for, was to see my Lady Newcastle; which we could not,
she being followed and crowded upon by coaches all
the way she went, that nobody could come near her;
only I could see she was in a large black coach, adorned
with silver instead of gold, and so white curtains,
and every thing black and white, and herself in her
cap, but other parts I could not make [out].
But that which I did see, and wonder at with reason,
was to find Pegg Pen in a new coach, with only her
husband’s pretty sister with her, both patched
and very fine, and in much the finest coach in the
park, and I think that ever I did see one or other,
for neatness and richness in gold, and everything
that is noble. My Lady Castlemayne, the King,
my Lord St. Albans, nor Mr. Jermyn, have so neat a
coach, that ever I saw. And, Lord! to have them
have this, and nothing else that is correspondent,
is to me one of the most ridiculous sights that ever
I did see, though her present dress was well enough;
but to live in the condition they do at home, and
be abroad in this coach, astonishes me. When
we had spent half an hour in the Park, we went out
again, weary of the dust, and despairing of seeing
my Lady Newcastle; and so back the same way, and to
St. James’s, thinking to have met my Lady Newcastle
before she got home, but we staying by the way to
drink, she got home a little before us: so we
lost our labours, and then home; where we find the
two young ladies come home, and their patches off,
I suppose Sir W. Pen do not allow of them in his sight,
and going out of town to-night, though late, to Walthamstow.
So to talk a little at Sir W. Batten’s, and
then home to supper, where I find Mrs. Hewer and her
son, who have been abroad with my wife in the Park,
and so after supper to read and then to bed.
Sir W. Pen did give me an account this afternoon
of his design of buying Sir Robert Brooke’s fine
house at Wansted; which I so wondered at, and did
give him reasons against it, which he allowed of:
and told me that he did intend to pull down the house
and build a less, and that he should get L1500 by the
old house, and I know not what fooleries. But
I will never believe he ever intended to buy it, for
my part; though he troubled Mr. Gawden to go and look
upon it, and advise him in it.
2nd. To the office, where all the morning. At noon home to dinner, and then abroad to my Lord Treasurer’s, who continues so ill as not to be troubled with business. So Mr. Gawden and I to my Lord Ashly’s and spoke with him, and then straight home, and there I did much business at the office, and then to my own chamber and did the like there, to my great content, but to the pain of my eyes, and then to supper and to bed, having a song with my wife with great pleasure, she doing it well.