mind. But it is my comfort that this is the
thing that after so many years good service that has
made him my enemy. Thence to the King’s
Head ordinary, and there dined among a company of
fine gentlemen; some of them discoursed of the King
of France’s greatness, and how he is come to
make the Princes of the Blood to take place of all
foreign Embassadors, which it seems is granted by
them of Venice and other States, and expected from
my Lord. Hollis, our King’s Embassador
there; and that either upon that score or something
else he hath not had his entry yet in Paris, but hath
received several affronts, and among others his harnesse
cut, and his gentlemen of his horse killed, which
will breed bad blood if true. They say also that
the King of France hath hired threescore ships of
Holland, and forty of the Swede, but nobody knows
what to do; but some great designs he hath on foot
against the next year. Thence by coach home and
to my office, where I spent all the evening till night
with Captain Taylor discoursing about keeping of masts,
and when he was gone, with Sir W. Warren, who did give
me excellent discourse about the same thing, which
I have committed to paper, and then fell to other
talk of his being at Chatham lately and there discoursing
of his masts. Commissioner Pett did let fall
several scurvy words concerning my pretending to know
masts as well as any body, which I know proceeds ever
since I told him I could measure a piece of timber
as well as anybody employed by the King. But,
however, I shall remember him for a black sheep again
a good while, with all his fair words to me, and perhaps
may let him know that my ignorance does the King as
much good as all his knowledge, which would do more
it is true if it were well used. Then we fell
to talk of Sir J. Minnes’s and Sir W. Batten’s
burning of Oliver’s head, while he was there;
which was done with so much insulting and folly as
I never heard of, and had the Trayned Band of Rochester
to come to the solemnity, which when all comes to all,
Commissioner Pett says it never was made for him; but
it troubles me the King should suffer L100 losse in
his purse, to make a new one after it was forgot whose
it was, or any words spoke of it. He being gone
I mightily pleased with his discourse, by which I
always learn something, I to read a little in Rushworth,
and so home to supper to my wife, it having been washing
day, and so to bed, my mind I confess a little troubled
for my Lord Sandwich’s displeasure. But
God will give me patience to bear since it rises from
so good an occasion.
15th. Before I was up, my brother’s man came to tell me that my cozen, Edward Pepys, was dead, died at Mrs. Turner’s, for which my wife and I are very sorry, and the more for that his wife was the only handsome woman of our name. So up and to the office, where the greatest business was Sir J. Minnes and Sir W. Batten against me for Sir W. Warren’s contract for masts, to which I may go to my memorandum book to see what past, but came