and did not come forward for want of direction.
Commissioner Pett’s house was all unfurnished,
he having carried away all his goods. I met with
no satisfaction whereabouts the chaine was broke,
but do confess I met with nobody that I could well
expect to have satisfaction [from], it being Sunday;
and the officers of the Yard most of them abroad,
or at the Hill house, at the pay of the Chest, which
they did make use of to day to do part in. Several
complaints, I hear, of the Monmouth’s coming
away too soon from the chaine, where she was placed
with the two guard-ships to secure it; and Captain
Robert Clerke, my friend, is blamed for so doing there,
but I hear nothing of him at London about it; but
Captain Brookes’s running aground with the “Sancta
Maria,” which was one of the three ships that
were ordered to be sunk to have dammed up the River
at the chaine, is mightily cried against, and with
reason, he being the chief man to approve of the abilities
of other men, and the other two slips did get safe
thither and he run aground; but yet I do hear that
though he be blameable, yet if she had been there,
she nor two more to them three would have been able
to have commanded the river all over. I find
that here, as it hath been in our river, fire-ships,
when fitted, have been sunk afterwards, and particularly
those here at the Mussle, where they did no good at
all. Our great ships that were run aground and
sunk are all well raised but the “Vanguard,”
which they go about to raise to-morrow. “The
Henery,” being let loose to drive up the river
of herself, did run up as high as the bridge, and
broke down some of the rails of the bridge, and so
back again with the tide, and up again, and then berthed
himself so well as no pilot could ever have done better;
and Punnet says he would not, for his life, have undertaken
to have done it, with all his skill. I find
it is true that the Dutch did heele “The Charles”
to get her down, and yet run aground twice or thrice,
and yet got her safe away, and have her, with a great
many good guns in her, which none of our pilots would
ever have undertaken. It is very considerable
the quantity of goods, which the making of these platforms
and batterys do take out of the King’s stores:
so that we shall have little left there, and, God
knows! no credit to buy any; besides, the taking away
and spending of (it is possible) several goods that
would have been either rejected or abatement made
for them before used. It is a strange thing to
see that, while my Lords Douglas and Middleton do ride
up and down upon single horses, my Lord Bruncker do
go up and down with his hackney-coach and six horses
at the King’s charge, which will do, for all
this time, and the time that he is likely to stay,
must amount to a great deal. But I do not see
that he hath any command over the seamen, he being
affronted by three or four seamen before my very face,
which he took sillily, methought; and is not able
to do so much good as a good boatswain in this business.