Index. 



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, 170. 

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

 King's Rue, 56. 

 Kitts Hill, 91. 

 Knives, flint, found at Eyeworth, 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; on the Ictis of the ancients, 56. 



Latchmore Fond, 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 AVilliam 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. 



Leighton, Mr., fresco in Lyndhurst 

 church by, 88. 



Leland on the death of William H., 96 

 (foot-note). 



Lepidoptcra, 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. 



Lincy Hill Wood, 83. 



Lisle, Alice, 121. 



Loute, to, meaning of, 188. 



Lungs of oak (Sticta pulmonaria), 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. 



MALMESBDRT, 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). 



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 esthetic life, how best determined, 

 I 224, 225. 



333 



