498 
might have appeared in his writings 
against its precepts and constitution. 
His obsequies were celebrated on the 
14th, in the Metropolitan church of 
Notre Dame. A deputation of the 
institute went to the house where the 
body lay, and attended it to the bury- 
ing ground of Vaugirard, where it 
was deposited. Previous to the in- 
terment, Mr, Fontanes, the friend 
and colleague of Ja Harpe, pro- 
nounced a manly and sympathetic 
oration*. 
At Edinburgh, Miss Jean Alex- 
ander, daughter of the late Wm. A. 
lord provost and M. P. of that city. 
10th. In Grosvenor-place, Mrs. 
Long, sister to the late, and aunt to 
the present, sir James Tilney Long, 
bart. 
On the island of Bermuda, the la- 
dy of vice-admiral sir Andrew Mit- 
chell, K. B, 
~ 11th. In Ireland, the hon. Jas, 
Tenson, second son of the late lord 
Reversdale. 
In his 26th year, capt. Heary 
West, of the royal navy. His death 
was occasioned by a very severe ac- 
cident, a few days before, while 
fencing with his fencing-master, 
when, the latter making a strong 
lunge, the foil broke through the 
mask, and breaking also, the splin- 
tered piece entered his mouth, and 
penetrated his throat, lacerating his 
neck ina shocking, manner. 
12th. At his lordship’s palace, 
in the arms of its mother, in the cha- 
pel, shortly after the ceremony of 
baptism, the infant daughter of Mr. 
‘Moore, eldest son-of the archbishop 
of Canterbury. 
At Bath, the hon. Mrs. Bagwell, 
eldest daughter of the late lord 
Graves. 
At Munich, aged ‘three years, 
* Vide Characters. 
ANNUAL REGISTER, 
1803. 
prince Maximilian, of Bavaria, third 
son of the elector. 
One Felsted, drinking at the Ge- 
nervous Briton, in Newark, Not- 
tinghamshire, and trying how much 
ale he could guzzle down in a short 
time, took sucha quantity, as to ec- 
casion immediate suffocation and 
death. 
Interred, in the family vault at 
Yardley, co. Herts, the remains of 
Mrs. Elizabeth Cheaney, of Bunting- 
ford, aged 91, relict of Butler C. 
esq. of Littlecourt, in the same 
county, and daughter of sir Pynsent 
Charnock, bart. of Holcot, co. Bed- 
ford. 
2ist. At Paris, in her 90th year, 
mademoiselle Dumesnil, a celebrated 
actress. 
At Gringley, near Gainsborough, 
one of the children of Mr. William- 
sou; on the 23d another; and, on 
the 24th, by grief, his wife, who was 
in a state of pregnancy, they were 
all buried in one coffin. ; 
23d. At Richmond, Surry, Ed- 
ward Constable, esq: of Burton 
Constable, in Holderness, in the 
east riding of Yorkshire. He was 
generally styled the lord of Holder- 
ness, being possessed of the richest 
part of that fine grazing district, si- 
tuated on the Humber, to the extent 
of 16,0001. per annum. Mr. C.. 
was highly accomplished ; had lived 
in the best societies both at home 
and abroad ; and annually expend- 
ed 20001. in benevolences of the most 
disinterested and liberal kind. Dy- 
ing without issue, he is succeeded by 
his next brother, Francis Sheldon, 
esq. who, with this fine estate, be- 
comes possessed also of one of the 
best furnished houses and libraries 
in England, as heir-looms appertain- 
ing thereto. . 
26th. The 
