the condition of the nation, how the King and his brother
are at a distance about this business of the Chancellor,
and the two Houses differing. And he do believe
that there are so many about the King like to be concerned
and troubled by the Parliament, that they will get
him to dissolve or prorogue the Parliament; and the
rather, for that the King is likely, by this good
husbandry of the Treasury, to get out of debt, and
the Parliament is likely to give no money. Among
other things, my Lord Crew did tell me, with grief,
that he hears that the King of late hath not dined
nor supped with the Queen, as he used of late to do.
After a little discourse, Mr. Caesar, he dining there,
did give us some musique on his lute (Mr. John Crew
being there) to my great content, and then away I,
and Mr. Caesar followed me and told me that my boy
Tom hath this day declared to him that he cared not
for the French lute and would learn no more, which
Caesar out of faithfulness tells me that I might not
spend any more money on him in vain. I shall
take the boy to task about it, though I am contented
to save my money if the boy knows not what is good
for himself. So thanked him, and indeed he is
a very honest man I believe, and away home, there
to get something ready for the Lords Commissioners
of the Treasury, and so took my wife and girle and
set them at Unthanke’s, and I to White Hall,
and there with the Commissioners of the Treasury, who
I find in mighty good condition to go on in payment
of the seamen off, and thence I to Westminster Hall,
where I met with my cozen Roger and walked a good
while with him; he tells me of the high vote of the
Commons this afternoon, which I also heard at White
Hall, that the proceedings of the Lords in the case
of my Lord Clarendon are an obstruction to justice,
and of ill precedent to future times. This makes
every body wonder what will be the effect of it, most
thinking that the King will try him by his own Commission.
It seems they were mighty high to have remonstrated,
but some said that was too great an appeale to the
people. Roger is mighty full of fears of the
consequence of it, and wishes the King would dissolve
them. So we parted, and I bought some Scotch
cakes at Wilkinson’s in King Street, and called
my wife, and home, and there to supper, talk, and to
bed. Supped upon these cakes, of which I have
eat none since we lived at Westminster. This
night our poor little dogg Fancy was in a strange fit,
through age, of which she has had five or six.
3rd. Up, by candlelight, the only time I think I have done so this winter, and a coach being got over night, I to Sir W. Coventry’s, the first time I have seen him at his new house since he come to lodge there. He tells me of the vote for none of the House to be of the Commission for the Bill of Accounts; which he thinks is so great a disappointment to Birch and others that expected to be of it, that he thinks, could it have been [fore]seen, there would