our answer fair and got Brouncker and the rest to sign
it, I by coach to White Hall to the Committee of the
Council, which met late, and Brouncker and J. Minnes
with me, and there the Duke of York present (but not
W. Coventry, who I perceive do wholly avoid to have
to do publickly in this business, being shy of appearing
in any Navy business, which I telling him the other
day that I thought the King might suffer by it, he
told me that the occasion is now so small that it cannot
be fatal to the service, and for the present it is
better for him not to appear, saying that it may fare
the worse for his appearing in it as things are now
governed), where our answer was read and debated, and
some hot words between the Duke of York and Sir T.
Clifford, the first for and the latter against Gawden,
but the whole put off to to-morrow’s Council,
for till the King goes out of town the next week the
Council sits every day. So with the Duke of
York and some others to his closet, and Alderman Backewell
about a Committee of Tangier, and there did agree upon
a price for pieces of eight at 4s. 6d. Present
the Duke of York, Arlington, Berkeley, Sir J. Minnes,
and myself. They gone, the Duke of York did tell
me how hot Clifford is for Child, and for removing
of old Officers, he saying plainly to-night, that
though D. Gawden was a man that had done the best service
that he believed any man, or any ten men, could have
done, yet that it was for the King’s interest
not to let it lie too long in one hand, lest nobody
should be able to serve him but one. But the
Duke of York did openly tell him that he was not for
removing of old servants that have done well, neither
in this place, nor in any other place, which is very
nobly said. It being 7 or 8 at night, I home
with Backewell by coach, and so walked to D. Gawden’s,
but he not at home, and so back to my chamber, the
boy to read to me, and so to supper and to bed.
26th. Could sleep but little last night, for
my concernments in this business of the victualling
for Sir D. Gawden, so up in the morning and he comes
to me, and there I did tell him all, and give him my
advice, and so he away, and I to the office, where
we met and did a little business, and I left them
and by water to attend the Council, which I did all
the morning, but was not called in, but the Council
meets again in the afternoon on purpose about it.
So I at noon to Westminster Hall and there stayed
a little, and at the Swan also, thinking to have got
Doll Lane thither, but elle did not understand my
signs; and so I away and walked to Charing Cross,
and there into the great new Ordinary, by my Lord
Mulgrave’s, being led thither by Mr. Beale, one
of Oliver’s, and now of the King’s Guards;
and he sat with me while I had two grilled pigeons,
very handsome and good meat: and there he and
I talked of our old acquaintances, W. Clerke and others,
he being a very civil man, and so walked to Westminster
and there parted, and I to the Swan again, but did