of, though I cannot see what he can take it to proceed
from but my tenderness and good will to him.
After this discourse was ended, he began to talk very,
cheerfully of other things, and I walked with him
to White Hall, and we discoursed of the pictures in
the gallery, which, it may be, he might do out of
policy, that the boy might not see any, strangeness
in him; but I rather think that his mind was somewhat
eased, and hope that he will be to me as he was before.
But, however, I doubt not when he sees that I follow
my business, and become an honour to him, and not
to be like to need him, or to be a burden to him, and
rather able to serve him than to need him, and if
he do continue to follow business, and so come to
his right witts again, I do not doubt but he will
then consider my faithfulnesse to him, and esteem me
as he ought. At chappell I had room in the Privy
Seale pew with other gentlemen, and there heard Dr.
Killigrew, preach, but my mind was so, I know not whether
troubled, or only full of thoughts of what had passed
between my Lord and me that I could not mind it, nor
can at this hour remember three words. The anthem
was good after sermon, being the fifty-first psalme,
made for five voices by one of Captain Cooke’s
boys, a pretty boy. And they say there are four
or five of them that can do as much. And here
I first perceived that the King is a little musicall,
and kept good time with his hand all along the anthem.
Up into the gallery after sermon and there I met
Creed. We saluted one another and spoke but not
one word of what had passed yesterday between us,
but told me he was forced to such a place to dinner
and so we parted. Here I met Mr. Povy, who tells
me how Tangier had like to have been betrayed, and
that one of the King’s officers is come, to
whom 8,000 pieces of eight were offered for his part.
Hence I to the King’s Head ordinary, and there
dined, good and much company, and a good dinner:
most of their discourse was about hunting, in a dialect
I understand very little. Thence by coach to
our own church, and there my mind being yet unsettled
I could mind nothing, and after sermon home and there
told my wife what had passed, and thence to my office,
where doing business only to keep my mind employed
till late; and so home to supper, to prayers, and
to bed.
23rd: Up and to Alderman Backwell’s, where Sir W. Rider, by appointment, met us to consult about the insuring of our hempe ship from Archangell, in which we are all much concerned, by my Lord Treasurer’s command. That being put in a way I went to Mr. Beacham, one of our jury, to confer with him about our business with Field at our trial to-morrow, and thence to St. Paul’s Churchyarde, and there bespoke “Rushworth’s Collections,” and “Scobell’s Acts of the Long Parliament,"’ &c., which I will make the King pay for as to the office; and so I do not break my vow at all. Back to the Coffee-house, and then to the ’Change, where Sir W. Rider and I did bid 15 per cent., and