arising in their own houses or in those of
their neighbours; but if the fire was caused by an enemy they were not
liable. As one poor man was convicted and hanged for the crime, it was
held that the landlords must be mulcted.[158] Public opinion shifted
about in this matter, for we read that on September 16th, 1667, Pepys
saw “a printed account of the examinations taken, touching the burning
... showing the plot of the <DW7>s therein, which it seems hath
been ordered to be burnt by the hands of the hangman, in Westminster
Palace.”[159]

London remained in ruins for many months, and as late as April 23rd,
1668, Pepys describes himself as wearily walking round the walls in
order to escape the dangers within. At last new streets of houses arose
from the ruins, but, unfortunately, in spite of the proposals of Wren,
Hooke, and Evelyn for erecting a handsome and well-arranged city, the
old lines were in almost every case retained.

A passage in the “Diary” in which Pepys remarks on the great streets
“marked out with piles drove in the ground,” and expresses the opinion
that, if ever so built, they will form “a noble sight,” would seem to
show that at one time a better plan of building was contemplated.[160]

Had the plan suggested in Parliament by Colonel Birch been carried out,
great difficulties would have been avoided. His proposal was, that the
whole ground should be sold and placed in trust. Then the trustees were
to sell again, with preference to the former owners, by which means
a general plan of building might have been adopted; but an unequalled
opportunity of making London into a fine city was let slip.[161]

At one time it was supposed that the Fire would cause a westward march
of trade, but the City asserted the old supremacy when it was rebuilt.

Soon after the conclusion of the “Diary,” Pepys left the Navy Office,
and the latter years of his life were spent partly in York Buildings
and partly at Clapham. It was after the Restoration that the West End
grew into importance, and the house at the foot of Buckingham Street,
from the windows of which Pepys could look out upon the river, was not
built when the Diarist was settled in Crutched Friars. It was erected
upon part of the site of York House, whose last resident was the
worthless Buckingham:--

   “Beggar’d by fools, whom still he found too late,
   He had his jest, and they had his estate.”

This house, in which Pepys was pleased to find “the remains of the
noble soul of the late Duke of Buckingham appearing, in the door-cases
and the windows,”[162] was sold by his son and demolished in 1672.

As Pepys left London so it remained in its chief features for more than
one hundred years, and it was not until the beginning of the present
century that the vast extension of the town to the north and south
began to make itself felt.

FOOTNOTES:

[140] “Diary,” Aug. 23, 1662.

[141] April 20, 1662.

[142] “Diary,” Oct. 26, 1664.

[143] Oct. 2, 1664.

[144] April 23, 1665.

[145] “Diary,” Aug. 19, 1661.

[146] Sept. 19, 1662.

[147] Sept. 10, Nov. 15, 1661.

[148] “Diary,” Aug. 1, 1667.

[149] Dec. 15, 1662.

[150] “Diary,” July 26, 1664.

[151] “Diary,” Jan. 20, 1659–60.

[152] Hippocras, a drink composed of red or white wine, with the
addition of sugar and spices.

[153] “Diary,” Jan. 31, 1665–66.

[154] Sept. 8, 1666.

[155] Dec. 14, 1666.

[156] Ward’s “Diary,” p. 94.

[157] “Diary,” Feb. 3, 1666–67.

[158] Nov. 5, 1666.

[159] The title of this very rare pamphlet is--“A true and faithful
account of the several Informations exhibited to the Honourable
Committee appointed by the Parliament to inquire into the late dreadful
burning of the City of London. Printed in the year 1667.” 4to. pp. 35.

[160] “Diary,” March 29, 1667.

[161] “Diary,” Feb. 24, 1666–67.

[162] June 6, 1663.




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER VII.

PEPYS’S RELATIONS, FRIENDS, AND ACQUAINTANCES.

 “If a man does not make new acquaintances as he advances through life
 he will soon find himself left alone; a man should keep his friendship
 in constant repair.”--DR. JOHNSON.


Family feeling was strong in Pepys, and we therefore find him in
constant communication with persons in all degrees of relationship.
These relations varied greatly in social position, from the peer to
the little shopkeeper. Thus we find that one Pepys was a Lord Chief
Justice of Ireland; another a Member of Parliament; another a Doctor of
Divinity; another a goldsmith, and another a turner.

In later life, when Pepys had risen greatly in social importance, the
relations were not so much associated with, and a more distinguished
circle of friends make their appearance. This gradual dropping away
of the relations may have been caused by decrease of the family, for
the Diarist on one occasion writes: “It is a sad consideration how
the Pepys’s decay, and nobody almost that I know in a present way of
increasing them.”[163]

The members of Pepys’s immediate family have already been alluded to,
and we have seen how his father, John Pepys, the tailor, retired to
Brampton in 1661. The old man died in 1680, and desired by his will
that all the lands and goods left him by his brother Robert should
be delivered up to his eldest son. He also left _£_5 to the poor of
Brampton, and 40_s._ to the poor of Ellington, and the remainder of his
property to be divided amongst his three children--Samuel and John and
Paulina Jackson. John, however, died before him.

Of the numerous cousins who figure in the “Diary,” the Turners and
the Joyces are the most frequently referred to. Serjeant John Turner
and his wife Jane, who lived in Salisbury Court, were not very highly
esteemed by Sir William Baker, who called the one a false fellow and
the other a false woman, and Pepys does not appear altogether to have
disliked hearing him say so.[164]

Their daughter Theophila was, however, a favourite with Pepys, and
on March 3, 1662–63, she showed him his name on her breast as her
valentine, “which,” he observes, “will cost me 20_s._” Four days
afterwards he bought her a dozen pairs of white gloves.

The Joyces were never much liked by Pepys, but at one time he thought
it well to be friends with them, as he writes on the 6th of August,
1663,--“I think it convenient to keep in with the Joyces against a bad
day, if I should have occasion to make use of them.” William Joyce
was good-natured, but Pepys wearied of his company because he was “an
impertinent coxcomb” and too great a talker. As is often the case with
our Diarist, he gives a different character of the man on another
occasion. He writes, “A cunning, crafty fellow he is, and dangerous to
displease, for his tongue spares nobody.”[165]

Anthony Joyce was in business, and on one occasion he supplied Pepys
with some tallow, payment for which he was unduly anxious about, so
that the purchaser was vexed.[166] Anthony gave over trade in 1664,
but was ruined by the Fire; and afterwards kept the “Three Stags” at
Holborn Conduit. William was greatly disgusted when his brother became
a publican. Pepys says he ranted about it “like a prince, calling him
hosteller and his sister hostess.”[167]

In January, 1667–68, Anthony threw himself into a pond at Islington,
but being seen by a poor woman, he was got out before life was extinct.
“He confessed his doing the thing, being led by the devil; and do
declare his reason to be, his trouble in having forgot to serve God
as he ought since he came to this new employment.”[168] He died soon
after this, and his friends were in great fear that his goods would be
seized upon on the ground that he was a suicide. Pepys used all his
influence to save the estate, and obtained the King’s promise that it
should not be taken from the widow and children. Those who were likely
to benefit by the confiscation gave much trouble, and managed to stop
the coroner’s verdict for a time. At last, however, the widow’s friends
on the jury saved her from further anxiety by giving a verdict that
her husband died of a fever. “Some opposition there was, the foreman
pressing them to declare the cause of the fever, thinking thereby to
obstruct it; but they did adhere to their verdict, and would give no
reason.”[169]

Kate Joyce (Anthony’s widow) was a pretty woman, and caused Pepys some
trouble. She had many offers of marriage, and after a short period of
widowhood she married one Hollingshed, a tobacconist.[170] Pepys was
disgusted, and left her to her own devices with the expression, “As she
brews let her bake.”

Mrs. Kite, the butcher, was another of Pepys’s aunts whose company he
did not greatly appreciate. He was, however, her executor, and at her
death he calls her daughter ugly names, thus: “Back again with Peg
Kite, who will be I doubt a troublesome carrion to us executors.”[171]
A few days after she is called “a slut,”[172] and when she declares her
firm intention to marry “the beggarly rogue the weaver,” the executors
are “resolved neither to meddle nor make with her.”[173]

Few of these family connections were left when Pepys himself died, for
in the long list of persons to whom rings and mourning were given the
following relations only are noticed:--Samuel and John Jackson, sons
of Pall Jackson (born Pepys), the two nephews; Balthazar St. Michel,
brother-in-law, and his daughter Mary; Roger Pepys, of Impington,
Edward Pickering, Tim Turner, the minister of Tooting; Mr. Bellamy, Mr.
and Mrs. Mathews, Dr. Montagu, Dean of Durham; and the Earl of Sandwich.

Dr. Daniel Milles, the minister of St. Olave’s, Hart Street, was one of
Pepys’s life-long acquaintances--we can hardly call him friend, for the
Diarist never seems to have cared much for him. We read how he “nibbled
at the Common Prayer,” then how he took to the surplice, and gradually
changed from the minister under the Commonwealth to the Church of
England rector under Charles. A year or two after he ought to have been
accustomed to the Prayer-Book, he made an extraordinary blunder in
reading the service. Instead of saying, “We beseech Thee to preserve
to our use the kindly fruits of the earth,” he said: “Preserve to our
use our gracious Queen Katherine.”[174] In 1667 he was presented to the
rectory of Wanstead, in Essex, and in order to qualify him for holding
two livings at the same time, he was made one of the Duke of York’s
chaplains.[175]

It is often amusing to notice how frequently Pepys changed his opinion
of certain persons: for instance, in 1660, he calls Mr. Milles “a
very good minister,”[176] while in 1667 he styles him “a lazy fat
priest.”[177]

Two men who occupy a considerable space in the “Diary” are the two
clerks, Thomas Hayter and William Hewer. Most of those who were in
anyway connected with Pepys were helped on by him in the struggle
of life, and his clerks were no exception to this rule. Hayter was
appointed Clerk of the Acts in 1674, and Secretary of the Admiralty
in 1679; and subsequently Hewer was a Commissioner of the Navy and
Treasurer for Tangier. Some of those whose fortunes had been made by
Pepys turned out ungrateful when their patron was out of power; but
Hewer continued to be a comfort to the old man to the last.

Allusion has already been made to Pepys’s helpers in the arrangement of
his books and papers, and therefore much need not be said about them
here. While the “Diary” was being written, Pepys obtained help from his
wife and brother-in-law and servants; but when he became more opulent
he employed educated men to write for him. One of these was Cesare
Morelli, an Italian, recommended by Thomas Hill. He arranged Pepys’s
musical papers, and in 1681 he acknowledged the receipt of _£_7, which
made a total of _£_85 17_s._ 6_d._ received from Pepys during a period
extending from November 4th, 1678, to August 13th, 1681.[178] This
friendship, which does Pepys much credit, caused him some trouble, as
Morelli was a Roman Catholic, and the zealots falsely affirmed that he
was also a priest.

Pepys early made the acquaintance of Dr. Petty, who was a member of
the Rota Club; and he frequently mentions him and his double-bottomed
boat (named “The Experiment”) in the “Diary.” Many anecdotes are told
of Petty by Aubrey--how he was poor at Paris, and lived for a week on
three pennyworth of walnuts; how, while teaching anatomy at Oxford,
he revived Nan Green after her execution, and how he obtained the
Professorship of Music at Gresham College by the interest of Captain
John Graunt, author of “Observations on the Bills of Mortality.” At
the Restoration Petty was knighted, and made Surveyor-General of
Ireland, where he gathered a large fortune. Pepys considered Sir
William Petty to be one of the most rational men that he ever heard
speak with tongue;[179] and he was also an excellent droll. The latter
character was proved when a soldier knight challenged him to fight. He
was very short-sighted; and, having the privilege of nominating place
and weapon for the duel, he chose a dark cellar for the place, and a
great carpenter’s axe for the weapon. This turned the challenge into
ridicule, and the duel never came off.

Petty was a prominent Fellow of the Royal Society, and about 1665 he
presented a paper on “The Building of Ships,” which the President (Lord
Brouncker) took away and kept to himself, according to Aubrey, with
the remark, that “’twas too great an arcanum of State to be commonly
perused.” Aubrey also relates an excellent story _apropos_ of the
Royal Society’s anniversary meeting on St. Andrew’s Day. The relater
had remarked that he thought it was not well the Society should have
pitched upon the patron of Scotland’s day, as they should have taken
St. George or St. Isidore (a philosopher canonized). “No,” said Petty,
“I would rather have had it on St. Thomas’s Day, for he would not
believe till he had seen and put his fingers into the holes, according
to the motto, _Nullius in verba_.”

Among the City friends of Pepys, the Houblons stand forward very
prominently. James Houblon, the father, died in 1682, in his ninetieth
year, and was buried in the church of St. Mary Woolnoth, his epitaph
being written in Latin by Pepys. His five sons are frequently mentioned
in the “Diary,” but James and Wynne were more particularly his friends,
and were among those who received mourning rings after his death. In
1690, when Pepys was committed to the Gate-house, and four gentlemen
came forward to bail him, James Houblon was one of these four.[180]

Alderman Backwell, the chief goldsmith of his time, had many dealings
with Pepys, who went to him at one time to change some Dutch money,
and at another to weigh Lord Sandwich’s crusados.[181] Probably our
Diarist was rather troublesome at times, for once he bought a pair of
candlesticks, which soon afterwards he changed for a cup, and at last
he obtained a tankard in place of the cup. In 1665 there was a false
report that Backwell was likely to become a bankrupt; but in 1672,
on the closing of the Exchequer, the King owed him _£_293,994 16_s._
6_d._, and he was in consequence ruined by Charles’s dishonest action.
On his failure many of his customers’ accounts were taken over by the
predecessors of the present firm of Child and Co., the bankers.

We shall have occasion to allude in the next chapter to some of those
who were brought in contact with Pepys in the way of business; but
it is necessary to say a few words here about two men who were both
official acquaintances and personal friends. Sir Anthony Deane was
one of the most accomplished shipbuilders of his time, and a valuable
public servant, but he did not escape persecution. A joint charge
of betraying the secrets of the British navy was made against Pepys
and Deane in 1675. In 1668 Deane had held the office of shipwright
at Portsmouth, and afterwards he was appointed a Commissioner of the
Navy. In 1680 he resigned his post, but in 1681 he again formed one of
the new Board appointed by James II., and hoped to help in improving
the condition of the navy, which was then in a very reduced state.
After the Revolution he sought retirement in Worcestershire, and the
two old men corresponded and compared notes on their states of mind.
Deane wrote to Pepys: “These are only to let you know I am alive.
I have nothing to do but read, walk and prepare for all chances,
attending this obliging world. I have the old soldier’s request, a
little space between business and the grave, which is very pleasant
on many considerations. As most men towards their latter end grow
serious, so do I in assuring you that I am,” &c.[182] Pepys replied:
“I am alive too, I thank God! and as serious, I fancy, as you can be,
and not less alone. Yet I thank God too! I have not within me one of
those melancholy misgivings that you seem haunted with. The worse the
world uses me, the better I think I am bound to use myself. Nor shall
any solicitousness after the felicities of the next world (which yet
I bless God! I am not without care for) ever stifle the satisfactions
arising from a just confidence of receiving some time or other,
even here, the reparation due to such unaccountable usage as I have
sustained in this.”[183]

Mr. (afterwards Sir Henry) Sheres is frequently referred to in the
latter pages of the “Diary,” but the friendship which sprang up between
him and Pepys dates from a period subsequent to the completion of
that work. Sheres accompanied the Earl of Sandwich into Spain, where
he acquired that Spanish character which clung to him through life.
He returned to England in September, 1667, carrying letters from Lord
Sandwich. Pepys found him “a good ingenious man,” and was pleased with
his discourse.

In the following month Sheres returned to Spain, being the bearer of a
letter from Pepys to Lord Sandwich.[184] Subsequently he was engaged at
Tangier, and received _£_100 for drawing a plate of the fortification,
as already related.[185] He was grateful to Pepys for getting him
the money, and had a silver candlestick made after a pattern he had
seen in Spain, for keeping the light from the eyes, and gave it to
the Diarist.[186] On the 5th of April, 1669, he treated the Pepys
household, at the Mulberry Garden, to a Spanish _olio_, a dish of meat
and savoury herbs, which they greatly appreciated.

On the death of Sir Jonas Moore, Pepys wrote to Colonel Legge
(afterward Lord Dartmouth) a strong letter of recommendation in favour
of Sheres, whom he describes “as one of whose loyalty and duty to the
King and his Royal Highness and acceptance with them I assure myself;
of whose personal esteem and devotion towards you (Col. Legge), of
whose uprightness of mind, universality of knowledge in all useful
learning particularly mathematics, and of them those parts especially
which relate to gunnery and fortification; and lastly, of whose
vigorous assiduity and sobriety I dare bind myself in asserting much
farther than, on the like occasion, I durst pretend to of any other’s
undertaking, or behalf of mine.”[187] Sheres obtained the appointment,
and served under Lord Dartmouth at the demolition of Tangier in 1683.
He appears to have been knighted in the following year, and
to have devoted himself to literature in later life. He translated
“Polybius,” and some “Dialogues” of Lucian, and was the author of a
pretty song. His name occurs among those who received mourning rings on
the occasion of Pepys’s death.

Raleigh said, “There is nothing more becoming any wise man than to make
choice of friends, for by them thou shalt be judged what thou art.” If
so, it speaks well for Pepys that the names of most of the worthies
of his time are to be found amongst his correspondents. Newton and
Wallis stand out among the philosophers; the two Gales (Thomas and
Roger), Evelyn, and Bishop Gibson among antiquaries and historians;
Kneller among artists; and Bishop Compton and Nelson, the author of the
“Festivals and Fasts,” among theologians.

The letters of some of these men have been printed in the
“Correspondence” appended to the “Diary,” and in Smith’s “Life,
Journals, and Correspondence of Samuel Pepys;” but many more still
remain in manuscript in various collections.

FOOTNOTES:

[163] “Diary,” April 26, 1664.

[164] Oct. 10, 1664.

[165] “Diary,” Aug. 14, 1664.

[166] May 31, 1662.

[167] Dec. 6, 1666.

[168] Jan. 21, 1667–68.

[169] “Diary,” Feb. 18, 1667–68.

[170] May 11, 1668.

[171] Sept. 15, 1661.

[172] Oct. 2, 1661.

[173] Nov. 7, 1661.

[174] “Diary,” April 17, 1664.

[175] May 29, 1667.

[176] “Diary,” Aug. 19, 1660.

[177] June 3, 1667.

[178] Smith’s “Life, Journals, &c., of Samuel Pepys,” vol. i. p. 270.

[179] “Diary,” Jan. 27, 1663–64.

[180] Smith’s “Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol. ii. p. 352.

[181] A Portuguese coin worth from _2s. 3d._ to _4s._:--

“Believe me, I had rather lost my purse Full of cruzados.”--_Othello_,
iii. 4.

[182] Smith’s “Life, &c. of Pepys,” vol. ii. p. 291.

[183] Ibid., vol. ii. p. 238.

[184] Smith’s “Life, &c. of Pepys,” vol. i. p. 117.

[185] “Diary,” Jan. 18, 1668–69.

[186] Jan. 28, 1668–69.

[187] Smith’s “Life, &c. of Pepys,” vol. i. p. 303.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER VIII.

THE NAVY.

   “Our seamen, whom no danger’s shape could fright,
   Unpaid, refuse to mount their ships for spite,
   Or to their fellows swim on board the Dutch,
   Who show the tempting metal in their clutch.”

   MARVELL’S _Instructions to a Painter_.


Our literature is singularly deficient in accounts of the official
history of the navy. There are numerous books containing lives of
seamen and the history of naval actions, but little has been written
on the management at home. The best account of naval affairs is to be
found in the valuable “Tracts” of the stout old sailor Sir William
Monson, which are printed in “Churchill’s Voyages.”[188]

Sir William was sent to the Tower in 1616, and his zeal in promoting an
inquiry into the state of the navy, contrary to the wishes of the Earl
of Nottingham, then Lord High Admiral, is supposed to have been the
cause of his trouble.

The establishment of the navy, during a long period of English history,
was of a very simple nature. The first admiral by name in England was
W. de Leybourne, who was appointed to that office by Edward I., in the
year 1286, under the title of “Admiral de la Mer du Roy d’Angleterre,”
and the first Lord High Admiral was created by Richard II. about a
century afterwards. This word “admiral” was introduced into Europe
from the East, and is nothing more than the Arabic _amir-al_[189] (in
which form the article is incorporated with the noun). The intrusive
_d_, however, made its appearance at a very early period. The office of
“Clerk of the King’s Ships,” or “of the Navy,” afterwards “Clerk of the
Acts of the Navy,” is in all probability a very ancient one, but the
first holder of the office whose name Colonel Pasley, R.E.,[190] has
met with, is Thomas Roger or Rogiers, who lived in the reigns of Edward
IV., Edward V., and Richard III. In the third volume of Pepys’s MS.
“Miscellanies” (page 87) is an entry of an order, dated 18th May, 22
Edw. IV. (1482), to the Treasurer and Chamberlain of the Exchequer, to
examine and clear the account of “our well beloved Thomas Roger, Esq.,
Clerk of our Ships.” In Harleian manuscript 433, which is believed to
have belonged to Lord Burghley, there is a register of grants passing
the Great Seal during the reigns of Edward V. and Richard III., and
No. 1690 contains the appointment of “Thomas Rogiers to be clerc of
all maner shippes to the King belonging.” It has no date, but is very
probably a reappointment by Richard III. on his assumption of the crown.

The navy owes much to Henry VIII., who reconstituted the Admiralty,
founded the Trinity House, and established the dockyards at Deptford,
Woolwich, and Portsmouth. The origin of the board of “Principal
Officers and Commissioners of the Navy,” commonly called in later times
“the Navy Board,” dates from his reign. His predecessors had usually
themselves managed whatever naval force they possessed, assisted by
their Privy Council, and by the officer already alluded to, who was
styled “Clerk” or “Keeper” of the King’s ships, but in Henry’s time
the rapidly increasing magnitude and importance of the navy rendered a
more complete and better organized system of management necessary. To
supply this want several new offices were created, and before Henry’s
death we find, in addition to the Lord High Admiral and the Clerk of
the Ships, a Lieutenant (or Vice-Admiral), a Treasurer, a Comptroller,
and a Surveyor of the Navy,[191] as well as a Keeper of the Naval
Storehouses at Erith and Deptford.[192] A few years later we meet with
a “Master of the Ordnance of the Ships.” This last office, which had
been held by Sir William Woodhouse, was granted by Philip and Mary in
1557 to William (afterwards Sir William) Winter in addition to that of
Surveyor, to which he had been appointed by Edward VI.[193]

Each of these officers must have received some sort of instructions for
his guidance, but no general code of rules for the administration of
the navy was framed until after the accession of Elizabeth, who issued,
about 1560, a set of regulations for “the Office of the Admiralty and
Marine Causes,” with the following preamble:[194]--“Forasmuch as since
the erection of the said office by our late dear father Henry VIII.,
there hath been no certain ordinance established so as every officer in
his degree is appointed to his charge: and considering that in these
our days our navy is one of the chiefest defences of us and our realm
against the malice of any foreign potentate: we have therefore thought
good by great advice and deliberation to make certain ordinances and
decrees, which our pleasure and express commandment is that all our
officers shall on their parts execute and follow as they tender our
pleasure, and will answer to the contrary.”

Then follows a list of the several officers at that time forming the
Board, viz.:--

1. The Vice-Admiral.

2. The Master of the Ordnance and Surveyor of the Navy: one officer.

3. The Treasurer.

4. The Comptroller.

5. The General Surveyor of the Victuals.

6. The Clerk of the Ships.

7. The Clerk of the Stores.[195]

The officers were to meet at least once a week at the office on Tower
Hill, to consult, and take measures for the benefit of the navy, and
were further directed to make a monthly report of their proceedings to
the Lord Admiral.

The particular instructions which follow are brief, and by no means
explicit:--

1. The Master of the Ordnance is to take care to make the wants of his
department known to the Lord Admiral in good time, and he is to obtain
the signatures of three of his colleagues every quarter to his books
and accounts, which are then to be submitted to the Court of Exchequer.

2. The Treasurer is to make no payments except on the warrant of at
least two of his colleagues, and his books are to be made up and
certified by a similar number of the officers every quarter.

3. The Surveyor-General of the Victuals is to have his issues
warranted, and his accounts certified in the same manner. He is to take
care always to have in store a sufficient stock of victuals to supply a
thousand men at sea for one month at a fortnight’s notice.

4. The Surveyor, Comptroller, Clerk of the Ships, and Clerk of the
Stores are to see the Queen’s ships grounded and trimmed from time to
time, and to keep them in such order that upon fourteen days’ warning
twelve or sixteen sail may be ready for sea, and the rest soon after.
They are to make a monthly report of the state of the ships to the
Vice-Admiral and the other officers.

5. The Clerk of the Ships is to provide timber and other materials for
building and repairing ships.

6. The Clerk of the Stores is to keep a perfect record of receipts and
issues: the latter to be made on the warrant of at least two of the
officers.

This most interesting and important document is concluded in the
following words:--

“Item, our pleasure and commandment is that all our said officers do
agree in one consultation, and all such necessary orders as shall be
taken amongst them from time to time to be entered in a ledger book for
the whole year, to remain on record.

“The assistants not to be accounted any of our head officers, but yet
to travel in our courses when they shall be thereunto commanded or
appointed by our Lord Admiral or Vice Admiral, or other our officers.

“Item, our mind and pleasure is that every of our said officers shall
see into their fellows’ offices, to the intent that when God shall
dispose His will upon any of them they living may be able, if we prefer
any of them, to receive the same.

“These our ordinances to be read once a quarter amongst our officers,
so as thereby every of them may the better understand his duty, and to
be safely kept in our Consultation house at Tower Hill.”

We will now return to Sir William Monson, who, in his “Naval Tracts,”
answers the question what kind of men are to be chosen for the various
offices. He suggests that “the Comptroller’s and Clerk’s places be
reduced into one, who should be an experienced clerk, _long bred in
the office_.... Provided always, that besides their experience and
abilities to perform the active part of His Majesty’s service, these
men be of good substance and esteem in their estates.”

Such a rule as this would have excluded Pepys from the service, as he
knew nothing of the navy when he was made Clerk of the Acts. He soon,
however, made himself master of his business, and at the time of his
death he was esteemed the greatest authority on naval affairs. In
illustration of Monson’s recommendation, it may be remarked that in
1585 the two offices of Clerk and Comptroller were held by the same
man, William Borough.

The salaries received by the various officers are set down by Monson as
follows:--

                    _£  s. d._
    Treasurer       220 13  4
    Comptroller     155  6  8
    Surveyor        146  6  8
    Clerk           102  3  4[196]

Although the salary of the Clerk of the Acts is here put at over one
hundred pounds, yet the ancient “fee out of the Exchequer,” which was
attached to the office, did not amount to more than _£_33 6_s._ 8_d._
per annum, and this sum is specially set forth in Pepys’s patent.

In July, 1660, the salaries of the officers of the navy (with the
exception of that of the Treasurer) were advanced, Pepys’s being raised
to _£_350.[197] The salary of the Treasurer remained the same, but
this was but a small part of his emoluments, which amounted in all to
several thousand pounds a year.[198]

In the Pepysian Library there is preserved the pocket-book of James
II., from which I have been allowed to extract the following memorandum
of salaries:--

                                 _£  s. d._
    Treasurer of the Navy        220 13  4
    Comptroller                  500  0  0
    Surveyor                     490  0  0
    Clerk of the Acts            350  0  0
    Three Commissioners
      at _£_500 and one at       350  0  0
    Messenger to the Admiralty    20  0  0

When the Duke of Buckingham was assassinated, in 1628, the office of
Lord High Admiral was for the first time put into commission. All the
great officers of State were Commissioners, and Edward Nicholas, who
had been secretary to Lord Zouch and to the Duke of Buckingham, was
appointed Secretary of the Admiralty.

During the Commonwealth both the Admiralty and the Navy Office were
administered by bodies of Commissioners. The offices of Comptroller,
Surveyor, and Clerk of the Acts were abolished, and although the
Treasurer remained, he was not a member of the Navy Board. Robert
Blackburne, who was Secretary to most of the Commissions of the
Admiralty, entertained Pepys after the Restoration with an account
of the doings of the members. He told him that Sir William Penn got
promotion by making a pretence of sanctity; and he then mimicked the
actions of the Commissioners, who, he affirmed, would ask the admirals
and captains respecting certain men, and say with a sigh and a casting
up of the eyes, “Such a man fears the Lord;” or, “I hope such a man
hath the Spirit of God.”[199]

At the Restoration the Duke of York was appointed Lord High Admiral,
and all powers formerly granted to the Admiralty and Navy Board
were recalled.[200] By the Duke’s advice a committee was named to
consider a plan proposed by himself for the future regulation of the
affairs of the navy; and at a court held on July 4th, 1660, three new
commissioners (John Lord Berkeley, Sir William Penn, and Peter Pett)
were appointed to assist the four principal officers. Pett was to be
employed at Chatham dockyard, but the other two had no special duties
assigned to them, although their appointment gave them equal power
with the original members when they attended at the Board. As there
was at this time no half-pay, these appointments were considered as
affording a convenient means of granting a comfortable subsistence to
an admiral when not at sea. Lord Clarendon strongly disapproved of
this innovation, and attributed the idea to Sir William Coventry, who
wished to reduce the power and emoluments of the Treasurer.[201]

In January, 1661–62, James Duke of York issued Instructions which
were founded on those drawn up by the Earl of Northumberland, Lord
High Admiral from 1638 to 1644, and remained in force until the
reorganization of the Admiralty at the beginning of the present century.

It is here necessary to stop a moment for the purpose of noticing
Pepys’s relation to these Instructions. Before the publication of the
“Diary” it was supposed that he was the chief author of the Rules. In
the first Report of the Commissioners of Naval Revision (13th June,
1805) it is distinctly stated that he drew them up under the direction
of the Duke, and even Lord Braybrooke makes the claim in regard to
Pepys’s authorship. This is an error, and Colonel Pasley points out
that at the date of the issue of the Regulations Pepys was by no means
on intimate terms with James. Even two years later (4th March, 1633–34)
he writes, “I never had so much discourse with the Duke before, and
till now did ever fear to meet him;” but what really settles the
matter is, that under date February 5th, 1661–62, Pepys writes: “Sir
G. Carteret, the two Sir Williams, and myself all alone reading of
the Duke’s institutions for the settlement of our office, whereof we
read as much as concerns our own duties, and left the other officers
for another time.” The latter of these important passages was not
printed by Lord Braybrooke, and is only to be found in the Rev. Mynors
Bright’s transcript.[202]

The Navy Office, as we see from the “Diary,” was by no means a happy
family. Each officer was jealous of his fellow, and this jealousy was
somewhat fostered by the duties enjoined. Pepys constantly complains
of the neglect by his colleagues of their several duties, and when
the Duke of York returned from his command at the end of the first
great Dutch war, he found the office in the greatest disorder. This
caused the preparation of the Diarist’s “great letter” to the Duke,
which is referred to in the “Diary,” on November 17th, 1666. A still
more important letter, on the same subject, written by Pepys, but
purporting to come from the pen of the Duke of York, was not prepared
until nearly two years after this.[203] We learn from the “Diary” all
the stages of progress of this letter, the effect it produced when read
out at the office,[204] and the way in which the officers prepared
their answers.[205] In his allusion to this letter, Lord Braybrooke
again does some injustice to James, for he writes: “We even find in the
‘Diary,’ as early as 1668, that a long letter of regulation, produced
before the Commissioners of the Navy by the Duke of York _as his own
composition_, was entirely written by the Clerk of the Acts.”

Colonel Pasley very justly observes, in commenting on this view of the
Lord High Admiral’s position:--“There is nothing unusual or improper
in a minister, or head of a department, employing his subordinates to
prepare documents for his signature, and in this particular instance
it was evidently of importance that the actual author should remain
unknown. Not only was Pepys himself most anxious to avoid being
known in the matter, but it is obvious that the authority and effect
of the reprimand and warning would have been much lessened, if the
other members of the Board had been aware that the Duke had no other
knowledge of the abuses of the office than what Pepys told him. It
seems from the ‘Diary,’ that about 1668 Pepys first obtained the
complete confidence of the Duke--a confidence which he always after
retained and never abused. It is evident from numerous remarks in his
manuscripts that Pepys had the highest respect for James’s opinion in
naval matters. In fact, the mutual respect and friendship of these two
men was equally honourable to both, and it is a mistake to endeavour to
magnify one at the expense of the other.”

The letter referred to is in the British Museum,[206] and as it is of
considerable interest in the life of Pepys, it will be worth while to
devote a small space to a few notes on its contents.

James refers to his former letter of January 2nd, 1661, sent with
the “Instructions,” as well as to that of March 22nd, 1664, and,
after some general remarks, he points out the particular duty of each
officer, finishing with remarks on their joint duties as a Board. The
letter is drawn up in so orderly a manner, and discovers so thorough a
knowledge of the details of the office, that there is little cause for
surprise that the officers suspected Pepys to be the author. Article
by article of the “Instructions” are set down, and following each of
them are remarks on the manner in which it had been carried out. It
is very amusing to notice the tact with which our Diarist gets over
the difficulty of criticizing his own deeds. The Duke is made to say
that although he has inquired as to the execution of the office of
Clerk of the Acts, he cannot hear of any particular to charge him
with failure in his duty, and as he finds that the Clerk had given
diligent attendance, he thinks that the duty must have been done well,
particularly during the time of the war, when, in spite of the work
being greater, the despatch was praiseworthy. Yet he would not express
further satisfaction, but would be willing to receive any information
of the Clerk’s failures which otherwise might have escaped his
knowledge. The officers were informed that an answer was required from
each of them within fourteen days. When these answers were received,
Pepys set to work to write a reply for the Duke to acknowledge.
Matthew Wren, the Duke’s secretary, smoothed down the language of this
letter[207] a little, but it still remained a very stinging reprimand.
These two letters form, probably, the most complete instance of a
severe “wigging” given by the head of an office to his staff.

We will now return to the consideration of the business management of
the navy, and it is necessary for us to bear in mind that the offices
of the Admiralty and of the Navy Board were quite distinct in their
arrangements. The Navy Board formed the Council of the Lord High
Admiral, and the Admiralty was, originally, merely his personal office,
the locality of which changed with his own change of residence, or that
of his secretary. It was at one time in Whitehall, at another in Cannon
Row, Westminster; and when Pepys was secretary, it was attached to his
house in York Buildings.

When, however, there was a Board of Admiralty in place of a Lord High
Admiral, the Admiralty Office became of more importance, and the Navy
Office relatively of less.

According to Pepys, there was some talk of putting the office of
Lord High Admiral into commission in the year 1668,[208] but it was
not so treated until June, 1673, when the Duke of York laid down all
his offices. The Commissioners on this occasion were Prince Rupert,
the three great officers of State, three dukes, two secretaries, Sir
G. Carteret, and Edward Seymour (afterwards Speaker of the House of
Commons); and Pepys was the secretary. Before the commission passed the
Great Seal, the King did the business through the medium of Pepys.[209]

Lords of the Admiralty were occasionally appointed to assist the Lord
High Admiral, or to fill his place while he was abroad. Pepys refers to
such Lords on November 14th, 1664, and in March of the following year
he remarks: “The best piece of news is, that instead of a great many
troublesome Lords, the whole business is to be left with the Duke of
Albemarle to act as Admiral.”[210]

These lords were not properly commissioners, as a commission was only
appointed by the King when the office of Lord High Admiral was vacant,
but they formed a deputation or committee appointed by the Admiral to
act as his deputies.

Pepys was with the Duke of York previous to the reinstatement of the
latter as Lord High Admiral, he returned to the office with his patron,
and he continued secretary until the Revolution, when he retired into
private life. On the Duke’s accession to the throne a new board was
formed and the navy was again raised to a state of efficiency.

Pepys was Clerk of the Acts from 1660 to 1672, that is, during the
whole period of the “Diary,” and three years afterwards. He was
succeeded by his clerk, Thomas Hayter, and his brother John Pepys, who
held the office jointly. As already stated, Pepys was promoted to be
Secretary of the Admiralty in 1672, and continued in office until 1679,
when he was again succeeded for a time by Hayter. We know comparatively
little of him in the higher office, and it is as Clerk of the Acts that
he is familiar to us. With regard to this position it is necessary to
bear in mind that the “so-called” clerk, as well as being secretary,
was also a member of the Board, and one of the “principal officers.”
On one occasion Pepys met Sir G. Carteret, Sir J. Minnes, and Sir W.
Batten at Whitehall, and when the King spied them out, he cried, “Here
is the Navy Office!”[211]

I have already mentioned that the principal officers were superseded
during the Commonwealth. Again, in 1686, they were suspended, and the
offices were temporarily placed under a body of equal commissioners.

The Navy Office, where Pepys lived during the whole period over
which the “Diary” extends, was situated between Crutched Friars and
Seething Lane, with an entrance in each of these places. The ground was
originally occupied by a chapel and college attached to the church of
Allhallows, Barking, but these buildings were pulled down in the year
1548, and the land was used for some years as a garden plot.

In Elizabeth’s reign, when the celebrated Sir William Wynter, Surveyor
of Her Majesty’s Ships, brought home from sea much plunder of
merchants’ goods, a storehouse of timber and brick was raised on this
site for their reception. In course of time the storehouse made way
for the Navy Office, a rather extensive building, in which the civil
business of the navy was transacted until the last quarter of the
eighteenth century. On July 4th, 1660, Pepys went with Commissioner
Pett to view the houses, and was very pleased with them, but he feared
that the more influential officers would shuffle him out of his rights.
Two days afterwards, however, he went with Mr. Coventry and Sir G.
Carteret to take possession of the place; still, although his mind was
a little cheered, his hopes were not great. On July 9th, he began to
sign bills in his office, and on the 18th he records the fact that he
dined in his own apartments.

Pepys’s house was a part of the Seething Lane front, and that occupied
by Sir William Penn was on the north side of the garden, a house which
was afterwards occupied by Lord Brouncker.[212] When the new Somerset
House was finished, the Navy Office was removed there, and the old
buildings in the city were sold and destroyed.

In course of time the work of the navy could not be properly carried
out with the old machinery, and, at last, the Admiralty Office,
which had largely grown in importance, swallowed up the Navy Office.
By an Act of Parliament, 2 William IV., the principal officers
and commissioners of the navy were abolished, as were also the
commissioners for victualling the navy; and all power and authority was
vested in the Admiralty.

I have attempted to give in a few pages as clear an account as possible
of the kind of machinery by which the navy was governed, and I now
propose to pass rapidly in review a few of the points raised by Pepys.
To do more than glance at some of these would require a volume. The
“Diary” is filled with information respecting the office and the petty
squabbles of the officers, and we obtain from it a gloomy notion of the
condition of the navy. In fact, it would be hardly possible to believe
the wretched details if we had them from a less trustworthy authority.
The whole system of money-getting was unsatisfactory in the extreme,
and the officers of the navy were often expected to perform the task
of making bricks without straw. The Treasurer, not being able to get
money from the Treasury, floated bills, and these were often in very
bad repute. We read in the “Diary,” that on August 31st, 1661, the
bills were offered to be sold on the Exchange at 10 per cent. loss;
and on April 14th, 1663, things were even worse, for it was reported
that they were sold at a reduction of 15 per cent. In December of the
latter year Pepys could hardly believe the evidence of his ears when he
learned the “extraordinary good news,” that the credit of the office
was “as good as any merchant’s upon Change;” but these bright days
did not last long. Parliament being very dissatisfied with the way in
which the money was spent by the officers of the navy, appointed, a few
years afterwards, a commission to look into the accounts. This gave
Pepys much trouble, which he did not relish, and we find him busy in
making things as pleasant as possible during the latter part of 1666.
He was in “mighty fear and trouble” when called before the committee,
the members of which appeared to be “in a very ill humour.” Three years
after this he drew up a letter to the Commissioners of Accounts on
the state of the office, a transcript of which, addressed to “H. R. H.
the Lord High Admiral,” and dated January 8th, 1669–70, is now in the
library of the British Museum.[213]

One of the most unsatisfactory divisions of the naval accounts
related to the pursers. Pepys was early interested in the Victualling
Department, out of which he afterwards made much money; and on
September 12th, 1662, we find him trying “to understand the method
of making up Purser’s Accounts, which is very needful for me and
very hard.” On November 22nd, 1665, he remarks that he was pleased
to have it demonstrated “that a Purser without professed cheating
is a professed loser twice as much as he gets.” Pepys received his
appointment of Surveyor-General of the Victualling Office chiefly
through the influence of Sir William Coventry, and on January 1st,
1665–6, he addressed a letter and “New Yeares Guift” on the subject of
pursers to his distinguished friend. He relates in the “Diary” how he
wrote the letter, and how Sir William praised his work to the Duke.[214]

The want of money led to other evils that brought the greatest
discredit upon the Navy Office. The tickets that were given to the
men in place of money, were received with the greatest disgust, and
during the time of the Dutch war the scarcity of sailors was so great
that a wholesale system of pressing was resorted to. We learn that on
June 30th, 1666, Sir Thomas Bludworth, the Lord Mayor, impressed a
large number of persons wholly unfit for sea, and when we are further
told that some of them were “people of very good fashion,” it is not
surprising that Pepys should call the Mayor “a silly man.”

So great was the disgust of the unpaid men, that during the war with
Holland English sailors positively preferred to serve in the ships of
the enemies of England rather than fight for their own country, and
when the Dutch were in the Medway English voices were heard from Dutch
ships.[215]

The seamen were not likely to learn much good from their superiors,
for throughout the whole fleet swearing, drinking, and debauchery were
rampant.[216]

A great part of the evils arose from the appointment of so-called
“gentlemen captains,” men who were unacquainted with maritime affairs,
and treated the sailor captains with contempt, calling them tarpaulins,
a name which now only remains to us in the reduced form of tar. This
evil was well known in the reign of Elizabeth, and was pointed out by
Gibson, who wrote memoirs of the expeditions of the navy from 1585 to
1603,[217] and all readers are familiar with Macaulay’s remarks on
the same subject. Captain Digby, a son of the Earl of Bristol, and one
of these “ornamental officers,” after he had been in the fleet about a
year expressed the wish that he might not again see a tarpaulin have
the command of a ship.[218] These useless captains, who could make
bows, but could not navigate a ship, raised the ire of old Nan Clarges,
otherwise Duchess of Albemarle, who “cried out mightily against the
having of gentlemen captains with feathers and ribbands, and wished the
king would send her husband to sea with the old plain sea captains that
he served with formerly, that would make their ships swim with blood,
though they could not make legs as captains now-a-days can.”[219]

The common custom of employing indiscriminately land officers as
admirals, and naval officers as generals, often led to disasters.
There can be no doubt of the bravery of Monk and Rupert, but when on
shipboard they made many blunders and endangered the safety of the
fleet.

All this confusion caused dire disasters, which culminated in the
presence of the hostile Dutch fleet in our rivers; a national disgrace
which no Englishman can think of even now without a feeling of shame.
While reading the “Diary,” we are overwhelmed with the instances
of gross mismanagement in naval affairs. Many of the men whose
carelessness helped to increase the amount of rampant blundering
were, however, capable of deeds of pluck and bravery. In one of the
engagements with the Dutch, Prince Rupert sent his pleasure-boat, the
“Fanfan,” with two small guns on board, against the Dutch admiral, De
Ruyter. With great daring, the sailors brought their little boat near,
and fired at De Ruyter’s vessel for two hours, but at last a ball did
them so much damage that the crew were forced to row briskly to save
their lives.[220]

Another instance of bravery more deserving of honour is that recorded
of Captain Douglas, of the “Royal Oak,” who had received orders to
defend his ship at Chatham. This he did with the utmost resolution,
but, having had no order to retire, he chose rather to be burnt in his
ship than live to be reproached with having deserted his command. It
is reported that Sir William Temple expressed the wish that Cowley had
celebrated this noble deed before he died.[221]

Pepys tells us that on July 21st, 1668, he went to his “plate-makers,”
and spent an hour in contriving some plates for his books of the King’s
four yards, and that on the 27th of the same month the four plates
came home. They cost him five pounds, and he was in consequence both
troubled and pleased.

No account of the state of the navy in Charles II.’s time, however
short, would be complete without some notice of the four dockyards
(Chatham, Deptford, Portsmouth, and Woolwich), which necessarily
occupy a very prominent place in the “Diary.” Chatham yard was founded
by Queen Elizabeth, and it remained under the special charge of the
Surveyor of the Navy until a Special Commissioner was appointed in
1630. This explains a passage in the “Diary” which has not hitherto
been illustrated. When, in April, 1661, Sir William Batten, the
Surveyor of the Navy, and Pepys were on a visit to Chatham, they went
“to see Commissioner Pett’s house, he and his family being absent, and
here I wondered how my Lady Batten walked up and down, with envious
looks, to see how neat and rich everything is, saying that she would
get it, for it belonged formerly to the Surveyor of the Navy.”[222]
The first Commissioner was Phineas Pett, who died in 1647, and was
succeeded by his son, Peter Pett, who figures so frequently in the
“Diary.” Peter was continued in office at the Restoration, but he was
suspended in 1667 in consequence of the success of the Dutch attack
upon Chatham. He was sent to the Tower and threatened with impeachment,
but, although the threat was not carried out, he was never restored to
office. The appointment remained in abeyance for two years after, when,
in March, 1669, Captain John Cox, the master attendant at Deptford,
was made resident Commissioner at Chatham. In January, 1672, he was
appointed flag captain to the Duke of York, in the “Prince,” without
vacating his office at Chatham, was knighted in April, and killed at
the battle of Solebay in May, all in the same year.

The Hill-house that Pepys visited for the first time on the 8th of
April, 1661, is frequently mentioned on subsequent pages of the
“Diary.”[223] The “old Edgeborrow,” whose ghost was reported to haunt
the place, was Kenrick Edisbury, Surveyor of the Navy from 1632 to
1638. Pepys does not seem quite to have appreciated the story of the
ghost which was told him as he went to bed after a merry supper,
although he affirms that he was not so much afraid as for mirth’s sake
he seemed.[224] In the “Memoirs of English Affairs, chiefly Naval,
from the year 1660 to 1673, written by James, Duke of York,” there is
a letter from James to the principal officers of the navy (dated May
10th, 1661), in which he recommends that the lease of the Hill-house
should be bought by them, if it can be obtained at a reasonable rate,
as the said house “is very convenient for the service of his Majesty’s
Navy.”[225]

After the defeat of the Spanish Armada, Sir Francis Drake and Sir
John Hawkins advised the establishment of a chest at Chatham for the
relief of seamen wounded in their country’s service, and the sailors
voluntarily agreed to have certain sums “defalked” out of their wages
in order to form this fund. In July, 1662, Pepys was told of the abuse
of the funds, and advised to look into the business.[226] At the end
of the same year a commission was appointed to inspect the chest,[227]
but the commissioners do not seem to have done much good, for in 1667
there was positively no money left to pay the poor sailors what was
owed to them.[228] After a time the property became considerable, but
unfortunately the abuses grew as well. In 1802 the chest was removed to
Greenwich, and in 1817 the stock is said to have amounted to _£_300,000
consols.

Deptford dockyard was founded about the year 1513. Pepys made
occasional visits to it, and on one occasion he and Coventry took the
officers (of whose honesty he had not a very high opinion) by surprise.
On June 16th, 1662, he mentions going to see “in what forwardness the
work is for Sir W. Batten’s house and mine.” He found the house almost
ready, but we hear no more of it in the subsequent pages of the “Diary.”

Portsmouth dockyard was established by Henry VIII., but it did not
hold a foremost position until, in the reign of William III., Edmund
Dummer contrived a simple and ingenious method of pumping water from
dry docks below the level of low tide, which enabled Portsmouth for
the first time to possess a dry dock capable of taking in a first-rate
man-of-war. It was Dummer who also designed and constructed the first
docks at Plymouth.[229]

Sir Edward Montague first chose Portsmouth as the place from which to
draw his title, but he afterwards gave the preference to Sandwich.

When Pepys visited Portsmouth in May, 1661, he was very pleased with
his reception by the officers of the dockyard, who treated him with
much respect.

Although the date of the foundation of Woolwich dockyard is not
recorded, it is known to have been of considerable importance in Henry
VIII.’s reign. It figures very frequently in the “Diary.”[230]

Very soon after Pepys was settled in his office, he thought it
advisable to give his attention to the question of the British dominion
of the seas, and he made a special study of Selden’s “Mare Clausum.”
He intended to write a treatise on the rights of the English flag,
and present it to the Duke of York. His reason for doing this was
that it promised to be a good way to make himself known.[231] The
right of making foreign vessels strike their sails to the English flag
had been insisted upon from early times. Selden’s work, in which the
case was strongly urged, met therefore with great favour. Charles I.
made an order in council that a copy should be kept in the council
chest, another in the Court of Exchequer, and a third in the Court of
Admiralty. The upholders of this right triumphed when, in the treaty of
peace with the Dutch (February 9th, 1674), the States-General confessed
that to be a right which before had been styled courtesy, and they
agreed that not only separate ships, but whole fleets should strike
sails to any fleet or ship carrying the king’s flag.[232] John Evelyn
argued strongly in favour of England’s right to the dominion of the sea
in his “Navigation and Commerce” (1674), but he privately confessed to
Pepys that he did not consider there was any sufficient evidence of the
right.[233]

We must now turn our attention to the Diarist’s colleagues at the Navy
Office, and it is here very needful to caution the reader against
putting implicit faith in all the adverse remarks that fill the
“Diary.” It is a curious fact that, with the exception of Sir William
Coventry, scarcely any of the officers come off with a good character.
Pepys held Coventry in profound respect, and was never prouder than
when he received a word of praise from him, and yet we do not obtain a
very favourable idea of the secretary to the Duke of York from other
writers, and in the pages of Clarendon we are presented with a very
adverse character of him.

Those officers with whom Pepys came most in contact were Sir George
Carteret, the Treasurer; Sir Robert Slingsby and Sir John Minnes,
successive Comptrollers; Sir William Batten and Colonel Thomas
Middleton, successive Surveyors; and Sir William Penn and Lord Viscount
Brouncker, additional Commissioners.

Pepys did not hold Carteret in much esteem, and we read constant
disparaging remarks respecting him, such as that on one occasion
he wanted to know what the four letters S. P. Q. R. meant, “which
ignorance is not to be borne in a Privy Counsellor,”[234] but after Sir
George’s son had married a daughter of Lord Sandwich, and he had thus
become a near connection of Pepys’s family, we read of “his pleasant
humour,” and are told that he is “a most honest man.” Sir Robert
Slingsby died in 1661, and therefore does not occupy a very prominent
position in the “Diary,” but Pepys grieved for his loss.

Sir John Minnes was better known as a wit than as a sailor, and it
was he who taught Pepys to appreciate Chaucer. He does not, however,
come off very handsomely in the “Diary.” Captain Holmes called him
“the veriest knave and rogue and coward in the world,”[235] and Sir
William Coventry likened him to a lapwing, who was always in a flutter
to keep others from the nest.[236] Pepys himself, after a few quarrels,
hints pretty plainly that he was an old coxcomb, a mere jester or
ballad-monger, and quite unfit for business.

We are told of Sir William Batten’s corruption and underhand
dealing,[237] of his knavery,[238] and of his inconsequent action
in objecting to lighthouses generally, and then proposing one for
Harwich;[239] but Pepys’s two chief enemies were Sir William Penn and
Lord Brouncker.

Sir William Penn and Pepys were much thrown together, and were
alternately very friendly and very jealous of each other. When Pepys
first associated with Penn, he found him sociable but cunning, and ever
after the pages of the “Diary” are filled with vituperation respecting
this successful admiral. Considering the eminent position of William
Penn the son, as a leader among the Quakers, it is curious to note that
before the Restoration, and when Monk was coming from the North, it was
reported that Penn, the father, had turned Quaker.[240] In May, 1660,
Charles II. wrote to Monk: “I have so good an opinion of General Penn,
that if you had not recommended him to me I would have taken care of
all his interests;”[241] and we cannot doubt that he possessed some
eminent qualities of which we learn nothing in the “Diary.”

Lord Brouncker was a good mathematician in his own day, and his name
has come down with credit to ours as the first President of the Royal
Society, but his portrait as painted by Pepys is far from a pleasing
one--let us hope that it was not a true likeness. He was not a rich
man, for his mother was a gamester, and his father a land-lacking peer,
and he was probably not over particular as to the means he took to
obtain money. We may believe this, however, without agreeing with Pepys
that he was “a rotten-hearted, false man.”[242] Aubrey says that the
following lines were written on his parents:--

   “Here’s a health to my Lady Brouncker, and the best card in her hand;
   And a health to my Lord her husband, with ne’er a foot of land.”[243]

These were some of the men who helped to carry on the work of the
English navy. It would have been well for the fame of most of them if
Pepys had never put pen to paper.

FOOTNOTES:

[188] Vol. iii. There is a MS. copy of these “Tracts” in the Pepysian
Library.

[189] Thus _Amir-al-moumenim_ is the Arabic for Commander of the
Faithful.

[190] It is to Colonel Pasley’s kindness that I owe the greater
portion of the information contained in this chapter. That officer,
who is Director of Works at the Admiralty, has made large collections
relating to the early history of the administration of the navy, and to
him I am also indebted for the valuable lists in the Appendix, which
he has compiled for me with great labour from original sources. No
such lists were previously in existence. Colonel Pasley has further
kindly supplied me with the notes that follow which are signed in each
instance “C. P.”

[191] Harl. MS. 249.

[192] Letters and Papers, Henry VIII. vol. iv. pt. 1, p. 309.

[193] Add. MS. 5752, fol. 6ᵇ (Brit. Mus.).

[194] State Papers, Dom. Eliz. vol. xv. No. 4. There is a copy of these
regulations in the British Museum, Add. MS. 9295, fol. 17.

[195] The number of principal officers was afterwards fixed at four,
viz.:--1. Treasurer; 2. Comptroller; 3. Surveyor; 4. Clerk of the Acts.

[196] These amounts were made up of the “Fee out of the Exchequer” (or
salary proper); the Allowance for one or more Clerks; “Boat-hire,” and
“Riding Costs” (or travelling expenses).--C. P.

[197] “Diary,” July 7, 1660.

[198] The emoluments of the Treasurer arose chiefly from “poundage” on
all sums passing through his hands. In time of war his profits were
often very large.--C. P.

[199] “Diary,” Nov. 9, 1663.

[200] In the “Succession of the Lords High Admiral,” &c., in Pepys’s
“Naval Collections,” it is stated that on the Restoration the
existing Commissioners of the Admiralty and of the Navy respectively
were temporarily continued in office by order in council of the
31st May, 1660. By a subsequent order (7th July following) a Board
of Principal Officers and Commissioners of the Navy on the ancient
model was appointed, and the Duke of York was directed to revoke the
authority _he_ had granted “unto the former Treasurer, Officers, and
Commissioners of the Navy.” It would appear, therefore, that the
Admiralty Commissioners had been suppressed, and the Duke appointed
Admiral at some intermediate date between the 31st May and the 7th
July, 1660; although, according to Pepys’s list, quoted above, his
patent under the Great Seal bore date the 29th January, 1660–61.--C. P.

[201] Life of Clarendon, 1827, vol. ii. p. 331.

[202] The Regulations were printed in 1717, under the title of “The
Œconomy of His Majesty’s Navy Office.... By an Officer of the Navy.”

[203] _See_ “Diary,” Aug. 16, 21, 23, 25, 30, 1668.

[204] Aug. 29, Sept. 8th, 1668.

[205] Sept. 12, 18, 1668.

[206] “The Duke’s Reflections on the severall Members of the Navy
Boards Duty,” dated “St. James, 28 Aug., 1668.” “The Duke’s Answer to
their severall Excuses,” dated “Whitehall, 25 Nov., 1668” (both in
Harleian MS. 6003).

[207] _See_ “Diary,” Nov. 25, 1668.

[208] “Diary,” Nov. 5, 1668.

[209] Williamson Letters (Camden Society), vol. i. pp. 47, 51, 56.

[210] “Diary,” March 17, 1664–65.

[211] “Diary,” Nov. 2, 1663.

[212] P. Gibson in “Life of Penn,” ii. 616.

[213] Sloane MS. 2751.

[214] The letter, signed “S. Pepyes,” and dated “Greenwich, 1st
January, 1665,” is in the British Museum (Add. MS. 6287). There is also
a copy in Harl. MS. 6003.

[215] The “Englishmen on board the Dutch ships” were heard to say, “We
did heretofore fight for tickets; now we fight for dollars!”--“Diary,”
June 14, 1667.

[216] “Diary,” Oct. 20, 1666.

[217] Gibson was a contemporary of Pepys, and a clerk in the Navy
Office. He was somewhat of a _laudator temporis acti_, and fonder of
drawing his illustrations from events of Queen Elizabeth’s time than
from those of more recent days. See his paper in praise of “Seamen
Captains,” printed in the preface to Charnock’s “History of Marine
Architecture,” pp. lxxiv.-xcv.--C. P.

[218] “Diary,” Oct. 20, 1666.

[219] Jan. 10, 1665–66.

[220] Campbell’s “Naval History,” 1818, vol. ii. p. 165.

[221] Ibid. p. 177.

[222] “Diary,” April 10, 1661. This house (of which there is a plan
in King’s MS. 43) was pulled down in 1703, and the house now occupied
by the Admiral Superintendent of Chatham Dockyard was built in its
place.--C. P.

[223] A plan, with front and side elevations of the Hill-house as it
was in 1698, is in King’s MS. 43. The ground on which it stood is now
included in the Marine Barracks.--C. P.

[224] “Diary,” April 8, 1661.

[225] 1729, p. 23.

[226] “Diary,” July 3, 1662.

[227] Nov. 13, 1662.

[228] June 18, 1667.

[229] Dummer was Assistant to the Surveyor of the Navy when he designed
these works. The improvement of Portsmouth and the foundation of a
dockyard at Plymouth were called for by the political changes arising
out of the Revolution. Previously our great naval wars had been waged
against the Dutch, and the Thames and Medway were then the most
convenient localities for fitting and repairing ships of war. After
the Revolution, the Dutch became our allies, and the French our most
formidable enemies. The naval ports on the Channel then became more
important than those on the east coast.--C. P.

[230] King’s MS. 43 (Brit. Mus.) contains plans of all the dockyards
in 1688 and 1698, and detailed drawings of the principal buildings as
they were in the latter year, as well as of the Navy Office in Seething
Lane, and the Hill-house at Chatham.--C. P.

[231] “Diary,” Nov. 29, 1661.

[232] Campbell’s “Naval History,” 1818, vol. ii. p. 217.

[233] “Evelyn’s Diary,” ed. 1879, vol. iii. p. 414. (Letter dated Sept.
19, 1682.)

[234] “Diary,” July 4, 1663.

[235] “Diary,” Dec. 7, 1661.

[236] Nov. 4, 1664.

[237] June 13, 1663.

[238] May 5, 1664.

[239] Nov. 4, 1664.

[240] Nov. 9, 1663.

[241] Lister’s “Life of Clarendon,” vol. iii. p. 107.

[242] “Diary,” Jan. 29, 1666–67.

[243] Aubrey’s “Lives,” 1813, vol. ii. p. 260.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER IX.

THE COURT.

       “And when he was beat,
       He still made his retreat
   To his Clevelands, his Nells, and his Carwells.”

   MARVELL’S _Ballad on the Lord Mayor and Aldermen_.


The Court of Charles II. was not unlike that of Comus, for drunkenness
and vice reigned supreme in both. Pepys’s “Diary” forms a valuable
antidote to the Grammont “Memoirs,” because in the latter work the
pictures are drawn in rose colour, while in the former we see the
squalid poverty that accompanied the wasteful extravagance. In the
courts of most of our sovereigns statesmen have borne an important
part, but at the Restoration the court was formed of wits and beautiful
women only. Then statesmen moved in the outer circles, and were laughed
at by those who dwelt in the inner ones. Grammont relates that the
Earl of Arlington was one day offering his humble services and best
advice to Miss Stewart, to assist her in conducting herself as King’s
mistress, a situation “to which it had pleased God and her virtue to
raise her!” He had only just begun his speech, “when she recollected
that he was at the head of those whom the Duke of Buckingham used
to mimic; and as his presence and his language exactly revived the
ridiculous ideas that had been given her of him, she could not forbear
bursting out into a fit of laughter in his face, so much the more
violent as she had for a long time struggled to suppress it.” It is not
to be supposed that Pepys could know much of the inner circle of the
court, but still there was much gossip about those who composed it, and
he sets down many tales in his “Diary” respecting the doings of the too
celebrated ladies. Several of the stories which were supposed to have
owed much to the lively imaginations of Counts Hamilton and Grammont,
are corroborated by Pepys.[244] The wild frolic of Miss Jennings and
Miss Price, to which allusion will be made later on in this chapter,
is not overlooked by Pepys.[245] Miss Jennings was not singular in her
freak, and Bishop Burnet relates that about the year 1668, the King
and Queen and all the court went about disguised in sedan chairs to
houses where they were not known. On one occasion the Queen’s chairmen,
not knowing who she was, left her alone, and she had to get back to
Whitehall as best she could in a hackney coach or in a cart. The
same masqueradings went on in the country as in town; and in 1670 the
Queen, the Duchess of Richmond, the Duchess of Buckingham, and some
others, disguised themselves as country lasses, in red petticoats,
waistcoats, &c., in order to visit the fair at Audley End. The grand
ladies and their companions overacted their parts, and were soon
discovered, so that they were glad to escape as best they could from
the crowd that gathered round them.

[Illustration: Frances Jennings, Duchess of Tyrconnel]

Pepys seems to have held the vulgar opinion that the great people
ought to converse in a more distinguished tone than ordinary mortals,
and he constantly remarks on the commonplace character of the King’s
talk. On October 26th, 1664, there was a launch at Woolwich, attended
by the King and his Court, which is fully described by our Diarist,
who remarks: “But Lord! the sorry talke and discourse among the great
courtiers round about him, without any reverence in the world, but so
much disorder. By and by the Queene comes and her Mayds of Honour; one
whereof Mʳˢ. Boynton, and the Duchesse of Buckingham had been very
sicke coming by water in the barge (the water being very rough); but
what silly sport they made with them in very common terms, _methought
was very poor and below what people think these great people say and
do_.”

On the 15th of November, 1666, there was a grand ball at court, that
day being the Queen’s birthday; and Pepys and his wife went to see the
dancing, which they found very tiresome. The ladies, however, were
pleasant to look upon, and their dresses very rich; so we read in the
“Diary:” “Away home with my wife, between displeased with the dull
dancing and satisfied with the clothes and persons.”

These ladies owe much of their fame to the series of portraits which
still exists to show a later age the outward forms that charmed the
men of two centuries ago. We are told in the Grammont “Memoirs” that,
“the Duchess of York being desirous of having the portraits of the
handsomest persons at court, Lely painted them, and employed all
his skill in the performance; nor could he ever exert himself upon
more beautiful subjects. Every picture appeared a masterpiece; and
that of Miss Hamilton appeared the highest finished: Lely himself
acknowledged that he had drawn it with a particular pleasure.” Next
to the deshabille, in which most of these ladies are arranged, the
most noticeable feature in these portraits is the soft, sleepy eye--a
supposed beauty that was attained to after a considerable amount of
practice:--

   “---- on the animated canvas stole
   The sleepy eye, that spoke the melting soul.”

Mrs. Hyde, the first wife of Henry Hyde, afterwards second Earl of
Clarendon, had by long practice given such a languishing tenderness to
her looks, that we are told by Hamilton, “she never opened her eyes but
like a Chinese.” In spite of all this softness, many of these women
were in the habit of swearing “good mouth-filling oaths”--a practice
thoroughly in character with the general grossness of manners and
language at Charles’s court. When looking at these portraits of the
beauties, we must not think of them all as the mistresses of the King
and Duke of York, for some remained pure in this corrupt atmosphere.
“La belle Hamilton” was one of these, and the description both of her
mind and person by her husband, the Count de Grammont, forms such an
exquisite portrait in words that, although well known, I venture to
transfer it to my pages:--“Miss Hamilton was at the happy age when
the charms of the fair sex begin to bloom; she had the finest shape,
the loveliest neck, and most beautiful arms in the world; she was
majestic and graceful in all her movements; and she was the original
after which all the ladies copied in their taste and air of dress.
Her forehead was open, white, and smooth; her hair was well set, and
fell with ease into that natural order which it is so difficult to
imitate. Her complexion was possessed of a certain freshness, not to
be equalled by borrowed colours: her eyes were not large, but they
were lively, and capable of expressing whatever she pleased: her mouth
was full of graces, and her contour uncommonly perfect: nor was her
nose, which was small, delicate, and turned up, the least ornament of
so lovely a face. In fine, her air, her carriage, and the numberless
graces dispersed over her whole person, made the Chevalier de Grammont
not doubt but that she was possessed of every other qualification. Her
mind was a proper companion for such a form: she did not endeavour to
shine in conversation by those sprightly sallies which only puzzle;
and with still greater care she avoided that affected solemnity in
her discourse, which produces stupidity; but without any eagerness
to talk, she just said what she ought, and no more. She had an
admirable discernment in distinguishing between solid and false wit;
and far from making an ostentatious display of her abilities, she
was reserved, though very just in her decisions: her sentiments were
always noble, and even lofty to the highest extent, when there was
occasion; nevertheless, she was less prepossessed with her own merit
than is usually the case with those who have so much. Formed as we have
described, she could not fail of commanding love; but so far was she
from courting it, that she was scrupulously nice with respect to those
whose merit might entitle them to form any pretensions to her.”

On the 25th of July, 1666, Pepys went to Whitehall to see the King at
dinner, and thought how little he should care to have people crowding
about him as they were round his Majesty. He adds, “Among other things
it astonished me to see my Lord Barkeshire waiting at table, and
serving the King drink, in that dirty pickle as I never saw man in my
life.”

There is a good story told of Grammont which is _apropos_ of the above.
One day, when the King dined in state, he made the Count remark that he
was served upon the knee, a mark of respect not common at other courts.
“I thank your Majesty for the explanation,” answered Grammont; “I
thought they were begging pardon for giving you so bad a dinner.”

I have already remarked on the poverty that went hand-in-hand with
extravagance, and this is well illustrated by one or two entries in
the “Diary.” In April, 1667,[246] the King was vexed to find no paper
laid for him at the Council table. Sir Richard Browne called Wooly, the
person who provided the paper, to explain the reason of the neglect.
He told his Majesty that he was but a poor man, and was already out of
pocket _£_400 or _£_500, which was as much as he was worth; and that
he could not provide it any longer without money, not having received
a penny since the King’s coming in. Evelyn corroborated this, and told
Pepys that several of the menial servants of the court lacked bread,
and had not received a farthing of wages since the Restoration.[247]

Shortly afterwards the King was found to want personal linen, and Mr.
Ashburnham, one of the Grooms of the Bedchamber, rated the wardrobe-man
very severely for this neglect. Mr. Townsend pleaded that he wanted
money, and owed the linendraper _£_5,000. He further told Pepys that
the grooms took away the King’s linen at the end of the quarter as
their fee, whether he could get more or not.[248] Hence the great want.

Charles II. was one of the most worthless of our monarchs, and the most
beloved. The responsibility of all evils, troubles, or crimes, was laid
upon his advisers, his mistresses, and anyone but upon himself, by his
loving subjects. His readiness of access, and good-humoured freedom of
manner charmed all who came in contact with him. “Unthinkingness” was
said by Halifax to be one of his characteristics, and Rochester uses
the expression, “Unthinking Charles;” yet this was more an apparent
than a real characteristic. Like most indolent men, he tried to get his
own way, and he was one of the earliest to find out that if the people
are allowed their way when they are in earnest, they will let their
governors do as they wish at other times. It has been said that the
strongest resolve he ever formed was a determination not to go on his
travels again; therefore he never opposed a strong popular movement. He
sought, however, every opportunity of turning the movement to his own
advantage, if there were any possibility of doing so.

Charles was fit to be the head of his court, for he was among the
wittiest there. He was a good teller of a story, and fond of exhibiting
his talent. Walpole proposed to make a collection of his witty sayings,
and Peter Cunningham carried out this idea in “The Story of Nell Gwyn.”

Curiously enough, Pepys held a very poor opinion of the King’s power
in this respect. On one occasion he says Charles’s stories were good,
although “he tells them but meanly.”[249] At another time he alludes to
“the silly discourse of the King.”[250]

The Diarist must surely have been prejudiced, for the general opinion
on this point, and the stories that have come down to us, are against
him. That was a happy distinction made by Charles when he said of
Godolphin, then a page at court, that he was never _in_ the way, and
never _out_ of the way. Of the King’s natural abilities there can be no
doubt. He took an intelligent interest in the formation of the Royal
Society, and passed many hours in his own laboratory. Pepys visited
this place on January 15th, 1668–69, and was much pleased with it. He
saw there “a great many chymical glasses and things, but understood
none of them.”

The King was fond of seeing and making dissections,[251] and the very
month he died he was engaged in some experiments on the production of
mercury.

His greatest fault was want of faith, for he believed neither in the
honour of man nor the virtue of woman; and, as a consequence, he
lived down to his debased views. His religion always sat lightly upon
him, but such as it was it was not that of a Protestant. James II.
told Pepys, in a private conversation, that Charles had been a Roman
Catholic some long time before his death.[252]

Charles’s relations with women were singularly heartless. His conduct
towards his wife was abominable, although when in her company he was
usually polite. On the occasion of her serious illness, when she was
like to die, he conjured her to live for his sake, and Grammont hints
that he was disappointed when she took him at his word.

The Queen, although not beautiful, was pleasing in appearance, and
the King appears to have been satisfied with her when she arrived in
England, for he wrote to Clarendon, that her eyes were excellent and
her voice agreeable, adding, “If I have any skill in physiognomy,
which I think I have, she must be as good a woman as ever was born.” A
few days after he wrote to the Chancellor in these words, “My brother
will tell you of all that passes here, which I hope will be to your
satisfaction. I am sure ’tis so much to mine that I cannot easily tell
you how happy I think myself, and I must be the worst man living (which
I hope I am not) if I be not a good husband. I am confident never two
humors were better fitted together than ours are.”[253] Yet shortly
after writing thus, he thrust his abandoned mistress, Lady Castlemaine,
upon this virtuous wife; so that from his own mouth we can condemn
him. Pepys reports a sharp answer (“a wipe,” he calls it) which the
Queen made to the favourite. Lady Castlemaine came in and found the
Queen under the dresser’s hand, which she had been for a long time. “I
wonder your Majesty,” says she, “can have the patience to sit so long
adressing?”--“I have so much reason to use patience,” says the Queen,
“that I can very well bear with it.”[254]

Clarendon was charged with choosing Katherine because he knew that she
could not bear children to the King, but this was a most foul calumny.
She was naturally most anxious to be a mother, and in her delirium she
fancied that she had given birth to a boy, but was troubled because
he was ugly. The King, being by, said, “No, it is a very pretty boy.”
“Nay,” says she, “if it be like you it is a fine boy indeed, and I
would be very well pleased with it.”[255]

The Duke of York was pre-eminently a man of business, and there remains
little to be added here to what has been already said in the chapter on
the Navy. He did not shine at Court, and his conduct there is amusingly
described in the Grammont “Memoirs,” _apropos_ of his fancy for “la
belle Hamilton:”--“As hunting was his favourite diversion, that sport
employed him one part of the day, and he came home generally much
fatigued; but Miss Hamilton’s presence revived him, when he found her
either with the Queen or the Duchess. There it was that, not daring
to tell her what lay heavy on his heart, he entertained her with what
he had in his head: telling her miracles of the cunning of foxes and
the mettle of horses; giving her accounts of broken legs and arms,
dislocated shoulders and other curious and entertaining adventures;
after which, his eyes told her the rest, till such time as sleep
interrupted their conversation; for these tender interpreters could not
help sometimes composing themselves in the midst of their ogling.”

It is not necessary to enter fully into the history of the Duke’s
amours, but one curious incident in his life may be noticed here.
In the year 1673 he had a passion for Susan, Lady Bellasys, widow
of Sir Henry Bellasys, K.B. (who fell in a foolish duel with Tom
Porter,[256]), and, although she was a Protestant, he gave her a
promise of marriage, after having tried in vain to convert her to the
Roman Catholic faith. When her father-in-law, John, Lord Bellasys, who
was a Roman Catholic, heard of this, he, fearing that she would convert
the Duke, and thus spoil all hope of introducing the Roman Catholic
religion into England, went to the King and told him of his brother’s
matrimonial intentions. Charles thereupon prohibited the marriage.[257]

After James came to the throne, his daughter Mary, Princess of Orange,
expressed a desire through Monsieur d’Alberville to know the chief
motives of his conversion; and in reply he wrote her a full account
of the circumstances that led to it. He tells her that he was bred a
strict Church of England man, “And I was so zealous that way, that
when the Queen my mother designed to bring up my brother, the Duke
of Gloucester, a Catholic, I, preserving still the respect due to
her, did my part to keep him steady to his first principles; and, as
young people often do, I made it a point of honour to stick to what
we had been educated in, without examining whether we were right or
wrong.”[258]

Anne Hyde, then in the household of the Princess of Orange, was
contracted to the Duke of York on November 24th, 1659, and was
secretly married to him at Worcester House, on September 3rd,
1660. There is a good story told by Locke, in his “Memoirs of Lord
Shaftesbury,” which shows how shrewd that nobleman was: “Soon after
the Restoration the Earl of Southampton and Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper,
having dined together at the Chancellor’s, as they were returning home
Sir Anthony said to my Lord Southampton, ‘Yonder Mrs. Anne Hyde is
certainly married to one of the Brothers.’ The Earl, who was a friend
to the Chancellor, treated this as a chimæra, and asked him how so wild
a fancy could get into his head. ‘Assure yourself’ (replied he) ‘it is
so. A concealed respect (however suppressed) showed itself so plainly
in the looks, voice, and manner wherewith her mother carved to her, or
offered her of every dish, that it is impossible but it must be so.’
My Lord Southampton, who thought it a groundless conceit then, was
not long after convinced, by the Duke of York’s owning her, that Lord
Ashley was no bad guesser.”[259]

An infamous conspiracy was formed by Sir Charles Berkeley and others to
induce the Duke to deny his marriage by accusing his wife of immoral
conduct. Although the Duke in the end acted honourably by her, he
did not dismiss the miscreants who lied in the basest manner. There
seems reason to believe that a few years afterwards she did carry on
an intrigue with Henry Sidney, afterwards Earl of Romney, and Pepys
alludes to the rumours respecting this on November 17th, 1665, January
9th, 1665–6, and October 15th, 1666. Peter Cunningham sums up the
evidence on the point as follows:--“There cannot, I think, be any doubt
of the intrigue of the Duchess of York (Anne Hyde) with Harry Sidney,
afterwards Earl of Romney, brother of Algernon Sidney and of Waller’s
Sacharissa. See on what testimony it rests. Hamilton more than hints
at it; Burnet is very pointed about it in his History; Reresby just
mentions and Pepys refers to it in three distinct entries and on three
different authorities.”[260]

Pepys tells us that the Duchess sat at her husband’s council, and
interfered with business,[261] and the fact that she was the master
was generally acknowledged. On one occasion the King called his
brother “Tom Otter,” alluding to the henpecked husband in Ben Jonson’s
“Epicene, or the Silent Woman.” Tom Killegrew threw the sarcasm back
upon the King with telling effect, by saying, “Sir, pray which is the
best for a man to be, a Tom Otter to his wife or to his mistress?”[262]
it being well known that Charles was the slave of Lady Castlemaine.

[Illustration: Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleveland]

The Duchess possessed great abilities, and readily adapted herself
to her exalted position. Burnet says of her that she “was a very
extraordinary woman. She had great knowledge, and a lively sense of
things. She understood what belonged to a princess, and took state upon
her rather too much.”

The next personage of importance at court was Mrs. Palmer, afterwards
Countess of Castlemaine and Duchess of Cleveland, who figures so
largely in the “Diary.” It is greatly to the credit of Lords Clarendon
and Southampton that they would have nothing to do with the King’s
favourite. Burnet tells us that the former would let nothing pass the
Great Seal in which she was named, and the latter would never suffer
her name to appear in the Treasury books. The King usually held a court
at his mistress’s lodgings before going to church, and his ministers
made their applications there, but Clarendon and Southampton were never
to be seen in her rooms.

Clarendon opposed her admission to the post of Lady of the Bedchamber
to the Queen, and would not allow his wife to visit her; in consequence
he made an implacable enemy who did not rest until she had compassed
his disgrace.

On July 26th, 1662, Pepys heard that when the mistress’s name was
presented by the King to his wife, the Queen pricked it out of the
list. On February 23rd, 1662–63, he heard that the King had given to
Lady Castlemaine all the Christmas presents made him by the peers; and
that at a court ball she was much richer in jewels than the Queen and
Duchess both together. Although our Diarist was a devoted admirer of
the lady, he is forced to call this “a most abominable thing.”

Lady Castlemaine was a woman of the most abandoned profligacy, and,
moreover, of bad manners as well as bad morals. In the Grammont
“Memoirs” she is described as “disagreeable from the unpolished state
of her manners, her ill-timed pride, her uneven temper and extravagant
humours.” Pepys knew her only in the distance, and was infatuated with
her beauty; at one time he fills his eyes with her, which much pleases
him,[263] and at another he “gluts himself with looking at her.”[264]
The sight of her at any public place was quite sufficient to give him
pleasure, whatever the entertainment might be, and his admiration was
extended to everything which was in any way connected with the King’s
mistress.

The greatest beauty at the court of Charles II. was Frances Stuart,
who was most assiduously followed by the King. She was the exact
opposite of Lady Castlemaine, being as much a lady as her rival was
ill-mannered, and as foolish as the other was clever. Her portrait
is admirably painted in the Grammont “Memoirs,” thus:--“She was
childish in her behaviour and laughed at everything, and her taste
for frivolous amusements, though unaffected, was only allowable in
a girl about twelve or thirteen years old. A child however she was
in every other respect, except playing with a doll: blind man’s buff
was her most favourite amusement: she was building castles of cards,
while the deepest play was going on in her apartments, where you saw
her surrounded by eager courtiers, who handed her the cards, or young
architects, who endeavoured to imitate her.”

[Illustration: Frances Stuart, Duchess of Richmond]

Her relations with the King were of a very risky character, and scandal
made very free with her good fame. Pepys took it for granted after
hearing the common report that she was the King’s mistress;[265] yet
Evelyn told him on April 26th, 1667, that up to the time of her leaving
the court to be married there was not a more virtuous woman in the
world. A passage in the “Diary” (Nov. 6th, 1663) exhibits very strongly
the low state of morality at court. Lord Sandwich told Pepys “how he
and Sir H. Bennet, the Duke of Buckingham and his Duchess, was of a
committee with somebody else for the getting of Mrs. Stewart for the
King, but that she proves a cunning slut, and is advised at Somerset
House by the Queen mother, and by her mother, and so all the plot is
spoiled and the whole committee broke.” By the early part of the year
1667 Mrs. Stewart’s position had become quite untenable, and to escape
from the King’s importunities she accepted the proposal of marriage
made to her by the Duke of Richmond. The King threw all the obstacles
he could in the way of the marriage, and when the lovers escaped
and were united he exhibited the greatest chagrin. Pepys relates a
story[266] that Charles one Sunday night took a pair of oars and rowed
secretly to Somerset House in order to get sight of the Duchess, who
was then living there. The garden door not being open, he is said to
have clambered over the wall, “which is a horrid shame!”

The Duke was afterwards appointed ambassador to Denmark, and died at
Elsinore, December 21st, 1672. After the death of her husband the
Duchess lived at court and attached herself to the person of the Queen.
In the latter years of her life she remained in seclusion dividing her
time between cards and cats. She died in 1702, and by her last will
left several favourite cats to different female friends with legacies
for their support.

   “But thousands died without or this or that,
   Die and endow a college or a cat.”[267]

Among the lesser lights of the court was Elizabeth, Countess of
Chesterfield, who figures so prominently in the Grammont “Memoirs.” The
scandal there related did not escape the open ears of Pepys, who on the
3rd of November, 1662, first hears that the Duke of York is smitten
with the lady; that the Duchess has complained to the King, and that
the Countess has gone into the country. The Earl is not mentioned here,
but on January 19th, 1662–3, the Diarist obtained fuller particulars,
and learnt that Lord Chesterfield had long been jealous of the Duke.
Pepys calls the Countess “a most good virtuous woman,” and evidently
considers the husband’s conduct in carrying off his wife to his seat
in Derbyshire as caused by a fit of ungrounded jealousy. The day after
Lord Chesterfield had seen his wife talking with the Duke of York, he
went to tell the latter how much he felt wronged, but the Duke answered
with calmness, and pretended not to understand the reason of complaint.
The story of the _bas verds_ that forms so prominent a feature in the
Grammont account is not alluded to by the Diarist, but these brilliant
 stockings introduced by the Countess, seem to have become
fashionable subsequently, for on the 15th of February, 1668–9, Pepys
bought a pair of green silk stockings, garters, and shoe-strings, and
two pairs of jessimy gloves to present to his valentine.

The career of pretty Margaret Brook, who married Sir John Denham on the
25th of May, 1665, was a short one. On the 10th of June, 1666, Pepys
hears that she has become the Duke of York’s new mistress, and that she
declares she will be owned publicly. On November 12th of the same year
he hears of her serious illness, an illness that terminated in death.

At this time rumours of poisoning were easily put into circulation,
and some supposed that Lady Denham was murdered by her husband. Others
whispered that the Duchess of York had poisoned her with powder of
diamonds, but when her body was opened after death, as she had desired
it should be, no sign of poison was found.[268]

One of the most brilliant of the maids of honour, and, to her
credit be it said, one of the few virtuous ladies at court, was
Frances Jennings, the eldest sister of Sarah, afterwards Duchess of
Marlborough. The Duke made advances to her, which she repulsed coolly.
He could not believe in his defeat, and plied her with love-letters.
It was not etiquette for her to return them to him, so she affected
unconsciousness, and carelessly drawing out her handkerchief allowed
these royal effusions to fall upon the floor for anyone who chose
to pick up. The King now laid siege to the beauty, but was equally
unsuccessful as his brother had been. In the Grammont “Memoirs” there
is a full account of the lady’s freaks, and Pepys managed to hear of
one of them:--“Mrs. Jennings, one of the Duchess’s maids, the other day
dressed herself like an orange wench, and went up and down, and cried
oranges; till falling down, or by some accident, her fine shoes were
discerned, and she put to a great deal of shame.”[269] This is but a
bald account of the adventure so graphically described by Hamilton,
who makes the object of Miss Jennings’s disguise to be a visit to the
famous German doctor and astrologer in Tower Street. Rochester assumed
this character and the name of Alexander Bendo at the same time,
issuing a bill in which he detailed his cures, and announced his powers
of prophecy. This was on the occasion of one of the wild young Lord’s
escapes from court, but we are not told its date. Hamilton is silent
on this point, but Pepys’s corroboration of one part of the adventure
helps to date the other.

Frances Jennings was loved by the dashing Dick Talbot, who was
accounted the finest figure and the tallest man in the kingdom, but
she offended him by her partiality for the lady-killer Jermyn. She was
soon disgusted by this empty coxcomb, and in 1665 was married to George
Hamilton, brother of the author of the Grammont “Memoirs.” After the
death of Hamilton, the widow married her first lover Talbot, afterwards
created Duke of Tyrconnel. Subsequent to the death of her second
husband, she visited London, and hired a stall at the New Exchange in
the Strand, where, dressed in a white robe and masked with a white
domino, she maintained herself for a time by the sale of small articles
of haberdashery. Thus her second and more notorious adventure caused
her to be known as the “White Milliner.”

This notice of the ladies of the Court of Charles II. may be concluded
with a brief mention of the two actresses,--Nell Gwyn and Moll Davis.

Pepys’s first mention of the former is under date April 3rd, 1665,
where he calls her “pretty witty Nell.” He was always delighted to see
her, and constantly praises her excellent acting, yet sometimes he
finds fault, for instance--“Nell’s ill-speaking of a great part made
me mad.”[270] She disliked acting serious parts, and with reason, for
she spoilt them.[271] Pepys mentions on January 11th, 1667–68, that
the King had sent several times for Nell, but it was not until some
time after that she left the stage finally, and became a recognized
mistress of the King. Peter Cunningham tells us, in his “Story of Nell
Gwyn,” that had the King lived she would have been created Countess
of Greenwich. James II. attended to his brother’s dying wish: “Do not
let poor Nelly starve,” and when she was outlawed for debt he paid
her debts. Her life was not a long one, and she died of apoplexy in
November, 1687, in the thirty-eighth year of her age.

Moll Davis it is well known charmed the King by her singing of the
song, “My lodging is on the cold ground,” in the character of the
shepherdess Celania in Davenant’s “Rivals,” a play altered from
“The Two Noble Kinsmen,” and the Duke of Buckingham is said to have
encouraged the King’s passion for her in order to spite the Countess of
Castlemaine. She was also a fine dancer, and greatly pleased Pepys on
more than one occasion. On March 7th, 1666–67, he expresses the opinion
that her dancing of a jig in boy’s clothes was infinitely better than
that of Nell Gwyn. About a year after this, when Moll Davis had been
“raised” to the position of King’s mistress, she danced a jig at court;
and the Queen being at this public exhibition of one of her rivals in
her own palace, got up and left the theatre.[272]

After the ladies come the male courtiers, but these butterflies of
the court do not figure very prominently in the “Diary.” Rochester is
occasionally mentioned, as is Henry Jermyn rather oftener. Buckingham
appears more frequently, but then he set up for a statesman. He was one
of the most hateful characters in history, and as one reads in the
“Diary” the record of his various actions, the feelings of disgust and
loathing that they inspire are near akin to hatred. He gave counsel to
the King at which Charles recoiled; he showed himself a coward in his
relations with Lord Ossory, and his conduct towards his wife proves
that he was not even a gentleman. Grammont calls Buckingham a fool, but
he was more of a knave than a fool, for he was too clever for us to be
able to despise him. He seems to have exerted the fascination of the
serpent over those around him, and the four masterly hands that have
drawn his portrait evidently thought it worthy the devotion of their
greatest care. Walpole says of these four famous portraits: “Burnet
has hewn it out with his rough chisel; Count Hamilton touched it with
that slight delicacy that finishes while it seems but to sketch;
Dryden caught the living likeness; Pope completed the historical
resemblance.”[273]

In conclusion, some mention must be made of those who did not take a
prominent position at court, but who nevertheless exerted considerable
influence in that corrupted circle, such as the Chiffinches, Bab May,
and Edward Progers, with all of whom Pepys had constant communication.
Thomas Chiffinch was one of the pages of the King’s bedchamber, and
keeper of his private closet. He died in 1666, and was succeeded in
his employments by his brother William, who became a still greater
favourite of the King than Thomas, and was the receiver of the secret
pensions paid by the court of France to the King of England. Progers
had been banished from Charles’s presence in 1650, by an Act of the
Estates of Scotland, “as an evil instrument and bad counseller of the
King.” Baptist May, Keeper of the Privy Purse, had a still worse rebuff
than this, for when he went down in state as the court candidate for
Winchelsea, he was rejected by the people, who cried out that they
would have “No court pimp to be their burgess.”[274] It would not be
fair, however, to throw all the obloquy upon these understrappers, for
we have already seen that the bearers of historical names could lend
themselves to perform the same duties.

FOOTNOTES:

[244] Peter Cunningham has a note in his “Story of Nell Gwyn,” “on the
Chronology of the English portion of De Grammont’s Memoirs.”

[245] “Diary,” Feb. 21, 1664–65.

[246] “Diary,” April 22, 1667.

[247] April 26, 1667.

[248] Sept. 2, 1667.

[249] “Diary,” Jan. 2, 1667–68.

[250] Dec. 2, 1668.

[251] “Diary,” May 11, 1663.

[252] Smith, vol. ii. p. 264.

[253] Lister’s “Life of Clarendon,” vol. iii. p. 197.

[254] “Diary,” July 3, 1663.

[255] “Diary,” Oct. 26.

[256] Mentioned by Pepys, July 29, Aug. 8, 12, 1667.

[257] “Burnet’s Own Time,” i. 353. The lady afterwards married a
gentleman of fortune named Fortrey, and died in 1713.

[258] James’s letter is printed in “Smith’s Life, &c., of Pepys,” vol.
ii. p. 322.

[259] _Quoted_, Lister’s “Life of Clarendon,” ii. 72 (note).

[260] “The Story of Nell Gwyn,” p. 197 (note).

[261] “Diary,” Jan. 27, 1667–68.

[262] July 30, 1667. Mrs. Otter thus addresses her husband in Act iii.
Sc. 1: “Is this according to the instrument when I married you, that
I would be princess and reign in my own house, and you would be my
subject and obey me?”

[263] “Diary,” July 23, 1661.

[264] Aug. 23, 1662.

[265] “Diary,” Feb. 8, 1662–63; May 18, 1663; April 15, 1666.

[266] May 18, 1668.

[267] Pope’s “Moral Essays,” Epistle iii.

[268] Lord Orrery to the Duke of Ormond, Jan. 25, 1666–67. (Orrery,
“State Papers,” fol. 1742, p. 219.)

[269] “Diary,” Feb. 21, 1664–65.

[270] “Diary,” Nov. 11, 1667.

[271] Dec. 26, 1667.

[272] “Diary,” May 31, 1668.

[273] “Royal and Noble Authors.”

[274] “Diary,” Oct. 21, 1666.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER X.

PUBLIC CHARACTERS.

 “So violent did I find parties in London, that I was assured by
 several that the Duke of Marlborough was a coward, and Mr. Pope a
 fool.”--VOLTAIRE.


In dealing with the public characters at the time of the Restoration,
the two men who were mainly instrumental in bringing that event
about--Monk and Montagu--must needs be given a prominent place.

George Monk, Duke of Albemarle, was a singularly unheroic character.
He was slow and heavy, but had a sufficient supply of good sense, and,
in spite of many faults, he had the rare good fortune to be generally
loved.[275] He was so popular that ballads were continually being made
in his praise. Pepys said there were so many of them that in after
times his fame would sound like that of Guy of Warwick.[276]

Aubrey tells us that Monk learned his trade of soldiering in the
Low Countries, whence he fled after having slain a man. Although he
frequently went to sea in command of the fleet, he always remained a
soldier, and the seamen laughed behind his back when instead of crying
“Tack about,” he would say “Wheel to the right or left.” Pepys tells
a story of him to the same effect: “It was pretty to hear the Duke of
Albemarle himself to wish that they would come on our ground, meaning
the French, for that he would pay them, so as to make them glad to
go back to France again; _which was like a general, but not like an
admiral_.”[277]

Monk was fond of low company; both he and his vulgar wife were quite
unfit for high--I cannot say refined--society, for there was but
little refinement at court. Ann Clarges had been kind to Monk when
he was a prisoner in the Tower, and he married her out of gratitude.
She had been previously married to Thomas Ratford, of whose death no
notice was given at the time of the marriage, so that the legitimacy
of Christopher, afterwards second Duke of Albemarle, was seriously
questioned. Aubrey relates a story which cannot well be true, but which
proves the general feeling of doubt respecting the point. He says that
Thomas Clarges came on shipboard to tell Monk that his sister had had
a child. Monk cried out, “What is it?” and on hearing the answer, “A
boy,” he said, “Why, then, she is my wife.” Pepys was told a tale by
Mr. Cooling which corroborates the opinion expressed on the company
kept by the Duke. “Once the Duke of Albemarle, in his drink, taking
notice as of a wonder that Nan Hide should ever come to be Duchess of
York. ‘Nay,’ says Troutbeck, ‘ne’er wonder at that; for if you will
give me another bottle of wine, I will tell you as great, if not a
greater miracle.’ And what was that, but that our dirty Bess (meaning
his Duchess) should come to be Duchess of Albemarle?”[278]

Sir Edward Montagu, Earl of Sandwich, was in every respect the opposite
of Monk. He was a courtier and a gentleman, but he did not manage to
gain the popularity of his great contemporary, nor to retain such as
he did at one time possess. As Pepys’s great patron his name naturally
occupies a very prominent position in the “Diary,” and as such he has
already been frequently alluded to in these pages. He appears to have
been a very agreeable man, but so easy and careless in business matters
that he was continually in want of money. In 1662 Pepys found that he
was above _£_7,000 in debt, and his enemies soon after gave out that
his debts amounted to _£_100,000. At any rate, his finances were so
often in an unsatisfactory state that Pepys had a special dislike to
lending his money in that quarter. Three years afterwards he had grown
very unpopular, and “it was purposed by some hot-heads in the House
of Commons, at the same time when they voted a present to the Duke of
York, to have voted _£_10,000 to the Prince, and _half-a-crown_ to my
Lord of Sandwich; but nothing came of it.”[279] It was, therefore,
well for him when he obtained an honourable exile by being appointed
ambassador to the court of Spain, as there he was held in high esteem.
His enemies, however, were not satisfied, and they continued to attack
him during his absence. Whatever his faults, and they were probably
many, Lord Sandwich was by far the most able naval commander of his
time, so that the nation had a heavy loss when he was killed in the
naval action against the Dutch at Solebay, in May, 1672.

Prince Rupert, as the cousin of the King, naturally held a prominent
position in the State, but he did not gain much credit from the
undertakings he was thrust into. His fame as a brilliant, though rash,
soldier, was gained during the troubles of his uncle’s reign, and not
from anything he did after the Restoration. He was out of place on
board ship, although he is said to have displayed immense bravery and
much skill in the sea-fight against the Dutch, from August 11th to
13th, 1673. His interest in science and mechanical art appears to have
been real, and to him we owe the invention or introduction into England
of mezzotinto engraving, and the introduction of

                    ... “that glassy bubble
   That finds philosophers such trouble,
   Whose least part cracked, the whole does fly,
   And wits are cracked to find out why.”

The Prince’s courage was so patent to all that his friends were rather
surprised to find that when he was very ill and like to die, “he had
no more mind to it than another man;” so they came to the rather lame
conclusion that “courage is not what men take it to be--a contempt of
death.”[280]

[Illustration: EDWARD HYDE, EARL OF CLARENDON.]

The next great public character was Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon, who
for the few years before his fall was the greatest man in the kingdom.
Public opinion has been much divided as to his merits. In spite of
many very evident faults, he certainly exhibited on several occasions
a high-minded spirit. He would not consent to do any business with
the King’s mistresses, and Burnet says that he “kept a register of
all the King’s promises, and of his own, and did all that lay in his
power afterwards to get them performed.” His disposition was rather
ungracious, and he made many enemies, who attacked him with success
when the King was tired of him. Clarendon was very dictatorial with
Charles, and sent him such missives as this, “I pray be at Worcester
House on Sunday as soon as may be.” On one occasion he fixed eight
o’clock in the morning, for Lord Broghill to have an audience with
the King, who did not think the arrangement quite fair, and wrote,
“You give appointments in a morning to others sooner than you take
them yourself, but if my Lord Broghill will come at nine, he shall be
welcome.”

On the institution of the Royal Society, Lord Clarendon was appointed
visitor for life, but after his death the position was to be held
by several high officers, by reason of their offices. Sprat, in his
“History of the Royal Society,” specially thanks the Lord Chancellor,
Attorney-General, and Solicitor-General, for their assistance in the
preparation of the charter; a proof, says Sprat, of the falsehood of
the reproach that law is an enemy to learning and civil arts.

One day in July, 1664, Lord Sandwich told Pepys that Lord Clarendon
was very displeased with him for being forward in the cutting down of
trees in Clarendon Park; so the Diarist sought an interview with the
Lord Chancellor in order that he might soothe the great man, and he was
successful in his endeavour.[281]

Clarendon Park, near Salisbury, was crown-land mortgaged by Charles
I. for _£_20,000, and granted by Charles II. to the Duke of Albemarle
subject to this mortgage, and with the right to the timber reserved
to the Crown. Lord Clarendon bought the place of Albemarle, and his
complaint against the Commissioners of the Navy was, that while they
had all the royal forests at command, they chose to spoil the beauty
of his property. He further affirmed that he had no intention to
contest the King’s right, nor to defraud the Crown of timber; but
complained that at the very time the Commissioners sent down a person
to mark standing timber for felling, there was a large quantity of wood
belonging to the Crown lying on the estate unappropriated, which had
been “felled divers years” before.[282]

Two of Pepys’s patrons--Sir George Downing and Sir William
Coventry--are frequently mentioned in the “Diary;” the first almost
always with some expression of dislike, and the other invariably in
terms of respect. He sometimes describes his whilom master as “a
stingy fellow,”[283] and laughs at his ridiculous pieces of thrift,
“and niggardly manner of entertaining his poor neighbours.”[284]
At another time he calls him “a perfidious rogue” for betraying
former friends;[285] still, he could appreciate Downing’s business
capabilities, and when setting down the fact that the Commissioners of
the Treasury had chosen Sir G. Downing for their secretary, he added,
“I think, in my conscience, they have done a great thing in it, for
he is active and a man of business, and values himself upon having of
things do well under his hand; so that I am mightily pleased in their
choice.”[286] At this time Pepys had forgotten the constant causes
of annoyance which Downing had given him, and he could afford to be
magnanimous in acknowledging his enemy’s good qualities. I have already
remarked that Sir William Coventry stands out prominently as the only
person who is noticed in the “Diary” in terms of unqualified praise.
Other men of the time did not equally admire him, so that it is not
easy to come to a just estimation of his character.

Poor Pepys was placed in an awkward predicament on one occasion when he
was on a visit to Hampton Court, owing to the enmity between Coventry
and Lord Sandwich. He was pleased when the latter asked him to come
privately to his lodgings, but adds, “Lord! to see in what difficulty
I stand, that I dare not walk with Sir W. Coventry for fear my Lord or
Sir G. Carteret should see me; nor with either of them, for fear Sir W.
Coventry should.”[287]

When Clarendon fell, in 1667, it was thought likely that Coventry would
succeed him as virtual prime minister. His quarrel, however, with the
Duke of Buckingham put him out of favour with the King and out of
office; so that, although he survived until 1686, he never again took a
prominent part in political affairs.

Arthur Annesley, afterwards Earl of Anglesey, is called by Pepys “a
grave, serious man,”[288] and “a very notable man,”[289] but he does
not appear to have been a very friendly one. Although he was under
obligations to Sir Edward Montagu’s family, he took the opportunity,
when the thanks of Parliament were voted to Montagu, to quash the
motion which was made to give him a reward.[290] He was made Treasurer
of the Navy in 1667, in succession to Sir George Carteret, and in the
following year when he answered the Duke of York’s letter, he bid the
Duke call for Pepys’s books,[291] in hopes that the Clerk of the Acts
might get a reprimand. A peace seems afterwards to have subsisted
between the two, for in 1672 Lord Anglesey signed himself in a letter
to Pepys, “Your affectionate friend and servant.”

Sir Thomas Osborne, subsequently Viscount Dunblane, Earl of Danby,
Marquis of Carmarthen, and Duke of Leeds, was appointed joint Treasurer
of the Navy, with Sir Thomas Littleton, to succeed Lord Anglesey. This
appointment was greatly disliked by the Duke of York and the officers
of the navy, who looked upon the two men as spies set to watch them.
Pepys calls Osborne a creature of the Duke of Buckingham’s,[292] and
at another time says he is a beggar “having _£_11 or,_£_12,00 a year,
but owes about _£_10,000.”[293] It is clear that the Diarist did not
foresee the great figure Osborne was about to make in the world; a rise
somewhat due to his own parts, and much to the favour of the King. When
Charles made him Lord High Treasurer, he told him that he ought to take
care of himself, for he had but two friends in England. This startled
Osborne, until his majesty explained himself by saying that he (the
King) was one, and the other was the Treasurer’s merits.[294]

Joseph Williamson, who rose from a college tutorship to the office
of Secretary of State, has a few words of praise given to him in the
“Diary.” He was the son of a clergyman, and in early life is said to
have acted as secretary to a member of parliament. He graduated at
Oxford as a member of Queen’s College, and in December, 1661, was
appointed Keeper of the State Paper Office. About the same time he
was Latin Secretary to the King, an office the reversion of which
had been promised to John Evelyn. In 1666 Williamson undertook the
superintendence of the “London Gazette,” and in 1672 obtained the
post of Clerk to the Privy Council, on the resignation of Sir Richard
Browne, when he was knighted. The King had many years before promised
to give the place to Evelyn, but in consideration of the renewal of the
lease of Sayes Court, the latter parted with it to Williamson. Honours
now came thick upon the new-made knight. He was Plenipotentiary at the
Congress of Cologne in 1673 and 1674, and on his return to England
was made Principal Secretary of State, a position which he held for
four years. He was President of the Royal Society in 1678, and married
Catherine Stuart, daughter of George, Lord Aubigny, and widow of Henry
O’Brien, Lord Ibracken, eldest son of the Earl of Thomond, in 1682. He
died in 1701, and was buried in the Duke of Richmond and Lennox’s vault
in Henry VII.’s Chapel, by right of his wife’s connection with the Duke
of Lennox.

The widow’s eldest son by her first husband, Donald O’Brien, was lost
in the wreck of the “Gloucester” in 1682, and he is mentioned in a
letter of Pepys to Hewer, written from Edinburgh on May 8th of that
year. The will of the father contains the following very remarkable
paragraph:--“I conjure my son Donatus O’Brien, to honour and obey his
King in whatever he commands that is not contradictory to the Holy
Scripture and Protestant religion, in which I conjure him (upon pain of
my curse) not only to continue himself, but to advise his brothers and
sisters to do the same; and that he never marry a <DW7>; and that he
take great care if ever God bless him with children (which I trust he
will many) to breed them strictly in the Protestant religion. I advise
him to cherish the English on his estate, and drive out the Irish, and
especially those of them who go under the name of gentlemen.”[295]

Before passing on to make a final note on some of the celebrated
sailors alluded to in the “Diary,” a place must be found for one
of the most eccentric women that ever lived--Margaret, Duchess of
Newcastle. Pepys writes, “the whole story of this lady is romance, and
all she does is romantic.”[296] Every one who came in contact with her
fooled her to the top of her bent. Evelyn likened her to Zenobia, the
mother of the Gracchi, Vittoria Colonna, besides a long line of other
celebrities, and when she “took the dust” in the park she was followed
and crowded upon by coaches all the way she went, so that nobody could
come near her.[297]

Her husband’s play, “The Humourous Lovers,” was, Pepys says, “the most
silly thing that ever came upon a stage,”[298] and also “the most
ridiculous thing that ever was wrote,”[299] yet she and the Duke were
“mightily pleased with it, and she at the end made her respects to the
players from her box, and did give them thanks.”

On the 30th of May, 1667, the Duchess made a visit to one of the
meetings of the Royal Society, when various fine experiments were shown
for her entertainment. She was loud in her expressions of admiration
as she was led out of the room by several noblemen who were among the
company present. There had been great debate among the philosophers as
to the advisability of inviting the lady, for many believed that the
town would be full of ballads on the event. Her footmen were habited
in velvet coats, and she herself appeared in antique dress, so that
there is no cause for wonder that people came to see her as if she
were the Queen of Sheba. Mrs. Evelyn drew a very lively picture of the
Duchess in a letter to Dr. Bohun: “I acknowledge, though I remember
her some years since, and have not been a stranger to her fame, I was
surprised to find so much extravagancy and vanity in any person not
confined within four walls.... Her mien surpasses the imagination of
poets or the descriptions of romance heroine’s greatness; her gracious
bows, seasonable nods, courteous stretching out of her hands, twinkling
of her eyes, and various gestures of approbation, show what may be
expected from her discourse, which is airy, empty, whimsical, and
rambling as her books, aiming at science difficulties, high notions,
terminating commonly in nonsense, oaths, and obscenity.” Pepys’s
summing up of the Duchess’s character is shorter, but accords well with
Mrs. Evelyn’s opinion--he says she was “a mad, conceited, ridiculous
woman.”[300]

In a book written by a man so intimately connected with the navy as
Pepys was, it is not surprising that mention should occur pretty
frequently of sailors and soldiers who commanded at sea.

In the great victory over the Dutch in 1665, the Earl of Falmouth, Lord
Muskerry, and Richard Boyle, second son of the Earl of Burlington,
were all killed by one shot, as they were standing on board the “Royal
Charles,” close by the Duke of York, into whose face their blood
spurted. The Earl appears very frequently in the “Diary” as Sir Charles
Berkeley, Lord Berkeley, Lord Fitzharding, and Earl of Falmouth, and
he was to have been created a Marquis had he lived. Charles II. shed a
flood of tears when he heard of his friend’s death, but Pepys tells us
that none but the King wished him alive again.[301]

Lord Clarendon put in a few bitter words the most thorough condemnation
of the man. He said, “few had observed in him any virtue or quality
which they did not wish their best friends without.” The various
allusions to Lord Falmouth in the “Diary” quite bear out this
character, and yet because he was Sir William Coventry’s friend we are
told of “his generosity, good nature, desire of public good, and low
thoughts of his own wisdom; his employing his interest in the king to
do good offices to all people, without any other fault than the freedom
he do learn in France of thinking himself obliged to serve his king in
his pleasures.”[302]

A much greater national loss which took place in this engagement was
the death of the famous admiral Sir John Lawson. This chief among the
“tarpaulins” was well known to Pepys, as he was the vice-admiral under
Sir Edward Montagu at the time when Charles II. was brought over by
the fleet. He is described as the same plain man as ever after all his
successes,[303] yet an enemy called him a false man, and the greatest
hypocrite in the world.[304] When Lawson died, Pepys could not but
acknowledge that the nation had a loss, although he was not sorry,
because the late admiral had never been a friend to him.[305] In the
great engagement against the Dutch of the 3rd of June, 1665, Opdam’s
ship blew up, and a shot from it, or rather a piece of iron, wounded
Lawson on the knee, from which he never recovered. The national loss is
expressed in one of the “Poems on State Affairs.”[306]

                       “Destiny allowed
   Him his revenge, to make his death more proud.
   A fatal bullet from his side did range,
   And battered Lawson; oh, too dear exchange!
   He led our fleet that day too short a space,
   But lost his knee: since died, in glorious race:
   Lawson, whose valour beyond Fate did go,
   And still fights Opdam in the lake below.”

In October, 1666, there was a rumour that Sir Jeremy Smith had killed
Sir Robert Holmes in a duel, and Pepys was not sorry to hear it,
although he soon found that report did not tell true.[307] Holmes was
very unpopular, and Andrew Marvell called him the “cursed beginner of
the two Dutch wars;” describing him as “first an Irish livery boy, then
a highwayman, now Bashaw of the Isle of Wight,” who had “got in bonds
and by rapine _£_100,000.”[308]

Sir Jeremy Smith was befriended by the Duke of Albemarle, when Holmes
delivered articles of accusation against him to the King and Cabinet,
and he suffered no ill from the vengeance of his enemy, for in 1669 he
was appointed a Commissioner of the Navy in place of Sir William Penn.
Pepys was able to find an epithet for him, and although he liked him
fairly well, he called him “an impertinent fellow.”[309]

This slight notice of some of the sailors of the Restoration period
may well be closed by a relation of the remarkable action of certain
seamen at the funeral of Sir Christopher Mings. Mings, like Lawson,
was of poor extraction, and, like him, grew up a worthy captain. He
was wounded in the face and leg in an engagement with the Dutch, and
shortly afterwards died of his wounds. Pepys and Sir William Coventry
attended the funeral, and on their going away, “about a dozen able,
lusty, proper men came to the coach side with tears in their eyes, and
one of them that spoke for the rest begun and said to Sir W. Coventry,
‘We are here a dozen of us that have long known and loved and served
our dead commander, Sir Christopher Mings, and have now done the last
office of laying him in the ground. We would be glad we had any other
to offer after him, and revenge of him. All we have is our lives; if
you will please to get His Royal Highness to give us a fireship among
us all, here is a dozen of us, out of all which choose you one to be
commander, and the rest of us, whoever he is, will serve him; and if
possible do that that shall show our memory of our dead commander and
our revenge.’” When this speech was finished Coventry was much moved,
and Pepys could scarcely refrain from tears.[310] What became of these
worthy men we are not told.

FOOTNOTES:

[275] “The blockhead Albemarle hath strange luck to be loved, though
he be, and every man must know it, the heaviest man in the world, but
stout and honest to his country.”--“Diary,” Oct. 23, 1667.

[276] “Diary,” March 6, 1667.

[277] April 4, 1667.

[278] “Diary,” Nov. 4, 1666.

[279] “Diary,” Nov. 6, 1665.

[280] “Diary,” Jan. 15, 1664–65.

[281] “Diary,” July 14, 1664.

[282] Lister’s “Life of Clarendon,” vol. iii. p. 340.

[283] “Diary,” June 28, 1660.

[284] Feb. 27, 1666–67.

[285] March 12, 1661–62.

[286] May 27, 1667.

[287] “Diary,” Jan. 28, 1665–66.

[288] Dec. 3, 1664.

[289] July 9, 1667.

[290] June 19, 1660.

[291] Sept. 16, 1668.

[292] “Diary,” Oct. 29, 1668.

[293] Feb. 14, 1668–69.

[294] Sir John Williamson’s “Letters” (Camden Society), vol. i. p. 64.

[295] See that monument of learning and research, Chester’s
“Westminster Abbey Registers,” 1875, p. 194 (note).

[296] “Diary,” April 11, 1667.

[297] May 1, 1667.

[298] March 30.

[299] April 11, 1667.

[300] “Diary,” March 18, 1668.

[301] “Diary,” June 9, 1665.

[302] August 30, 1668.

[303] “Diary,” Jan. 12, 1662–63.

[304] Nov. 9, 1663.

[305] June 25, 1665.

[306] Vol. i. p. 24.

[307] “Diary,” Oct. 31, 1666.

[308] “Seasonable Argument,” 1677.

[309] “Diary,” May 10, 1669.

[310] “Diary,” June 13, 1666.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER XI.

MANNERS.

   “The king’s most faithful subjects we,
     In’s service are not dull,
   We drink to show our loyalty,
     And make his coffers full.
   Would all his subjects drink like us,
     We’d make him richer far,
   More powerful and more prosperous
     Than all the Eastern monarchs are.”

   SHADWELL’S _The Woman Captain_.


No passages in the “Diary” are more valuable than those from which
we can gather some idea of the manners of the time in which Pepys
lived. It is chiefly, in fact, on account of the pictures of the mode
of life among the men and women of the middle classes portrayed in
those passages that the book has attained its immense popularity.
History instructs, while gossip charms, so that for hundreds who desire
to learn the chronicle of events, thousands long to hear how their
ordinary fellow creatures lived, what they ate, what they wore, and
what they did.

Pepys liked good living, and he was careful to set down what he ate,
so that we are able to judge of his taste. This is what he calls a
“pretty dinner”--“a brace of stewed carps, six roasted chickens and
a jowl of salmon hot, for the first course; a tanzy and two neats’
tongues, and cheese the second.”[311] A good calf’s head boiled with
dumplings he thought an excellent dinner,[312] and he was very proud
of a dinner he gave to some friends, which consisted of “fricasee of
rabbits and chickens, a leg of mutton boiled, three carps in a dish, a
great dish of a side of a lamb, a dish of roasted pigeons, a dish of
four lobsters, three tarts, a lamprey pie (a most rare pie), a dish of
anchovies, good wine of several sorts and all things mighty noble and
to my great content.”[313] He was very indignant when Sir W. Hickes
gave him and his fellows “the meanest dinner (of beef, shoulder and
umbles of venison, which he takes away from the keeper of the forest,
and a few pigeons, and all in the meanest manner) that ever I did see,
to the basest degree.”[314] Pepys liked all kinds of pies, whether they
contained fish or swan, but there was one pie in particular that was
filled with such a pleasant variety of good things that he never tasted
the like in all his life.[315] On two several occasions he records his
appreciation of a joint which sounds strange to modern ears--viz.,
boiled haunch of venison.[316] At special seasons he was in the habit
of partaking of the diet appropriate to the festival: thus on Shrove
Tuesday he ate fritters,[317] and at Christmas mince pies[318] or plum
porridge,[319] plum pudding not having been at that time invented.
The meat taken with these sweets was sometimes the orthodox beef, but
it was more often something else, as on Christmas day, 1660, when it
consisted of shoulder of mutton and chicken.

Breakfast was not formerly made an ordinary meal, but radishes were
frequently taken with the morning draught. On May 2nd, 1660, Pepys
had his breakfast of radishes in the Purser’s cabin of the “Naseby,”
in accordance with the rule laid down by Muffet in his “Health’s
Improvement” (1655), that they “procure appetite and help digestion;”
which is still acted upon in Italy.

Ale-houses, mum-houses, and wine-houses abounded in all parts of
London, and much money must have been spent in them. The charges seem
to have been high, for Pepys relates how on one occasion the officers
of the navy met the Commissioners of the Ordnance at the Dolphin
Tavern, when the cost of their dinner was 34_s._ a man.[320] We are not
told how much Sir W. Batten, Sir W. Penn, and Pepys had to pay when
they ordered their dinner at the Queen’s Head at Bow, and took their
own meat with them from London.[321]

There is abundant evidence in the “Diary” of the prevalent habits of
deep drinking, and Pepys himself evidently often took more than was
good for him. Men were very generally unfit for much business after
their early dinners; thus Pepys tells of his great speech at the bar of
the House of Commons that it lasted so long that many of the members
went out to dinner, and when they came back they were half drunk.[322]
Sir William Penn told an excellent story which exhibits well the habits
of the time. Some gentlemen (?) drinking at a tavern blindfolded the
drawer, and told him that the one he caught would pay the reckoning.
All, however, managed to escape, and when the master of the house came
up to see what was the matter, his man caught hold of him, thinking
he was one of the gentlemen, and cried out that he must pay the
reckoning.[323] Various drinks are mentioned in the “Diary,” such as
mum (an ale brewed with wheat), buttered ale (a mixture of beer, sugar,
cinnamon, and butter), and lamb’s wool (a mixture of ale with sugar,
nutmeg, and the pulp of roasted apples), among other doctored liquors.
Such stuff as this does not indicate a refined taste, and the same may
be said when we find that wine was also made up for vitiated palates.
On June 10th, 1663, Pepys goes with three friends to the Half Moon
Tavern, and buys some sugar on the way to mix with the wine. We read of
Muscadel, and various kinds of sack, as Malago sack, raspberry sack,
and sack posset, of Florence wine, and of Navarre wine. Rhine wines
must have been popular at this time, if we may judge from the numerous
Rhenish wine-houses spread about the town. Amongst Pepys’s papers was
found a memorandum on the dangers England might experience in the event
of a war with France. Lord Dartmouth proposed that we might ruin the
French by forbidding their wines, “but that he considers, will never
be observed with all our heat against France. We see that, rather than
not drink their wine, we forget our interest against it, and play
all the villanies and perjuries in the world to bring it in, because
people will drink it, if it be to be had, at any rate.”[324] What Lord
Dartmouth thought to be impossible was practically effected by the
Methuen treaty in 1703, after the signing of which French wines were
driven out of the English market for many years by Spanish wines, and
it was long thought patriotic to drink port.

Pepys liked to be in the fashion, and to wear a newly-introduced
costume, although he was displeased when Lady Wright talked about the
great happiness of “being in the fashion, and in variety of fashions
in scorn of others that are not so, as citizens’ wives and country
gentlewomen.”[325] The Diary is full of references to new clothes, and
Pepys never seems so happy as when priding himself upon his appearance
and describing the beauties of velvet cloaks, silk coats, and gold
buttons. In 1663, he found that his expenses had been somewhat too
large, and that the increase had chiefly arisen from expenditure
on clothes for himself and wife, although, as already remarked, it
appears that Mrs. Pepys’s share was only _£_12, against her husband’s
_£_55.[326] In fact, our Diarist was at one time rather mean in
regard to the money he allowed his wife, although afterwards he was
more generous, and even gave _£_80 for a necklace of pearls which he
presented to her.

One of the strangest attempts to fix a fashion was made by Charles
the Second, who soon, however, tired of his own scheme. In 1661, John
Evelyn advocated a particular kind of costume in a little book entitled
“Tyrannus, or the Mode.” Whether the King took his idea from this book,
or whether it originated in his own mind we cannot tell, but at all
events, on the 17th of October, 1666, he declared to the Privy Council
his “resolution of setting a fashion for clothes which he will never
alter.” Pepys describes the costume in which Charles appeared on the
15th of October in the following words:--“A long cassock close to
the body, of black cloth and pinked with white silk under it, and a
coat over it, and the legs ruffled with black rib and like a pigeon’s
leg, ... a very fine and handsome garment.” Several of the courtiers
offered heavy bets that Charles would not persist in his resolution
of never altering this costume, and they were right, for very shortly
afterwards it was abandoned. The object aimed at was to abolish the
French fashion, which had caused great expense, but in order to
thwart his brother of England’s purpose, the King of France ordered
all his footmen to put on the English vests.[327] This impertinence
on the part of Louis XIV., which appears to have given Steele a hint
for his story of Brunetta and Phillis in the “Spectator,” caused the
discontinuance of the so-called Persian habit at the English Court.

There are occasional allusions in the “Diary” to female dress. Thus, on
October 15th, 1666, Lady Carteret tells Pepys that the ladies are about
to adopt a new fashion, and “wear short coats above their ancles,”
in place of the long trains, which both the gossips thought “mighty
graceful.” At another time Pepys was pleased to see “the young, pretty
ladies dressed like men, in velvet coats, caps with ribands, and with
laced bands, just like men.”[328] Vizards or black masks appear to
have come into general use, or rather were revived by the ladies about
1663. By wearing them women were able to sit out the most licentious
play with unblushing face. We read that Pepys and his wife went to
the Theatre Royal on June 12th of that year:--“Here I saw my Lord
Falconbridge and his Lady, my Lady Mary Cromwell, who looks as well as
I have known her, and well clad; but when the House began to fill she
put on her vizard, and so kept it on all the play; which of late is
become a great fashion among the ladies, which hides their whole face.”
After the play Pepys and Mrs. Pepys went off to the Exchange to buy a
vizard, so that the latter might appear in the fashion.

The custom of wearing the hat indoors is more than once alluded to in
the “Diary,”[329] and on one occasion Pepys was evidently much elated
by the circumstance that he was in a position to wear his hat--“Here
it was mighty strange to find myself sit here in Committee with my hat
on, while Mr. Sherwin stood bare as a clerk, with his hat off to his
Lord Ashly and the rest, but I thank God I think myself never a whit
the better man for all that.”[330] This practice, which still exists
in the House of Commons, was once universal, and in the statutes of
the Royal Society the right of addressing the meeting with his hat
on was reserved to the president, the other members being expected
to uncover on rising to speak. A few years after the above committee
meeting, it became the fashion of the young “blades” to wear their hats
cocked at the back of their heads.[331] This obtained the name of the
“Monmouth cock,” after the popular Duke of Monmouth, and according to
the “Spectator,” it still lingered in the west of England among the
country squires as late as 1711. “During our progress through the most
western parts of the kingdom, we fancied ourselves in King Charles the
Second’s reign, the people having made little variations in their dress
since that time. The smartest of the country squires appear still in
the Monmouth cock.”[332]

Gloves were then, as now, looked upon as an appropriate present to a
lady, and Pepys often bought them for this purpose. On October 27th,
1666, he gave away several pairs of _jessimy_ or jessemin gloves, as
Autolycus says, “gloves as sweet as damask roses;” and on January 25th,
1668–69, he was vexed when his wife wanted him to buy two or three
dozen perfumed gloves for her. Those who did not wear these useful
coverings laid themselves open to remark, as we read of Wallington, a
little fellow who sang an excellent bass, that he was “a poor fellow, a
working goldsmith, that goes without gloves to his hands.”[333] The use
of muffs by men became common after the Restoration, and continued till
Horace Walpole’s day, and even later. November, 1662, was a very cold
month, and Pepys was glad to wear his wife’s last year’s muff, and to
buy her a new one. The long hair worn by the cavaliers was superseded
soon after the Restoration by the use of wigs. Pepys went on the 29th
of August, 1663, to his barber’s to be trimmed, when he returned a
periwig which had been sent for his approval, as he had not quite
made up his mind to wear one, and “put it off for a while.” Very soon
afterwards, however, he ordered one to be made for him;[334] and then
he had his hair cut off, which went against his inclination. The new
wig cost three pounds, and the old hair was used to make another.[335]
This last only cost twenty-one shillings and sixpence to make up, and
the peruque-maker promised that the two would last for two years.[336]
The Duke of York very soon followed the fashion set by his subordinate,
and put on a wig for the first time on February 15th, 1663–4. These
magnificent ornaments, which look so grand in the portraits, were very
apt to get out of order, and on one occasion Pepys had to send his
wig back to the barber’s to be cleansed of its nits. No wonder he was
vexed at having had it sent to him in such a state.[337] On May 30th,
1668, he came to an agreement with his barber to keep his wigs in good
order for twenty shillings a year. It is remarkable that people did
not return to the sensible fashion of wearing their own hair after the
plague, when there must have been great dread of infection from this
source. Pepys bought a wig at Westminster during the sickness, and
was long afraid to wear it. He adds, “it is a wonder what will be the
fashion after the plague is done, as to periwigs, for nobody will dare
to buy any hair, for fear of the infection, that it had been cut off
the heads of people dead of the plague.”[338]

Before passing on to consider some other customs, a word should be
said on the practice of wearing mourning. When the Duke of Gloucester
died, it is related that the King wore purple, which was used as royal
mourning. At the same time Mrs. Pepys spent _£_15 on mourning clothes
for herself and husband.[339] We are told how the whole family went
into black on the death of the elder Mrs. Pepys,[340] and we have very
full and curious particulars of the funeral of Thomas Pepys. For this
occasion Samuel had the soles of his shoes blacked, which seems a
rather odd kind of mourning![341]

The engagement between Philip Carteret and Lady Jemimah Montagu gave
the Diarist considerable employment, and from the long account he has
written on it we gather that he was very proud of such assistance as
he was able to give. Carteret was a shy young man, and needed much
instruction, as to how he should take the lady’s hand, and what he
should do. The whole description is very droll, but too long to quote
here. Pepys made the best of the affair, but he evidently thought his
_protégé_ a very insipid lover. The wedding took place on July 31st,
1665, the bride and bridegroom being in their old clothes, but Pepys
was resplendent in a “new  suit and coat trimmed with gold
buttons, and gold broad lace round his hands, very rich and fine.” This
is the account of what occurred after supper:--“All of us to prayers
as usual, and the young bride and bridegroom too; and so after prayers
soberly to bed; only I got into the bridegroom’s chamber while he
undressed himself, and there was very merry till he was called to the
bride’s chamber, and into bed they went. I kissed the bride in bed, and
so the curtains drawn with the greatest gravity that could be, and so
good night. But the modesty and gravity of this business was so decent
that it was to me, indeed, ten times more delightful than if it had
been twenty times more merry and jovial.”

There are several allusions in the “Diary” to the custom of scrambling
for ribbons and garters at weddings, and Pepys expresses himself as not
pleased when favours were sent to others after Lord Hinchingbroke’s
wedding, and he was overlooked.[342] At this time wedding rings were
not the plain and inelegant things they are now, but were frequently
ornamented with precious stones, and almost invariably had a motto
engraved upon them. Pepys’s aunt Wight was “mighty proud” of her
wedding ring, which cost her twelve pounds, and had been lately set
with diamonds.[343]

It is not necessary to remark that there was a considerable laxity
of manners during the period with which we are now dealing, as this
is pretty well known, but one or two passages in the “Diary” may,
perhaps, be alluded to here. On one occasion Mrs. Turner, the wife of a
serjeant-at-law, while dressing herself in her room by the fire, took
occasion to show Pepys her leg, which she was very proud of, and which
he affirms was the finest he had ever seen.[344] At another time, Pepys
went to Lady Batten’s, when he found her and several friends very merry
in her chamber; Lady Penn flung him down upon the bed, and then herself
and the others came down one after another upon him. He might well add,
“and very merry we were.”[345]

This laxity of manners is invariably laid to the demoralizing effect of
the Restoration, but it is evident from this portion of the “Diary,”
which was written before that event, that it was as usual for men to
visit ladies in their bedrooms before Charles II. “returned to take
possession of his birthright,” as it was afterwards. Thus we read that
on February 24th, 1659–60, Pepys took horse at Scotland Yard, and rode
to Mr. Pierce, “who rose, and in a quarter of an hour, leaving his wife
in bed (with whom Mr. Lucy, methought, was very free as she lay in
bed); we both mounted and so set forth about seven of the clock.” This
remark probably offended Lord Braybrooke’s modesty, for it appears for
the first time in Mr. Mynors Bright’s edition.

There are several passages in the “Diary” which are of interest, as
showing how our ancestors travelled. Although travelling by coach was a
very slow operation, much ground could be got over in a short space of
time on horseback. On the 6th of July, 1661, Pepys set out for Brampton
about noon, and arrived there at nine o’clock at night; having ridden
at the rate of about nine miles an hour, with allowance for stoppages
for refreshment.

The first great improvement in coach-building was made soon after the
Restoration, when glass-coaches were introduced. The Comte de Grammont
did not approve of the coach made for the King, and therefore ordered
from Paris an elegant and magnificent calash, which was greatly
admired, and cost him two thousand louis.

There were some who did not appreciate the improved carriages, and
were alive to the evils that were caused by the change. “Another
pretty thing was my Lady Ashly’s speaking of the bad qualities of
glass-coaches, among others the flying open of the doors upon any
great shake; but another was that my Lady Peterborough being in her
glass-coach with the glass up, and seeing a lady pass by in a coach
whom she would salute, the glass was so clear that she thought it had
been open, and so ran her head through the glass!”[346]

It is a curious instance of the survival of terms in popular language
that certain carriages were styled glass-coaches even within living
memory.

Although the hours kept by “society” in Charles II.’s reign were
considerably earlier than those now adopted, and Pepys often went to
bed by daylight,[347] yet people did sit up very late sometimes. On
the 9th of May, 1668, the House of Commons sat till five o’clock in
the morning to discuss a difference that had arisen between them and
the House of Lords. One night Pepys stayed at the office so late that
it was nearly two o’clock before he got to bed,[348] and at another
time the servant got up at the same hour to do the week’s washing.[349]
The watchman perambulated the streets with his bell and called out the
hours, so that when Pepys was sitting up to fill up the entries in the
“Diary,” he often heard the cry “Past one of the clock, and a cold,
frosty, windy morning,”[350] or some similar information.

It is not easy to settle with any great accuracy the respective values
of money at that time and at present, as many things were considerably
cheaper, but others were dearer. Bab May said that _£_300 per annum was
an ample income for a country gentlemen; a remark that was repeated
by Marvell, and increased by him to _£_500. The gentry did not like
this criticism, but it shows at least that money had a much greater
purchasing power then than now. In the winter of 1666–67 the farmers
were very unfortunate, and many were forced to become bankrupts, so
that property previously bringing in _£_1,000[351] suddenly became
worth only _£_500. The wages of a cookmaid were _£_4 a year, which
Pepys thought high,[352] and a coach cost _£_53,[353] but a beaver hat
was charged as high as _£_4 5_s._[354] Twenty-five pounds was paid for
a painted portrait, and _£_30 for a miniature, and _£_80 for a necklace
of pearls. Cherries were sold at two shillings a pound,[355] oranges
at six shillings a dozen, and dinners at an ordinary varied from seven
shillings to a guinea.

There are so many little items in the “Diary” which are of interest as
illustrating old customs, some of which still exist, and others which
have died out, that it would be quite impossible to allude here even
to a fraction of them. One or two instances, therefore, gathered at
random, must be sufficient. Pepys on several occasions mentions the
custom of “beating the bounds” in the various parishes on Ascension
Day or Holy Thursday, when a boy was in some cases beaten, or, as in
Dorsetshire, tossed into a stream, in order to impress very forcibly
upon his memory the locality of the parish boundaries. At one time
he writes, “This day was kept a holy-day through the town; and it
pleased me to see the little boys walk up and down in procession with
their broomstaffs in their hands, as I had myself long ago gone,”[356]
and at another, “They talked with Mr. Mills about the meaning of
this day, and the good uses of it; and how heretofore, and yet in
several places, they do whip a boy at each place they stop at in their
procession.”[357] Allusion has already been made to the mixed motives
that drew Pepys to church, and how he often attended more to the pretty
faces in the congregation than to the words of the preacher. He had
high authority for his conduct in the demeanour of the court, and he
himself tells us how, while Bishop Morley (of Winchester) was preaching
on the song of the angels, and reprehending the mistaken jollity of
the court, the courtiers “all laugh in the chapel when he reflected on
their ill actions and courses.”[358]

There is comparatively little in the “Diary” about the Nonconformists,
although in the early part of his career Pepys was more favourable
to their claims than to those of the conforming clergy. He was once
induced to give five shillings to a parson among the fanatics, who said
a long grace like a prayer, and was in great want, although he would
willingly have done otherwise. His aunt James, “a poor, religious,
well-meaning, good soul,” told him that the minister’s prayers had
helped to cure him when he was cut for the stone.[359]

We have a curious peep into a rustic church which Pepys and his cousin
Roger attended on the 4th of August, 1662: “At our coming in, the
country people all rose with so much reverence; and when the parson
begins, he begins ‘Right worshipful and dearly beloved,’ to us.”

There are several allusions in the “Diary” to various punishments in
vogue at the time. In 1663, the parish of St. Olave’s was supplied
with a new pair of stocks “very handsome,” and one Sunday, a poor boy
who had been found in a drunken state by the constable, was led off
“to handsel them.”[360] It was formerly the custom to punish offenders
on the spot where their crimes had been committed; thus, on February
18th, 1659–60, two soldiers were hanged in the Strand for their mutiny
at Somerset House. The bodies of the criminals were frequently allowed
to hang in some conspicuous spot until they rotted away; and on April
11th, 1661, Pepys and “Mrs. Anne” “rode under the man that hangs upon
Shooter’s Hill, and a filthy sight it is to see how his flesh is shrunk
to his bones.” London must have exhibited a ghastly appearance when
the heads of traitors were stuck up on the city gates, on Temple Bar,
Westminster Hall, and other public places. The heads and the limbs were
covered with pitch, and remained in their elevated position for years,
until in many cases they were blown down by the wind. Pepys once found
the head of a traitor at the top of one of the turrets of Westminster
Abbey.[361] Some of Charles I.’s judges received an easier punishment.
William Monson, the “degraded” Earl of Castlemaine, Sir Henry Mildmay,
and Robert Wallop were sentenced to imprisonment for life, and to be
drawn on sledges with ropes round their necks from the Tower to Tyburn
and back, on the anniversary of the late King’s execution. Pepys met
the three sledges on Tower Hill on the 27th of January, 1661–62.

If called upon in the character of a judge to sum up the case
against the people of England in respect to their manners after the
Restoration, I think it would be but fair to say that these were better
than those of their rulers. It was not until after the Revolution, when
the vices of Charles’s court had had time to pollute the children of
the men who brought him back, that the lowest depths of immorality were
reached.

FOOTNOTES:

[311] “Diary,” March 26, 1662.

[312] Nov. 1, 1663.

[313] April 4, 1665.

[314] Sept. 13, 1665.

[315] Nov. 14, 1661.

[316] Sept. 9, 1662; Dec. 28, 1667.

[317] “Diary,” Feb. 26, 1660–61.

[318] Dec. 25, 1666.

[319] Dec. 25, 1662.

[320] June 20, 1665.

[321] March 14, 1667.

[322] “Diary,” March 5, 1667–68.

[323] Oct. 9, 1660. This is one of the additions in Mr. Mynors Bright’s
edition.

[324] Smith’s “Life, Journals, &c., of Pepys,” vol. ii. p. 202.

[325] “Diary,” Dec. 3, 1661.

[326] “Diary,” Oct 31, 1663.

[327] “Diary,” Nov. 22, 1666.

[328] July 27, 1665.

[329] Jan. 21, 1660–61.

[330] “Diary,” Jan. 17, 1664–65.

[331] June 3, 1667.

[332] “Spectator,” No. 129.

[333] “Diary,” Sept. 15, 1667.

[334] Oct. 30, 1663.

[335] Nov. 3, 1663.

[336] Nov. 13, 1663.

[337] “Diary,” July 18, 1664.

[338] Sept. 3, 1665.

[339] Sept. 17, 1660.

[340] March 27, 1667.

[341] March 18, 1663–64.

[342] “Diary,” Jan. 17, 1667–68.

[343] Dec. 4, 1668.

[344] Jan. 3, 1664–65.

[345] April 12, 1665.

[346] “Diary,” Sept. 23, 1667.

[347] June 12, 1662; July 1, 1662.

[348] Jan. 30, 1664–65.

[349] March 12, 1659–60.

[350] Jan. 16, 1659–60.

[351] “Diary,” Feb. 27, 1666–67.

[352] March 26, 1663.

[353] Oct. 24, 1668.

[354] June 27, 1661.

[355] “When cherries were first introduced into England they cost as
much as 20_s._ a pound.”--Buckle’s “Common-place Book,” vol. ii. p. 395.

[356] “Diary,” May 23, 1661.

[357] April 30, 1668.

[358] Dec. 25, 1662.

[359] May 30, 1663.

[360] “Diary,” April 12, 1663.

[361] Oct. 21, 1660.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER XII.

AMUSEMENTS.

   “The shows of things are better than themselves,
   How doth it stir this airy part of us
   To hear our poets tell imagin’d fights,
   And the strange blows that feigned courage gives.”

   _The Tragedy of Nero._


In dealing with the amusements of Pepys’s day, we find how pre-eminent
a position the theatre held in popular esteem. The presentation of a
new play was looked upon as an event of the greatest moment, and the
various appearances of favourite actors were chronicled in the “Diary”
with considerable regularity.

Immediately after the Restoration, two companies of actors were
organized, who acted at two different houses: one theatre was known
as the King’s house, and the other as the Duke’s house. Sir William
Davenant obtained a patent for his company under the name of “The
Duke’s servants,” and as he had succeeded during the Commonwealth
in performing certain dramatic pieces under cover of a musical
accompaniment, his theatre was sometimes known as “The Opera.” A patent
for “The King’s servants” was granted to Tom Killigrew, whose house
was for distinction’s sake called “The Theatre.” Pepys has registered
as many as 145 plays which he saw acted, some of them several times
over, and there is every reason to believe that he saw many more
during the period over which the “Diary” extends, that he has omitted
to mention.[362] When the theatres were first opened, the old plays
were revived until the living dramatists had time to produce new ones,
but several of the old masterpieces held their ground for many years.
Among the revived dramatists were Marlowe, Shakespeare, Ben Jonson,
Beaumont and Fletcher, Ford, Massinger, and Shirley. In the whole of
Evelyn’s “Diary,” Hamlet is the only play of Shakespeare which the
author mentions as having seen acted, and his observation upon this is
that “now the old plays begin to disgust this refined age, since his
Majesty’s been so long abroad.”[363] Yet, in the one month of December,
1660, Pepys had seen two distinct plays of Shakespeare, and after
the date of Evelyn’s entry, he saw Henry IV., Hamlet, Twelfth Night,
Merry Wives, Romeo and Juliet, Midsummer Night’s Dream, Henry VIII.,
Macbeth, Othello, Taming of a Shrew, and Tempest, which proves that
Shakespeare was more generally appreciated than is usually supposed.
Here we have eleven plays, which is the largest number of plays by one
dramatist, with the exception of Fletcher, whose separate productions
and joint ones with Beaumont number as many as twenty-four. Shirley
comes next with nine, then Ben Jonson with five, Ford with two, and
Massinger with the same number. We have already seen how little Pepys
appreciated Shakespeare’s genius, but it seems as if he could not
enough express his delight in the plays of Ben Jonson. He describes the
“Alchymist” as “a most incomparable play,”[364] and the “Silent Woman”
as “the best comedy, I think, that ever was wrote;”[365] of “Every Man
in His Humour,” he writes, “wherein is the greatest propriety of speech
that ever I read in my life.”

Although some of the actors had gained experience on the stage of
Charles I.’s reign, most of them were novices, and it is therefore
remarkable to find such an array of talent at both houses.

Most of the old players were attached to the King’s company. Hart,
Mohun, and Burt were all fine actors, and they had acted female parts
before the suppression of the theatre, but Betterton, one of the
greatest actors that ever lived, was a host in himself and the mainstay
of the Duke’s house. Pepys was never tired of lauding his powers, and
delighted in seeing him act. His Hamlet was “beyond imagination,”[366]
and his Henry V. “incomparable.”[367] Mrs. Knipp was one of those
actresses of whom little or nothing is known outside the “Diary,” but
who makes a considerable figure there. Pepys was very partial to this
free-and-easy lady, and when we read of his behaviour to her we need
not be surprised to find Mr. Knipp alluded to as a “jealous-looking
fellow.”[368] This is the place to expose a cruel slander against a
worthy man, which Pepys has embalmed in his pages and which has not
been corrected by the editors. Pepys having occasion to mention Anne
and Beck Marshall, the well-known actresses, he sets down that Mrs.
Pierce told him how they were the daughters of Stephen Marshall, the
great Presbyterian, and then reports Nell Gwyn’s often-quoted speech
to Beck as to the difference in the education of the two; the latter
being “a Presbyter’s praying daughter.”[369] With such an authority it
is not surprising that Lord Braybrooke should reproduce the statement
in a note to another passage,[370] but on investigation the whole
bubble bursts. Stephen Marshall died on the 19th of November, 1655,
and was buried in Westminster Abbey. At the date of his will his wife
was dead, and five of his daughters were already married, three of
them at least to clergymen. The remaining daughter, Susan, who was
unmarried, must have been more than twenty-one years of age at the
time of her father’s death, as she proved his will. These important
facts were discovered by Colonel Chester, and set forth in his
remarkable volume, “Westminster Abbey Registers.” It did not concern
the Colonel to discover the parents of Anne and Rebecca, but he proved
very conclusively that they were not the children of the Rev. Stephen
Marshall. Another blunder is made in the “Memoirs of Count Grammont,”
where “Roxolana” in Davenant’s “Siege of Rhodes,” is confused with
“Roxana” in Lee’s “Rival Queens,” and in the notes it is inferred that
one of these Mrs. Marshalls was seduced by Aubrey de Vere, last Earl of
Oxford, of that name. The “Roxolana” who was deceived by Lord Oxford
with a false marriage, was Elizabeth (or Frances) Davenport, who is
frequently mentioned by Pepys.

At the revival of the stage after the Restoration, a more lavish
expenditure on scenery and dresses became common. Pepys tells us that
when Ben Jonson’s “Catiline” was acted at the King’s House, Charles
II. gave the actors _£_500 for robes which were required.[371] We
also learn that “the gallants do begin to be tired with the vanity
and pride of the theatre actors, who are indeed grown very proud
and rich.”[372] But a few years afterwards, when Pepys stepped up
to Harris’s dressing-room after the play, he observed “much company
come to him and the wits, to talk and to assign meetings.”[373] When
Kynaston was beaten by Sir Charles Sedley for imitating him, the
manager of the King’s theatre was forced to read Kynaston’s part in
“The Heiress,” much to the disadvantage of the _vraisemblance_ of the
play. Pepys writes, “but it was pleasant to see Beeston come in with
others supposing it to be dark, and yet he is forced to read his part
by the light of candles, and this I observing to a gentleman that
sat by me, he was mightily pleased therewith, and spread it up and
down.”[374] Pepys had occasional talks with Tom Killigrew on the state
of the stage, and heard from him of the scheme for setting up a nursery
of young actors in Moorfields, where plays should be acted; “but four
operas it shall have in the year, to act six weeks at a time; where we
shall have the best scenes and machines, the best music and everything
as magnificent as in Christendom.” For this purpose Killigrew “sent for
voices and painters and other persons from Italy,”[375] but all this
fine project came to naught, and two years afterwards he explained to
Pepys all that he had done for the theatre and what he proposed still
to do. He said “that the stage is now by his pains a thousand times
better and more glorious than ever heretofore. Now wax-candles and
many of them; then not above 3 lbs. of tallow: now all things civil,
no rudeness anywhere; then, as in a bear-garden: then, two or three
fiddlers; now, nine or ten of the best: then, nothing but rushes upon
the ground, and everything else mean; now, all otherwise: then, the
Queen seldom, and the King never would come; now, not the King only for
state, but all civil people do think they may come as well as any.”[376]

The theatres were open in the afternoon, three o’clock being the usual
hour for performance, and the plays were therefore acted by daylight
during the summer. The roof consisted of skylights made of thin glass,
which let the wet into the pit in times of heavy rain. Pepys felt the
inconvenience on one occasion, and he wrote: “Before the play was done
it fell such a storm of hail, that we in the middle of the pit were
fain to rise, and all the house in a disorder.”[377] A few years after
this the very same inconvenience was experienced. “A disorder in the
pit by its raining in from the cupola at top,” and this must often have
happened.[378]

When plays were acted at court, the performances took place at night,
probably because the actors were then free after acting at the
theatres. Sometimes even the King had to wait, as we read, “after all
staying above an hour for the players, the King and all waiting, which
was absurd, saw ‘Henry V.’ well done by the Duke’s people, and in most
excellent habits, all new vests, being put on but this night.... The
play continued till twelve at night.”[379]

It is here necessary to guard readers of the “Diary” against a mistake
very easily fallen into in respect to the various theatres, as the
editors have given no explanation to guide them. Davenant’s, or the
Duke’s, company occupied the old “Cockpit” in Drury Lane for a short
time after the Restoration, until they removed to Lincoln’s Inn Fields,
in the spring of 1662. Now Pepys frequently mentions the plays acted
at the Cockpit, but these were performed at night, and apparently the
Cockpit alluded to was the one at Whitehall, not that in Drury Lane.
This seems evident by an entry under date Nov. 20, 1660: “I found my
Lord in bed late, he having been with the King, Queen and Princess
at the Cockpit all night, where General Monk treated them; and after
supper a play;” because the Duke of Albemarle lived at the Cockpit
in St. James’s Park. Peter Cunningham mentions in the “Handbook of
London,” that he found in the records of the Audit Office a payment of
xxxˡⁱ. per annum, “to the Keeper of our playhouse called the Cockpitt,
in St. James’s Park,” but he gives no further particulars and does not
appear to have noticed how far the entries in the “Diary” illustrate
this appointment. On December 1st, 1662, the Duke’s company acted
before the King at the Cockpit, and January 5th, 1662–63, the King’s
company acted in the same place, but Pepys did not think the latter at
all equal to “the Duke’s people.”

All the entries in the “Diary” relating to the stage require more
investigation than they have yet received, as the notes of the
editors are quite insufficient. We have seen how the allusions to
the “Cockpit” in the years 1660–62, might either refer to the Duke’s
theatre or to the Court theatre, and the same confusion might easily
be made in respect to the Lincoln’s Inn theatre. Pepys says that on
November 20th, 1660, he and Mr. Shepley went “to the new play-house
near Lincoln’s Inn Fields (which was formerly Gibbon’s tennis-court).”
This was the home of the King’s company from 1660 till 1663, when they
went to Drury Lane. As already stated, the Duke’s company removed to
Portugal Street in 1662, so that for a short period the two rival
theatres were close together in the neighbourhood of Lincoln’s Inn
Fields. Pepys visited all parts of the house, and did not much care
where he sat so that he got in: thus on November 7, 1667, he was
“forced to sit in the side balcony over against the music-room, close
by my Lady Dorset and a great many great ones;” and some years before
he was somewhat troubled to be seen by two or three of his clerks,
who were in the half-crown box, while he was in an eighteenpenny
place.[380] The price of a pit seat was 2_s._ 6_d._, and in spite of
the inconvenience of the place in wet weather, it was frequented by
people of fashion; for instance, the Duke of Buckingham sat there,
and was surrounded by Lord Buckhurst, Sir Charles Sedley, Sir George
Etherege, and other poets;[381] and “a company of fine ladies” was not
absent.[382] But even at that time “citizens, ’prentices and others”
jostled their betters. Pepys writes: “I do not remember that I saw so
many, by half, of the ordinary ’prentices and mean people in the pit
at 2_s._ 6_d._ apiece as now; I going for several years no higher than
the 12_d._ and then the 18_d._ places, though I strained hard to go in
when I did.”[383] The theatres were generally crowded, and on special
occasions it was difficult to find a place. When Etherege’s “She
Would if She Could” was first acted, 1,000 persons were turned away
because there was no room in the pit an hour before the performance
commenced.[384] An ingenious plan for keeping seats which was in vogue
for many subsequent years is mentioned by Pepys. On May 2, 1668, he
writes: “To the Duke of York’s play house at a little past twelve,
to get a good place in the pit for the new play, and there setting a
poor man to keep my place, I out and spent an hour at Martin’s, my
bookseller’s, and so back again, where I find the house quite full. But
I had my place.”

When the theatre built for the King’s company in Drury Lane, was opened
in 1663, Pepys found some faults in the construction, one of these
being the narrowness of the passages in and out of the pit. He did
not approve also of the placing of the orchestra under the stage, by
which means the basses could not be heard at all, and the trebles very
faintly.[385]

Pepys does not mention <DW2>’s Corner in the King’s theatre, a name which
recalls the better-known <DW2>’s Alley of Her Majesty’s Opera House, but
it is alluded to in Dryden’s epilogue spoken at the new house in Drury
Lane on March 26th, 1674:

   “So may <DW2> Corner full of noise remain,
   And drive far off the dull attentive train.”

Pepys does, however, tell us how loudly people of fashion talked. One
day Sir Charles Sedley had a merry discourse with two ladies, which
prevented the Diarist from hearing any of the play. His feelings were
divided between pleasure in hearing the wit and annoyance in losing the
play.[386] The manners of most of the audience, as exhibited in several
little traits, were far from commendable, but it would be difficult to
equal the following incident, which is related as if there were nothing
particularly unladylike in it: “I sitting behind in a dark place [in
the theatre], a lady spit backward upon me by mistake, not seeing me,
but after seeing her to be a very pretty lady, I was not troubled at it
at all.”[387]

One of the institutions of the theatre was Orange Moll, who is
frequently mentioned in the “Diary.” The orange girls stood with their
backs to the stage, and the beaux in the pit broke jests with them.
One of these women tried to impose upon Pepys by affirming that she
had delivered a dozen oranges to some ladies in a box in accordance
to his order, “which was wholly untrue, but yet she swore it to be
true.” He denied the charge, and would not pay, but for quiet bought
four shillings’ worth of oranges at 6_d._ apiece.[388] This was the
usual price, as we learn from the prologue to Mrs. Behn’s “Young King,”
1698:--

   “Half crown my play, sixpence my orange cost.”

The mistress or superior of these women was named, for distinction,
Orange Moll.

Pepys makes a passing allusion to the old practice of placing the
notices of performances on posts, but the editors have left the passage
without explanation. He writes: “I went to see if any play was acted,
and I found none upon the post, it being Passion week.”[389] This is
well illustrated by an anecdote:--“Master Field, the player, riding up
Fleet Street a great pace, a gentleman called him, and asked what play
was played that day? He (being angry to be stayed upon so frivolous
a demand) answered that he might see what play was to be played upon
every _post_. I cry you mercy (said the gentleman) I took you for a
_post_ you rode so fast.”

The other amusements mentioned by Pepys sink into insignificance by
the side of the theatre, but a short enumeration of some of them may
be given here. The cock-pit, in Shoe Lane, was a well-known place of
resort for sporting men, and Pepys went to see some cock-fighting
there, but he soon had enough of it, although he was glad to have seen
“the strange variety of people.”[390] He went on one occasion to the
Bear Garden, on the Bankside, “and saw some good sport of the bull’s
tossing of the dogs: one into the very boxes,” but he did not much
like the company, and on the whole he thought it “a very rude and
nasty pleasure.”[391] At another time he went to the same place to see
a prize fight, but being ashamed to be seen, he went in a back way
(getting among the bulls, and fearing to be too near the bears) and sat
with his cloak before his face.[392]

Pepys did not practise athletic sports himself, but he liked to
see them practised by others. He was a spectator at a very serious
fencing-match where the combatants cut each other rather severely
both in the head and legs.[393] The King was a good player at tennis,
but Pepys thought it “a loathsome sight” to see his play “extolled
without any cause at all.”[394] Charles was in the habit of weighing
himself before and after a game, and on a certain occasion he lost
four and a-half pounds. The best players in England were said to be
Prince Rupert, Bab May, Captain Cooke, and Mr. (afterwards Sir Thomas)
Chicheley.[395] Pepys liked a game of bowls, because he could play it
with the ladies;[396] and he sometimes condescended to have a game at
ninepins.[397] Gaming ran high at Court, and we are told that Lady
Castlemaine played _£_1,000 and _£_1,500 at a cast, winning _£_15,000
one night, and losing _£_25,000 on another night.[398] No wonder Bishop
Morley denounced this excess in play, and specially commented on the
groom-porter’s conduct in one of his sermons before the Court.[399]

There are several references in the “Diary” to games of cards, but in
most instances the particular game played is not mentioned. Cribbage,
handycap (a game like loo), and gleek (played by three persons with
forty-four cards), are, however, all specially alluded to.[400]

Pepys played at shuttlecock on January 11th, 1659–60; at shuffle (or
shovel) board on July 30th, 1662, and on April 1st, 1665, and at
tables or backgammon on September 11th and 16th, 1665. Among the minor
amusements must be mentioned the crying of forfeits,[401] blindman’s
buff,[402] and crambo or tagging of rhymes.[403]

Dancing was in high repute, and Pepys describes the various balls
pretty fully. On the 31st of December, 1662, there is some lively
dancing at Whitehall. The King (a good dancer) opens the ball with the
Duchess of York, and the dancing commences with the Bransle or “brawl,”
of Shakespeare and Gray. Then follows the swift coranto, and the
country dances. When the King stood up, all the ladies, even the Queen
herself, rose. A few years later a gallant company again meet at the
palace, and the same order of proceeding is followed. First comes the
brawl, then the coranto, and last of all a dance from France, which the
King calls the “new dance.”[404]

Pepys learns the coranto himself in May, 1663, and two years afterwards
he disputes with Captain Taylor on the best way of dancing it.[405] At
first Pepys’s Puritan leanings led him to look rather unfavourably upon
dancing, but in the end he became tolerably fond of it. On January 6th,
1667–68, he had a party for which he engaged four fiddlers at a cost of
_£_3, and everything went off very satisfactorily in consequence. All
that Pepys has to say about amusements is to be found in the “Diary,”
for his letters contain no information respecting the stage or the
balls at Court. This is only another indication of how much we have
lost by the discontinuance of the “Diary,” for it is scarcely possible
to believe that the man who exhibited so absorbing an interest in the
proceedings of the theatre, should suddenly have ceased to visit it.

FOOTNOTES:

[362] These entries are of so much importance in dramatic history, as
giving definite dates for the performance of the various plays, that I
have thought it well to give a complete list in the Appendix.

[363] Evelyn’s “Diary,” Nov. 26, 1661.

[364] “Diary,” June 22, 1661.

[365] Sept. 19, 1665.

[366] “Diary,” Aug. 24, 1661.

[367] Aug. 13, 1664.

[368] Dec. 8, 1665.

[369] Oct. 26, 1667.

[370] Feb. 1, 1663–64.

[371] “Diary,” Dec. 11, 1667.

[372] Feb. 23, 1660–61.

[373] April 29, 1668.

[374] “Diary,” Feb. 2, 1668–69.

[375] Aug. 2, 1664.

[376] “Diary,” Feb. 12, 1666–67.

[377] June 1, 1664.

[378] May 1, 1668.

[379] Dec. 28, 1666.

[380] “Diary,” Jan. 19, 1660–61.

[381] Feb. 6, 1667–68.

[382] March 31, 1660–61.

[383] “Diary,” Jan. 1, 1667–68.

[384] Feb. 6, 1667–68.

[385] May 8, 1663.

[386] “Diary,” Feb. 18, 1666–67.

[387] Jan. 28, 1660–61.

[388] May 11, 1668.

[389] “Diary,” March 24, 1662.

[390] Dec. 21, 1663.

[391] Aug. 14, 1666.

[392] Sept. 9, 1667.

[393] “Diary,” June 1, 1663.

[394] Dec. 28, 1663; Jan. 4, 1663–64.

[395] Sept. 2, 1667.

[396] May 1, 1661.

[397] April 28, 1660.

[398] Feb. 14, 1667–68.

[399] Dec. 25, 1662.

[400] _Cribbage_, Jan. 2, 1659–60, May 15, 1660; _handycap_, Sept. 19,
1660; _gleek_, Jan. 13, Feb. 17, 1661–62.

[401] “Diary,” Feb. 4, 1660–61.

[402] Dec. 26, 1664.

[403] May 19, 1660.

[404] Nov. 15, 1666.

[405] April 23, 1665.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




CHAPTER XIII.

CONCLUSION.

   “Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter.”

   _Ecclesiastes_ xii. 13.


Now that all the divisions of our subject have been discussed, there
is little to add in a concluding chapter. We have seen Pepys in his
poverty, when he and his wife struggled to keep up a decent appearance
with an empty larder and a fireless grate at home. We have seen the
sudden change, when he became rich and increased his expenses with
an ever-present sense of the effect of his movements upon the outer
world. And, lastly, we have seen how he lived to an honoured old age,
and passed out of life as a worthy example of virtue and honour. We
have peeped into some of his dearly-loved books, and seen how the
“Bibliotheca Pepysiana” helps to illustrate the character of its
founder.

Having thus looked at the man as he lived, we passed on to his
surroundings. First, we dealt with the town he loved and knew so well,
then made the acquaintance of the relations and friends that surrounded
him, and lastly, tried to understand the arrangements of the office
where he spent so large a portion of his life. This was the inner
circle. The frequenters of the Court and the public characters with
whom he came into occasional contact or knew only from observation at a
distance, formed the outer circle of his life.

Byron, in allusion to the question, “Where is the world?” asked by Dr.
Young at the age of eighty, cried out:--

                                           “Alas!
   Where is the world of _eight_ years past? ’Twas there--
     I look for it--’tis gone, a globe of glass
   Crack’d, shiver’d, vanish’d, scarcely gazed on, ere
     A silent change dissolves the glittering mass.
   Statesmen, Chiefs, Orators, Queens, Patriots, Kings,
   And Dandies, all are gone on the wind’s wings.”

Yet we may point to the pages of Pepys’s “Diary,” and say that there
the globe is still whole, and that there men and women of nearly three
times eighty years ago live and move before our eyes.

In taking leave of the official, the gossip, the musician, and the man
of letters, I can only express the hope that these pages may be found
a useful companion to one of the most interesting books in the English
language.




APPENDIX.


    I. PORTRAITS OF SAMUEL PEPYS.

   II. THE SCHEMES OF ALEXANDER MARCHANT, SIEUR DE ST. MICHEL
        (MRS. PEPYS’S FATHER).

  III. PEPYS’S MANUSCRIPTS AT OXFORD.

   IV. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.

    V. PEPYS’S CORRESPONDENTS.

   VI. LIST OF THE OFFICERS OF THE NAVY.

  VII. PLAYS WHICH PEPYS SAW ACTED.




[Illustration: Decoration]




APPENDIX I.

PORTRAITS OF SAMUEL PEPYS.


PAINTINGS BY

1. _Savill_ (a painter in Cheapside). 1661. See “Diary,” Nov. 23.

    Jan. 6, 1661–62: “I sent my lute to the Paynter’s, and there I
    staid with him all the morning to see him paint the neck of my lute
    in my picture, which I was not pleased with after it was done.”

Pepys appears to have sat to this same painter for a miniature or
“picture in little,” which cost _£_3. See “Diary,” Feb. 20, 1661–62,
June 11, 1662.

    Jan. 28, 1661–62: “The Paynter, though a very honest man, I found
    to be very silly as to matter of skill in shadows, for we were long
    in discourse, till I was almost angry to hear him talk so simply.”

2. _John Hales._ 1666.

    March 17, 1666: “This day I began to sit, and he will make me, I
    think, a very fine picture. He promises it shall be as good as my
    wife’s, and I sit to have it full of shadows, and do almost break
    my neck looking over my shoulder to make the posture for him to
    work by.”

    March 30, 1666: “To Hales’s, and there sat till almost quite darke
    upon working my gowne, which I hired to be drawn in: an Indian
    gown.”

    April 11, 1666: “To Hales’s, where there was nothing to be found to
    be done more to my picture, but the musique, which now pleases me
    mightily, it being painted true.”

This picture was bought by Peter Cunningham, at the sale of the Pepys
Cockerell collection in 1848, and it was purchased by the trustees of
the National Portrait Gallery in 1866. The eyes look at the spectator,
and the face is turned three-quarters to the left. The music is Pepys’s
own song, “Beauty Retire.”

    “There is a similar picture belonging to Mr. Hawes, of Kensington,
    which Mr. Scharf, the Keeper of the National Portrait Gallery,
    thinks is either a replica or a good old copy.”--REV. MYNORS
    BRIGHT’S edition of the “Diary,” vol. iii. p. 423 (note).

Walpole mentions Hales in his “Anecdotes of Painting,” and says that
he lived in Southampton Street, Bloomsbury, and died there suddenly in
1679.

3. _Sir Peter Lely._ Pepysian Library, Magdalene College, Cambridge.

4. _Sir Godfrey Kneller._ Andrew Pepys Cockerell, Esq. This picture was
lent to the First Special Exhibition of National Portraits, 1866, and
was numbered 950.

5. _Sir Godfrey Kneller._ The Royal Society.

6. _Sir Godfrey Kneller._ Hall of Magdalene College, Cambridge.

7. A small portrait attributed to _Kneller_, representing a seated
figure; with a globe in one corner, and a guitar (or lute) and
compasses on a table, and a ship in the distance at sea. Mr. Scharf
suggests the possibility of this being the portrait by _Savill_
described above (No. 1), and this suggestion seems highly probable.
Mrs. Frederick Pepys Cockerell.

8. _Anonymous._ 1675.

    “The picture is beyond praise; but causes admiration in all that
    see it. Its posture so stately and magnificent, and it hits so
    naturally your proportion and the noble air of your face, that I
    remain immovable before it hours together,” &c. T. Hill to Pepys,
    Lisbon, July 1, 1675.--SMITH’S “Life of Pepys,” vol. i. p. 161.

9. The picture by Verrio at Christ’s Hospital, of James II. on his
throne receiving the mathematical pupils of the school, contains a
portrait of Pepys. The original drawing for the picture by Verrio is in
the possession of Andrew Pepys Cockerell, Esq.


ENGRAVINGS BY

1. Robert White. Kneller, painter. Portrait in a carved oval frame,
bearing inscription SAM. PEPYS. CAR. ET. JAC. ANGL. REGIB. A. SECRETIS.
ADMIRALIÆ. Motto under the frame, “Mens cujusque is est quisque.” Large
book-plate.

2. Robert White. Kneller, painter. Portrait in an oval medallion on a
scroll of paper. Motto over his head, “Mens cujusque is est quisque;”
underneath the same inscription as on No. 1. Small book-plate.

These two engravings are described by Granger.

3. J. Bragg. Kneller, painter. Frontispiece to vol. i. of the first
edition of the “Diary,” 1825 (4to.). “From the original in the
possession of S. P. Cockerell.” Picture described as No. 7, now in the
possession of Mrs. Frederick Pepys Cockerell.

4. J. Bragg. Kneller, painter. Frontispiece to vol. i. of the second
edition of the “Diary,” 1828; much worn in the third edition, 1848.
“From the original picture in the possession of S. P. Cockerell.”
Picture described as No. 4, now in the possession of Andrew Pepys
Cockerell, Esq.

5. W. C. Edwards. Kneller, painter. Frontispiece to vol. i. of the
fourth edition of the “Diary,” 1854. From the same original as the
preceding article.

6. Charles Wass. Walker, painter. In Smith’s “Life, Journals, and
Correspondence of Pepys,” vol. i. 1841, said to be in the collection of
the Royal Society, but this is a mistake.


PHOTOGRAPHS.

1. From the portrait by Kneller (No. 4), series of photographs
published by the South Kensington Museum under the superintendence of
the Council of the Arundel Society.

2. From Edwards’s engraving of Kneller’s Portrait, “Diary,” ed. Mynors
Bright, vol. i. 1875.

3. From Hales’s Portrait (No. 2), “Diary,” ed. Mynors Bright, vol. iii.
1876.


BUST.

The following extracts from the “Diary” refer to a bust which was made
for Pepys:--

    Feb. 10, 1668–69: “So to the plaisterer’s at Charing Cross that
    casts heads and bodies in plaister: and there I had my whole face
    done; but I was vexed first to be forced to daub all my face over
    with pomatum: but it was pretty to feel how soft and easily it is
    done on the face, and by and by, by degrees how hard it becomes,
    that you cannot break it, and sits so close, that you cannot pull
    it off, and yet so easy, that it is as soft as a pillow so safe is
    everything where many parts of the body do bear alike. Thus was the
    mould made; but when it came off there was little pleasure in it,
    as it looks in the mould, nor any resemblance whatever there will
    be in the figure when I come to see it cast off.”

    Feb. 15, 1668–69: “To the plaisterer’s, and there saw the figure of
    my face taken from the mould: and it is most admirably like, and I
    will have another made, before I take it away.”




[Illustration: Decoration]




APPENDIX II.

THE SCHEMES OF ALEXANDER MARCHANT, SIEUR DE ST. MICHEL (MRS. PEPYS’S
FATHER.)


The unpractical schemes of Mons. St. Michel are alluded to on pages
7–8 of this book, but the editors of the “Diary” have taken no pains
to obtain any information respecting him, and his name even does
not appear in the “Diary.” Lord Braybrooke suggests, without any
justification for the suggestion, that Mrs. Pepys’s mother had married
again (see “Diary,” March 29th, 1667).

Pepys was wrong in the date of the patent, which is numbered 138, and
Sir Edward Ford’s name does not appear in it. Sir John Colladon, a
Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, was naturalized by Charles
II., and appointed one of the Physicians to the Queen.

St. Michel’s name evidently puzzled the man who drafted the patent. The
following is a copy of the original patent:--

 “CHARLES THE SECOND, by the grace of God, &c., to all to whom these
 p’sents shall come, greeting

 “WHEREAS we are informed that John Colladon, Doctor in Phisicke,
 and Alexander Marchant, of St. Michall, have, with much paines and
 charge, found “A WAY TO P’VENT AND CURE THE SMOAKEING OF CHIMNEYS,
 EITHER BY STOPPING THE TUNNELL TOWARDS THE TOP, AND ALTERING THE
 FORMER COURSE OF THE SMOAKE, OR BY SETTING TUNNELLS WITH CHECKE
 WITHIN THE CHIMNEYES;” wᶜʰ Invenc̃on soe found out as aforesaid was
 never publickly exercised or made vse of in anie of our kingdomes
 or dominions: And whereas the said John Colladon and Alexander
 Marchant have humbly besought vs for their better incouragemᵗ to
 exercise and put in practice the said Invenc̃on, that wee would be
 gratiously pleased to graunt vnto them, the said Joh. Colladon and
 Alexander Marchant, our Lr̃es Patents of Priviledge for the sole vse
 and benifitt thereof, for the time and terme of fowerteene yeares,
 according to the statute in that case made and provided.

 “NOWE KNOWE YE, therefore, that we, of our princely inclinac̃on,
 being willing to incourage and promote works of this nature, and to
 give all due and fitting incouragemᵗ to the inventers of such arts
 as may be of publicke vse and benifitt, of our especiall grace,
 certeine knowledge, and meere moc̃on, and vpon the humble petic̃on
 of the said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant, have given and
 graunted, and by these p’sents, for vs, our heyres and successors, doe
 give and graunt vnto the said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant,
 their executors, administrators, and assignes, speciall licence, full
 power, priviledge, and authoritie, that they and every of them, by
 themselves, their or anie of their deputie or deputies, servants,
 workmen, or assignes, at all times and from time to time hereafter,
 dureing the terme of yeares hereafter in these p’sents expressed,
 shall and lawfully may vse, exercise, imploy, and enioy the said
 newe Invenc̃on in and throughout all our realmes and dominions, and
 every or anie of them, in such manner as to them or anie or either
 of them, in their or anie of their discrec̃ons shall seeme meet, and
 shall and may have and enioy the sole benifitt and advantage comeing
 or ariseing by reason thereof, dureing the terme of yeares hereby
 graunted; and to the end, the said John Colladon and Alexander
 Marchant, their executors, administrators, and assignes, and every of
 them, may the better enioy the full and whole benifitt and the sole
 vse and exercise of the Invenc̃on aforesaid, wee doe by these p’sents,
 for vs, our heyres and successors, require and streightly cōmaund
 all and every person and persons, bodyes politicke and corporate, of
 whatsoever qualitie or degree, name or addic̃on, they be, that neither
 they nor anie of them, dureing the terme of yeares hereby graunted,
 either directly or indirectly, doe or shall vse or put in practice the
 said Invenc̃on, soe by the said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant
 attained vnto or invented as aforesaid, nor doe or shall counterfeit,
 imitate, or resemble the same, nor doe or shall make anie addition
 therevnto, or substracc̃on from the same, whereby to p’tend themselves
 the inventors or devisors thereof, without the licence, consent, or
 agreement of the said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant, their
 executors, administrators, or assignes, in writeing vnder their hands
 and seales, first had and obteined in that behalfe, vpon such paines
 and penalties as can or may be inflicted vpon such offendors for
 their contempt of this our cōmaund in that behalfe, and further to be
 answerable to the said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant, their
 executors, and administrators, and assignes, according to lawe and
 justice, for their damages thereby susteined; to have and to hold all
 the said licences, powers, privileges, and authorities hereby graunted
 as aforesaid vnto them, the said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant,
 for & dureing the terme of fowerteene yeares from the makeing of these
 p’sentꝬ next ensueing, and fully to be compleate and ended, according
 to the statute in such case made and provided. And further, wee doe
 by these p’sents, for vs, our heyres and successors, give and graunt
 vnto the said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant, their executors,
 administrators, and assignes, full power and authoritie that they and
 every of them, their, every or anie of theyr deputies, servantꝬ, and
 agents, or anie of them, haveing first obteined a warrant in this
 behalfe from the Lord Cheife Justice of the Courte of King’s Bench
 for the time being, may, with the assistance of a constable or anie
 other lawfull officer, at convenient times in the day, dureing the
 terme aforesaid, and in lawfull manner, enter into and make search
 in anie houses or other places where there shall be iust cause of
 suspic̃on, for discovering and findeing out all such persons as shall,
 within the terme of fowerteene yeares aforesaid, imitate or cause
 to be imitated, or shall vse or put in practize the said Invenc̃on,
 by the said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant invented and found
 out as aforesaid, that soe such offenders may be proceeded agᵗ, and
 punished according to theyr demeritts, and theyr invenc̃ons and works
 tending to the ends aforesaid then and there found, to be seized upon,
 broken in peeces, and defaced, and the materialls thereof left in the
 hands and custodie of some constable or officer, to be disposed in
 such manner and forme as wee, our heyres and successors, shall from
 time to time direct and appoint. And further, wee doe by these p’sens,
 for vs, our heyres and successors, will, authorize, and require all
 and singuler justices of the peace, mayors, sheriffes, bayliffes,
 constables, headboroughes, and all other officers and ministers
 whatsoever, of vs, our heyres and successors, for the time being, that
 they and every of them respectively, be from time to time dureing the
 said terme hereby graunted, in theyr respective places, favouring,
 aydeing, helping, and assisting vnto the said John Colladon and
 Alexander Marchant, theyr executors, administrators, and assigns, and
 to theyr and every of their deputy and deputies, servantꝬ and agents,
 in and by all things in and about the accomplishment of our will and
 pleasure herein declared, and in the exercise and execuc̃on of the
 powers and privileges herein and hereby graunted, or menc̃oned to be
 graunted, as aforesaid. And moreover, wee will and cōmaund by these
 p’sents, for vs, our heyres and successors, that our said officers and
 ministers, or anie of them, doe not molest, trouble, or interrupt the
 said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant, or either of them, theyr
 or either of theyr executors, administrators, or assignes, or theyr
 or either of theyr deputie or deputies, servants, or agents, or anie
 of them, in or about the use or exercise of the said Invenc̃on, or in
 any matter or thing concerneing the same. Provided alwayes, that if
 at anie tyme dureing the said terme of fowerteene yeares, it shall
 be made appeare vnto vs, our heyres or successors, that this our
 graunt is contrary to lawe, or p’iudiciall or inconvenient, and not
 of publicke vse or benifitt, then vpon significac̃on and declarac̃on
 thereof to be made by vs, our heyres or successors, these our Lr̃es
 Patents shall forthwith cease, determine, and be vtterly voyde to
 all intents and purposes, and the same not to be vsed, exercised,
 or imployed, anie thing herein-before menc̃oned to the contrary
 notwithstanding. Provided further, that in case it shall be found or
 made appeare that the said Invenc̃on is not a newe Invenc̃on of the
 said John Colladon and Alexander Marchant, as to the publicke vse and
 exercise thereof within this our kingdome of England, then at all
 tymes from thenceforth these p’sents shall cease, determine, and be
 voyde, anie thing in these p’sents before conteined to the contrary
 notwithstanding. Provided alsoe, that these our Lr̃es Patents, or
 anie thing herein conteined, shall not extend, or be construed to
 extend, to give priviledge to the said John Colladon and Alexander
 Marchant, or either of them, their or either of theyr executors,
 administrators, or assignes, or anie of them, to vse, or imitate
 any invenc̃on or worke found out or invented by anie other person
 or persons, and publickly exercised within these our said relmes,
 or anie the dominions or territories therevnto belonging, vnto whom
 wee have alreadie graunted our like Lr̃es Patents of Priviledge for
 the sole vse, exercise, and benifitt thereof; it being our will and
 pleasure that the said John Colladon and Alexander Merchant, their
 executors, administrators, and assignes, and all and singuler other
 person and persons to whom we have alreadie graunted our like Lr̃es
 PatentꝬ of Priviledge as aforesaid, shall distinctly vse and practize
 their severall Invenc̃ons by them invented and found out, according
 to the true intent and meaneing of the said severall and respective
 Lr̃es Patents, and of these p’sents. And lastly, wee doe by these
 p’sents, for vs, our heyres and successors, graunt vnto the said John
 Colladon and Alexander Merchant, their executors, administrators, and
 assignes, that these our Lr̃es Patents, or the inrollmᵗ thereof, shall
 be in and by all things good, valid, sufficient, and effectuall in the
 lawe, according to the true intent & meaneing thereof, and shall be
 taken, construed, and adiudged most favourable and benificiall for the
 best benifitt and advantage of the said John Colladon and Alexander
 Marchant, theyr executors, administrators, and assignes, aswell in
 all courts of record as elsewhere, notwithstanding the not full and
 certeine describeing the manner and quality of the said Invenc̃on, or
 of the mat’ialls thereof, or of the true and certeine vse and benifitt
 thereof, and notwithstanding anie other defecte, incerteintyes,
 or imperfecc̃ons in these p’sents conteined, or anie act, statute,
 ordinance, provision, proclamac̃on, or restreint to the contrary
 thereof, in anie wise notwithstanding.

   “In witnes, &c. Witnes the King at Westm̃, the
   “Second day of May.

   “Ꝑ br̃e de privat. sigill.,” &c.

In 1665 St. Michel was again anxious for a patent. The following is
a copy of a petition preserved among the State Papers in the Record
Office:--

   “To the Kings most Excellᵗ Maᵗⁱᵉ.

 “The humble petic̃ion of Major Allexandʳ Marchant aꝉs de Sᵗ. Michell
 upon the River Couanon neare the Towne of Bauge in Anjou in France
 Esqᵉ. Sheweth--

 “That yoʳ petʳ hath invented the two following publick conveniences,
 first, for a generall forme how to keepe alwayes cleare water in
 ponds to wash horses, sweete & with as little Mudd in the bottome as
 the Owner thereof shall wish, if hee follow the direct modell of yoʳ
 Mᵗᵉ petʳ so being no Mudd Stincks (as now it is) a horse may safely
 bee washed in it & drinke there. Fire with it may be extinguished
 if accidents should happen, the stirring then being not noysome wᶜʰ
 now is so much, that in Somer time may cause an increase of the
 plague. All which Evills may bee prevented with as little charge to
 the owner as in the old fashion, so great inconveniences are (by the
 filthiness of these waters) contracted to horses with losses both to
 rich & poore especially those of the Army although Farriers for their
 gains, Ostlers to save themselves a Labour of going to the River doth
 mainteyne stincking water good to heale horses, but are convinced by
 the Argumᵗ: That the King having nowhere (as his Mᵗʸ may) the most
 stinking ponds to wash his Mᵗᵉ horses (if that were good) that through
 the Three Kingdomes by Rivers side & other sweete water where horses
 doe goe to Drink, no such corrupt ponds are erected to enter them in
 it, coming out of the cleare water.

    “All these things considered of yʳ Mᵗⁱᵉ yʳ petʳ beseecheth yoʳ
    Royall pleasure for a patent for this publick goode for 14 years
    that hee may manifest it. And that yʳ Mᵗⁱᵉ bee pleased to have
    incerted in the said patent that nobody whatsoever may not for
    the space of the said 14 yeares use the said invention without
    your petʳ Lycense under his hand & Seal or the hand & Seale of
    his Deputyes in any part of yoʳ Mᵗᵉ Dominions, wherein many ponds
    for cattle being so full of Mudd that there remaineth no room for
    water, without often great charges or Labour ill spent, Fish ponds
    also may bee so ordered. And that your petʳ may find no obsticle in
    receiving what hee shall contract for, with the severall partyes
    who shall make use of his said Modell.

 “Your petʳ further sheweth as to his second publick Convenience That
 hee hath also invented, That by Moulding (or by rubbing bricks ready
 made in a Mould of ruffe Stone) to any proportion of externall ornamᵗ
 for building as that being sooner ready then them that wich are carved
 & with great wast, Labour, time & cost spent.

    “Your Mᵗⁱᵉˢ petʳ: humbly desires yoʳ Royall Graunt also for it, And
    that it may bee inserted in the recited patent, that nobody may
    make none, nor cause none to bee made by yʳ petʳˢ Invention of what
    proporc̃on or Figure whatsoever to bee moulded or rubbed, but by
    Lycence of yoʳ petʳ: in the space of the said 14 yeares the patent
    also bearing what forfeiture yoʳ Maᵗᵉ may thinke just, & as also
    for the former demand that the discoverers of Transgressing, yoʳ
    Maᵗᵉ patent agᵗ: this publick good may find some encouragemᵗ.

    “And yoʳ petʳ shall pray,” &c.

The petition was referred to the Attorney-General.

   “Att yᵉ Court at Whitehall, June 2, 1665.

 “His Maᵗʸ is graciously pleased to referre this Petic̃on to Mʳ.
 Attorney Genrall to consider of this petitionᵉʳˢ suit & yᵉ nature
 of yᵉ invencon, & to certify his Mᵗʸ what his Opinion is upon it.
 And then his Mᵗʸ will be glad to signify his further Pleasure for yᵉ
 encouragemᵗ of a publicke Good.

   “ARLINGTON.”

The Attorney-General reported as follows:--

   “May it please yoʳ most Excellent Majᵗʸ.

 “In obedience to yoʳ Majᵗⁱᵉˢ referrence I have considered of
 this petic̃on, & conferred with the petʳ thereopon. And in case
 the perticulers therein menc̃oned to bee invented by him bee new
 Invenc̃ons (as for any thing yett appeareing to mee they are) Yoʳ
 Majᵗʸ, if soe graciously pleased, may grant the peticonʳ the sole use
 & benefitt thereof for fourteene yeares according to the statute in
 that behalfe made.

 “And such Grants usually have a provisor therein which render the same
 void in case the thing granted bee not a new Invention within the
 meaneing of that statute.

 “Which I humbly submitt to yoʳ Majᵗⁱᵉˢ further pleasure.

   “G. PALMER.”

The result was a warrant for a patent.

   “Sᵗ. Michel’s Invenc̃on.

 “Whereas Major Alexander Merchᵗ aꝉs Sᵗ. Michaell has by his long
 travailes, study, paines, & charges found out an invenc̃on or way for
 to keep yᵉ water that is in ponds wherein people wash their horses &
 in other ponds wholsome sweet & with little or noe mudd in yᵉ botome
 as also a way for yᵉ moulding, grinding or rubbing of bricks in any
 forme or shape wᵗsoever fit for the internall & externall ornamᵗ of
 any buildings within any of these Our Dominions. And whereas the sᵈ.
 Alex. Marchant aꝉs Sᵗ. Michael hath humbly besought us yᵗ Wee would
 bee graciously pleased to grant unto him Our Lr̃es Patents of licence
 & priviledge for yᵉ sole use & benefit of his severall Invenc̃ons for
 yᵉ terme of 14 yeares according to ye statute in such case made &
 provided. Our &c: containing our Grant, licence or priviledge unto yᵉ
 sᵈ Alexander Merchant aꝉs Sᵗ. Michael of yᵉ sole use & benefit of his
 sᵈ s̃rall invenc̃ons within these Our Realmes & Dominions for yᵉ terme
 of 14 yeares according to yᵉ statute in yᵗ behalfe made with such
 powers clauses & provisoes as are usually incerted in grants of like
 nature.

   “Snd. &c. yᵉ 7th of July, 1665.

   “To Our Attorney Genr̃all.       ARLINGTON.”

Not contented with curing smoky chimneys, purifying water, and moulding
bricks, St. Michel proposed in 1667 to raise submerged ships, and to
prevent others from being submerged.

 “Propositions dedicated to the King by Alex. Marchant, Sieur de
 St. Michel sur Couanon les Bauges, in Anjou, Captain and Major of
 English troops in Italy and Flanders, offering to show that he can
 draw up all submerged ships; can prevent others from being submerged;
 has discovered King Solomon’s gold and silver mines, much vaster
 than those discovered by Columbus, and now much fuller than they
 were in that King’s time. He wishes to satisfy His Majesty on his
 first proposition, lest the other should be deemed unworthy an
 audience.”--_Calendar of State Papers, Domestic_, 1667, pp. 252–3.

What a curious comment upon this statement of the discovery of gold and
silver mines is to be found in the following extract from the “Diary”:--

 March 29, 1667: “4_s._ a week which his (Balty St. Michel’s) father
 receives of the French Church is all the subsistence his father and
 mother have, and about 20_l._ a year maintains them.”

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




APPENDIX III.

PEPYS’S MANUSCRIPTS AT OXFORD.


Chapter V. p. 82.--Pepys’s manuscripts in the Rawlinson Collection at
the Bodleian Library, Oxford, are very fully described in the “Oxford
Catalogue of Manuscripts,” and the Rev. W. D. Macray’s Index to the
same. Besides the letters from various persons which are noted further
on in the list of Pepys’s correspondents, are a large number of copies
of letters from Pepys himself. The other papers are described as (1)
Naval and Official, (2) Personal and Miscellaneous. In the first class
are various notes on the state of the navy at different periods,
questions respecting shipbuilding, memorials, minutes, and reports. In
the second class are accounts of expenses, bonds, inventories, lists of
books, &c.; and in both classes are papers of considerable interest for
the purpose of elucidating the particulars of Pepys’s life. Besides the
above there are papers relating to other members of the family.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




APPENDIX IV.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.


Chapter V. p. 98.--The following notice of old musical instruments will
help to illustrate some of Pepys’s allusions:--

“The lute about three hundred years ago was almost as popular as is at
the present day the pianoforte. Originally it had eight thin catgut
strings arranged in four pairs, each being tuned in unison; so that
its open strings produced four tones; but in the course of time,
more strings were added. Until the sixteenth century twelve was the
largest number, or rather, six pairs. Eleven appear for some centuries
to have been the most usual number of strings: these produced six
tones, since they were arranged in five pairs and a single string.
The latter, called the _chanterelle_, was the highest. According to
Thomas Mace, the English lute in common use during the seventeenth
century had twenty-four strings, arranged in twelve pairs, of which six
pairs ran over the finger-board and the other six by the side of it.
This lute was therefore, more properly speaking, a theorbo. The neck
of the lute, and also of the theorbo, had frets consisting of catgut
strings tightly fastened round it at the proper distances required for
ensuring a chromatic succession of intervals.... The lute was made of
various sizes according to the purpose for which it was intended in
performance. The treble lute was of the smallest dimensions, and the
bass lute of the largest. The theorbo, or double-necked lute, which
appears to have come into use during the sixteenth century, had, in
addition to the strings situated over the finger-board, a number of
others running at the left side of the finger-board, which could not
be shortened by the fingers, and which produced the bass tones. The
largest kinds of theorbo were the _archlute_ and the _chitarrone_.

“The most popular instruments played with a bow at that time [1659]
were the treble-viol, the tenor-viol and the bass-viol. It was usual
for viol players to have ‘a chest of viols,’ a case containing four
or more viols of different sizes. Thus Thomas Mace, in his directions
for the use of the viol, ‘Musick’s Monument,’ 1676, remarks: ‘Your
best provision and most complete, will be a good chest of viols six in
number, viz., two basses, two tenors, and two trebles, all truly and
proportionably suited.’ The violist, to be properly furnished with his
requirements, had therefore to supply himself with a larger stock of
instruments than the violinist of the present day.

“That there was, in the time of Shakespeare, a musical instrument
called _recorder_ is undoubtedly known to most readers from the
stage-direction in ‘Hamlet’: ‘Re-enter players with recorders.’ But not
many are likely to have ever seen a recorder, as it has now become very
scarce.”--ENGEL’S _Musical Instruments_ (S. K. M. Art Handbooks), pp.
114–119.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




APPENDIX V.

PEPYS’S CORRESPONDENTS.


Chapter VII.--The following is a list of those friends and
acquaintances whose letters to Pepys are still extant. The greater
proportion of the letters are at Oxford, but some printed in the
“Diary” are at Cambridge.

  [The date is that of the letter. B. affixed shows that the MS. is
  in the Bodleian Library; S. that the letter is printed in Smith’s
  “Life, &c., of Pepys;” and P. that it is printed in the
  Correspondence attached to the “Diary.”]

  Ackworth, William, Storekeeper in Woolwich Dockyard, 1664. B.

  Agar, Thomas, 1679–87. B.

  Ailesbury, Robert Bruce, Earl of, 1684. B.

  Alberville, Marquis d’ [otherwise White], 1687. B.

  Alcock, Thomas, Master Caulker at Portsmouth, 1682–6. B.

  Allais, Denise d’, 1680. B.

  Andrewes, Sir Matthew, 1686–87. B.

  Andrews, Thomas, Contractor for the Victualling of Tangier, 1664. B.

  Anglesey, Arthur Annesley, 1st Earl of, 1672. B., S.

  Atkins, Samuel. B.

  Aylmer, Lieut. George, 1677–78. B.

  Baesh, Sir Edward, 1689. B., S. (spelt Beash).

  Bagwell, William, Carpenter of H.M.S. “The Prince,” 1668, 1681. B.

  Banks, C., 1678. B.

  Banks, Sir John, 1672–9. B.

  Barlow, Thomas, Clerk of the Acts, 1660–1. B.

  Barrow, Philip, Storekeeper at Chatham, 1663. B.

  Barry, James, 1678. B.

  Bastinck, Francis, 1674, 1679. B.

  Batelier, Joseph, Clerk in the Navy Office, 1681–83. B.

  Battine, Edward, Clerk of the Survey at Portsmouth, 1687. B.

  Beach, Sir Richard, 1677–88. B.

  Beane, R., 1682. B.

  Beaumont, Basil, Midshipman in the “Phœnix,” 1687. B.

  Bedford, Thomas, Deputy-Registrar of the Admiralty, 1687. B.

  Belasyse, John, Lord, 1675. B.

  Berkeley, John, 3rd Lord, of Stratton, 1678. B., P.

  Bernard, Sir John, 1677. B.

  Berry, Sir John, 1674–87. B.

  Berry, Captain Thomas, 1673. B.

  Bertie, Peregrine, 1688. B.

  Betts, Isaac, Master Shipwright at Portsmouth Dockyard. B.

  Bibaud, Henry, 1686–7. B.

  Bickerstaffe, Sir Charles, 1685–88. B.

  Bland, Mrs. Sa., 1664. B.

  Blathwayt, William, Secretary to James II., afterwards Clerk of the
    Council and Secretary at War, 1687. B.

  Bodham, W., of Woolwich Ropeyard, 1665–71. B.

  Bolland, Captain Richard, 1676–7. B.

  Booth, Sir William, Captain of H.M.S. “Adventure,” and Commissioner
   of the Navy, 1679–88. B.

  Bounty, Captain John, 1680. B.

  Bourk, William, Purser, 1687. B.

  Bowles, George, 1681. B.

  Bowles, Phineas, 1680–9. B.

  Brisbane, John, 1679. B.

  Brooke, Sir Robert, 1667. B.

  Brouncker, William, Lord, 1667. B., P.

  Browne, Captain John, afterwards a Cutler, 1682. B.

  Browne, John, Alderman and Mayor of Harwich, 1689. B.

  Bulkeley, Lord, 1687. B.

  Bulteel, P., 1687. B.

  Bunce, Stephen, 1676. B.

  Burchett, Josiah, 1687–8. B., P., S.

  Burton, Dr. Hezekiah, 1677. B., P.

  Butler, Sir Nicholas, 1688. B.

  Canham, Ambrose, 1684. B.

  Carteret, Sir Philip, 1686–7. B., S.

  Chamberlayne, C., 1687. B.

  Chardin, Sir John, 1687. B.

  Charlett, Dr. A., 1700–2. P.

  Chetwood, K., 1687. B.

  Chicheley, Sir John, 1673. B., S.

  Child, John, 1680. B.

  Child, Sir Josiah, 1673. B.

  Churchill, Captain George, 1688. B.

  Clarendon, Henry, 2nd Earl of, 1700–1. P.

  Clutterbuck, Sir Thomas, 1671. B., S.

  Colinge, Richard. B.

  Compton, Dr. Henry, Bishop of London, 1691. P.

  Cooke, Thomas, 1687. B.

  Copleston, Sir John, 1679. B.

  Corie, Thomas, 1675. B.

  Cotton, Captain Andrew, 1687. B.

  Coventry, Sir William, 1664–76. B. 1665, 1673. P.

  Cowse, William, 1688. B.

  Cramporne, Thomas, 1674. B.

  Creed, John, 1667–87. B.

  Custis, Edmund, 1675. B.

  Cuttance, Sir Roger, 1667. B.

  Dartmouth, George Legge, Lord, 1683–4. B., P. 1684–89. S.

  Deane, Sir Anthony, 1666–89. B. 1689. S.

  Delaune, Dr. W., 1702. P.

  Denise, Claude, Secretary to the Consistory of the Savoy, 1679–81. B.

  Dering, Sir Edward, 1687–8. B.

  Des Glereaux, Paul Thevenin Sieur, 1680. B.

  Des Moulins, Mdlle. Marie Lecoq, 1680–1. B.

  Done, Andrew, 1679. B.

  Donluis, Felix, 1680–88. B.

  Dore, James, 1689. B.

  D’Oyly, Edmund, 1679. B.

  Dryden, John, 1699. S.

  Duck, Mrs. Ann, 1682. B.

  Dummer, Edmund, 1679. B., S.

  Dunlope, Charles. B., S.

  Dyre, Captain William, 1679–81. B.

  Elkins, Richard, 1667. B.

  Ellis, John, Scrivener, 1678. B.

  Erlisman, Captain John, 1681. B.

  Ernle, Sir John, 1671. B.

  Evelyn, John, 1666–89. B. 1667, 1700. P. 1687–9. S.

  Evelyn, Mrs. Mary, 1687. B., S.

  Fairfax, George, 1677. B.

  Falkener, John, Woolwich Ropeyard, 1664. B.

  Feilding, Captain Henry, 1682. B.

  Ferrer, Mrs. Jane, 1668. B.

  Fist, Anthony, 1671. B.

  Fitzpatrick, Colonel John, 1687. B.

  Flawes, William, Captain of H.M.S. “Falcon,” 1679. B.

  Fletcher, Mathias, Carver to the Navy at Deptford, 1689. B.

  Ford, Lieut. Samuel, 1678–88. B.

  Fowler, Mrs. Anne, Widow of Capt. Fowler, 1687–8.

  Fowler, Thomas, Captain of H.M.S. “Swallow,” 1683–87. B.

  Fox, Simon, 1675. B.

  Francklin, Samuel, 1682. B.

  Frederick, Sir John, 1677. B.

  Frowde, Philip, Master of the Post Office, 1688. B.

  Furzer, Daniel, Assistant Shipwright at Chatham Dockyard, 1685. B.

  Gale, Roger, 1702–3. P.

  Gale, Thomas, D.D., 1680–90. B. 1680–8. S. 1688–9, 1700. P.

  Galenière, Mons. de, 1702–3. P.

  Gauden, Sir Denis, 1671–1682. B.

  Gauden, Jonathan, 1689. B.

  Gelson, John, 1683. B.

  George, Lieut. John, 1679. B.

  Gibbon, John, 1675. B., S.

  Gibbon, Mary, Wife of Capt. Thomas Gibbon, 1681. B.

  Gibbon, Captain Thomas, 1681. B.

  Gibson, Dr. Edmond, afterwards Bishop of London, 1696. P.

  Gibson, Richard, Victualling Agent to the Navy, 1670–88. B. 1688. P.

  Gifford, Captain William, 1688. B.

  Gordon, Sir Robert, 1687. B.

  Gough, Richard, 1683. B.

  Gray, J., son of Lord Gray, of Stamford, 1680. B.

  Gregory, Edward, Commissioner of Chatham Dockyard, 1670–89. B.

  Guilford, Sir Francis North, Lord, 1677–82. B.

  Guillym, S., 1688. B.

  Guy, Henry, 1680–1. B.

  Gwynn, Francis, 1688. B., S.

  Haddock, Sir Richard, 1681. B.

  Hall, Thomas, 1681. B.

  Hamilton, Thomas, 1679. B.

  Hancock, Giles, 1682. B.

  Harbord, William, M.P., 1679. B.

  Hardesnell, J., 1681. B.

  Harman, William, Captain of H.M.S. “Bristol,” 1675. B.

  Harris, Alexander, Messenger to the Admiralty, 1679. B.

  Hawer, Nathaniel, 1688–9. B. 1688–9. S.

  Hayes, Sir James, Commissioner of the Treasury in Ireland, 1666–73. B.

  Hayter, Thomas, Clerk of the Acts, and Secretary to the Admiralty,
    1673–9. B.

  Hebdon, Sir John, 1666, 1681. B.

  Herne, Sir Nathaniel, 1674. B.

  Hewer, William, 1675–88. B. 1682, 1688. P. 1675–88. S.

  Heywood, Captain Peter, 1679. B.

  Hickes, Dr. George, 1700–2. P.

  Hill, Joseph, B.D., 1676–88. B. 1681–9. S.

  Hill, Thomas, 1673–5. B., S.

  Hodges, William, Merchant at Cadiz, 1684–88. B.

  Holmes, Henry, 1688. B.

  Holmes, Sir John, 1677–9. B.

  Holmes, Lady M., 1687. B.

  Holmes, Sir Robert, 1688. B.

  Homewood, Edward, Chatham, 1686–7. B.

  Hopson, Sir Thomas, 1688. B.

  Hosier, Francis, 1666. B.

  Houblon, James, 1674–89. B. 1677–86. S.

  Houblon, Mrs., 1683. B., S.

  Houblon, Wynne, 1688. B., S.

  How, Edward, Carpenter of H.M.S. “Oxford,” 1686. B.

  How, Lieut. John, 1675. B.

  Howard, Mrs. E., Housekeeper to the Duke of York, 1671. B.

  Howard, Sir Robert, 1679. B.

  Howe, William, Judge at Barbadoes, 1681–88.

  Hughes, Thomas. B., S.

  Hunter, S., Clerk to the Trinity House, 1680–87. B.

  Jackson, John, brother-in-law of Pepys, 1676. B.

  Jackson, John, nephew of Pepys, 1687. B. 1699–1700. P.

  Jackson, Samuel, 1688. B., S.

  James II., 1688. B., P. 1679–81. P.

  Jaques, Captain William, 1678. B.

  Jeffreys, George, Lord Chancellor, 1687. B., P.

  Jenifer, Captain James, 1667, 1679. B.

  Jenkins, Sir Leoline, 1676–85. B. 1678–9. P.

  Jenner, Sir Thomas, Baron of the Court of Exchequer 1687. B.

  Jodrell, Paul, Clerk of the House of Commons, 1684–5. B.

  Jordan, Sir Joseph, 1667. B.

  Joyne, John, Watchmaker at Paris, 1680–1. B.

  Kember, James. B.

  Kennedy, Sir James, Consul in Holland, 1687–8. B.

  Killigrew, Admiral Henry, 1679–88. B.

  King, Gregory, 1692–3. P.

  Kirke, Colonel Piercy, of Tangier, 1683. B.

  Kneller, Sir Godfrey, 1690. B., S. 1701–2. P.

  Langley, Captain Thomas, Mayor of Harwich, 1667–87. B.

  Lanyon, John, Contractor for the Victualling of Tangier, 1664–6. B.

  La Pointe, ---- de, 1683. B.

  Latour, Raphael de la Bordasse, Seigneur de, 1680. B.

  Lee, Robert, Master Shipwright at Chatham Dockyard, 1685. B.

  Legendre-Tunier, T., 1669. B.

  L’Estrange, Sir Roger, 1681. B.

  Lewsley, Thomas, of Chatham, 1664. B.

  Lhostein, Captain Augustus, 1674. B.

  Littleton, Edward, 1689. B.

  Lloyd, Captain David, 1688. B.

  Loke, George, of Brampton, 1681. B.

  Lorrain, Jacques, 1680. B.

  Lorrain, Paul, son of Jacques, 1681. B. 1700. P.

  Loton, Rev. John, of Chatham, 1670–88. B. 1688. S.

  Lovelace, Thomas, 1680. B.

  Lowther, Sir John, Commissioner of the Admiralty, 1689. B.

  Luzancy, Hippolitus de, Vicar of Harwich, 1689. B., P.

  Lynch, Thomas, Purser, 1680–1. B.

  McDonnell, Captain, afterwards Sir Randal, 1687. B.

  Martin, Samuel, Consul at Algiers, 1667–76. B.

  Maryon, Joseph, of Clare Hall, Cambridge, 1681. B. 1680–1. S.

  Matthews, John, of Huntingdon, 1681–7.

  Maulyverer, John, of Magdalene College, Cambridge, 1679. B., P.

  Mayden, Thomas, Merchant, 1676. B.

  Middleton, Martha, Countess of, 1682. B.

  Middleton, Colonel Thomas, 1665–7. B.

  Miller, Thomas, of Brampton, 1683. B.

  Milles, Daniel, D.D., 1681–2. B. 1687. S.

  Mills, Rev. Alexander, of Sandwich, 1687. B., S.

  Montagu, Rev. John, 1674. B., S.

  Moore, Henry, 1667–9. B.

  Moore, Sir Jonas, 1678. B., S.

  Morales, ---- de, Portuguese Captain, 1680. B.

  Mordaunt, Lady Elizabeth, 1680–2. B.

  Moreau, Claude, Porter in Paris, 1680–3. B.

  Morelli, Cesare, 1674–87. B. 1681. P. 1674. S.

  Morland, Sir Samuel, 1677–88. B. 1686–8. P. 1687. S.

  Munden, Sir Richard, 1679–80. B.

  Murcott, Anne, 1687. B.

  Narborough, Sir John, 1679. B.

  Nelson, Robert, 1702–3. P.

  Nevett, Richard, Purser, 1681. B.

  Newlin, Robert, of Seville, 1684. B.

  Newton, Sir Isaac, 1693. P.

  Nicolls, Captain Matthias, 1681–2. B.

  Norfolk, Jane Howard, Duchess of, 1681. P. 1687. B., S.

  Norfolk, Thomas Howard, 7th Duke of, 1673. B., S.

  Norman, James, 1667. B.

  Norwood, Colonel Henry, 1679–81. B. 1679. S.

  Orford, Edward Russell, afterwards 1st Earl of, 1689. B., S.

  Papillon, Thomas, Merchant, 1673. B.

  Parker, Abraham, Muster-master in the Navy, 1673–4 B.

  Parry, Francis, Envoy to Portugal, 1679. B.

  Peachell, John, D.D., 1680–8. B., P. 1680–8. S.

  Pearse, Elizabeth, Laundress to the Queen of James II., 1682. B.

  Pearse, James, Surgeon-General to the Fleet, 1666–80. B.

  Pearse, James, Jun., 1677–86. B. 1679. S.

  Pedley, Sir Nicholas, of Huntingdon, 1682. B.

  Peletyer, Antoine, of Paris, 1669–80. B.

  Pellissary, Madame Bibaud, of Paris, 1680, 1687. B.

  Penn, Sir William, 1664. B.

  Pepys, Charles, Master Joiner at Chatham Dockyard, 1689. B., S.

  Pepys, John, Sen., 1664. B.

  Pepys, John, from H.M.S. “Sapphire,” 1687. B.

  Pepys, Richard, 1688. B., S.

  Pepys, Roger, M.P., 1674. B.

  Pepys, Thomas, 1681. B.

  Pepys, Mrs. Ursula, 1680–87. B. 1683. P. 1680. S.

  Perriman, J., of Rotherhithe, 1668. B.

  Peterborough, Penelope Mordaunt, Countess of, 1680. B.

  Pett, Mrs. Ann, widow of Christopher Pett, 1670. B.

  Pett, Christopher, 1666. B.

  Pett, Sir Peter, 1664–1684. B. 1684. S.

  Pett, Peter, 1682. B.

  Pett, Sir Phineas, 1672–89. B. 1686–88. S.

  Pett, Samuel, 1679. B.

  Petty, Sir William, 1683–87. B. 1683. S.

  Philipson, John, of Newcastle, 1682. B.

  Poole, Sir William, Captain of H.M.S. “St. David,” 1675–9. B.

  Povey, Thomas, 1672–86. B. 1672. P. 1680. S.

  Prestman, John, 1679. B.

  Priaulx, Thomas, of Seville, 1684. B.

  Prowd, Captain John, 1676. B., S.

  Puckle, James, 1679–80. B.

  Raines, Sir Richard, Judge of the Court of Admiralty, 1686–88. B.

  Rand, William, Governor of the Sea-Chest, 1672. B.

  Reay, Lord, 1699–1700. P.

  Reresby, Gars, 1683–4. B.

  Rich, Peter, 1680. B.

  Richmond, Charles Lennox, Duke of, 1671–2. B., S.

  Robins, Judith, 1687. B.

  Robinson, Sir Robert, 1667–79. B.

  Rochester, Laurence Hyde, Earl of, 1677. B.

  Rolfe, John, Alderman of Harwich, 1689. B.

  Rooke, Sir George, 1679.

  Rooke, Colonel W., 1679. B.

  Rooth, Sir Richard, 1674–87. B.

  Ross, Thomas, 1674. B., S.

  Row, Richard, 1675. B.

  Roydon, Charles, Captain of H.M.S. “Guernsey,” 1677–8. B.

  Rushworth, Mrs. Hannah, 1676–7. B.

  Russell, Charles, 1683. B., S.

  Ruvigny, Henri, Marquis de, 1679, 1681–2. B.

  Rycaut, Paul, 1686. B.

  Sackville, Captain Edward, 1679. B.

  St. John, Dr. John, Judge in the East Indies, 1688. B.

  St. John, Lady, 1687. B.

  St. Michel, Balthasar, 1670–89. B. 1672. P. 1673–4, 1689. S.

  St. Michel, Mrs. Esther, 1681–2. B., S.

  St. Michel, Samuel, 1689. B., S.

  Salisbury, Hugh, 1670. B.

  Sandford, S., Alderman of Harwich, 1683, 1686, 1689. B.

  Sandwich, Edward Montagu, 1st Earl of, 1665. B., P.

  Sandwich, Edward, Lord Hinchinbroke, 2nd Earl of, 1667. B., S.

  Sansom, John, 1675. B.

  Savile, Henry, 1672–9. B. 1672. P.

  Scott, Robert, Bookseller, 1681–8. B. 1688. P. 1681. S.

  Seaman, Dr. Robert, Alderman of Harwich. 1688–9. B.

  Shadwell, Edward, 1688. B.

  Shales, Captain John, 1688. B.

  Sheres, Sir Henry, 1675–87. B. 1683. S.

  Sheridan, Thomas, 1680. B., S.

  Sherwin, Judith, 1680. B.

  Shish, Jonas, Shipwright at Sheerness and Deptford, 1664. B.

  Silvester, Edward, 1671. B.

  Skelton, Bevil, 1686. B.

  Skinner, Daniel, 1676–7. B.

  Skinner, Ephraim, 1674. B.

  Skinner, Mrs. Frances, 1699. B., S.

  Skinner, O’Brien, 1679–82. B.

  Skinner, Peter, 1686–89. B. 1689. S.

  Slingar, Roger, 1684. B., S.

  Slingsby, Sir Henry, 1687. B., P.

  Smith, Sir Jeremiah, 1667. B.

  Smith, Dr. Thomas, 1702. P.

  Sotherne, James, 1680. B.

  Southwell, Edward, 1682. B.

  Southwell, Sir Robert, 1671–88. B. 1681–8. S.

  Spencer, William, Bursar of Peter House, Cambridge, 1686. B.

  Spragg, Captain Thomas, 1688–9. B.

  Spragge, Sir Edward, 1672. B.

  Stock, Abraham, of Dover, 1677–88. 1688. S.

  Stockdale, Robert, 1674. B.

  Stokes, W., Mayor of Dover, 1678. B.

  Strickland, Sir Roger, 1688. B.

  Sussex, Anne Fitzroy Lennard, Countess of, 1688. B., S.

  Taylor, Captain John, of Chatham Dockyard, 1667. B.

  Taylor, Captain Silas, 1672. B.

  Teddiman, Thomas, 1681. B., S.

  Thynne, Henry Fred, 1687. B.

  Tilghman, Abraham, Clerk to the Commissioners at Deptford, 1687.
    B., P., S.

  Tippetts, Sir John, Commissioner of the Navy at Portsmouth, 1664–85.
    B.

  Torrington, Arthur Herbert, Earl of, 1679. B.

  Tosier, Captain John, 1679. B.

  Trenchepain, François, 1679–80. B.

  Trevanion, Ri, 1680. B.

  Trevor, Sir John, 1687. B.

  Tuke, Lady (M.), 1687. B., S.

  Turner, Dr. John, 1682–87. B. 1680–88. S.

  Turner, Mrs. Mary, 1682. B.

  Turner, Tim, 1680. B., S.

  Tyler, Richard, 1667. B.

  Tyrrell, Captain John, 1687. B.

  Tyrrell, Sir Timothy, 1679–80. B.

  Vernon, John, 1681. B.

  Villiers, Sir Edward, 1681. B.

  Vincent, Nathaniel, D.D., 1682–8. B. 1682–8. S.

  Vittells, Captain Richard, Master Superintendent at Chatham, 1687–8.
    B.

  Walbanke, John, 1681. B.

  Wallis, John, D.D., 1688. B., S. 1699–1702. P.

  Waltham, Thomas, 1667. B.

  Warner, John, 1685. B., S.

  Warren, Sir William, 1664–88. B.

  Wells, Jeremiah, Rector of West Hanningfield, Essex, 1670–9. B.

  Wescombe, Sir Martin, Consul at Cadiz, 1686. B.

  Wheler, George, 1681. B.

  Williamson, Sir Joseph, 1689. B., S.

  Wivell, E., 1674–87. B.

  Wood, Dr. Robert, 1682. B., S.

  Woolley, William, 1684. B.

  Wren, Matthew, 1669–70. B., P.

  Wrenn, Captain Ralph, 1687. B.

  Wright, Edward, 1680. B. 1696. P.

  Wyborne, Sir John, Deputy Governor of Bombay, 1680–8. B. 1686–8. S.

  Wyborne, Lady (K.), 1683–8. B. 1686–7. S.

  Wylde, Captain Charles, 1683. B., S.

  Yeabsley, Thomas, Contractor for the Victualling of Tangier, 1664–5.




[Illustration: Decoration]




APPENDIX VI.

LISTS

_Of the Secretaries of the Admiralty, and Principal Officers of the
   Navy; viz., Treasurers, Comptrollers, Surveyors, Clerks of the Acts,
   and Commissioners of the Navy at Chatham; to the beginning of the
   18th century._ (_Compiled by Colonel Pasley, C.B., R.E._)


From the middle of the 16th to the end of the 17th century, Chatham
was by far the most important of the English naval stations, and the
Commissioner resident there had from the first a seat and vote at the
Board in London--a privilege which was not extended to his colleague at
Portsmouth until a much later date. The rise of the latter port dates
from the alliance with the Dutch, and war with France which followed
the accession of William and Mary, and which made it necessary to
establish a first-class naval yard at a less distance from the French
coast than Chatham. The same cause led to the construction of a dry
dock at Plymouth. See “Edmund Dummer,” in the list of Surveyors of the
Navy.

The figures in the first column represent the year of appointment,
when that can be ascertained. The prefix “circ.” implies that the
person named in the second column is known to have held the office at
the time stated, although the date of first appointment is not known.
In some cases the only date that can be found is that of an order
to the Attorney-General to prepare letters patent; sometimes that
of the patent itself; sometimes of a warrant to execute the office,
notwithstanding that the patent is not yet passed; and occasionally
that of a letter from some person at Court informing his correspondent
that the King or Queen has signed such and such a patent. It has been
thought better, therefore, to state only the _year_ of appointment, as
the insertion in lists of this kind of the month and day tends to give
them a delusive appearance of accuracy.

The scantiness of MS. records before the Revolution arises from the
practice which existed of retiring Officers taking away with them their
office books and papers, which they regarded as their own property.
This was put a stop to in the Dockyards by a Navy Board Order of the
18th August, 1692. Unless otherwise stated, the manuscripts in the
following lists are in the British Museum.


SECRETARIES OF THE ADMIRALTY,

_From the first placing of the Office of Lord High Admiral in
Commission to the commencement of the 18th century_.

 NOTE.--An asterisk (*) _before_ the name of a titled office-holder
 signifies that the title (knighthood or other) was conferred upon him
 during his tenure of that office.

  Date of
 Appointment.     Name.             Authority.     Lord High Admiral.

    1628    Edward Nicholas.    Cal. Stᵗᵉ Papers    In Commission.
                                      (Domestic
                                      Series).

      Nicholas had been Secretary to Lord Zouch, Warden of the Cinque
      Ports, and afterwards to the Duke of Buckingham, Lord High
      Admiral. On the assassination of the latter, in 1628, the office
      of Lord High Admiral was for the first time entrusted to a body
      of commissioners instead of to an individual, and Nicholas
      was appointed Secretary of the Admiralty. When the Earl of
      Northumberland was appointed Lord High Admiral, ten years later,
      Nicholas ceased to hold any office immediately connected with
      the Navy, but retained the post of Clerk of the Council. He was
      afterwards knighted, and became Secretary of State to Charles I.,
      and (after the Restoration) to Charles II.

    1638    Thomas Smith.       Cal. St. Pap.       Earl of
                                                     Northumberland.

    1643      ----?                                 Earl of Warwick.

    1645      ----?                                 A Committee of
                                                     both Houses of
                                                     Parliament.

    1648      ----?                                 Earl of Warwick
                                                     again.

      I have not met with any record of the names of the Secretaries
      during the period from 1643 to 1649.

    1649    Robert Coytmor.     Cal. St. Pap.       A Committee of
                                                     the Council of
                                                     State.

    1652    Robert Blackborne.  Cal. St. Pap.       Commissioners
                                                     appointed by Act
                                                     of Parliament.

      Blackborne had previously held the office of Secretary to the
      “Navy Committee,” a Committee of the House of Commons. The
      precise relations existing between the numerous committees and
      commissions at this period are not very clear.

    1653    Robert Blackborne.  Cal. St. Pap.       Commissioners
                                                     appointed by
                                                     Act of the
                                                     Convention.

    1654    Robert Blackborne.  Addit. MS. 18,986,  Do. by Patent
                                 fo. 150 (Letter     of the Protector
                                 to Blackborne       Oliver.
                                 from Commissr.
                                 Pett).

    1658    Robert Blackborne.  Admiralty Orders    Do. by Patent
                                 and Instructions,   of the Protector
                                 1656 to 1658        Richard.
                                 (Admiralty
                                 Library MS.).

    1659    Robert Blackborne.  Addit. MS. 9,302,   Commissioners
                                 fo. 183 (List of    appointed by
                                 Officers and        the Rump.
                                 Salaries of the
                                 Admiralty and
                                 Navy before the
                                 Restoration).

      Blackborne continued to hold the office of Secretary until the
      appointment of the Duke of York as Lord High Admiral in July,
      1660. He is frequently mentioned by Pepys.

    1660    *Sir William     }                      Duke of York.
              Coventry.      }  From “Mr.
                             }   Hewer’s account
    1667    Matthew Wren.    }   of the             Duke of York.
                             }   Secretaries
    1672    Sir John Werden. }   of the             Duke of York.
                             }   Admiralty
    1673    Samuel Pepys.    }   from King          King Charles
                             }   Charles II.’s       II, with a
                             }   restoration to      Commission.
                             }   King James II.’s
    1679    Thomas Hayter.   }   withdrawing,       In Commission.
                             }   December, 1688.”
    1680    John Brisband.   }                      In Commission.
                             }
    1684    Samuel Pepys.    }  (MS. in Pepysian    King Charles
                             }   Collection,         II. (assisted by
                             }   “Naval Minutes.”)   the Duke of
                             }                       York).
                             }
    1685    Samuel Pepys.    }                      King James II.
                             }
    1688    Samuel Pepys.    }                      Prince of
                             }                       Orange.
                             }
    1689    Phineas          }                      In Commission.
              Bowles.        }

    1690    James Sotherne.     Luttrell, ii.       In Commission.
                                 p. 10.

    1694    William Bridgman.   Luttrell, iii.      In Commission.
                                 p. 341.

    1695    William Bridgman    Haydn’s “Book of    In Commission.
              and Josiah         Dignities.”
              Burchett, joint
              Secretaries.

      The _date_ of the joint appointment is taken from Haydn, but the
      _fact_ is proved by Admiralty letters in the Chatham Dockyard
      Records, which about this time bear the signature sometimes of
      Bridgman and sometimes of Burchett as Secretary.

    1698    Josiah Burchett,    Luttrell, iv. 396.  In Commission.
              alone.

    1702    Josiah Burchett.                        Earl of Pembroke.

    1702    Josiah Burchett,    Luttrell, v. 176.   Prince George of
              George                                 Denmark.
              Clark, joint.

    1705    Josiah Burchett,    Luttrell, v. 605.   Prince George of
              alone.                                 Denmark.

    1708    Josiah Burchett.                        Earl of Pembroke.

    1709    Josiah Burchett.                        In Commission.

      NOTE.--Mr. Burchett continued to hold this office until 1742,
      when he retired. (“British Chronologist,” 29th Oct., 1742.)


TREASURERS OF THE NAVY,

_To the commencement of the 18th century_.

    Date of
  Appointment.       Name.                  Authority.

  circ. 1546   Robert Legg.              Harleian MS. 249.

      The first paper in this volume of the Harleian Collection is
      a “Confession taken of 23 of the crediblest forfathers at
      Deptford-Strande the 29ᵗʰ day of October (anno R. R. Hen. VIII.
      38vo.) consernynge the taking of the Gallye Blancherd, in the
      presens of Sir Thomas Cleire, Lieuftennaunt, Robert Legg Esq.
      Treasourer, Will. Brocke, Comptroller, Benjamin Gonson, Surveour,
      and Rich Brocke, Capitaigne of the Kynges Majesties Gallye
      Subtill.” I have not found any record of the date of Legg’s
      appointment.

    1549       Benjamin Gonson.          Additˡ. MSS. vol. 9295, fo. 56.

    1577       Benjamin Gonson and       Additˡ. MSS. vol.
                 *Sir John Hawkins,       9295, fo. 56.
                 joint.

    1578       Sir John Hawkins,         Cal. St. Papers.
                 alone.

    1595       Vacant.                   Cal. St. Papers.

      On Sir John Hawkins’s death in 1595, Roger Langford, his deputy,
      was appointed to do the duty of Treasurer, with the title of
      “Paymaster of Marine Causes,” pending the appointment of a new
      Treasurer, which did not take place till 1598.

    1598      *Sir Fulke Greville.[406]  Cal. St. Pap.

    1604      Sir Robert Mansell.        Cal. St. Pap., and
                                          Phineas Pett’s Autobiography.

    1618      Sir William Russell.       Cal. St. Pap.

    1627      *Sir Sackville Crowe,      Cal. St. Pap.
                Bart.

      Sir Sackville Crowe was one of the Special Commissioners
      appointed in 1618 by James I. to inquire into abuses in the
      navy. In 1627 Sir W. Russell was superseded in his favour, but
      three years later he was charged with misappropriation, or
      embezzlement, and was compelled to resign, when Russell was
      reinstated.

    1630      Sir William Russell,       Cal. St. Pap.
                again.

    1639      Sir William Russell,       Cal. St. Pap.
                and *Sir Henry
                Vane, joint.

    1642      Sir Henry Vane, alone.     Forster, “Statesmen of the
                                          Commonwealth.”

    1651      Richard Hutchinson.        Cal. St. Pap.

      Hutchinson had been Deputy Treasurer to Sir H. Vane, whom he
      succeeded as Treasurer in 1651. He continued to hold that office
      until the Restoration. He is several times mentioned in Pepys’s
      “Diary.”

    1660      Sir George Carteret.       Pepys, &c.

      Sir George Carteret had been Comptroller of the Navy before the
      Civil War.

    1667      Earl of Anglesey.          Duke of York’s Memoirs, p. 235.

    1668      Sir Thomas Osborne,        Duke of York’s Memoirs, p. 236.
                Bart., Sir Thomas
                Littleton, Bart.,
                joint.

    1671      Sir Thomas Osborne,        Duke of York’s Memoirs,
                alone.                    p. 236.

      The patent of Sir Thomas Osborne (afterwards Duke of Leeds) to
      be sole Treasurer is printed in the Duke of York’s “Memoirs of
      the English Affairs,” pp. 235–238. It recites and revokes the
      appointments of 1667 and 1668.

    1673      Edward Seymour.            Collins’s “Peerage of England”
                                          (Sir E. Brydges’ edition),
                                          vol. i. p. 195.

      Afterwards Sir Edward Seymour, Bart. The Duke of Somerset and the
      Marquis of Hertford are descended from him.

    1681      Viscount Falkland.         Luttrell, vol. i. p. 76.

      Lord Falkland died in 1694. (Luttrell, iii. 317.)

    1689      Edward Russell.            Collins’s “Peerage,”
                                          vol. i. p. 283.

      A distinguished naval commander. Afterwards Earl of Orford, which
      title became extinct at his death.

    1699      Sir Thomas Littleton,      Luttrell, v. 521.
                Bart.

      Died in 1710. (Luttrell, vi. 530.)

    1710      Robert Walpole.            Luttrell, vi. 534.

      Afterwards Prime Minister and Earl of Orford.

FOOTNOTES:

[406] Afterwards Lord Brooke.


COMPTROLLERS OF THE NAVY,

_To the commencement of the 18th century_.

    Date of
  Appointment.       Name.                  Authority.

  circ. 1514  John Hopton.               Cal. of Letters, &c.,
                                          Henry VIII.

      Hopton certainly held the office of Comptroller in 1514, but I
      have been unable to ascertain the date of his appointment. He
      died about 1524.

  circ. 1542  John Osburne.              Byng MSS. vol. x.[407]
                                          Admiralty Library
                                          (Pepys’s Naval Collections).

  circ. 1546  William Brock.             Harleian MS. 249,
                                          No. 1.

    1562      William Holstock.          Cal. St. Pap.

  circ. 1585  William Holstock and       Lansdowne MS. 43,
                William Borough,          No. 33.
                joint.

      At this period (1585) W. Borough was Clerk _and_ Comptroller
      of the Ships, but as Holstock certainly retained the office of
      Comptroller till 1589, I presume they must have held it jointly.

  circ. 1590  William Borough,           Cal. St. Pap.
                alone.

      After 1589 Holstock’s name appears no more at the foot of
      certificates or other papers connected with the navy recorded in
      the Calendars of State Papers, and it is probable that he died or
      retired then, leaving Borough sole Comptroller. The latter died
      about the end of 1598. (Cal. St. Pap.)

    1598      Sir Henry Palmer.          Cal. St. Pap.

    1611      Sir Guilford Slingsby.     Cal. St. Pap.

    1631      Sir Henry Palmer,          Cal. St. Pap.
                   junior.

    1639      Sir Hen. Palmer, jun.,     Cal. St. Pap.
                  and Capt. George
                  Carteret,[408] joint.

    1642      In abeyance.               Addit. MSS. vol. 9311, fo. 188.

      In 1642 the Parliament abolished the offices of Comptroller,
      Surveyor, and Clerk of the Acts, and constituted instead of them
      a Board of equal Commissioners. The Treasurer remained, but was
      no longer a member of the Navy Board.

    1660      *Sir Robert Slingsby.      Cal. St. Pap.; Pepys’s Diary.

      The Navy Board in its old form was re-established at the
      Restoration.

    1661      Sir John Minnes.           Pepys’s Diary.

    1671      Sir Thomas Allen.          Duke of York’s Instructions
                                          (MS. Admiralty Library).

      Died in 1685. (Luttrell, i. p. 358.)

    1685      Sir Richard Haddock.       Addit. MS. 9322.

    1686      In abeyance.               Pepys’s Memoir.

      The principal officers (except the Treasurer) were suspended, and
      the office placed temporarily under the charge of a body of equal
      Commissioners, as described in Pepys’s “Memoir.”

    1688      Sir Richard Haddock,       Pepys’s Memoir.
                restored.

      Special Commission revoked, and former officers restored.

    1715      Sir Charles Wager.         Byng MSS. vol. 13
                                          (Admiralty Library).

FOOTNOTES:

[407] This volume contains a transcript of part of Pepys’s
Naval Collections in the Library of Magdalene College, Cambridge. It
comprises some extracts from Lord Clarendon’s copy of the Council Books
of King Henry VIII. from 1541 to 1543, one of which records a letter
being written to Mr. Stanhopp and John Osburne, “Comptroller of the
King’s H.’ˢ Ships.” I cannot find the date of his first appointment.

[408] Afterwards Sir George Carteret, Treasurer of the Navy.


SURVEYORS OF THE NAVY,

_To the commencement of the 18th century_.

    Date of
  Appointment.       Name.                    Authority.

  circ. 1546  Benjamin Gonson.           Harleian MS. 249. (_See_
                                          Robert Legg, Treasurer.)

      Gonson was appointed Treasurer of the Navy in 1549.

    1549      *Sir William Winter.       Addit. MS. 5752, fo. 6ᵇ.

      Letters Patent of Philip and Mary, dated 2nd Nov. 1557, recite a
      patent of Edward VI. appointing William Wynter to be “Surveyor of
      our Ships,” and go on to appoint him “Master of our Ordnance of
      our Ships,” in addition to the Surveyorship. He continued to hold
      the joint offices for many years--certainly till 1589, perhaps
      later. The date of his death is uncertain.

    1598      *Sir John Trevor.          Cal. St. Pap.

    1611      *Sir Richard Bingley.      Phineas Pett’s Autobiography.

    1616      *Sir Thomas Aylesbury.     Cal. St. Pap.

    1632      Kenrick Edisbury.          Cal. St. Pap.

      This is the “Old Edgborough,” whose ghost was supposed to haunt
      the Hill House at Chatham. (Pepys’s Diary, 8th April, 1661.) He
      died in 1638.

    1638      William Batten.            Cal. St. Pap.

      Afterwards Sir William. (See 1660 below.)

    1642      In abeyance.               Addit. MSS. vol. 9311 fo. 188.

      A body of Commissioners appointed by Parliament instead of the
      principal officers.

    1660      Sir William Batten,        Cal. St. Pap., and
              restored.                   Pepys’s Diary.

      Died in 1667.

    1667      Colonel Thomas             Pepys’s Diary, 10th Dec. 1667.
                Middleton.

      _See_ Middleton in List of Commissioners at Chatham, 1672.

    1672      *Sir John Tippetts.        Duke of York’s Instructions
                                          (MS. in Admiralty Library).

    1686      In abeyance.               Pepys’s Memoir.

    1688      Sir John Tippetts,         Pepys’s Memoir.
                restored.

    1692      Edmund Dummer.             Luttrell, ii. 522.

      In the British Museum (King’s MS. 40) there is an interesting
      account by Dummer of a tour made by him in the Mediterranean
      on board H.M.S. “Woolwich” in 1682–84. The volume contains
      many plans and drawings. In the reign of William III., Dummer
      contrived a simple and ingenious method of pumping water from
      dry docks below the level of low tide, which enabled Portsmouth
      for the first time to possess a dry dock capable of taking in
      a first-rate man-of-war, previously regarded as impracticable,
      owing to the small rise of tide there as compared with that at
      Woolwich, Deptford, Chatham, and Plymouth. He also designed and
      constructed the first docks at Plymouth. (See Harl. MS. 4318;
      Lansdowne MS. 847; King’s MSS. 40, 43.)

    1699      Daniel Furzer.             Luttrell, iv. 556.

    1715      Jacob Acworth.             Byng Collection, vol.
                                          xiii. (MS. in Admiralty
                                          Library).


CLERKS OF THE SHIPS, OF THE NAVY, OR OF THE ACTS,

_To the commencement of the 18th century_.

    Date of
  Appointment.       Name.                   Authority.

  circ. 1482  Thomas Roger, or           Pepys’s “Miscellanies”
                  Rogiers.                (MS.) and Harleian
                                           MS. 433.

      The office of “Clerk of the King’s Ships,” or of the Navy,
      afterwards “Clerk of the Acts of the Navy,” is in all probability
      a very ancient one; but the first holder of the office whose
      name I have met with is Thomas Roger or Rogiers, who seems to
      have held it in the reigns of Edward IV., Edward V., and Richard
      III. In the third volume of Pepys’s MS. “Miscellanies,” p. 87,
      is an entry of an order dated 18th May, 22nd Edward IV. (1482),
      to the Treasurer and Chamberlain of the Exchequer to examine and
      clear the account of “our well beloved Thomas Roger Esq. Clerk of
      our Ships.” Harleian MS. 433 (supposed to have belonged to Lord
      Burghley) is a register of grants, &c., passing the Privy Seal,
      &c., during the reigns of Edward V. and Richard III., with some
      entries of other reigns. No. 1690 is the appointment of “Thomas
      Rogiers to be Clerc of all maner shippes to the King belonging.”
      It has no date, but is very probably a reappointment by Richard
      III. on his assumption of the throne.

    Temp.     William Comersale.         “Letters and Papers,
  Henry VII.                              Henry VIII.,” vol. i. p. 48.
    Temp.     Robert Brigandyne,
  Henry VII.    or Brikenden.
     1509

      “Privy Seal 28 July 1509 for Robert Brikenden to be Keeper or
      Clerk of the King’s Ships in the Realm of England, with 12_d._
      a day for himself, and 6_d._ a day for his Clerk, in the same
      manner as William Comersale,--out of the customs of Exeter and
      Dartmouth.”

                                         “Letters and Papers,
                                          Henry VIII.,” vol.
                                          iii. pt. 2, p. 1263.

      “Grant 21 April 1523:--Rob. Briganden, of Smalhed, Kent, alias of
      Portesmouth. Release, as Clerk of the King’s Ships to Henry VII.
      and Henry VIII., and purveyor of Stuffs and timber for the same.”

      From these two documents it appears that Brigandyne’s appointment
      as Clerk of the Ships in 1509 was a reappointment on the
      accession of Henry VIII., and that he had held the same office
      under Henry VII. after Comersale, who may very probably have
      succeeded Rogiers.

      Brigandyne’s name appears very frequently in connection with
      naval matters down to October, 1525, after which there is no
      mention of him in the Calendar of letters and papers.

    1526      Thomas Jermyn, or          “Letters and Papers,
                Germyn.                   Henry VIII.,” vol.
                                          iv. pt. 1, p. 954.

      Patent 1526, April 3rd. Thomas Jermyn, Yeoman of the Guard and
      Crown, to be Keeper or Clerk of the Navy, and Keeper of the Dock
      at Portsmouth, with 12_d._ a day, and 6_d._ a day for a Clerk,
      out of the issues of the Ports of Exeter and Dartmouth.

      From this date to 1530 there are numerous entries connected with
      Jermyn’s accounts as Clerk of the Ships.

  circ. 1540  Sir Thomas Spert.          Pepys’s “Miscellanies,”
                                          vol. vii. (MS. at
                                          Magdalene College).

      This volume of the “Miscellanies” includes a collection of
      payments made to the navy between 1537 and 1541. Amongst these
      are regular half-yearly payments at the rate of _£_33 6_s._ 8_d._
      to “Sir Thomas Spert, Clerke of the King’s Ships.”

  circ. 1563  George Winter.             Addit. MSS. vol. 5752.

      This volume contains an order of Queen Elizabeth, dated 16th
      July, 1563, to Lord Clinton, Lord High Admiral, to deliver
      certain stores to George Winter, “Clerk of our Ships.” I have
      been unable to find the date of his appointment to this office,
      which he continued to hold till his death in 1581. His epitaph
      in Dyrham Church, Gloucestershire, is printed in Bigland’s
      Collection. He was brother to Sir William Winter, Surveyor of the
      Navy and Master of Sea Ordnance.

  circ. 1585  William Borough.           Lansdowne MS. 43,
                                          No. 33.

      In February of this year Borough was Clerk _and_ Comptroller:
      see his letter of this date (Feb. 1584, meaning no doubt 1585
      as years are counted now) to Lord Burghley (Lansd. MSS. 43, 33)
      beginning, “To the righte honnorable the L. Burghley Lord Highe
      Treasourer of Englande--your suppliant William Borough Clarke and
      Comptroller of her Maᵗⁱᵉ Shippes,” &c. The paper is endorsed, “A
      dewtifull declaration, February Anᵒ. 1584. By William Borough
      Clarke and Comptroller of her Maᵗⁱᵉ Navie.” It is an original
      letter, the body written in a very neat hand of the period, and
      signed by Borough himself in a different, but also very neat,
      hand. As William Holstock was certainly Comptroller at this time,
      and had been so for more than twenty years, it is probable that
      he and Borough held that office jointly, whilst Borough also
      performed the functions of Clerk of the Ships. (_See_ List of
      Comptrollers.) As Winter died in 1581, and Borough had certainly
      been Clerk for some time before the date of his letter, it is
      probable that he immediately succeeded Winter.

  circ. 1600  *Sir Peter Buck.           Phineas Pett’s Autobiography.

      As Borough died in 1598 (Cal. St. Pap.), it is probable he was
      succeeded about that time by Peter Buck; but the first occasion
      on which I find the name of the latter mentioned as Clerk of the
      Ships is in the year 1600, by Phineas Pett. Sir Henry Palmer
      certainly succeeded Borough in the Comptrollership in 1598 (Cal.
      St. Pap.). Buck died in 1625. He had been for some years Clerk
      of the Cheque at Chatham before his appointment to the Board.
      He is mentioned by Pepys as one of his predecessors (“Diary,”
      14 Dec. 1660), who was not a little proud of his office having
      once been held by a knight. Lord Braybrooke, in his note to this
      entry, says that Buck was Secretary to Algernon Percy, Earl of
      Northumberland; but Buck was Clerk of the Navy at least two years
      before the Earl was born, and died when the latter was only
      twenty-three years of age.

    1625      Dennis Fleming.            Cal. St. Pap.

    1638      Dennis Fleming and         Cal. St. Pap.
              Thomas Barlow,
              joint.

    1642      In abeyance.               Addit. MSS. vol. 9311
                                          fo. 188.

      A body of Commissioners appointed by Parliament instead of the
      principal officers.

    1660      Samuel Pepys.

      Lord Braybrooke, in his note to the entry of the 27th June, 1660,
      quotes Pepys’s patent, in which Fleming and Barlow’s joint patent
      is recited and revoked, and Pepys was appointed Clerk of the
      Acts at a salary of _£_33 6_s._ 8_d._ per annum. But this amount
      was only the ancient “fee out of the Exchequer” which had been
      attached to the office for more than a century. Pepys’s salary
      had been previously fixed at _£_350 a year. Lord Braybrooke
      says, in a note to 9th Feb. 1664–65, that “Barlow had previously
      been Secretary to Algernon, Earl of Northumberland, when High
      Admiral;” but he was appointed Clerk of the Acts two months
      before the Earl became Lord High Admiral. Barlow had, however,
      been in his service at an earlier date, and had been appointed by
      the Earl Muster-Master of the Fleet under his command in 1636.
      (Cal. St. Pap.)

    1674      Thomas Hayter and        Addit. MSS. vol. 9307.
              John Pepys, joint.

      When Pepys was promoted to be Secretary of the Admiralty, he was
      succeeded in the office of Clerk of the Acts by his clerk and his
      brother jointly.

    1677      Thomas Hayter and        Orders and Warrants,
              James Sotherne,          1676–78 (MS. in Admiralty
              joint.                   Library).

      Sotherne was appointed “one of the Clerkes of yᵉ Acts of our Navy
      Royall,” in the place of John Pepys “lately deceased:” 12th March,
      1676–77.

    1679      James Sotherne,
              alone.

      Hayter was promoted to be Secretary of the Admiralty when Pepys
      was thrown into prison.

    1686      In abeyance.             Pepys’s Memoir.

      Special temporary Commission appointed, and the principal
      officers suspended.

    1688      James Sotherne,          Pepys’s Memoir.
              restored.

      Special Commission revoked.

  circ. 1690  Charles Sergison.

      Sotherne was made Secretary of the Admiralty in January, 1690,
      and it is probable that Sergison immediately succeeded him. The
      Letter-books of the Navy Board at Chatham show that he held the
      office in 1691, and held it until 1719.

    1719      Tempest Holmes.          Byng Collection, vol.
                                        xiii. (MS. in Admiralty
                                        Library).


COMMISSIONERS OF THE NAVY APPOINTED TO RESIDE AT CHATHAM,

_From the first establishment of that office in 1630 to the
commencement of the 18th century_.

    Date of
  Appointment.       Name.                    Authority.

    1630      Phineas Pett.            Phineas Pett’s Autobiography
                                        (Addit. MS. 9298).

      This interesting MS., in Pett’s own handwriting, contains full
      details of the life of the celebrated builder of the “Royal
      Sovereign,” or “Sovereign of the Seas,” from his birth in 1570
      until 1637, when it breaks off abruptly. It is endorsed, in a
      much later handwriting: “The life of Comʳ. Pett’s father, whose
      place he did enjoy.” A few leaves are wanting, but their contents
      are supplied by a complete transcript in the Harleian MS. 6279,
      in which, however (as well as in another transcript in the
      Pepysian Library), the orthography is somewhat modernized, and
      the handwriting is that of the latter part of the 17th century.
      Extracts from a copy of the Harleian transcript are printed in
      “Archæologia,” vol. xii.

      Pett died in 1647, at Chatham. Having submitted to the
      Parliament in 1642, he retained his office until his death in
      1647.[409]

    1647      Peter Pett.              Addit. MSS. vol. 9306
                                        (Navy Board Letter-book),
                                        shows that in
                                        Nov. 1648, Peter
                                        Pett held this office.

      I have not met with Peter Pett’s original appointment, but I have
      no doubt that he immediately succeeded his father Phineas, on the
      death of the latter in 1647. He was continued in the same office
      after the Restoration. In 1667, in consequence of the Dutch
      attack on Chatham, he was superseded, sent to the Tower, and
      threatened with impeachment. The threat was not carried out, but
      he was never restored to office.

    1667      Vacant.

      No new appointment was made for nearly two years after Pett’s
      removal.

    1669      *Sir John Cox.           Pepys’ Diary: Narborough’s Diary.

      Cox was master of the Duke of York’s flagship, “Royal Charles,”
      in the victory over the Dutch Admiral Opdam, 3rd June, 1665. Was
      captain of the “Sovereign” in the three days’ battle with the
      Dutch fleet in June, 1666. Master Attendant at Deptford in 1667.
      Resident Commissioner at Chatham, March, 1669. Appointed, 15th
      Jan. 1672, Flag-Captain to the Duke of York in the “Prince,”
      without vacating his office at Chatham. Knighted by King Charles
      II., on board the “Prince,” at the Nore, on the 27th April.
      Killed at the Battle of Sole Bay, on the 28th May in the same
      year.

      (See “Diary” of Captain John Narborough (afterwards Sir John),
      whilst serving as First Lieutenant on board the “Prince.” It is
      amongst the Pepysian MSS. at Magdalene College, and there is a
      transcript in the Admiralty Library.)

    1672      Colonel Thomas           Duke of York’s Instructions
                Middleton.              (MS. in Admiralty Library).

      Colonel Middleton was one of the Commissioners of the Admiralty
      appointed by the Rump in January, 1660. Engaged in the West India
      trade after the Restoration (see Duke of York’s “Memoirs,” p. 9).
      Appointed Commissioner at Portsmouth in 1664, and Surveyor of
      the Navy in 1667. Removed to Chatham as Resident Commissioner in
      June, 1672. Died in December of the same year.

    1672      *Sir Richard Beach.      Duke of York’s Instructions
                                        (MS. in Admiralty Library).

      Captain of H.M.S. the “Crown” in February, 1663. Served at sea
      till 1672, in which year he captured an Algerine man-of-war.
      Appointed Resident Commissioner at Chatham in Dec. 1672, and
      transferred to Portsmouth in the same capacity in 1679. Removed
      to the Board in London as Comptroller of Victualling Accounts in
      1690. Died in May, 1692.

    1679      *Sir John Godwin.        Addit. MS. 9312.

      Served in the navy as a lieutenant, and subsequently in the
      Victualling Department. Appointed Commissioner at Chatham in Dec.
      1679; removed to the Board in London, March, 1686; died in 1689.

    1686      Sir Phineas Pett.        Pepys’s Memoirs.

      Son of Peter Pett, shipbuilder, of Ratcliffe, and grand-nephew
      of Phineas Pett, the first Commissioner at Chatham. Appointed
      Master Shipwright at Portsmouth in June, 1660, and transferred to
      Chatham in the same capacity in the following month. Dismissed
      for misbehaviour in office on the 25th Sept., 1668, but restored
      three months afterwards on making submission and surrendering
      his patent. Promoted to the Board in London as Comptroller of
      Victualling Accounts on the 5th August, 1680, and knighted by
      the King on the same day. Transferred to Chatham as Commissioner
      in 1686. Dismissed on account of his political opinions on the
      accession of William and Mary.[410]

    1689      *Sir Edward Gregory.     Admiralty Orders,
                                        1688–9 (MS. in the
                                        Public Record Office).

      Served as a purser in the navy in 1662–3. Succeeded his father as
      Clerk of the Cheque in Chatham Yard in Feb. 1665, which office
      he resigned after holding it nearly twenty years. Appointed
      Commissioner at Chatham on the 20th April, 1689. Knighted by
      William III. in Jan. 1691. Retired on a pension of _£_300 a year
      in June, 1703. Died in 1713.

    1703      Captain George St.       Chatham Records.
               Lo.

      Attained the rank of captain in 1682. When in command of the
      “Portsmouth,” in 1689, was captured with his ship, and taken into
      Brest severely wounded. In 1693 he published a tract, entitled,
      “England’s Safety or a bridle to the French King.” In the same
      year he was appointed a member of the Navy Board. Transferred to
      Plymouth as Commissioner in 1695, and from thence to Chatham in
      1703. Superseded on the accession of George I., in 1714, by the
      omission of his name from the new patent for the Navy Board.

FOOTNOTES:

[409] Chatham Parish Register, quoted in “Archæologia,” vol. xii. p.
284.

[410] _Note respecting Sir Phineas Pett._--There were so many
shipbuilders of the name of Phineas Pett, that it is often difficult to
trace the history of any one of them. In February, 1660, Phineas Pett,
son of John Pett, and grandson of Commissioner Phineas Pett, being then
Assistant-Master Shipwright at Chatham, petitioned to be promoted, and
was appointed Master Shipwright at Chatham in the same month. But it
would appear that the appointment was revoked, or never carried into
effect, for in the following July we find Phineas Pett, “of Ratcliffe,”
who had been appointed Master Shipwright at Portsmouth in June,
transferred to Chatham in the same capacity. And in September Phineas
Pett, Assistant-Master Shipwright at Chatham, was suspended from office
on the accusation of having, _when a child_, spoken contemptuously of
the King! For this offence he was dismissed in the following month.

[Illustration: Decoration]




[Illustration: Decoration]




APPENDIX VII.

PLAYS WHICH PEPYS SAW ACTED.


CHAPTER XII.--Pepys was not very careful in setting down the titles
of the plays he saw, and in many instances he quotes the second
titles alone. This caution must be remembered by those consulting the
following list:--

  Adventures of Five Hours (Tuke), “Duke’s,” Jan. 8, 17, 1662–63;
    Jan. 27, 1668–69; “Court at Whitehall,” Feb. 15, 1668–69.

  Aglaura (Suckling), “King’s,” Jan. 10, 1667–68.

  Albumazar (Tomkis), “Duke’s,” Feb. 22, 1667–68.

  Alchymist (Ben Jonson), “Theatre,” June 22, Aug. 14, 1661;
    “King’s,” April 17, 1669.

  All’s Lost by Lust (W. Rowley), “Red Bull,” March 23, 1661.

  Antipodes (R. Brome), “Theatre,” Aug. 26, 1661.

  Argalus and Parthenia (Glapthorne), “Theatre,” Oct. 28, 1661.

  Bartholomew Fair (Ben Jonson), “Theatre,” June 8, Sept. 7, 1661;
    “King’s,” Aug. 2, 1664; “Court at Whitehall,” Feb. 22, 1668–69.

  Beggar’s Bush (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Lincoln’s Inn Fields”
    (King’s Company), Nov. 20, 1660; “Theatre,” Oct. 8, 1661;
     “King’s,” April 24, 1668.

  Black Prince (Lord Orrery), “King’s,” Oct. 19, 23, 1667; April 1,
     1668.

  Bondman (Massinger), “Whitefriars,” March 1, 1660–61; “Salisbury
     Court,” March 26, 1661; “Opera,” Nov. 4, 26, 1661; April 2, 1662.

  Brenoralt (Suckling), “Theatre,” July 23, 1661; “King’s,” Aug. 12,
     Oct. 19, 1667. (_See_ “Discontented Colonel.”)

  Cardinal (Shirley), “Cockpit” (Whitehall), Oct. 2, 1662; “King’s,”
     Aug. 24, 1667; April 27, 1668.

  Catiline (Ben Jonson), “King’s,” Dec. 11, 1667.

  Catiline’s Conspiracy (Stephen Gosson), “King’s,” Dec. 19, 1668.

  Chances (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Theatre,” April 27, Oct. 9, 1661;
     “King’s,” Feb. 5, 1666–67.

  Change of Crowns (Edward Howard), “King’s,” April 15, 1667.

  City Match (Mayne), “King’s,” Sept. 28, 1668.

  Claracilla (Thomas Killigrew), “Theatre,” July 4, 1661; “Cockpit”
     (Whitehall), Jan. 5, 1662–63; “King’s,” March 9, 1668–69.

  Coffee House (St. Serfe), “Duke’s,” Oct. 5, 15, 1667.

  Committee (Sir Robert Howard), “Royal Theatre,” June 12, 1663;
     “King’s,” Aug. 13, Oct. 29, 1667; May 15, 1668.

  Country Captain (Duke of Newcastle), “Theatre,” Oct. 27, Nov. 26,
     1661; “King’s,” Aug. 14, 1667; May 14, 1668.

  Coxcomb (Beaumont and Fletcher), “King’s,” March 17, 1668–69.

  Cupid’s Revenge (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Duke’s,” Aug. 17, 1668.

  Custom of the Country (Beaumont and Fletcher), “King’s,” Aug. 1,
     1667.

  Cutter of Coleman Street (Cowley), “Opera,” Dec. 16, 1661.
     (_See_ “Guardian.”)

  Discontented Colonel (Suckling), “King’s,” March 5, 1667–68.
     (_See_ “Brenoralt.”)

  Duchess of Malfy (Webster), “Duke’s,” Sept. 30, 1662; Nov. 25,
     1668.

  Duke of Lerma (Sir Robert Howard), “King’s,” Feb. 20, 1667–68.

  Elder Brother (Fletcher), “Theatre,” Sept. 6, 1661.

  English Monsieur (Hon. James Howard), “King’s,” Dec. 8, 1666;
     April 7, 1668.

  English Princess, or Richard III. (J. Caryl), “Duke’s,” March 7,
     1667.

  Evening Love (Dryden), “King’s,” June 19, 1668.

  Faithful Shepherdess (Fletcher), “Royal Theatre,” June 13, 1663;
     “King’s,” Oct. 14, 1668; Feb. 26, 1668–69.

  Father’s Own Son, “Theatre,” Sept. 28, Nov. 13, 1661.

  Faustus, Dr. (Marlow), “Red Bull,” May 26, 1662.

  Feign Innocence, or Sir Martin Marr-all (Duke of Newcastle,
     corrected by Dryden), “Duke’s,” Aug. 16, 20, 1667. (_See_ “Sir
     Martin Marr-all.”)

  Flora’s Vagaries (Rhodes), “King’s,” Aug. 8, 1664; Oct. 5, 1667;
     Feb. 18, 1667–68.

  French Dancing Master, “Theatre,” May 21, 1662.

  General (Shirley), “King’s,” April 24, 1669.

  Generous Portugals, “King’s,” April 23, 1669.

  German Princess (Holden), “Duke’s,” April 15, 1664.

  Ghosts (Holden), “Duke’s,” April 17, 1665.

  Goblins (Suckling), “King’s,” May 22, 1667.

  Grateful Servant (Shirley), “Duke’s,” Feb. 20, 1668–69.

  Greene’s Tu Quoque (Cooke), “Duke’s,” Sept. 12, 16, 1667.

  Guardian (Cowley), “Duke’s,” Aug. 5, 1668. (_See_ “Cutter of
     Coleman Street.”)

  Guzman (Lord Orrery), “Duke’s,” April 16, 1669.

  Hamlet (Shakespeare), “Opera,” Aug. 24, 1661; “Theatre,” Nov. 27,
     1661; “Duke’s,” May 28, 1663; Aug. 31, 1668.

  Heiress (Duke of Newcastle?), “King’s,” Feb. 2, 1668–69.

  Henry IV. (Shakespeare), “Theatre,” Dec. 31, 1660–61; June 4, 1661;
     “King’s,” Nov. 2, 1667; Jan. 7, 1667–68; Sept. 18, 1668.

  Henry V. (Lord Orrery), “Duke’s,” Aug, 13, 1664; July 6, 1668; “Court
     at Whitehall,” Dec. 28, 1666.

  Henry VIII. (Shakespeare or Davenant), “Duke’s,” Dec. 10, 22, 1663;
     Jan. 1, 1663–64; Dec. 30, 1668–69.

  Heraclius (Corneille), “Duke’s,” March 8, 1663–64; Feb. 4, 1666–67;
     Sept. 5, 1667.

  Horace (Corneille, translated by Catherine Phillips), “King’s,”
     Jan. 19, 1668–69.

  Humorous Lieutenant (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Cockpit” (Whitehall),
     April 20, 1661.

  Hyde Park (Shirley), “King’s,” July 11, 1668.

  Impertinents (Shadwell), “Duke’s,” May 2, 4; June 24, 1668; April 14,
     1669. (_See_ “Sullen Lovers.”)

  Indian Emperor (Dryden), “King’s,” Aug. 22, 1667; Nov. 11, 1667;
     March 28, April 21, 1668.

  Indian Queen (Howard and Dryden), “King’s,” Jan. 31, 1663–64; June 27,
     1668.

  Island Princess (Beaumont and Fletcher), “King’s,” Jan. 7, Feb. 9,
     1668–69.

  Jovial Crew (R. Brome), “Theatre,” July 25, Aug 27, Nov. 1, 1661;
     “King’s,” Jan. 11, 1668–69.

  King and no King (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Theatre,” March 14,
     1660–61; Sept. 26, 1661.

  Knight of the Burning Pestle (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Theatre,”
     May 7, 1662.

  Labyrinth (Corneille), “King’s,” May 2, 1664.

  Ladies a la-Mode (Dryden? Translated from the French), “King’s,”
     Sept. 15, 1668.

  Lady’s Trial (Ford), “Duke’s,” March 3, 1668–69.

  Law against Lovers (Davenant), “Opera,” Feb. 18, 1661–62.

  Liar (Corneille), “King’s,” Nov. 28, 1667.

  Little Thief (Fletcher), “White Friars,” April 2, 1661; “Theatre,”
     May 19, 1662.

  Love and Honour (Davenant), “Opera,” Oct. 21, 1661.

  Love at first Sight (Killigrew), “Theatre,” Nov. 29, 1661.

  Love Despised (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Duke’s,” Aug. 17, 1668.

  Love in a Maze (Shirley), “Theatre,” May 22, 1662; June 10, 1663;
     “King’s,” May 1, 1667; Feb. 7, 1667–68; April 28, 1668.

  Love in a Tub (Etherege), “Court at Whitehall,” Oct. 29, 1666;
     “Duke’s,” April 29, 1668.

  Love’s Cruelty (Shirley), “King’s,” Dec. 30, 1667.

  Love’s Mistress (T. Heywood), “Theatre,” March 11, 1660–61.

  Love’s Quarrel, “Salisbury Court,” April 6, 1661; “King’s,” May 15,
     1665; Aug. 15, 1668.

  Love’s Tricks or the School of Compliment (Shirley), “Duke’s,”
     Aug. 5, 1667.

  Macbeth (Shakespeare), “Duke’s,” Nov. 5, 1664; Dec. 28, 1666; Jan. 8,
     1666–67; Oct. 16, Nov. 7, 1667; Aug. 12, Dec. 21, 1668;
     Jan. 15, 1668–69.

  Mad Couple (Hon. James Howard), “King’s,” Sept. 20, Dec. 28, 1667;
     July 29, 1668.

  Mad Lover (Beaumont and Fletcher), “White Friars,” Feb. 9, 1660–61;
     “Opera,” Dec. 2, 1661; “Duke’s,” Feb. 18, 1668–69.

  Maid of the Mill (Fletcher and Rowley), “Opera,” April 1, 1662;
     “Duke’s,” Sept. 10, 1668.

  Maid’s Tragedy (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Theatre,” May 16, 1661;
     “King’s,” Dec. 7, 1666; Feb. 18, 1666–67; April 15, May 9, 1668.

  Maiden Queen (Dryden), “King’s,” March 2, 1666–67; May 24, Aug. 23,
     1667; Jan. 24, 1667–68; Jan. 1, 13, 1668–69.

  Man is the Master (Davenant, translated from Scarron), “Duke’s,”
     March 26, May 7, 1668.

  Merry Devil of Edmonton, “Theatre,” Aug. 10, 1661.

  Merry Wives of Windsor (Shakespeare), “Theatre,” Dec. 5, 1660; Sept.
     25, 1661; “King’s,” Aug. 15, 1667.

  Midsummer Night’s Dream (Shakespeare), “King’s,” Sept. 29, 1662.

  Mistaken Beauty (Corneille), “King’s,” Nov. 28, 1667.

  Mock Astrologer, “King’s,” March 8, 1668–69.

  Monsieur Ragou (J. Lacey), “King’s,” July 31, 1668.

  Moor of Venice (Shakespeare), “Cockpit” (Whitehall), Oct. 11, 1660;
     “King’s,” Feb. 6, 1668–69.

  Mulberry Garden (Sedley), “King’s,” May 18, June 29, 1668.

  Mustapha (Lord Orrery), “Duke’s,” April 3, 1665; Jan. 5, 1666–67;
     Sept. 4, 1667; Feb. 11, 1667–68.

  Northern Castle, “King’s,” Sept. 14, 1667.

  Othello (Shakespeare), “Cockpit” (Whitehall), Oct. 11, 1660; “King’s,”
     Feb. 6, 1668–69.

  Parson’s Wedding (T. Killigrew), “King’s,” Oct. 11, 1664.

  Philaster (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Theatre,” Nov. 18, 1661; “King’s,”
     May 30, 1668.

  Queen Elizabeth’s Troubles (T. Heywood), “Duke’s,” Aug. 17, 1667.

  Queen of Arragon (W. Habington), “Duke’s,” Oct. 19, 1668.

  Queen’s Masque (T. Heywood), “Salisbury Court,” March 2, 25, 1660–61.
     (_See_ “Love’s Mistress.”)

  Rival Ladies (Dryden), “King’s,” Aug. 4, 1664.

  Rivals (Davenant, from “Two Noble Kinsmen”), “Duke’s,” Sept. 9,
     Dec. 1664.

  Rolla [Query, same as “Rollo”], “King’s,” April 17, 1667.

  Rollo, Duke of Normandy (J. Fletcher), “Theatre,” March 28, 1661;
     “King’s,” Sept. 17, 1668.

  Roman Virgin (Betterton’s alteration of Webster’s “Appius and
     Virginia”), “Duke’s,” May 12, 1669.

  Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare), “Opera,” March 1, 1661–62.

  Royal Shepherdess (alteration by Shadwell of Fountain’s “Rewards of
     Virtue”), “Duke’s,” Feb. 26, 1668–9.

  Rule a Wife and have a Wife (J. Fletcher), “Whitefriars,” April 1,
     1661; “Theatre,” Feb. 5, 1661–62.

  School of Compliments (Shirley), “Duke’s,” Jan. 7, 1667–68.

  Scornful Lady (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Cockpit” (Whitehall),
     Nov. 17, 1662; “King’s,” Dec. 27, 1666; Sept. 16, 1667;
     June 3, 1668.

  Sea Voyage (Beaumont and Fletcher), “King’s,” May 16, 1668.

  She Would if She Could (Etherege), “Duke’s,” Feb. 6, 1667–68; Feb. 1,
     1668–69.

  Siege of Rhodes, Part 2 (Davenant), “Opera,” Nov. 15, 1661; May 20,
     1662; “Duke’s,” Dec. 27, 1662, May 21, 1667.

  Silent Woman (Ben Jonson), “Theatre,” May 25, 1661; “King’s,” June 1,
     1664; April 16, 1667; Sept. 19, 1668.

  Sir Martin Marr-all (Duke of Newcastle, corrected by Dryden),
     “Duke’s,” Aug. 16, 20, Sept. 28, Oct. 14, 1667; Jan. 1, 1667–68;
     April 25, May 22, 1668.

  Slighted Maid (Sir R. Stapylton), “Duke’s,” Feb. 23, 1662–63;
     May 29, 1663.

  Spanish Curate (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Whitefriars,” March 16,
     1660–61; July 28, 1668; “King’s,” May 17, 1669.

  Spanish Gipsy (Middleton and Rowley), “King’s,” March 7, 1667–68.

  Storm (Fletcher), “King’s,” Sept. 25, 1667; March 25, 1668.

  Sullen Lovers or the Impertinents (T. Shadwell), “Duke’s,” May 2, 4,
     June 24, 1668; April 14, 1669. (_See_ “Impertinents.”)

  Surprisal (Sir Robert Howard), “King’s,” April 8, Aug. 27, 1667;
     Dec. 26, 1667; April 17, May 1, 1668.

  Tamer tamed (Fletcher), “Cockpit,” Oct. 30, 1660; “Theatre,”
     July 31, 1661.

  Taming of a Shrew (alteration from Shakespeare), “King’s,” April 9,
     Nov. 1, 1667.

  Tempest (Shakespeare), “Duke’s,” Nov. 7, 13, Dec. 12, 1667; Jan. 6,
     Feb. 3, 1667–68; April 30, May 11, 1668.

  ’Tis a pity she’s a Whore (Ford), “Salisbury Court,” Sept. 9, 1661.

  Traitor (Shirley), “New Playhouse,” Nov. 22, 1660; “Theatre,” Oct. 10,
     1661; “King’s,” Jan. 13, 1664–65; Sept. 2, 1667.

  Tryphon (Lord Orrery), “Duke’s,” Dec. 8, 9, 1668.

  Twelfth Night (Shakespeare), “Opera,” Sept. 11, 1661; “Duke’s,”
     Jan. 6, 1662–63; Jan. 20, 1668–69.

  Unfortunate Lovers (Davenant), “Duke’s,” March 7, 1663–64; April 8,
     Dec. 3, 1668.

  Ungrateful Lovers [Query, same play as previous one], “Duke’s,”
     Sept. 11, 1667.

  Usurper (E. Howard), “King’s,” Jan. 2, 1663–64; Dec. 2, 1668.

  Valiant Cid (translation from Corneille), “Cockpit” (Whitehall),
     Dec. 1, 1662.

  Victoria Corombona (Webster), “Theatre,” Oct. 2, 1661.

  Villain (T. Porter), “Duke’s,” Oct. 20, Dec. 26, 1662; Jan. 1,
     1662–63; Oct. 24, 1667.

  Virgin Martyr (Massinger), “Theatre,” Feb. 16, 1660–61; “King’s,”
     Feb. 27, 1667–68; May 6, 1668.

  Volpone (Ben Jonson), “King’s,” Jan. 14, 1664–65.

  Wild Gallant (Dryden), “Court at Whitehall,” Feb. 23, 1662–63.

  Wild-goose Chase (Beaumont and Fletcher), “King’s,” Jan. 11, 1667–68.

  Wit in a Constable (Glapthorne), “Opera,” May 23, 1662.

  Wit Without Money (Fletcher), “Cockpit,” Oct. 16, 1660; “King’s,”
     April 22, 1663.

  Wits (Davenant), “Opera,” Aug. 15, 17, 23, 1661; “Duke’s,” April 18,
     20, 1667; Jan. 18, 1668–69.

  Women pleased (Beaumont and Fletcher), “Duke’s,” Dec. 26, 1668.

  Worse and Worse (G. Digby, Earl of Bristol), “Duke’s,” July 20, 1664.




[Illustration: Decoration]




INDEX.

_The titles of Chapters are printed in italics._


        PAGE

  Admiral, introduction of the word into English                   129

  Admiral (Lord High), the office first put in commission          136

  Admiralty (The), relation of the office to the Navy Board   142, 145

  ---- Secretaries of, list                                        268

  Almanacs foretell the Fire of London                             113

  Albemarle (George Monk, Duke of)                             31, 183

  Albemarle (Duchess of)                                           184

  ---- her disgust at the ways of the “gentlemen captains”         149

  Aldborough, members of Parliament for                             48

  _Amusements_                                                 217–231

  Anglesey (Earl of)                                               190

  Arlington (Earl of) laughed at by Miss Stewart                   159

  Ascension day, custom of beating the bounds on that day          213

  “Athenæum” on the charm of the “Diary”                            17

  Audley End, visit of the queen and grand ladies to the fair at   161

  Axe Yard, Pepys’s home there                                      24


  Backwell (Alderman), the goldsmith                               123

  Bailey (J. E.), his paper on the Cipher of the “Diary”            13

  Balaam (Dr.), his opinion of Tangier                              75

  Ballads, Pepys’s collection of                                    90

  Barlow (Thomas), Pepys’s predecessor as Clerk of the Acts         23

  Batten (Sir William)                                             157

  Batten (Lady), married to Sir James B. Leyenburg                  48

  Bear at the Bridge foot                                          102

  Beating the bounds                                               213

  Bellasys (John, Lord), Governor of Tangier                        69

  Bellasys (Susan, Lady)                                           169

  Bence (John), M.P. for Aldborough                                 48

  Berkeley (Sir Charles), afterwards Earl of Falmouth         171, 195

  Betterton, Pepys’s admiration for                                219

  Binding of Pepys’s books                                          84

  Birch (Colonel), his proposal for the rebuilding of London
    after the Fire                                                 114

  Blackburne (Robert), Secretary of the Admiralty             136, 269

  Bludworth (Sir Thomas), a poor creature                           32

  Bombay a more iniquitous place than Tangier                       75

  Booksellers employed by Pepys                                     93

  Brampton, Pepys’s money buried there                              34

  ---- parish registers                                              3

  Braybrooke (Lord) as an editor                                    15

  ---- his censure on James II.                                    139

  Breakfasts, Pepys’s                                              201

  Bright’s (Rev. Mynors) edition of the “Diary”                     15

  British dominion of the seas                                     154

  Brook (Margaret), afterwards Lady Denham                         177

  Brooke (Sir Robert), M.P. for Aldborough                          48

  Brouncker (Lord)                                                 158

  Buckingham (Duke of)                                             180

  ---- his mimicry                                                 160

  ---- his Duchess                                                 161

  Buckingham House in the Strand                                   115

  Burton (Dr. Hezekiah)                                             79

  Butler’s “Hudibras” in the Pepysian library                       89


  Cambridge, Pepys’s name on the boards of Trinity College           4

  ---- Pepys entered at Magdalene College                            4

  Cards, games at                                                  229

  Carriage-building, improvements in                               211

  Carteret (Sir George)                                       156, 273

  Carteret (Philip), his marriage with Lady Jemimah Montagu        209

  Castle Rising, members of Parliament for                          49

  Castlemaine (Countess of)                              168, 172, 173

  ---- Pepys’s admiration for her                                   41

  Catalogues made by Pepys                                      82, 92

  _Characters (Public)_                                        183–198

  Charles II., his coronation                                       24

  ---- his own account of his escape after the Battle of Worcester  53

  ---- viciousness of his Court                                    159

  ---- his character                                           165–169

  Chatham dockyard                                                 151

  ---- Commissioners of the Navy resident at                       284

  Chaucer, Pepys’s appreciation of                                  86

  Chest (The) at Chatham                                           152

  ---- removed to Greenwich                                        153

  Chesterfield (Elizabeth, Countess of)                            176

  Chiffinch (Thomas)                                               181

  Chiffinch (William)                                              181

  Church, Pepys’s behaviour at                                     214

  Clapham, Pepys moves there                                        59

  Clarendon (Edward Hyde, Earl of)                                 187

  ---- displeased with Pepys                                       188

  Clarendon Park, the timber at                                    188

  Clarges (Ann), afterwards Duchess of Albemarle                   184

  Clerk of the Acts, an ancient office                             129

  ---- list of holders of the office                               279

  Clothworkers’ Company, Pepys elected Master                       51

  Clothworkers’ Hall, burning of                                   112

  Cocker (Edward), the writing master                           30, 87

  Cockfighting, Pepys’s opinion of                             94, 228

  “Cockpit,” plays acted there                                     223

  Coleridge, quotations from                                     1, 46

  Cooper (Mr.), teaches Pepys mathematics                           28

  Costume, varieties of, after the Restoration                     203

  Cottenham, the Pepyses of                                          1

  Cotton’s Scarronides appreciated by Pepys                         90

  _Court (The)_                                                159–182

  Coventry (Mr., afterwards Sir William)     32, 36, 37, 189, 197, 270

  Coventry (Mr., afterwards Sir William) suggests that Pepys should
    write a history of the Dutch war                                31

  ---- Pepys’s respect for him                                     156

  Cox (Sir John)                                              151, 285

  Creed (John), Secretary to the Commissioners of Tangier           66

  Crowland (Abbot of), his lands in Cambridgeshire                   2

  Cunningham (Peter), on the charm of the “Diary”                   17

  ---- his story of Nell Gwyn referred to                     160, 172


  Dancing at Court                                                 230

  Dartmouth (Lord)                                          54, 55, 80

  ---- sent out to destroy Tangier                                  72

  Davenant’s (Sir William) company of actors                       217

  Davis (Moll)                                                     179

  Deane (Sir Anthony)                                          53, 124

  Denham (Lady)                                                    177

  Deptford dockyard                                                153

  “Diary,” account of the                                           11

  Dinners, Pepys’s opinion upon                                    200

  Dockyards, the four                                              150

  Domesday Book                                                     44

  Douglas (Captain), his bravery                                   150

  Downing (Sir George)                                             188

  ---- Pepys’s connection with him                          11, 18, 23

  D’Oyly wants to borrow money from Pepys                           53

  Drinking, habits of deep                                         201

  Dryden recommended by Pepys to modernize Chaucer                  87

  Dummer (Edmund), constructer of the first docks at
    Plymouth                                              81, 153, 278

  Dutch in the Medway                                              149

  Dutch war, Pepys proposes to write a history of the               31


  “Ecclesiastes,” quotation from                                   232

  Edisbury (Kenrick), the “old Edgeborrow” of the “Diary”     152, 277

  Evelyn (John) visits Pepys in the Tower                           52

  ---- his defence of England’s right to the dominion of the sea   155

  Evelyn’s (Mrs.) picture of the Duchess of Newcastle              194


  Falmouth (Sir Charles Berkeley, Earl of)                    171, 195

  Fane (Mrs.), Pepys’s housekeeper                                  59

  Fashion, Charles II.’s attempt to fix the                        204

  Field, Pepys’s lawsuit with                                       28

  Fitzgerald (Col.), Deputy Governor of Tangier                     69

  Flag (English), rights of                                        155

  Fox (Lady), Pepys’s anagrams upon her name when Mrs. Whittle       5


  Gaming at Court                                                  229

  Gibson’s “Memoirs of the Navy”                                   148

  “Gloucester” (The), wreck of                                      54

  Gloves, use of perfumed                                          206

  Grammont, Memoirs of                         159, 160, 162, 163, 164

  Greenwich, plague there                                          110

  Grenville (Lord), his help in deciphering the “Diary”             12

  Gwyn (Nell)                                                      179


  Hales’s portrait of Pepys                                        237

  Hamilton (Miss)                                        162, 163, 169

  Harbord (Sir Charles) suggested as paymaster for Tangier          69

  Harbord (William), M.P. for Launceston                            52

  ---- his opinion of the government of Tangier                     70

  Harrington (James) and his Rota Club                              18

  Harwich, Pepys elected M.P. for                                   57

  ---- is unpopular there when out of favour at Court               57

  Hats worn indoors                                                205

  Hayter (Thomas) appointed Clerk of the Acts             49, 121, 283

  ---- Secretary of the Admiralty                                  270

  Henry VIII., what he did for the Navy                            130

  Hewer (William)                                                  121

  ---- Pepys lives with him                                         59

  Hickes (Dr. George) attends Pepys’s death-bed                     60

  Hill-house (The), at Chatham                                     152

  Hippocras, not wine, but a mixed drink                       27, 109

  Hollar’s views of Tangier                                         70

  Holmes (Sir Robert)                                              196

  Houblons (The), friends of Pepys                 58, 59, 72, 73, 123

  Hours of going to bed                                            212

  Howard (Lord)                                                     49

  Huntingdon, Pepys goes to school there                             3

  Hyde (Anne), wife of the Duke of York                            170

  Hyde (Mrs.)                                                      162


  Inns, abundance of, in London                                    201


  Jackson (John), Pepys’s nephew                                61, 73

  James II., previously Duke of York                    31, 37, 49, 58

  ---- his relations with Pepys                                22, 138

  ---- his connection with the Countess of Chesterfield            176

  ---- ---- with Lady Denham                                       177

  ---- ---- with Frances Jennings                                  178

  ---- his character                                               169

  ---- his wife Anne                                               170

  ---- his conversion to Roman Catholicism                         170

  ---- shipwreck of his ship “The Gloucester”                       54

  Jennings (Frances), afterwards Duchess of Tyrconnel         160, 179

  Johnson (Dr.), quotation from                                    116

  Jones (Sir William), M.P., his opinion of the government of
    Tangier                                                         70

  Jonson (Ben), Pepys’s admiration of                              219

  Joyce (Anthony), his misfortunes and death                       118

  Joyce (Kate)                                                     119

  Joyce (William), an impertinent coxcomb                          118


  Katherine (Queen)                                                168

  ---- her marriage portion                                         64

  Katherine of Valois, her body at Westminster Abbey                40

  Killigrew’s company of actors                                    218

  King Street, Westminster, full of inns                           106

  King’s College, Cambridge, Pepys suggested for Provost            53

  Kingsmall (Sir Francis), grandfather of Mrs. Pepys                 7

  Kirke (Colonel), Deputy Governor of Tangier           68, 69, 72, 73

  Kite (Mrs.), and her daughter Peg                                119

  Kneller’s (Sir Godfrey), portrait of Dr. Wallis                   60

  ---- portraits of Pepys                                          238

  Knipp (Mrs.), the actress                                        220


  Lawson (Sir John)                                                196

  ---- his opinion of Tangier                                       65

  Leeds (Duke of)                                             191, 273

  Legge (Colonel), afterwards Lord Dartmouth            54, 55, 72, 80

  Lely’s (Sir Peter), portrait of Pepys                            238

  ---- portraits of the beauties of the Court                      162

  Leybourne (W. de), the first English Admiral                     129

  Leyenburg (Sir James B.), Pepys’s quarrel with him                48

  Lincoln’s Inn, theatres in                                       224

  _London_                                                     100–125

  ---- the Plague                                              109–112

  ---- the Fire                                            31, 112–115

  ---- rebuilding of                                               114

  ---- prints of, collected by Pepys                                92

  London Bridge, danger of “shooting” it                           101

  Lorrain (Paul), a cataloguer employed by Pepys                    84


  Magdalene College, Cambridge, Pepys’s library there               77

  Maitland MS. at Cambridge                                         81

  Man (Mr.) offers to buy the place of Clerk of the Acts            24

  _Manners_                                                    199–216

  Marshall (Stephen), not the father of Anne and Beck Marshall     220

  Maryon (S.)                                                       54

  Marvell (Andrew), his attack on Pepys                             53

  ---- “Instructions to a Painter,” quoted                         178

  ---- “Ballad on the Lord Mayor and Aldermen,” quoted             159

  Masks worn by ladies                                             205

  Maulyverer (John)                                                 79

  May (Baptist)                                                    182

  Michell (Betty), Pepys’s admiration for her                       42

  Milles (Dr. Daniel), the minister of St. Olave’s                 120

  Mills (Rev. Alexander)                                            57

  Milton’s “Paradise Lost,” quotation from                          63

  ---- works in the Pepysian Library                                88

  Mings (Sir Christopher), loved by his sailors                    197

  Minnes (Sir John)                                           156, 276

  ---- teaches Pepys to love Chaucer                                86

  Moll (Orange), at the theatre                                    227

  Money, value of, in Pepys’s day                                  212

  Monk (George), afterwards Duke of Albemarle                  31, 183

  Monson (Sir William), his Naval Tracts                      128, 134

  Montagu (Sir Edward), afterwards Earl of
    Sandwich,                      9, 10, 20, 24, 29, 49, 65, 154, 185

  ---- first chose Portsmouth for his title when offered an
    earldom                                                        154

  Montague (Lady Jemimah), her marriage with Philip Carteret       209

  Moorfields full of people after the Fire                          33

  ---- the fights there                                            105

  ---- its state after the Fire                                    112

  Moors turned out of Tangier                                       64

  ---- take possession of the place again                           74

  Morelli (Cesare)                                                 121

  Mourning, use of                                                 208

  Muffs, use of, by men                                            207

  Muly Ismael, Emperor of Morocco                                   74

  Musical instruments referred to in the “Diary”       97, 98, 252–253


  “Naseby,” Pepys in the                                        10, 21

  ---- its name is changed to “Charles”                             22

  _Navy (The)_                                                 128–158

  ---- lists of the officers of the                                266

  Navy Board, origin of                                            130

  ---- composition in the reign of Elizabeth                       131

  ---- instructions                                                132

  ---- salaries of the officers                                    135

  ---- Commissioners during the Commonwealth                       136

  ---- re-arrangement of the Board at the Restoration              137

  ---- their want of money                                         146

  Navy Office in Crutched Friars                                   144

  ---- attempts to save it from being burnt                         32

  Nero (Tragedy of), quotation from                                217

  Newcastle (Margaret, Duchess of)                                 193

  Newgate Street, the butchers there                               104

  Nonconformists, Pepys’s opinion of the                           214

  Northumberland (Algernon, Earl of)                       23 (_note_)

  Norwood (Colonel), Deputy Governor of Tangier                 67, 69


  O’Brien (Donald), his father’s will                              192

  Offley petitions against Pepys’s election as M.P. for Castle
    Rising                                                          50

  Oranges, price of                                                227

  Osborne (Sir Thomas), afterwards Duke of Leeds              191, 273

  Ossory (Earl of), appointed Governor of Tangier                   71


  Page (Sir Thomas), Provost of King’s College, Cambridge           53

  Pasley (Colonel), his assistance to the author     129, 140 (_note_)

  ---- his lists of the Officers of the Navy                       266

  Paston (Sir Robert), afterwards Viscount Yarmouth                 49

  Peachell (Dr.), Master of Magdalene College                       79

  Penn (Sir William)                                       25, 32, 157

  ---- his house at the Navy Office                                145

  Pepys (Mrs. Elizabeth), her marriage to Samuel Pepys            6, 9

  ---- squabbles with her husband                               42, 44

  ---- her death                                                    47

  ---- her religion                                                 51

  Pepys (John), Samuel’s brother                                    49

  ---- joint Clerk of the Acts with Thomas Hayter             143, 283

  Pepys (John), Samuel’s father                                   3, 9

  ---- his will                                                    117

  Pepys (Margaret), Samuel’s mother                                  3

  Pepys (Paulina), Samuel’s sister, he gives her a marriage
    portion                                                         44

  Pepys (Richard), Lord Chief Justice of Ireland                     2

  Pepys (Robert), Samuel’s uncle, his death                         25

  Pepys (Samuel), “_Pepys before the Diary_”                      1–15

  ---- “_Pepys in the Diary_”                                    16–45

  ---- “_Pepys after the Diary_”                                 46–62

  ---- antiquity of his family                                       1

  ---- his birth, Feb. 23, 1632–3, and parentage                     3

  ---- his education                                               3–5

  ---- a Roundhead as a boy                                          4

  ---- admonished for being drunk                                    5

  ---- his romance, “Love a Cheate”                                  5

  ---- made Master of Acts by proxy                                  6

  ---- his marriage to Elizabeth St. Michel                       6, 9

  ---- operation for the stone                                      10

  ---- accompanies Sir Edward Montagu to the Sound                  10

  ---- Clerk of the Exchequer                                       11

  ---- uses Shelton’s system of shorthand in writing his “Diary”    13

  ---- how he wrote his “Diary”                                     14

  ---- tells Sir W. Coventry how he kept a diary                    16

  ---- living in Axe-yard                                           18

  ---- a member of the Rota Club                                    19

  ---- accepts the post of Secretary to the Generals at Sea         20

  Pepys (Samuel) is pleased at being addressed as “Esq.”            21

  ---- goes on board the “Naseby”                                   21

  ---- is made Clerk of the Acts                                    22

  ---- his relation to the Instructions for the Navy Office        138

  ---- takes possession of his house at the Navy Office            144

  ---- his feelings on Barlow’s death, by which he gained _£_100
    a year                                                          23

  ---- takes the oaths as a Clerk of the Privy Seal                 24

  ---- is sworn a justice of the peace                              24

  ---- goes to Brampton to see after the property left by his
    uncle                                                           26

  ---- his vows                                                     26

  ---- thinks it wise to spend while he can enjoy life              27

  ---- proposes to write on the British dominion of the seas       154

  ---- sworn a younger brother of the Trinity House                 28

  ---- is made a burgess of Portsmouth                              28

  ---- is appointed a Commissioner for Tangier                      28

  ---- learns mathematics and dancing                          28, 230

  ---- remonstrates with the Earl of Sandwich on his conduct        29

  ---- his eyesight begins to fail                                  30

  ---- ---- gets worse                                              37

  ---- thinks of writing a history of the Dutch war                 31

  ---- is appointed an assistant of the Corporation of the Royal
    Fishery                                                         31

  ---- Treasurer of Tangier                                 31, 66, 69

  ---- Surveyor-General of the Victualling Office                   31

  ---- his connection with the Victualling Department of the Navy  147

  ---- is useful during the period of the Plague and the Fire of
    London                                                          31

  ---- sets up a carriage                                           33

  ---- buries his money at Brampton                                 34

  ---- his letter on the state of the office                   139–142

  ---- his criticism on himself in the letter                      141

  ---- his letter to the Commissioners of Accounts                 147

  ---- his great speech at the bar of the House of Commons          34

  ---- ends the “Diary”                                             38

  ---- his tour through France and Holland                          47

  ---- his wife dies                                                47

  ---- is a candidate at Aldborough for election as a Member of
    Parliament                                                      48

  ---- he quarrels with Sir J. B. Leyenburg                         48

  ---- is appointed Secretary of the Admiralty                      48

  ---- is one of the mourners at Lord Sandwich’s funeral            49

  ---- is elected Member for Castle Rising                          50

  ---- charges of Popery made against him                           50

  ---- Commissioner for Tangier                                     70

  ---- elected Master of the Clothworkers’ Company                  51

  ---- is committed to the Tower                                    52

  ---- is elected Member for Harwich                                53

  ---- takes down from Charles II.’s dictation the account of the
    King’s escape after the battle of Worcester                     53

  ---- is suggested as a candidate for the provostship of King’s
    College                                                         54

  ---- accompanies the Duke of York to Scotland, and is nearly
    shipwrecked on the way                                          54

  ---- goes on an expedition to Tangier                         55, 72

  ---- his Tangier Journal                                      56, 72

  ---- reappointed Secretary of the Admiralty                       56

  ---- elected President of the Royal Society                       56

  ---- takes part in James II.’s coronation                         56

  ---- elected for Harwich and Sandwich                             57

  ---- close of his public career at the Revolution                 57

  ---- committed to the Gate House at Westminster                   58

  ---- publishes his “Memoirs of the Navy”                          58

  ---- parts with his housekeeper, Mrs. Fane                        59

  ---- settles at Clapham                                      59, 115

  ---- has a portrait of Dr. Wallis painted for Oxford by Kneller   60

  ---- his death                                                    60

  ---- post-mortem examination                                      61

  ---- his frequent journeys on the river                          101

  ---- a lover of good living                                      200

  ---- his love of dress                                       29, 203

  ---- his money-grubbing                                           39

  ---- admiration for women                                         40

  ---- his unfaithfulness to his wife                               43

  ---- his credulity                                                44

  ---- is both mean and generous                                    44

  ---- want of the imaginative faculty                              45

  ---- account of his portraits and bust                       237–240

  ---- his different wills                                          40

  ---- mourning rings given to his friends                          62

  ---- his motto                                                    94

  ---- his songs                                                    95

  ---- _his books and collections_                               77–99

  ---- his manuscripts at Oxford                                   251

  ---- _his relations, friends, and acquaintances_             116–127

  ---- his correspondents                                          254

  Peterborough (Henry, 2nd Earl of), first English governor of
    Tangier                                                     66, 68

  Pett’s (Commissioner Peter) house at Chatham                     151

  ---- his threatened impeachment                             151, 285

  Pett (Phineas), Commissioner of the Navy                         284

  Pett (Sir Phineas), Commissioner of the Navy                 286–287

  Petty (Sir William)                                               22

  Plays which Pepys saw acted                                 218, 289

  Portsmouth dockyard                                              153

  Portuguese delivery of Tangier to England                         64

  Posts, announcement of plays placed on                           228

  Povy (Thomas), Treasurer for Tangier                          49, 66

  Pressing for the Navy                                            148

  Progers (Edward)                                                 181

  Prynne’s remarks on Abp. Laud, quotation from                     16

  ---- his rusty sword in the way                                   20

  Punishments in Pepys’s day                                       215

  Purser’s accounts                                                147


  Quadring (Dr.), Master of Magdalene                               80


  Rawlinson MSS. at Oxford                                          82

  Rich’s shorthand not used by Pepys                                13

  Richmond (Duke of)                                               175

  Richmond (Duchess of)                                  160, 161, 174

  ---- Pepys’s admiration for her                                   41

  Rings (mourning), given at Pepys’s death                          62

  Roger or Rogiers (Thomas), Clerk of the King’s Ships        129, 279

  Romney (Earl of), his intrigue with the Duchess of York          171

  Rota Club                                                         18

  “Roxana” and “Roxalana” confused together                        221

  Royal Society, Charles II.’s connection with it                  167

  ---- Petty’s suggestion for the Anniversary Meeting              123

  ---- Pepys elected President                                      56

  ---- visit of the Duchess of Newcastle to                        194

  Rupert (Prince)                                                  186

  ---- his boat the “Fanfan”                                       150

  Russian Ambassador, his entry into London                        104

  Rutherford (Andrew, Lord), Governor of Dunkirk and afterwards
    of Tangier                                                      68

  Ryder (Sir W.), his house at Bethnal Green full of valuables
    after the Fire                                                  33


  Sailors (English) on board Dutch ships                           148

  St. Michel (Alexander Marchant, Sieur de), father of Mrs. Pepys,
    his schemes                                           6–8, 241–250

  St. Michel (Balthasar), letter to Pepys, giving an account of
    his family                                                   6, 51

  St. Michel (Elizabeth), afterwards Mrs. Pepys   6, 9, 42, 44, 47, 51

  St. Paul’s School, Pepys educated there                            4

  Sandwich, Pepys elected M.P. for                                  57

  Sandwich (Earl of)                           9, 10, 20, 24, 154, 185

  ---- takes possession of Tangier                                  65

  ---- his stay at Chelsea                                          29

  ---- his funeral                                                  49

  Savill’s portrait of Pepys                                       237

  Scotch, Pepys antipathy to the                                    55

  Scott (Colonel John), his charge against Pepys                    52

  Seething Lane, Pepys’s house there                                24

  Selden’s “Mare Clausum”                                          155

  Seymour (Sir Edward), Pepys applies to him for his interest       58

  Shadwell’s (T.), “Epsom Wells,” quotation from                   100

  ---- “The Woman Captain,” quotation from                         199

  Shaftesbury (Earl of), his shrewdness                            171

  ---- his frivolous charge against Pepys[411]                      50

  Shakespeare’s “Winter’s Tale,” quotation from                     77

  ---- acting of his plays after the Restoration                   218

  ---- edition of his plays in the Pepysian Library                 88

  Shelton’s Tachygraphy                                             13

  Sheres (Sir Henry), employed at Tangier                       69, 73

  ---- his friendship for Pepys                                    125

  Shorthand, Pepys a lover of                                       14

  ---- Pepys’s collection of books on                               92

  Shovel (Sir Cloudesley), his answer to Muly Ismael                74

  Skinner (Daniel), papers of Milton possessed by him               89

  Smith (Sir Jeremy)                                               197

  Smith (John), the decipherer of the “Diary”                       12

  ---- “Life, Journals, &c., of Pepys,” _alluded to_       56 _passim_

  Stewart (Frances), afterwards Duchess of Richmond  41, 160, 161, 174

  Stockings, green silk, fashionable                               177

  Symons (William), his political misfortunes                       18

  Sympson (Mr.), the maker of Pepys’s bookcases                     83


  _Tangier_                                                      62–76

  ---- Lord Dartmouth’s expedition to                               55

  ---- the mole built                                               67

  ---- ---- destroyed                                               73

  Tarpaulins _v._ “Gentlemen captains”                             148

  Taverns frequented by Pepys                                  105–108

  Tennis, Charles II. a proficient at                              229

  Teviot (Earl of), Governor of Dunkirk and afterwards of Tangier   68

  Thames (River), as a highway                                     100

  Theatres after the Restoration                                   217

  Tickets given to the sailors in place of money                   147

  “Tom Otter,” Charles II. calls the Duke of York by this name     172

  Travelling on horseback and by coach                             211

  Turner (Mr.), of the Navy Office, wishes to be made Clerk of
    the Acts                                                        23

  Turner (Serjeant John), and his wife                             117

  Turner (Mrs.) shows her leg to Pepys                             210

  Turner (Theophila)                                               117


  Verrio’s portrait of Pepys                                       239

  Voltaire, quotation from                                         183


  Wallis (Dr.), his portrait                                        60

  Wedding customs                                                  209

  Westminster Hall, the stationers of                              109

  Whittle (Elizabeth), anagrams upon, by Pepys                       5

  Wigs, fashion of wearing                                         207

  Willett (Deb.), Pepys’s liaison with her                          43

  Williamson (Sir Joseph)                                          191

  Wines drunk in Pepys’s time                                      202

  Woolwich dockyard                                                154

  Wren (Matthew)                                              141, 270

  Wynter (Sir William)                                   131, 144, 277


  York Buildings, Pepys’s house there                              115

FOOTNOTES:

[411] The charge was not so frivolous after all, for the writer of
an article on the “Diary” in the “Edinburgh Review” for July, 1880,
points out that although Pepys denied publicly that he ever possessed a
crucifix, he positively states in the “Diary” that he had one. See July
20, August 2, and November 3, 1666. I ought to have noted this, as the
facts are given in the Index to the “Diary.”


CHISWICK PRESS: C. WHITTINGHAM AND CO. TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE.




      *      *      *      *      *      *




Transcriber’s note:

The illustrations which were included as plates in the original have
been moved near to the text they illustrate. The five portraits of
court ladies did not have captions in the original, their names have
been included by the transcriber as a description of the illustration.

Footnotes have been moved to the end of chapters.

Variant spelling, inconsistent hyphenation and irregular punctuation
are retained, but, in a few cases, missing punctuation has been added
for consistency, e.g. after abbreviations, and to match quotation marks.

On page 109 the date on which Pepys first notices signs of the plague
was originally printed as the 7th of June, 1667; the year has been
changed to 1665.

In the index the page number (31) for the entry “Pepys thinks of
writing a history of the Dutch war” has been added.



***