and Mrs. Mallett is quite broke off; he attending
her at Tunbridge, and she declaring her affections
to be settled; and he not being fully pleased with
the vanity and liberty of her carriage. He told
me how my Lord has drawn a bill of exchange from Spayne
of L1200, and would have me supply him with L500 of
it, but I avoyded it, being not willing to embarke
myself in money there, where I see things going to
ruine. Thence to discourse of the times; and
he tells me he believes both my Lord Arlington and
Sir W. Coventry, as well as my Lord Sandwich and Sir
G. Carteret, have reason to fear, and are afeard of
this Parliament now coming on. He tells me that
Bristoll’s faction is getting ground apace against
my Lord Chancellor. He told me that my old Lord
Coventry was a cunning, crafty man, and did make as
many bad decrees in Chancery as any man; and that in
one case, that occasioned many years’ dispute,
at last when the King come in, it was hoped by the
party grieved, to get my Lord Chancellor to reverse
a decree of his. Sir W. Coventry took the opportunity
of the business between the Duke of Yorke and the
Duchesse, and said to my Lord Chancellor, that he
had rather be drawn up Holborne to be hanged, than
live to see his father pissed upon (in these very
terms) and any decree of his reversed. And so
the Chancellor did not think fit to do it, but it still
stands, to the undoing of one Norton, a printer, about
his right to the printing of the Bible, and Grammar,
&c. Thence Sir W. Pen and I to Islington and
there drank at the Katherine Wheele, and so down the
nearest way home, where there was no kind of pleasure
at all. Being come home, hear that Sir J. Minnes
has had a very bad fit all this day, and a hickup do
take him, which is a very bad sign, which troubles
me truly. So home to supper a little and then
to bed.
27th. Up, and to my new closett, which pleases
me mightily, and there did a little business.
Then to break open a window, to the leads’ side
in my old closett, which will enlighten the room mightily,
and make it mighty pleasant. So to the office,
and then home about one thing or other, about my new
closet, for my mind is full of nothing but that.
So at noon to dinner, mightily pleased with my wife’s
picture that she is upon. Then to the office,
and thither come and walked an hour with me Sir G.
Carteret, who tells me what is done about my Lord’s
pardon, and is not for letting the Duke of Yorke know
any thing of it beforehand, but to carry it as speedily
and quietly as we can. He seems to be very apprehensive
that the Parliament will be troublesome and inquisitive
into faults, but seems not to value them as to himself.
He gone, I to the Victualling Office, there with
Lewes’ and Willson setting the business of the
state of the fleete’s victualling even and plain,
and that being done, and other good discourse about
it over, Mr. Willson and I by water down the River
for discourse only, about business of the office,