atre, and played the same characters as Mr Garrick was then performing in London, and with nearly as much eclat.
Lately, At Paris, after a few days' illness, the celebrated Colonel Thornton, late of Thornville Royal, in the county of York.
- At Greenock, of the small pox, in the 76th year of his age, Mr Wm. Macleod of Stornaway, but for the greater part of his long life a planter in Jamaica
At Holloway Head, near Northwich, at the extraordinary age of 121 years, Mr John Maddock. He retained his faculties to the last.
ABERCROMBY'S, Mr, speech on parlia- mentary reform, I. 143. Abeona transport, the loss of, II. 87. Achilles, whale ship, runs against the powder magazine, Dundee, II. 185. Address to the King at the opening of Parliament, I. 7. On the subject of economy voted by the House of Com- mons, I. 78. Various addresses to, II. 90, 91, 97.
Advocate, the Lord; his speech, in re- ply to Lord Archibald Hamilton, I.
Agricultural distress, I..156. Report, II.
Althorpe's, Lord, speech relative to the timber trade, I. 161.
America. State of affairs in Mexico, I. 278. Iturbide joins the insurrectionary bands, 279. Independent forces range themselves under Iturbide, ib. Arrival of O'Donaju, ib. Cortes called, 280. Death of O'Donaju, 281. Peru, ib. Flattering condition of, ib. Viceroy's troops defeated, ib. San Martin enters Lima, 282. Establishes the constitu- tion, ib. Battle of Calabosa, 283. Com- plete triumph of the independents, ib. General congress, ib. State of affairs in Buenos Ayres, ib. Brazil, ib. Revo- lution at Bahia, 284. At Rio Janeiro, ib. King returns to Europe, 285. St Domingo, ib. United States, 286. Army estimates, I. 48.
Association, the Constitutional, proceed- ings relative to, II. 25.
Attorney-General's speech, in opposition to Lord A. Hamilton, I. 19. Speech on the Constitutional Association,Ï. 173. Awful destruction at Whitehaven, II. 106.
Baker, Sir Robert, resigns his office of head magistrate of the Bow-Street po- lice, II. 166.
Banks, Sir Joseph, biographical account of, I. 301. Scientific eminence of, ib. His various enterprizes in the prosecu- tion of knowledge, 302. Chosen pre- sident of the Royal Society, 303. Knighted, ib. Elected a member of the Privy Council, ib. Named a mem- ber of the French Institute, 304. Agri- cultural pursuits, ib. Death of, ib. Description of his form and expression, ib. His will, ib.
Bankes', Mr G., animated speech on mo- ving the address in the House of Com- mons, I. 7.
Bankes', Mr, motion for an address to the crown, on the subject of retrench- ment and economy, I. 78. Opposes the catholic claims, 122.
Barcelona, sickness and mortality at, II.
Baring's, Mr, complaint respecting the manner in which the public accounts were made up, I. 43. Speech respect- ing the currency, 153. Reply to Mr Ricardo, 155. Speech respecting the timber trade, 162.
Bathurst, Mr C. B. supports Lord Castle- reagh, and condemns the Queen, I. 28. Speech relative to the Constitutional Association, 172.
Bathurst's, Earl, speech relative to Gram- pound, I. 140
Beacon newspaper, particulars respecting, II. 175.
Belmore, the Earl of, moves the address to his Majesty in the House of Lords, I. 7. Bennet's, Mr, motion for reduction of the Quarter-Master-General's office in Scotland, I. 57. Speech on the army estimates, 59.. Speech on the state of agriculture, 159. Speech relative to the timber trade, 161. Respecting the Io- nian islands, 176. Motion relative to a libel in the John Bull newspaper, 182. Speech on the close of the evi- dence against the conductors of the John Bull, 183.
Bentinck's, Lord W., motion relative to Sicily, I, 107. Bernal's, Mr, remark on the mates, I. 46. Biography, political, I. 289. Mr Grat- tan, ib. Earl of Sheffield, 294. Sir Home Popham, 295. Earl of Malms- bury, 297. Kellermann, 298. Lefeb- vre, 299.
literary, 301. Sir Joseph Banks, ib. President West, 305. Mr Arthur Young, 309. Mr Hayley, 319. Volney, 320.
Birnie, Richard, Esq. appointed head magistrate of the Bow-Street police, in the room of Sir R. Baker, and knight- ed, II. 167. Birth-day, the celebration of his Majes- ty's, II. 105. Disturbances on the oc- casion at Edinburgh and Glasgow, ib. Births, list of, II. 338.
Bourdeaux, the Duke of, the baptism of, II. 107.
Brougham's, Mr, reply to Lord Castle- reagh, I. 24. Speech respecting the Queen's acquittal and the motion for provision, 30. Speech respecting the Queen's law expenses, 32. Reprobates the conduct of ministers respecting the Queen's case, ib. Supports Sir James Mackintosh's motion, 100. Reply to Mr Lambton, 144. Motion relative to the Constitutional Association, 169.
Speech relative to the John Bull news paper, 184.
Browne, Colonel, attempt to assassinate, at Milan, II. 88.
Browne, Mr James, seconds the address in the House of Commons, I. 8. Re- marks respecting Ireland, ib. Opposes the grant to the Queen, 28. Bruce, the Robert, steam packet, destroy- ed by fire, II. 166.
Bucharest, earthquake and other misfor- tunes at, and in the neighbourhood of, II. 143.
Buckingham, the Marquis of, his speech in support of the catholic question, I. 130.
Bull, John, the proprietors of, summon- ed to the bar of the House of Commons for breach of privilege, I. 182. Trial of for libel on Lady Caroline Wrottes- ley, II. 55. Fined and imprisoned, 60. Buonaparte, Napoleon, death of, II. 113. Dissection of his body, 114. Funeral,
115. Burdett's, Sir Francis, motion relative to the proceedings at Manchester, 178. Remarks relative to the editor of the John Bull, 184. Judgment of the Court of King's Bench on, II. 14. Correspondence between and Mr Can- ning, 110.
Calcraft's, Mr, speech in reply to Mr Cree
vey, I. 48. On reducing the army, 54. Calthorpe's, Lord, observations on the affairs of Naples, I. 90. Cambridge, improvements at, II. 286. Campbell, George, G. C. B., particulars with regard to the death of, II. 90. Canning's, Mr, speech on the affairs of
Naples, I. 104. Correspondence be- tween and Sir Francis Burdett, II. 110. Cantre, Louis, projects himself into the crater of Vesuvius, II. 99. Carlisle, Mary Ann, trial of, for blasphe mous libel, II. 42. Guilty, 44. Fined and imprisoned, 47.-For seditious li- bel, ib. Disagreement among the jury,
Cartwright and others, judgment on, II.
Carnarvon, Earlof, moves the Grampound disfranchisement bill in the House of Lords, I. 139.
Castlereagh's, Lord, speech at the open- ing of Parliament I. 10. Speech re- specting provision for the Queen, I. 13. The erasure of the Queen's name from the Liturgy, 22. Motion for pro- vision for, 24. Reply to Mr Western, 25-To Mr Hume, ib. Motion for reading the report of the committee re- lative to the Queen's provision, 32. Speech respecting the address from the "presbytery of Langholme, 33. Speech disapproving of Lord A. Hamilton's motion relative to the order in council directed to the Church of Scotland, 39. Speech relative to Mr Hume's resolu- tion on the army estimates, 49. Sup- ports the army estimates, 54. State- ment relative to, 56. Reply to Mr Hume respecting sinecure garrisons, 58. Speech in opposition to Mr Hume, 63. Opposes the repeal of the duty on malt, 67. Speech on the subject of economy and retrenchment, 79. Reply to Sir James Mackintosh on the affairs of Naples, 90. Speech respecting the state of Europe, 106. Communication re- specting the Russian army, ib. Reply to Mr Stuart Wortley, ib. Speech on the Catholic question, 120. Defends the House of Lords in altering the transference of the Grampound elective franchise, 141. Manoeuvre for getting rid of the bill for mitigating punishment in cases of forgery, 150. Speech re- specting breach of privilege in the John Bull newspaper, 182. Action for win- dows broken at the acquittal of the Queen, II. 76.
Catastrophe, an awful one at Carville colliery, near Newcastle, II. 183. Catholic question, I. 111. Petition from the English Roman Catholics presented to Parliament, 112.
Cavendish, Lord George, supports Mr Western's motion for repealing the malt tax, I. 66.
Chancellor's, the Lord, reply to Lord Darnley, I. 40. Opposes the Catholic bill, 132. Speech against the disfran- chisement of Grampound, 140. Charitable benefactors, II. 102. Chester, Bishop of, his speech against Catholic emancipation, I. 130
Cheshire, improvements at, II. 286. Chetwynd's, Mr, motion for reduction, I. 57. Speech on the distress of the coun- try, 64.
Christie and Trail, trial of, for duel with Mr Scott, II. 60. Verdict, not guilty,
Clarence, the Duke of, grant to, I. 177. Cockburn, Sir George, speech in reply to Mr Bernal, I. 46.
Commercial economy, remarks relative to, I. 160. Notices, II. 183. Woollen cloth milled, II. 283. Chamber of Commerce at Manchester, ib. Mecha- nism, great perfection it hath reached at, ib. Rapid rise of Sincapore, ib. Re- marks respecting Canada, 284. Constitutional Association, motion re- specting, in Parliament, I. 169. Coronation of George IV., notice of, I. 189. Full particulars of, II. 117 140.
Coroner's inquest on the body of Mr John Scott, II. 100. Verdict, wilful murder against Mr Christie, 101.- -On the body of Robert Dalrymple, Esq. ib.- On George Francis, shot in the riot at the Queen's funeral, 165. On Richard Honey, shot on the same occasion,
County Clare, a process-server beaten and robbed in, II. 182.
Courier, observations on the King's visit to Drury Lane, II. 96. Creevey, Mr, his speech on the motion for a committee of ways and means, I. 43. Speech relative to the navy es- timates, 47. Motion relative to the army, 48. Motion relative to the ex- pense of the office of Secretary of War, 57. Motion for reduction of soldiers, 58. Objects to the repairs at Barba- does, 65.
Croker's, Mr, speech in support of the Ad- miralty Board, I. 47.
Cuddie, Mr, particulars respecting his death, II. 109.
Curwen's, Mr, speech on the state of na-
tional industry, I. 152. Speech relative to the agricultural interests, 158.
Darnley's, Lord, speech respecting the Queen, I. 39. Motion for an address
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