FOR 
It has been ftated by Fleta that -it fi igni- 
onem viz vel ee tranfitus, et 
rd the kingdom. 
fies ** ar me 
ime averi 
Itisa a ee pra€tice enh has leng too much 
prevailed, and which feems at prefent far from being on the 
decline near large towns where the confumption is great. 
ould be guarded againft as much as poffible by a more full 
and complete enforcement of the laws againft it. 
By the 5th and 6th of" Edw. VI. cap. 14. it is ena@ed 
that any buying or contracting for merchandize, victuals, or 
other things whatfoever, in the way, coming by land or 
w 
_ 
ct 
fuch price to market ; or erfuadin 
e value of them, 
ad rifoned t 
foe the third Since, he thall ibe all his ol, ie fet up in 
the pillory, and be imprifoned at the king’s pleafu re. 
Several other ftatutes have been made from time to tim 
ainit the offences a eer ari and regrating, 
ail of which, — e5 & 6 Edw. VI. above cited, 
downwards, a - enforcing the me, are re- 
_pealed by fe 12 ce. III. c. 71, frem ad preamble oF 
which we learn that the re eneie as found worfe than 
difeafe. But thefe offences againft public a are highly 
criminal at common law (1 Hawk. P. C. 234); and are pu- 
y diferetionary fine and imprifonment. | 
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fheaf before it is thrathed 5 for by 
effect fore alled. . 3 Inft “197. H. P. C. 
n Mining: fignifies a {mall an nd i 
ferior fort oflead ore, oe by buddling the old hillocks 
or refufe of former ore- dreffi ing; it isinferior to /mytham, 
which fee. 
FORES TE R, or officer of the foreft, appointed by 
the king’s letters patent to walk the foreft, and watch 
vert and venifon ; 
unifhed according to aa offence He is 
alfo to take care of the lawing of do 
Though the letters patent of a pee be ordinarily 
only granted guamdiu bene fe gefferit ; yet they are granted 
to fome and their heirs, who are hereby called forefters in 
fee. 4 But though this office is a fee fimple, 
it cannot be granted. or afligned over without the king’s 
licence, A Antt. 31 
A * riding forefter” is to lead the king in his Rate 7 
a ite 277). Although every lord of parliament, fent 
for by the king, may, beth in coming and returning, kill 
.a deer or twoin the king’s foreft or chace through which 
he paffes; yet it muft not be done privily, without the 
sani il the Brefter, if prefent ; or, if abfent, by caufing one 
a horn; becaufe atherwi e he may bea trefpafler, 
and. ay to fteal the deer. Chart, Foreft.c.11. 4 Init. 308, 
FOR 
If any forefter find any perfon hunting without - warrant 
e is to arreft his > an y him to prifon, from: 
whence hé fhall not be delivered. without, {pecial warrant 
from the king, or his jutti elt, &c. But. by 
ftat. . ITT. ¢. 8. perfons are eg oe if = taken in | 
the manour, as wit h a bow ready to rryi ng away” 
deer killed, or {meared with blood : ak if one be not. 
thus taken. he may be attached by his goods. 4 Inft. 289, 
A forefter fhall not: be queftioned for killing a tre{paffer, . 
who (after the’ peace cried to ae will not yield himfelf ;: 
fo as it ee not done - oO ormer al Stat. 2E: 
ti eelpdien in a foreft, &c. kill a man. 
ho o on them Giteegh they bore no > malice to the 
perfon killed, it is murder ; becaufe they were upon an un- 
lawful a&, and therefore malice is tape 4 br. 548.. 
nd if murder bs committed by fuch trefpaffers, all are 
principals. Ke 
ir William Tenple relates, that the Franks having fub+ 
dued all aul, their princes reduced Flanders into a kind. 
of government, = eles — coradels of ait with part: 
of the os vince of thei 
This quality ‘of lord fee en till ae aime of Charle.. 
magne, a according to others, of Charles the Bald, in 
whofe time Flanders being crected into a gounty, the title of 
forefter was ig into that of count. 
FORESTUS, Perrus, or eee Van Forest, ii 
Biography, was. bora at Alcmaer in 1522. He was fent by 
his father to ries in order r to ftudy with a view to the 
Bologna, Padua, and see a 
Si and afterwards proceeded to complete his itudies 
at Paris. e fettled, at the requeft of his friends, in h 
native town; but at the end of twelve years ove 
elft, in corteienes of a petition from the inhabitants of 
that place, which was that time ravag fatal 
contagious epidemic. Foreeft obeyed the call of humanity, 
otwithftanding the dangers to which he w siciagee! 
expofed ut he not only Mie ade his own health, . 
ic 
. pagel 3 anfomuch t ios lft regarded . 
r preferver, aa re the capacity of 
phyfician, ‘with a confide oe eos for nearly thirty 
years; after which he was invited to Leyd 
the Arf iedies on medicine, 
verfity in 1575. 
0 his e city impe maer, where 
ce terminated his life in car. in the feventy-fifth year of © 
“Foret, (for by his Latin name he is beft han was - 
one the moft expert phyficians of his time: he was 
extremely induftrious, and his principal views were ‘direG@ed 
o the obfervation of difeafes, in which he manifelted, in 
inft -t 
etailed ; and | a pprchen e was Bitaar ge | more 
nds 9 
the juftnefs of his p 
anxious to ognottics, and the 
felicity of i a than to relate a Hes account of the 
fymptoms: but Boerhaave has praifed him highly for the 
care and attention whic has evinced in the colleCtion 
ing. are the titles of his I.- 
Curationum Medicin alum. five Medicine 
Pragtice, libri 28.”? Francofurti, 1602, two vols. in folio, 
, : a 
