nothing, and so to White Hall, and there attended the
King and Council, who met and heard our answer.
I present, and then withdrew; and they sent two hours
at least afterwards about it, and at last rose; and
to my great content, the Duke of York, at coming out,
told me that it was carried for D. Gawden at 6d. 8d.,
and 8 3/4d.; but with great difficulty, I understand,
both from him and others, so much that Sir Edward Walker
told me that he prays to God he may never live to
need to plead his merit, for D. Gawden’s sake;
for that it hath stood him in no stead in this business
at all, though both he and all the world that speaks
of him, speaks of him as the most deserving man of
any servant of the King’s in the whole nation,
and so I think he is: but it is done, and my heart
is glad at it. So I took coach and away, and
in Holborne overtook D. Gawden’s coach, and
stopped and went home, and Gibson to come after, and
to my house, where D. Gawden did talk a little, and
he do mightily acknowledge my kindness to him, and
I know I have done the King and myself good service
in it. So he gone, and myself in mighty great
content in what is done, I to the office a little,
and then home to supper, and the boy to read to me,
and so to bed. This noon I went to my Lady Peterborough’s
house, and talked with her about the money due to
her Lord, and it gives me great trouble, her importunity
and impertinency about it. This afternoon at
Court I met with Lord Hinchingbroke, newly come out
of the country, who tells me that Creed’s business
with Mrs. Pickering will do, which I am neither troubled
nor glad at.
27th (Lord’s day). Up, and to my office
to finish my journall for five days past, and so abroad
and walked to White Hall, calling in at Somerset House
Chapel, and also at the Spanish Embassador’s
at York House, and there did hear a little masse:
and so to White Hall; and there the King being gone
to Chapel, I to walk all the morning in the Park, where
I met Mr. Wren; and he and I walked together in the
Pell-Mell, it being most summer weather that ever
was seen: and here talking of several things:
of the corruption of the Court, and how unfit it is
for ingenious men, and himself particularly, to live
in it, where a man cannot live but he must spend,
and cannot get suitably, without breach of his honour:
and did thereupon tell me of the basest thing of my
Lord Barkeley, one of the basest things that ever
was heard of of a man, which was this: how the
Duke of York’s Commissioners do let his wine-licenses
at a bad rate, and being offered a better, they did
persuade the Duke of York to give some satisfaction
to the former to quit it, and let it to the latter,
which being done, my Lord Barkeley did make the bargain
for the former to have L1500 a-year to quit it; whereof,
since, it is come to light that they were to have
but L800 and himself L700, which the Duke of York hath
ever since for some years paid, though this second
bargain hath been broken, and the Duke of York lost