He gone, I to the office, where we sat all the morning,
Sir W. Pen sick of the gout comes not out. After
dinner at home, to White Hall, it being a very rainy
day, and there a Committee for Tangier, where I was
mightily pleased to see Sir W. Coventry fall upon
my Lord Bellasses’ business of the 3d. in every
piece of it which he would get to himself, making
the King pay 4s. 9d, while he puts them off for 4s.
6d., so that Sir W. Coventry continues still the same
man for the King’s good. But here Creed
did vex me with saying that I ought first to have
my account past by the Commissioners of Tangier before
in the Exchequer. Thence W. Coventry and I in
the Matted gallery, and there he did talk very well
to me about the way to save the credit of the officers
of the Navy, and their places too, by making use of
this interval of Parliament to be found to be mending
of matters in the Navy, and that nothing but this
will do it, and gives an instance in themselves of
the Treasury, whereof himself and Sir John Duncombe
all the world knows have enemies, and my Lord Ashly
a man obnoxious to most, and Sir Thomas Clifford one
that as a man suddenly rising and a creature of my
Lord Arlington’s hath enemies enough (none of
them being otherwise but the Duke of Albemarle), yet
with all this fault they hear nothing of the business
of the Treasury, but all well spoken of there.
He is for the removal of Sir John Minnes, thinking
that thereby the world will see a greater change in
the hands than now they do; and I will endeavour it,
and endeavour to do some good in the office also.
So home by coach, and to the office, where ended
my letters, and then home, and there got Balty to read
to me out of Sorbiere’s Observations in his
Voyage into England, and then to bed.
20th. Up, and with Colonell Middleton, in a
new coach he hath made him, very handsome, to White
Hall, where the Duke of York having removed his lodgings
for this year to St. James’s, we walked thither;
and there find the Duke of York coming to White Hall,
and so back to the Council-chamber, where the Committee
of the Navy sat; and here we discoursed several things;
but, Lord! like fools; so as it was a shame to see
things of this importance managed by a Council that
understand nothing of them: and, among other
things, one was about this building of a ship with
Hemskirke’s secret, to sail a third faster than
any other ship; but he hath got Prince Rupert on his
side, and by that means, I believe, will get his conditions
made better than he would otherwise, or ought indeed.
Having done there, I met with Sir Richard Browne,
and he took me to dinner with him to a new tavern,
above Charing Cross, where some clients of his did
give him a good dinner, and good company; among others,
one Bovy, a solicitor, and lawyer and merchant all
together, who hath travelled very much, did talk some
things well; but only he is a “Sir Positive:”
but the talk of their travels over the Alps very fine.
Thence walked to the King’s playhouse, and