office again, leaving Mr. Hill if he can to get Mrs.
Coleman at night. About nine at night I come
home, and there find Mrs. Pierce come and little Fran.
Tooker, and Mr. Hill, and other people, a great many
dancing, and anon comes Mrs. Coleman with her husband
and Laneare. The dancing ended and to sing,
which Mrs. Coleman do very finely, though her voice
is decayed as to strength but mighty sweet though
soft, and a pleasant jolly woman, and in mighty good
humour was to-night. Among other things Laneare
did, at the request of Mr. Hill, bring two or three
the finest prints for my wife to see that ever I did
see in all my life. But for singing, among other
things, we got Mrs. Coleman to sing part of the Opera,
though she won’t owne that ever she did get
any of it without book in order to the stage; but,
above all, her counterfeiting of Captain Cooke’s
part, in his reproaching his man with cowardice, “Base
slave,” &c., she do it most excellently.
At it till past midnight, and then broke up and to
bed. Hill and I together again, and being very
sleepy we had little discourse as we had the other
night. Thus we end the month merrily; and the
more for that, after some fears that the plague would
have increased again this week, I hear for certain
that there is above 400 [less], the whole number being
1,388, and of them of the plague, 1,031. Want
of money in the Navy puts everything out of order.
Men grow mutinous; and nobody here to mind the business
of the Navy but myself. At least Sir W. Batten
for the few days he has been here do nothing.
I in great hopes of my place of Surveyor-Generall
of the Victualling, which will bring me L300 per annum.
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A conceited man, but
of no Logique in his head at all
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French have taken two
and sunk one of our merchant-men
Hath sent me masters
that do observe that I take pains
How little heed is had
to the prisoners and sicke and wounded
How unhppily a man may
fall into a necessity of bribing people
Lechery will never leave
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Money I have not, nor
can get
Mr. Evelyn’s translating
and sending me as a present
Poor seamen that lie
starving in the streets
Saying me to be the
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Searchers with their
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THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS M.A. F.R.S.
CLERK OF THE ACTS AND SECRETARY TO THE ADMIRALTY
Transcribed from the
shorthand manuscript in the Pepysian
library
Magdalene College Cambridge by
the Rev. MYNORS bright M.A.
Late fellow
and President of
the College
(Unabridged)
WITH LORD BRAYBROOKE’S NOTES