ANTIQUITIES OF SELBORNE. 
403 
tended for holy water, or whatever purpose, we were going to 
procure, but found that the labourers had just broken it in 
pieces, and carried it out on the highways. 
The Priory of Selborne had possessed in this village a Grange, 
an usual appendage to manorial estates, where the fruits of their 
lands were stowed and laid up for use, at a time when men took 
the natural produce of their estates in kind. The mansion of this 
spot is still called the Grange, and is the manor-house of the 
convent-possessions in this place. The author has conversed 
with very ancient people who remembered the old original 
Grange ; but it has long given place to a modern farm-house. 
Magdalen College holds a court-leet and court-baron* in the 
great wheat-barn of the said Grange annually, where the Pre- 
sident usually superintends, attended by the bursar and steward 
<^ the college. f 
The following uncommon presentment at the court is not un- 
worthy of notice. There is on the south side of the king's field, 
(a large common-field so called) a considerable tumulus, or 
hillock, now covered with thorns and bushes, and known by the 
name of Kite's Hill, which is presented, year by year, in court 
as not ploughed. Why this injunction is still kept up respecting 
this spot, which is surrounded on all sides by arable land, may 
be a question not easily solved, since the usage has long survived 
the knowledge of the intention thereof. We can only suppose 
that as the prior, besides thurset and pillory, had also furcas, a 
power of life and death, that he might have reserved this little 
eminence as the place of execution for delinquents. And there 
is the more reason to suppose so, since a spot just by is called 
GaUy [Gallows] hill. 
The lower part of the village next the Grange, in which is a 
pond and a stream, is well known by the name of Gracious-street, 
an appellation not at all understood. There is a lake in Surrey, 
near Chobham, called also Gracious-pond • and another, if we 
mistake not, near Hedleigh, in the county of Hants. This strange 
denomination we do not at all comprehend, and conclude that it 
may be a corruption from some Saxon word, itself perhaps for- 
gotten. 
standard measure between the monastery and its tenants. The priory we have mentioned 
claimed the assize of bread and beer in Selborne manor, and probably the adjustment of dry 
measures for grain, &c. 
* The time when this court is held is the mid-week between Easter and Whitsuntide. 
+ Owen Oglethorp, president, &c. an.:Edw. Sexti, primo [viz. 1547.] demised to Robert Arden 
S<sliu)rDe Grange for twenty years. Rent vili. — Index of Leases. 
2 D 2 
