478 
Victories never before equalled, 
> Yet afterwards surpassed by his own 
last achievement, 
The BATTLE of TRAFALGAR! 
Fought on the 21st of October, in the year 
1805. 
ON THAT DAY, 
Before the conclusion of the Action 5 
He Fell, mortally wounded! 
But the sources of Life and Sense failed not 
until it was known to him that the 
Destruction of the enemy being completed, 
The glory of his Country and his own had , 
attained their summit 5 
Tken laying his hand on bis brave heart, 
With a look of exalted resignation to the will 
OF THE 
Supreme Disposer of the fate of man and 
nations, 
HE EXPIRED. 
"The Lord-Mayor, Aldermen, and Common- 
Council, of the city of London, 
_ Have caused this Monument to be erected 5 
Wot in the presumptuous hope of sustaining 
the departed Hero’s memory, 
But to manifest their estimation of the Man, 
And their admiration of his deeds. 
This testimony of their gratitude, they trust, 
will remain as long 
As their own renowned city shall exist. 
THE PERIOD TO 
NELSON’s FAME can only be the End of 
> Time. 
The committee appointed to carry into’ ex- 
ecution the resolution ef the Lord Mayor, 
Aldermen, and Common Council, of the city. 
ef London, for erecting a statue of his Ma- 
jesty (in marble) in the Council Chamber at 
Guildhall, have adopted the model of Mr. 
Chantrey, which represents his Majesty 
Standing in his robes, in the act of answering 
an address of the city of London, which ad- 
dress he holds in his left hand, inthe form of 
a scroll, marked with the city arms.—In the 
back ground is a pediment, on which are de- 
cribed the emblems of commerce, agri- 
culture, the arts, and manufactures: and the 
pediment supports the globe, on which are 
delineated the tracks observed by the prin- 
’ cipal circumnavigators of the present reign, 
encircled by the British flag. ©This emblem 
is characteristic of the triumphant command 
the British flag possesses in every part of the 
world, the natural and necessary consequence _ 
of the splendour of our naval superiority. 
The figure of his Majesty is graceful and well 
proportioned. Mr. Chantrey has also been 
particularly happy in the choice of his em- 
blems, and pays a well-merited compliment 
to our Sovereign for that liberal pretection 
which his Majesty has extended tothe finearts. 
MARRIED, 
At St. Michael Bassishaw, Mr. F. G. 
Marriages and Deaths in and near London. 
[June ?, 
Amici, of Basinghall-street, to Elizabeth, 
eldest daughter of Charles Hicks, esq. of 
Finsbury Square. ; 
At St. Margaret’sy; Westminster, Lievte« 
nant-colonel Hugh Sutherland, to Anny 
daughter of the late Hector Mackay, esq. of 
Streatham. 
At St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, Mr. John 
Parkinson, of Kingsland-road, to Diana, se+ 
cond daughter of James Chappell, esq. 
At Mary-le-bone, the Rev. George Mure 
ray, to Lady Sareh Maria Hay.—-Robert 
Bateson, esq. of Belvoir Park, in the county 
of Down, only son of Thomas Bateson, esqy 
of Orange Field, in, the same county, to 
Catherine, youngest daughter of Samucl 
Dickson, ,esq..of the county of Limerick. 
William Wilkins, esq. of Manchester-streety 
architect, to Miss Alicia Murphy, of New 
Cavendish-street. ; 
At St. George’s, Hanover-square, H. T. 
King, esq. of Soho-square, to Miss Knight, 
of Sloane-street. f 
At St. James’s, Mr. George Bedford, of 
Bath, to Olivia Frances, only daughter of 
Colonel Smith, of the Island of St. He- 
lena. 
At St. Martin’s in the Fields, Mr. P. Whit- 
worth, youngest son of William W. esq. of 
Aswardby, Lincolnshire, to Miss Harriet 
Cooper, of Grantham. 
At St. Giles’s in the Fields, William, 
second son of George Ward, esq. of Beile 
Vue, Isle of Wight, to Emily, filth daughter 
of H. C. Combe, esq. M. P. 
. At St. Margaret’s, Westminster, Edwin 
Corbett, esq. major in the Cheshire militia, 
to Anne, second daughter of John Black. 
burne, esq. M. P. for Lancashire. — Wm. Ed- 
ward Tomline, esq- to Frances, only daughter 
of the late John Amler, esq- of Ford Hall, 
Shropshire. 
At Deptford, Mr. Samuel Ralph, surgeon, 
of Tunbridge, to Miss Dornford, one of the 
the grand-daughters of the late Josiah 
D. esq. 
At Lambeth, Thomas Hayter, esq. of 
Brixton-hill, to Miss Wooding- 
At Lewisham, Hanson Berry, esq. eldest 
son of Sir Jolin Berry, bart. te Elizabeth Ann, 
daughter of Henry Tahourdin, esq. of Sy- 
denham. : 
At Newington, the Rev. Edward Andrews, 
of Romford, to Miss Bayley, daughter of the 
late P. B. esq. of Nantwich, Cheshire. 
At St. George’s, Southwark, - William 
Mackay, M. D. of the Royal Navy, to Ame- 
lia, youngest daughter of the late J, C. Des 
bell, esq. of Bath. > 
Rafael de Cruz Guerriero, secretary of 
legation from the Prince Regent of Portugal 
to the court of London, to Evelyn Palyarty 
daughter of Ignatius P, esq. of Bedford 
Place, Russel Square. nei 
DIED. 
