1824-.] 



«S(/. late a Lieut.-Col.in the Bengal Army. 



Ill Qiieen-sqiiare, Westminster, 60, 

 3Irs. Margaret Lees. 



In Surrey-street, Strand, 70, Richard 

 Carter, fsq. 



At Thistle Grove, Brompton, 76, George 

 Devon, csfj. 



C. It. M. Molloy, esq. late Capt. in the 

 Grenadier Guards. 



In Mortimer-street, Cavendish-square, 

 78, Lieut -Gen. John Simon Farley. 



In George-street, Hanover-square, Mrs. 

 Heaviside, wife of surgeon H. esq. 



In Grosveuor-strcet, 92, the Hon. Hen- 

 rittla IP'alpole. 



In Cornhill, 70, Mrs. Bradshaw. 



At Wallliauistow, 64, Richard Stain- 

 forth, exq. 



Mr. Edmund Marsden, 58, of Soulhwark, 

 a respectable hop and seed merchant. 



At Harefield, Middlesex, 66, Robert 

 George Spedding, esq. of Golden-heart 

 Wharf, Dowgale. 



In London, Joseph Kemp, iw.u. of Sidney 

 tollcge, Cambridije, and author of many 

 productions esteemed by the musical 

 world. 



In York-place, City-road, 63, IVilliam 

 Jones, es(f. late of Mortoii-on-Marsh, Glon- 

 cestershne. 



At Crooni's-hill, Greenwich, 19, Mis. 

 Cruickshank, wife of Capt. C. 



In Dean-stiett, Soho, Richard West, esq. 

 oi St. Alban's, generally and jusily es- 

 teemed and lamented. 



At Hammersmith, 83, T. Biirnell, esq. 



In Gloucester-place, Portman-sqiiarc, 

 69, Philip Uiukam, esq. 



In Drury-lane, Mr. Oxberry, the come- 

 <lian. 31 r. Oxberry was born in London, 

 in 1784, and was intended by his father, a 

 respectable tradesman in the parish of St. 

 Luke, to be an artist; but after being some 

 time with Mr. Stubbs, and aflerwards two 

 years and a half m a bookseller's shop, he 

 became aojiiainted with a company who 

 played at a private tlieati", whom he 

 joined. His first appearance on the Lon- 

 don boards was at Covent-gardeii Theatre, 

 Nov. 7, 1807, and from that time he became 

 a favourite in the metropolis. In addition 

 to the profession of an actor, he kept a 

 tavern and wine vaults. He was also a 

 printer, and had an extensive establishment 

 at Camberwell. In this occupation he 

 edited a series of plays, and some other 

 works connecled with the stage, all of 

 which have enjoyed considerable popu- 

 larity. His death was sudden, and in the 

 prime of life; and we are sorry to learn 

 that he has left a widow and children uii- 

 provided for, although he was a blameless, 

 ingenious, and industrious man. 



At East-Hoi^eley, Surrey, 70, the Rev. 

 John Ouen, ma. rector of liastHorselcy, 

 of St. Bennett's, Paul's Wharf, Lomlon, 

 Arciidcacuu of Kichuiond, ia the North- 



lyeatlis in andnetir London. 



663 



Riding of this connly, and Cllapla^o-Geue- 

 raf to the Forces. 



In Bedford-row, Mr. Sergeant Manley, 

 a Connnissioner of the Excise, and for- 

 merly Attorney General of the Chester 

 Circuit, and an active barrister. 



In Lower Grosvenor-street, Lord Henry 

 Thomas Howard Molyiuux Howard, Deputy 

 Earl Marshal of Euglaud, and brother t» 

 tlie Duke of Norfolk. He represented 

 Gloucester ni several parliaments, and sat 

 in the present parliauient for Steynin". 



At her residence, Seymour-place, Little 

 Chelsea, Donna Maria Therem de Riego y 

 Riego, widow of General Don Rafael del 

 Kiego y Riego. This lady, whose fortunes 

 have so deeply interested pubhc sympathy 

 was the daughter of Don Joaquim del 

 Riego y Biistillo, and Donna Josefa del 

 Riego Florez. She was born on the 15th 

 ot May, 1800, in the town of Tineo, capi- 

 fal of the district of the same name, in the 

 province of Asturias, and was the eldest of 

 seven children, having, at the time of her 

 death, three brothers and three sisters liv- 

 ing, all of whom were separated from her 

 by the fatalities of civil war, except one 

 sister, Donna Lncie, whom neither peril 

 nor privation could distract from the exer- 

 cise ot that regard and atfeulion which she 

 was able to manifest under every trial. 

 Within three montiis after her arrival iii 

 London, the sanguinary act was perpe- 

 trated which extinguished every present 

 consolation and future hope. The accoinit 

 «t his death reached her on the loth of 

 November. Her poor frauie could no 

 longer rally or resist; she wa'>ted and 

 withered daily under the corroding inHii. 

 ence of a tedious decline, and at length 

 closed her unhappy course in the e'tn- 

 braces of her sister, attended by her 

 devoted protector, the estimable canon 

 and several distinguished and faithful Spa- 

 niards, who had, to the latest moment, en- 

 joyed the confidence and adhered to' the 

 foi tunes of her husband, and never failed 

 in proofs of respect, attention, and regard, 

 towards the unfortunate widow. 



In King-street, Holboni, of a rapid 

 decline, Mr. James George Burlice, in the 

 21st year of his age, a yoimg man of 

 singular self-acquiied attainments and ex- 

 emplary virtne. In 1817 he sufiered the 

 amputation of his right arm, which opera- 

 tion he bore with a fortitude seldom 

 equalled. In a short time after he re- 

 ceived the Minerva medal from the 

 Society of Arts, fbr a drawing of a por- 

 trait, executed with his left hand, on which 

 occasion his Royal Hiijliness the Duke of 

 Sussex, in presenting him with the medal, 

 evinced the most sympathetic feeling. 

 In 1817 he presented to the Society of 

 Arts a dravviiig of his Royal Highness the 

 Duke of Sussex, executed also with big 

 left hand. At the age of 16 he fiuished a 



work 



