---- Apothecary, [146].
Servants, [i. e. Falconers, Huntsmen, &c.] wages and expences of, from January to March 1529, 284 to 289.
Service, to a German that offered his, to the king, [117].
Sets, for those lost by the king at Greenwich, [143].
Sets meant either games or wagers.
Sexton Philip, the fool, [5], [11], bis, [13], [17], [21], [24], [25], [31], [34], [38], [45], [61], bis, [73], [75], bis, [80], bis, [86], [120], bis, [138], bis, [139], [164], [168], [183], [193], [199], [215], [217], [231], [238], [247], [265], [271], [274], [281]. See Fool.
Seymour Sir Edward, [5], [17], [36].
Afterwards the King's brother-in-law, and Duke of Somerset, the celebrated Protector of England. These entries show the familiar manner in which he was treated by Henry as early as 1529. The first item is of a payment to him of 337l. upon a reckoning between His Majesty and himself, and the second and third to money lost to him by the King at play. On one occasion Sir Edward won of Henry the large sum of 376l. 10s.
Seymour, Robert, [273].