which is a horrid shame. How the King and these
gentlemen did make the fiddlers of Thetford, this
last progress, to sing them all the bawdy songs they
could think of. How Sir W. Coventry was brought
the other day to the Duchesse of York by the Duke,
to kiss her hand; who did acknowledge his unhappiness
to occasion her so much sorrow, declaring his intentions
in it, and praying her pardon; which she did give him
upon his promise to make good his pretences of innocence
to her family, by his faithfulness to his master,
the Duke of York. That the Duke of Buckingham
is now all in all, and will ruin Coventry, if he can:
and that W. Coventry do now rest wholly upon the Duke
of York for his standing, which is a great turn.
He tells me that my Lady Castlemayne, however, is
a mortal enemy to the Duke of Buckingham, which I
understand not; but, it seems, she is disgusted with
his greatness, and his ill usage of her. That
the King was drunk at Saxam with Sidly, Buckhurst,
&c., the night that my Lord Arlington come thither,
and would not give him audience, or could not which
is true, for it was the night that I was there, and
saw the King go up to his chamber, and was told that
the King had been drinking. He tells me, too,
that the Duke of York did the next day chide Bab.
May for his occasioning the King’s giving himself
up to these gentlemen, to the neglecting of my Lord
Arlington: to which he answered merrily, that,
by God, there was no man in England that had heads
to lose, durst do what they do, every day, with the
King, and asked the Duke of York’s pardon:
which is a sign of a mad world. God bless us
out of it!
24th. This morning comes to me the coachmaker,
and agreed with me for L53, and stand to the courtesy
of what more I should give him upon the finishing
of the coach: he is likely also to fit me with
a coachman. There comes also to me Mr. Shotgrave,
the operator of our Royal Society, to show me his
method of making the Tubes for the eyes, which are
clouterly done, so that mine are better, but I have
well informed myself in several things from him, and
so am glad of speaking with him. So to the office,
where all the morning, and then to dinner, and so
all the afternoon late at the office, and so home;
and my wife to read to me, and then with much content
to bed. This day Lord Brouncker tells me that
the making Sir J. Minnes a bare Commissioner is now
in doing, which I am glad of; but he speaks of two
new Commissioners, which I do not believe.
25th (Lord’s day). Up, and discoursing
with my wife about our house and many new things we
are doing of, and so to church I, and there find Jack
Fenn come, and his wife, a pretty black woman:
I never saw her before, nor took notice of her now.
So home and to dinner, and after dinner all the afternoon
got my wife and boy to read to me, and at night W.
Batelier comes and sups with us; and, after supper,
to have my head combed by Deb., which occasioned the
greatest sorrow to me that ever I knew in this world,