Compton a gun
to discharge seven times, the best of all devices that ever I saw, and
very serviceable, and not a bawble; for it is much approved of, and
many thereof made. Thence to my office all the afternoon as long as I
could see, about setting many businesses in order. In the evening came
Mr. Lewis to me, and very ingeniously did enquire whether I ever did
look into the business of the Chest at Chatham;
[Pepys gives some particulars about the Chest on November 13th, 1662.
"The Chest at Chatham was originally planned by Sir Francis Drake
and Sir John Hawkins in 1588, after the defeat of the Armada; the
seamen voluntarily agreed to have 'defalked' out of their wages certain
sums to form a fund for relief. The property became considerable, as
well as the abuses, and in 1802 the Chest was removed to Greenwich.
In 1817, the stock amounted to L300,000 Consols."--Hist. of Rochester,
p. 346.--B.]
and after my readiness to be informed did appear to him, he did
produce a paper, wherein he stated the government of the Chest to me;
and upon the whole did tell me how it hath ever been abused, and to
this day is; and what a meritorious act it would be to look after it;
which I am resolved to do, if God bless me; and do thank him very
much for it. So home, and after a turn or two upon the leads with my
wife, who has lately had but little of my company, since I begun to
follow my business, but is contented therewith since she sees how I
spend my time, and so to bed.
4th. Up by five o'clock, and after my journall put in order, to my office
about my business, which I am resolved to follow, for every day I see
what ground I get by it. By and by comes Mr. Cooper, mate of the
Royall Charles, of whom I intend to learn mathematiques, and do begin
with him to-day, he being a very able man, and no great matter, I
suppose, will content him. After an hour's being with him at
arithmetique (my first attempt being to learn the multiplication-table);
then we parted till to-morrow. And so to my business at my office
again till noon, about which time Sir W. Warren did come to me about
business, and did begin to instruct me in the nature of fine timber and
deals, telling me the nature of every sort; and from that we fell to
discourse of Sir W. Batten's corruption and the people that he employs,
and from one discourse to another of the kind. I was much pleased with
his company, and so staid talking with him all alone at my office till 4
in the afternoon, without eating or drinking all day, and then parted,
and I home to eat a bit, and so back again to my office; and toward the
evening came Mr. Sheply, who is to go out of town to-morrow, and so
he and I with much ado settled his accounts with my Lord, which,
though they be true and honest, yet so obscure, that it vexes me to see
in what manner they are kept. He being gone, and leave taken of him as
of a man likely not to come to London again a great while, I eat a bit of
bread and butter, and so to bed. This day I sent my brother Tom, at his
request, my father's old Bass Viall which he and I have kept so long,
but I fear Tom will do little good at it.
5th. To my office all the morning, to get things ready against our sitting,
and by and by we sat and did business all the morning, and at noon had
Sir W. Pen, who I hate with all my heart for his base treacherous tricks,
but yet I think it not policy to declare it yet, and his son William, to my
house to dinner, where was also Mr. Creed and my cozen Harry
Alcocke. I having some venison given me a day or two ago, and so I
had a shoulder roasted, another baked, and the umbles
[The umbles are the liver, kidneys, and other portions of the inside of
the deer. They were usually made into pies, and old cookery books
contain directions for the making of 'umble pies.']
baked in a pie, and all very well done. We were merry as I could be in
that company, and the more because I would not seem otherwise to Sir
W. Pen, he being within a day or two to go for Ireland. After dinner he
and his son went away, and Mr. Creed would, with all his
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