Close
Please type your search term
Close
Home Consultation

Full record

Fermer

Title : Journals of Sir John Lauder, lord Fontainhall : with his observations on public affairs and other memoranda (1665-1676) / edited, with introduction and notes, by Donald Crawford,...

Author : Lauder, John (1646-1722)

Publisher : printed at the University press by T. and A. Constable, for the Scottish society (Edinburgh)

Date of publication : 1900

Contributor : Crawford, Donald (1837-1919). Éditeur scientifique. Préfacier. Annotateur

Subject : France -- Descriptions et voyages

Subject : Grande-Bretagne -- Descriptions et voyages

Type : monographie imprimée

Language : English

Format : LI-[347] p.-[1] f. de front. : portr. ; in-8

Format : application/pdf

Copyright : domaine public

Identifier : ark:/12148/bpt6k102873r

Source : Bibliothèque nationale de France, 8-Nm-433 (36)

Relation : http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb30749069j

Description : Collection : Publications of the Scottish history society ; 36

Provenance : bnf.fr

Close
First page Previous page
Pagination
Next page Last page (Screen 53 / 398)
Download / Print
Fermer la popin

Download

You can obtain several pages of this document as an electronic file. You may choose one of the following formats : PDF, single page JPEG or plain text.

Choose format :
PDF
JPEG (Only the current page)
txt


Choose to download:
full document
a portion of this document


Pour une réutilisation non commerciale du contenu
En cochant cette case, je reconnais avoir pris connaissance des conditions dutilisation non commerciale et je les accepte.


Pour une réutilisation Commerciale
consultez nos conditions de reutilisation commerciale

Close
Contribute

Report an anomaly

Want to report an anomaly on the following document :

Title : Journals of Sir John Lauder, lord Fontainhall : with his observations on public affairs and other memoranda (1665-1676) / edited, with introduction and notes, by Donald Crawford,...

Author : Lauder, John (1646-1722)

Url of the page : http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k102873r/f53


Please describe the observed anomaly as exactly as possible,with the following proposals and/or the comment box.


Nature of the problem :

Wrong bibliographic data

Inconsistency between bibligraphic data and document posted

Blurred and truncated images

Incomplete Document or missing pages :

Incorrect or incomplete table of contents

Download problem

Unavailable Document

zoom

OCR/text

audio mode

Full Screen

other (please specify in comments)

Other (please specify in comments)


Comments :



Please leave us your email so we can respond :


Please copy the characters you see in the picture

The text doesn't conform to the displayed image

Close
Commander
Fermer la popin

Commander

This document may be reproduced identically by visiting the following associate site(s):
TheBookEdition IkiosqueEdilivre

Order a copy

Close
Help

Send by e-mail

Fermer
A mail has been sent A problem occured, the e-mail delivery failed. Please try again.
Close

Search module

Click here to toogle the search panel

Search results

Search this document

The text below has been produced using a process called optical character recognition (O.C.R.). Since it is an automatic process, it is subject to errors you might find in this page.

The recognition rate for this document is 88.9 %.



JOURNAL OF JOHN LAUDER

2

singing and sometymes all, that the rowers protested that
they never carried 80 merry a company doune the Thames. On
the way we was tuise stoopt by men of war to know whither
their ware any seamen in it, that they might be sent to the
fleet: at which we alleadged Captain Blawprine 1 G. Moor
was much troubled, for he was exceeding skipper like.
To morrow tymously we tooke post about 6 a eloack, and
reach Dover about onè yet we got not passage til ij at
night. What a distressed brother 1 was upon the sea neids
not hear be told, since its not to be feared that 1'1 forget it,
yet I cannot but tell whow Mr. John Kincead and I had a
bucket betwixt us strove who should have the bucket
first, both being equally ready and whow at every vomit and
gasp he gave he cried Goda mercy as give he had bein to
expire immediately.

About 5 in the morning we landed on France the land
of graven images. Heir we divided into 3 companies Joseph
Marior wt one Mr. Colison went into Flanders Mr. Dick
Moor and Kinkead went to Deip and so to Roau. Mr.
Strachan, Hamilton, and I stayed in Calais til Monday,
10 of April, and joined wt the messenger for Paris one
Pierre, a sottish fellow, yet one that entertained us nobly
their went also wt him besides us on Mr. Lance Normand,
Newwarks gouernor and a son of my Lord Arreray or
BroU,8 a very sharp boy wt his governour Doctor Hall. In
our joumey we passed severall brave tounes as Bulloigne,
Monstrul, Abewill, Poix, Beauveaus, wheir is the most
inagnificent church I had ever then sien. We chanced to
lay a night at a pitty vilage called Birny, wheir my chamber
was contigue to a spatious pleasant wood that abounded wt
nightingales, small birds to look upon who wt the melodious-
nesse of their singing did put sleip qu «it from me. The great
number we meit of souldiers all the way begat in us great

1 Compare Blawflum (Jamieson), a deception. « Prine' may be prein, pin, a
thing of little value. Moor is playfully described as captain or skipper.
How.

J Roger Boyle, 1621-1679, first Baron of Broghill and Earl of Orrery, M.P.
for Edinburgh, 1656-58, member of Cromwell's House of Lords. lie was suc.
ceeded by his son Roger, i646.yo.

Source: gallica.bnf.fr / Bibliothèque nationale de France, 8-Nm-433 (36)

Share

Permalink on this document

Permalink on this page
Embeddable widget

Embeddable thumbnail
Send by e-mail

Blogs and social networks

Add to your collection

null null null
Close