Third Charter. 95 



things good, firm, valid, sufficient, and effectual in law, 

 to all respects, purposes, constructions, and intents, 

 towards and against us, our heirs, and successors, as 

 well in all our Courts as elsewhere within our realm of 

 England, without any confirmations, licences, or tolera- 

 tions from us, our heirs, or successors in any manner 

 hereafter to be procured or obtained : 



Notwithstanding the badly naming or badly reciting, 

 or not reciting, the aforesaid lands, tenements, and other 

 the premises or any parcel thereof ; And notwithstand- 

 ing the not finding an office or inquisition of the premises 

 or of any parcel thereof, whereby our title ought to have 

 been found before the making of these our Letters 

 Patent ; And notwithstanding the badly reciting, or not 

 reciting, any demise or grant made of the premises or of 

 any parcel thereof, being of record or not of record ; And 

 notwithstanding the badly naming or not naming any 

 town, hamlet, parish, place, or county in which the pre- 

 mises or any parcel thereof are or is ; And notwith- 

 standing that full, true, and certain mention is not made 

 of the names of the tenants, farmers, or occupiers of the 

 premises or of any parcel thereof ; And notwithstanding 

 any defects of the certainty, or computation, or declara- 

 tion of the true yearly value of the premises or of any 

 parcel thereof, or of the yearly rent reserved of and upon 

 the premises, or of and upon any parcel thereof, in these 

 our Letters Patent expressed and contained ; And not- 

 withstanding the Statute made and enacted in the Par- 

 liament of the Lord Henry the Sixth, late King of England, 

 our progenitor, in the eighteenth year of his reign ; And 

 notwithstanding any other defects in not certainly 

 naming the nature, kind, sort, quantity, or quality of the 

 premises or of any parcel thereof ; And notwithstanding 

 the Statute concerning the not putting of lands and 

 tenements to mortmain, or any statute, act, ordinance, 

 proclamation, provision, or restriction to the contrary 

 thereof heretofore had, made, enacted, ordained, or pro- 

 vided, in anywise notwithstanding : SAVING, nevertheless, 

 to Andrew Cole, Esquire, and to all other persons whom- 

 soever, other than us, our heirs, and successors, such 

 right, claim, interest, and demand whatsoever, as he or 

 they or any one of them has or may have, or of right 

 ought to have, of and in the premises or any part or 

 parcel thereof. 



And further we will, and by these presents for us, our The 



