help me in my musique notions, which my head is now-a-days
full of, and I do believe will come to something that
is very good. Thence to White Hall, expecting
to have heard the Bishop of Lincolne, my friend, preach,
for so I understood he would do yesterday, but was
mistaken, and therefore away presently back again,
and there find everything in good order against dinner,
and at noon come Mr. Pierce and she, and Mrs. Manuel,
the Jew’s wife, and Mrs. Corbet, and Mrs. Pierces
boy and girl. But we are defeated of Knepp, by
her being forced to act to-day, and also of Harris,
which did trouble me, they being my chief guests.
However, I had an extraordinary good dinner, and the
better because dressed by my own servants, and were
mighty merry; and here was Mr. Pelling by chance come
and dined with me; and after sitting long at dinner,
I had a barge ready at Tower-wharfe, to take us in,
and so we went, all of us, up as high as Barne-Elms,
a very fine day, and all the way sang; and Mrs. Manuel
sings very finely, and is a mighty discreet, sober-carriaged
woman, that both my wife and I are mightily taken with
her, and sings well, and without importunity or the
contrary. At Barne-Elms we walked round, and
then to the barge again, and had much merry talk,
and good singing; and come before it was dark to the
New Exchange stairs, and there landed, and walked
up to Mrs. Pierces, where we sat awhile, and then
up to their dining-room. And so, having a violin
and theorbo, did fall to dance, here being also Mrs.
Floyd come hither, and by and by Mr. Harris.
But there being so few of us that could dance, and
my wife not being very well, we had not much pleasure
in the dancing: there was Knepp also, by which
with much pleasure we did sing a little, and so, about
ten o’clock, I took coach with my wife and Deb.,
and so home, and there to bed.
24th. Up pretty betimes, and so there comes
to me Mr. Shish, to desire my appearing for him to
succeed Mr. Christopher Pett, lately dead, in his
place of Master-Shipwright of Deptford and Woolwich,
which I do resolve to promote what I can. So
by and by to White Hall, and there to the Duke of
York’s chamber, where I understand it is already
resolved by the King and Duke of York that Shish shall
have the place. From the Duke’s chamber
Sir W. Coventry and I to walk in the Matted Gallery;
and there, among other things, he tells me of the
wicked design that now is at last contriving against
him, to get a petition presented from people that the
money they have paid to W. Coventry for their places
may be repaid them back; and that this is set on by
Temple and Hollis of the Parliament, and, among other
mean people in it, by Captain Tatnell: and he
prays me that I will use some effectual way to sift
Tatnell what he do, and who puts him on in this business,
which I do undertake, and will do with all my skill
for his service, being troubled that he is still under
this difficulty. Thence up and down Westminster
by Mrs. Burroughes her mother’s shop, thinking
to have seen her, but could not, and therefore back
to White Hall, where great talk of the tumult at the
other end of the town, about Moore-fields, among the
’prentices, taking the liberty of these holydays
to pull down bawdy-houses.