the Duke of Albemarle, the only man fit for those works,
to him for his purse: to which the Chancellor
answered, that he received it from the King, and would
deliver it to the King’s own hand, and so civilly
returned the Duke of Albemarle without it; and this
morning my Lord Chancellor is to be with the King,
to come to an end in the business. After sitting,
we rose, and my wife being gone abroad with Mrs. Turner
to her washing at the whitster’s, I dined at
Sir W. Batten’s, where Mr. Boreman was, who come
from White Hall; who tells us that he saw my Lord Chancellor
come in his coach with some of his men, without his
Seal, to White Hall to his chamber; and thither the
King and Duke of York come and staid together alone,
an hour or more: and it is said that the King
do say that he will have the Parliament meet, and
that it will prevent much trouble by having of him
out of their enmity, by his place being taken away;
for that all their enmity will be at him. It
is said also that my Lord Chancellor answers, that
he desires he may be brought to his trial, if he have
done any thing to lose his office; and that he will
be willing, and is most desirous, to lose that, and
his head both together. Upon what terms they
parted nobody knows but the Chancellor looked sad,
he says. Then in comes Sir Richard Ford, and
says he hears that there is nobody more presses to
reconcile the King and Chancellor than the Duke of
Albemarle and Duke of Buckingham: the latter
of which is very strange, not only that he who was
so lately his enemy should do it, but that this man,
that but the other day was in danger of losing his
own head, should so soon come to be a mediator for
others: it shows a wise Government. They
all say that he [Clarendon] is but a poor man, not
worth above L3000 a-year in land; but this I cannot
believe: and all do blame him for having built
so great a house, till he had got a better estate.
Having dined, Sir J. Minnes and I to White Hall,
where we could be informed in no more than we were
told before, nobody knowing the result of the meeting,
but that the matter is suspended. So I walked
to the King’s playhouse, there to meet Sir W.
Pen, and saw “The Surprizall,” a very
mean play, I thought: or else it was because
I was out of humour, and but very little company in
the house. But there Sir W. Pen and I had a great
deal of discourse with Moll; who tells us that Nell
is already left by my Lord Buckhurst, and that he makes
sport of her, and swears she hath had all she could
get of him; and Hart,
[Charles Hart, great-nephew of Shakespeare, a favourite actor. He is credited with being Nell Gwyn’s first lover (or Charles I., as the wits put it), and with having brought her on the stage. He died of stone, and was buried at Stanmore Magna, Middlesex, where he had a country house.]
her great admirer, now hates her; and that she is very poor, and hath lost my Lady Castlemayne, who was her great friend also but she is come to the House, but is neglected by them all.