[1088] Grim.
[1089] Auctor anonymus.
[1090] Its apparent dissimilarity to the "Octod'" of Geoffrey's charter is instructive to note.
[1091] Hearne, who prints this entry, "Feodum Osberti oct. deniers i. mil." (Liber Niger, ed. 1774, i. 53), makes it the occasion of an exquisitely funny display of erudite Latinity, in which he gravely rebukes Dugdale for his ignorance on the subject ("quid sibi velit denariata militis ignorasse videtur Dugdalius quam tamen is facile intelliget," etc., etc.), having himself mistaken the tenant's name for a term of land measurement.
[1092] Bracton's Note-book (ed. Maitland), ii. 616; iii. 495. A Nicholas "Treys-deners" or "Treydeners" occurs in Cornwall in the same reign (De Banco, 45-46 Hen. III., Mich., No. 16, m. 62). "Penny" and "Twopenny" are still familiar surnames among us, as is also "Pennyfather" (? Pennyfarthing).
[1093] Addl. MS., 5860, fols. 221, 223 (ink).
[1094] Cott. MSS., Nero, C. iii. fol. 188.
[1095] "Clerico suo Thomæ Londoniensi" (i. 160).