all the men in the world, I never knew any man of
his degree so great a coxcomb in such imployments.
I see I have lost him forever, but I value it not;
for he is a coxcomb, and, I doubt, not over honest,
by some things which I see; and yet, for all his folly,
he hath the good lucke, now and then, to speak his
follies in as good words, and with as good a show,
as if it were reason, and to the purpose, which is
really one of the wonders of my life. Thence
walked to Westminster Hall; and there, in the Lords’
House, did in a great crowd, from ten o’clock
till almost three, hear the cause of Mr. Roberts, my
Lord Privy Seal’s son, against Win, who by false
ways did get the father of Mr. Roberts’s wife
(Mr. Bodvill) to give him the estate and disinherit
his daughter. The cause was managed for my Lord
Privy Seal by Finch the Solicitor [General]; but I
do really think that he is truly a man of as great
eloquence as ever I heard, or ever hope to hear in
all my life. Thence, after long staying to speak
with my Lord Sandwich, at last he coming out to me
and speaking with me about business of my Lord Peterborough,
I by coach home to the office, where all the afternoon,
only stept home to eat one bit and to the office again,
having eaten nothing before to-day. My wife
abroad with my aunt Wight and Norbury. I in the
evening to my uncle Wight’s, and not finding
them come home, they being gone to the Parke and the
Mulberry garden, I went to the ’Change, and
there meeting with Mr. Hempson, whom Sir W. Batten
has lately turned out of his place, merely because
of his coming to me when he came to town before he
went to him, and there he told me many rogueries of
Sir W. Batten, how he knows and is able to prove that
Captain Cox of Chatham did give him L10 in gold to
get him to certify for him at the King’s coming
in, and that Tom Newborne did make [the] poor men give
him L3 to get Sir W. Batten to cause them to be entered
in the yard, and that Sir W. Batten had oftentimes
said: “by God, Tom, you shall get something
and I will have some on’t.” His
present clerk that is come in Norman’s’
room has given him something for his place; that they
live high and (as Sir Francis Clerk’s lady told
his wife) do lack money as well as other people, and
have bribes of a piece of sattin and cabinetts and
other things from people that deal with him, and that
hardly any body goes to see or hath anything done
by Sir W. Batten but it comes with a bribe, and that
this is publickly true that his wife was a whore,
and that he had libells flung within his doors for
a cuckold as soon as he was married; that he received
L100 in money and in other things to the value of L50
more of Hempson, and that he intends to give him back
but L50; that he hath abused the Chest and hath now
some L1000 by him of it. I met also upon the ’Change
with Mr. Cutler, and he told me how for certain Lawson
hath proclaimed warr again with Argier, though they
had at his first coming given back the ships which