Page:Archaeological Journal, Volume 8.djvu/251

 ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS. 183 It. for iij yards of cotton to make liyni an under petticotc for winter. ii* vi"* It. for a bowngracc for Mrs. Marie . . ... . . . . vii* vi'* 1583. It. for canvas and bombast ^ for the bodycs & to ware under his cote . . xii"" It. for garteryng and a stryng to liis myttens . . . . ■ . vi It. for a pare of pattens ......... viii** 1584. It. for a knyffe sheath w'** a silkc strynge ....... iiii It. for a briislie to make clcaiie his coote ...... ii'' It. to James Ahvood for a clock for his leucry . . . . . . xxv" It. for woddcn sooles for liis patients ....... ii"* It. for a saddle and furnyturc for him ....... xix' 1585. It. for an ell and d. of lAinkishire cloth to make whit lynyngs for hisapparcll ii' It. for syrops, oyntmcnts, and other medcionable things for him in his sickness iii" x*" It. for his losse in play at Ililsdcn ........ vi"" It. his token to a scholcfelowe . . . . . . . . . vi"* It. his offeryng «•'*> a poor maryed cople ....... xii** It. for lethryngs & nalcs for his pattens ....... iiii** 1.586. It. for a ell half of brod talHity to make him a diiblet and venytyons'. . xii' It. for ij pound of bombast for ij dubletts ...... iii" It. gcven by him to the horskcp' at Astwell- . . . . . . vi"* It. for a yeard of gold lace to edg his falling bands. . . . . ii" 1587. It. for an ell and a halfe and halfc a q'ter of popingiaye taffata to make hym a dublett and Venetians, at xiii' the ell ..... . xxi* ii'* It. for an ell and halfc and halfe a q'ter of yellowc sarcenet to lay under the same ............. vii' viii'' It. for an ewe bowl .......... xii"* It. for ij paier of cut finger gloves ........ vi"* It. for a shooting glove .......... iiii"* It. for fethcring and beddinc; of vi arrowes. . . . . . . vi** It. delyvered to M' Fermo"' when he went to a marriadge . . . v" It. gyven in his purse when he went to Astwell. . . . . . ii' vi"* 1588. It. for a stone bow for my master-' ........ viii" 1589. It. to the smyth of Barford for mending M' Farmer's burding pccc. . iii" viii"* 1590. It. for iij pare of shoes and a pare of pantables ■*..... iiij' viii"* It. to his scolemaster at Islyngton . . . . . . . . x» It. to the barbar for trymmyng of him ....... vi"* It. for pauipilion for the hose' ......... xii'' It. delyvered my mr at Nocke,'"' at the wedding V Bombast, originally cotton, from iom6«.r, able colours for seruauntes ; slight rugge or low Latin ; or bomhace, Italian ; or haum- pampilion." Pampee, according to Roquefort, bast, German, — all signifying cotton. — was the name of a flowered tissue (pampt, ^ares. Jleuron). May not pampilion, a shaggy cloth, Venytyons, Venetians, a particular be a name derivable from ^a««MS^//oszts .? fashion of hose, or breeches, originally im- ^ Nockc, -i.e. Nuke, in the hundred of ported from Venice. — Narcx. Ploughlcy, and county of Oxford. (See the •^ Astwell, in Northamptonshire, the seat Guide to the Architectural Antiquities in the of Mr. Shirley. Neighbourhood of Oxford, p. 201.) Here was •* Stone-bow, a bow from which stones the residence of Joan Bradshaw, grandmother might be shot; a cross-bow. — Nares. of Mr. Richard Fermor, and here his sister Pantables, pantable, a sort of high shoe was married to ^Ir. Plowden. Joan Bradshaw or slipper ; perhaps corrupted from 2>a«to^. — died in 1598, and was liere buried. Here "O'J'es. also was buried Benet or Benedict Winrh- Pampilion. Hollyband, in his " Trea- combe, in 1"23, one of the executors of Mr. surie of the French Tongue," 1 580, renders Fermor. " kahiUemeiU de bureau, a coatc of chaunge-