[21] Afterwards General Sir John Burgoyne.

[22] A few miles south of Sanagun.

[23] Mulcaster.

[24] Guard or watchman.

[25] [Appendix].

[26] It was by his father’s desire that Captain Charles Boothby entered the Army instead of preparing for Holy Orders, and this intensified the anguish in parting with his son throughout the war, as was often stated by Captain C. Boothby in later years.

[27] Said to be the proudest man in France.

[28] See [Appendix].

[29] The continuation of the Journals of Captain Charles Boothby will be found in A Prisoner of France, already published by Messrs. A. and C. Black.

[30] Written to a French General at Reggio.