ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS.
Mr. Round and Mr. Challenor Smith now find, alas! that a few Wills near to 1400 A.D. (including at least two printed by Dugdale) escaped Mr. S.'s note-book. So we must have another volume some day. Miss Marx will start at copying the fresh Wills, as soon as Huon and The Four Sons of Aymon are clear for our Extra Series.
- p. v, l. 5; ; p. 4, l.1 ; p.155, col. 2, l.10 ;forHampshire, read Dorsetshire
- p. vi, l. 1, after "BROWNE", insert "(alias atte Grove)."
- p. vi, l. 4; p. 45 , 46 ; for Thomas (Bathe), read John.
- p. vi, l. 5; p. 47, l. 8 ; for Weston, read Weston Underwood.
- p. vi, l. 12, for Bikinacre, read Hanningfield.
- p. vi, l. 16, for Hornsey, read (Hornsey)
- p. vii, l. 8, for English Wills, read English Will
- p. xi, note. Read "Perhaps of his Boece too. His name 'Jankyn Clerk' is at 39/6; and his 'Koke of London' at 94/11. The Pore Caitiff, a Wycliffite book, is bequeathd on p. 50, l. 18."
- p. xv, l. 8, for schal, read schel.
- p. 5, l. 5. Johane my doughter,my sone is wyf.She was daughter of Roger, Lord De La Warr, the hero of Crécy and Poictiers (by his 2nd wife Alianore, dau. of John, Lord Mowbray), and heiress in her issue (by the half-blood) to her two brothers, successive lords. It was through her that the Barony of De La Warr came into the West family.—J. H. R.
- p. 5, l. 5. paled black and white. That is, striped vertically. It would be blazoned in Heraldry—"paly sable and argent." Joan, Lady Abergavenny, in her will (1434) bequeaths a similar "Bed of Velvet, white and black paled, with Quyshions, Tapettes, and formers that long to the same bed."—J. H. R.
- p. 5, l. 28. Sir Nichol Cliston knyght. Sir Nicholas de Clifton, of Clifton (then Cliston), near Preston, Lancashire. He was in the French wars with his