of the Queen-mother, thought rather to bring her into
England; and the King of France did give her a jewell:
so that Mr. Evelyn believes she may be worth in jewells
about L6000, and that that is all that she hath in
the world: and a worthy woman; and in this hath
done as great an act of honour as ever was done by
woman. That now the Countesse Castlemayne do
carry all before her: and among other arguments
to prove Mrs. Stewart to have been honest to the last,
he says that the King’s keeping in still with
my Lady Castlemayne do show it; for he never was known
to keep two mistresses in his life, and would never
have kept to her had he prevailed any thing with Mrs.
Stewart. She is gone yesterday with her Lord
to Cobham. He did tell me of the ridiculous
humour of our King and Knights of the Garter the other
day, who, whereas heretofore their robes were only
to be worn during their ceremonies and service, these,
as proud of their coats, did wear them all day till
night, and then rode into the Parke with them on.
Nay, and he tells me he did see my Lord Oxford and
the Duke of Monmouth in a hackney-coach with two footmen
in the Parke, with their robes on; which is a most
scandalous thing, so as all gravity may be said to
be lost among us. By and by we discoursed of
Sir Thomas Clifford, whom I took for a very rich and
learned man, and of the great family of that name.
He tells me he is only a man of about seven-score
pounds a-year, of little learning more than the law
of a justice of peace, which he knows well: a
parson’s son, got to be burgess in a little
borough in the West, and here fell into the acquaintance
of my Lord Arlington, whose creature he is, and never
from him; a man of virtue, and comely, and good parts
enough; and hath come into his place with a great
grace, though with a great skip over the heads of
a great many, as Chichly and Duncum, and some Lords
that did expect it. By the way, he tells me,
that of all the great men of England there is none
that endeavours more to raise those that he takes into
favour than my Lord Arlington; and that, on that score,
he is much more to be made one’s patron than
my Lord Chancellor, who never did, nor never will do,
any thing, but for money! After having this
long discourse we parted, about one of the clock,
and so away by water home, calling upon Michell, whose
wife and girle are pretty well, and I home to dinner,
and after dinner with Sir W. Batten to White Hall,
there to attend the Duke of York before council, where
we all met at his closet and did the little business
we had, and here he did tell us how the King of France
is intent upon his design against Flanders, and hath
drawn up a remonstrance of the cause of the war, and
appointed the 20th of the next month for his rendezvous,
and himself to prepare for the campaign the 30th,
so that this, we are in hopes, will keep him in employment.
Turenne is to be his general. Here was Carcasses
business unexpectedly moved by him, but what was done