my business at the office I home, and there I found
Coleman come again to my house, and with my wife in
our great chamber, which vexed me, there being a bed
therein. I staid there awhile, and then to my
study vexed, showing no civility to the man.
But he comes on a compliment to receive my wife’s
commands into the country, whither he is going, and
it being Saturday my wife told me there was no other
room for her to bring him in, and so much is truth.
But I staid vexed in my closet till by and by my
cozen Thomas Pepys, of Hatcham, come to see me, and
he up to my closet, and there sat talking an hour or
two of the sad state of the times, whereof we did
talk very freely, and he thinks nothing but a union
of religious interests will ever settle us; and I do
think that, and the Parliament’s taking the
whole management of things into their hands, and severe
inquisitions into our miscarriages; will help us.
After we had bewailed ourselves and the kingdom very
freely one to another (wherein I do blame myself for
my freedom of speech to anybody), he gone, and Coleman
gone also before, I to the office, whither Creed come
by my desire, and he and I to my wife, to whom I now
propose the going to Chatham, who, mightily pleased
with it, sent for Mercer to go with her, but she could
not go, having friends at home, which vexed my wife
and me; and the poor wretch would have had anybody
else to have gone, but I would like nobody else, so
was contented to stay at home, on condition to go to
Ispsum next Sunday, which I will do, and so I to the
office to dispatch my business, and then home to supper
with Creed, and then Creed and I together to bed,
very pleasant in discourse. This day talking
with Sir W. Batten, he did give me an account how
ill the King and Duke of York was advised to send
orders for our frigates and fire-ships to come from
Gravesend, soon as ever news come of the Dutch being
returned into the river, wherein no seamen, he believes,
was advised with; for, says he, we might have done
just as Warwicke did, when he, W. Batten; come with
the King and the like fleete, in the late wars, into
the river: for Warwicke did not run away from
them, but sailed before them when they sailed, and
come to anchor when they come to anchor, and always
kept in a small distance from them: so as to
be able to take any opportunity of any of their ships
running aground, or change of wind, or any thing else,
to his advantage. So might we have done with
our fire-ships, and we have lost an opportunity of
taking or burning a good ship of their’s, which
was run aground about Holehaven, I think he said,
with the wind so as their ships could not get her
away; but we might have done what we would with her,
and, it may be, done them mischief, too, with the wind.
This seems very probable, and I believe was not considered.