in such manner as pleased the King and Council.
Speaking concerning the difficulty of pleasing of
seamen and giving them assurance to their satisfaction
that they should be paid their arrears of wages, my
Lord Ashly did move that an assignment for money on
the Act might be put into the hands of the East India
Company, or City of London, which he thought the seamen
would believe. But this my Lord Anglesey did
very handsomely oppose, and I think did carry it that
it will not be: and it is indeed a mean thing
that the King should so far own his own want of credit
as to borrow theirs in this manner. My Lord
Anglesey told him that this was the way indeed to
teach the Parliament to trust the King no more for
the time to come, but to have a kingdom’s Treasurer
distinct from the King’s. Home at noon
to dinner, where I expected to have had our new girle,
my wife’s woman, but she is not yet come.
I abroad after dinner to White Hall, and there among
other things do hear that there will be musique to-morrow
night before the King. So to Westminster, where
to the Swan . . . . and drank and away to the Hall,
and thence to Mrs. Martin’s, to bespeak some
linen, and there je did avoir all with her, and drank,
and away, having first promised my goddaughter a new
coat-her first coat. So by coach home, and there
find our pretty girl Willet come, brought by Mr. Batelier,
and she is very pretty, and so grave as I never saw
a little thing in my life. Indeed I think her
a little too good for my family, and so well carriaged
as I hardly ever saw. I wish my wife may use
her well. Now I begin to be full of thought for
my journey the next week, if I can get leave, to Brampton.
Tonight come and sat with me Mr. Turner and his wife
and tell me of a design of sending their son Franke
to the East Indy Company’s service if they can
get him entertainment, which they are promised by
Sir Andr. Rickard, which I do very well like of.
So the company broke up and to bed.
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Act of Council passed,
to put out all Papists in office
And a deal of do of
which I am weary
But do it with mighty
vanity and talking
Feared she hath from
some [one] or other of a present
Fell a-crying for joy,
being all maudlin and kissing one another
Found to be with child,
do never stir out of their beds
Had his hand cut off,
and was hanged presently!
Hates to have any body
mention what he had done the day before
House of Lords is the
last appeal that a man can make
I find her painted,
which makes me loathe her (cosmetics)
King do resolve to declare
the Duke of Monmouth legitimate
Lady Castlemayne is
compounding with the King for a pension
My intention to learn
to trill
Never, while he lives,
truckle under any body or any faction
Pressing in it as if
none of us had like care with him
Singing with many voices
is not singing
Their condition was
a little below my present state
Weary of it; but it
will please the citizens
Weigh him after he had
done playing