124 



Chronology, Mdrriagesy and Deaths. 



\_3viLr, 



His Majesty commands u8 to assure you that he 

 will continue to use his utmost endeavours to pre- 

 vent the extension of hostilities, and to promote 

 the restoration of peace. — It is wltii satisfaction 

 His Majesty informs you.tliat he has been enabled 

 to renew his Diplomatic Relations with the Otto- 

 man Porte.— Tlie Ambassadors of His Majesty- 

 and of the King of France, are on their return to 

 Constantinople ; and llie Emperor of Russia, hav- 

 ing been pleased to authorise the Plenipotentiaries 

 of his Allies to act on behalf of his Imperial Ma- 

 jesty, the negociations for the final pacification of 

 Greece will be carried on in the name of the 

 Three Contracting Parties to the Treaty of Lon- 

 don. — The Army of his Most Christian Majesry 

 has been withdrawn from the Morea, with the 

 exception of a small force destined, for a time, to 

 assist in the establishment of order in a country 

 which has so long been the scene of confusion and 

 anarchy. — It is with increased regret tliat His 

 Majesty again adverts to the condition of the Por- 

 tuguese Jlonarchy. But His Majesty commands 

 us to repeat his determination to use every effort 

 to reconcile conflicting interests, ai}d to remove 

 the evils which prcs.« so heavily upon a country- 

 the prosperity of which must ever be an object of 

 His Majesty's solicitude. 



" Gentlemen of the House of Commons — His 

 Majesty commands us to thank you for the sup- 

 plies which you have granted for the service of 

 the year, and to assure you of His Majesty's de- 

 termination to apply them with every attention to 

 economy. 



" My Lords and Gentlemen — His Majesty has 

 commanded us, in conclusion, to express the sin- 

 cere hope of His Majesty, that the important mea- 

 sures which have been adopted by Parliament, in 

 the course of the present Ses^ion, may tend, under 

 the blessing of Divine Providence, to establish the 

 tranquillity and improve the condition of Ireland : 

 and that by strengthening the bonds of union be- 

 tween the several parts of this Great Empire, they 

 may consolidate and augment its power, and pro- 

 mote the happiness of his people." 



MARRIAGES. 

 At St. James's church, T. Gable, esq., to Maria, 

 daughter of the late Sir Christoplier Willoughby, 

 Bart. — R. Dering, esq., nephew of Sir E. Uering, 

 Bart., to Letilia, second daughter of Sir Johu 

 Sbee, Cart.— At Hjldersham, W. Stutiield, esq., 

 of Tavistock- square, to Mary, only child of John 

 Burgoyne, esq. — At Bramdean, Sir John Maxwell 

 Tyldeji, Bart., to Miss Elizabeth Walsh.— At 

 Bloomsbury, Rev. W. Brownlow, to Miss Fanny 

 Chambers, grand-daughter of the late Sir R. 

 Chambers, Chief Justice of Bengal. — At Mary-le- 

 bone, W. Wood, esq., youngest son of Alderman 

 Wood,M.P.,-to Miss Morris.— At Bath, W. W. 

 Huntley, esq., to Emily Theresa Versturme, eldest 

 daughter of Sir L. Versturme. 



DEATHS. 

 At M'ilbraham, Rev. J. Stevenson, 92 ; he had 

 been vicar of that place 67 years, chaplain of 

 Trinity College 60 years, aud rector of Allerton 

 53 years J he was senior member of Cambridge 

 University. — In Fenchurch-buildings, H. Riving- 

 ton, esq. — At Highgate, near Birmingham, Jane, 

 wile of \y. Hamper, esq. — Dr. C. Lloyd, Bishop of 

 Oxford.— At Woodstone. Rev. J. Bringhurst, 75 ; 

 he had "been rector of that place half a century. — 



In the Isle of Wight, Arthnr Vansittart, esq. — In 

 St. Jaines'ssqnare, Capt. S. Ei'Sl<ine, second son 

 of the Earl of Rosslyn.— In the King's Bench pri- 

 son, where he had been confined since 1813, J. 

 Pytches, esq., formerly -SI.P. for Sudbury. — At 

 Hammersmith, A. S. Scott, sister of Sir David 

 Scott, Bart.— At Oundle, Mr. T. Haynes, 70, 

 author of several works on Horticulture. — Hon. 

 Henry Leeson ; he was drowned in Belvedere 

 Lake, Mnllingar, by being suddenly overset in a 

 small boat while talking to his Inotherthe Earl of 

 Miltown.— At Brighton, LordThnrlow.— At Plas- 

 newydd Cottage, Llanuollen, Lady Eleanor Char- 

 lotte Butler. She was daughter of the 16th, and 

 sister to the 17th Earl of Ormondand Ossory.and 

 aunt to the late aud present Marquis of Ormond. 

 For the last 50 years, Lady Eleanor Buller was 

 the faithful and affectionate companion of Miss 

 Ponsonby, at their beautiful retreat at Llangollen. 

 It is impossible almost to describe the feelings of 

 the inhabitants at her funeral ; all the shops were 

 closed, business at a stand, and scarcely a dry eye 

 to be seen. All who could afford it were attired 

 in deep mourning. The body was interred in the 

 same vault in Llangollen church-yard, in which 

 repose the remains of a faithful servant, Mrs. 

 Mary Carrol, who accompanied those ladies from 

 the sister kingdom, to their secluded seat, tho 

 abode of literature, taste, and benevolence, Plas- 

 newydd, Llangollen. — At Ryde, Hannah Jane, 

 wife of Sir H.Thompson, Bart. — At Winchester, 

 Aaron Fernandez Nunez, esq. — At Bath, Lady 

 Holbourne, relict of Sir F. Hnlbourne, Bart — At 

 Bristol, Adricn Moens,esq., Consul to the King of 

 the Netherlands. — At Craikhope, William Beattie, 

 95 ; he lived under the same family from eight 

 years old, and when the Roxburgh Border So- 

 ciety instituted a premium for the oldest servant 

 iu theircounty, it was adjudged to him. — At Ceul, 

 Lady Mackenzie. — At Bath, Sir W. Burroughs, 

 formerly M.P. at Taunton, and many years Ad- 

 vocate-General to the East-India Company at Cat 

 cutta, and Puisne Judge at that presidency. — In 

 Portnian- square, the Dowager Viscountess MeU 

 ville. — In Great George-street, Lady Eliiabeth 

 Fane, 78, relict of J. Fane, esq., M.P. for Oxford- 

 shire, aud sister to the Earl of Macclesfield. — At 

 Cadelry, E. Whittle, esq., 101.— At Northlajids, 

 the Rev. G. A. F. Chichester, youngest son of the 

 late Lord Spencer and Lady Harriet Chichester. 

 —At Midfield, Sir J. F. Drummond, Bart.— In St. x 

 Janies's-place, T. Bonham, second son of J. B. 

 Caster, esq., M.P. — In the Ide of Wight, Lady 

 Thompson, daughter of the late Hon. Sir George 

 Grey. — At SoLo, liirmingham, Marian, wife of 

 M. R. Bolton, esq.— At Rosehill, Bath, G. Baker, 

 esq. — At the Manse of Falkirk, the Rev. Dr. 

 James Wilson, 76, author of " A Histoi-y of 

 Egypt." — The Hon. T. Stapleton, eldest son of 

 Lord Le Despencer. — .^t Cheltenham, the Hon. 

 Sophia Walpole, relict of the Hon. R. Walpole, 

 Minister at the Court of Lisbon. — T, Wilson, 

 esq., merchant in the city, and Consul for Den- 

 mark. — .At Chester, John Singleton, 97, who rode 

 Lord Rockingham's brown bay filly in 1776, the 

 first year of the Leger. 



MARRIAGES ABROAD. 



At the Palace Chapel, Malta, T. L. Gnoch, esq. 



sou of Sir T. Good], Bart. 31. P., to Anne Europa, 



daughter of Colonel the Hon. W. H. Gardner, 



and niece to the late Vice Admiral Viscouut 



