what a pass are all our matters come to! At
noon by appointment to Cursitor’s Alley, in
Chancery Lane, to meet Captain Cocke and some other
creditors of the Navy, and their Counsel, Pemberton,
North, Offly, and Charles Porter; and there dined,
and talked of the business of the assignments on the
Exchequer of the L1,250,000 on behalf of our creditors;
and there I do perceive that the Counsel had heard
of my performance in the Parliamenthouse lately, and
did value me and what I said accordingly. At
dinner we had a great deal of good discourse about
Parliament: their number being uncertain, and
always at the will of the King to encrease, as he
saw reason to erect a new borough. But all concluded
that the bane of the Parliament hath been the leaving
off the old custom of the places allowing wages to
those that served them in Parliament, by which they
chose men that understood their business and would
attend it, and they could expect an account from,
which now they cannot; and so the Parliament is become
a company of men unable to give account for the interest
of the place they serve for. Thence, the meeting
of the Counsel with the King’s Counsel this
afternoon being put off by reason of the death of Serjeant
Maynard’s lady, I to White Hall, where the Parliament
was to wait on the King; and they did: and it
was to be told that he did think fit to tell them
that they might expect to be adjourned at Whitsuntide,
and that they might make haste to raise their money;
but this, I fear, will displease them, who did expect
to sit as long as they pleased, and whether this be
done by the King upon some new counsel I know not,
for the King must be beholding to them till they do
settle this business of money. Great talk to-day
as if Beaufort was come into the Channel with about
20 ships, and it makes people apprehensive, but yet
the Parliament do not stir a bit faster in the business
of money. Here I met with Creed, expecting a
Committee of Tangier, but the Committee met not, so
he and I up and down, having nothing to do, and particularly
to the New Cockpit by the King’s Gate in Holborne,
but seeing a great deal of rabble we did refuse to
go in, but took coach and to Hide Park, and there
till all the tour was empty, and so he and I to the
Lodge in the Park, and there eat and drank till it
was night, and then carried him to White Hall, having
had abundance of excellent talk with him in reproach
of the times and managements we live under, and so
I home, and there to talk and to supper with my wife,
and so to bed.
31st. Up pretty betimes and to the office, where we sat all the morning, and at noon I home to dinner, where uncle Thomas dined with me, as he do every quarter, and I paid him his pension; and also comes Mr. Hollier a little fuddled, and so did talk nothing but Latin, and laugh, that it was very good sport to see a sober man in such a humour, though he was not drunk to scandal. At dinner comes a summons for this office and the Victualler to attend a Committee of Parliament this