FOR 
force fhould appear, {uch as could not fafely be oppofed, 
muit be abandoned ; ; unlefs, indeed, _reinforce- 
left a ae 
ae 
8, & fa ne are enclosed are e firk fent 
ete together with the infantry as 
efeor t; the laden cavalry then clofe in, and, in their ny 
‘are proteéte ed by the efcorts of horfe 
Where great refiftance is expecte ed, s fometimes ne- 
ceflary for a few guns, efpecially horfe-ar riley i proceed 
with the foragers; but the utmoft endeav hould be 
ufed to avoid coming to action. I ome cine the 
whole army move to the {cene of plunder, for the purpofe 
of carrying off whatever may be procurable, and for which 
conveyance can be provided ; the camp being left under 
charge of a few fmall detachments, or piquets 5 = eae 
- ean happen only on great emergefcy, or when the my 
are fo near as to render it cae Dene to detach any ore) 
: ion of forage, for the daily confumption of one 
of 10lb. of hind 2olb. of hay, and: 5lb. of 
ts are al. 
tion of ve duty. Wien 
5 
on for 
are of courfe adopted, an diftsibuted aa valorem 
itary Affairs, a detachment fent 
“the - sg pela is Fae 
anhas 
ed in the morai 
at flay. at te poft. till the foragers be all come off: the 
groun nd. See the preceding article 
* FORRENBACH, in Geography, a town of- sacl 
in oy ieee | of Nuremberg ; five miles E. 5. E.. 
erfbac 
H FO. RES, a town fituated near the mouth of the river 
Findhora, on a rifing ground three. miles diftant = the 
bay. of the fame name,. is.a royal. burgh, in the county of 
Moray ; and though it is uncertain wher i it ea this 
privileged -diftinG@tion, yet it is n ticed in.records.as 
ont, thi hi 
er to’ ne Br iti ae r 
lia ment: sit is the feat’ of a poelbye = "Phe. houfes, wih 
‘general neatly. built, amounted; — ng. to, the 
returns made to aera in 1851, to.663, containing 
31 14 in ihabitants ; ; of wm 80. vedi in trade: 
1d 1 1e ee is savigable up t to the ee 
of- -Rillos, within: two niles 6 f the town, 
ete ied this place. The Findhom 
mon.an 
tive, 
§ thi 
abounds. with Prale 
furrounded by. extenfive neers 3 Of an eminence.at- the 
- Sweno’s ftone.?? 
‘the Gothic. kind to. be f 
er fit, and: the fitheries on it are very produc-. 
ach: of, the town, on. an eminence, fkands: 
the ge of bundayars, commanding a fine ptofpe&, and. pean che natural hiftor 
FOR 
Thi 8, which exceeds all other obelifks 
tobe feen in Scotland, is perhaps the fineft t of 
eund in aw rope. 
oe y Mr. Pennant in his Tour t 
bree feet ten inches broad, and one ha three see thick ; 
hei jhe above Bom -is 23 feet; below, as it is mee 
On fide are numLere of rude bons of ani- 
mals a pte ie mee with colours flying ; fome of them 
feem bound like captives. On the oppolite fide was a-crofs 
included ina circle, par — above fans a of ged ee 
om the foot of th 
e of the fi de 
aad guarde 
ereCted. round the bate. nea have been ae ‘conjeGtur es 
re{pecting the age and aan of this monument. at 
of the late reverend iner appears the mot proba- 
marks, which “accompanied a drawing of the 
. Pennant, he fuppofes it to have been fet 
i on Of the peace concluded Nees 
Malcolsi, king of Scotland, and pages the Danifh king of 
England, in the year 1002; when the Danes, who had long 
been in pofleffion of Moray, finally relinquifhed that pro* 
vince by _ tion. 
In not far from Forres, a ta Mac- 
beth’s. ee with the witc hes Belo e ftone, at 
the head of an inlet of the fea, are fome remains ‘of Kinlofe 
abbey,.. founded in 1150 by, David I. for Ciftercian ana 
and amply endow “be ruins were fold, in 1651, 
build as ne of Inv oe “On the oppotite fide ot “hat 
as. C eftate, overwhelmed with fand about a 
pei ago. The country, se feveral ale welt of Forres, 
is level, well cultivated, and adorned with fine plantations, 
feats, old caftles, &c. In naho How of that traét there w 
difcovered, i in the neu eee a-fhip’s anchor four feet below 
ground, | when om other ¢ irounifen nees, it would 
hat de ake ee: the low- lands a 
chu urch-yard - 
a: ftone- -crofe orn 
with rude reliefs. N. lat. 57° > 36 “W. long. 3° ee 
-RESTER’S Istanp, a. a ale in the North 
Pacific ocean, about 14 miles m the S. W. cvaft- 
of the Prince of Wales’ 8 rerveciene ra called by Mr. 
Dixon. N, lat. of. E. long. 126° 38!. 
FORS, a towa of Sweden, in Weft Gothland; r7- aniite. 
S.S. E. of Uddevalla. — Alfo, a town of Sweden, in Jamt-- 
land ;- 44-miles N. of Sundf{wall. 
FORS E, ariver of eaten in Caithnetes 3 which runs- 
into the North fea; fix miles nurfo 
-FORS 
ES, Car ADUPE, @ cima: fed in: » Weftmoreland” 
for water-falle, 
SKALEA, in Botany, name 
of. his: opal Peter al “a: Sees spe etched fent, ate 
a expetice. of the oe. a ing to-. -inveltigate t the - 
tural’ produCtions of t - company with. the 
celebrate oe _died,-at “Ferien j in. Re abi 
ed: - notes and:-defcripti 
of Bey pt and Arabia; but 
not corre&ted- by: references to-other- Sen AS ae — F 
welt.énd of. the town ftoe cau) Ae by fome. io the e- have been by himfelf‘-for the prefs, were- aig recs ree 
early Kings, and: burnt at. the an : Near Korres, in. quarto ~voltmes, under the dir as of * his fellow. tras 
the parifh“of Rafford, isa very. iualeees remain of anti : s veller, at- Co bpentiagen j in 1975. os Mant. 11. Sehreb; . 
jt ia an aks Pilly. known. under. the: denomination of: 
» Gens: 208i. Willd: Sp. 
5 
“Ph ve 2. puss Mart. Mil, Did. 
Vn Se’. 
