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When God knows she hath played the whore, and forced at this time after
she was brought to bed, this story. Thence calling at several places by
the home, and there to the office, and then home to supper and to bed.
10th. Up, and to the Excise-Office, and thence to White Hall a little,
and so back again to the 'Change, but nobody there, it being over, and so
walked home to dinner, and after dinner comes Mr. Seymour to visit me, a
talking fellow: but I hear by him that Captain Trevanion do give it out
every where, that I did overrule the whole Court-martiall against him, as
long as I was there; and perhaps I may receive, this time, some wrong by
it: but I care not, for what I did was out of my desire of doing justice.
So the office, where late, and then home to supper and to bed.
11th (Lord's day. Easter day). Up, and to Church; where Alderman
Backewell's wife, and mother, and boy, and another gentlewoman, did come,
and sit in our pew; but no women of our own there, and so there was room
enough. Our Parson made a dull sermon, and so home to dinner; and, after
dinner, my wife and I out by coach, and Balty with us, to Loton, the
landscape-drawer, a Dutchman, living in St. James's Market, but there saw
no good pictures. But by accident he did direct us to a painter that was
then in the house with him, a Dutchman, newly come over, one Evarelst,
who took us to his lodging close by, and did shew us a little flower-pot
of his doing, the finest thing that ever, I think, I saw in my life; the
drops of dew hanging on the leaves, so as I was forced, again and again,
to put my finger to it, to feel whether my eyes were deceived or no. He
do ask L70 for it: I had the vanity to bid him L20; but a better picture
I never saw in my whole life; and it is worth going twenty miles to see
it. Thence, leaving Balty there, I took my wife to St. James's, and
there carried her to the Queen's Chapel, the first time I ever did it;
and heard excellent musick, but not so good as by accident I did hear
there yesterday, as I went through the Park from White Hall to see Sir
W. Coventry, which I have forgot to set down in my journal yesterday.
And going out of the Chapel, I did see the Prince of Tuscany' come out,
a comely, black, fat man, in a mourning suit; and my wife and I did see
him this afternoon through a window in this Chapel. All that Sir W.
Coventry yesterday did tell me new was, that the King would not yet give
him leave to come to kiss his hand; and he do believe that he will not in
a great while do it, till those about him shall see fit, which I am sorry
for. Thence to the Park, my wife and I; and here Sir W. Coventry did
first see me and my wife in a coach of our own; and so did also this
night the Duke of York, who did eye my wife mightily. But I begin to
doubt that my being so much seen in my own coach at this time, may be
observed to my prejudice; but I must venture it now. So home, and by
night home, and so to my office, and there set down my journal, with the
help of my left eye through my tube, for fourteen days' past; which is so
much, as, I hope, I shall not run in arrear again, but the badness of my
eyes do force me to it. So home to supper and to bed.
12th. Up, and by water to White Hall, where I of the whole Office
attended the Duke of York at his meeting with Sir Thomas Allen and
several flag-officers, to consider of the manner of managing the war with
Algiers; and, it being a thing I was wholly silent in, I did only
observe; and find that; their manner of discourse on this weighty affair
was very mean and disorderly, the Duke of York himself being the man that
I thought spoke most to the purpose. Having done here, I up and down the
house, talking with this man and that, and: then meeting Mr. Sheres, took
him to see the fine flower-pot I saw yesterday, and did again offer L20
for it; but he [Verelst] insists upon L50. Thence I took him to St.
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