[696] Hist. MSS. Com. ix. 139, 145.
[697] Ibid. 173.
[698] The cost was entered on the chamberlain’s accounts, but there is nothing more to tell how the matter ended. Ibid. 144.
[699] Hist. MSS. Com. ix. 169-70.
[700] Ibid. 170.
[701] The details as to the costs of many of these feasts are preserved—the claret and wines white and red, and the beer and ale, which recommended a dinner made up for example of a swan, five capons, two geese, a side of brawn, two lambs, four rabbits, beef, marrow bones, a jowl of salmon, gurnards, roach, bread, spices, salt, vinegar, butter, milk, eggs, lard, and suet. Sacks of coal were always bought for the cooking of these great dinners, either charcoal sold in sacks, or “sea-cole” sold by the tub. Hist. MSS. Com. ix. 146, 163.
[702] Ibid. 143-4.
[703] Hist. MSS. Com. ix. 77.
[704] Ibid. 112.
[705] Lit. Cant. i. 216.