INDEX
INDEX.
The titles of Chapters are printed in italics.
| PAGE | |
Admiral, introduction of the word into English | [129] |
| Admiral (Lord High), the office first put in commission | [136] |
| Admiralty (The), relation of the office to the Navy Board | [142], [145] |
| —— Secretaries of, list | [268] |
| Almanacs foretell the Fire of London | [113] |
| Albemarle (George Monk, Duke of) | [31], [183] |
| Albemarle (Duchess of) | [184] |
| —— her disgust at the ways of the “gentlemen captains” | [149] |
| Aldborough, members of Parliament for | [48] |
| Amusements | [217–231] |
| Anglesey (Earl of) | [190] |
| Arlington (Earl of) laughed at by Miss Stewart | [159] |
| Ascension day, custom of beating the bounds on that day | [213] |
| “Athenæum” on the charm of the “Diary” | [17] |
| Audley End, visit of the queen and grand ladies to the fair at | [161] |
| Axe Yard, Pepys’s home there | [24] |
| Backwell (Alderman), the goldsmith | [123] |
| Bailey (J. E.), his paper on the Cipher of the “Diary” | [13] |
| Balaam (Dr.), his opinion of Tangier | [75] |
| Ballads, Pepys’s collection of | [90] |
| Barlow (Thomas), Pepys’s predecessor as Clerk of the Acts | [23] |
| Batten (Sir William) | [157] |
| Batten (Lady), married to Sir James B. Leyenburg | [48] |
| Bear at the Bridge foot | [102] |
| Beating the bounds | [213] |
| Bellasys (John, Lord), Governor of Tangier | [69] |
| Bellasys (Susan, Lady) | [169] |
| Bence (John), M.P. for Aldborough | [48] |
| Berkeley (Sir Charles), afterwards Earl of Falmouth | [171], [195] |
| Betterton, Pepys’s admiration for | [219] |
| Binding of Pepys’s books | [84] |
| Birch (Colonel), his proposal for the rebuilding of London after the Fire | [114] |
| Blackburne (Robert), Secretary of the Admiralty | [136], [269] |
| Bludworth (Sir Thomas), a poor creature | [32] |
| Bombay a more iniquitous place than Tangier | [75] |
| Booksellers employed by Pepys | [93] |
| Brampton, Pepys’s money buried there | [34] |
| —— parish registers | [3] |
| Braybrooke (Lord) as an editor | [15] |
| —— his censure on James II. | [139] |
| Breakfasts, Pepys’s | [201] |
| Bright’s (Rev. Mynors) edition of the “Diary” | [15] |
| British dominion of the seas | [154] |
| Brook (Margaret), afterwards Lady Denham | [177] |
| Brooke (Sir Robert), M.P. for Aldborough | [48] |
| Brouncker (Lord) | [158] |
| Buckingham (Duke of) | [180] |
| —— his mimicry | [160] |
| —— his Duchess | [161] |
| Buckingham House in the Strand | [115] |
| Burton (Dr. Hezekiah) | [79] |
| Butler’s “Hudibras” in the Pepysian library | [89] |
| Cambridge, Pepys’s name on the boards of Trinity College | [4] |
| —— Pepys entered at Magdalene College | [4] |
| Cards, games at | [229] |
| Carriage-building, improvements in | [211] |
| Carteret (Sir George) | [156], [273] |
| Carteret (Philip), his marriage with Lady Jemimah Montagu | [209] |
| Castle Rising, members of Parliament for | [49] |
| Castlemaine (Countess of) | [168], [172], [173] |
| —— Pepys’s admiration for her | [41] |
| Catalogues made by Pepys | [82], [92] |
| Characters (Public) | [183–198] |
| Charles II., his coronation | [24] |
| —— his own account of his escape after the Battle of Worcester | [53] |
| —— viciousness of his Court | [159] |
| —— his character | [165–169] |
| Chatham dockyard | [151] |
| —— Commissioners of the Navy resident at | [284] |
| Chaucer, Pepys’s appreciation of | [86] |
| Chest (The) at Chatham | [152] |
| —— removed to Greenwich | [153] |
| Chesterfield (Elizabeth, Countess of) | [176] |
| Chiffinch (Thomas) | [181] |
| Chiffinch (William) | [181] |
| Church, Pepys’s behaviour at | [214] |
| Clapham, Pepys moves there | [59] |
| Clarendon (Edward Hyde, Earl of) | [187] |
| —— displeased with Pepys | [188] |
| Clarendon Park, the timber at | [188] |
| Clarges (Ann), afterwards Duchess of Albemarle | [184] |
| Clerk of the Acts, an ancient office | [129] |
| —— list of holders of the office | [279] |
| Clothworkers’ Company, Pepys elected Master | [51] |
| Clothworkers’ Hall, burning of | [112] |
| Cocker (Edward), the writing master | [30], [87] |
| Cockfighting, Pepys’s opinion of | [94], [228] |
| “Cockpit,” plays acted there | [223] |
| Coleridge, quotations from | [1], [46] |
| Cooper (Mr.), teaches Pepys mathematics | [28] |
| Costume, varieties of, after the Restoration | [203] |
| Cottenham, the Pepyses of | [1] |
| Cotton’s Scarronides appreciated by Pepys | [90] |
| Court (The) | [159–182] |
| Coventry (Mr., afterwards Sir William) | [32], [36], [37], [189], [197], [270] |
| Coventry (Mr., afterwards Sir William) suggests that Pepys should write a history of the Dutch war | [31] |
| —— Pepys’s respect for him | [156] |
| Cox (Sir John) | [151], [285] |
| Creed (John), Secretary to the Commissioners of Tangier | [66] |
| Crowland (Abbot of), his lands in Cambridgeshire | [2] |
| Cunningham (Peter), on the charm of the “Diary” | [17] |
| —— his story of Nell Gwyn referred to | [160], [172] |
| Dancing at Court | [230] |
| Dartmouth (Lord) | [54], [55], [80] |
| —— sent out to destroy Tangier | [72] |
| Davenant’s (Sir William) company of actors | [217] |
| Davis (Moll) | [179] |
| Deane (Sir Anthony) | [53], [124] |
| Denham (Lady) | [177] |
| Deptford dockyard | [153] |
| “Diary,” account of the | [11] |
| Dinners, Pepys’s opinion upon | [200] |
| Dockyards, the four | [150] |
| Domesday Book | [44] |
| Douglas (Captain), his bravery | [150] |
| Downing (Sir George) | [188] |
| —— Pepys’s connection with him | [11], [18], [23] |
| D’Oyly wants to borrow money from Pepys | [53] |
| Drinking, habits of deep | [201] |
| Dryden recommended by Pepys to modernize Chaucer | [87] |
| Dummer (Edmund), constructer of the first docks at Plymouth | [81], [153], [278] |
| Dutch in the Medway | [149] |
| Dutch war, Pepys proposes to write a history of the | [31] |
| “Ecclesiastes,” quotation from | [232] |
| Edisbury (Kenrick), the “old Edgeborrow” of the “Diary” | [152], [277] |
| Evelyn (John) visits Pepys in the Tower | [52] |
| —— his defence of England’s right to the dominion of the sea | [155] |
| Evelyn’s (Mrs.) picture of the Duchess of Newcastle | [194] |
| Falmouth (Sir Charles Berkeley, Earl of) | [171], [195] |
| Fane (Mrs.), Pepys’s housekeeper | [59] |
| Fashion, Charles II.’s attempt to fix the | [204] |
| Field, Pepys’s lawsuit with | [28] |
| Fitzgerald (Col.), Deputy Governor of Tangier | [69] |
| Flag (English), rights of | [155] |
| Fox (Lady), Pepys’s anagrams upon her name when Mrs. Whittle | [5] |
| Gaming at Court | [229] |
| Gibson’s “Memoirs of the Navy” | [148] |
| “Gloucester” (The), wreck of | [54] |
| Gloves, use of perfumed | [206] |
| Grammont, Memoirs of | [159], [160], [162], [163], [164] |
| Greenwich, plague there | [110] |
| Grenville (Lord), his help in deciphering the “Diary” | [12] |
| Gwyn (Nell) | [179] |
| Hales’s portrait of Pepys | [237] |
| Hamilton (Miss) | [162], [163], [169] |
| Harbord (Sir Charles) suggested as paymaster for Tangier | [69] |
| Harbord (William), M.P. for Launceston | [52] |
| —— his opinion of the government of Tangier | [70] |
| Harrington (James) and his Rota Club | [18] |
| Harwich, Pepys elected M.P. for | [57] |
| —— is unpopular there when out of favour at Court | [57] |
| Hats worn indoors | [205] |
| Hayter (Thomas) appointed Clerk of the Acts | [49], [121], [283] |
| —— Secretary of the Admiralty | [270] |
| Henry VIII., what he did for the Navy | [130] |
| Hewer (William) | [121] |
| —— Pepys lives with him | [59] |
| Hickes (Dr. George) attends Pepys’s death-bed | [60] |
| Hill-house (The), at Chatham | [152] |
| Hippocras, not wine, but a mixed drink | [27], [109] |
| Hollar’s views of Tangier | [70] |
| Holmes (Sir Robert) | [196] |
| Houblons (The), friends of Pepys | [58], [59], [72], [73], [123] |
| Hours of going to bed | [212] |
| Howard (Lord) | [49] |
| Huntingdon, Pepys goes to school there | [3] |
| Hyde (Anne), wife of the Duke of York | [170] |
| Hyde (Mrs.) | [162] |
| Inns, abundance of, in London | [201] |
| Jackson (John), Pepys’s nephew | [61], [73] |
| James II., previously Duke of York | [31], [37], [49], [58] |
| —— his relations with Pepys | [22], [138] |
| —— his connection with the Countess of Chesterfield | [176] |
| —— —— with Lady Denham | [177] |
| —— —— with Frances Jennings | [178] |
| —— his character | [169] |
| —— his wife Anne | [170] |
| —— his conversion to Roman Catholicism | [170] |
| —— shipwreck of his ship “The Gloucester” | [54] |
| Jennings (Frances), afterwards Duchess of Tyrconnel | [160], [179] |
| Johnson (Dr.), quotation from | [116] |
| Jones (Sir William), M.P., his opinion of the government of Tangier | [70] |
| Jonson (Ben), Pepys’s admiration of | [219] |
| Joyce (Anthony), his misfortunes and death | [118] |
| Joyce (Kate) | [119] |
| Joyce (William), an impertinent coxcomb | [118] |
| Katherine (Queen) | [168] |
| —— her marriage portion | [64] |
| Katherine of Valois, her body at Westminster Abbey | [40] |
| Killigrew’s company of actors | [218] |
| King Street, Westminster, full of inns | [106] |
| King’s College, Cambridge, Pepys suggested for Provost | [53] |
| Kingsmall (Sir Francis), grandfather of Mrs. Pepys | [7] |
| Kirke (Colonel), Deputy Governor of Tangier | [68], [69], [72], [73] |
| Kite (Mrs.), and her daughter Peg | [119] |
| Kneller’s (Sir Godfrey), portrait of Dr. Wallis | [60] |
| —— portraits of Pepys | [238] |
| Knipp (Mrs.), the actress | [220] |
| Lawson (Sir John) | [196] |
| —— his opinion of Tangier | [65] |
| Leeds (Duke of) | [191], [273] |
| Legge (Colonel), afterwards Lord Dartmouth | [54], [55], [72], [80] |
| Lely’s (Sir Peter), portrait of Pepys | [238] |
| —— portraits of the beauties of the Court | [162] |
| Leybourne (W. de), the first English Admiral | [129] |
| Leyenburg (Sir James B.), Pepys’s quarrel with him | [48] |
| Lincoln’s Inn, theatres in | [224] |
| London | [100–125] |
| —— the Plague | [109–112] |
| —— the Fire | [31], [112–115] |
| —— rebuilding of | [114] |
| —— prints of, collected by Pepys | [92] |
| London Bridge, danger of “shooting” it | [101] |
| Lorrain (Paul), a cataloguer employed by Pepys | [84] |
| Magdalene College, Cambridge, Pepys’s library there | [77] |
| Maitland MS. at Cambridge | [81] |
| Man (Mr.) offers to buy the place of Clerk of the Acts | [24] |
| Manners | [199–216] |
| Marshall (Stephen), not the father of Anne and Beck Marshall | [220] |
| Maryon (S.) | [54] |
| Marvell (Andrew), his attack on Pepys | [53] |
| —— “Instructions to a Painter,” quoted | [178] |
| —— “Ballad on the Lord Mayor and Aldermen,” quoted | [159] |
| Masks worn by ladies | [205] |
| Maulyverer (John) | [79] |
| May (Baptist) | [182] |
| Michell (Betty), Pepys’s admiration for her | [42] |
| Milles (Dr. Daniel), the minister of St. Olave’s | [120] |
| Mills (Rev. Alexander) | [57] |
| Milton’s “Paradise Lost,” quotation from | [63] |
| —— works in the Pepysian Library | [88] |
| Mings (Sir Christopher), loved by his sailors | [197] |
| Minnes (Sir John) | [156], [276] |
| —— teaches Pepys to love Chaucer | [86] |
| Moll (Orange), at the theatre | [227] |
| Money, value of, in Pepys’s day | [212] |
| Monk (George), afterwards Duke of Albemarle | [31], [183] |
| Monson (Sir William), his Naval Tracts | [128], [134] |
| Montagu (Sir Edward), afterwards Earl of Sandwich, | [9], [10], [20], [24], [29], [49], [65], [154], [185] |
| —— first chose Portsmouth for his title when offered an earldom | [154] |
| Montague (Lady Jemimah), her marriage with Philip Carteret | [209] |
| Moorfields full of people after the Fire | [33] |
| —— the fights there | [105] |
| —— its state after the Fire | [112] |
| Moors turned out of Tangier | [64] |
| —— take possession of the place again | [74] |
| Morelli (Cesare) | [121] |
| Mourning, use of | [208] |
| Muffs, use of, by men | [207] |
| Muly Ismael, Emperor of Morocco | [74] |
| Musical instruments referred to in the “Diary” | [97], [98], [252–253] |
| “Naseby,” Pepys in the | [10], [21] |
| —— its name is changed to “Charles” | [22] |
| Navy (The) [128–158] | |
| —— lists of the officers of the | [266] |
| Navy Board, origin of | [130] |
| —— composition in the reign of Elizabeth | [131] |
| —— instructions | [132] |
| —— salaries of the officers | [135] |
| —— Commissioners during the Commonwealth | [136] |
| —— re-arrangement of the Board at the Restoration | [137] |
| —— their want of money | [146] |
| Navy Office in Crutched Friars | [144] |
| —— attempts to save it from being burnt | [32] |
| Nero (Tragedy of), quotation from | [217] |
| Newcastle (Margaret, Duchess of) | [193] |
| Newgate Street, the butchers there | [104] |
| Nonconformists, Pepys’s opinion of the | [214] |
| Northumberland (Algernon, Earl of) | [23] [(note)] |
| Norwood (Colonel), Deputy Governor of Tangier | [67], [69] |
| O’Brien (Donald), his father’s will | [192] |
| Offley petitions against Pepys’s election as M.P. for Castle Rising | [50] |
| Oranges, price of | [227] |
| Osborne (Sir Thomas), afterwards Duke of Leeds | [191], [273] |
| Ossory (Earl of), appointed Governor of Tangier | [71] |
| Page (Sir Thomas), Provost of King’s College, Cambridge | [53] |
| Pasley (Colonel), his assistance to the author | [129], [140] [(note)] |
| —— his lists of the Officers of the Navy | [266] |
| Paston (Sir Robert), afterwards Viscount Yarmouth | [49] |
| Peachell (Dr.), Master of Magdalene College | [79] |
| Penn (Sir William) | [25], [32], [157] |
| —— his house at the Navy Office | [145] |
| Pepys (Mrs. Elizabeth), her marriage to Samuel Pepys | [6], [9] |
| —— squabbles with her husband | [42], [44] |
| —— her death | [47] |
| —— her religion | [51] |
| Pepys (John), Samuel’s brother | [49] |
| —— joint Clerk of the Acts with Thomas Hayter | [143], [283] |
| Pepys (John), Samuel’s father | [3], [9] |
| —— his will | [117] |
| Pepys (Margaret), Samuel’s mother | [3] |
| Pepys (Paulina), Samuel’s sister, he gives her a marriage portion | [44] |
| Pepys (Richard), Lord Chief Justice of Ireland | [2] |
| Pepys (Robert), Samuel’s uncle, his death | [25] |
| Pepys (Samuel), “Pepys before the Diary” | [1–15] |
| —— “Pepys in the Diary” | [16–45] |
| —— “Pepys after the Diary” | [46–62] |
| —— antiquity of his family | [1] |
| —— his birth, Feb. [23], 1632–3, and parentage | [3] |
| —— his education | [3–5] |
| —— a Roundhead as a boy | [4] |
| —— admonished for being drunk | [5] |
| —— his romance, “Love a Cheate” | [5] |
| —— made Master of Acts by proxy | [6] |
| —— his marriage to Elizabeth St. Michel | [6], [9] |
| —— operation for the stone | [10] |
| —— accompanies Sir Edward Montagu to the Sound | [10] |
| —— Clerk of the Exchequer | [11] |
| —— uses Shelton’s system of shorthand in writing his “Diary” | [13] |
| —— how he wrote his “Diary” | [14] |
| —— tells Sir W. Coventry how he kept a diary | [16] |
| —— living in Axe-yard | [18] |
| —— a member of the Rota Club | [19] |
| —— accepts the post of Secretary to the Generals at Sea | [20] |
| Pepys (Samuel) is pleased at being addressed as “Esq.” | [21] |
| —— goes on board the “Naseby” | [21] |
| —— is made Clerk of the Acts | [22] |
| —— his relation to the Instructions for the Navy Office | [138] |
| —— takes possession of his house at the Navy Office | [144] |
| —— his feelings on Barlow’s death, by which he gained £100 a year | [23] |
| —— takes the oaths as a Clerk of the Privy Seal | [24] |
| —— is sworn a justice of the peace | [24] |
| —— goes to Brampton to see after the property left by his uncle | [26] |
| —— his vows | [26] |
| —— thinks it wise to spend while he can enjoy life | [27] |
| —— proposes to write on the British dominion of the seas | [154] |
| —— sworn a younger brother of the Trinity House | [28] |
| —— is made a burgess of Portsmouth | [28] |
| —— is appointed a Commissioner for Tangier | [28] |
| —— learns mathematics and dancing | [28], [230] |
| —— remonstrates with the Earl of Sandwich on his conduct | [29] |
| —— his eyesight begins to fail | [30] |
| —— —— gets worse | [37] |
| —— thinks of writing a history of the Dutch war | [31] |
| —— is appointed an assistant of the Corporation of the Royal Fishery | [31] |
| —— Treasurer of Tangier | [31], [66], [69] |
| —— Surveyor-General of the Victualling Office | [31] |
| —— his connection with the Victualling Department of the Navy | [147] |
| —— is useful during the period of the Plague and the Fire of London | [31] |
| —— sets up a carriage | [33] |
| —— buries his money at Brampton | [34] |
| —— his letter on the state of the office | [139–142] |
| —— his criticism on himself in the letter | [141] |
| —— his letter to the Commissioners of Accounts | [147] |
| —— his great speech at the bar of the House of Commons | [34] |
| —— ends the “Diary” | [38] |
| —— his tour through France and Holland | [47] |
| —— his wife dies | [47] |
| —— is a candidate at Aldborough for election as a Member of Parliament | [48] |
| —— he quarrels with Sir J. B. Leyenburg | [48] |
| —— is appointed Secretary of the Admiralty | [48] |
| —— is one of the mourners at Lord Sandwich’s funeral | [49] |
| —— is elected Member for Castle Rising | [50] |
| —— charges of Popery made against him | [50] |
| —— Commissioner for Tangier | [70] |
| —— elected Master of the Clothworkers’ Company | [51] |
| —— is committed to the Tower | [52] |
| —— is elected Member for Harwich | [53] |
| —— takes down from Charles II.’s dictation the account of the King’s escape after the battle of Worcester | [53] |
| —— is suggested as a candidate for the provostship of King’s College | [54] |
| —— accompanies the Duke of York to Scotland, and is nearly shipwrecked on the way | [54] |
| —— goes on an expedition to Tangier | [55], [72] |
| —— his Tangier Journal | [56], [72] |
| —— reappointed Secretary of the Admiralty | [56] |
| —— elected President of the Royal Society | [56] |
| —— takes part in James II.’s coronation | [56] |
| —— elected for Harwich and Sandwich | [57] |
| —— close of his public career at the Revolution | [57] |
| —— committed to the Gate House at Westminster | [58] |
| —— publishes his “Memoirs of the Navy” | [58] |
| —— parts with his housekeeper, Mrs. Fane | [59] |
| —— settles at Clapham | [59], [115] |
| —— has a portrait of Dr. Wallis painted for Oxford by Kneller | [60] |
| —— his death | [60] |
| —— post-mortem examination | [61] |
| —— his frequent journeys on the river | [101] |
| —— a lover of good living | [200] |
| —— his love of dress | [29], [203] |
| —— his money-grubbing | [39] |
| —— admiration for women | [40] |
| —— his unfaithfulness to his wife | [43] |
| —— his credulity | [44] |
| —— is both mean and generous | [44] |
| —— want of the imaginative faculty | [45] |
| —— account of his portraits and bust | [237–240] |
| —— his different wills | [40] |
| —— mourning rings given to his friends | [62] |
| —— his motto | [94] |
| —— his songs | [95] |
| —— his books and collections | [77–99] |
| —— his manuscripts at Oxford | [251] |
| —— his relations, friends, and acquaintances | [116–127] |
| —— his correspondents | [254] |
| Peterborough (Henry, 2nd Earl of), first English governor of Tangier | [66], [68] |
| Pett’s (Commissioner Peter) house at Chatham | [151] |
| —— his threatened impeachment | [151], [285] |
| Pett (Phineas), Commissioner of the Navy | [284] |
| Pett (Sir Phineas), Commissioner of the Navy | [286–287] |
| Petty (Sir William) | [22] |
| Plays which Pepys saw acted | [218], [289] |
| Portsmouth dockyard | [153] |
| Portuguese delivery of Tangier to England | [64] |
| Posts, announcement of plays placed on | [228] |
| Povy (Thomas), Treasurer for Tangier | [49], [66] |
| Pressing for the Navy | [148] |
| Progers (Edward) | [181] |
| Prynne’s remarks on Abp. Laud, quotation from | [16] |
| —— his rusty sword in the way | [20] |
| Punishments in Pepys’s day | [215] |
| Purser’s accounts | [147] |
| Quadring (Dr.), Master of Magdalene | [80] |
| Rawlinson MSS. at Oxford | [82] |
| Rich’s shorthand not used by Pepys | [13] |
| Richmond (Duke of) | [175] |
| Richmond (Duchess of) | [160], [161], [174] |
| —— Pepys’s admiration for her | [41] |
| Rings (mourning), given at Pepys’s death | [62] |
| Roger or Rogiers (Thomas), Clerk of the King’s Ships | [129], [279] |
| Romney (Earl of), his intrigue with the Duchess of York | [171] |
| Rota Club | [18] |
| “Roxana” and “Roxalana” confused together | [221] |
| Royal Society, Charles II.’s connection with it | [167] |
| —— Petty’s suggestion for the Anniversary Meeting | [123] |
| —— Pepys elected President | [56] |
| —— visit of the Duchess of Newcastle to | [194] |
| Rupert (Prince) | [186] |
| —— his boat the “Fanfan” | [150] |
| Russian Ambassador, his entry into London | [104] |
| Rutherford (Andrew, Lord), Governor of Dunkirk and afterwards of Tangier | [68] |
| Ryder (Sir W.), his house at Bethnal Green full of valuables after the Fire | [33] |
| Sailors (English) on board Dutch ships | [148] |
| St. Michel (Alexander Marchant, Sieur de), father of Mrs. Pepys, his schemes [6–8], [241–250] | |
| St. Michel (Balthasar), letter to Pepys, giving an account of his family | [6], [51] |
| St. Michel (Elizabeth), afterwards Mrs. Pepys | [6], [9], [42], [44], [47], [51] |
| St. Paul’s School, Pepys educated there | [4] |
| Sandwich, Pepys elected M.P. for | [57] |
| Sandwich (Earl of) | [9], [10], [20], [24], [154], [185] |
| —— takes possession of Tangier | [65] |
| —— his stay at Chelsea | [29] |
| —— his funeral | [49] |
| Savill’s portrait of Pepys | [237] |
| Scotch, Pepys antipathy to the | [55] |
| Scott (Colonel John), his charge against Pepys | [52] |
| Seething Lane, Pepys’s house there | [24] |
| Selden’s “Mare Clausum” | [155] |
| Seymour (Sir Edward), Pepys applies to him for his interest | [58] |
| Shadwell’s (T.), “Epsom Wells,” quotation from | [100] |
| —— “The Woman Captain,” quotation from | [199] |
| Shaftesbury (Earl of), his shrewdness | [171] |
| —— his frivolous charge against Pepys[411] | [50] |
| Shakespeare’s “Winter’s Tale,” quotation from | [77] |
| —— acting of his plays after the Restoration | [218] |
| —— edition of his plays in the Pepysian Library | [88] |
| Shelton’s Tachygraphy | [13] |
| Sheres (Sir Henry), employed at Tangier | [69], [73] |
| —— his friendship for Pepys | [125] |
| Shorthand, Pepys a lover of | [14] |
| —— Pepys’s collection of books on | [92] |
| Shovel (Sir Cloudesley), his answer to Muly Ismael | [74] |
| Skinner (Daniel), papers of Milton possessed by him | [89] |
| Smith (Sir Jeremy) | [197] |
| Smith (John), the decipherer of the “Diary” | [12] |
| —— “Life, Journals, &c., of Pepys,” alluded to | [56] passim |
| Stewart (Frances), afterwards Duchess of Richmond | [41], [160], [161], [174] |
| Stockings, green silk, fashionable | [177] |
| Symons (William), his political misfortunes | [18] |
| Sympson (Mr.), the maker of Pepys’s bookcases | [83] |
| Tangier | [62–76] |
| —— Lord Dartmouth’s expedition to | [55] |
| —— the mole built | [67] |
| —— —— destroyed | [73] |
| Tarpaulins v. “Gentlemen captains” | [148] |
| Taverns frequented by Pepys | [105–108] |
| Tennis, Charles II. a proficient at | [229] |
| Teviot (Earl of), Governor of Dunkirk and afterwards of Tangier | [68] |
| Thames (River), as a highway | [100] |
| Theatres after the Restoration | [217] |
| Tickets given to the sailors in place of money | [147] |
| “Tom Otter,” Charles II. calls the Duke of York by this name | [172] |
| Travelling on horseback and by coach | [211] |
| Turner (Mr.), of the Navy Office, wishes to be made Clerk of the Acts | [23] |
| Turner (Serjeant John), and his wife | 117 |
| Turner (Mrs.) shows her leg to Pepys | [210] |
| Turner (Theophila) | [117] |
| Verrio’s portrait of Pepys | [239] |
| Voltaire, quotation from | [183] |
| Wallis (Dr.), his portrait | [60] |
| Wedding customs | [209] |
| Westminster Hall, the stationers of | [109] |
| Whittle (Elizabeth), anagrams upon, by Pepys | [5] |
| Wigs, fashion of wearing | [207] |
| Willett (Deb.), Pepys’s liaison with her | [43] |
| Williamson (Sir Joseph) | [191] |
| Wines drunk in Pepys’s time | [202] |
| Woolwich dockyard | [154] |
| Wren (Matthew) | [141], [270] |
| Wynter (Sir William) | [131], [144], [277] |
| York Buildings, Pepys’s house there | [115] |
FOOTNOTES:
- [411] The charge was not so frivolous after all, for the writer of an article on the “Diary” in the “Edinburgh Review” for July, 1880, points out that although Pepys denied publicly that he ever possessed a crucifix, he positively states in the “Diary” that he had one. See July 20, August 2, and November 3, 1666. I ought to have noted this, as the facts are given in the Index to the “Diary.”
CHISWICK PRESS: C. WHITTINGHAM AND CO. TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE.
Admiral, introduction of the word into English