By J. Waylen. 363 
to the Parliament, disbursed for his enlargement £5.—John Sweetapple, of Chalk, 
£10 upon the Propositions.—John Gilbert, of Sarum, £10.—Ellis Hascall, of 
Semley, £10.—Seized by Mr. Sanger, the collector of Richard Rawkins, tenant 
-of Sir John Webb, at Odstock, £80. [Among other particulars of the Odstock 
seizure occurs this :—]Received for two books of vey seized goods of Mr. Smith, 
the minister, 15 shillings. 
12th January. Mr. Robert Edmunds hath fully compounded for £30. He 
served at the Illegal Assizes; but as he deserted the party before the assizes were 
ended, and carried himself as a friend ever since, we have thought fit to clear 
him of that delinquency. 
Henry Michell, jun., is become tenant to this Committee for Sir Edward 
Alford’s farm at Wichbury at £60. 
13th January. Edward Poore, of Bemerton, in the capacity of Oxford carrier, 
often conveyed during the war letters and provisions to the enemy. He com- 
pounds for £10, his estate being under £200.—John Ponchardon, of Whiteparish, 
and John Lee, of Hammington, each subscribe £20. 
14th January. Matthew Bee, of Salisbury, Esq., and alderman there, sends 
his son-in-law, Isaack A’Court, who proves Mr. Bee’s previous payments to 
Parliamentary Generals, and now adds £30 for his twenty-fifths. 
Mr. William Bowles, of Sarum, compounds for delinquency in £20, his estate 
being under £200, [His crime was, going to Oxford, proving wills and suing 
forth pardons under the Great Seal, contrary to the Ordinance of Parliament, 
and practising there as an attorney. He confessed that he sued out a pardon 
from the King for one Mr. Franklin, of Warminster, which cost Mr. Franklin 
forty or fifty pounds. He knows also that the same thing was done for Francis 
Dove through the influence of his wife and of his brother, Robert Dove; the 
injurious character of such pardons being that they recognized the adherents of 
the Parliament as in a state of rebellion. Two days later Mr. Bowles comes 
again before the Committee in behalf of Mistress Henchman, to compound for 
that part of the annuity due unto Dr. Henchman out of her estate, being £100 
per annum, half of which the Dorset Committee had seized. The other half 
Mr. Bowles undertakes to farm at £40 de claro, besides the lady’s fifths.] 
16th January. Sundry subscriptions, either upon the Propositions or for the 
twenty-fifths :—William Barfot, of Sarum, £5.—Henry Gilbert, of Sarum, £5. 
George Page, of Sarum, £10—Mr. John Mompesson, jun., a grey mare, worth 
£7.—Mr. Francis Dove, of Sarum, a bay nag, worth £5.—Robert White, of 
Sarum, £5.—Leonard Cockey, £5.—Edmund Chandler, £10.—Rawlence Allen, 
£20.—John Rowden, formerly in arms for the King, now takes the Covenant 
and sends in a horse.—John Batt, of Sarum, who formerly served under Capt. 
Windover, takes the Negative Oath and promises £5.—Mr. Morris Green, two 
horses worth £8. 
17th January. John Butler, of Bodenham, hath agreed to water the meadows 
