Friday 5 July 1661
At home, and in the afternoon to the office, and that being done all went to Sir W. Batten’s and there had a venison pasty, and were very merry. At night home and to bed.
Daily entries from the 17th century London diary
At home, and in the afternoon to the office, and that being done all went to Sir W. Batten’s and there had a venison pasty, and were very merry. At night home and to bed.
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7 Annotations
First Reading
dirk • Link
venison pasty
Heavy stuff! Indigestion tomorrow morning?
vicente • Link
Should have gone to the H.o L.
July 5th Petitions from Good Christians and Anabptists. pet: will be heard but ???
then report concerning Penal Laws against Priests. ...For refusing to take Oath of Supremacy . should it be repealed? it was read and voted and Ordered To stand as is.
http://www.british-history.ac.uk/…
Otherwise they are very interested in the Real estate trans actions.
Linda • Link
Do you think when he says he was "very merry" that it is because they have been drinking?
Mary • Link
"very merry"
I expect that they have been drinking, but Pepys' use of 'merry' here would have been literal, not as a euphemism for 'jovially drunk' or 'tipsy'.
Robert Gertz • Link
Apparently Sir Will B. kicked in for the real thing, unlike cozen Tom in Jan, 1660.
"...only the venison pasty was palpable beef, which was not handsome."
JWB • Link
"They don't flee from me"
Three fauns this morning in my orchard eating low hanging pears. Anyone for venison pasties?
A. De Araujo • Link
If you can assure me it is not from road kill.