Diary of Samuel Pepys, Oct/Nov 1664 [sp36g10.txt]
About several businesses, hoping to get money by them
After many protestings by degrees I did arrive at
what I would
All ended in love
Below what people think these great people say and
do
Even to the having bad words with my wife, and blows
too
Expected musique, the missing of which spoiled my
dinner
Gadding abroad to look after beauties
Greatest businesses are done so superficially
Little children employed, every one to do something
Meazles, we fear, or, at least, of a scarlett feavour
My leg fell in a hole broke on the bridge
My wife was angry with me for not coming home, and
for gadding
Not the greatest wits, but the steady man
Rotten teeth and false, set in with wire
Till 12 at night, and then home to supper and to bed
What a sorry dispatch these great persons give to
business
What is there more to be had of a woman than the possessing
her
Where a trade hath once been and do decay, it never
recovers
Diary of Samuel Pepys, December 1664 [sp37g10.txt]
Irish in Ireland, whom Cromwell had settled all in
one corner
Tear all that I found either boyish or not to be worth
keeping
Diary of Samuel Pepys, 1664 N.S. Complete [sp38g10.txt]
A real and not a complimentary acknowledgment
A mad merry slut she is
About several businesses, hoping to get money by them
After many protestings by degrees I did arrive at
what I would
All divided that were bred so long at school together
All ended in love
All the men were dead of the plague, and the ship
cast ashore
And with the great men in curing of their claps
At least 12 or 14,000 people in the street (to see
the hanging)
Bath at the top of his house
Bearing more sayle will go faster than any other ships(multihull
Began discourse of my not getting of children
Below what people think these great people say and
do
But the wench went, and I believe had her turn served
Came to bed to me, but all would not make me friends
Chatted with her, her husband out of the way
Could not saw above 4 inches of the stone in a day
Do look upon me as a remembrancer of his former vanity
Doubtfull of himself, and easily be removed from his
own opinion
Drink a dish of coffee
Even to the having bad words with my wife, and blows
too
Expected musique, the missing of which spoiled my
dinner
Expressly taking care that nobody might see this business
done
Fear of making her think me to be in a better condition
Fear all his kindness is but only his lust to her
Feared I might meet with some people that might know
me
Fetch masts from New England
Few in any age that do mind anything that is abstruse
Find myself to over-value things when a child