Uap. F. ' the Forest Laws.
r 55
both of fojest and chafe: and therefore the Laws ok thefinest especially Pchbide so? the pMkbstksN 6f thosewoods snd cvderts, whether they be the Woods of theKing, o? the wsods ok any other person: So that, ifsnp msn have woods within any WM, although that ^ ?“ may ,the soil wherein those woods do grow de his own S S?dow?'keeholo, pet he may not rut down no? fell his Wwds umher,noz coderts there: and note,thai woods and roderts -re within his ownail one in some knee andllsni6cattou,but in some tench W n ods .‘" a Fo -and stgnistcarion they do disserts thus,where the treesdo grow scattering, here and there one, w that those Forests, not-trees do not one of them touch another, such plseed are „-ct>A,a-iinAcalled woods, but they are not properly to ve called rd- the OrdinanceHerts r Fo? cvberts are those woods, that are thickets ° h f 3 S’ E> I aniand full ef trees which the Lstiniffs do call Impcditisli-^',n??ri;artnae silvae: And Cicero doth call a wood, that is a cdbert ii«. « b ut mso? 3>ær ? Latibulum in one place, aNd in attottztr place sKm-Eot .be caileth the same Votneeord: Ladreor doth sonletiNiea kkc Commoncall the came Umbracolaai, the old Foresters 84 call thet&n£Cever«*> as sword ok art ? w? as they so ekli sll 7nathe trees in the WM, veer, * midiiate, okgrernnskte, w that are onlythey do likewise call all. thow tress and WbM that aeciarauvesre thick and full ok trees, C6MW,chitidlM M u^ui jmis, andfrom the French wo?d CooVsrk> Which in GttgW H irnr i u ~Ploperfy a secret biding place* so? the Deer , kd htoi Seaman ™ ythem in, under the green bert. n>re5ckit>eaZainlt
them, Co. 4.
Inst. 207. Virgil. Cicero# Sudanis.'; &nd if a man bath * woftdin a'for eft, and hathno such ptticriptianj the L$W doth appoint him »means to M both: wood and timber,6> as it be no prejudice to the Gttrit, But /ufficictft JS left besides* arid that is by a writj ^ da mpmnfvx upon return whereof the Jting doth liceiise dim- Co, 4,
3 ! 4