Page:The Grammar of Heraldry, Cussans, 1866.djvu/93

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79
Appendix
Crest. Out of a ducal coronet or, a greyhound's head argent, gorged with a collar gules, charged with three plates.
*Bertie, of Uffinton, Lincolnshire.—Argent; three battering rams barwise in pale azure, headed and garnished or.
Crest. A pine tree proper.
Motto. Loyaulté me oblige.
Betton, of Totterton Hall, Stropshire.—Argent; two pales sable, each charged with three crosses-crosslet fitchées or.
Crest. A demi-lion rampant gules, ducally crowned or.
Motto. Nunquam non paratus.
Blois, of Cockfeld Hall, Suffolk.—Gules; a bend vair between two fleurs-de-lys argent.
Crest. A gauntlet erect proper, holding a fleur-de-lys argent.
Motto. Je me fie en Dieu.
Bond, of Grange and Lutton, Dorsetshire.—Sable; a foss or.
Crest. An eagle's wing sable, charged with a fess or.
Motto. Non sufficit orbis.
*Boscawen, of Boscawen Rose, Cornwall.—Ermine; a rose gules, barbed and seeded proper.
Crest. A falcon proper, belled or.
Motto. Patience passe science.
Boughton, of Rouse-Lench, Worcestershire.—Sable; three crescents or.
Crest. A stork's head erased, per saltire sable and argent; in the beak or, a snake proper.
Motto. Omne bonum Dei donum.
Briscoe, of Crofton, Cumberland.—Argent; three greyhounds courant in pale sable.
Crest. A greyhound courant sable, seizing a hare proper.
Motto. Gratâ sume manu.
Brooke, of Ufford, Suffolk.—Gules; on a chevron argent, a lion rampant sable, crowned or, armed and langued of the field.
Crest. On a chapeau gules, guarded ermine, a wing of the first, charged with a chevron argent thereon a lion as in the arms.