and yet I doubt all true; that nobody minds it, but
that the King and Kingdom must speedily be undone,
and rails at my Lord about the prizes, but I think
knows not my relation to him. Here I endeavoured
to satisfy all I could, people about Bills of Exchange
from Tangier, but it is only with good words, for money
I have not, nor can get. God knows what will
become of all the King’s matters in a little
time, for he runs in debt every day, and nothing to
pay them looked after. Thence I walked to the
Tower; but, Lord! how empty the streets are and melancholy,
so many poor sick people in the streets full of sores;
and so many sad stories overheard as I walk, every
body talking of this dead, and that man sick, and
so many in this place, and so many in that. And
they tell me that, in Westminster, there is never
a physician and but one apothecary left, all being
dead; but that there are great hopes of a great decrease
this week: God send it! At the Tower found
my Lord Duke and Duchesse at dinner; so I sat down.
And much good cheer, the Lieutenant and his lady,
and several officers with the Duke. But, Lord!
to hear the silly talk that was there, would make
one mad; the Duke having none almost but fools about
him. Much of their talke about the Dutch coming
on shore, which they believe they may some of them
have been and steal sheep, and speak all in reproach
of them in whose hands the fleete is; but, Lord helpe
him, there is something will hinder him and all the
world in going to sea, which is want of victuals;
for we have not wherewith to answer our service; and
how much better it would have been if the Duke’s
advice had been taken for the fleete to have gone
presently out; but, God helpe the King! while no better
counsels are given, and what is given no better taken.
Thence after dinner receiving many commands from the
Duke, I to our office on the Hill, and there did a
little business and to Colvill’s again, and
so took water at the Tower, and there met with Captain
Cocke, and he down with me to Greenwich, I having
received letters from my Lord Sandwich to-day, speaking
very high about the prize goods, that he would have
us to fear nobody, but be very confident in what we
have done, and not to confess any fault or doubt of
what he hath done; for the King hath allowed it, and
do now confirm it, and sent orders, as he says, for
nothing to be disturbed that his Lordshipp hath ordered
therein as to the division of the goods to the fleete;
which do comfort us, but my Lord writes to me that
both he and I may hence learn by what we see in this
business. But that which pleases me best is that
Cocke tells me that he now understands that Fisher
was set on in this business by the design of some
of the Duke of Albemarle’s people, Warcupp and
others, who lent him money to set him out in it, and
he has spent high. Who now curse him for a rogue
to take L100 when he might have had as well L1,500,
and they are mightily fallen out about it. Which
in due time shall be discovered, but that now that