[1384] Printed in Coll. de Manuscrits (Quebec), iv. p. 1, as is also a letter of Dieskau from the English Camp (p. 5), and a letter of Montreuil of Sept. 18 (p. 6).

[1385] N. Y. Col. Docs., x. 318.

[1386] It is translated in the N. Y. Col. Docs., x. 340, and is accompanied (p. 342) by a diagram of the cul-de-sac which received the English.

[1387] This seems to be the document which Parkman quotes as Livre d’Ordres, now in the possession of Abbé Verreau. Parkman does not think it materially modifies the despatches as filed in Paris.

[1388] New Jersey Archives, viii., Part 2d, 133; also see pp. 137, 149, 188.

[1389] New Jersey Archives, viii., Pt. 2d, p. 168.

[1390] Smith’s New York, ii. 224; N. H. Prov. Papers, vi. 460, 463; The Conduct of Genl Shirley, pp. 53-56; Livingston’s Rev. of Mil. Operations.

[1391] One of his projects, which he had to abandon, was a winter attack on Ticonderoga. (N. H. Prov. Papers, vi. 461, 467.) He explained in Feb. to Gov. Morris, of Penna., his views of the campaign. (Penna. Archives, ii. 579.) Cf. also N. H. Prov. Papers, vi. 480.

[1392] Johnson, i. 536.

[1393] Vol. ii. ch. i. Cf. also Parkman, i. 392-3.