[278] Terrae Filius, p. 181. The room was built in Charles II.’s reign, and was the first room built in an Oxford College for use by the Fellows in common.
[279] J. R. Green in The Druid (College Magazine), 1862.
[280] Printed in Wood’s City of Oxford (edit. Clark), i. 640.
[281] See Wood’s City of Oxford, i. 586, 587.
[282] In that year its members were three graduates and eighteen undergraduates, with a manciple and cook.
[283] Clark’s Register of the University of Oxford, II. ii. 7.
[284] Ibid. p. 36.
[285] Thus, it would seem, leaving the buildings of White Hall untouched for the present.
[286] On the north side of the gateway the following distich was carved—
“Breconiæ natus patriæ monumenta reliquit,