JOURNAL OF JOHN LAUDER 4 me hèar from you what ye think wil do it and what ye will take for the frank. So being confident of your cair heirof, and in doing wheirof ye sall very much oblidge him who is, Sir,- your reall friend, JOHN LAUDEB. The bill of exchange is as followeth Edïnburgh, 17 March 1665, for 400 livres T.L.t 81&41 dayes after sight of this my first bill of exchange (my 2 not being payed) please pay to Mr. John Lauder or his order 400 livres TL value receaved heir from his father B. John Lauder. Make punctuall payment and please it to account, as by the advice of your humble servant, THOMAS CRAFURD. For Mr. Francis Kinloch, Merchant in Paris. Francis having read thir, out of his kindnese would suffer me to stay no wheir but in his oune house, wheir I stayed all thè space I was at Paris, attended and entertained as give 1 had bein a Prince. While I was heir .I communicated my inten- tions and directions for going straight to Poictiers to these countrymen fornamed, who ware all unanimously against it, not sieing what good I could do their since the Colledge was just upon the point of rising; they conceived theirfor that 1 might imploy my tyme much better either in Orleans at Mr. Ogilvyes house, or Saumur at Mr. Dualls for in either of these 1 could have a richer advantage in reference to the laDgu~e, both because its beter spoken their [then at) Poictiers, as also fewer Scotsmen their then in Poictiers. 1 sould also have for a pistoll a month a master to give me a lesson on the Instituts once a day, which I could not so have at that rate at Poictiers. Thus they reasoned, and I fand Mr. Kinloch to be of the same mind. I considering that it was. not expedient for me to step one step wtout direction from my father, 1 wrot the Vednesday following, 19 of Aprill, acquaintinghim wt it; and that I sould attend his answer and win at Orleans. While I was at Paris I went and saw the new Bridge, and Henry 4 his stately statue in brasse sent as a present hy the King of Denmark. I was also at the Place Royalle 1 See Introduction, p. xlii. 2 See Introduction, p. xliii.