yet was, at the Committee for Tangier, angry that
I should offer to suffer a bill of exchange to be
protested. So my Lord did bid me take heed, for
that I might easily suppose I could not want enemies,
no more than others. In all he speaks with the
greatest trust and love and confidence in what I say
or do, that a man can do. After this discourse
ended we sat down to dinner and mighty merry, among
other things, at the Bill brought into the House to
make it felony to break bulke, which, as my Lord says
well, will make that no prizes shall be taken, or,
if taken, shall be sunke after plundering; and the
Act for the method of gathering this last L1,250,000
now voted, and how paid wherein are several strange
imperfections. After dinner my Lord by a ketch
down to Erith, where the Bezan was, it blowing these
last two days and now both night and day very hard
southwardly, so that it has certainly drove the Dutch
off the coast. My Lord being gone I to the office,
and there find Captain Ferrers, who tells me his wife
is come to town to see him, having not seen him since
15 weeks ago at his first going to sea last.
She is now at a Taverne and stays all night, so I
was obliged to give him my house and chamber to lie
in, which he with great modesty and after much force
took, and so I got Mr. Evelyn’s coach to carry
her thither, and the coach coming back, I with Mr.
Evelyn to Deptford, where a little while with him
doing a little business, and so in his coach back
again to my lodgings, and there sat with Mrs. Ferrers
two hours, and with my little girle, Mistress Frances
Tooker, and very pleasant. Anon the Captain
comes, and then to supper very merry, and so I led
them to bed. And so to bed myself, having seen
my pretty little girle home first at the next door.
26th. Up, and, leaving my guests to make themselves
ready, I to the office, and thither comes Sir Jer.
Smith and Sir Christopher Mings to see me, being just
come from Portsmouth and going down to the Fleete.
Here I sat and talked with them a good while and
then parted, only Sir Christopher Mings and I together
by water to the Tower; and I find him a very witty
well-spoken fellow, and mighty free to tell his parentage,
being a shoemaker’s son, to whom he is now going,
and I to the ’Change, where I hear how the French
have taken two and sunk one of our merchant-men in
the Streights, and carried the ships to Toulon; so
that there is no expectation but we must fall out
with them. The ’Change pretty full, and
the town begins to be lively again, though the streets
very empty, and most shops shut. So back again
I and took boat and called for Sir Christopher Mings
at St. Katharine’s, who was followed with some
ordinary friends, of which, he says, he is proud, and
so down to Greenwich, the wind furious high, and we
with our sail up till I made it be taken down.
I took him, it being 3 o’clock, to my lodgings
and did give him a good dinner and so parted, he being
pretty close to me as to any business of the fleete,