herself, she fell backwards into the area, Urr, an industrious and worthy man. never to rise again. During the greater part of his life he was a 21. At Paisley, after a very short illness, zealous disciple of Mrs Buchan, the enthe Rev. Charles Stuart, pastor of the Ro- thusiastic pretender to a divine mission, anan Catholic Congregation. His prema- who, towards the close of the last century, ture death, at the early age of 25, was the flourished in the vicinity of Closeburn. cffect of typhus fever, caught, to appear At Paris, the Countess Dillon, relict of ance, by contagious infection and subse- the Hon. General Arthur Dillon, brother querit laborious attendance on some of his to the late Viscount Dillon. This lady Hock suffering under that disease. was first married to the Comte de la Touche, 22. At Paisley, Miss Ann Paterson of by whom she had one son, and a daughter Craigton, aged 97. married to the Duke of Fitz-James. By 24. At his house in George Square, the late Hon. Arthur Dillon she has left Edinburgh, Sir Patrick Inglis, Bart. one daughter, married to General Ber At Hutchesontown, aged 84, Mr trand. James Bryce, late merchant in Glasgow. At St Maude, near Paris, aged 11 years, 26. At Eyemouth, William Dewar, Esq. Lord Boringdon, eldest son of the Earl of formerly captain in the artillery service of Morley. A stalk of rye, which he had inthe Nabob of Arcot, in the 77th year of advertently swallowed the latter. end of his age, much respected. July, was the cause of his sufferings. It 30. At Jedburgh, James Potts, Esq. was found, after his death, three inches in late Sheriff-clerk of Roxburghshire, in the length, in its original state, lodged in the 79th year of his age. intestines. Lately, at his house in Fife, Admiral At Cawnpore, in the 65th year of his Duddingston. age, Major-General Sir John Horsford, At Benares, in the East Indies, Claude K.C. B. commanding first division field Russell, Esq. of the Honourable East In. army, and Colonel of the 3d battalion of dia Company's service. artillery. The State has in him lost a At Ballynure, Ireland, near Clones, Mi. most able and upright servant, the army chael Pendar, at the advanced age of 107. one of its most distinguished officers, and He had been a pensioner for 72 years. the Honourable Order of the Bath a mem At Manchester, at the age of 70 years, ber worthy of its distinction. He served Nirs Maclellan, formerly Miss Mary Mac- nearly thirty-nine years with his regiment ghie, daughter of the late Mr Macghie of as an officer, and was much employed on Airds, and the celebrated heroine of the field service during the eight years he popular ballad of “ Mary's Dream.” commanded the Bengal artillery ; his at. At his house, Harsendam, Herts, Major- tention to its interests was chiefly exempliGeneral Hadden of the Royal Artillery. fied in improving the situation of the sol. In Wimpole Street, London, Mrs Far dier, European and Native, in all the sequharson, aged 83. veral branches of that extensive and widely At Whittlebury, Northamptonshire, in dispersed corps. After a service of fortyhis 73d year, the Rev. Henry Beauclerk, five years, in various parts of India, spent only son of the late Lord Henry Beau- in constant and unwearied devotion w his clerk. duty-never even in sickness having enAt Dublin, Mrs Blackford, grand- joyed the indulgence of one day's furdaughter of the Earl of Darnley. lough, or leave of absence from his profesIn the Scotch College, Paris, deservedly sional labours this eminent officer, whose lamented, the Rev. John Farquharson, Su sound constitution, hardened by tempeperior. He was long Principal or Head of rance, had long contended with an extrathe Scotch College at Douay, in Flanders, ordinary complication of disease, ended å which he was forced to abandon at the per long life of useful services shortly after bis riod of the Revolution, and went to Glas return from field service at Hattras. A gow, where he remained many years, offi man of stern principle, sound judgment, ciating as Catholic clergyman, and was extensive knowledge, and independent spi. much esteemed for his moviesty and humi- rit, his memory will be respected by all lity, and as an honest man. who knew him, and his loss long regretted At an advanced period of life, Mr George by those who were bis selected friends. Kidd, farmer in Crocketford, perish of General Inder. ABERDEEN, bankrupt state Amherst,Lord, interview of, Bedpai, Tables of, notice of 260 ANALYTICAL NOTICES - Berlin, theatre there destroy. journals, 156, 260, 461 Binning, Lord, review of his sion of Parliament, abstract covered in Fifeshire, 423 asylums in Scotland, 250 on Sir H. Davy's safety. attachment, singular lamp, 260 Birds, observations on the Births, 97, 192, 293, 396, &c. 88, 186, 236, 390, 490 Black, Dr. his valuable im. respecting half-pay officers 233 Block.printing, recent im. Arsenious acid, method of provements made in, 136 his son at St Helena, 79% posed conscription, 478 den-Traquair, 43–Dry. Antiquities of Eng- Balloons, Irish Channel cross. this singular character, 207 276 Britain, general view of its from it to assist the South - Scotland, Royal, in. American patriots, 81, 282 ing fund, 383_Letting of Bankrupts, list of English, the post. horse duty in, 486 Legislation, 81, 184, -Linen Company's Bank some of its oflicers, 486 in Africa, notice of, 66 sea, 467 Burgh reform in Scotland, prisoners in the house of the cathedral church of Sa Giles there, 320_On the at, in the last century, 13 Country funerals, plan for university museum, 267- 417--Expenditure and funds the slave trade by, ib. country, general view of, 39 ing of the South Bridge, table purposes in, 413 society, 481_Town Guard Deaf and dumb, remarks on disbanded, ib. the, 312 Egypt, interesting accounts marks on Mr West's pic. Encyclopædia Britannica, analytical notice of the Deaths, 98,194,295,398,498 supplement to the, 55 Derby, trials and executions graphical sketch of, 292 Mrs, of Grange, mis- 442 dation at the mineral springs Ayrshire, 387 Faa, Johonie, the gypsey Duns Scotus, Joannes, anec. chief, and the Countess of Cassillis, account of their ballad of, 308 existence of, remaining in Earthquakes in Inverness, Scotland, 237 tions on, 439 cal structure of the Calton. diffusion of, 26 82, 182_Canal between it notices of, 156, 260 nation of the high school stance of sudden rise to, 382 bylline Leaves, 245_Of his weekly assemblies for danc government in its own sta- ment and amusements of in the ministry, 173—Or. regulating the 230_Predilection for liter. iwo soldiers for treason, ib. its police establishment, 283 the Legislative Assembly, house, 284- Magistrates of, Chambers, 478 - Prizes poem, 464 the encouragement of Arts serving from, in travelling Launch of a new frigate, 84 hot and desert regions, 369 Layng, Beatrix, account of latitudes, &c. 469 cion of witchcraft, 202- Java, eruption of a burning der, 206 Leith, opening of the second Igneous origin of agates or Scottish army under him the, 445 Leyden and Murray's ac- Indies, East, capture of fort count of discoveries in Af- of pirates in the Persian Life preserver, experiinents lish beggar, account of, 103 versions of the Scriptures - boats, improvementsin, tions on, 439 West, numerous de Literary and Scientific intel. of Kingston on the subject, 69, 166, 268, 369, 472- Italy, 69, 166, 370, 471- with some original letters 167, 269, 472_Prussia, America, 278_Epidemic from stone, notice of a servations on the, 229 beries there, 381-Arrival Livonia, account of the uni- lin, ib. Londre, Six Mois a en 1816, tia, and Guastalla, 74 question " What is Love?" of the, 83 stormed by the British, 78 Keats, John, review of his Lunatic Asylums, review of a plan for erecting them in Lunatics, number of in Seot- Church of Scotland, review M'Avoy, Miss, a blind lady who reads by the touch, M.Gregor, Genera), evacu. at Athol House, 104 Macassar, curious treaty be- poems, 254 answer Magnetism, notice of a new Murthly Castle, the supposed ed to serve in, 88, 186, 246, 491 Patents lately enrolled, 86, Perth, account of its surren- Natural History, observations der to Montrose in 1644,316 Picts, on the origin of the 225 Pilniewinks, an instrument remote mountains of the ing, 214-Recent instances voyage to, 148 Pittenweem, horrid barbari. Netherlands, anti- commer. ties exercised there on per- Difference between the King craft, 199-Act of the Scot. tish Privy Council, and re- port of a committee on the Nepaulese and Goorkas, ob subject, 203, 206 lestiall Vestallis, ib.-An to the question Verses on a tragical event Norway, bread made from in a Highland Glen, 161- the bark of trees iv, 315 Lines written in early youth, ib. 163—On Friend. ship, ib. Song, ib. Glen 263-Highland Song, ib. O'Connor, Roger, Esq. trial Sonnet, 264_Stanzas, ib. of mail coach robbery, 85 the death of the Hon. Henry the notation employed in into the Scottish Church, tale, 364Sonnet on recei. ving the Scenes of Jpfancy -, remarks on the his. The Legend of St Rosalie, 46_Lady Margaret, an commerce and manufac. Polar ice, Captain Scoresby's observations on the, 414 Stewart's outlines of, 159 of Prussia, 173— Notice of jeu d'esprit, notice of, 261 state of Algiers, ac- view of, 361-Prizes pro the ruins of, 370 the encouragement of the the, 32-originated in the reign of Elizabeth, 34- Parliament, members return. sums collected under, at va- |