Page:Welsh Medieval Law.djvu/319

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in the same gwlad as its owner, receives four legal pence for every cow the horse may be worth. Whoever shall protect a cow from thieves in the same gwlad as the owner, receives four legal pence.

[1]A she calf is six pence in value from the time it is born until the calends of December. Thence until the calends of February it is eight pence in value. Until the calends of May, it is ten pence in value. Until August, it is twelve pence in value. Until the calends of December, it is fourteen pence in value. Until the calends of February, it is sixteen pence in value. Until the calends of May, it is eighteen pence in value. Until August, it is twenty pence in value. The next morning an increase of two pence for the season, and four for its calf bearing, is added to it ; and then it is twenty-six pence in value until the calends of December. Until the calends of February, it is twenty-eight pence in value. Until the calends of May, it is thirty pence in value. On the ninth day of May it ought to have teithi, milk coming from the end of each of its teats, and its calf walking nine paces after it; and unless it be so, sixteen pence is the worth of its teithi. Two pence likewise it

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