By J. Waylen. 353 
The condition of the bond is that if Collis bring not a warrant from under Sir 
Thomas Fairfax’s hand to enable the Lord Cromwell to receive his said rents, 
then Collis is to pay the said money. He is to bring the warrant by 2nd Feb. 
4th October. Henry Good, minister, of Woodford, for delinquency, subscribes 
to pay £10 within fourteen days. 
John Call brought in his account for half-year’s rent belonging to Sir Henry 
Compton ; and there remained due to the State, besides allowances for taxes and 
quarterings for soldiers, £29 15s. 
9th October. Mr. Rawlins Hillman subscribes to pay £5 within a fortnight. 
Henry Ghost, of Newcourt, £10 to be paid in six days. A horse of his having 
been pressed for the Parliament’s service by Thomas Eastmond, tithing-man of 
Weeke, when Sir Edward Hungerford was in that part, Ghost caused Eastmond 
and the rest of the tithing to be fined by the Royalists. 
13th October. Mistress Rebecca Lawrence, in the, behalf of her husband, Dr. 
Lawrence, hath compounded with us for his parsonage of Bemerton; and haying 
already paid £10, is to pay £30 more by Christ-tide. 
17th October. Richard Green, of Winterbourne Stoke, being called before us, 
subscribes £10. He formerly lent a horse worth £10 to Captain Ludlow for the 
Parliament’s service. \ 
23rd October. John Wayland, Christopher Gale, and Henry Turner, renting 
the sheep-slaight upon Mr. Tattershall’s farm at Stapleford, and entering last 
Michaelmas, paid then to him £15, and were to pay £13 6s. 8d. more for the 
whole year. This has been seized by us, besides £6 13s. 4d. fram Gale, as 
tenant of the arable.-— Received John Hill, collector. 
24th October. Mr. Thomas Hickman, parson of Upton Lovell, compounds for 
his corn, stock, and goods there for £50 to be paid on Ist Nov. and lst Dec. Out 
of which, andthe rest of the tithes detained by the parishioners, the minister 
that serveth the cure is to have a liberal maintenance. 
George Brown, of Ludgershall, Esq., a recusant. Mrs. Eleanor Brown, his 
wife, hath been before us and made composition for his stock there for £150— 
fifty within a week, another fifty at St. Andrew’s tide, and the remaining fifty 
by Ist February. Also for the year’s rent ending at Michaelmas for his demesne 
at Ludgershall £40. 
25th October. Hugh Grove, of Chisenbury, gent., gives security to pay £100 
in part of his composition, half in two days after Leonardstide, the rest on St. 
Thomas’s day ; by which time he is to repair to the Committee of Sequestrations 
above [i.e., in London] to make composition for his estate, and we are to 
give him a certificate of the value of his goods and lands and an acquittance 
for the £100. [But before reaching that final tribunal, Mr. Grove is overtaken 
by a further demand from the local Committee, namely, £60 in respect of the 
