Volume 1
The Flemings in Oxford : being documents selected from the Rydal papers in illustration of the lives and ways of Oxford men 1650-1700 / edited by John Richard Magrath.
- Date:
- 1904-1924
Licence: Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)
Credit: The Flemings in Oxford : being documents selected from the Rydal papers in illustration of the lives and ways of Oxford men 1650-1700 / edited by John Richard Magrath. Source: Wellcome Collection.
79/634 (page 49)
![15 for my Dinner .... . 00 — 00 — 06 Toy® Post..... • 00 - 00 — 04 Spent • 00 - 00 — 07 16 for my Dinner .... • 00 - 00 - 04 17 for my Dinner .... • 00 - 00 - 03 i Taken out more . . 00 - 05 - 00 18 For a letter .... . 00 - 00 - 03 For my Dinner .... • 00 - 00 - 03 Spent ..... • 00 — 00 — 04 | Lent unto my Cosen T. W. • 01 — 00 — 00 19 j Taken out more • 01 - 00 - 00 for my Dinner .... • 00 - 00 — 09 X Given unto Mr Latch1 for puseing of or Report 01 - 00 — 00 March For yt which my Vncle Jo: Kirkby writt for .- 00 - 03 - 00 19 Spent ..... • 00 - 00 - 03 20 for my Dinner .... • 00 - 00 - 09 21 j Taken out more . 01 - 00 - 00 For my Dinner .... . 00-01—00 for a letter .... . 00 - 00 - 04 22 for Valentines Devotians2 . . 00 - 02 - 10 for a paire of white gloves . OO - OI - 04 for my Dinner .... • 00 - 00 - 06 for ye Philologicall Commentarie3 • 00 - 01 - 04 1 Perhaps John Latch, who matriculated from Brasenose 26 Feb., 1607-8, aged 19, of Somerset, gent., barrister at law of the Middle Temple 1637 (as son of Thomas, of Langford, Somerset), ‘ a person of great learning in his profession,’ who died Aug., 1655. (Foster, s. v.; Wood (who gives him by mistake to St. John’s), Alhenae, iii, 399.) a Private Devotions, Digested into Six Letanies; I. Of Confession. II. Of Deprecation. III. Of Supplication. IV. Of Thanksgiving. V. Of Intercession. VI. For the Sick. With Directions and Prayers For the Lords Day, Sacrament, Day of Death, Judgment. And two daily Prayers, One for the Morning, Another ior the Evening. The thirteenth Edition, London, Printed for LI. Moseley at the Princes Arms in S. Pauls Churchyard, 1634. (Bodl. small 8°.) It is dedicated to Thomas, Lord Coventry, by Your Lop in all Duty, Henry Valentine. 3 Philologicall commentary, or, an illustration of the most obvious and usefull words in the law. With their distinctions and diverse acceptations, as they are found as well in reports ancient and modern, as in records, and memorials never printed. Usefull for all young students of the law. By E. L. [Edward Leigh] Gentleman, sometimes of the Middle Temple. London, 1652, Duodecimo*. (Halkett and Laing’s Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous Literature, vol. 3, 1885, column 1899. E](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b24879253_0001_0079.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)