192 . 
SCOTLAND. 
Married.| At Edinburgh, J. Dallyell, 
esq. of the 3d Dragoon Guards, to Miss J, 
Anstruther, of Balcaskie—George Cleg- 
hora, esq. of Weens, county of Roxburgh, 
to Miss M.C. Dalton, of Sleningford-hall, 
Yorkshire. 
Died.) At Glasgow, Capt. Aveling, of 
the 77th reot. 
At Dumfries, Mr. J. Richardson, 
IRELAND. 
We fee] it impossible to record all the 
burnings, assassinations, and bloody con- 
flicts, of which the S.W. counties have pre- 
sented instances within the month. 
A county meeting was lately held at Kil- 
kenny, when 2 series of resolutions, and a 
petition founded thereon, for the removal 
of the Catholic disabilities, were agreed 
to. Mr. T. Barnes, in seconding the re- 
solutions, said, “It was the wish of his 
majesty’s ministérs to have a general ex- 
pression of public sentiment on the sub- 
ject.” We heartily wish them success. 
Ata meeting of the landowners of the 
parish of Arglish, in the county of Water- 
ford, on the 24th ult. resolutions were pas- 
sed to the following eifect: That many far- 
‘mers are indebted for several years’ arrears 
of tythes, which they have no means or 
prospect of ever being able to discharge : 
that the long tolerated and accumulating 
arrears show the charge to have been ‘at 
first exorbitant; and that, as no advan- 
tage can be derived for holding men ac- 
countable for sums they are unable to pay, 
such debts should be compounded for, or 
remitted. To the Duke of Devonshire, 
who is patron of the same village of Ar- 
glish, a memorial was voted, which states 
that a few tenants hold farms of a hundred 
acres or upwards, “but the bulk of the 
parishioners are poor and indigent, many 
Scotland—Abroad. 
-{Mareh 1, 
being wretched cottagers, to all intents and 
purposes, as real beggars as any of those 
who crave charity on the highways.’ They 
proceed to complain of the system of tythe- 
farming, and mention the case -of “a 
wretched man, at this moment, in this in- 
clement season of the year, who, with a 
family of five children, has been deprived 
of their only means of subsistence, by his 
potatoes being seized and detained for a 
sum of forty shillings, which has arisen by 
costs and expeices, on account of fifteen 
shillings: tithe.” 
Married | Haliiday Bruce, esq. of Dub 
lin, to Miss A. Brue, of Bristol —At 
Charlestown, T. Leeke, esq. barrister, to 
nna Shaw, daughter of the Hon. Matt. 
Plunkett.— George William Blathwayt, 
esq. of the Ist, or King’s Dragoon Guards, 
to Miss Marianne Vesez, of Magherafelt. 
Died.| At Dublin, 78, Richard Nevill, 
esq. teller of the exchequer, in Ireland.— 
Mrs. Wolseley, widow of Rev. William W- 
At Cork, 88, the Rev. Dr. Atterbury, 
precentor of Cloyne, rector and vicar of 
the uvion of Clonmell, grandson of Atter- 
bury, bishop of Rochester. c nat 
At Glynn, county of Antrim, George 
Anson M‘Cleverty, esq. — 108, Lewis 
O' Dynell, esq. of Brew, county of Mayo. 
ABROAD. 
Died.) At British Accra, on the coast of 
Africa, onthe tth of October Jast, in his 
32nd year, Anthony Calvert Hutton, esq. 
merchant, elder son of William Bernard 
Hutton, of Watling-street, in the City of 
Loudon, merchant. He was a pattern to 
the best in filial and brotherly affection, a 
most faithful and sincere friend, and very 
good Christian: his memory will be ever 
‘fondly revered by a large circle of friends, 
but most by the writer of this, for she 
knew him best. 
TO CORRESPONDENTS 
We thank our Edinburgh Friend, but aswe do not see the Magazine to which he 
alludes, and it is we believe, unseen south of the Tweed, its impertinences neither 
affect nor disturbus. In regard to malignant libellers, we feel in regard to them, just 
as we should with respect to a groupe of Toads who, when disturbed in their ditches or © 
holes, spit their venom, but without effect or anneyance. 
At page 138 of the presen Number, in the paragraph relative to Davip WILLIAMS, 
Jor “ communing” read “ commanding.” 
Many articles will elim special attention in this Number. The Jirst paper solves a 
problem which hitherto has baffled enquiry. 
has nothing superior in the language. 
The second, asa display of wit and satire, 
In tours and foreign letters—we are eminently 
rich in the Journey in Columbia, in the Letiers from Persia, in the Your in Wales, in 
the highly interesting article of H. Pouquevilie, and in the important information con- 
tained in Capt. Raynes Route, which we regret we could not afford to illustrate with a 
map. .TheL’Ape italiana and tke German Student, present modern-subjects. The 
Philosophy of Criticism will be found to maintain tts spirit—and in pure Belles Let- 
tres, the article oi, the Old Ballad andon Hr. Thelwalls Poetry will afford gratifica~ 
tion. The Lriter on Gibbon, and Mr. BAKEWELL’S ingenious suggestion, merit respect. 
The Poetry, ike Steprensiana, always curious and original, the Public: Societies, 
Patents, Varieties, Chemical Report, Critical Proemium, §c. §c. will be found rich in 
materials ; and in the Public Affairs, we have been so fortunute as to procure a Par- 
Viamentary copy of the New POPULATION ABSTRACT, which has noi been otherwise 
published. ; 
