Forsyth- chapter V
"******smooth bore, 9 lbs. weight, with 30-inch barrels, 14 gauge, loaded with spherical No.15 ball, and 4 drachms of powder, gives a moderate recoil.
Now, if Forsyth meant 4 drachms at 60gr. to the drachm, that would be 240gr. of powder. I can tell you from experience that he most certainly did not mean the Apothecary's weight of 60gr. to the drachm, but actually meant 27.3gr. to the Dram, as 109.2 t 110gr. does indeed give a moderate recoil. Look at the picture above of the recoil of a mere 5 drams + 4gr. - imagine 240gr., ie: 8.8drams!!!!!!!!!!!!
In an 8 pound SXS modern shotgun, my first shot of a 14 bore ball with 6 drams (191gr.) of 2F GOEX spun me around like a weathercock - ask Taylor- he was there. That shot also split the stock. I have also fired 240gr. from the rifle pictured above - it will lift you off the seat - moderate recoil it isn't.
Forsyth also talks about trajectories with certain powder charges in chapter 5. These trajectories, and point blank ranges, correspond to drams equivalent charges, not drachms. His listed charges seem to match my zeros with those same powder charges very closely.
Also- when he refers to the issue 24 bore - military rifles, ie: the .577 Enfields, he also uses the drachm word, but the charges, ie: 2 1/2 drachms match the dram charge actually used by the government- ie: 68gr.
As tot he elephant's head, Baker noted, "4 1/2 or even 5 drachms may be used in such a rifle without any very unpleasant recoil".
5 drams would be 136gr. - note above what 5 drams + 4 gr. kicks like - 5 drachms would be 300gr. - YIKES - yes - I accidentally fired off one of those.
"without any very unpleasant recoil" does not even remotely describe the recoil of that charge.