FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1678   1679   1680   1681   1682   1683   1684   1685   1686   1687   1688   1689   1690   1691   1692   1693   1694   1695   1696   1697   1698   1699   1700   1701   1702  
1703   1704   1705   1706   1707   1708   1709   1710   1711   1712   1713   1714   1715   1716   1717   1718   1719   1720   1721   1722   1723   1724   1725   1726   1727   >>   >|  
ising and admiring them: but, Lord! the strangest ayre that ever I heard in my life, and all of one cast. But strange to hear my Lord Lauderdale say himself that he had rather hear a cat mew, than the best musique in the world; and the better the musique, the more sicke it makes him; and that of all instruments, he hates the lute most, and next to that, the baggpipe. Thence back with my Lord to his house, all the way good discourse, informing of myself about optiques still, and there left him and by a hackney home, and after writing three or four letters, home to supper and to bed. 29th (Lord's day). Up and all the morning in my chamber making up my accounts in my book with my father and brother and stating them. Towards noon before sermon was done at church comes newes by a letter to Sir W. Batten, to my hand, of the late fight, which I sent to his house, he at church. But, Lord! with what impatience I staid till sermon was done, to know the issue of the fight, with a thousand hopes and fears and thoughts about the consequences of either. At last sermon is done and he come home, and the bells immediately rung soon as the church was done. But coming; to Sir W. Batten to know the newes, his letter said nothing of it; but all the towne is full of a victory. By and by a letter from Sir W. Coventry tells me that we have the victory. Beat them into the Weelings; [In a letter from Richard Browne to Williamson, dated Yarmouth, July 30th, we read, "The Zealanders were engaged with the Blue squadron Wednesday and most of Thursday, but at length the Zealanders ran; the Dutch fleet escaped to the Weelings and Goree" ("Calendar of State Papers," 1665-66, p 591).] had taken two of their great ships; but by the orders of the Generalls they are burned. This being, methought, but a poor result after the fighting of two so great fleetes, and four days having no tidings of them, I was still impatient; but could know no more. So away home to dinner, where Mr. Spong and Reeves dined with me by invitation. And after dinner to our business of my microscope to be shown some of the observables of that, and then down to my office to looke in a darke room with my glasses and tube, and most excellently things appeared indeed beyond imagination. This was our worke all the afternoon trying the several glasses and several objects, among others, one of my plates, where the lines appeared so very plain that it is not pos
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1678   1679   1680   1681   1682   1683   1684   1685   1686   1687   1688   1689   1690   1691   1692   1693   1694   1695   1696   1697   1698   1699   1700   1701   1702  
1703   1704   1705   1706   1707   1708   1709   1710   1711   1712   1713   1714   1715   1716   1717   1718   1719   1720   1721   1722   1723   1724   1725   1726   1727   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

letter

 

sermon

 

church

 

dinner

 

Batten

 

victory

 
Weelings
 

Zealanders

 
musique
 
glasses

appeared

 
Calendar
 
Papers
 

escaped

 
objects
 

orders

 
length
 

Yarmouth

 
Williamson
 

squadron


Wednesday

 
Thursday
 

engaged

 

plates

 

Generalls

 

impatient

 

business

 

tidings

 

Browne

 

invitation


Reeves

 

office

 

fleetes

 
imagination
 
observables
 

afternoon

 

microscope

 

result

 

fighting

 

excellently


methought

 

burned

 
things
 

informing

 
discourse
 
optiques
 

baggpipe

 
Thence
 
hackney
 

supper