[1] [2] The next daie Richard Marshall hauing thus got the victorie, destroied certeine houses and lordships there in the marshes which belonged to the said Iohn of Monmouth. Matth. Paris. About the same time also, Richard Sward with other outlawes destroied the possessi|ons belonging to the earle of Cornewall beside Bre|hull, and burned a place there called Segraue, where Stephan de Segraue the lord chiefe iustice was borne, and likewise a village belonging to the bishop of Winchester, not farre from Segraue aforesaid. This was the maner of those outlawes, that they hurt no person, but onelie those councellers about the king by whom they were exiled, and therefore bea|ring stomach against them, they did not onlie excogi|tate but also execute this reuenge; which till they had obteined, they were no lesse ill appaid, than well plea|sed when the same was past, for

—minuit vindicta dolorem.