and I to Mr. Phillips, and there discoursed with him
in order to to-morrow’s business of the Court
and getting several papers ready, when presently comes
in my uncle Thomas and his son thither also, but finding
us there I believe they were disappointed and so went
forth again, and went to the house that Prior has
lately bought of us (which was Barton’s) and
there did make entry and forbade paying rent to us,
as now I hear they have done everywhere else, and
that that was their intent in coming to see us this
day. I perceive most of the people that do deal
with us begin to be afraid that their title to what
they buy will not be good. Which troubled me
also I confess a little, but I endeavoured to remove
all as well as I could. Among other things they
make me afraid that Barton was never admitted to that
that my uncle bought of him, but I hope the contrary.
Thence home, and with my father took a melancholy
walk to Portholme, seeing the country-maids milking
their cows there, they being there now at grass, and
to see with what mirth they come all home together
in pomp with their milk, and sometimes they have musique
go before them. So back home again, and to supper,
and in comes Piggott with a counterfeit bond which
by agreement between us (though it be very just in
itself) he has made, by which I shall lay claim to
the interest of the mortgage money, and so waiting
with much impatience and doubt the issue of to-morrow’s
Court, I to bed, but hardly slept half an hour the
whole night, my mind did so run with fears of to-morrow.
14th. Up, and did digest into a method all I
could say in our defence, in case there should be
occasion, for I hear he will have counsel to plead
for him in the Court, and so about nine o’clock
to the court at the Lordshipp where the jury was called;
and there being vacancies, they would have had my
father, in respect to him, [to] have been one of the
Homage, but he thought fit to refuse it, he not knowing
enough the customs of the town. They being sworn
and the charge given them, they fell to our business,
finding the heir-at-law to be my uncle Thomas; but
Sir Robert [Bernard] did tell them that he had seen
how the estate was devised to my father by my uncle’s
will, according to the custom of the manour, which
they would have denied, first, that it was not according
to the custom of the manour, proposing some difficulty
about the half-acre of land which is given the heir-at-law
according to custom, which did put me into great fear
lest it might not be in my uncle’s possession
at his death, but mortgaged with other to T. Trice
(who was there, and was with my good will admitted
to Taylor’s house mortgaged to him if not being
worth the money for which it was mortgaged, which
I perceive he now, although he lately bragged the
contrary, yet is now sensible of, and would have us
to redeem it with money, and he would now resurrender
it to us rather than the heir-at-law) or else that
it was part of Goody Gorum’s in which she has