1807.] 
Hermitage street, to Mrs. Wigstead, of Kens- 
ington. 
James Fleming, esq. captain in the 16th re- 
giment of foot, to Lady Leigh, of Baker 
street, Portman square, relict of Sir S.-E. 
Leigh. 
The Right Hon. the Earl of Abingdon, to 
the Hon. Miss Emily Gage, youngest sister 
to Lord Viscount Gage. 
James Webbe Tobin, esq. to Miss Mullet, of 
Broad street buildings. 
M. Mallet, formerly a general officer in. the 
French service, to the Hon. Mrs. Hill, daugh- 
ter of Viscount Molesworth. 
At Lambeth, Charles Boyde, esq. of the 
custom house, to Miss Hyde, of Moore Place. 
Captain Monckton of the Royal Navy to 
Mr. Mackie, widow of the late Thomas Mac- 
Kie, esq. of Deptford. 
Mr. R. C. Berry, of Bucklersbury, solicitor, 
to Miss Charlotte Durnford, -of Great Cum- 
berland street, Portman square. 
At Clapham, John Poynder, esq. of Bride- 
well hospital, to Miss Elizabeth Brown, of 
Clapham. 
Captain Keble, of the Hon. E. I. Company’s 
Service, to Miss Elizabeth Ann Doigly, of 
Southoop, Gloucestershire. 
John Hopkins Foster, of Northbury, near 
Taunton, Somerset, to Miss Susanna Millet, 
of the Terrace, Gray’s inn lane. 
DIED, 
In Green-street, Gsosvenor-square, Mrs. 
Penelope Madan, daughter of the late Major 
M. of the horse guards, 
At Merton, in Surrey, Edward Pryce, esq. 
of Bucklersbury, London, 65. 
Mr. Reynat, of Newcastle-place, Clerken- 
well, many years principal supervisor at the 
stamp- office. 
At Knightsbridge, “fames Lynch, esq. M.D. 
a native of the city of Dublin. 
In Upper Norton-sireet, Mrs. Fane Halh- 
day, relict of Stmon H. esq. of Westcombe- 
perk, Kent. 
In Castle-street, Oxford street, Madame 
Gombert. : 
Whilst bathing in Scot’s Pond, Bethnal 
Green, Mr. ‘Fobn Const, officer of excife. 
At Beafont, Mrs. Reed, wife of William 
R. esq. 
In Gloucester-place, ohn Charles Fitzge- 
rald,esq. only son of Jonn F. esq. 
in St. Martin’s-le-Grand, 84, ohn Duffin, 
fan-maker, who had been seventy years re- 
sident in one house. 
At Teddington, 68, Thomas Whiteburst, esq, 
At Addlestone, near Chertsey, 63, James 
Carter, esq. many years an eminent attorney, 
in Bishopsgate-street. 
At Kensington Gravel Pits, JLicutenant- 
colonel Parkhill, of the 34th regiment. 
At Stockwell Green, Mr. Walker, of 
Doctors’ Commons. 
In Cumberland: street, 
Molyneux, esq. 
William Allen, esq. of the seal office, in 
‘the ‘Pemple. . : Ren 
80, Edward F. 
Marriages and Deaths in and near London. 
291 ¢ 
At Brompton, }. D. Albert de Miene, esqy 
At Hendon, Alexander Beghie, esq. of New 
Broad-street. 
At Rotherhithe, Mr. Fobn Scarth, stock 
broker. 
At Chelsea, Mr. Pdilip. Coles, of Duke~ 
street, Adelphi. 
After a few days illness, aged 23, obs 
Till Adams, of Cannon-street, one of the 
society of Friends. He was a young man of 
great promise, and of good natural parts. 
His education was confined to the common 
course of English insruction, but he evinced 
an ardour for study, and the acquirement of 
useful knowledge, thet has seldom been sur= 
passed. These qualities of his mind were, 
however, excelled by the goodness of his 
heart; for he was a dutiful son, and an afs 
fectionate brother. 
The Right Hon. Baronefs Howard de Wal. 
den and Braybrooke, 60. She was the second 
wire and relict of the late Sir John Griffin 
Griffin, K.B. called to the house of peers by 
the title of Lord Howard de Walden, who 
died May 25, 1797, and daughter of William 
Clayton, esq. of Baileyford, Bucks. 
Ata humble apartment in the Edgware- 
road, a celebrated prophetess, named Levy, 
of the Jewish religion, possessed of property 
to the amount of 30001. She has bequeathed 
1000]. to her son, ts5ool. to her daugoter, 
and to her second daughter, who was brought 
up to her mother’s profession, 500i. and the 
necessary apparatus for divination, She wag 
patronised by several females of distinction, 
whom she attended, and had her fixed hourg 
for accommodating customers at home. It 
was no uncommon thing for.a dozen inquisi- 
tive young women and wives to be in wait. 
ing at one time, at two shillings each. She 
impesed on the credulous by a pack of cards 
of curious make, and at other times affected 
to deliver her prophetic strains by the posi« 
tion of the planets. She was 70 years of 
age, and 15 years ago left the washing-tub 
to emorace this lucrative profession. In the 
commencement of her divination she pre- 
tended, when enquiries were made after 
stolen ggods, to point out the thief in a 
looking.glass; but this stratagem not being 
well managed, she had the good sense and 
grace to give it up, as above her powers. 
In Saville row, ‘fobn Walrad, Count de 
Welderen, the last male heir of a family 
whose nobility is so ancient that its origin 
is coeval with the formation of society and 
states in the middie ages of history, and 
which for many centuries back was seated in 
the Duchy of Guelderland, which in after 
ages made part of the Republic of the United 
Provinces of the Low Countries. In that 
country, as in many other ruined sovereigne 
ties in that part of Europe, the equestrian 
order formed from the most ancient times a 
part of the government under their limited 
sovereigns, and none but families that were 
noble from time immemorial, and whose no- 
bility was not derived trom letters of nobili- 
Oa Nia “a ' ftatiorm 
