Lavengro George Borrow (free ebook reader for ipad TXT) š
- Author: George Borrow
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Captain: The West Norfolk Militia was raised in 1759 by the third Earl of Orford.He died in December, 1791, when the regiment was reorganised (not āraisedā) under the new Colonel, the Hon. Horatio Walpole, subsequently the sixth Earl of Orford. Thus in February, 1792, Thomas was transferred from the Guards to be Sergeant-major in the W.N.M., and stationed at East Dereham. He married the following year, became Quartermaster (with the rank of Ensign) in 1795, and Adjutant (Lieutenant) in February, 1798. This his final promotion doubtless gave him the honorary rank of Captain, since in the Monthly Army List for 1804 we read: āAdjutant, Thomas Borrow, Capt.ā But a letter before me dated 18th April, 1799, from his Major, is officially addressed to him as āLieut. Borrow, Adjutant,ā etc., etc. āā Knapp ā©
MS., āOrford.ā āā Knapp ā©
Petrement: Our author knew very well that his motherās maiden name was Ann Perfrement, pronounced and written Parfrement at the present day by those of the family we have met. The correct spelling is found on the tombstone of her sister, Sarah, at Dereham (1817), and on that of her brother, Samuel, at Salthouse near Holt (1864). āā Knapp ā©
Castle of De Burgh: A fanciful Borrovian epithet applied to Norwich Castle. Nor did the exiles build the Church of St. Mary-the-Less, in Queen Street, Norwich; it was a distinct parish church long before Elizabethās reign, and in her time the parish was consolidated with the neighbouring one of St. Georgeās, Tombland, while the church became municipal property. But the French exiles of the Edict of 1685 did worship there, even as did the Dutch refugees from Alvaās persecution a century before (1565ā āā 70). āā Knapp ā©
Middle Age: Borrowās father was thirty-four, and his mother twenty-one, at the date of their marriage. John was born seven years after the marriage, and George ten. The mother was, then, thirty-one at Georgeās birth. āā Knapp ā©
Bishop Hopkins: Sermons. āā Knapp ā©
Angola: More correctly āAngora.ā āā Knapp ā©
Foreign grave: Lieut. John Thomas Borrow died at Guanajuato, Mexico, 22nd November, 1833. āā Knapp ā©
āSnorroā Sturleson: Poet and historian of Iceland (1178ā āā 1241). Harald (not āHaroldā) III, called āHaardraade.ā Battle of Stamford Bridge, 1066 AD, same year as Norman Conquest. See Malletās Northern Antiquities, pp. 168ā āā 71 and 194; Snorroās Heimskringla, II, p. 164, and his Chronica, 1633, p. 381, for the quotation. āā Knapp ā©
Norwegian ellsā āabout eight feet. ā©
Winchester: Rather āWinchelsea,ā according to the Regimental Records. āā Knapp ā©
A gallant frigate: A reminiscence of Norman Cross gossip in 1810ā āā 11. āNinety-eight French prisoners, the crew of a large French privateer of eighteen guns called the Contre-Amiral Magon, and commanded by the notorious Blackman, were captured 16th October, 1804, by Capt. Hancock of the Cruiser sloop, and brought into Yarmouth. They marched into Norwich, 26th November, and the next morning proceeded under guard on their way to Norman Cross barracksāā āNorwich Papers, 1804. āā Knapp ā©
Lady Bountiful: Dame Eleanor Fenn (1743ā āā 1813). āā Knapp ā©
Bard: William Cowper (1731ā āā 1800). āā Knapp ā©
Some Saint: Withburga, daughter of Anna, king of the East Angles, was the āsaintā and the ādaughterā at the same time. āā Knapp ā©
Hunchbacked rhymer: Alexander Pope. āā Knapp ā©
Properties of God, read āattributes.ā āā Knapp ā©
Rector: The Rev. F. J. H. Wollaston. āā Knapp ā©
Philoh: James Philo (1745ā āā 1829). āā Knapp ā©
Tolerism, read ātoleration.ā āā Knapp ā©
MS., āin regimental slang.ā āā Knapp ā©
Mere: Whittlesea Mere, long since drained. āā Knapp ā©
Bengui: See the glossary for all Gypsy words. āā Editor ā©
MS., āAmbroseā throughout the book.410 āā Knapp ā©
Three years: Included in the subsequent narrative, not excluded from it as his Norwich school days (1814ā āā 15, 1816ā āā 18) were. They extend from July, 1811, to April, 1813ā āfrom Norman Cross to Edinburgh. The chronology, according to the Regimental Records, was as follows: George was at East Dereham from 22nd July to 18th November, 1811, at J. S. Buckās (āDr. B.āsā) school; 30th November, 1811, to February, 1812,
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