196 m 
the fervice, however, proved too powerful 
for his conftitution, which the maturity of 
years had not been permitted to ftrengthen. 
At Cowbridge, Mr. T. Glover, of the Bear 
Inn. 
At Swanfea, R.S Roberts, efg. 
At Tenby, Pembroke, Mifs Ball, eldeft 
daughter of B. Ball, efq. a young lady much 
refpected and beloved. 
In his ri6th year, Mr. H. Thomas, far- 
mer, near Tenby. — J. Kenrick, efg. of 
Wynne-hal!, near Ruabon, Denbighhhire. 
At Wrexham, aged 93, Mrs. M. Yale, 
daughter of the late D. Yale, efq. of Plas 
yn Yale, Denbighhiire. 
SCOTLAND. 
Married.] At Bollindean, Perth, Phi ‘lip 
Dundas, efq. to Mifs Wedderburn, (ned 
of Sir John Wedderburn, bart. 
At Caftle Menzies, Lieutenant Colonel 
Archibald Butter, of Pitlochie, to Mifs Vere 
Menzies, daughter of Sir Robert Menzies, 
bart. 
At Edinburgh, R. Forfyth, efq. advocate, 
to Mifs jacobina Carfon, daughter of the late 
j. Carfon, M.D. pbyfician at Philadelphia. 
Died. | Six John Wedderburn, bart. of Bal- 
Jindean. 
At the Grove, near Aberdeen, in his 7gth 
year, the Rev. Dr. Brown. 
At Aberdeen, on the 18th curt. in the 
68th year of hisage, James Beattie, L L.D. 
profeflor of moral philofophy and hogic, in 
Mareichal College; well known in the lite- 
rary worlé.—[ An authentic account of this illuf- 
trcus writer wil! be given in our next. | 
IRELAND. 
Married.) At Dublin, T. Tenni ae efq. 
of Caftle-Tennifon, county Refcommon, to 
Lady F. King, youngeft daughter of the Earl 
of Kingfton. 
At Kiltergus, J.Hume, efq. of Eumewood, 
Wicklow, brotherto Mr. Hume, M. P. ve 
that county, tothe only daughter ef the late 
Rev. C. Smyth, of Croagh, ccunty Lime- 
rick, and niece to the late Arthur Smitk, 
archbithop of Dublin. 
Ac Kirk Santon, Ife of Man, J. Bell, ef. 
of St. Mary’s-abbey, Dublin, to Miis Cal- 
low of Scatiet. > 
Dicd.j In Sackville-fireet, .Dublin, Sir 
Anthony Brabazon, bart. of Newpark, co. 
Mayo. 
Lord Kilwarden, Chief Juftice of the 
King’s Bench in this kingdom. His Lord- 
fhip was barbaroufly murdered by a body of 
rebels affembled in Thom as-ftreet, Dublin, 
the principal icene of the late daring infur- 
rection. His Lordihip was accempanicd by 
his daughter ana nephew, the Rev. R. Wolfe,. 
when the carriage was ftopped. Miis Wolle 
eicaped, having been conveyed to a public- 
houfe in the neighbourhood, and thence to 
the Caftle ; but Lord Kilwarden and his ne- 
pew were dragged out of the carriage, and 
killed by many wounds inflited with pikes. 
~~ 
Scovlodit<-Teetayeh Pah Abroad, 
(Sept. t 
It is highly probable that~ his Lordthip be= 
came obnoxious to the rebels from the ftrong 
meafures he had formerly adopted in his ca~ 
pacity of Attorney General—fuch as prepar- 
ing the Tumultuous Affembly A@, the Ha- 
beas Corpus Sufpenfion A&, the Murder Con- 
fpiracy AG, and various other ftatutes, di¢ 
rected principally againft the organization of 
rebellion—while many hundreds of the De- 
fenders and United Irifhmen were brought ta 
juftice by profecutions conduGed by him. 
Dr. Huffay, the titular bifhop of Water. 
ford. After bathing at Tinmore, he was fude 
denly feized with an apople€tic fit, and al- 
moft inftantly expired. 
At her houie at St. Dunlough’s, near 
Dublin, Lady Catherine O’Toole, fifter to 
the Earl of Mountnoiris; a lady of faperion 
charms and fafcinating manners. 
After a long illnefs, the lady of Sir John 
Gillman, bart. of Gillmanville, in Ireland, 
daughter of Sir Thomas Miller, bart. of 
Froyle, in Hampfhire. 
At his houfe, Black Rock, near Dublin, 
R. Jephfon, eiq. many years matter of the 
horie to the Lord-lieutenant of Ireland, and 
a fuccefsful dramatic writer. 
officer in the Irifh army, and formerly mem- 
ber of parliament in that kingdom, and cele- 
He was an 
/ 
brated tur his convivial powers and his feli- © 
city in ludicrous compofition. His firft_dra-: 
matic piece, ‘* Brayanza,”’ was acted with 
fuccefs at Drury-lane, and printed in the 
year 1575}; but the plot was thought to ree 
femble Venice Preferved too nearly. 
Law of Lombardy,” a tragedy, with.a fimi- 
lar relation to Much Ado about Nothing, 
was aéied nine nights at Drury-lane, and 
printed in 1779. ‘* The Count of Nar- 
borne’? was well received. He wrote, alfo 
‘* The Campaign; or, Love in the Eaft In-, 
dies,*? an opera; ‘Julia; or, the Italian 
Lover,” a tragedy, in language and fenti- 
ments often fublime 5 *¢ Two Strings to your 
Bow,” a farce; and. ¢* The Confpiracy.” 
In 1794 he pubdlithed ‘¢ The Confefiions of 
ames #aptifte Couteau, citizen of France.. 
, 3 
written by, himfelf, and tranflated from the 
original French,” 2 vols, 12m, 
fatire ca the depravity of French manners, 
but very reprehenfible on many accounts, . 
In the fame year he fent abroad *¢ Roman 
Portral:s,”’ 
bigest) remaiks and illuftrations, in one 
volume, -4to, 
In Dublin Caftle, f. Darcy, efq. of Hyde. 
Park, county of Weitmeath. = 
MARRIED ARROAD. 
In the ifland of Guernfey, Major Macken- 
zie, of the 4gd regiment of foot, to Mifs C, 
Baiduck. 
DIED ABROAD. 
At Calcutta, Eaft Indies, Lieutenant Colo- 
nel J. Wood, fon of the late Mrs. Wood, of 
Kennington-lane. 
fn December lait, Major General Horton 
Brifcoe, 
a’ fevere. 
a poem, in heroic verfe, with. 
‘©The . 
