[85] Azure; a chevron, per pale and per chevron, gules and argent counterchanged, between three garbs or; on a chief argent, a St. Julian’s cross sable.
[86] The use of the term “Tom and Jerry” has already been mentioned (p. 26).
[87] A usurer.
[88] Trans. Essex Arch. Soc., vol. i. p. 125.
[89] Historic Devices, Badges, &c., p. 386.
[90] A demi-woman, hair flowing proper, vested gules holding in the dexter hand three roses, slipped and leaved vert.
[91] Trans. Essex Arch. Soc., N. S., vol. ii. part iv. p. 400.
[92] A view of the house is given in Lord Braybrooke’s History of Audley End and Walden (p. 153).
[93] Quarterly, gules and or; in the first quarter a mullet argent.
[94] Palin’s Stifford, p. 82.