Appendix. : 
For lodgings for my lord and his company attending him at 
Dover 2 nights ara cy AS 
To Bailif’s widow at Calais for lodging of my lord, Mr. Howard 
and Roger Smith 3 weeks ae ae “aia 
To Joan Nele and other his fellows for my Lord’s passage, and 
diverse other attending him, from Calais to Dover, in two passengers 
To Mr. Semor’s man for his and two carters and 4 horses expenses 
bringing a wagon from Wulfhall to Twickenham, to carry my Lord 
Beauchamp from thence to Elvetham [one of the Earl’s seats in 
Hants] and returning to Wulfhall again : ie 
2. Sports AND AMUSEMENTS. 
For feeding of 3 greyhounds for 31 days ae 5 
For feeding of 4 couple of spanyels being a-brode hawking, 6 days 
Do. a cast of leonards [lanner-hawks | =) 49 
Paid to a fox taker 23 Feb. for taking of foxes in Tottenham 
Park and in the Forest n : asd Ae 
Paid to Morse and Grammatts for helpyng to take the wylde swyne 
in the Forest 4d. ; aud for 8 hempen halters to bynd their legs 4d.; 
and for drink for them that helped to take them 4d. 
To Edmund Coke and Wm. Morse and others for sekyng wild 
swyne in the Forest 2 days* 36 oe ce 
To Thomas Christopher for his costes when he caryed the two wilde 
bores to the Court to my Lord att Wynsor Allhallowen even : 
Paid for my costs when I rode to Trowbridge to my Lord with 
the spanyells that I toke from the Byshope of Salysbury’s partrydge 
taker e ee oe se ¥ 
Paid to Thomas Pottenger, my lord’s falconer for watching the 
hawks in Collingbourne woods this year for 13 weeks, 6d. the day 
and night (1544) se : Be ited 
To a partridge-taker which brought partridges to store my Lord’s 
Grace’s ground, 30 Jan’ 2 Ae ae 
To Mr, Sidenham’s man for the same i “2 
Edward King for feeding of partridges that came from Jersey and 
were sent to Wulfhall Ri Ee eh. "F 
Pd. to a Fesaunt-taker which toke fesaunts in Bently woodds by 
my Lord’s commaundment the 13 April last : : 
In reward to a keeper of Windsor Forest that brought my lord 
word of a red deer lodged at Elvetham | : Se 
To Edward Woulphe Capitayne of my lord’s pinnace the Phenix, 
towards rigging and victualling the same Se + 
Delivered to Mr. Sapcotes at Salisbury the 8th May, to take unto 
my lord, which he did lose att pennypryket+ - ne 
coco 
0 
69 
0 
173 
6 0 
9 8 
25 0 
0 
* At this item, there is a note in the margin :—“ Every keeper and woodward hereafter to seke in 
his walk, and no such allowance to be had.” 
+ Penny-prick,” says Strutt (English Pastimes) ‘‘appears to have been a common game in the 
fifteenth century, and is reproved by a religious writer of that period.” Strutt does not describe it, 
VOL. XV.—NO. XLIV. 
8 
