less earnestness than heretofore: and this, it
may be, is, from what he told me lately, that the King
is offended at what is talked, that he hath declared
himself desirous not to have to do with any employment
more. But he do tell me that the leisure he hath
yet had do not at all begin to be burdensome to him,
he knowing how to spend his time with content to himself;
and that he hopes shortly to contract his expence,
so as that he shall not be under any straits in that
respect neither; and so seems to be in very good condition
of content. Thence I away over the Park, it being
now night, to White Hall, and there, in the Duchess’s
chamber, do find the Duke of York; and, upon my offer
to speak with him, he did come to me, and withdrew
to his closet, and there did hear and approve my paper
of the Administration of the Navy, only did bid me
alter these words, “upon the rupture between
the late King and the Parliament,” to these,
“the beginning of the late Rebellion;”
giving it me as but reason to shew that it was with
the Rebellion that the Navy was put by out of its
old good course, into that of a Commission. Having
done this, we fell to other talk; he with great confidence
telling me how matters go among our adversaries, in
reference to the Navy, and that he thinks they do
begin to flag; but then, beginning to talk in general
of the excellency of old constitutions, he did bring
out of his cabinet, and made me read it, an extract
out of a book of my late Lord of Northumberland’s,
so prophetic of the: business of Chatham, as is
almost miraculous. I did desire, and he did
give it me to copy out, which pleased me mightily,
and so, it being late, I away and to my wife, and by
hackney; home, and there, my eyes being weary with
reading so much: but yet not so much as I was
afeard they would, we home to supper and to bed.
18th (Lord’s day). Up, and all the morning
till 2 o’clock at my Office, with Gibson and
Tom, about drawing up fair my discourse of the Administration
of the Navy, and then, Mr. Spong being come to dine
with me, I in to dinner, and then out to my Office
again, to examine the fair draught; and so borrowing
Sir J. Minnes’s coach, he going with Colonel
Middleton, I to White Hall, where we all met and did
sign it and then to my Lord Arlington’s, where
the King, and the Duke of York, and Prince Rupert,
as also Ormond and the two Secretaries, with my Lord
Ashly and Sir T. Clifton was. And there, by and
by, being called in, Mr. Williamson did read over
our paper, which was in a letter to the Duke of York,
bound up in a book with the Duke of York’s Book
of Instructions. He read it well; and, after
read, we were bid to withdraw, nothing being at all
said to it. And by and by we were called in again,
and nothing said to that business; but another begun,
about the state of this year’s action, and our
wants of money, as I had stated the same lately to
our Treasurers; which I was bid, and did largely,
and with great content, open. And having so done,