Henry the Eighth, had great and sudden increase of
wealth, but yet, by overspending, both died poor; and
further tells the King how much of this L1,200,000
depends upon the life of the Prince, and so must be
renewed by Parliament again to his successor; which
is seldom done without parting with some of the prerogatives
of the Crowne; or if denied and he persists to take
it of the people, it gives occasion to a civill war,
which may, as it did in the late business of tonnage
and poundage, prove fatal to the Crowne. He showed
me how many ways the Lord Treasurer did take before
he moved the King to farme the Customes in the manner
he do, and the reasons that moved him to do it.
He showed the a very excellent argument to prove,
that our importing lesse than we export, do not impoverish
the kingdom, according to the received opinion:
which, though it be a paradox, and that I do not remember
the argument, yet methought there was a great deale
in what he said. And upon the whole I find him
a most exact and methodicall man, and of great industry:
and very glad that he thought fit to show me all this;
though I cannot easily guess the reason why he should
do it to me, unless from the plainness that he sees
I use to him in telling him how much the King may
suffer for our want of understanding the case of our
Treasury. Thence to White Hall (where my Lord
Sandwich was, and gave me a good countenance, I thought),
and before the Duke did our usual business, and so
I about several businesses in the house, and then
out to the Mewes with Sir W. Pen. But in my
way first did meet with W. Howe, who did of himself
advise me to appear more free with my Lord and to
come to him, for my own strangeness he tells me he
thinks do make my Lord the worse. At the Mewes
Sir W. Pen and Mr. Baxter did shew me several good
horses, but Pen, which Sir W. Pen did give the Duke
of York, was given away by the Duke the other day
to a Frenchman, which Baxter is cruelly vexed at, saying
that he was the best horse that he expects a great
while to have to do with. Thence I to the ’Change,
and thence to a Coffee-house with Sir W. Warren, and
did talk much about his and Wood’s business,
and thence homewards, and in my way did stay to look
upon a fire in an Inneyard in Lumbard Streete.
But, Lord! how the mercers and merchants who had
warehouses there did carry away their cloths and silks.
But at last it was quenched, and I home to dinner,
and after dinner carried my wife and set her and her
two mayds in Fleete Streete to buy things, and I to
White Hall to little purpose, and so to Westminster
Hall, and there talked with Mrs. Lane and Howlett,
but the match with Hawly I perceive will not take,
and so I am resolved wholly to avoid occasion of further
ill with her. Thence by water to Salsbury Court,
and found my wife, by agreement, at Mrs. Turner’s,
and after a little stay and chat set her and young
Armiger down in Cheapside, and so my wife and I home.
Got home before our mayds, who by and by came with