CHRONICLE. 



177 



Prince Joseph of Lorraine. 



M. Sonini, the celebrated French 

 traveller. 



Brockmann, a celebrated actor in 

 Vienna, on whose death the thea- 

 tre was closed for ten nights. 



June. 



2. Lady Glynne, relict of Sir 

 Stephen Glynne, Bart. 



At Paris, Vice- Admiral de Winter, 

 long commander of theDutchfleet, 

 and distinguished for bravery and 

 humanity. 



9. Sir F. Molyneux, Bart, aged 

 75. He had held for upwards of 46 

 years the office of gentleman-usher 

 of the Black Rod to the House of 

 Lords. 



11. Rev. Dr. Moodie, a minister 

 of Edinburgh, and Hebrew pro- 

 fessor in the University. 



12; The Rev. Philip Parsons, 

 M. A. Rector of Eastwell and 

 Snave,andministerofWye,inKent, 

 aged 83. He was exemplary in 

 the discharge of his clerical duty, 

 as well as of that of master of the 

 school at Wye, where many of the 

 first gentlemen of the county were 

 educated under him. He was the 

 author of several works in verse and 

 prose, among which were, a paper 

 in The World, on advertising for 

 curates ; New-market, or an Essay 

 on the Turf; Dialogues of the 

 Dead with the Living ; and Monu- 

 ments in Churches in the Eastern 

 Parts of Kent. 



14-. Mr. George McAllister, pro- 

 fessor of the art of painting and 

 staining of glass at Dublin, in 

 which he had arrived at great ex- 

 cellence, when he was cut off at the 

 early age of 26. 



22. Richard Kinuan, Esq. F.R.S. 

 President of the Royal Irish 



Vol. LIV. 



Academy, and of the Dublin Li-* 

 brary Society, member of the most 

 considerableliterarysocieties in Eu- 

 rope, and universally known among 

 the votaries of science by his valu- 

 able writings in chemistry, miner- 

 alogy, and other branches of know- 

 ledge. 



25. The Dowager Lady Harring- 

 ton, relict of Sir J. Harrington, 

 Bart. 



Mr. Harrison, a celebrated vocal 

 performer, for many j'ears the lead- 

 ing tenor singer in the kingdom, 

 distinguished for sweetness, taste, 

 and expression. 



26. Charles Stedman, Esq. of 

 the StaaipofHce, author of a his- 

 tory of the American war. 



At Clifton, of a decline, Philip 

 Mallet, Esq. Barrister at law, This 

 gentleman possessed in an extra- 

 ordinary degree the affection and 

 esteem of his friends, on account of 

 the noble independence of his spi- 

 rit, his frankness, strict honour, vir- 

 tue, and philanthropy. His politi- 

 cal principles were tiiose of the 

 purest advocates for reform, and 

 he maintained them with great en- 

 ergy on various public occasions ; 

 nor can it be doubted that if his 

 health had i>ermitted, he would 

 have become a distinguished speak- 

 er. He was singularly studious, 

 and greatly attached to the philo- 

 sophy of the human mind, of which 

 he gave proof by his Abridgment 

 of Locke on the Human Under- 

 standing ; and his editions of Ba- 

 con on the Advancement of Hu- 

 man Learning ; and Hobbes on Hu- 

 man Nature, and on Liberty and 

 Necessity, with an elaborate life of 

 the author prefixed, which he just 

 lived to finish. These publication*, 

 valuable in themselves, give a fore- 

 taste of what might have been ex- 



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