and did send him to make it clean, and in the mean
time, having staid for him a good while, did go away
by water to the Castle Taverne, by Exeter House, and
there met Sir W. Batten, [Sir] W. Pen, and several
others, among the rest Sir Ellis Layton, who do apply
himself to discourse with me, and I think by his discourse,
out of his opinion of my interest in Sir W. Coventry,
the man I find a wonderful witty, ready man for sudden
answers and little tales, and sayings very extraordinary
witty, but in the bottom I doubt he is not so.
Yet he pretends to have studied men, and the truth
is in several that I do know he did give me a very
inward account of them. But above all things
he did give me a full account, upon my demand, of this
judge of the Admiralty, Judge Jenkins; who, he says,
is a man never practised in this Court, but taken
merely for his merit and ability’s sake from
Trinity Hall, where he had always lived; only by accident
the business of the want of a Judge being proposed
to the present Archbishop of Canterbury that now is,
he did think of this man and sent for him up:
and here he is, against the ‘gre’ and
content of the old Doctors, made judge, but is a very
excellent man both for judgment and temper, yet majesty
enough, and by all men’s report, not to be corrupted.
After dinner to the Court, where Sir Ellis Layton
did make a very silly motion in our behalf, but did
neither hurt nor good. After him Walker and
Wiseman; and then the judge did pronounce his sentence;
for some part of the goods and ship, and the freight
of the whole, to be free, and returned and paid by
us; and the remaining, which was the greater part,
to be ours. The loss of so much troubles us,
but we have got a pretty good part, thanks be to God!
So we are not displeased nor yet have cause to triumph,
as we did once expect. Having seen the end of
this, I being desirous to be at home to see the issue
of any country letters about my mother, which I expect
shall give me tidings of her death, I directly home
and there to the office, where I find no letter from
my father or brother, but by and by the boy tells me
that his mistress sends me word that she hath opened
my letter, and that she is loth to send me any more
news. So I home, and there up to my wife in
our chamber, and there received from my brother the
newes of my mother’s dying on Monday, about
five or six o’clock in the afternoon, and that
the last time she spoke of her children was on Friday
last, and her last words were, “God bless my
poor Sam!” The reading hereof did set me a-weeping
heartily, and so weeping to myself awhile, and my wife
also to herself, I then spoke to my wife respecting
myself, and indeed, having some thoughts how much
better both for her and us it is than it might have
been had she outlived my father and me or my happy
present condition in the world, she being helpless,
I was the sooner at ease in my mind, and then found
it necessary to go abroad with my wife to look after
the providing mourning to send into the country, some
to-morrow, and more against Sunday, for my family,
being resolved to put myself and wife, and Barker
and Jane, W. Hewer and Tom, in mourning, and my two
under-mayds, to give them hoods and scarfs and gloves.
So to my tailor’s, and up and down, and then
home and to my office a little, and then to supper
and to bed, my heart sad and afflicted, though my
judgment at ease.