be 
CHRONICLE. 
Narbonne, primate of the Gauls, 
president of the states of Lan- 
guedoc, and commander of the 
order of the Holy Ghost. This 
venerable prelate, who was emi- 
pently distinguished for his know- 
ledge, talents, and eloquence, was 
the youngest brother of Henry the 
eleventh lord viscount Dillon, of 
Jreland, and son ofthe honourabte 
Arthur Dillon, third son of ‘Theo- 
bald seventh viscount Dillon, a 
marshal-de-camp, and lieutenant-ge- 
neral in the French service. He 
was born at St. Germain-en-Laye, 
1721; ordained bishop of Evreux, 
Oct. 28, 1753; archbishop of 
Thoulouse, 17583 archbishop of 
Narbonne, 1762; and commander 
of the order of the Holy Ghost, 
1776. When the revolution took 
place in France, which was a total 
subversion of every principle that 
all good men hold dear aad sacred, 
he retired to this country, where he 
has since constantly resided, pre- 
ferring the sacrifice of his high rank 
and situation, to a dereliction of 
those principles cf duty and honour 
which uniformly guided his conduct 
through a long and meritorious life. 
At half after nine in the morning 
of the 1ith, all that remains in 
England of the ancient royal family 
and nobility of France, began to 
assemble at the French Catholic 
chapel, in Little George-street, 
King-street, Portman-square, to do 
honour to his obsequies. M. M. 
Colbert, bishop of Rhodes, per- 
formed the service in his full ponti. 
ficals, in the presence of all the other 
emigrant French bishops now in 
London, and a great number of the 
most distinguished of the French 
nobility, with the crosses and rib- 
bons of the different orders to which 
they belong. After the usual 
54h 
prayers and anthems, the body was 
removed in a hearse and six, fol- 
lowed by four mourning-coaches, 
lord Dillon’s, lord Trimblestown’s, 
anda private gentleman’s carriage, 
to St. Pancras church-yard, where 
prayers were again read by the bi- 
shop of Rhodes. In the carriages 
were several bishops and other ec. 
clesiasties, as well as his relations 
and friends. 
At Coburg, in his 53d year, ofan 
inflammation of the Jungs, prince 
Lewis-Charles-Frederick of Saxe. 
Coburg, brother of the reigning 
duke of that name, and lieutenant- 
generalin the service of the emperor 
of Austria. 
7th. At Stansted-Bury, Herts, 
sincerely lamented by his family and 
friends, in his’ 8@d year, captain 
Jocelyn, of the royal navy. He was 
son of lieutenant-colonel J, and 
descended, in the same degree of re- 
lationship with the late earl of Ro- 
den, from sir Robert J. bart. of 
Hyde-hall, near Sawbridgeworth, 
Herts. He married klizabeth 
daughter and sole heiress of John 
Salusbury, esq. of Brynybarcutt, co. 
Denbigh ; by whom he had two sons 
and two daughters; the eldest a 
captain in» the 58th foot, now in 
Sicily; the youngest, a youth of 
great promise, who was a lieutenant ~ 
in the same regiment, fell, in his 
18th year, in Egypt, on the ever- 
memorable 21st of March, 1801, 
when the brave Abercrombie re- 
ceived his death-wound. CaptainJ. 
was entered in the navy at a very 
early age, and fora long series of’ 
years faithfully served his king and 
country. He was tord Anson’s first 
lieutenant in the Royal George, and 
acquitted himself with great credit, 
and the acknowledged satisfaction 
of his noble commander, who ex- 
prassed 
