[65] A mount vert, thereon a ram statant.
[66] Argent; a royal tent between two parliament robes gules, lined ermine; on a chief azure, a lion passant guardant or. Crest: On a mount vert, a lamb passant argent, holding a banner of the last, staff proper, on the banner a cross pattée gules within a glory of the third.
[67] An elephant argent, armed or, on his back a tower of the first, the trappings, &c., of the second.
[68] Azure; a chevron or, between three goats’ heads erased argent.
[69] It is worth mention here that in the Account of the Trials of John Swan and Elizabeth Jeffries, published in 1752, reference is made (p. 10) to a certain “John Mills [who resided] at the Why not beat Dragon? at Mile End.” This most extraordinary sign, however, is just outside Essex. Larwood and Hotten do not allude to it.
[70] On a chapeau gules, turned up ermine, an eagle, wings extended or, preying on an infant in its cradle proper, swaddled gules, the cradle laced gules.
[71] Lowestoft, 1867.
[72] Dale’s Annals of Coggeshall, p. 160.
[73] Ibid. p. 261.
[74] Vide Trans. Essex Arch. Soc., N. S., vol. iii. part i. p. 74.