Diary of Samuel Pepys — Volume 72: February/March 1668-69 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 54 pages of information about Diary of Samuel Pepys — Volume 72.

Diary of Samuel Pepys — Volume 72: February/March 1668-69 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 54 pages of information about Diary of Samuel Pepys — Volume 72.

THE DIARY OF SAMUEL PEPYS M.A.  F.R.S.

CLERK OF THE ACTS AND SECRETARY TO THE ADMIRALTY

Transcribed from the shorthand manuscript in the PEPYSIAN library
Magdalene College Cambridge by the Rev.  MYNORS Bright M.A.  Late fellow
and president of the College

(Unabridged)

WITH LORD BRAYBROOKE’S NOTES

Editedwith additions by

Henry B. Wheatley F.S.A.

Diary of Samuel Pepys. 
March
1668-1669

March 1st.  Up, and to White Hall to the Committee of Tangier, but it did not meet.  But here I do hear first that my Lady Paulina Montagu did die yesterday; at which I went to my Lord’s lodgings, but he is shut up with sorrow, and so not to be spoken with:  and therefore I returned, and to Westminster Hall, where I have not been, I think, in some months.  And here the Hall was very full, the King having, by Commission to some Lords this day, prorogued the Parliament till the 19th of October next:  at which I am glad, hoping to have time to go over to France this year.  But I was most of all surprised this morning by my Lord Bellassis, who, by appointment, met me at Auditor Wood’s, at the Temple, and tells me of a duell designed between the Duke of Buckingham and my Lord Halifax, or Sir W. Coventry; the challenge being carried by Harry Saville, but prevented by my Lord Arlington, and the King told of it; and this was all the discourse at Court this day.  But I, meeting Sir W. Coventry in the Duke of York’s chamber, he would not own it to me, but told me that he was a man of too much peace to meddle with fighting, and so it rested:  but the talk is full in the town of the business.  Thence, having walked some turns with my cozen Pepys, and most people, by their discourse, believing that this Parliament will never sit more, I away to several places to look after things against to-morrow’s feast, and so home to dinner; and thence, after noon, my wife and I out by hackneycoach, and spent the afternoon in several places, doing several things at the ’Change and elsewhere against to-morrow; and, among others, I did also bring home a piece of my face cast in plaister, for to make a wizard upon, for my eyes.  And so home, where W. Batelier come, and sat with us; and there, after many doubts, did resolve to go on with our feast and dancing to-morrow; and so, after supper, left the maids to make clean the house, and to lay the cloth, and other things against to-morrow, and we to bed.

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Diary of Samuel Pepys — Volume 72: February/March 1668-69 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.