Index. 



333 



JAMES I. grants twenty assart-lands in 

 the Forest, 43. 



Jar-bird, meaning of a, 187. 



John, King, his oppression of the Cis- 

 tercian order, 61; founds Beaulieu 

 Abbey, 62. 



KALKESORE, old name of Calshot, 54. 

 Keltic element in the dialect of the New 



Forest, 163; in the topography, 164. 

 Kestrel, eggs of, weight of the, 264. 

 " Keystone under the hearth," meaning 



of the proverb, 1 70. 

 King's Day, the, explanation of, 231. 

 King's Rue, 56. 

 Kitts Hill, 91. 

 Knives, flint, found at Eye worth, 297 



(foot-note*). 

 Knoll, Black, 78, 84. 

 Knyghton, on the afforestation of the 



New Forest, 24; his authority of no 



value, 95 (foot-note). 

 Knyghtwood Oak, the, 16. 



LABOURERS in the New Forest, average 

 wages of, 47 (foot-note). 



Lane, Jane, 121. 



Langley Heath, barrows on, opened by 

 the Rev. J. P. Bartlett, 211. 



Lappenberg, his account of the afforesta- 

 tion of the New Forest by William I., 

 21; pn the Ictis of the ancients, 56. 



Latchmore Pond, 81, 199. 



Lawrence, the sprite, in the Forest, 

 174. 



Law-Courts, last of the Forest, 12, 87. 



Laws, Forest-, Canute's, 35 ; made still 

 severer by William I., 38; Charles I., 

 attempts to revive, 42. 



Leap, 55; the spot where the Dauphin, 

 Louis VIII. of France, embarked, 55; 

 where Charles I. embarked, 56 ; 

 British and Roman road at, 56 ; mass 

 of tin found near, 57. 



Lease to, meaning of, 193. 



Leigh ton, Mr., fresco in Lyndhurst 

 church by, 88. 



Leland on the death of William II., 96 

 (foot-note). 



Lepidoptera, list of the Forest, Ap- 

 pendix IV., 319. 



Lewis, Sir George C., on the Ictis of 

 the ancients, 57; his theory corrobo- 

 rated, 58. 



Lichens, used as specifics in the Forest, 

 176. 



Lichmore Pond, 81, 199. 



Life, modern, its hurry and confu- 

 sion, 73. 



Liney Hill Wood, 83. 



Lisle, Alice, 121. 



Loute, to, meaning of, 188. 



Lungs of oak (Sticta pulmonarid), used 

 as a specific for consumption, 176. 



Lung-wort, narrow-leaved, the, 69, 256. 



Lymington, port of, 154; its history, 

 155, 156; extracts from the Corpora- 

 tion Books of, 155 (foot-note). 



Lyndhurst, derivation of, 86 (foot-note); 

 church of, 87; scenery round, 89, 90; 

 ancient tenure at, 86, 87; woods 

 round, 90, 91. 



MALMESBURY, William of, on the 

 afforestation of the New Forest, 25 

 (foot-note); on the death of William 

 II., 93, 94 (foot-note), 95 (foot-note); 

 on the physical appearance of Wil- 

 liam II., 99 (foot-note). 

 I Map, Ordnance, mistake of the, 128 

 (foot-note). 



Mapes, Walter, on the afforestation of 

 the New Forest, 24. 



Mark Ash Wood, 17. 



Mead, made in the New Forest, 184. 



Merlin, breeding of the, in the Forest, 

 267, 268 (foot-note); weight of sup- 

 posed egg of, 161, 264. 

 | Middle Marine Bed, the, at Mineway, 

 237, 238. 



Milford, church of, 150, 151. 



Millaford Brook, the, 83, 90. 



Mills in the New Forest, comparative 

 value of, by Domesday, 29 ; rented by 

 a payment of eels, in Domesday, 119 

 (foot-note). 



Milton, words used by, now provin- 

 cialisms, 191. 



Milton, village of, mentioned in Domes- 

 day, 148 (foot-note). 



Minestead, 92. 



Monastery, average library of a, 65 

 (foot-note); life in a, 72, 73. 



Monmouth's Ash, 122. 



Monmouth, capture of, 122 ; writes to 

 James, the Queen Dowager, and the 

 Lord Treasurer, 123. 



Moon-Hill Woods, the, 75. 



Morefalls, the Lord Treasurer, South- 

 ampton, on the evils of granting, 43, 

 44 (foot-note). 



Moyles Court, 120, 121. 



Moyne, William le-, tenure of, at Lynd- 

 hurst, 87. 



Mudeford, 146. 



NATAN-LEAGA, the name preserved, 33. 

 Nation, history of a, how best read, 224; 



its aesthetic life, how best determined, 



224, 225. 



