During their final White House meeting on Dec. 28, President Clinton gave Monica S. Lewinsky more than a half-dozen ''going-away'' presents, including an Alaskan stone carving and a decorative pin, said several lawyers familiar with Mr. Clinton's grand-jury testimony on Monday.

The President met in the Oval Office for 20 minutes early that December morning with Ms. Lewinsky, who was under subpoena to testify in the Paula Corbin Jones sexual misconduct lawsuit against Mr. Clinton, the lawyers said today. At the time, the former White House intern was preparing to leave Washington for a job in New York that Mr. Clinton's close friend Vernon E. Jordan Jr. was helping her try to secure.

The gifts that Ms. Lewinsky received from Mr. Clinton -- the list was even more extensive than previously disclosed -- had also been subpoenaed by the Jones lawyers. They included such items as a signed copy of a State of the Union address and a souvenir from Radio City Music Hall, where Mr. Clinton celebrated his 50th birthday at a fund-raising party in August 1996.

Much of the original interest in the gifts reflected an effort to determine the degree of intimacy of their relationship. But on Monday, both in his grand jury testimony and in his speech to the nation, Mr. Clinton acknowledged having had an intimate relationship with Ms. Lewinsky.