to do it (which I will never undertake), or leave
the employment, which I had rather do. Mightily
pleased with the noblenesse of this house, and the
brave furniture and pictures, which indeed is very
noble, and, being broke up, I with Sir G. Carteret
in his coach into Hide Park, to discourse of things,
and spent an hour in this manner with great pleasure,
telling me all his concernments, and how he is gone
through with the purchase for my Lady Jemimah and her
husband; how the Treasury is like to come into the
hands of a Committee; but that not that, nor anything
else, will do our business, unless the King himself
will mind his business, and how his servants do execute
their parts; he do fear an utter ruin in the state,
and that in a little time, if the King do not mind
his business soon; that the King is very kind to him,
and to my Lord Sandwich, and that he doubts not but
at his coming home, which he expects about Michaelmas,
he will be very well received. But it is pretty
strange how he began again the business of the intention
of a marriage of my Lord Hinchingbroke to a daughter
of my Lord Burlington’s to my Lord Chancellor,
which he now tells me as a great secret, when he told
it me the last Sunday but one; but it may be the poor
man hath forgot, and I do believe he do make it a secret,
he telling me that he has not told it to any but myself,
end this day to his daughter my Lady Jemimah, who
looks to lie down about two months hence. After
all this discourse we turned back and to White Hall,
where we parted, and I took up my wife at Unthanke’s,
and so home, and in our street, at the Three Tuns’
Tavern’ door, I find a great hubbub; and what
was it but two brothers have fallen out, and one killed
the other. And who should they be but the two
Fieldings; one whereof, Bazill, was page to my Lady
Sandwich; and he hath killed the other, himself being
very drunk, and so is sent to Newgate. I to
the office and did as much business as my eyes would
let me, and so home to supper and to bed.
10th. Up and to the office, where a meeting
about the Victuallers’ accounts all the morning,
and at noon all of us to Kent’s, at the Three
Tuns’ Tavern, and there dined well at Mr. Gawden’s
charge; and, there the constable of the parish did
show us the picklocks and dice that were found in
the dead man’s pocket, and but 18d. in money;
and a table-book, wherein were entered the names of
several places where he was to go; and among others
Kent’s house, where he was to dine, and did dine
yesterday: and after dinner went into the church,
and there saw his corpse with the wound in his left
breast; a sad spectacle, and a broad wound, which makes
my hand now shake to write of it. His brother
intending, it seems, to kill the coachman, who did
not please him, this fellow stepped in, and took away
his sword; who thereupon took out his knife, which
was of the fashion, with a falchion blade, and a little
cross at the hilt like a dagger; and with that stabbed