[207] Shaw, p. 186.
[208] Such was the style in which Lovat, to be complimentary, usually addressed Duncan Forbes, on account of the military capacity in which the future Lord President had acted during the Rebellion.
[209] Culloden Papers, p. 55.
[210] Culloden Papers, p. 56.
[211] Sergeant Macleod served in 1703, when only thirteen years of age, in the Scots Royals, afterwards under Marlborough, then at the battle of Sherriff Muir in 1715. After a variety of campaigns he was wounded in the battle of Quebec, in 1759, and came home in the same ship that brought General Wolf's body to England. Macleod died in Chelsea Hospital at the age of one hundred and three. His Memoirs are interesting.
[212] Memoirs of the Life of Sergeant Donald Macleod, p. 45. London, 1791.
[213] Anderson. From King's Monumenta Antiqua.
[214] Culloden Papers.
[215] Mrs. Grant's MS.
[216] Anderson, p. 159. From family archives.