Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1666 N.S. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1666 N.S..

Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1666 N.S. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1666 N.S..
and by that time comes Mr. Batelier and Mercer, and away by coach to Mrs. Pierces, by appointment, where we find good company:  a fair lady, my Lady Prettyman, Mrs. Corbet, Knipp; and for men, Captain Downing, Mr. Lloyd, Sir W. Coventry’s clerk, and one Mr. Tripp, who dances well.  After some trifling discourse, we to dancing, and very good sport, and mightily pleased I was with the company.  After our first bout of dancing, Knipp and I to sing, and Mercer and Captain Downing (who loves and understands musique) would by all means have my song of “Beauty, retire.” which Knipp had spread abroad; and he extols it above any thing he ever heard, and, without flattery, I know it is good in its kind.  This being done and going to dance again, comes news that White Hall was on fire; and presently more particulars, that the Horse-guard was on fire;

["Nov. 9th.  Between seven and eight at night, there happened a fire in the Horse Guard House, in the Tilt Yard, over against Whitehall, which at first arising, it is supposed, from some snuff of a candle falling amongst the straw, broke out with so sudden a flame, that at once it seized the north-west part of that building; but being so close under His Majesty’s own eye, it was, by the timely help His Majesty and His Royal Highness caused to be applied, immediately stopped, and by ten o’clock wholly mastered, with the loss only of that part of the building it had at first seized.”—­The London Gazette, No. 103.—­B.]

and so we run up to the garret, and find it so; a horrid great fire; and by and by we saw and heard part of it blown up with powder.  The ladies begun presently to be afeard:  one fell into fits.  The whole town in an alarme.  Drums beat and trumpets, and the guards every where spread, running up and down in the street.  And I begun to have mighty apprehensions how things might be at home, and so was in mighty pain to get home, and that that encreased all is that we are in expectation, from common fame, this night, or to-morrow, to have a massacre, by the having so many fires one after another, as that in the City, and at same time begun in Westminster, by the Palace, but put out; and since in Southwarke, to the burning down some houses; and now this do make all people conclude there is something extraordinary in it; but nobody knows what.  By and by comes news that the fire has slackened; so then we were a little cheered up again, and to supper, and pretty merry.  But, above all, there comes in the dumb boy that I knew in Oliver’s time, who is mightily acquainted here, and with Downing; and he made strange signs of the fire, and how the King was abroad, and many things they understood, but I could not, which I wondering at, and discoursing with Downing about it, “Why,” says he, “it is only a little use, and you will understand him, and make him understand you with as much ease as may be.”  So I prayed him to tell him that I was afeard that my coach would be gone, and that he should go down

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Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1666 N.S. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.