90 Yorkshire. 
M. Lewthwaite.—In Botchergate, 29, Mr. 
J. Liddie.—In Caldewbrow, 45, Mr. W. 
Cartmel.—31, Mr. J. Graham, of the firm 
of Messrs. Graham and Armstrong, soli- 
citors.—50, Mrs. Bonnell. 
At Maryport, 81, Mrs. S. Campbell.— 
Miss E. Fisher. 
At Wigton, 72, Mr. W. Cowen.—21, 
Miss E. Barton,—81, Mrs. J. Shepherd. 
At Longtown, ¢8, Mrs. Jolinston, de- 
servedly lamented.--At Shadwell Crook, 
Kirkandiews-on-Esk, 74, Mrs. M, Ridley. 
—At Little Bampton, 26, Miss M. 
Chicken, . much respected —At + Green 
Row, 32, Mr. J. Drape, deservedly re- 
gretted. 
At Carlisle, 35, Jeremiah, eldest son of 
the late Mr. Francis Jollie. He had long 
lingered in a gradual decay of nature, and, 
though his death was sudden, it was not 
altoyether unexpected. As a man, he 
possessed, in an eminent degree, the 
milder virtues of the heart—generous 
without. ostentation, and virtnous without 
affectation; those who knew him witnessed 
many instances of his sympathy for the 
distressed, and his veneration for the good. 
He had not the tinsel accomplishments of 
modern society, but his heart was a gem 
which shone brighter without them ; which 
was richly lustrous, though devoid of the 
meretricious  glitterings given by the 
lapidary fashion, As to the world he was 
a child,—unacquainted with deceit him- 
self, he never suspected it in others ; hence 
most of the embittered ingredients mingled 
in his life were occasioned by the hollow- 
ness of hypocritical friendship, and the 
treachery of plausible and obliged compa- 
nionship. As a patriot he was firm, vigo- 
rous, and. persevering—he despised syco- . 
phancy, and he detested tyranny,— corrup- 
tion had no baits for him, riches no temp- 
tation, ambition no allurements: he loved 
his country genuinely, fervently, and de- 
votedly—yet, much as he loved her, he 
loved freedom more; for the one he had 
the affection of a son, for the other the at- 
tachment of a lover. But no spot of 
earth could bound the sympathies of his 
soul—wherever.liberty waved her banner, 
there were his anxious looks and his fervent 
hopes. Man was his brother—French, 
Spaniard, Portuguese, African, Indian, 
American, Italian, Greek, struggling for 
freedom, had his prayer, and the tributes 
of his pen. Often has he been heard to ex- 
press his enthusiastic aspirations for the fate 
of America, of Italy, and of Greece, and de- 
clare that the delight of hissoul would be the 
liberation of Greece, and the regeneration 
of the British. Constitution—and that he 
might be living to see both. Asa writer, 
his style was nervous without being parti- 
cularly rugged, classical without being in 
the least pedantic :—he had an excellent 
knowledge of the dead, and some of the 
living, languages. He had great vigour 
[ Aug. 1, 
of thought and expression—the charaete- 
ristic of his productions being strength ra- 
ther than beauty; but his sentences told 
—they went home to the heart as much as 
to the head, without playing vound either 
the one or the other, 
YORKSHIRE, 
The exhibition of the Northern Society 
for the Encouragement of the Fine Arts 
closed on the 10th ult.: pictures to the 
amount of seven hundred and seventy-five 
pounds were sold. 
Messrs. Benyon and Co. Leeds, by the 
application of the smoke-burning apparatus 
of Messrs. Parkes, have recently suc- 
ceeded in consuming the smoke from 
their factory. 
The West Riding will shortly enjoy, it 
is expected, advantages hitherto unknown, 
from the improvements lately made on the 
Aire and Calder navigation, which were 
designed by the late Mr. Rennie. About 
300 workmen are already employed in this 
undertaking. It is calculated that in two 
years the work will be finished, and then 
vessels of a sufficient burihen to navigate 
any of the European seas with safety, may 
receive their cargoes at the town of Leeds. 
A fatal accident, occasioned by fire- 
damp, lately took place at the colliery of 
Messrs. Newboulds, near Shefhield, ‘Len 
of the workmen had just descended the pit 
where the gas bad accumulated, which, 
coming in contact with the lighted candle, 
ignited the vapour, and five men were 
killed. 
Marvied.] Mr. J. Sigsworth, to Miss 
Watkinson.—Mr. J. Robinson, to Miss 
Hawkins : all of York —Mr. J. Firth, to 
Miss M. Doughty: both of Hull—Mr. J. 
Bowes, of Leeds, to Miss E. Lord, of 
Lower Mills, Rochdale.—Mr. W. Brown, 
of Leeds, to Miss E. Harrison, of Wake- 
field. —Mr. J. Knowles, of Leeds, to. Miss 
M. Mount, of Laytonstone.—Mr, Farrar, 
of Doncaster, to Miss H. Watt, of Arm- 
thorpe.— Mr. W. Ibbotson, to Miss 
Gallon, both of Knaresborough.—Mr, J. 
Gill, of Halifax, to. Miss 8. Wooler, of 
Ledger Mill.—Mr. J. Wharton, to Miss S. 
Chapman, both of Bradford.—Mr. W. 
Bentley, of Skipton, to Miss E. Mason, of 
Croft-house.— Godfrey Wentworth, jun. 
esq. of Woolley-park, to Miss Fawkes, of 
Farnley-hall—_Mr. W. Spencer, to Miss 
M. Lister, both of Addingham.—Mr, D. 
Scholefield, of Whitkirk, to Miss S. Schole- 
field, of Leeds.—Harry Croft, esq. of Stel- 
lington, to Miss E. Charlton, of Apley- 
castle, : 
Died.| At York, Mrs. Cartley.—78, 
Mr. Cordukes.—47, Mr. E. W. Rhodes. 
At Hull, 55, Mr. Jas. Horner.—In 
Nile-street, the Rev. J. Hawkesley, late of 
Aldermanbury, London.—76, Mrs. E. Grey. 
At Leeds, in Woodhouse-lane, Mr. 
J. Bray.—43, My, R. Randerson—Mr. W. 
May. 
