I all the morning in my office busy, and at noon home
to dinner mightily oppressed with wind, and after dinner
took coach and to Paternoster Row, and there bought
a pretty silke for a petticoate for my wife, and thence
set her down at the New Exchange, and I leaving the
coat at Unthanke’s, went to White Hall, but the
Councell meeting at Worcester House I went thither,
and there delivered to the Duke of Albemarle a paper
touching some Tangier business, and thence to the
’Change for my wife, and walked to my father’s,
who was packing up some things for the country.
I took him up and told him this business of Tom,
at which the poor wretch was much troubled, and desired
me that I would speak with J. Noble, and do what I
could and thought fit in it without concerning him
in it. So I went to Noble, and saw the bond that
Cave did give and also Tom’s letter that I mentioned
above, and upon the whole I think some shame may come,
but that it will be hard from any thing I see there
to prove the child to be his. Thence to my father
and told what I had done, and how I had quieted Noble
by telling him that, though we are resolved to part
with no more money out of our own purses, yet if he
can make it appear a true debt that it may be justifiable
for us to pay it, we will do our part to get it paid,
and said that I would have it paid before my own debt.
So my father and I both a little satisfied, though
vexed to think what a rogue my brother was in all
respects. I took my wife by coach home, and
to my office, where late with Sir W. Warren, and so
home to supper and to bed. I heard to-day that
the Dutch have begun with us by granting letters of
marke against us; but I believe it not.
7th. Up and to my office, where busy, and by
and by comes Sir W. Warren and old Mr. Bond in order
to the resolving me some questions about masts and
their proportions, but he could say little to me to
my satisfaction, and so I held him not long but parted.
So to my office busy till noon and then to the ’Change,
where high talke of the Dutch’s protest against
our Royall Company in Guinny, and their granting letters
of marke against us there, and every body expects
a warr, but I hope it will not yet be so, nor that
this is true. Thence to dinner, where my wife
got me a pleasant French fricassee of veal for dinner,
and thence to the office, where vexed to see how Sir
W. Batten ordered things this afternoon (vide my office
book, for about this time I have begun, my notions
and informations encreasing now greatly every day,
to enter all occurrences extraordinary in my office
in a book by themselves), and so in the evening after
long discourse and eased my mind by discourse with
Sir W. Warren, I to my business late, and so home
to supper and to bed.