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Thursday 26 December 1661

This morning Sir W. Pen and I to the Treasury office, and there we paid off the Amity (Captain Stokes’s ship that was at Guinny) and another ship, and so home, and after dinner Sir William came to me, and he and his son and Aaugliter, and I and my wife, by coach to Moorfields to walk; but it was most foul weather, and so we went into an alehouse and there eat some cakes and ale, and a washeallbowle1 woman and girl came to us and sung to us. And after all was done I called my boy (Wayneman) to us to eat some cake that was left, and the woman of the house told us that he had called for two cakes and a pot of ale for himself, at which I was angry, and am resolved to correct him for it. So home, and Sir W. Pen and his son and daughter to supper to me to a good turkey, and were merry at cards, and so to bed.

  1. “The wenches with their wassall bowls About the streets are singing.” —Wither’s Christmas Carol.

    The old custom of carrying the wassail bowl from door to door, with songs and merriment, in Christmas week, is still observed in some of our rural districts.—B.

Friday 27 December 1661Wednesday 25 December 1661

Also on this day

Temperature: 6°C / 43°F

  • (Average for December 1661)

In Earls Colne, Essex

Annotations

  • Washeall-bowle (From L&M Companion)

    Wassail bowl, for making wassail (spiced ale drunk on Christmass Eve and Twelfth Night), carried on their rounds by wassailers, who sang carols from house to house.

  • “And after all was done I called my boy …”

    As far as I can find, this is the first time that we find proof in Sam’s diary that Will is with him (them) without Sam mentioning him - until of course Will does something (for better or for worse) which earns him a few words of comment.

    This makes it all the more probable that Will has been out with Sam many times (if not most of the time) without being mentioned explicitly in Sam’s diary entries.

  • Will vs Wayneman

    There has been some confusion about this before, but is seems I was wrong in assuming Wayneman = Will.

    Nonetheless my previous remark stands: servant(s) must often have accompanied Sam on his daily errands, most of the time without being mentioned explicitly in the diary.

  • “Aaugliter” does this have any thing to do with fortelling.?
    augur prophet or augeo, -xi, -actumto enlarge?
    lito to sacrifice with omens?

  • Wassail
    There’s a website devoted to the tradition of making wassail - http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/5567/wassail.html A reversion to saturnalia!

  • Aaugliter
    Vicenzo (aka Vicente & Vincent inter alia) has made a brilliantly erudite interpretation (in jest, I believe) of what seems an evident mis-scan of “daughter”.

  • Regarding Wayneman and Will:
    Naughty Wayneman the incorrigible youngster is the brother of much beloved maidservant Jane. Jane’s widowed mother and Jane have begged Sam to look out for Wayneman’s welfare and future prospects. Wayneman joined the Pepys household as a boy servant. Will Hewer is another young servant cum trainee-clerk who resided throughout his teen years in Sam’s household. Will Hewer featured prominently throughout Sam’s lifetime.

  • Christmas revelry at last.

    (The wassail, and maybe the turkey as well)

  • Would this “turkey” be an American turkey or the African “turkey”? If it is an American turkey I think it would have been expensive. I seem to recall that turkeys were expensive to purchase until the 20th century when culture techniques were perfected.

    From the “kidzone”:
    When the Spanish first found the bird in the Americas more than 400 years ago they brought it back to Europe. The English mistakenly thought it was a bird they called a “turkey” so they gave it the same name. This other bird was actually from Africa, but came to England by way of the Turkey (lots of shipping went through Turkey at the time). The name stuck even when they realized the birds weren’t the same.

  • Turkey

    According to this page

    http://www.worldwidewords.org/articles/turkey.htm

    the merchants from Turkey were still selling the American bird (pavo meleagris) and it was known in England in the time of Shakespeare. The history given here is different from that at kidzone. Take your pick!

    The guinea fowl comes from Africa, but from West Africa, not from the parts where Turkish merchants would be trading.

  • Turkey

    For more on the subject, check the background info:

    http://www.pepysdiary.com/p/378.php

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