----, paid for fetching a, [115].
----, paid for "lying out to take," 157.
----'s hoods and hawk's gloves for, [159].
----, meat for, [3], [5], [25], [28], [30], [31], [34], [38], [42], [51], bis, [52], [71], [78], [85], [95], bis, [116], bis, [129], [133], [135], [140], bis, [163], [171], [181], [185], bis, [198], [200], [212], [216], [221], bis, [222], [225], [227], [229], [236], sæpe, [253], [254], [259], bis, [278], bis, [279], [284], bis, [286], [288], [289].
These numerous items of money for hawks' meat are more fully noticed at the commencement of the volume.
----, paid for taking up a, [256].
Hawks brought from the King of France, [269];
the expences of them, [275], [279].
---- to the Mew, [37].
The Mew was a close place in which hawks were confined whilst moulting. "The Mews at Charing Cross were so called because Henry the Eighth used them for his hawks on those occasions."—M.