Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1660 N.S. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 477 pages of information about Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1660 N.S..

Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1660 N.S. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 477 pages of information about Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1660 N.S..

20th.  About two o’clock my wife wakes me, and comes to bed, and so both to sleep and the wench to wash.  I rose and with Will to my Lord’s by land, it being a very hard frost, the first we have had this year.  There I staid with my Lord and Mr. Shepley, looking over my Lord’s accounts and to set matters straight between him and Shepley, and he did commit the viewing of these accounts to me, which was a great joy to me to see that my Lord do look upon me as one to put trust in.  Hence to the organ, where Mr. Child and one Mr Mackworth (who plays finely upon the violin) were playing, and so we played till dinner and then dined, where my Lord in a very good humour and kind to me.  After dinner to the Temple, where I met Mr. Moore and discoursed with him about the business of putting out my Lord’s L3000, and that done, Mr. Shepley and I to the new Play-house near Lincoln’s-Inn-Fields (which was formerly Gibbon’s tennis-court), where the play of “Beggar’s Bush” was newly begun; and so we went in and saw it, it was well acted:  and here I saw the first time one Moone,

[Michael Mohun, or Moone, the celebrated actor, who had borne a major’s commission in the King’s army.  The period of his death is uncertain, but he is known to have been dead in 1691.  Downes relates that an eminent poet [Lee] seeing him act Mithridates “vented suddenly this saying:  ’Oh, Mohun, Mohun, thou little man of mettle, if I should write a 100, I’d write a part for thy mouth.’” —­Roscius Anglicanus, p. 17.]

who is said to be the best actor in the world, lately come over with the King, and indeed it is the finest play-house, I believe, that ever was in England.  From thence, after a pot of ale with Mr. Shepley at a house hard by, I went by link home, calling a little by the way at my father’s and my uncle Fenner’s, where all pretty well, and so home, where I found the house in a washing pickle, and my wife in a very joyful condition when I told her that she is to see the Queen next Thursday, which puts me in mind to say that this morning I found my Lord in bed late, he having been with the King, Queen, and Princess, at the Cockpit

     [The Cockpit at Whitehall.  The plays at the Cockpit in Drury Lane
     were acted in the afternoon.]

all night, where.  General Monk treated them; and after supper a play, where the King did put a great affront upon Singleton’s’ musique, he bidding them stop and bade the French musique play, which, my Lord says, do much outdo all ours.  But while my Lord was rising, I went to Mr. Fox’s, and there did leave the gilt tankard for Mrs. Fox, and then to the counting-house to him, who hath invited me and my wife to dine with him on Thursday next, and so to see the Queen and Princesses.

21st.  Lay long in bed.  This morning my cozen Thomas Pepys, the turner, sent me a cupp of lignum vitae

     [A hard, compact, black-green wood, obtained from ’Guaiacum
     offcinale’, from which pestles, ship-blocks, rollers, castors, &c.,
     are turned.]

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Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1660 N.S. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.