
for ieveral nights feecesipe tly, till, Muacklin’s 
Piz "CHGS forge 
and always with greater attraction. 
fouare, in the 87th year of his’ age. 
0 Deaths in and near Lon 
Fick HAG out as long ashe could, but the love of 
fame, and the temptation of profit, were at laf 
teo Soest for him to refit, and he éntered toto 
aoe ate exfgagement. He frankly, however, 
offered to divide bis falary with Macklin, till - 
yanager fhould relent, or, at leaft, tl 
Boda thould obtain a defirable Situation 
eliewhere. Macklin, in revenge, hired a vait 
body of Irifh chairmen, and ftationed them inthe 
pit, difeufed m decayed finery from Mon- 
miouth-itreet, who, as foon as Garrick came 
upon the flage, raifed a tremendous howl: fo 
tcat it was in vain that Garrick attempted to 
fpeak. Thefe outrageous {cenes ps repeated 
ry 
refiources beginning to fail, La fame Of his 
ing to return what they: had been 
‘futfered 20) bovae irom. Monmouth-ftreet, he 
was obliged to give up the hepeof obftru@ting 
the career of Garrick, or inducipg the public to 
éfpoute his caufe, He then reiuyne ed to fre- 
fand, where he was ceceived with great -kind- 
o* 
dare, and increafed' confiderably in profefoval- 
repute. As ‘his reputatiot was fo high, he 
found little difficulty in again procuiing an. ad- 
vantageous engazement in London. He re- 
temed accordingly, and all old gr ievances were 
forsotten. After this, he played Shylock often, 
He alfo 
performed Sir Gibert Wrangle, in Cibber’s very 
pealant comedy of the Refufal, &c. &e,. 
On Saturdays July xeth, at his houfe in 
Kampitezd, Ignatius Gahagan, efg. of Scho- 
Ns 
aga. was a native of lrelarid, where, as well 
as in England, he pofleffed confiderable eftates. 
After vifiting moft of the countries in Eurepe, 
he fettled here, and, remained in or near the 
capital, fur the lai 30 or go years, except 
during a fesy fnort excurfions to Spa. Dublin, 
&c.—He was a mn of great hemour, and kept 
Bp an acquaintance with ail the wits-of the 
age; Garrick. Murphy, Bios &c. were fre- 
quently at bis houfe, asd he would have tra- 
elled forty miles at any time, either to make 
er hear a good, ton tict. Being bred a cath Bi 
he experienced fome difficulties On atcount of 
his religious opinions, and once actually found 
lueclalf waxes the nc cefity of recaxting his 
faith, in order to preierve his e%:te. ‘This 
occucted, in ceafequence of the penal laws of 
jreland, by whicn the preteftact heir was 
enabled to ow? the catholic profefior; a cireum- 
dkance that needs.only to) be mentioned, to call 
forth a jeft degree of indizuatioa from the 
enlightened and liberal, whatever their own 
paiticular belief may be. Mr. G. according'y 
repaired 2 his. native country, abjured the 
tenets of ponery, became a member of the 
inglith church, as by Jaw elabifsed, and at 
the end of about a fortnight, fold his eftare, 
and brought the money to ‘England, Gi being 
reminded of this circumfance, he was accui- 
tomed to fay, *€ that he would rather at any 
time entruft Ged. with his /u/, than the laws 
of Sreland with his /uzds.”’—Mr. G. has left 
behing him an only child, who has been fome 
Mr. Ga- - 
[Jaly ’ 
time married fo the ston de Mantelanien, 
grandfon of the great man of the fame name, 
and who rendered it immortal by ‘his ‘ Efprit 
_ des, Loix.”? : 
_ \ Deaths Weroalt 
_At the Hague, Admiral Lucas, jut as his 
trial was about to commence. 
In March lait, of the yellow fever, on board 
the Macras thip of war, inthe Weft- ‘Indies, P . 
Stuart, efg. firf lieutenant. . 
In Livonia, Count Bakatl, many years refi- 
dent minifter atthe Court of London, from the 
King oF Poland: 
June 21. .Much and defervedly lamented, 
doit... Deaths Abroad. 
~ count Bernftoril, the Danith minifler, immor- 
talizcad by the bleffings of his countrymen, and 
the praifes of Mr. Fax, and, in many refpeés, 
one of the greateft men oF the age. Unlike 
the generality ef modern ftatefmen, he punc- 
tysily fuldiled the promifes he made, and uni- 
formiy a adhered to the eS hich had 
railed him. to power, His great and leading® 
arb ition was, to improve and.meliorate the 
-conititution = his country, and condition of his _ 
countrymen ; and, from motives tru'y honour=— 
able to his philanthropy, he fec 
Denmark in peace with. all foreig powers. As 
he detefted wars. abroad, | he. never employed 
either {pies cr informers-at home. He admi- 
niftered justice in PEICY 5 3 and while he added 
to a r liberties, he dinin‘fhed as much as 

potlible the burthens of his fellow-fulj&s. 
Dee his long iilnefs, the Prince Royal v hited 
hint thred times a- day. In thefe vifits, the 
dving miniiter admonifhed and inftru@tcd the 
Prince on points of importance to the govern- 
ment of Dewmark; and his inftrudtions, there 
is reafon to think, will not be loft ihe count 
was in the 62d year of his age. 
Lately, in France, at the age of 73, ‘the 
Citizen Sédiine, formerly a member of the 
French Academy. His death had been an- 
nounced. many months before the event really 
took place, and all the journals were eager to 
regret the lofs of an author who had diverted 
and inftructed France, during the laft forty 
years... They reminded the public of his uni- 
form fuccefs in the drama, and recalled the 
agreeable fenfations experienced during the per- 
formance of ‘ Felix,” € Richard,”  Rofe 
and Colas,’ “ The Deferter,” ‘¢ Aucaffin and 
Nicolette,” ‘4 Le Philofoghe fans le Savoir,” 
«La Gageure imprévue,’ “© La Reine de Gol= 
conde,” “© Guillaume T. eli,” &¢. During a ma- 
lady that proved fatal, Sedaine read one of 
thofe journals, and thus, on his. death bed, 
enjoyed, by anticipation, a tafie of his awit 
pofhumous fame: he received, however, a ftill 
nobler coafolarion from the teftimony of a con-_ 
fcience, which whifpered to him, that he had 
never feparated morals from talents, and the’ 
love of renown from the love of virtue, Mi-— 
chacl-Jean Sédaine was born at Paris, on the | 
4th of June, 1719. His father, who was an 
architect, having diffipated all his fortune, his 
fon, at the age of- thirteen, was obliged to . 
refign his fudies, in which he had made great 
i 2 progrefs ;. 

