182!.] 
Dmths in and near London. 
275 
Mrs. Ann Carter , of Beckham, 
la Budge-row, Mr. Edward Gittow, 
youngest son of Thomas G- esq. of St. 
Nicholas, Thanet. 
At Islington, Mrs. E . Tbone , relict of 
the late €apt. John T. aged 72. 
In Harley-street, Simeon Droz , esq. 
In South Audiey-street, Miss Sdina 
Thistlewaile. 
In George-street, Hanover Square, the 
wife of 2\ C. Corry, esq. of Monaghan. 
At Twickenham, 44, the Rev. II. P. 
Bea uchamp. 
At Brompton, Mr. Thomas Sorel Banis¬ 
ter . 
At Kensington, the Rev. Joseph Butler. 
85, William Hunt , esq. of the South 
Sea House. 
At Homerton, 55, Mrs. Helen Cowley . 
Sophia Elizabeth Fitzherbert , only 
daughter of P. F.esq. of Bristol. 
On Paddington Green, 74, Jos-. Thrupp , 
esq. 
42, Lydia, wife of Mr. George Lamb, of 
Camberwell Grove. 
In London-street, Fitzroy Square, 59, 
David Sutherland , esq. 
At Percy-street, Bedford-square, Mrs. 
Tandy. 
37, John Taylor, esq. of St. George’s 
Terrace, Hyde Park. 
On the Terrace, High-street, Mary-ie- 
bone, 74, George Elwes, esq., son of the 
notorious miser of that name. 
Julia Clara , 2d daughter of J. Mazzi-ng- 
hi, of Sloane-street, -Chelsea, after a short 
illness from eating melon. 
Thomas Stallard Penoyre , esq. of Lead- 
euhall-street. 
At Battersea Rise, 75, Richard Budd, 
M.D. 
In Upper Thornhaugh-street, 72, Rev. 
Thomas Exon. 
At Putney, Mary, wife of Mr. J. Chari- 
wood. 
H 7 * Kinnaird , esq. sen. magistrate of the 
Thames Police Office, and a druggist in 
Hoi born. 
InDevonshire-street, Portland-place, 52, 
Edward Charles Howell Shepherd , esq. 
Mr. Henry Bolt , of Leaden hall-street. 
At Sunbury Common, Robert Jones, esq. 
At Queen’s Row, Walworth, 6,5, E. 
Adams , esq. 
At Tottenham, 68, Mr. James Norman. 
67, Edward Griffin , esq. many years 
Secretary to the Sun Fire Office. 
At Springfield Lodge, Camberwell, 80, 
Arianna Margaret la , widow of the late 
Col. Chalmers. 
After a short illness, 85, Mr. George 
Crane , of Rathbone-place. 
At Fulham, Louisa , wife of the Rev. H. 
Wat. 
At Harrow, Mr. James Oldfield. 
Lately at his residence inGreat Pulteney- 
street, Dr. Polideri , who accompanied 
Lord Byron abroad as his domestic 
physician. The servant, not finding him 
rise at the usual hour, went to his 
room between eleven and twelve o’clock, 
and found him groaning, apparently in 
the agonies of death. An alarm was 
given, and medical aid immediately called, 
but before the arrival of the surgeons he 
had expired in a fit of apoplexy. 
At Westbourne-place,Sloane square, Mr. 
Robert Warded. 
At Camberwell, 59, Sarah Ann, wife of 
Mr.B. Lowett, sen. 
At Pentonville, Margaret , youngest 
daughter of E. Cornwell, esq. of Friday* 
street. 
In Dover-street, Piccadilly, Mary Ann , 
wife of Charles March, esq. 
At Fenchurch-street, Mr. Christopher 
Wilson. 
At Upper Tooting, 16, Adam , eldest son 
of Adam Oldham, esq. 
68, Henry Robins , esq. of the Great 
Piazza, Covent Garden, many years known 
to the public as an auctioneer in a consider¬ 
able business, which he conducted with a 
degree of probity which ensured success 
and the accumulation of a considerablo 
fortune. 
Suddenly, Abraham Mendes Furtado-, 
esq. better known by the name of Charles 
Furtado, the celebrated piano-forte player. 
At Hayes, 84, Mr. Robert Heel. 
At Dulwich, Harriet , wife of Thomas 
Fleming, esq. 
At Tunbridge, 69, after a short illness, the 
Rev. Vicessimus Knox , D.D. of the Adel phi, 
London. This respectable and distinguished 
divine was born in London, in 1752, his 
father being then master of St. Paul’s School, 
where he received his first education. He 
was then removed to St. John’s College, Ox¬ 
ford, and on an exhibition in 1779, took 
the degree of A.M. and obtained a fellowship. 
By his father’s interest, and his own merits, 
he was appointed master of Tunbridge School* 
which he raised to the highest"character 
among classical seminaries, where he married 
the daughter of a respectable bookseller, and 
discharged his onerous duties with singular 
credit till 1812, when he resigned in favour of 
his son, the Rev. Thomas Knox, of Brazen 
Nose College, Oxford and settled in the 
Adelphi, where he passed the remainder of 
his days in the undisturbed enjoyment of a 
literary life. The degree of D.D. was con¬ 
ferred on him by an American university. In 
the course of h is active and useful life he has 
written many excellent works, some of which 
will last as long as the language, and endure 
as a testimony of his talents and excellent 
principles. The first met with are “ Essays, 
Moral and Literary,” in one volume 8vo. pub¬ 
lished without a name. The success of this 
work induced him to enlarge it, and to print 
it with his name, in 2 vols. 8vo. 1798, since 
which it has run through at latest twenty 
editions, and done much towards forming the 
learning 
