By the Rev. J. E. Jackson. 81 
8. d. 
Item, for iij peny halters and ij halfpeny halters.............. iiij. 
Item, for a hoggshed to kepe water......++-+s+++eereeeeeereees xs 
Item, for grese for the pulleys........-..+see- ceeeeeereeeeeees i 
Item, for ij lods of erthe to make the pyt to melte the leade.... Viij. 
Item, for iiij lods of Sande to cast the lede........ sseeeeeeseees XYj. 
Item, for ij lods of erthe to make the leade pyt in the Frater..... viij. 
Ttem, for iiij lods of sande to caste the leade there...-........+. XYj- 
Item, to Thomas Alen’s servant mason to make the furnes wher 
the lede ashys were melten ...----. seer cece reece cette tees eens x, 
Item, for ij 1b. of Gunpowder bought att Sarum to fyer the grett : 
tymber peces of the Steple........... sees cereee cece sett eeeeeeee jj. Vu}, 
Item, for ij lb of Gunpowder bought at London......-..+-..---- ij 
Item, for an oxe hyde to make a pere of bellowes to melte the 
leade ashys. Mr. Alen hath theym............c0ceceeeeeeeeceees vi. Vij. 
Item, for a lode of Charcole to melte the same ashys-...-....... viij. 
Item, for a rope borrowyd of John Androes for the weyng of the 
WM aes cel bs ile (eats hota « so ctw sth iy alosagia wiatniayeveibininiore We.al  rinvie Sal 9s viij. 
The sum total of the hole charge £xiiij. vs. iij’. (This included 
the men’s wages for several weeks.) 
Wherof Receaved for lede by him sold to diverse men iiij'. 
xiij’. v‘.: and so resteth more to the saide Nottingham ix". xis. ix*. 
the whiche is allowed to him in the fote of his account for the 
prouffitts of the demaynes and parsonage of Ambrosbury for oon 
_ year and an half, ended at thannuntiation of O'. lady, A°. xxxiij’. 
R. Henrici viij, and so even. 
No. 5. Thys porcion of my Lord’s leede delyvered from Ambros- 
bury to Hampton, by Aleyn’s marke, the lst day August A’ 
R. Regis Henrici 8%. xxxiij’. 
Sowys of leede, 100, weighing 29°" 18°". 0%. 131 
This was conveyed by carts hired from Douse and others of 
Collingbourne, Wm. Nowis and others of Ursaunt (Urchfont), 
John Burden and Edmund Longe of Kaninge, J. Collet of Allyng- 
ton, Ryng and Rowemans of Newton and Manningford, Maton 
of Enforde, Thos. Hunt of Chesenbury, Alexander and Giles 
Thystylthawrt of Winterslowe, R. Ocborne of Farley, Symon Cane 
and others of Wynterbourne, Thos. Byggs, Isabel Fostarde 







Sse hi 
hana ee 

1 The ‘* Sows” of lead were not all of one and the same weight. Dr. Johnson 
_ says ‘‘An oblong mass of lead or unforged iron, or mass of metal melted from 
the ore, is called, I know not why, sow metal, and pieces of that metal are called 
pigs.” 
“VOL. X.—NO. XXVIII. F 
