APPENDIX, X°I. 379 
HAVE MORE AND SEVERER PUNISHMENT IN 
THE DAY OF THE RESURRECTION." 
It appears, from the foregoing relation, that 
Sclim was deposed on Thiu'sday the 27th of 
May, IS06. In the Hamburgh Correspondent of 
July the 24th following, (See General Evening 
Post, August 4th, 1807,) a long account was 
inserted of the Turkish Revolution, in which 
the subsequent passage occurs : 
" This occasioned so much distrust and discon- 
tent, that the revolution would have broken out 
sooner, if the Englishjleet had not made its appear- 
ance. The party, in fact, were pretty sure of 
their object ; and even in February last, in a 
respectable German Journal, the following pas- 
sage appeared, under the head of A Dialogue in 
the Shades. 
*' ' A Professor of Astronomy in London, in 
a view of the Constellations, has observed an 
insurrection among the Janissaries, and the death of 
the Sultan.^ 
" In consequence of the dispositions after- 
wards made, the dethronement of Selim seemed 
naturally to follow, for" . . . &c. 
It is observable, that the Professor of Astro- 
nomy here mentioned, was no other than the 
