PORT OF SUNIUM. 
the sea were much decomposed. Several per- 
sons had written their names upon the marble; 
and even those which had been inscribed with 
pencils remained, with their dates, as fresh as 
when they were first written. We read the 
names of the lamented T\VEDDELL, and of the 
Hon. Captain WILLIAM PAGET. The last of 
these, a gallant naval officer, now buried at 
Gibraltar, will not want a memorial in Greece. 
His name will be long 1 remembered, for the Anecdote 
coolness, the intrepidity, and the humanity officer, 
which he displayed when commander of the 
Romney, a fifty-gun ship, during his memorable 
action with a French frigate, La Sibylle, in the 
harbour of Myconi. The French officer was an 
old acquaintance, and one with whom he had 
The same gentleman has transmitted to the author the following 
beautiful Inscription, recently discovered in Santos. It relates to a 
woman of the name of TYRINNA, who died at the age of twenty-seven. 
'H yevin Soft) Ti xai It ftaufriffi Tujwa 
"E|a^f, ffa.attf axost Qtgova-' Kgtrn;, 
'EmaSa; r^ifffas trial ':, <roxiv<rt 
Aoirrwu; tfavov Saxjf* xau trrna%ci{. 
Hoc! yap, iftau 0fyttv|j, ;?{? Capias eurt yccf eturti 
Atifeftai, aSr li.ivrtn /SXao'roy unixaftitr;. 
"AT/ 2s vtzr^toou xai ti-^a^ttftia fit*.a0gou, 
