174 ANNUAL REGISTER, 1818. [Dec. 



Supporter. THE CHIEF MOURNER. Supporter. 



Train-bearers. 



Assistants to the Chief Mourner. 



Princes of the blood Royal. 



Train-bearers. 



Tlie Vice-Chamberlain to her late Majesty. 



Mistress of the Robes. 



Ladies of the Bedchamber. 



Keeper of the Robes. 



Women of the Bedchamber to her late Majesty. 



Maids of Honour. 



Women Attendants to her late Majesty. 



Ten Gentlemen Pensioners, with their axes reversed. 



Forty Yeomen of the Guard, with their partizans reversed. 



Upon entering the Choir, the 

 Royal Body will be placed on a 

 platform, and the Crowia and 

 Cushion laid on the CofBn. 



The Chief Mourner will sit on 

 a chair at the head of the Corpse. 

 The Supporters on either side. 



The Princes of the Blood 

 Royal will sit near the Chief 

 Mourner. 



The Lord Chamberlain of her 

 late Majesty will take his place 

 at the feet of the corpse, and the 

 Supporters of the Pall their places 

 near the Royal bodj'. 



During the service the Knights 

 of the Garter present will occupy 

 their respective stalls ; the Judges, 

 Ministers of State, Nobility, and 

 Great Officers of the Household, 

 will be placed in the vacant and 

 intermediate stalls; the Ladies 

 Attendants in the seat below the 

 stalls on the north side nearest 

 the altar ; the officers of the 

 Duchy of Cornwall, the Grooms 

 of the Bedchamber, Law officers, 

 &c. in the seat below the stalls on 

 the soutli side nearest the altar ; 

 the Physicians, Equerries, &c. in 

 the front seats on either side ; the 

 Gentlemen Ushers, Pages, &c. 

 will be arranged on either side, 

 below the altar. 



The part of the service before 

 the interment, and the Anthem 

 being performed, the Royal Body 

 will be deposited in the vault ; 

 and the Service concluded, Sir 

 Isaac Heard, Garter, will pro- 

 nounce, near the grave, the styles 

 of her late Majesty. 



N. B. The Knights of the 

 several Orders who walk in the 

 procession will wear their respec- 

 tive Collars. 



The procession from the en- 

 trance to the choir, within the 

 Chapel, will be flanked by the 

 Grenadiers of the Foot Guards, 

 every fourth man bearing a flam- 

 beau. 

 Henry Howard-Molyneux- 



HowARD, Dep. Earl Marshal. 

 Herald's-college, Nov. 26, 1818. 



(Copied from the Times News- 

 paper, December 2). 



Soon after nine o'clock, the 

 Lancers, who were to conduct 

 the Royal remains, assembled in 

 front of the Palace at Kew; and 

 half an hour after, the hearse, 

 with eight horses, was drawn up 

 and received the coffin, when the 

 procession began to move in the 

 following order : — 



Two 



