[1054] Kirkconnel MS.
[1055] Jacobite Memoirs, p. 58.
[1056] Kirkconnel MS.
[1057] Jacobite Memoirs, p. 60. Kirkconnel MS.
[1058] Lockhart Papers, vol. ii. p. 460. Kirkconnel MS.
[1059] Maxwell of Kirkconnel gives a different version of this matter from that of Lord George Murray. After stating that his lordship represented to Charles the dangerous situation he might be in if the united armies of Wade and Cumberland overtook him before reaching Carlisle, he says that Lord George “proposed to avoid them by sacrificing the cannon and all the heavy baggage to the safety of the men, which was now at stake. He observed that the country is mountainous betwixt Kendal and Penrith, and the roads, in many places, very difficult for such carriages; but the prince was positive not to leave a single piece of his cannon. He would rather fight both their armies than give such an argument of fear and weakness. He gave peremptory orders that the march should be continued in the same order as hitherto, and not a single carriage to be left at Kendal.”
[1060] Jacobite Memoirs, p. 63.
[1061] In the prince’s Household Book, printed among the Jacobite Memoirs, the following entries occur:—
| Dec. 17th, at Shape, Tuesday. | ||
| To ale, wine, and other provisions, | £4 | 17 |
| The landlady for the use of her house, | 2 | 2 |
| N.B. The landlady a sad wife for imposing. | ||
[1062] Jacobite Memoirs, p. 65.