at bowles Sport to me to see him so earnest on
so little occasion Sporting in my fancy with
the Queen Staid two hours with her kissing her,
but nothing more Statute against selling of offices
Staying out late, and painting in the absence
of her husband Still in discontent with my wife,
to bed, and rose so this morn Strange slavery
that I stand in to beauty Strange thing how I
am already courted by the people Strange things
he has been found guilty of, not fit to name Strange
the folly of men to lay and lose so much money Strange
how civil and tractable he was to me Street ordered
to be continued, forty feet broad, from Paul’s
Subject to be put into a disarray upon very small
occasions Such open flattery is beastly Suffered
her humour to spend, till we begun to be very quiet
Supper and to bed without one word one to another
Suspect the badness of the peace we shall make
Swear they will not go to be killed and have no
pay Take pins out of her pocket to prick me if
I should touch her Talk very highly of liberty
of conscience Talked with Mrs. Lane about persuading
her to Hawly Taught my wife some part of subtraction
Tax the same man in three or four several capacities
Tear all that I found either boyish or not to
be worth keeping Tell me that I speak in my dreams
That I might not seem to be afeared That
I may have nothing by me but what is worth keeping
That I might say I saw no money in the paper
That he is not able to live almost with her That
I may look as a man minding business That hair
by hair had his horse’s tail pulled off indeed
The gentlemen captains will undo us The
very rum man must have L200 The gates of the
City shut, it being so late The manner of the
gaming The factious part of the Parliament The
Lords taxed themselves for the poor—an earl,
s. The unlawfull use of lawfull things
The coachman that carried [us] cannot know me
again The boy is well, and offers to be searched
The devil being too cunning to discourage a gamester
The monkey loose, which did anger me, and so I
did strike her The most ingenious men may sometimes
be mistaken The Alchymist,”—[Comedy
by Ben Jonson The barber came to trim me and
wash me The present Irish pronunciation of English
The house was full of citizens, and so the less
pleasant The goldsmith, he being one of the jury
to-morrow The plague is got to Amsterdam, brought
by a ship from Argier The pleasure of my not
committing these things to my memory The world
do not grow old at all The ceremonies did not
please me, they do so overdo them The rest did
give more, and did believe that I did so too Their
ladies in the box, being grown mighty kind of a sudden
Their saws have no teeth, but it is the sand only
Their condition was a little below my present
state Then to church to a tedious sermon Then
home, and merry with my wife Thence by coach,
with a mad coachman, that drove like mad Thence
to Mrs. Martin’s, and did what I would with her
There is no passing but by coach in the streets,
and hardly that There did see Mrs. Lane. .