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..
business, but we could not procure it.  So I to my Lord Treasurer’s and got my warrant, and then to Lovett’s, but find nothing done there.  So home and did a little business at the office, and so down by water to Deptford and back again home late, and having signed some papers and given order in business, home, where my wife is come home, and so to supper with my father, and mighty pleasant we were, and my wife mighty kind to him and Pall, and so after supper to bed, myself being sleepy, and my right eye still very sore, as it has been now about five days or six, which puts me out of tune.  To-night my wife tells me newes has been brought her that Balty’s wife is brought to bed, by some fall or fit, before her time, of a great child but dead.  If the woman do well we have no reason to be sorry, because his staying a little longer without a child will be better for him and her.

31st.  Waked very betimes in the morning by extraordinary thunder and rain, which did keep me sleeping and waking till very late, and it being a holiday and my eye very sore, and myself having had very little sleep for a good while till nine o’clock, and so up, and so saw all my family up, and my father and sister, who is a pretty good-bodied woman, and not over thicke, as I thought she would have been, but full of freckles, and not handsome in face.  And so I out by water among the ships, and to Deptford and Blackewall about business, and so home and to dinner with my father and sister and family, mighty pleasant all of us; and, among other things, with a sparrow that our Mercer hath brought up now for three weeks, which is so tame that it flies up and down, and upon the table, and eats and pecks, and do everything so pleasantly, that we are mightily pleased with it.  After dinner I to my papers and accounts of this month to sett all straight, it being a publique Fast-day appointed to pray for the good successe of the fleete.  But it is a pretty thing to consider how little a matter they make of this keeping of a Fast, that it was not so much as declared time enough to be read in the churches the last Sunday; but ordered by proclamation since:  I suppose upon some sudden newes of the Dutch being come out.  To my accounts and settled them clear; but to my grief find myself poorer than I was the last by near L20, by reason of my being forced to return L50 to Downing, the smith, which he had presented me with.  However, I am well contented, finding myself yet to be worth L5,200.  Having done, to supper with my wife, and then to finish the writing fair of my accounts, and so to bed.  This day come to town Mr. Homewood, and I took him home in the evening to my chamber, and discoursed with him about my business of the Victualling, which I have a mind to employ him in, and he is desirous of also, but do very ingenuously declare he understands it not so well as other things, and desires to be informed in the nature of it before he attempts it, which I like well, and so I carried him to Mr. Gibson to discourse

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