has engraven, in his History of Lancashire, those of the Canadian stag ; by which, I suppose, he meant the elk, whose
horns, however, are palmated; and thence too, with his usual sagacity, he inferred the universality of a Deluge. As if
an indigenous animal, extinct in his time, could not have died in a Lancashire bog.
2N2
276 HISTORY OF WHALLEY. [Boon III. CHAP. IV.
duced by the Forest Laws, and is still continued in uninclosed manors or chaces ; but the
one did not want and the other disdained to accept the closer protection of a park ; for it
is scarcely possible to impound an animal which can bound almost twenty feet perpen-
dicular. 1
The roe and hare, therefore, were necessarily left to take their chance for life together
in the forest or in the field. But an animal like the former, bringing forth once a year,
and at most two at a birth, did little more than provide for a succession of its species
against the contingence of natural death, in a secure and protected state. Placed, there-
fore, out of that protection, it could only have subsisted, at least in populous districts, by
means of a quality which it did not possess, namely, sagacity added to swiftness ; while
the other, by producing three or sometimes four together, perhaps too by the singular
property of superfoetation, 2 multiplies much faster; and by the acuteness of its hearing,
and the rotundity of its eye, together with its habits of vigilance and universal caution,
though otherwise helpless in itself, and very partially protected by man, preserves its
species undiminished in the midst of enemies. The bulk of the roe, too, which ren-
dered it a better mark and more difficult to be concealed, was another unfavourable
circumstance.
The third and most helpless of these animals, the rabbit, is obviously preserved, partly
in consequence of having been made property, and partly by its own instinctive habit of
subterraneous concealment.
But, after the time of Canute, another species of deer seems to have been introduced,
of which, though it is become the most numerous of the whole genus, the great ornament
of our parks and forests, and even yet the second luxury of our tables, the history is very
obscure : this is the common fallow deer ; with respect to which, it is really extraordinary
that so accurate and well-informed a zoologist as Mr. Pennant 3 should acquiesce in the
common opinion that the spotted kind were brought from Bengal and the brown from
Norway to Scotland by James I. at the time of his marriage. This opinion must of course
bring down the introduction of the first variety to a later period than the discovery of the
Cape of Good Hope ; whereas the species was unquestionably found in England two
centuries before. I will now state what has occurred to me upon the subject, not as being
at all satisfactory, but in order to invite a more accurate investigation.
In the Squire of Low Degree, which is alluded to by Chaucer, in the Rhyme of Sir
Thopas, and is probably not long anterior to his time, we find merely this enumeration of
1 In Leland's time the roe remained in the marches of Wales ; at present it is found in no part of the island, but
in the highlands of Scotland; and at Blair, in Athol, where the breed most abounds, it is seen indiscriminately within
the park and without, passing and re-passing the pales at pleasure.
! This fact is denied by Mons. Buffon, but asserted by our countryman Sir Thomas Browne, a man not inferior
to the French naturalist in exactness of observation and philosophical incredulity. Instances of extra-uterine con-
ception, which may possibly have led to the other opinion, are certainly observed in hares. See Plot's Hist, of
Staffordshire, p. 253.
3 History of Quadrupeds, vol. i. p. 35, &c.
BOOK III. CHAP. IV.] FORESTS. 277
forest-beasts, harte and hynde, and other like ; but in the romance of St. Degore, which is
supposed by Mr. Warton * to be contemporary with the former,
jFot to f)imt for a tow or a io.
This may be referred to the end of Edward II. or beginning of his son's reign.
A little after, we find the following passage in the romance of Hippomedon. 2
tort!) tis fftountiis tfjoo,
Drriii ftotone liotfir Uut; ant: Boo.
And again,
tfic ante of tfje dFomst,
anti J^nto, 33ufe an* Boo.
WAETON, J/isf. o/ Eng. Poetry, i. 199.
While Caxton was printing the Golden Legend he had a present from William Lord
Arundel, of a buck in summer and a doe in winter. And about the same time they are
mentioned by dame Juliana Berners in the passage quoted above.
But it is not to be dissembled that, though the silence of Camite's Constitutions of the
Forest seems to prove them not indigenous in England, yet the Saxon Bucholt occasions
a little hesitation ; still, the word may either be derived from bucken, beech-trees, or, which
is more probable, may denominate the deer genus universally.
If, however, the buck and doe be not indigenous, from what country and at what
period between the time of Canute and that of Edward II. or III. they were introduced, I
am yet to be informed. Can any evidence be adduced to prove that they were imported by
the later crusaders from the East ? If our hierozoicon be accurate, the fallow deer was
known in Judea as early as the time of Solomon, 1 Kings iv. 23. 3
The rascal tribe (from which it does not appear why the marten should be excluded)
consisted of the otter, the badger, the weasel, and, in Leland's time, of the beaver also.
To these ought to be added (if the name were not unworthy of him) , another beautiful and
harmless forester, the squirrel ; and a sixth, well entitled to the appellation, who, if his
courage had been in any degree comparable to his strength, activity, and fierceness, would
have been a formidable animal indeed : this is that shy and treacherous native of the
woods, the wild cat, of which our common household cat is a diminutive and degenerate
variety ; who, with all the habits of domestication, retains every propensity of savage life :
fawning, yet irascible ; alternately indolent and indefatigable, vigilant and sluggish ;
1 Hist, of English Poetry, vol. i. p. 180.
2 It must be observed that, whatever may be the hero's name or age, and wherever the scene is laid in the old
romances, the manners are contemporary with the writers, and purely English. Thus, too, Shakespeare's Theseus is a
mere English sportsman. Midsummer Night's Dream.
3 And long before. See Deuteron. xiv. 5 ; where the Dishun, rather than the Jackmur, appears to be our fallow
deer ; as Jerom, who must have been well acquainted with the animals of the country where he lived, renders the
former Pygargus.
278
HISTORY OF WHALLEY.
[BOOK III. CHAP. IV.
voracious, though patient of abstinence ; fond of warmth, yet capable of enduring all the
extremities of cold ; cunning, but almost altogether indocile ; and thievish, when pampered
to the utmost.
The wild boar, which appears to have existed in England during the reign of Canute,
is to be referred partly to the present class and partly to the following.
2d. The next tribe, which disappears before the skill or courage of man, are the
larger animals of prey, of which the wolf, 1 as it attacks the more valuable domestic
animals, and sometimes man himself, will not long be endured after the invention of fire
arms, except where his retreats are nearly inaccessible.
His congener the fox now exists in England, either by connivance or contempt : for,
were this paltry animal once to be abandoned by sportsmen, or were he, instead of confining
himself to petty larcenies in the hen-roost, or on the common, now and then to seize an
infant, the species would not be permitted to remain for twelve months.
But, as we descend in the scale of predatory animals, their extinction becomes propor-
tionably difficult : their fecundity and diminutive size, together with the nature of their
haunts, near to themselves and inaccessible to man, enabling them to defy the vanquisher
of nobler beasts, and to carry on their petty but teazing and innumerable depredations
without a possibility of redress.
After the animals, which, in one way or other, were either protected or tolerated in
the forests, we are next to consider such as were forbidden. These were four : the goose,
the hog, the sheep, and the goat. For the first of these prohibitions, which would probably
not be executed with rigour, I know no reason, unless there be something in the scream or
dung of that uncleanly aud vociferous fowl particularly offensive to deer ; of the second,
the reason is obvious, as hogs would have made too free with mast and acorns ; the third
must have resulted from observing a circumstance, which I have often attended to, but
never heard remarked, namely, a visible aversion between deer and sheep ; deer will attach
themselves to cows, and goats to horses ; but nature seems to have implanted a mutual
antipathy in the two other tribes, for the purpose of preventing unnatural commixtures
between animals not sufficiently remote from one another in size, to hinder that evil with-
out a strong repulsive instinct.
1 Dr. Cams acquiesced in the vulgar opinion of the extinction of wolves in England by Edgar. " Regnavit," says
he, " Edganis circ. A.D. 959, a quo tempore non legimus nativum in Anglia visum lupum." I have already affirmed,
that they certainly existed among us to a much lower period, and will now produce the latest positive evidence I have
met with upon the subject. The [Cistercian] abbey of Fors, in Wensleydale, was founded A.D. 1145; that is, nearly
two centuries after the reign of Edgar ; and some time after, Alan, Earl of Bretagne, gave to the monks of that abbey
the flesh of wild animals, killed by wolves, in the forest of Wensleydale. These men must have been both stout and
vigilant to make the gift of any value; but the grant ascertains a curious and important fact in English zoology. Vide
Burton's Monast. Ebor. under Fors Abbey [p. 571.] [Si vero fratres ipsi, vel aliqui suorum servientium camera
alicujus ferae in mea foresta invenirent, cum Dei benedictione illam accipiant, fera; dico qua; luporum morsu peremp-
tarentur. Mon. Angl. V. 569. See also in Eymer the later royal commission issued in 1281 to Peter Corbet for taking
wolves in the five counties of Gloucester, Worcester, Hereford, Salop, and Stafford.]
BOOK III. CHAP. IV.]
FORESTS.
279
The reason why the goat was included in these prohibitions is very obvious, as he
must have been a capital offender against vert and greneheu. 1
Another tribe of animals was partially forbidden within the forests, from a very
different motive. In the varieties of the dog, Providence seems to have raised up a faithful
and necessary ally to man in his warfare or intercourse with other quadrupeds. In this
alliance he was too formidable to be overlooked by the jealousy of a forest legislator.
Accordingly we find that,
1st. The greyhound and the spaniel, from their strength and swiftness, were abso-
lutely prohibited within the verge of the forests.
2d. The mastiff, 2 a stout but not an active dog, was allowed to be kept, when incapa-
citated for mischief by one of the two following operations, either genucission, sometimes
termed boxing, which was the more ancient practice, 3 or expeditation, otherwise called
lawiug, 4 that is, striking off three toes of the fore feet, which is still in use. 5
3d. By the Constitutions of Canute, it was lawful to keep the velter or langeran, 6 and
the ramhundt, 7 by the former of which I understand the terrier, and by the latter the
1 Manwood, p. 238.
2 The etymology of this word has never been made out. Mamvood says, (Forest Laws, c. 1C,) in the old British
speech, meaning, I suppose, old English, they do call him Mase-thefe. This is childish, besides that, in old English,
the word would have been not Mase, but Mate, as ex. gr. a great wooden tower, which Kichard I. raised against the
Saracens, was called Mate griffon . Dr. Caius, the learned author of that scarce little work De Canibus Briiannicis,
is not much more happy, as he derives the words a maste sagina, cst enim crassum genus cam/in et bcne saginatum cate-
narium hoc; on which I have only to observe, that, if the mastiff had nothing better to feast upon than mast, he would
not long be genus crassum et bene saginatum. What follows will, I think, lead to the same origin of the word : scio
Augustinum Niphum Mastinum (mastivum nostri vacant) pecuarium existimarc et Albcrtum, Lyciscum, ex cane et lupo
gentium. This leads me to suspect both the name and the breed to be Spanish, for in that language the word Mestino
really signifies the lyciscus, or wolf-dog ; but the word mestizo, a mongrel, is, I believe, the genuine parent of mastiff.
This was Junius's conjecture (in voce mastiff), and is strikingly confirmed by the manner in which it is pronounced by
the common people in Lancashire, i. e. not mastiff but mastiss.
3 Or hocksinewing. Henry II. introduced the modern practice of lawing. Assiz. Woodstock, art. G.
4 Orhambling. Hence the vulgar word hample, to limp.
6 In Bowland expeditation is not governed by the species, but by the size of the dog an iron ring being kept as
a gauge, through which every foot that will pass escapes the operation.
. 6 In these constitutions almost all the Danish words which the translator has retained are corrupted. I would
read, therefore, instead of Langeran, which is nonsense, Lanjpun or Longsnout, from jpun ; in the Lancashire dialect
groon or groin, a sharp snout. I meet with the word also in old Scottish poetry.
Came like a sowe out of a middin,
Full slepy was his Grunye. (Dunbar.)
7 Ramhundt is pretty obviously the common sheep-dog. Hund in Danish, as in modern German, being co-exten-
sive with the generic term dog itself. Of this Dr. Caius admonishes his friend Gesner: "Hounde a vocabulo vestrati
hunde, quod canem in universum apud vos significat." I will just beg leave to add, that in the time of Caius, whose
book De Canibus Britannicis was first published A.D. 1570, three species of hybrid animals were common in England,
of which two are now rare, and the last I think unknown. 1st. The lyciscus or mungrel between the dog and the wolf.
2d. The lacena, bred between the dog and the fox. 3d. The vrcanus, between the dog and the bear. Of the existence
of this last I should have doubted, had not Dr. Caius, a man of integrity and science, declared that it abounded in his
time.
280 HISTORY OF WHALLEY. [Boon III. CHAP. IV.
sheep dog, as the diminutive size and base propensities of these kinds secured the nobler
animals of chace and venery from their attacks.
4th. No prohibition whatever is laid upon the keeping of staghounds, either because
it was supposed that no one would dare to attack the King's deer openly, and with whole
packs of dogs ; or because, certain privileges to kill deer having been granted to peers,
bishops, &c. on their way to and from parliament, it would be understood that whatever
was not included in these indulgences was prohibited of course. 1
It only remains that we throw together a few miscellaneous facts relating to the
administration of the forests.
In the privileges of a forest were contained all the subordinate rights belonging to
chaces, parks, and warrens, as omne majus contitiet in se minus."
In strictness of law none but the King could have a forest, for no subject could grant
a commission to hold a court of justice seat; but there are exceptions to this rule, as will
appear below.
To a forest, besides the justice seat, appertained the two inferior courts of swainmote
and attachment, with foresters, vcrdurers, regarders, and agisters ; a chace was entitled to
keepers and woodwards only.
Fifteen clays before midsummer, and fifteen after, were called the fence month, in
which all hunting was strictly forbidden, the hinds being then either big with young, or
having just calved.
The forests were generally driven twice a year, once immediately before the fence
month, in order that no disturbance might be given to the hinds, does, or fawns ; and,
2dly, about Holyrood day, when the agisters began to take in cattle. 3 At these times all
who had common right upon the forest came to the pounds, where a roll of the gaits they
were entitled to was kept, surchargers fined, and foreigners who had cattle straying within
the limits amerced, or sometimes the beasts forfeited.
No forester was permitted to arrest an offender against vert or venison, unless he
were taken with the manour, which 1 he might be in the four following situations, viz.
Stable-stand, Dogdraw, Back-bear, Bloody -hand.
1 In the present state of manners it will scarcely be believed with what tribes of dogs our ancient nobility, and
even dignified ecclesiastics, were accompanied on their journeys. " Now," says the accurate observer and bitter satirist
of his contemporary clergy, Piers Plowman,
Is Religion a pricker on a palfry, from maner to maner,
An heape of houndes at his ... . as he a lorde were.
And we are told that AD. 1216, an archdeacon of Eichmond, on his visitation, came to the priory of Bridlington
with ninety-seven horses, twenty-one dogs, and three hawks. (Dugdale's Monasticon, vol. ii. p. 65.)
It is well known that, upon the death of a bishop, his kennel of hounds was due, at common law, as a mortuary
to the King. Archbishop Cranmer was an excellent horseman, and fond of hunting. One of his successors, Archbishop
Juxon, was probably the last prelate in England who kept a pack of hounds : but there was an Irish prelate of later
times, T[wisdeu] Bishop of K[aphoe, 1747-55] a little man, but mighty hunter, whose example in this respect, as well
as others, probably has been monitory to his brethren in that kingdom, and who closed a life of indecorum and irregu-
larity in a manner more horrid than was ever openly told.
2 Manwood, p. 52. s ibid. p. 235.
BOOK III. CHAP. IV.]
FORESTS.
281
Stable-stand, when a man was found with a long bow, or cross bow bent, or standing
with greyhounds in his leash, ready to let them slip.
Dogdraw, when a man had already wounded a deer, and was found drawing after him
with an hound or other dog, to recover him in his flight.
Back-bear, when actually carrying off a deer which he had killed. And
Bloody-hand, when a man was found coursing, or returning from coursing, within the
forest, in a suspicious manner, with his hands embrewed in blood.
All these were to be arrested and committed to prison, where they were to await the
court of justice seat, unless delivered by the King's especial command.
Verdurers were judicial officers sworn to keep the assizes of the forest, and to receive
and enrol all presentment of trespasses against vert and venison. 1
The verdurer was also a kind of coroner, who, with ludicrous solemnity, held an
inquisition super visum corporis, over the slain deer.
The regarder was to view and inquire of similar trespasses.
Foresters were sworn to preserve the vert and venison, to attend the wild beasts, to
attach and present offenders. These were of two kinds, 1st. ordinary foresters, holding
their offices during pleasure, though under the great seal ; or, 2dly, 2 foresters of fee, who
held the office to them and their heirs, paying a fee farm to the King. These were the
real efficient guardians of the forests, and they had under them inferior servants, called
underkeepers or walkers.
Next to the foresters ranked the bedels of the forest, whose office was merely to
execute processes, and to make garnishments of the courts of Swainmote and Attachment.
The lowest officer in this catalogue was the woodward, to whom belonged only the
care of wood and vert, an object then deemed of no importance, excepting as it regarded
the accommodation of the deer.
The ensign of the woodward's office was a bill, as he was not empowered to bear a
bow, which belonged to his superiors.
To enliven this dry detail, we will now conclude with a beautiful portrait, drawn by
Chaucer, of an ancient forester, in the person of the Squire's Yeoman, of which the cos-
tume is most exact.
And he was cladde in cote and hode of grene ;
A shefe of peacock arwes bright and kene
Under his belt he bare ful thriftily,
Wei coude he dresse his takel yemanly :
His arwes drouped not with fethres lowe.
And in his hond he bare a mighty bowe ;
A not-hed hadde he with a boune visage
Of wood-crafte coude he wel alle the usage.
1 Manwood, c. 21.
2 This explains the term in the old ballad of Adam Bell, &o.
And forty forsters of the fee
These out-laws had yslaw. Percy's Ancient Songs, vol. i. p. 179.
VOL. I. 2 O
282
HISTORY OF WHALLEY.
[Boon III. CHAP. IV
Upon his arm he bare a gaie bracer,
And by his side a swerd and a bokeler,
And on that other side a gaie daggere,
Harneised wel-and sharpe as point of spere :
A Cristofre on his breste of silver shene,
A home he bare, the baudrik was of grene,
A Forster was he sothely, as I gesse.
Prologue to the Canterbury Tales.
We will now return from this long digression.
To the Honor of Clitheroe appertained a very extensive and wild domain, which was
divided into the forests of Blackburnshire and Bowland, 1 as the former was subdivided
into those of Pendle, Trawden, Accrington, and Rossendale ; and, after the marriage of
Alice de Lacy with Thomas Earl of Lancaster, all were included in the common descrip-
tion of foresta de Lancaster.
This, in exception to the general rule, was a forest in the strict sense of the term,
before it came united to the crown, " For," saith Manwood, " the Earl of Lancaster, in
the time of Edward II. and III. had a forest in the counties of Lancaster and York, in
the which he did execute the forest laws as largely as ever King of this realm did ; and,
even at this day, there are no records so much followed as those that were executed by the
said Earl in his forests." Forest Laws, p. 72.
Those of Blackburnshire and Bowland were high and barren tracts, rejected at the first
distribution of property, when townships were planted, and commons mered out in the
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