480 
At Hornewood Lodge, the seat of Major- 
general Morgan, suddenly while at dinner, 
the Hon. Anne Henley Ongiey, third daugh- 
ter of the late Lord O. and sister to the pre- 
sent Lord, © 
At Margate, the Rev. William Chapman, 
M.A. rector of Kimble Parva, Bucks, and 
wicar of St. John’s, Margate. He had en- 
joyed the living -of St. John’s, only since 
Easter, 1809, being then presented to it on 
the death of the Rev. William Harrison. 
At Sturry, Mr. John Dell, 53, From 
_ bodily infirmity, which rendered his life re- 
cluse at an early pericd, he formed a love for 
literature, and was the writer of several po- 
etical productions, replete with humour -and 
ingenuity 5 under the signature of Rusticus. 
At Maidstone, Mr. William Cork, sur- 
geov.—-William, only son of Mr. William 
Elzar. 
At Folkestone, Mr, William Reynolds, 
solicitor. 
At Canterbury, Thomas, eldest son of 
Pieutenant- colonel Greene, of the Royal 
Artillery, in the East India service, 17. 
At Tovil, John Beeching, esq. 47.—-Mis. 
Dowell, wife of Stephen D. esq. 
At the Marine Barracks, Chatham, Lieu- 
tenant Hancorn. He was leaving his room 
in the south end, and proceeding down the 
stone steps, which are separated from another 
fight ef steps by a Jowiron railing, when he 
overran himself and fellintothearea, by which 
be dislocated his neck and fractared his skull; 
he survived but a few hours. 
At Mongeham parsonage, in the 82d year 
ef his age, after a little more than an hour’s 
tndisposition, the Rev. Henry Dimock, of 
Pembroke college, Oxford, M.A. 1751; rec- 
tor of St. Edmund the King, and St. Ni- 
cholas Acons, London, and of Blackmanstone, 
in this county. Of this good man, at the 
clese of a long life spent in the practice of 
every duty, professional, social, and domestic, 
it may be truly said, he fell asleep. The 
depth and soundness of his learning, the 
strict orthodoxy of his belief, and the pri- 
mitive simplicity and integrity of his man- 
ners, might have entitled him to the highest 
offices In "the church; but, in this world, 
reward does not ‘ees accompany descet. 
In the father’s house are many mansions. His 
will be bright and splendid, as were his 
talents and his virtues; firm andimmoveable, 
as were his perseverance and his faith. 
At Deal, aged 87, John Carter, esq. the 
oldest magistrate (perhaps with the excep- 
tion of Lord Frederick Campbell) of the 
county. He was brother of the celebrated 
Mrs. Elizabeth Carter, the poetess, and 
Jearned translator of Epictetus, who died 
February 19, 1806, aged 89. He was born 
about December, 1725, the eldest son of Dr.. 
Nicholas Carter, minister of Deal, and rector 
of Woodchurch and of Ham, inthe same 
county (a native of Buckinghamshire), who 
died at Dealt in 1774, aged 87, by Maérgaret, 
Kent. , 
daughter and haiee of ee i . 
~ invasion. 
filled for seme 
et 
7 
esq. of Bere, in Dorsetshire, by a daughter _ 
of Thomas Trenchard, esq. of Wolverton 
and Lychet-Maltravers, in the sme cuunty. 
Mr. Carier, after having beéi educated at 
Cambridge, went into the army, and had a 
company in the 9th regiment of foot (if we 
mistake not) about sixty-five years ago. At 
this period his active and intelligent mind 
made him much consulted and employed, 
particularly on the Kentish coast, when the 
rebellion of 1745 created serious fears of aa. 
Some years afterwards, he maar. 
ried a lady of good fortune at Deal whom 
some of his sister's poems are addres nd 
retiring to the excellent house which formed 
a portion of her, property in his native town, 
there passed the remainder of his life, and 
breathed his last. Soon after, he was put 
into the commission of the peace for the 
county, and discharged the duties of it. for a. 
long period of years ‘with eminent superiority,, 
so as to entitle him to the elevation to the 
chair of the East Kent sessions, which he 
tinre with great credit. He 
was aman of very lively and acute natural 
parts, ‘very highty cultivated, an exact and 
elegant classical scholar, an excellent lin- 
guist, and a.man ef extensive and general 
reading ; inall which various departments he 
continued to exercise his admirable faculties 
to the last, his final illness not having at- 
taclted him for more than ten days before his 
death. 
powers of his body and mind with little ap- 
parent decay 3 his memory and vivacity were 
in strong force; he moved with agility, and 
the marks of age had made little impression 
on his person; he worked in his garden, he 
read with eagerness, he talked with his 
usual clearness and fluency, and he abated in 
none of the attentive politeness of the old 
court. 
cheerfully and hospitably, and betrayed no- 
thing of the peevishness of an octogenarian. 
His person was that of an hale man, of little 
more than sixty.. He had seen much of life, 
knew its. follies, and turned not with stern 
repulsiveness from an acquaintance or com- 
pliance with its humours. In short, he had 
all the polish, and all the agreeable know- 
ledge, of a man of the world, added to that of 
a ready and perfect scholar. In his literary 
taste, he was what some would deem tu9 an- 
tique; and many would deem too severe. OF 
the ancients, among his prime favourites, was 
Horace; and of the moderns, Pope. He 
seemed to prefer wit andacute sense, to sen- 
timent and fancy. His politics were these 
of whiggism, perhaps a little extended w'th 
the times, He feared despotism rather than 
anarchy ; and corruption rather than lizen- 
tiousness. He saw the two extremes of dan- 
ger between which modern fygovernments 
were vibrating; and leaned tothe side of the 
people. 
were so abundant, and in such constant exe 
Ps ercise, 
> ‘ 
Till that period he enjoyed all the 
He joined in all social circles, lived. 
The stores of his understanding - 
