my late profits, which have been very considerable
of late, but how great I know not till I come to cast
up my accounts, which burdens my mind that it should
be so backward, but I am resolved to settle to nothing
till I have done it. He gone, I to my Lord Bruncker’s,
and there spent the evening by my desire in seeing
his Lordship open to pieces and make up again his
watch, thereby being taught what I never knew before;
and it is a thing very well worth my having seen, and
am mightily pleased and satisfied with it. So
I sat talking with him till late at night, somewhat
vexed at a snappish answer Madam Williams did give
me to herself, upon my speaking a free word to her
in mirthe, calling her a mad jade. She answered,
we were not so well acquainted yet. But I was
more at a letter from my Lord Duke of Albemarle to-day,
pressing us to continue our meetings for all Christmas,
which, though every body intended not to have done,
yet I am concluded in it, who intended nothing else.
But I see it is necessary that I do make often visits
to my Lord Duke, which nothing shall hinder after
I have evened my accounts, and now the river is frozen
I know not how to get to him. Thence to my lodging,
making up my Journall for 8 or 9 days, and so my mind
being eased of it, I to supper and to bed. The
weather hath been frosty these eight or nine days,
and so we hope for an abatement of the plague the
next weeke, or else God have mercy upon us! for the
plague will certainly continue the next year if it
do not.
23rd. At my office all the morning and home
to dinner, my head full of business, and there my
wife finds me unexpectedly. But I not being at
leisure to stay or talk with her, she went down by
coach to Woolwich, thinking to fetch Mrs. Barbary
to carry her to London to keep her Christmas with
her, and I to the office. This day one come to
me with four great turkies, as a present from Mr.
Deane, at Harwich, three of which my wife carried
in the evening home with her to London in her coach
(Mrs. Barbary not being to be got so suddenly, but
will come to her the next week), and I at my office
late, and then to my lodgings to bed.
24th (Sunday). Up betimes, to my Lord Duke of
Albemarle by water, and after some talke with him
about business of the office with great content, and
so back again and to dinner, my landlady and her daughters
with me, and had mince-pies, and very merry at a mischance
her young son had in tearing of his new coate quite
down the outside of his sleeve in the whole cloth,
one of the strangest mishaps that ever I saw in my
life. Then to church, and placed myself in the
Parson’s pew under the pulpit, to hear Mrs.
Chamberlain in the next pew sing, who is daughter to
Sir James Bunch, of whom I have heard much, and indeed
she sings very finely, and from church met with Sir
W. Warren and he and I walked together talking about
his and my businesses, getting of money as fairly as
we can, and, having set him part of his way home,