friends with the Duchess; and that he is often there,
and waits on her. That he do believe that these
present great men will break in time, and that W.
Coventry will be a great man again; for he do labour
to have nothing to do in matters of the State, and
is so usefull to the side that he is on, that he will
stand, though at present he is quite out of play.
That my Lady Castlemayne hates the Duke of Buckingham.
That the Duke of York hath expressed himself very kind
to my Lord Sandwich, which I am mighty glad of.
That we are to expect more changes if these men stand.
This done, he and I to talk of my coach, and I got
him to go see it, where he finds most infinite fault
with it, both as to being out of fashion and heavy,
with so good reason that I am mightily glad of his
having corrected me in it; and so I do resolve to have
one of his build, and with his advice, both in coach
and horses, he being the fittest man in the world
for it, and so he carried me home, and said the same
to my wife. So I to the office and he away, and
at noon I home to dinner, and all the afternoon late
with Gibson at my chamber about my present great business,
only a little in the afternoon at the office about
Sir D. Gawden’s accounts, and so to bed and slept
heartily, my wife and I at good peace, but my heart
troubled and her mind not at ease, I perceive, she
against and I for the girle, to whom I have not said
anything these three days, but resolve to be mighty
strange in appearance to her. This night W.
Batelier come and took his leave of us, he setting
out for France to-morrow.
31st. Up, and at the office all the morning.
At noon home to dinner with my people, and afternoon
to the office again, and then to my chamber with Gibson
to do more about my great answer for the Duke of York,
and so at night after supper to bed well pleased with
my advance thereon. This day my Lord Anglesey
was at the Office, and do seem to make nothing of this
business of his suspension, resolving to bring it into
the Council, where he seems not to doubt to have right,
he standing upon his defence and patent, and hath
put in his caveats to the several Offices: so,
as soon as the King comes back again, which will be
on Tuesday next, he will bring it into the Council.
So ends this month with some quiet to my mind, though
not perfect, after the greatest falling out with my
poor wife, and through my folly with the girl, that
ever I had, and I have reason to be sorry and ashamed
of it, and more to be troubled for the poor girl’s
sake, whom I fear I shall by this means prove the
ruin of, though I shall think myself concerned both
to love and be a friend to her. This day Roger
Pepys and his son Talbot, newly come to town, come
and dined with me, and mighty glad I am to see them.
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