all in my Lord’s absence. But Sir W. Coventry
do undertake to defend it, and my Lord Bruncker got
ground I believe by it, who is angry at Sir W. Batten’s
and Sir W. Pen’s bad words concerning it, and
I have made it worse by telling him that they refuse
to sign to a paper which he and I signed on Saturday
to declare the reason of his actions, which Sir W.
Coventry likes and would have it sent him and he will
sign it, which pleases me well. So we parted,
and I with Lord Bruncker to Sir P. Neale’s chamber,
and there sat and talked awhile, Sir Edward Walker
being there, and telling us how he hath lost many fine
rowles of antiquity in heraldry by the late fire, but
hath saved the most of his papers. Here was
also Dr. Wallis, the famous scholar and mathematician;
but he promises little. Left them, and in the
dark and cold home by water, and so to supper and
to read and so to bed, my eyes being better to-day,
and I cannot impute it to anything but by my being
much in the dark to-night, for I plainly find that
it is only excess of light that makes my eyes sore.
This after noon I walked with Lord Bruncker into the
Park and there talked of the times, and he do think
that the King sees that he cannot never have much
more money or good from this Parliament, and that
therefore he may hereafter dissolve them, that as soon
as he has the money settled he believes a peace will
be clapped up, and that there are overtures of a peace,
which if such as the Lord Chancellor can excuse he
will take. For it is the Chancellor’s interest,
he says, to bring peace again, for in peace he can
do all and command all, but in war he cannot, because
he understands not the nature of the war as to the
management thereof. He tells me he do not believe
the Duke of York will go to sea again, though there
are a great many about the King that would be glad
of any occasion to take him out of the world, he standing
in their ways; and seemed to mean the Duke of Monmouth,
who spends his time the most viciously and idly of
any man, nor will be fit for any thing; yet bespeaks
as if it were not impossible but the King would own
him for his son, and that there was a marriage between
his mother and him; which God forbid should be if
it be not true, nor will the Duke of York easily be
gulled in it. But this put to our other distractions
makes things appear very sad, and likely to be the
occasion of much confusion in a little time, and my
Lord Bruncker seems to say that nothing can help us
but the King’s making a peace soon as he hath
this money; and thereby putting himself out of debt,
and so becoming a good husband, and then he will neither
need this nor any other Parliament, till he can have
one to his mind: for no Parliament can, as he
says, be kept long good, but they will spoil one another,
and that therefore it hath been the practice of kings
to tell Parliaments what he hath for them to do, and
give them so long time to do it in, and no longer.
Harry Kembe, one of our messengers, is lately dead.