but could not tell whereabouts it was in the prayers,
nor the Bishop neither, but laughed at the conceit;
so went in: but, God forgive me! I did
tell it by and by to people, and did say that the
man said that they were about something of saving their
souls, but could not tell whereabouts in the prayers
that was. I sent in a note to my Lord Privy
Seal, and he came out to me; and I desired he would
make another deputy for me, because of my great business
of the Navy this month; but he told me he could not
do it without the King’s consent, which vexed
me. So to Dr. Castle’s, and there did get
a promise from his clerk that his master should officiate
for me to-morrow. Thence by water to Tom’s,
and there with my wife took coach and to the old Exchange,
where having bought six large Holland bands, I sent
her home, and myself found out my uncle Wight and
Mr. Rawlinson, and with them went to the tatter’s
house to dinner, and there had a good dinner of cold
meat and good wine, but was troubled in my head after
the little wine I drank, and so home to my office,
and there did promise to drink no more wine but one
glass a meal till Whitsuntide next upon any score.
Mrs. Bowyer and her daughters being at my house I
forbore to go to them, having business and my head
disturbed, but staid at my office till night, and then
to walk upon the leads with my wife, and so to my
chamber and thence to bed. The great talk is,
that the Spaniards and the Hollanders do intend to
set upon the Portuguese by sea, at Lisbon, as soon
as our fleet is come away; and by that means our fleet
is not likely to come yet these two months or three;
which I hope is not true.
8th. Up very early and to my office, and there
continued till noon. So to dinner, and in comes
uncle Fenner and the two Joyces. I sent for a
barrel of oysters and a breast of veal roasted, and
were very merry; but I cannot down with their dull
company and impertinent. After dinner to the
office again. So at night by coach to Whitehall,
and Mr. Coventry not being there I brought my business
of the office to him, it being almost dark, and so
came away and took up my wife. By the way home
and on Ludgate Hill there being a stop I bought two
cakes, and they were our supper at home.
9th. Sir George Carteret, Sir Williams both
and myself all the morning at the office passing the
Victualler’s accounts, and at noon to dinner
at the Dolphin, where a good chine of beef and other
good cheer. At dinner Sir George showed me an
account in French of the great famine, which is to
the greatest extremity in some part of France at this
day, which is very strange.
[On the 5th of June
following, Louis, notwithstanding the scarcity,
gave that splendid carousal
in the court before the Tuileries, from
which the place has
ever since taken its name.—B.]
So to the Exchange, Mrs. Turner (who I found sick
in bed), and several other places about business,
and so home. Supper and to bed.