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November
1st.
Up betimes, and down to the waterside (calling and drinking a dram of
the bottle at Michell's, but saw not Betty), and thence to White Hall
and to Sir W. Coventry's lodging, where he and I alone a good while, where
he gives me the full of the Duke of Albemarle's and Prince's narratives,
given yesterday by the House, wherein they fall foul of him and Sir G.
Carteret in something about the dividing of the fleete, and the Prince
particularly charging the Commissioners of the Navy with negligence, he
says the Commissioners of the Navy whereof Sir W. Coventry is one. He
tells me that he is prepared to answer any particular most thoroughly,
but the quality of the persons do make it difficult for him, and so I
do see is in great pain, poor man, though he deserves better than twenty
such as either of them, for his abilities and true service to the King
and kingdom. He says there is incoherences, he believes, to be found between
their two reports, which will be pretty work to consider. The Duke of
Albemarle charges W. Coventry that he should tell him, when he come down
to the fleete with Sir G. Carteret, to consult about dividing the fleete,
that the Dutch would not be out in six weeks, which W. Coventry says is
as false as is possible, and he can prove the contrary by the Duke of
Albemarle's own letters. The Duke of Albemarle says that he did upon sight
of the Dutch call a council of officers, and they did conclude they could
not avoid fighting the Dutch; and yet we did go to the enemy, and found
them at anchor, which is a pretty contradiction. And he tells me that
Spragg did the other day say in the House, that the Prince, at his going
from the Duke of Albemarle with his fleete, did tell him that if the Dutch
should come on, the Duke was to follow him, the Prince, with his fleete,
and not fight the Dutch. Out of all this a great deal of good might well
be picked. But it is a sad consideration that all this picking of holes
in one another's coats-- nay, and the thanks of the House to the Prince
and the Duke of Albemarle, and all this envy and design to ruin Sir W.
Coventry--did arise from Sir W. Coventry's unfortunate mistake the other
day, in producing of a letter from the Duke of Albemarle, touching the
good condition of all things at Chatham just before the Dutch come up,
and did us that fatal mischiefe; for upon this they are resolved to undo
him, and I pray God they do not. He tells me upon my demanding it that
he thinks the King do not like this their bringing these narratives, and
that they give out that they would have said more but that the King hath
hindered them, that I suppose is about my Lord Sandwich. He is getting
a copy of the Narratives, which I shall then have, and so I parted from
him and away to White Hall, where I met Mr. Creed and Yeabsly, and discoursed
a little about Mr. Yeabsly's business and accounts, and so I to chapel
and there staid, it being All- Hallows day, and heard a fine anthem, made
by Pelham (who is come over) in France, of which there was great expectation,
and indeed is a very good piece of musique, but still I cannot call the
Anthem anything but instrumentall musique with the voice, for nothing
is made of the words at all. I this morning before chapel visited Sir
G. Carteret, who is vexed to see how things are likely to go, but cannot
help it, and yet seems to think himself mighty safe. I also visited my
Lord Hinchingbroke, at his chamber at White Hall, where I found Mr. Turner,
Moore, and Creed, talking of my Lord Sandwich, whose case I doubt is but
bad, and, I fear, will not escape being worse, though some of the company
did say otherwise. But I am mightily pleased with my Lord Hinchingbroke's
sobriety and few words. After chapel I with Creed to the Exchange, and
after much talk he and I there about securing of some money either by
land or goods to be always at our command, which we think a thing advisable
in this critical time, we parted, and I to the Sun Taverne with Sir W.
Warren (with whom I have not drank many a day, having for some time been
strange to him), and there did put it to him to advise me how to dispose
of my prize, which he will think of and do to my best advantage. We talked
of several other things relating to his service, wherein I promise assistance,
but coldly, thinking it policy to do so, and so, after eating a short
dinner, I away home, and there took out my wife, and she and I alone to
the King's playhouse, and there saw a silly play and an old one, "The
Taming of a Shrew," and so home and I to my office a little, and
then home to supper and to bed.
2nd. Up, and to the office,
where busy all the morning; at noon home, and after dinner my wife and
Willett and I to the King's playhouse, and there saw "Henry the Fourth:"
and contrary to expectation, was pleased in nothing more than in Cartwright's
speaking of Falstaffe's speech about "What is Honour?" The house
full of Parliament-men, it being holyday with them: and it was observable
how a gentleman of good habit, sitting just before us, eating of some
fruit in the midst of the play, did drop down as dead, being choked; but
with much ado Orange Moll did thrust her finger down his throat, and brought
him to life again. After the play, we home, and I busy at the office late,
and then home to supper and to bed.
3rd (Lord's day). Up, and
with my wife to church, and thither comes Roger Pepys to our pew, and
thence home to dinner, whither comes by invitation Mr. Turner, the minister,
and my cozen Roger brought with him Jeffrys, the apothecary at Westminster,
who is our kinsman, and we had much discourse of Cottenhamshire, and other
things with great pleasure. My cozen Roger did tell me of a bargain which
I may now have in Norfolke, that my she-cozen, Nan Pepys, is going to
sell, the title whereof is very good, and the pennyworth is also good
enough; but it is out of the way so of my life, that I shall never enjoy
it, nor, it may be, see it, and so I shall have nothing to do with it.
After dinner to talk, and I find by discourse Mr. Turner to be a man mighty
well read in the Roman history, which is very pleasant. By and by Roger
went, and Mr. Turner spent an hour talking over my Lord Sandwich's condition
as to this Parliament, which we fear may be bad, and the condition of
his family, which can be no better, and then having little to comfort
ourselves but that this humour will not last always in the Parliament,
and that [it] may well have a great many more as great men as he enquired
into, and so we parted, and I to my chamber, and there busy all the evening,
and then my wife and I to supper, and so to bed, with much discourse and
pleasure one with another.
4th. Up betimes, and by
water with Sir R. Ford (who is going to Parliament) to Westminster; and
there landing at the New Exchange stairs, I to Sir W. Coventry: and there
he read over to me the Prince's and the Duke of Albemarle's Narratives;
wherein they are very severe against him and our Office. But [Sir] W.
Coventry do contemn them; only that their persons and qualities are great,
and so I do perceive [he] is afeard of them, though he will not confess
it. But he do say that, if he can get out of these briars, he will never
trouble himself with Princes nor Dukes again. He finds several things
in their Narratives, which are both inconsistent and foolish, as well
as untrue, especially as to what the Duke of Albemarle avers of his knowing
of the enemy's being abroad sooner than he says it, which [Sir] W. Coventry
will shew him his own letter against him, for I confess I do see so much,
that, were I but well possessed of what I should have in the world, I
think I could willingly retreat, and trouble myself no more with it. Thence
home, and there met Sir H. Cholmly, and he and I to the Excise Office
to see what tallies are paying, and thence back to the Old Exchange, by
the way talking of news, and he owning Sir W. Coventry, in his opinion,
to be one of the worthiest men in the nation, as I do really think he
is. He tells me he do think really that they will cut off my Lord Chancellor's
head, the Chancellor at this day showing as much pride as is possible
to those few that venture their fortunes by coming to see him; and that
the Duke of York is troubled much, knowing that those that fling down
the Chancellor cannot stop there, but will do something to him, to prevent
his having it in his power hereafter to avenge himself and father-in-law
upon them. And this Sir H. Cholmly fears may be by divorcing the Queen
and getting another, or declaring the Duke of Monmouth legitimate; which
God forbid! He tells me he do verily believe that there will come in an
impeachment of High Treason against my Lord of Ormond; among other things,
for ordering the quartering of soldiers in Ireland on free quarters; which,
it seems, is High Treason in that country, and was one of the things that
lost the Lord Strafford his head, and the law is not yet repealed; which,
he says, was a mighty oversight of him not to have it repealed, which
he might with ease have done, or have justified himself by an Act. From
the Exchange I took a coach, and went to Turlington, the great spectacle-
maker, for advice, who dissuades me from using old spectacles, but rather
young ones, and do tell me that nothing can wrong my eyes more than for
me to use reading-glasses, which do magnify much. Thence home, and there
dined, and then abroad and left my wife and Willett at her tailor's, and
I to White Hall, where the Commissioners of the Treasury do not sit, and
therefore I to Westminster to the Hall, and there meeting with Col. Reames
I did very cheaply by him get copies of the Prince's and Duke of Albemarle's
Narratives, which they did deliver the other day to the House, of which
I am mighty glad, both for my present information and for my future satisfaction.
So back by coach, and took up my wife, and away home, and there in my
chamber all the evening among my papers and my accounts of Tangier to
my great satisfaction, and so to supper and to bed.
5th. Up, and all the morning
at the office. At noon home to dinner, and thence out with my wife and
girle, and left them at her tailor's, and I to the Treasury, and there
did a little business for Tangier, and so took them up again, and home,
and when I had done at the office, being post night, I to my chamber,
and there did something more, and so to supper and to bed.
6th. Up, and to Westminster,
where to the Parliament door, and there spoke with Sir G. Downing, to
see what was done yesterday at the Treasury for Tangier, and it proved
as good as nothing, so that I do see we shall be brought to great straits
for money there. He tells me here that he is passing a Bill to make the
Excise and every other part of the King's Revenue assignable on the Exchequer,
which indeed will be a very good thing. This he says with great glee as
an act of his, and how poor a thing this was in the beginning, and with
what envy he carried it on, and how my Lord Chancellor could never endure
him for it since he first begun it. He tells me that the thing the House
is just now upon is that of taking away the charter from the Company of
Woodmongers, whose frauds, it seems, have been mightily laid before them.
He tells me that they are like to fly very high against my Lord Chancellor.
Thence I to the House of Lords, and there first saw Dr. Fuller, as Bishop
of Lincoln, to sit among the Lords. Here I spoke with the Duke of York
and the Duke of Albemarle about Tangier; but methinks both of them do
look very coldly one upon another, and their discourse mighty cold, and
little to the purpose about our want of money. Thence homeward, and called
at Allestry's, the bookseller, who is bookseller to the Royal Society,
and there did buy three or four books, and find great variety of French
and foreign books. And so home and to dinner, and after dinner with my
wife to a play, and the girl--"Macbeth," which we still like
mightily, though mighty short of the content we used to have when Betterton
acted, who is still sick. So home, troubled with the way and to get a
coach, and so to supper and to bed. This day, in the Paynted-chamber,
I met and walked with Mr. George Montagu, who thinks it may go hard with
my Lord Sandwich, but he says the House is offended with Sir W. Coventry
much, and that he do endeavour to gain them again in the most precarious
manner in all things that is possible.
7th. Up, and at the office
hard all the morning, and at noon resolved with Sir W. Pen to go see "The
Tempest," an old play of Shakespeare's, acted, I hear, the first
day; and so my wife, and girl, and W. Hewer by themselves, and Sir W.
Pen and I afterwards by ourselves; and forced to sit in the side balcone
over against the musique-room at the Duke's house, close by my Lady Dorset
and a great many great ones. The house mighty full; the King and Court
there and the most innocent play that ever I saw; and a curious piece
of musique in an echo of half sentences, the echo repeating the former
half, while the man goes on to the latter; which is mighty pretty. The
play [has] no great wit, but yet good, above ordinary plays. Thence home
with [Sir] W. Pen, and there all mightily pleased with the play; and so
to supper and to bed, after having done at the office.
8th. Called up betimes
by Sir H. Cholmly, and he and I to good purpose most of the morning--I
in my dressing-gown with him, on our Tangier accounts, and stated them
well; and here he tells me that he believes it will go hard with my Lord
Chancellor. Thence I to the office, where met on some special, business;
and here I hear that the Duke of York is very ill; and by and by word
brought us that we shall not need to attend to-day the Duke of York, for
he is not well, which is bad news. They being gone, I to my workmen, who
this day come to alter my office, by beating down the wall, and making
me a fayre window both there, and increasing the window of my closet,
which do give me some present trouble; but will be mighty pleasant. So
all the whole day among them to very late, and so home weary, to supper,
and to bed, troubled for the Duke of York his being sick.
9th. Up and to my workmen,
who are at work close again, and I at the office all the morning, and
there do hear by a messenger that Roger Pepys would speak with me, so
before the office up I to Westminster, and there find the House very busy,
and like to be so all day, about my Lord Chancellor's impeachment, whether
treason or not, where every body is mighty busy. I spoke with my cozen
Roger, whose business was only to give me notice that Carcasse hath been
before the Committee; and to warn me of it, which is a great courtesy
in him to do, and I desire him to continue to do so. This business of
this fellow, though it may be a foolish thing, yet it troubles me, and
I do plainly see my weakness that I am not a man able to go through trouble,
as other men, but that I should be a miserable man if I should meet with
adversity, which God keep me from! He desirous to get back into the House,
he having his notes in his hand, the lawyers being now speaking to the
point of whether treason or not treason, the article of advising the King
to break up the Parliament, and to govern by the sword. Thence I down
to the Hall, and there met Mr. King, the Parliament-man for Harwich, and
there he did shew, and let me take a copy of, all the articles against
my Lord Chancellor, and what members they were that undertook to bring
witnesses to make them good, of which I was mighty glad, and so away home,
and to dinner and to my workmen, and in the afternoon out to get Simpson
the joyner to come to work at my office, and so back home and to my letters
by the post to-night, and there, by W. Pen, do hear that this article
was overvoted in the House not to be a ground of impeachment of treason,
at which I was glad, being willing to have no blood spilt, if I could
help it. So home to supper, and glad that the dirty bricklayers' work
of my office is done, and home to supper and to bed.
10th (Lord's day). Mighty
cold, and with my wife to church, where a lazy sermon. Here was my Lady
Batten in her mourning at church, but I took no notice of her. At noon
comes Michell and his wife to dine with us, and pretty merry. I glad to
see her still. After dinner Sir W. Pen and I to White Hall, to speak with
Sir W. Coventry; and there, beyond all we looked for, do hear that the
Duke of York hath got, and is full of, the small-pox; and so we to his
lodgings; and there find most of the family going to St. James's, and
the gallery doors locked up, that nobody might pass to nor fro and a sad
house, I am sure. I am sad to consider the effects of his death, if he
should miscarry; but Dr. Frazier tells me that he is in as good condition
as a man can be in his case. The eruption appeared last night; it seems
he was let blood on Friday. Thence, not finding [Sir] W. Coventry, and
going back again home, we met him coming with the Lord Keeper, and so
returned and spoke with him in White Hall Garden, two or three turns,
advising with him what we should do about Carcasse's bringing his letter
into the Committee of Parliament, and he told us that the counsel he hath
too late learned is, to spring nothing in the House, nor offer anything,
but just what is drawn out of a man: that this is the best way of dealing
with a Parliament, and that he hath paid dear, and knows not how much
more he may pay, for not knowing it sooner, when he did unnecessarily
produce the Duke of Albemarle's letter about Chatham, which if demanded
would have come out with all the advantages in the world to Sir W. Coventry,
but, as he brought it out himself, hath drawn much evil upon him. After
some talk of this kind, we back home, and there I to my chamber busy all
the evening, and then to supper and to bed, my head running all night
upon our businesses in Parliament and what examinations we are likely
to go under before they have done with us, which troubles me more than
it should a wise man and a man the best able to defend himself, I believe,
of our own whole office, or any other, I am apt to think.
11th. Up, and to Simpson
at work in my office, and thence with Sir G. Carteret (who come to talk
with me) to Broad Streete, where great crowding of people for money, at
which he blamed himself. Thence with him and Lord Bruncker to Captain
Cocke's (he out of doors), and there drank their morning draught, and
thence [Sir] G. Carteret and I toward the Temple in coach together; and
there he did tell me how the King do all he can in the world to overthrow
my Lord Chancellor, and that notice is taken of every man about the King
that is not seen to promote the ruine of the Chancellor; and that this
being another great day in his business, he dares not but be there. He
tells me that as soon as Secretary Morrice brought the Great Seale from
my Lord Chancellor, Bab. May fell upon his knees, and catched the King
about the legs, and joyed him, and said that this was the first time that
ever he could call him King of England, being freed from this great man:
which was a most ridiculous saying. And he told me that, when first my
Lord Gerard, a great while ago, come to the King, and told him that the
Chancellor did say openly that the King was a lazy person and not fit
to govern, which is now made one of the things in the people's mouths
against the Chancellor, "Why," says the King, "that is
no news, for he hath told me so twenty times, and but the other day he
told me so;" and made matter of mirth at it: but yet this light discourse
is likely to prove bad to him. I 'light at the Temple, and went to my
tailor's and mercer's about a cloake, to choose the stuff, and so to my
bookseller's and bought some books, and so home to dinner, and Simpson
my joyner with me, and after dinner, my wife, and I, and Willett, to the
King's play-house, and there saw "The Indian Emperour," a good
play, but not so good as people cry it up, I think, though above all things
Nell's ill speaking of a great part made me mad. Thence with great trouble
and charge getting a coach (it being now and having been all this day
a most cold and foggy, dark, thick day), we home, and there I to my office,
and saw it made clean from top to bottom, till I feared I took cold in
walking in a damp room while it is in washing, and so home to supper and
to bed. This day I had a whole doe sent me by Mr. Hozier, which is a fine
present, and I had the umbles of it for dinner. This day I hear Kirton,
my bookseller, poor man, is dead, I believe, of grief for his losses by
the fire.
12th. Up, and to the Office,
where sat all the morning; and there hear the Duke of York do yet do very
well with his smallpox: pray God he may continue to do so! This morning
also, to my astonishment, I hear that yesterday my Lord Chancellor, to
another of his Articles, that of betraying the King's councils to his
enemies, is voted to have matter against him for an impeachment of High
Treason, and that this day the impeachment is to be carried up to the
House of Lords which is very high, and I am troubled at it; for God knows
what will follow, since they that do this must do more to secure themselves
against any that will revenge this, if it ever come in their power! At
noon home to dinner, and then to my office, and there saw every thing
finished, so as my papers are all in order again and my office twice as
pleasant as ever it was, having a noble window in my closet and another
in my office, to my great content, and so did business late, and then
home to supper and to bed.
13th. Up, and down to the
Old Swan, and so to Westminster; where I find the House sitting, and in
a mighty heat about Commissioner Pett, that they would have him impeached,
though the Committee have yet brought in but part of their Report: and
this heat of the House is much heightened by Sir Thomas Clifford telling
them, that he was the man that did, out of his own purse, employ people
at the out-ports to prevent the King of Scots to escape after the battle
of Worcester. The House was in a great heat all this day about it; and
at last it was carried, however, that it should be referred back to the
Committee to make further enquiry. I here spoke with Roger Pepys, who
sent for me, and it was to tell me that the Committee is mighty full of
the business of buying and selling of tickets, and to caution me against
such an enquiry (wherein I am very safe), and that they have already found
out Sir Richard Ford's son to have had a hand in it, which they take to
be the same as if the father had done it, and I do believe the father
may be as likely to be concerned in it as his son. But I perceive by him
they are resolved to find out the bottom of the business if it be possible.
By and by I met with Mr. Wren, who tells me that the Duke of York is in
as good condition as is possible for a man, in his condition of the smallpox.
He, I perceive, is mightily concerned in the business of my Lord Chancellor,
the impeachment against whom is gone up to the House of Lords; and great
differences there are in the Lords' House about it, and the Lords are
very high one against another. Thence home to dinner, and as soon as dinner
done I and my wife and Willet to the Duke of York's, house, and there
saw the Tempest again, which is very pleasant, and full of so good variety
that I cannot be more pleased almost in a comedy, only the seamen's part
a little too tedious. Thence home, and there to my chamber, and do begin
anew to bind myself to keep my old vows, and among the rest not to see
a play till Christmas but once in every other week, and have laid aside
L10, which is to be lost to the poor, if I do. This I hope in God will
bind me, for I do find myself mightily wronged in my reputation, and indeed
in my purse and business, by my late following of my pleasure for so long
time as I have done. So to supper and then to bed. This day Mr. Chichly
told me, with a seeming trouble, that the House have stopped his son Jack
(Sir John) his going to France, that he may be a witness against my Lord
Sandwich: which do trouble me, though he can, I think, say little.
14th. At the office close
all the morning. At noon, all my clerks with me to dinner, to a venison
pasty; and there comes Creed, and dined with me, and he tells me how high
the Lords were in the Lords' House about the business of the Chancellor,
and that they are not yet agreed to impeach him. After dinner, he and
I, and my wife and girl, the latter two to their tailor's, and he and
I to the Committee of the Treasury, where I had a hearing, but can get
but L6000 for the pay of the garrison, in lieu of above L16,000; and this
Alderman Backewell gets remitted there, and I am glad of it. Thence by
coach took up my wife and girl, and so home, and set down Creed at Arundell
House, going to the Royal Society, whither I would be glad to go, but
cannot. Thence home, and to the Office, where about my letters, and so
home to supper, and to bed, my eyes being bad again; and by this means,
the nights, now-a-days, do become very long to me, longer than I can sleep
out.
15th. Up, and to Alderman
Backewell's
[Edward Backwell, goldsmith and alderman of the City
of London. He was a man of considerable wealth during the Commonwealth.
After the Restoration he negotiated Charles II.'s principal money transactions.
He was M.P. for Wendover in the parliament of 1679, and in the Oxford
parliament of 1680. According to the writer of the life in the "Diet.
of Nat. Biog. "his heirs did not ultimately suffer any pecuniary
loss by the closure of the Exchequer. Mr. Hilton Price stated that Backwell
removed to Holland in 1676, and died therein 1679; but this is disproved
by the pedigree in Lipscomb's "Hist. of Bucks," where the date
of his death is given as 1683, as well as by the fact that he sat for
Wendover in 1679 and 1680, as stated above.]
and there discoursed with him about the remitting of this L6000 to Tangier,
which he hath promised to do by the first post, and that will be by Monday
next, the 18th, and he and I agreed that I would take notice of it that
so he may be found to have done his best upon the desire of the Lords
Commissioners. From this we went to discourse of his condition, and he
with some vain glory told me that the business of Sheernesse did make
him quite mad, and indeed might well have undone him; but yet that he
did the very next day pay here and got bills to answer his promise to
the King for the Swedes Embassadors (who were then doing our business
at the treaty at Breda) L7000, and did promise the Bankers there, that
if they would draw upon him all that he had of theirs and L10,000 more,
he would answer it. He told me that Serjeant Maynard come to him for a
sum of money that he had in his hands of his, and so did many others,
and his answer was, What countrymen are you? And when they told him, why
then, says he, here is a tally upon the Receiver of your country for so
[much], and to yours for so much, and did offer to lay by tallies to the
full value of all that he owed in the world, and L40,000 more for the
security thereof, and not to touch a penny of his own till the full of
what he owed was paid, which so pleased every body that he hath mastered
all, so that he hath lent the Commissioners of the Treasury above L40,000
in money since that business, and did this morning offer to a lady who
come to give him notice that she should need her money L3000, in twenty
days, he bid her if she pleased send for it to-day and she should have
it. Which is a very great thing, and will make them greater than ever
they were, I am apt to think, in some time. Thence to Westminster, and
there I walked with several, and do hear that there is to be a conference
between the two Houses today; so I stayed: and it was only to tell the
Commons that the Lords cannot agree to the confining or sequestring of
the Earle of Clarendon from the Parliament, forasmuch as they do not specify
any particular crime which they lay upon him and call Treason. This the
House did receive, and so parted: at which, I hear, the Commons are like
to grow very high, and will insist upon their privileges, and the Lords
will own theirs, though the Duke of Buckingham, Bristoll, and others,
have been very high in the House of Lords to have had him committed. This
is likely to breed ill blood.
Thence I away home, calling at my mercer's and tailor's,
and there find, as I expected, Mr. Caesar and little Pelham Humphreys,
lately returned from France, and is an absolute Monsieur, as full of form,
and confidence, and vanity, and disparages everything, and everybody's
skill but his own. The truth is, every body says he is very able, but
to hear how he laughs at all the King's musick here, as Blagrave and others,
that they cannot keep time nor tune, nor understand anything; and that
Grebus, the Frenchman, the King's master of the musick, how he understands
nothing, nor can play on any instrument, and so cannot compose: and that
he will give him a lift out of his place; and that he and the King are
mighty great! and that he hath already spoke to the King of Grebus would
make a man piss. I had a good dinner for them, as a venison pasty and
some fowl, and after dinner we did play, he on the theorbo. Mr. Caesar
on his French lute, and I on the viol, but made but mean musique, nor
do I see that this Frenchman do so much wonders on the theorbo, but without
question he is a good musician, but his vanity do offend me.
They gone, towards night, I to the office awhile, and
then home and to my chamber, where busy till by and by comes Mr. Moore,
and he staid and supped and talked with me about many things, and tells
me his great fear that all things will go to ruin among us, for that the
King hath, as he says Sir Thomas Crew told him, been heard to say that
the quarrel is not between my Lord Chancellor and him, but his brother
and him; which will make sad work among us if that be once promoted, as
to be sure it will, Buckingham and Bristoll being now the only counsel
the King follows, so as Arlington and Coventry are come to signify little.
He tells me they are likely to fall upon my Lord Sandwich; but, for my
part, sometimes I am apt to think they cannot do him much harm, he telling
me that there is no great fear of the business of Resumption! By and by,
I got him to read part of my Lord Cooke's chapter of treason, which is
mighty well worth reading, and do inform me in many things, and for aught
I see it is useful now to know what these crimes are. And then to supper,
and after supper he went away, and so I got the girl to comb my head,
and then to bed, my eyes bad. This day, Poundy, the waterman, was with
me, to let me know that he was summonsed to bear witness against me to
Prince Rupert's people (who have a commission to look after the business
of prize-goods) about the business of the prize-goods I was concerned
in: but I did desire him to speak all he knew, and not to spare me, nor
did promise nor give him any thing, but sent him away with good words,
to bid him say all he knew to be true. This do not trouble me much.
16th. At the office all
the morning, and at noon took my Lord Bruncker into the garden, and there
told him of his man Carcasses proceedings against the Office in the House
of Commons. I did [not] desire nor advise him anything, but in general,
that the end of this might be ruin to the Office, but that we shall be
brought to fencing for ourselves, and that will be no profit to the office,
but let it light where it would I thought I should be as well as any body.
This I told him, and so he seeming to be ignorant of it, and not pleased
with it, we broke off by Sir Thos. Harvy's coming to us from the Pay Office,
whither we had sent a smart letter we had writ to him this morning about
keeping the clerks at work at the making up the books, which I did to
place the fault somewhere, and now I let him defend himself. He was mighty
angry, and particularly with me, but I do not care, but do rather desire
it, for I will not spare him, that we shall bear the blame, and such an
idle fellow as he have L500 a year for nothing.
So we broke off, and I home to dinner, and then to the
office, and having spent the afternoon on letters, I took coach in the
evening, and to White Hall, where there is to be a performance of musique
of Pelham's before the King. The company not come; but I did go into the
musique-room, where Captain Cocke and many others; and here I did hear
the best and the smallest organ go that ever I saw in my life, and such
a one as, by the grace of God, I will have the next year, if I continue
in this condition, whatever it cost me. I never was so pleased in my life.
Thence, it being too soon, I to Westminster Hall, it being now about 7
at night, and there met Mr. Gregory, my old acquaintance, an understanding
gentleman; and he and I walked an hour together, talking of the bad prospect
of the times; and the sum of what I learn from him is this: That the King
is the most concerned in the world against the Chancellor, and all people
that do not appear against him, and therefore is angry with the Bishops,
having said that he had one Bishop on his side (Crofts ), and but one:
that Buckingham and Bristoll are now his only Cabinet Council;
[The term Cabinet Council, as stated by Clarendon,
originated thus, in 1640: "The bulk and burden of the state affairs
lay principally upon the shoulders of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the
Earl of Strafford, and the Lord Cottington; some others being joined to
them, as the Earl of Northumberland for ornament, the Bishop of London
for his place, the two Secretaries, Sir H. Vane and Sir Francis Windebank,
for service and communication of intelligence: only the Marquis of Hamilton,
indeed, by his skill and interest, bore as great a part as be had a mind
to do, and had the skill to meddle no further than he had a mind. These
persons made up the committee of state, which was reproachfully after
called the junto, and enviously then in the Court the Cabinet Council"
("History of the Rebellion," vol. i., p. 211, edit. 1849).]
and that, before the Duke of York fell sick, Buckingham was admitted to
the King of his Cabinet, and there stayed with him several hours, and
the Duke of York shut out. That it is plain that there is dislike between
the King and Duke of York, and that it is to be feared that the House
will go so far against the Chancellor, that they must do something to
undo the Duke of York, or will not think themselves safe. That this Lord
Vaughan, that is so great against the Chancellor, is one of the lewdest
fellows of the age, worse than Sir Charles Sidly; and that he was heard
to swear, God damn him, he would do my Lord Clarendon's business. That
he do find that my Lord Clarendon hath more friends in both Houses than
he believes he would have, by reason that they do see what are the hands
that pull him down; which they do not like. That Harry Coventry was scolded
at by the King severely the other day; and that his answer was that, if
he must not speak what he thought in this business in Parliament, he must
not come thither. And he says that by this very business Harry Coventry
hath got more fame and common esteem than any gentleman in England hath
at this day, and is an excellent and able person. That the King, who not
long ago did say of Bristoll, that he was a man able in three years to
get himself a fortune in any kingdom in the world, and lose all again
in three months, do now hug him, and commend his parts every where, above
all the world. How fickle is this man [the King], and how unhappy we like
to be! That he fears some furious courses will be taken against the Duke
of York; and that he hath heard that it was designed, if they cannot carry
matters against the Chancellor, to impeach the Duke of York himself, which
God forbid! That Sir Edward Nicholas, whom he served while Secretary,
is one of the best men in the world, but hated by the Queen-Mother, for
a service he did the old King against her mind and her favourites; and
that she and my Lady Castlemayne did make the King to lay him aside: but
this man says that he is one of the most perfect heavenly and charitable
men in the whole world. That the House of Commons resolve to stand by
their proceedings, and have chosen a Committee to draw up the reasons
thereof to carry to the Lords; which is likely to breed great heat between
them. That the Parliament, after all this, is likely to give the King
no money; and, therefore, that it is to be wondered what makes the King
give way to so great extravagancies, which do all tend to the making him
less than he is, and so will, every day more and more: and by this means
every creature is divided against the other, that there never was so great
an uncertainty in England, of what would, be the event of things, as at
this day; nobody being at ease, or safe. Being full of his discourse,
and glad of the rencontre, I to White Hall; and there got into the theater-room,
and there heard both the vocall and instrumentall musick, where the little
fellow' stood keeping time; but for my part, I see no great matter, but
quite the contrary in both sorts of musique. The composition I believe
is very good, but no more of delightfulness to the eare or understanding
but what is very ordinary. Here was the King and Queen, and some of the
ladies; among whom none more jolly than my Lady Buckingham, her Lord being
once more a great man. Thence by coach home and to my office, ended my
letters, and then home to supper, and, my eyes being bad, to bed.
17th (Lord's day). Up,
and to church with my wife. A dull sermon of Mr. Mills, and then home,
without strangers to dinner, and then my wife to read, and I to the office,
enter my journall to this day, and so home with great content that it
is done, but with sorrow to my eyes. Then home, and got my wife to read
to me out of Fuller's Church History, when by and by comes Captain Cocke,
who sat with me all the evening, talking, and I find by him, as by all
others, that we are like to expect great confusions, and most of our discourse
was the same, and did agree with that the last night, particularly that
about the difference between the King and the Duke of York which is like
to be. He tells me that he hears that Sir W. Coventry was, a little before
the Duke of York fell sick, with the Duke of York in his closet, and fell
on his knees, and begged his pardon for what he hath done to my Lord Chancellor;
but this I dare not soon believe. But he tells me another thing, which
he says he had from the person himself who spoke with the Duke of Buckingham,
who, he says, is a very sober and worthy man, that he did lately speak
with the Duke of Buckingham about his greatness now with the King, and
told him- "But, sir, these things that the King do now, in suffering
the Parliament to do all this, you know are not fit for the King to suffer,
and you know how often you have said to me that the King was a weak man,
and unable to govern, but to be governed, and that you could command him
as you listed; why do you suffer him to go on in these things?"--"Why,"
says the Duke of Buckingham, "I do suffer him to do this, that I
may hereafter the better command him." This he swears to me the person
himself to whom the Duke of Buckingham said this did tell it him, and
is a man of worth, understanding, and credit. He told me one odd passage
by the Duke of Albemarle, speaking how hasty a man he is, and how for
certain he would have killed Sir W. Coventry, had he met him in a little
time after his shewing his letter in the House. He told me that a certain
lady, whom he knows, did tell him that, she being certainly informed that
some of the Duke of Albemarle's family did say that the Earl of Torrington
was a bastard, [she] did think herself concerned to tell the Duke of Albemarle
of it, and did first tell the Duchesse, and was going to tell the old
man, when the Duchesse pulled her back by the sleeve, and hindered her,
swearing to her that if he should hear it, he would certainly kill the
servant that should be found to have said it, and therefore prayed her
to hold her peace. One thing more he told me, which is, that Garraway
is come to town, and is thinking how to bring the House to mind the public
state of the nation and to put off these particular piques against man
and man, and that he propounding this to Sir W. Coventry, Sir W. Coventry
did give no encouragement to it: which he says is that by their running
after other men he may escape. But I do believe this is not true neither.
But however I am glad that Garraway is here, and that he do begin to think
of the public condition in reference to our neighbours that we are in,
and in reference to ourselves, whereof I am mightily afeard of trouble.
So to supper, and he gone and we to bed.
18th. Up, and all the morning
at my office till 3 after noon with Mr. Hater about perfecting my little
pocket market book of the office, till my eyes were ready to fall out
of my head, and then home to dinner, glad that I had done so much, and
so abroad to White Hall, to the Commissioners of the Treasury, and there
did a little business with them, and so home, leaving multitudes of solicitors
at their door, of one sort or other, complaining for want of such despatch
as they had in my Lord Treasurer's time, when I believe more business
was despatched, but it was in his manner to the King's wrong. Among others
here was Gresham College coming about getting a grant of Chelsey College
for their Society, which the King, it seems, hath given them his right
in; but they met with some other pretences, I think; to it, besides the
King's. Thence took up my wife, whom I had left at her tailor's, and home,
and there, to save my eyes, got my wife at home to read again, as last
night, in the same book, till W. Batelier come and spent the evening talking
with us, and supped with us, and so to bed.
19th. To the office, and
thence before noon I, by the Board's direction, to the Parliament House
to speak with Sir R. Brookes about the meaning of an order come to us
this day to bring all the books of the office to the Committee. I find
by him that it is only about the business of an order of ours for paying
off the ships by ticket, which they think I on behalf of my Lord Bruncker
do suppress, which vexes me, and more at its occasioning the bringing
them our books. So home and to dinner, where Mr. Shepley with me, newly
come out of the country, but I was at little liberty to talk to him, but
after dinner with two contracts to the Committee, with Lord Bruncker and
Sir T. Harvy, and there did deliver them, and promised at their command
more, but much against my will. And here Sir R. Brookes did take me alone,
and pray me to prevent their trouble, by discovering the order he would
have. I told him I would suppress none, nor could, but this did not satisfy
him, and so we parted, I vexed that I should bring on myself this suspicion.
Here I did stand by unseen, and did hear their impertinent yet malicious
examinations of some rogues about the business of Bergen, wherein they
would wind in something against my Lord Sandwich (it was plain by their
manner of examining, as Sir Thomas Crew did afterwards observe to me,
who was there), but all amounted to little I think. But here Sir Thomas
Crew and W. Hewer, who was there also, did tell me that they did hear
Captain Downing give a cruel testimony against my Lord Bruncker, for his
neglect, and doing nothing, in the time of straits at Chatham, when he
was spoke to, and did tell the Committee that he, Downing, did presently
after, in Lord Bruncker's hearing, tell the Duke of Albemarle, that if
he might advise the King, he should hang both my Lord Bruncker and Pett.
This is very hard. Thence with W. Hewer and our messenger, Marlow, home
by coach, and so late at letters, and then home to supper, and my wife
to read and then to bed. This night I wrote to my father, in answer to
a new match which is proposed (the executor of Ensum, my sister's former
servant) for my sister, that I will continue my mind of giving her L500,
if he likes of the match. My father did also this week, by Shepley, return
me up a 'guinny, which, it seems, upon searching the ground, they have
found since I was there. I was told this day that Lory Hide,
[Laurence Hyde, second son of Lord Chancellor Clarendon
(1614-1711). He held many important offices, and was First Lord of the
Treasury, 1679-84; created Earl of Rochester in 1681, and K.G. 1685.]
second son of my Lord Chancellor, did some time since in the House say,
that if he thought his father was guilty but of one of the things then
said against him, he would be the first that should call for judgement
against him: which Mr. Waller, the poet, did say was spoke like the old
Roman, like Brutus, for its greatness and worthiness.
20th. Up, and all the morning
at my office shut up with Mr. Gibson, I walking and he reading to me the
order books of the office from the beginning of the war, for preventing
the Parliament's having them in their hands before I have looked them
over and seen the utmost that can be said against us from any of our orders,
and to my great content all the morning I find none. So at noon home to
dinner with my clerks, who have of late dined frequently with me, and
I do purpose to have them so still, by that means I having opportunity
to talk with them about business, and I love their company very well.
All the morning Mr. Hater and the boy did shut up themselves at my house
doing something towards the finishing the abstract book of our contracts
for my pocket, which I shall now want very much. After dinner I stayed
at home all the afternoon, and Gibson with me; he and I shut up till about
ten at night. We went through all our orders, and towards the end I do
meet with two or three orders for our discharging of two or three little
vessels by ticket without money, which do plunge me; but, however, I have
the advantage by this means to study an answer and to prepare a defence,
at least for myself. So he gone I to supper, my mind busy thinking after
our defence in this matter, but with vexation to think that a thing of
this kind, which in itself brings nothing but trouble and shame to us,
should happen before all others to become a charge against us. This afternoon
Mr. Mills come and visited me, and stayed a little with me (my wife being
to be godmother to his child to-morrow), and among other talk he told
me how fully satisfactory my first Report was to the House in the business
of Chatham: which I am glad to hear; and the more, for that I know that
he is a great creature of Sir R. Brookes's.
21st. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, and at noon home, where my wife not very well,
but is to go to Mr. Mills's child's christening, where she is godmother,
Sir J. Minnes and Sir R. Brookes her companions. I left her after dinner
(my clerks dining with me) to go with Sir J. Minnes, and I to the office,
where did much business till after candlelight, and then my eyes beginning
to fail me, I out and took coach to Arundell House, where the meeting
of Gresham College was broke up; but there meeting Creed, I with him to
the taverne in St. Clement's Churchyard, where was Deane Wilkins, Dr.
Whistler, Dr. Floyd, a divine admitted, I perceive, this day, and other
brave men; and there, among other things of news, I do hear, that upon
the reading of the House of Commons's Reasons of the manner of their proceedings
in the business of my Lord Chancellor, the Reasons were so bad, that my
Lord Bristoll himself did declare that he would not stand to what he had,
and did still, advise the Lords to concur to, upon any of the Reasons
of the House of Commons; but if it was put to the question whether it
should be done on their Reasons, he would be against them; and indeed
it seems the Reasons--however they come to escape the House of Commons,
which shews how slightly the greatest matters are done in this world,
and even in Parliaments were none of them of strength, but the principle
of them untrue; they saying, that where any man is brought before a judge,
accused of Treason in general, without specifying the particular, the
judge do there constantly and is obliged to commit him. Whereas the question
being put by the Lords to my Lord Keeper, he said that quite the contrary
was true: and then, in the Sixth Article (I will get a copy of them if
I can) there are two or three things strangely asserted to the diminishing
of the King's power, as is said, at least things that heretofore would
not have been heard of. But then the question being put among the Lords,
as my Lord Bristoll advised, whether, upon the whole matter and Reasons
that had been laid before them, they would commit my Lord Clarendon, it
was carried five to one against it; there being but three Bishops against
him, of whom Cosens and Dr. Reynolds were two, and I know not the third.
This made the opposite Lords, as Bristoll and Buckingham, so mad, that
they declared and protested against it, speaking very broad that there
was mutiny and rebellion in the hearts of the Lords, and that they desired
they might enter their dissents, which they did do, in great fury. So
that upon the Lords sending to the Commons, as I am told, to have a conference
for them to give their answer to the Commons's Reasons, the Commons did
desire a free conference: but the Lords do deny it; and the reason is,
that they hold not the Commons any Court, but that themselves only are
a Court, and the Chief Court of judicature, and therefore are not to dispute
the laws and method of their own Court with them that are none, and so
will not submit so much as to have their power disputed. And it is conceived
that much of this eagerness among the Lords do arise from the fear some
of them have, that they may be dealt with in the same manner themselves,
and therefore do stand upon it now. It seems my Lord Clarendon hath, as
is said and believed, had his horses several times in his coach, ready
to carry him to the Tower, expecting a message to that purpose; but by
this means his case is like to be laid by. From this we fell to other
discourse, and very good; among the rest they discourse of a man that
is a little frantic, that hath been a kind of minister, Dr. Wilkins saying
that he hath read for him in his church, that is poor and a debauched
man, that the College' have hired for 20s. to have some of the blood of
a sheep let into his body; and it is to be done on Saturday next.
[This was Arthur Coga, who had studied at Cambridge,
and was said to be a bachelor of divinity. He was indigent, and "looked
upon as a very freakish and extravagant man." Dr. King, in a letter
to the Hon. Robert Boyle, remarks "that Mr. Coga was about thirty-two
years of age; that he spoke Latin well, when he was in company, which
he liked, but that his brain was sometimes a little too warm." The
experiment was performed on November 23rd, 1667, by Dr. King, at Arundel
House, in the presence of many spectators of quality, and four or five
physicians. Coga wrote a description of his own case in Latin, and when
asked why he had not the blood of some other creature, instead of that
of a sheep, transfused into him, answered, "Sanguis ovis symbolicam
quandam facultatem habet cum sanguine Christi, quia Christus est agnus
Dei" (Birch's "History of the Royal Society," vol. ii.,
pp. 214-16). Coga was the first person in England to be experimented upon;
previous experiments were made by the transfusion of the blood of one
dog into another. See November 14th, 1666 (vol. vi., p. 64).]
They purpose to let in about twelve ounces; which, they compute, is what
will be let in in a minute's time by a watch. They differ in the opinion
they have of the effects of it; some think it may have a good effect upon
him as a frantic man by cooling his blood, others that it will not have
any effect at all. But the man is a healthy man, and by this means will
be able to give an account what alteration, if any, he do find in himself,
and so may be usefull. On this occasion, Dr. Whistler told a pretty story
related by Muffet, a good author, of Dr. Caius, that built Keys College;
that, being very old, and living only at that time upon woman's milk,
he, while he fed upon the milk of an angry, fretful woman, was so himself;
and then, being advised to take it of a good-natured, patient woman, he
did become so, beyond the common temper of his age. Thus much nutriment,
they observed, might do. Their discourse was very fine; and if I should
be put out of my office, I do take great content in the liberty I shall
be at of frequenting these gentlemen's company. Broke up thence and home,
and there to my wife in her chamber, who is not well (of those), and there
she tells me great stories of the gossiping women of the parish--what
this, and what that woman was; and, among the rest, how Mrs. Hollworthy
is the veriest confident bragging gossip of them all, which I should not
have believed; but that Sir R. Brookes, her partner, was mighty civil
to her, and taken with her, and what not. My eyes being bad I spent the
evening with her in her chamber talking and inventing a cypher to put
on a piece of plate, which I must give, better than ordinary, to the Parson's
child, and so to bed, and through my wife's illness had a bad night of
it, and she a worse, poor wretch!
22nd. Up betimes, and drinking
my morning draught of strong water with Betty Michell, I had not opportunity
para baiser la, I by water to White Hall, and there met Creed, and thence
with him to Westminster Hall, where we talked long together of news, and
there met with Cooling, my Lord Chamberlain's Secretary, and from him
learn the truth of all I heard last night; and understand further, that
this stiffness of the Lords is in no manner of kindness to my Lord Chancellor,
for he neither hath, nor do, nor for the future likely can oblige any
of them, but rather the contrary; but that they do fear what the consequence
may be to themselves, should they yield in his case, as many of them have
reason. And more, he shewed me how this is rather to the wrong and prejudice
of my Lord Chancellor; for that it is better for him to come to be tried
before the Lords, where he can have right and make interest, than, when
the Parliament is up, be committed by the King, and tried by a Court on
purpose made by the King, of what Lords the King pleases, who have a mind
to have his head. So that my Lord [Cornbury] himself, his son, he tells
me, hath moved, that if they have Treason against my Lord of Clarendon,
that they would specify it and send it up to the Lords, that he might
come to his trial; so full of intrigues this business is! Having now a
mind to go on and to be rid of Creed, I could not, but was forced to carry
him with me to the Excise Office, and thence to the Temple, and there
walked a good while in the Temple church, observing the plainness of Selden's
tomb, and how much better one of his executors hath, who is buried by
him, and there I parted with him and took coach and home, where to dinner.
23rd. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, and at noon home to dinner, and all the afternoon
also busy till late preparing things to fortify myself and fellows against
the Parliament; and particularly myself against what I fear is thought,
that I have suppressed the Order of the Board by which the discharging
the great ships off at Chatham by tickets was directed; whereas, indeed,
there was no such Order. So home at night to supper and to bed.
24th (Lord's day). In my
chamber all the morning (having lain long in bed) till Mr. Shepley come
to dine with me, and there being to return to Hinchinbroke speedily, I
did give him as good account how matters go here as I could. After dinner,
he being gone, I to the office, and there for want of other of my clerks,
sent to Mr. Gibbs, whom I never used till now, for the writing over of
my little pocket Contract-book; and there I laboured till nine at night
with him, in drawing up the history of all that hath passed concerning
tickets, in order to the laying the whole, and clearing myself and Office,
before Sir R. Brookes; and in this I took great pains, and then sent him
away, and proceeded, and had W. Hewer come to me, and he and I till past
twelve at night in the Office, and he, which was a good service, did so
inform me in the consequences of my writing this report, and that what
I said would not hold water, in denying this Board to have ever ordered
the discharging out of the service whole ships by ticket, that I did alter
my whole counsel, and fall to arme myself with good reasons to justify
the Office in so doing, which hath been but rare, and having done this,
I went, with great quiet in my mind, home, though vexed that so honest
a business should bring me so much trouble; but mightily was pleased to
find myself put out of my former design; and so, after supper, to bed.
25th. Up, and all the morning
finishing my letter to Sir Robert Brookes, which I did with great content,
and yet at noon when I come home to dinner I read it over again after
it was sealed and delivered to the messenger, and read it to my clerks
who dined with me, and there I did resolve upon some alteration, and caused
it to be new writ, and so to the office after dinner, and there all the
afternoon mighty busy, and at night did take coach thinking to have gone
to Westminster, but it was mighty dark and foul, and my business not great,
only to keep my eyes from reading by candle, being weary, but being gone
part of my way I turned back, and so home, and there to read, and my wife
to read to me out of Sir Robert Cotton's book about warr, which is very
fine, showing how the Kings of England have raised money by the people
heretofore upon the people, and how they have played upon the kings also.
So after supper I to bed. This morning Sir W. Pen tells me that the House
was very hot on Saturday last upon the business of liberty of speech in
the House, and damned the vote in the beginning of the Long Parliament
against it; I so that he fears that there may be some bad thing which
they have a mind to broach, which they dare not do without more security
than they now have. God keep us, for things look mighty ill!
26th. Up, all the morning
at the office, and then home to dinner, where dined Mr. Clerke, solicitor,
with me, to discourse about my Tangier accounts, which I would fain make
up, but I have not time. After dinner, by coach as far as the Temple,
and there saw a new book, in folio, of all that suffered for the King
in the late times, which I will buy, it seems well writ, and then back
to the Old Exchange, and there at my goldsmith's bought a basin for my
wife to give the Parson's child, to which the other day she was godmother.
It cost me; L10 14s. besides graving, which I do with the cypher of the
name, Daniel Mills, and so home to the office, and then home to supper
and hear my wife read, and then to bed. This afternoon, after dinner,
come to me Mr. Warren, and there did tell me that he come to pay his debt
to me for the kindness I did him in getting his last ship out, which I
must also remember was a service to the King, though I did not tell him
so, as appeared by my advising with the board, and there writing to Sir
W. Coventry to get the pass for the ship to go for it to Genoa. Now that
which he had promised me for the courtesy was I take it 100 pieces or
more, I think more, and also for the former courtesy I had done for the
getting of his first ship out for this hemp he did promise me a consideration
upon the return of the goods, but I never did to this day demand any thing
of him, only about a month ago he told me that now his ship was come,
and he would come out of my debt, but told me that whereas he did expect
to have had some profit by the voyage, it had proved of loss to him, by
the loss of some ships, or some accidents, I know not what, and so that
he was not able to do what he intended, but told me that he would present
me with sixty pieces in gold. I told him I would demand nothing of his
promises, though they were much greater, nor would have thus much, but
if he could afford to give me but fifty pieces, it should suffice me.
So now he brought something in a paper, which since proves to be fifty
pieces. But before I would take them I told him that I did not insist
on anything, and therefore prayed him to consult his ability before he
did part with them: and so I refused them once or twice till he did the
third time offer them, and then I took them, he saying that he would present
me with as many more if I would undertake to get him L500 paid on his
bills. I told him I would by no means have any promise of the kind, nor
would have any kindness from him for any such service, but that I should
do my utmost for nothing to do him that justice, and would endeavour to
do what I could for him, and so we parted, he owning himself mightily
engaged to me for my kind usage of him in accepting of so small a matter
in satisfaction of all that he owed me; which I enter at large for my
justification if anything of this should be hereafter enquired after.
This evening also comes to me to my closet at the Office
Sir John Chichly, of his own accord, to tell me what he shall answer to
the Committee, when, as he expects, he shall be examined about my Lord
Sandwich; which is so little as will not hurt my Lord at all, I know.
He do profess great generousness towards my Lord, and that this jealousy
of my Lord's of him is without ground, but do mightily inveigh against
Sir Roger Cuttance, and would never have my Lord to carry him to sea again,
as being a man that hath done my Lord more hurt than ever he can repair
by his ill advice, and disobliging every body. He will by no means seem
to crouch to my Lord, but says that he hath as good blood in his veins
as any man, though not so good a title, but that he will do nothing to
wrong or prejudice my Lord, and I hope he will not, nor I believe can;
but he tells me that Sir E. Spragg and Utber are the men that have done
my Lord the most wrong, and did bespatter him the most at Oxford, and
that my Lord was misled to believe that all that was there said was his,
which indeed it was not, and says that he did at that time complain to
his father of this his misfortune. This I confess is strange to me touching
these two men, but yet it may well enough as the world goes, though I
wonder I confess at the latter of the two, who always professes great
love to my Lord. Sir Roger Cuttance was with me in the morning, and there
gives me an account so clear about Bergen and the other business against
my Lord, as I do not see what can be laid to my Lord in either, and tells
me that Pen, however he now dissembles it, did on the quarter deck of
my Lord's ship, after he come on board, when my Lord did fire a gun for
the ships to leave pursuing the enemy, Pen did say, before a great many,
several times, that his heart did leap in his belly for joy when he heard
the gun, and that it was the best thing that could be done for securing
the fleet. He tells me also that Pen was the first that did move and persuade
my Lord to the breaking bulke, as a thing that was now the time to do
right to the commanders of the great ships, who had no opportunity of
getting anything by prizes, now his Lordship might distribute to everyone
something, and he himself did write down before my Lord the proportions
for each man. This I am glad of, though it may be this dissembling fellow
may, twenty to one, deny it.
27th. Up, and all the morning
at my Lord Bruncker's lodgings with Sir J. Minnes and [Sir] W. Pen about
Sir W. Warren's accounts, wherein I do not see that they are ever very
likely to come to an understanding of them, as Sir J. Minnes hath not
yet handled them. Here till noon, and then home to dinner, where Mr. Pierce
comes to me, and there, in general, tells me how the King is now fallen
in and become a slave to the Duke of Buckingham, led by none but him,
whom he, Mr. Pierce, swears he knows do hate the very person of the King,
and would, as well as will, certainly ruin him. He do say, and I think
with right, that the King do in this do the most ungrateful part of a
master to a servant that ever was done, in this carriage of his to my
Lord Chancellor: that, it may be, the Chancellor may have faults, but
none such as these they speak of; that he do now really fear that all
is going to ruin, for he says he hears that Sir W. Coventry hath been,
just before his sickness, with the Duke of York, to ask his forgiveness
and peace for what he had done; for that he never could foresee that what
he meant so well, in the councilling to lay by the Chancellor, should
come to this. As soon as dined, I with my boy Tom to my bookbinder's,
where all the afternoon long till 8 or 9 at night seeing him binding up
two or three collections of letters and papers that I had of him, but
above all things my little abstract pocket book of contracts, which he
will do very neatly. Then home to read, sup, and to bed.
28th. Up, and at the office
all this morning, and then home to dinner, and then by coach sent my wife
to the King's playhouse, and I to White Hall, there intending, with Lord
Bruncker, Sir J. Minnes, and Sir T. Harvy to have seen the Duke of York,
whom it seems the King and Queen have visited, and so we may now well
go to see him. But there was nobody could speak with him, and so we parted,
leaving a note in Mr. Wren's chamber that we had been there, he being
at the free conference of the two Houses about this great business of
my Lord Chancellor's, at which they were at this hour, three in the afternoon,
and there they say my Lord Anglesey do his part admirablyably, and each
of us taking a copy of the Guinny Company's defence to a petition against
them to the Parliament the other day. So I away to the King's playhouse,
and there sat by my wife, and saw "The Mistaken Beauty," which
I never, I think, saw before, though an old play; and there is much in
it that I like, though the name is but improper to it--at least, that
name, it being also called "The Lyer," which is proper enough.
Here I met with Sir. Richard Browne, who wondered to find me there, telling
the that I am a man of so much business, which character, I thank God,
I have ever got, and have for a long time had and deserved, and yet am
now come to be censured in common with the office for a man of negligence.
Thence home and to the office to my letters, and then home to supper and
to bed.
29th. Waked about seven
o'clock this morning with a noise I supposed I heard, near our chamber,
of knocking, which, by and by, increased: and I, more awake, could, distinguish
it better. I then waked my wife, and both of us wondered at it, and lay
so a great while, while that increased, and at last heard it plainer,
knocking, as if it were breaking down a window for people to get out;
and then removing of stools and chairs; and plainly, by and by, going
up and down our stairs. We lay, both of us, afeard; yet I would have rose,
but my wife would not let me. Besides, I could not do it without making
noise; and we did both conclude that thieves were in the house, but wondered
what our people did, whom we thought either killed, or afeard, as we were.
Thus we lay till the clock struck eight, and high day. At last, I removed
my gown and slippers safely to the other side of the bed over my wife:
and there safely rose, and put on my gown and breeches, and then, with
a firebrand in my hand, safely opened the door, and saw nor heard any
thing. Then (with fear, I confess) went to the maid's chamber-door, and
all quiet and safe. Called Jane up, and went down safely, and opened my
chamber door, where all well. Then more freely about, and to the kitchen,
where the cook-maid up, and all safe. So up again, and when Jane come,
and we demanded whether she heard no noise, she said, "yes, and was
afeard," but rose with the other maid, and found nothing; but heard
a noise in the great stack of chimnies that goes from Sir J. Minnes through
our house; and so we sent, and their chimnies have been swept this morning,
and the noise was that, and nothing else. It is one of the most extraordinary
accidents in my life, and gives ground to think of Don Quixote's adventures
how people may be surprised, and the more from an accident last night,
that our young gibb-cat
[A male cat. "Gib" is a contraction of the
Christian name Gilbert (Old French), "Tibert").
"I am melancholy as a gib-cat"
Shakespeare, I Henry IV, act i., sc. 3.
Gib alone is also used, and a verb made from it--"to gib," or
act like a cat.]
did leap down our stairs from top to bottom, at two leaps, and frighted
us, that we could not tell well whether it was the cat or a spirit, and
do sometimes think this morning that the house might be haunted. Glad
to have this so well over, and indeed really glad in my mind, for I was
much afeard, I dressed myself and to the office both forenoon and afternoon,
mighty hard putting papers arid things in order to my extraordinary satisfaction,
and consulting my clerks in many things, who are infinite helps to my
memory and reasons of things, and so being weary, and my eyes akeing,
having overwrought them to-day reading so much shorthand, I home and there
to supper, it being late, and to bed. This morning Sir W. Pen and I did
walk together a good while, and he tells me that the Houses are not likely
to agree after their free conference yesterday, and he fears what may
follow.
30th. Up, and to the office,
where all the morning, and then by coach to Arundel House, to the election
of Officers for the next year; where I was near being chosen of the Council,
but am glad I was not, for I could not have attended, though, above all
things, I could wish it; and do take it as a mighty respect to have been
named there. The company great, and the elections long, and then to Cary
House, a house now of entertainment, next my Lord Ashly's; and there,
where I have heretofore heard Common Prayer in the time of Dr. Mossum,
we after two hours' stay, sitting at the table with our napkins open,
had our dinners brought, but badly done. But here was good company. I
choosing to sit next Dr. Wilkins, Sir George Ent, and others whom I value,
there talked of several things. Among others Dr. Wilkins, talking of the
universal speech, of which he hath a book coming out, did first inform
me how man was certainly made for society, he being of all creatures the
least armed for defence, and of all creatures in the world the young ones
are not able to do anything to help themselves, nor can find the dug without
being put to it, but would die if the mother did not help it; and, he
says, were it not for speech man would be a very mean creature. Much of
this good discourse we had. But here, above all, I was pleased to see
the person who had his blood taken out. He speaks well, and did this day
give the Society a relation thereof in Latin, saying that he finds himself
much better since, and as a new man, but he is cracked a little in his
head, though he speaks very reasonably, and very well. He had but 20s.
for his suffering it, and is to have the same again tried upon him: the
first sound man that ever had it tried on him in England, and but one
that we hear of in France, which was a porter hired by the virtuosos.
Here all the afternoon till within night.
Then I took coach and to the Exchange, where I was to
meet my wife, but she was gone home, and so I to Westminster Hall, and
there took a turn or two, but meeting with nobody to discourse with, returned
to Cary House, and there stayed and saw a pretty deception of the sight
by a glass with water poured into it, with a stick standing up with three
balls of wax upon it, one distant from the other. How these balls did
seem double and disappear one after another, mighty pretty! Here Mr. Carcasse
did come to me, and brought first Mr. Colwall, our Treasurer, and then
Dr. Wilkins to engage me to be his friend, and himself asking forgiveness
and desiring my friendship, saying that the Council have now ordered him
to be free to return to the Office to be employed. I promised him my friendship,
and am glad of this occasion, having desired it; for there is nobody's
ill tongue that I fear like his, being a malicious and cunning bold fellow.
Thence, paying our shot, 6s. apiece, I home, and there to the office and
wrote my letters, and then home, my eyes very sore with yesterday's work,
and so home and tried to make a piece by my eare and viall to "I
wonder what the grave," &c., and so to supper and to bed, where
frighted a good while and my wife again with noises, and my wife did rise
twice, but I think it was Sir John Minnes's people again late cleaning
their house, for it was past I o'clock in the morning before we could
fall to sleep, and so slept. But I perceive well what the care of money
and treasure in a man's house is to a man that fears to lose it. My Lord
Anglesey told me this day that he did believe the House of Commons would,
the next week, yield to the Lords; but, speaking with others this day,
they conclude they will not, but that rather the King will accommodate
it by committing my Lord Clarendon himself. I remember what Mr. Evelyn
said, that he did believe we should soon see ourselves fall into a Commonwealth
again. Joseph Williamson I find mighty kind still, but close, not daring
to say anything almost that touches upon news or state of affairs.
December 1667
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