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Monday 5 January 1662/63

Up and to the Duke, who himself told me that Sir J. Lawson was come home to Portsmouth from the Streights, who is now come with great renown among all men, and, I perceive, mightily esteemed at Court by all. The Duke did not stay long in his chamber; but to the King’s chamber, whither by and by the Russia Embassadors come; who, it seems, have a custom that they will not come to have any treaty with our or any King’s Commissioners, but they will themselves see at the time the face of the King himself, be it forty days one after another; and so they did to-day only go in and see the King; and so out again to the Council-chamber. The Duke returned to his chamber, and so to his closett, where Sir G. Carteret, Sir J. Minnes, Sir W. Batten, Mr. Coventry, and myself attended him about the business of the Navy; and after much discourse and pleasant talk he went away. And I took Sir W. Batten and Captain Allen into the wine cellar to my tenant (as I call him, Serjeant Dalton), and there drank a great deal of variety of wines, more than I have drunk at one time, or shall again a great while, when I come to return to my oaths, which I intend in a day or two. Thence to my Lord’s lodging, where Mr. Hunt and Mr. Creed dined with us, and were very merry. And after dinner he and I to White Hall, where the Duke and the Commissioners for Tangier met, but did not do much: my Lord Sandwich not being in town, nobody making it their business. So up, and Creed and I to my wife again, and after a game or two at cards, to the Cockpitt, where we saw “Claracilla,” a poor play, done by the King’s house (but neither the King nor Queen were there, but only the Duke and Duchess, who did show some impertinent and, methought, unnatural dalliances there, before the whole world, such as kissing, and leaning upon one another); but to my very little content, they not acting in any degree like the Duke’s people. So home (there being here this night Mrs. Turner and Mrs. Martha Batten of our office) to my Lord’s lodgings again, and to a game at cards, we three and Sarah, and so to supper and some apples and ale, and to bed with great pleasure, blessed be God!

Tuesday 6 January 1662/63Sunday 4 January 1662/63

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  • “into the wine cellar … and there drank a great deal of variety of wines”: another episode in the history of the liquid lunch. The conjunction with “apples and ale” calls to mind the old wine-seller’s adage: “Buy wine on apples, sell it with cheese.”

  • What a dizzy day! Sam seems to flit about all over the place and cram a vast amount of activity into a small amount of time. And how did he come to be able to have free rein in the King’s Wine Cellar? Is it because the Serjeant is under an obligation to Sam? Did Sam sell the Axe Yard lease at a knock-down price to Dalton?
    Note that Sam for a few days now has been talking about renewing his oaths any day now, but somehow, hasn’t quite screwed himself up to actually taking the oaths!
    All these card games - anyone know what they would have been playing? And was it for money?

  • The Duke seems to be turning up for the Monday meetings more often recently. Maybe the weather is too bad for hunting.

  • Strolls into the royal wine cellar and makes merry…? Talk about connections.

    “Excuse me?” Charles looks up. Castlemaine managing a stern glance from the floor. Several bottles of choice vintage scattered about.

    Ah..Ah…Ah…Ah…Batten looks at Pepys who looks at Dalton who maintains a disciplined air.

    “Your Majesty.” The Serjeant makes deep bow. “Mr. Pepys and Sir William expressed an interest in touring the royal cellar. My abject apologies for not informing you beforehand.”

    “Oh… Yes, well.” Charles waves a lace-trimmed wrist. “Carry on, Dalton. Batten, Pepys…Good to see you. Jamie tells me things are going swimmingly at the Naval Office. (Haw, haw) Have a good look round, quite a place.”

    “Your Majesty.” Pepys and Batten manage to squeak, backing away in bow state.

    Castlemaine eyeing them narrowly…

    ***

    I take the party-Sam, Bess, Jane Turner, Martha Batten camped out tonight in the Montagus’ Wardrobe lodging?…

    But he and Jem are out in the country…

    “Pepys? Dear Cousin Elisabeth? Mrs…Yes, Turner. And…”

    “Martha Batten, my lord. Daughter to Sir Will, my lord.” Martha nervously.

    “Yes. To what do we owe this…Unexpected pleasure?”

    “Me lor’…” Sarah steps in. Having sampled a little too much of the ale…Again.

    “Mr. Peeps wuz over with his Missus and com fer dinner with Mr. Cree…d, Sir Will, some Capt’n and Mr…er…Whichever. And they all comes back from their plays…Sumadem and Mr. Peeps says ‘les have us a lil’ ale and apppples, Sarah.’ and I says…”

    “Yes, certainly. Always glad to have you, Samuel. I hope you enjoyed your stay. Sarah, I’d like a word with you after our guests…Leave.”

  • Jamie and Anne kissing and leaning on each other at the play? Would be great to hear Bess’ take…

    Geesh Sam would you prefer Jamie flaunting a mistress?

    “But my God, Bess. It was his own wife!”

    Yeah, I know it’s unconventional, embarrassing to make such a public display. But I would say I like Jamie more and more, at least as a human being…

  • unnatural dalliances

    such as kissing, and leaning upon one another


    Samuel Prig speaking. Better Georges Brassens:


    Les amoureux qui s’bécott’nt sur les bancs publics
    Bancs publics, bancs publics
    En s’fouttant pas mal du regard oblique
    Des passants honnêtes
    Les amoureux qui s’bécott’nt sur les bancs publics
    Bancs publics, bancs publics
    En s’disant des “Je t’aime” pathétiques
    Ont des p’tit’s gueul’ bien sympatiques

    http://www.georges-brassens.com/brassens.htm
    Les Amoureux des bancs publics

  • Apples and ale

    sounds good, I think I’ll have that too!

  • Robert, Perhaps James may be playing Mr. Sweetie to his wife in public to cover up the latest gossip about Lady Chesterfield??? I am sure that she has heard the rumors about Lady C. being quickly brought to “the country home” by her husband to get her away from James’s clutches. Anne Hyde was nobody’s fool and VERY aware of James’ and his playing around, so perhaps he’s tryuing to get out of the dog house??

    http://www.pepysdiary.com/archive/1662/11/03/#annotations
    http://www.pepysdiary.com/archive/1663/01/01/#annotations

    On another note, as we’ve seen before, sometimes the audience antics are more entertaining than the play.

  • And as for you Mr. Hamilton, I’ll turn to that comic genius Steve Martin who once said….
    “Boy, those French, they have a different word for everything” …
    Thanks for the poem!

  • “impertinent and unnatural dalliances”
    I wonder if the audience had the same reaction or if it was the Puritan in Sam who was scandalized.

  • “Sir J. Lawson…come…from the Streights…with great renown among all men, and, I perceive, mightily esteemed at Court by all” and to the great envy of Sandwich, who had had his own time in the Mediterranean (the rivalry was bared by Sandwich to Pepys on 27 June):
    http://www.pepysdiary.com/archive/1662/06/27/index.php

  • The Wine cellar be off the Great Hall, the pantry across the road from the Great Hall. The Kings suite is over looking the Tems.
    The Council chambers be off the Court Yard, along with the Treasury Chamberbehind the Banqueting House
    There be a wardrobe, off Whitehall at the Palace Gates,, just before Banqueting Hall, it consists of 5 rooms, a large area over looking the Palace Gates plus a large room fronting the street of White hall. Kings has Laboratory & Bath[yes b, no v in text]
    [from the plan of the palace].

  • If the Cockpit be a stones throw away from the Banketing hall, the Axe a few yards the other way. Then I dothe think Sandwiches Place be in part of the Complex[known as the Wardrobe] along with all the HRH’s and those other big Lords, such [this list,] 4 D Richmond, 5 D Monmouth, 6 D Ormond ,7 D Albemarle,8 Earl of Bath, 9 Earl of Lauderdale, 10 L Peterbourough, 11 Lord Gerrard, 12 Lord Croft, 13 Lord Belaise, 14 Lord Chamberlain,37 Mr Hyde, 38 Mr Povey
    39 Mr Clayfinch, 40 Sir William Killigrew, 41 Sir Francis Clinton,
    42 Dr Frazier.

  • in Aqua Scripto, do you read from the 1680 map you so very helpfully added to the Whitehall info page?!
    On Jan. 1 L&M noted that Lady Castlemaine’s house was next door to Sandwich’s on King Street; the Roque map of 1746, which is a different London puts many things in (still) other places.
    (in time…)


  • This Plan marks Palmer as being sandwiched between Monmouth, Ormonde and Albermarle, back from The street, at indicatator 32

  • for card games look at “entertainment” in background info.
    for a famous picaresque card game painting (not Pepys stile, God forbid!) look at:
    http://www.abcgallery.com/C/caravaggio/caravaggio12.html

  • ‘Sam for a few days now has been talking about renewing his oaths any day now’
    Man after my own heart. But he is obviously still celebrating the Christmas holiday. When do the twelve days of Christmas end?

  • “When do the twelve days of Christmas end?”

    In the Western-rite churches they end on January 6, Epiphany, or Three King’s Day, the festival of Christ’s birth in Eastern-rite churches (~Orthodox Christmas).

  • Twelfth Night
    That´s today. End of Saturnalia. Public holiday in Lutheran Sweden.
    Strange with all these card games that Sam never seems to bother to mention who wins. Maybe he keeps his competitive streak for things that matter?

  • Twelfth Night (correction)
    Oops. The Night was yesterday, the Eve of today’s public holiday, aka Epiphany in some countries. Happy Orthodox Christmas going on in some other countries.
    A quick rundown at
    http://www.christmascarnivals.com/12-days-of-christmas/
    which gives an allegorical interpretation of the carol about the Twelve Days.
    No mention of the Twentieth Day which Swedes often talk about “Thirteen-Day Canute” (trettondag Knut).

  • “impertinent and unnatural dalliances”

    It was more the line in Chicago Chicago that came to my mind. I see little irony in Samual’s diary, any evidence it was different in real life ?

    On state street that great street I just want to say
    They do things that they don’t do on Broadway - say
    They have the time the time of their life
    I saw a man and he danced with his wife
    In Chicago, my home town

  • “impertinent and unnatural dalliances”

    Obviously when you are up there at the top of the tree, you don’t need to worry about “being much afeard of being seen by anybody”.

  • Isn’t the problem with what the D of Y was doing was not that it was with his wife, but that he was doing it at all - in a very public place? Although, I agree it was probably a deliberate political move on Anne’s part, who seems to have been an intelligent person and made no false moves in the fickle and changeable world of the Royal Court.

  • What was true of Palmer in 1680 was not in 1662, evidently — or so L&M, — and we know there are changes in time and the randy conduct of the Court grew increasingy public as C II’s reign went on.

    in Aqua Scripto, the 1680 diagram is WONDERFUL! http://www.londonancestor.com/maps/whitehall-palace.htm

  • Letter from Lord Peterborough to Sandwich

    Written from: Tangier
    Date: 5 January 1663

    Mentions the long delay of expected supplies from England for Tangier. Acquaints Lord Sandwich with some plans of fortification against the Moors. Adds particulars of a projected reduction of the expense of the Cavalry at Tangier; the saving to be applied “to the other works”. …

    Source:
    Bodleian Library
    http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/projects/carte/carte.html

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