and that they are a couple of false persons, which
I believe, and withal that he himself is a knave too.
He and I by and by to dinner mighty nobly, and the
King having dined, he come down, and I went in the
barge with him, I sitting at the door. Down
to Woolwich (and there I just saw and kissed my wife,
and saw some of her painting, which is very curious;
and away again to the King) and back again with him
in the barge, hearing him and the Duke talk, and seeing
and observing their manner of discourse. And
God forgive me! though I admire them with all the
duty possible, yet the more a man considers and observes
them, the less he finds of difference between them
and other men, though (blessed be God!) they are both
princes of great nobleness and spirits. The barge
put me into another boat that come to our side, Mr.
Holder with a bag of gold to the Duke, and so they
away and I home to the office. The Duke of Monmouth
is the most skittish leaping gallant that ever I saw,
always in action, vaulting or leaping, or clambering.
Thence mighty full of the honour of this day, I took
coach and to Kate Joyce’s, but she not within,
but spoke with Anthony, who tells me he likes well
of my proposal for Pall to Harman, but I fear that
less than L500 will not be taken, and that I shall
not be able to give, though I did not say so to him.
After a little other discourse and the sad news of
the death of so many in the parish of the plague,
forty last night, the bell always going, I back to
the Exchange, where I went up and sat talking with
my beauty, Mrs. Batelier, a great while, who is indeed
one of the finest women I ever saw in my life.
After buying some small matter, I home, and there to
the office and saw Sir J. Minnes now come from Portsmouth,
I home to set my Journall for these four days in order,
they being four days of as great content and honour
and pleasure to me as ever I hope to live or desire,
or think any body else can live. For methinks
if a man would but reflect upon this, and think that
all these things are ordered by God Almighty to make
me contented, and even this very marriage now on foot
is one of the things intended to find me content in,
in my life and matter of mirth, methinks it should
make one mightily more satisfied in the world than
he is. This day poor Robin Shaw at Backewell’s
died, and Backewell himself now in Flanders.
The King himself asked about Shaw, and being told
he was dead, said he was very sorry for it.
The sicknesse is got into our parish this week, and
is got, indeed, every where; so that I begin to think
of setting things in order, which I pray God enable
me to put both as to soul and body.