To pick up after horselydown’s stalwart work:
Et quo ad om(n)ia sup(er)ius legata volo q(uo)d quicumq(ue) eor(um) sup(er)vixerit h(ab)eat legata & non aliter
And as regards everything bequeathed above, I will that whoever survives should have the bequests, and not otherwise (i.e. without reversion to descendants).
To the 2 daughters of Lore Danndelyon, 10 marks
To Agnes, wife of John Danyel, 5 marks, and to his daughters, 10 marks
To Richard, his son, 5 marks
To the daughters of the same John, 10 marks
To the wife and unmarried daughters of John Valennes[?], 10 marks
To John Hughes and Richard Hughes, 5 marks
To Cecily Bardelond[?], 20 shillings
To the children of the said Cecily, 20 shillings
To Stephen atte lenetonne[?], 20 shillings
To the Vicar of Sheldwych Church, for assisting my executors, 40 shillings
To Nicholas atte churche, 20 shillings
To Guy de Valence, 20 shillings
To Thomas atte cherche, 13s 4d
To the fabric of Christ Church Canterbury, 40 shillings
Residue to be disposed by my executors for the salvation of my soul and the souls of my relatives and all the faithful deceased
Executors – Dennis my wife, Thomas atte Tonne, John Godard[?], Reginald Kyngeslond
sealed 12 August 1394
To the Convent of St Augustine, Canterbury, 40 shillings
There was a double probate, but I think it has no new names. Say if you need this, because it will take a while. As horselydown has said, it is very slow going.
Except for the extreme right of the first page, the image is rather better on Ancestry, where it is indexed as the will of Ane Peese (misreading of atte leese)