and large as the true money is, and yet saved fifty
per cent. to himself, which was by getting moulds
made to stamp groats like old groats, which is done
so well, and I did beg two of them which I keep for
rarities, that there is not better in the world, and
is as good, nay, better than those that commonly go,
which was the only thing that they could find out
to doubt them by, besides the number that the party
do go to put off, and then coming to the Comptroller
of the Mint, he could not, I say, find out any other
thing to raise any doubt upon, but only their being
so truly round or near it, though I should never have
doubted the thing neither. He was neither hanged
nor burned, the cheat was thought so ingenious, and
being the first time they could ever trap him in it,
and so little hurt to any man in it, the money being
as good as commonly goes. Thence to the office
till the evening, we sat, and then by water (taking
Pembleton with us), over the water to the Halfway
House, where we played at nine-pins, and there my damned
jealousy took fire, he and my wife being of a side
and I seeing of him take her by the hand in play,
though I now believe he did [it] only in passing and
sport. Thence home and being 10 o’clock
was forced to land beyond the Custom House, and so
walked home and to my office, and having dispatched
my great letters by the post to my father, of which
I keep copies to show by me and for my future understanding,
I went home to supper and bed, being late. The
most observables in the making of money which I observed
to-day, is the steps of their doing it.
1. Before they do anything they assay the bullion,
which is done, if it be gold, by taking an equal weight
of that and of silver, of each a small weight, which
they reckon to be six ounces or half a pound troy;
this they wrap up in within lead. If it be silver,
they put such a quantity of that alone and wrap it
up in lead, and then putting them into little earthen
cupps made of stuff like tobacco pipes, and put them
into a burning hot furnace, where, after a while,
the whole body is melted, and at last the lead in
both is sunk into the body of the cupp, which carries
away all the copper or dross with it, and left the
pure gold and silver embodyed together, of that which
hath both been put into the cupp together, and the
silver alone in these where it was put alone in the
leaden case. And to part the silver and the
gold in the first experiment, they put the mixed body
into a glass of aqua-fortis, which separates them by
spitting out the silver into such small parts that
you cannot tell what it becomes, but turns into the
very water and leaves the gold at the bottom clear
of itself, with the silver wholly spit out, and yet
the gold in the form that it was doubled together
in when it was a mixed body of gold and silver, which
is a great mystery; and after all this is done to get
the silver together out of the water is as strange.
But the nature of the assay is thus: the piece