| Description | Doom and award by Thomas Williams and Richard Fletcher upon the bitter controversies that had arisen between Hugh Goodman and Elizabeth his wife (now deceased) on the one side, and Thomas Thickness ["Thickyns"] and Jonet, wife of Edmund Bulkeley,on the other. Thickness to remit all manner of actions and suits he has instituted against Goodman; Jonet Bulkeley is, on Wednesday next ensuing, [the Feast of St Thomas the Apostle], to come to the church of Beaumaris, and between the time of Common Prayer and the Communion, kneel in the body of the church by the Lady Bulkeley's pew, face towards the people, and then and there shall declare to Hugh Goodman [who shall be also present] her sorrow for the slanderous words she had spoken of the deceased Elizabeth Goodman, (the exact words she was to say are put in the first person). This specifically done, Hugh Goodman is to forgive her, take her up by the hand, kiss her in "Loving sorte", and "so departe as Loving ffreindes" [which was easier said than done] |