Sir W. Coventry did give us the best advice he could
for us to provide for our own justification, believing,
as everybody do, that they will fall heavily upon
us all, though he lay all upon want of money, only
a little, he says (if the Parliament be in any temper),
may be laid upon themselves for not providing money
sooner, they being expressly and industriously warned
thereof by him, he says, even to the troubling them,
that some of them did afterwards tell him that he
had frighted them. He says he do prepare to
justify himself, and that he hears that my Lord Chancellor,
my Lord Arlington, the Vice Chamberlain and himself
are reported all up and down the Coffee houses to
be the four sacrifices that must be made to atone
the people. Then we to talk of the loss of all
affection and obedience, now in the seamen, so that
all power is lost. He told us that he do concur
in thinking that want of money do do the most of it,
but that that is not all, but the having of gentlemen
Captains, who discourage all Tarpaulins, and have
given out that they would in a little time bring it
to that pass that a Tarpaulin should not dare to aspire
to more than to be a Boatswain or a gunner.
That this makes the Sea Captains to lose their own
good affections to the service, and to instil it into
the seamen also, and that the seamen do see it themselves
and resent it; and tells us that it is notorious,
even to his bearing of great ill will at Court, that
he hath been the opposer of gentlemen Captains; and
Sir W. Pen did put in, and said that he was esteemed
to have been the man that did instil it into Sir W.
Coventry, which Sir W. Coventry did owne also, and
says that he hath always told the Gentlemen Captains
his opinion of them, and that himself who had now
served to the business of the sea 6 or 7 years should
know a little, and as much as them that had never almost
been at sea, and that yet he found himself fitter
to be a Bishop or Pope than to be a Sea-Commander,
and so indeed he is. I begun to tell him of the
experience I had of the great brags made by Sir F.
Hollis the other day, and the little proof either
of the command or interest he had in his men, which
Sir W. Pen seconded by saying Sir Fr. Hollis had told
him that there was not a pilot to be got the other
day for his fire-ships, and so was forced to carry
them down himself, which Sir W. Coventry says, in my
conscience, he knows no more to do and understand
the River no more than he do Tiber or Ganges.
Thence I away with Sir W. Pen to White Hall, to the
Treasury Chamber, but to no purpose, and so by coach
home, and there to my office to business, and then
home to dinner, and to pipe with my wife, and so to
the office again, having taken a resolution to take
a turn to Chatham to-morrow, indeed to do business
of the King’s, but also to give myself the satisfaction
of seeing the place after the Dutch have been here.
I have sent to and got Creed to go with me by coach
betimes to-morrow morning. After having done