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This pious and amiable man raised himself from the loom; by indefatigable labours at which, and allowing himself only four hours' sleep per diem, he found means to put himself to school, and ultimately to make such progress in religious and useful learning, that in 1820 he was ordained to a curacy by the present Bishop of Bath and Wells.

P. 91. The Rev. W. Easton was son of the Rev. Richard Easton, for fifty-five years Vicar of Grantham, a notice of whom will be found in Nichols's Literary Illustrations of the Eighteenth Century, vol. vi. p. 141; and brother-in-law to the late Rev. B. N. Turner, Rector of Denton, co. Lincoln, of whom a memoir and portrait are given in the same volume.

P. 91. The Rev. J. T. Flesher was the son of the late Gilbert Flesher, Esq. of Towcester, and was instituted to the Rectory of Tiffield in 1795, on the resignation of his uncle the Rev. Thos. Flesher, Vicar of Blackerley.

P. 94. The late William Borrer, Esq. of Brighton, was aged 79, not 97. He rose from nothing; and died the richest man in the county of Sussex. He was originally a butcher and cattle-jobber at Henfield; and during the war had many advantageous contracts for supplying the barracks with meat, corn, hay, and all kinds of stores. He lived at about the rate of 400l. a year, and is said to have left 3000l. a-year to his second son, 7000l. a-year to his youngest son, and all the rest of his property, amounting to upwards of 300,000l. to his eldest son.

P. 177. Lt.-Gen. Darby died on the 10th Jan. at Ballinaclough Ġlebe, the residence of the Very Rev. Dean Head, in co. Limerick. He was aged 73 years.

P. 178. James Kennedy, Member of the Royal College of Surgeons, is the author of the "History of the Contagious Cholera, in popular language."

P. 178. The ancestors of the late Daniel Sykes, Esq. M.P. had for many generations been settled at Hull, in the pursuit of extensive commercial engagements. Mr. Sykes's great-grandfather had such a connection with the Baltic trade, that, on the occasion of a severe famine in Sweden, he freighted several vessels with provisions, and sent them there for gratuitous distribution among the poor; for this act the Swedish government, in gratitude, gave him the lease of some iron mines, which eventually swelled the patrimony of his descendants so as to enable them to withdraw from all other speculations. On his death he bequeathed this property to one of his sons; and his landed estates to the other, from whom descended the celebrated collector and patron of literature, the late Sir Mark Sykes, of Sledmere, Bart. Mr. D. Sykes was the youngest of a family of six children, and was born at Hull Nov. 12, 1766. In early youth he showed proofs of extraordi

nary talents, which induced his father to educate him for the bar; but the state of his health compelled him to reside in the country, and relinquish all the hopes of his profession, which he principally continued for the benefit of his provincial neighbours. His father left him a large fortune, and a share in the commerce, which also occupied some of his time; and his leisure he employed in promoting the views of the Whig party, of which his family had long been supporters. He was one of the first estab lishers of the Rockingham weekly paper, which for many years, under the able editing of the Rev. George Lee, has had great influence in that part of the kingdom. Thus he spent the earlier part of his life, until, in 1820, the Whig party determined to propose him as a candidate to represent his na tive town in Parliament; when, such was his popularity, that he might be said to have been returned not only without opposition, but with acclamation. In 1826 he was again returned, but with some show of resistance. The people of Hull were decidedly opposed to all concessions to the Roman Catholics. Mr. Sykes, however, took for granted that the opinions of his own immediate circle were the opinions of his constituents: he therefore unguardedly declared in his place in the House of Commons that the people of Hull were in favour of the measure of emancipation, and referred to his own election in proof of his assertion. This assertion, produced as great a sensation in Hull, as the declaration of the Duke of Wellington against Reform did throughout the kingdom at large. A public meeting was called to afford him a proof to the contrary; and a worthy Alderman, Mr C. Bolton, in one of the best speeches ever delivered on that side of the question, de clared that Mr. Sykes had been returned by private friends and political opponents. Mr. Sykes received the censures then passed on him with no good-will, and finding his popularity decline, would not stoop to recover it, as it was lost in a cause which he had disinterestedly advocated all his life, and determined not to offer himself again for Hull Accordingly, at the general election in 1880, he was a candidate for Beverley, and was returned after a strong contest.-In youth, Mr. Sykes was remarkably handsome, as is recorded in Miss Seward's Letters, and in his advanced years he maintained the same animated expression of countenance. He married, early in life, one of whom it is sufficient to say that he boasted often they had not been, for many years, a single day apart from each other, and, "by God's will, they never more should be!" The bulk of his property, which was allowed to increase of itself, only as a prudent man would have required, he left righteously disposed among his nephews, according to their circum

tances.

INDEX

TO ESSAYS, DISSERTATIONS, AND HISTORICAL PASSAGES.

** The principal Memoirs in the OBITUARY are distinctly entered in
the" Index to the Essays.”

Abbeys, comparative notices of those in
Yorkshire 148

Acre, custom at the siege of 67
Adversaria 67, 411

Africa, Lander's expedition to 434. co-
lony of Liberia in 635

Elfric, earl of Mercia, seal of 443
Alexander the Great, successors of 413
America, trade of with the South Seas
238. prosperity of 240. manners of
346. education in 443

Analogia Linguæ Græcæ 41, 118, 225,
324, 417, 415, 508

Anatomy Bill, discussion on 73, 552
Ancona, occupied by the French 264
Anecdotal Literature, progress of 492,
586

at

Antimonial cup, account of 582
Antiquaries, Society of, meetings 68, 159,
255, 353, 443, 546
Antiquities, found at Bartlow Hills 162,
352. along the Roman wall 162.
Corneto 255. at Lisbon 291. in
Southwark 399. in East Anglia 445.
Sams's collection of 451. on British
and Roman 494. found in excavating
London Bridge 547
Arbalist, description of the 301
Archery, history of in England 113,
209, 299, 303, 420, 421, 594. cast of
the long bow 212. the Turkish bow
213. effects of in battle 302.
argu-
ments for the revival of 302. rules
for practising 421. works on 595.
rules of in Finsbury fields 600
Architecture, Soane's lectures on 252.
remarks on 57, 151, 242. ancient
English, proposed fund for 303
Armenia, people descended from 67
Army Estimates, discussion on 306
Arrows, cloth-yard, early use of 303
Artillery Company, origin of the 115, 423
Ascham's Toxophilus, notices of 594
Ashmolean Society, Oxford, meeting of
155

Atkins, Geo. memoir of 185

Aymon, John, MSS. possessed by 30
Bank Charter, on the renewal of the 482
Bankruptcy Court, opening of 76
Baronies, Irish, law for the descent of
496

Bartlow Hills, Roman remains at 162,
354

Baths, Roman, discovered near Chelten-
bam 150. description of 237
Beauvoir, Sir T. de, anecdote of 141

Bec, Barons of 27-30

Bede, original manuscripts of 496
Bedford, W. memoir of 563, 651 ·
Belgium, treaty with Holland 164
Bell, Dr. A. memoir of 278
Belliard, Gen. memoir of 176
Benedictionals, Romish 68, 160
Benefices, on the augmentation of 343
Berners, revived barony of 458
Bible, idea taken from by Shakspeare 67,
passages in noticed 67

Bible Society, remarks on 241

Bickerton, Adm. Sir R. H. memoir of 175
Bigland, John, memoir of 645
Birmingham Railway, description of 555
Birnie, Sir R. memoir of 470
Blain, in Britanny, church of 311
Blake, Sir J. memoir of 462
Blake's medal, description of 352
Bolton, E. original letter of 500
Bookham, gravestone at 354
Bootham Bar, York, proposed destruc-
tion of 100

Boroughs, bill for defining the bounda-
ries of 169, 551. disfranchised 635.
enfranchised 636. voters for 637.
boundaries of 638.

Barrer, Wm. memoir of 94, 652
Bourbons banished from France 74
Bowls, ancient, found in the Severn 13
Bradfield, co. York, notice of 338
Bramah, Joseph, genius of 613
Brampton Byerlaw, notices of 338
Brasbridge, Joseph, memoir of 567
Brereton, Lt.-Col. memoir of 84
Bretton Hall, ancient bed in 615
Bricks, ancient, found in excavating St.
Katherine's Docks 255

Brientz, visit to 111

Bristol, trial of the rioters at 75. bills
respecting 166

cathedral, ancient sculpture from,
in renovating the chapter-house of
452, 489, 583

Britanny, antiquities of 310
British Artists, exhibition of 153
Britons, relics of the literature of 588
Buckingham Palace, grant for the build-
ing of 72.
expenses of 356
Buckingham's lectures on Egypt 157
Buffoons among the Greeks 493
Bunce, James, bequests of 498

John, monument to 497
Burdett, Capt. memoir of 563
Burghley MSS. documents from 547
Burney, Dr. W. memoir of 279

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Index to Essays, &c.

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England, scenery of 56

extent of

Errington Family, notices of 581
Eton, list of boys at in 1779-1780, 23

Mortem, celebration of the 555
Etruria, on the ancient monuments in
514. origin of the inhabitants 544
antiquarian remains in 544, 160
Evans, Rev. J. memoirs of 372, 651
Exeter Hall, exhibition of paintings at
350

Fabius, character and abilities of 411

Fables, oriental collection of 493. of the
Greeks ib.

Fallows, Rev. F. memoir of 88
Falmouth, Lord, talents of 621
Fast, General, appointed 171
Fell, Bp. letter to 306

Female Ornaments of 16th century 615
Filey Bay, ancient name of 444
Finsbury Archers, rules of 600. list of
officers 602. account of 113, 209, 299,
420, 421

Fires, at Glasgow 76. at St. Thomas's,
170. Barclay's brewery 459
Fitzgerald, Lady, memoir of 79
Fleming, Lords, genealogy of 206, 495
Flesher, Rev. J. T. memoir of 91, 652
Fletcher, James, memoir of 184

-, Ralph, memoir of 274

Fossil Forest discovered near Rome 69
Foster, Capt. H. memoir of 87
Fotherby, co. Lincoln, account of 8
Fovera, etymology of 339
Fowke, Adm. memoir of 462
Francatripa, of Calabria, anecdot esf
523

France, civil list of 74. political plots
in 169. incomes of the clergy 264.
insurrection in 264, 553. cholera in

361

Frankland, Sir T. notice of 650
Free Will, remarks on 59

Freeman, Adm. Williams, memoir of
364, 651

French Histories, list of 543

Funerals, Nocturnal, notices of 501
Ganges, sources of the 527

655

Gebel el Mekattib, characters on the
rocks of 65

Geology, map of 46. disquisitions on
14, 43, 135. of the eastern coast of
England, 136, 254. lecture on 629
Germany, revolutionary state of 554
Gibbon, on the style and writings of 121,
217

Gibson, Bp. letter of 143
Giles, D. memoir of 82
Glasgow, fire at 76

Glass, malleable, discovery of 69
Gloucester, West Bridge and Gate at 17
Glove Trade, motion respecting 165
Goethe, J. W. memoir of 464
Gospel, on the propagation of the 49.
miracles of the 609

Grandlieu, lake of in Britanny 311
Grant, Rt. Hon. Sir W. memoir of 561
Gray, Stephen, experiments in electrici-
ty 394

Greece, civil war in 170

Gregor, Rev. W. memoir of 525

Greek Church, in Stag-lane, inquiry re-
specting 482

Greek Language, on the analogy of 41,
118, 225, 324, 415, 417, 508
Greeks, fables of the 493. satirical drama
of 494

Green, Wm. inscription on 190
Greenfield, W. memoir of 89

Greenwich Park, trees of 327

Greenwood, Cha. character of 650

Gresham Prize Medal 66, 545

Grimaldi Family, origin and pedigrees
of 26, 27!

Grub, ravages of the 328
Guernsey, anecdotes of 140

Guildo, Le, in Britanny, castle of 310
Gutannen, visit to 112

Haggerston, Sir C. memoir of 80
Hallamshire, notices of 337

Hallington, Northumb. account of 580
Hampton Court, notices of 328

Harvey, Dr. curious anecdote of 407
Hasli, valley of 112

Hastings Family, portraits of 398
Haswell, Major T. W. memoir of 471
Hats, historical notices of 482

Hayman, Cha. death of 476

Hercules, labours of symbolized 14. vase

representing his contest with the Ache-
lous 516

Herrick, W. memoir of 182
Herta, legendary lore of 224
Hervey, Sir Wm. notices of 399
Hesse, Capt. death of 382
Higden, G. B. memoir of 569
Highland Society of London, prizes offer-
ed by 545

Hill, Col. Sir T. N. memoir of 84, 650
Hindoostan, theistical society of 264.
curious custom in 593
Hingston, Francis, memoir of 621

History, coins illustrative of 131, 227,

325, 417, 510

Hogarth, anecdotes of 50

Holland, treaty with Belgium 164
Hone's "Year Book," notices of 197, 304
Hood, Edm. memoir of 183

Adm. Sir S. monument to 190
Horace, order of his writings 386, 416
Horse labour, on the substitution of steam
for 3

Hospital, in vicinity of Westminster Ab-
bey proposed 99

Hull Literary Society, meeting of 355
Hume, Gibbon, and Robertson, on the
styles and writings of 17, 121, 217, 313
Hunt, Sir T. descendants of 2
Huntingdon, Frances C'tess of, portrait
of 398

Huntingford, Bp. memoir of 559
Hurd, Mr. library of sold 443
Huskisson, Right Hon. W. monument to
117

Huyshe, family arms of 2

Hydraulic self-acting engine,invented546
Imp-yard, etymology of 339
India, state of the press in 66. descrip-

tive notices of 527. conquest of 528
Inundation of the Ohio 265. in the East
Indies 361

Ireland, disturbed state of 75, 633. go-
vernment plan of education in 261,
263. difficulty of collecting tithes

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King's Evil, royal licence to cure 411
Kingsale, Lord, memoir of 174
Kingston Bridge, antiquities found at
329, 444

Kinnier, Sir J. M. notices of 190
Kirkcudbright, C.G. Lord, memoir of 461
Knight Templars, proceedings against in
1312, 355

Knowles, Adm. Sir C. H. funeral of 190
Lady Chapel, St. Saviour's, history and
description of 34, 37, 104. meetings
respecting 38, 40, 101, 352, 458, 502.
reasons against pulling it down 39,
502. resolutions for the preservation

of 40, 101. subscriptions for 502. con-
cert in aid of 546

Lamb, Rev. J. memoir of 90

Lander, Rich. and John, biographical
notices of 527

Laroche, Capt. H. memoir of 274
Latin verses inquired for 98

Law, Archdeacon, inscription on 190
Law Institution,charter of incorporation
granted to 77

Lawrence, Sir T. library sold 649
Le Croisie, in Britanny, custom at 311
Legh, G. J. memoir of 307
Leightonville Priory, Salop 2, 94
Leslie, C. P. memoir of 563
Levasseur, M. memoir of 184
Lewis, Isle of, ancient chessmen found
in 445. whales caught there 457
Liberia, improving state of 635
Lillebone, in Normandy, antiquitiesof 322
Lincolnshire, geological features of 254.
popular superstitions of 591

Lisbon, Roman remains discovered at 291
Literature, on attempts in 127. of the
Britons 588

Anecdotal, progress of 492, 586
Liverpool, histories of 66
Liverseege, Henry, memoir of 281
Locke, opinions on the currency 485
Locker, Capt. W. memoir of 611. cha
racter of 612

Logic, remarks on 48

London, early history of 428. British and
Roman 494. model of 546

London Bridge, approaches to 99. snuff-
box formed out of the foundation piles
of 201. historical memoir of 201-206.
state of during demolition 205. anti-
quities found in excavating 547
London University, annual report of 254.
prizes 443

Lord's Prayer, on the proper reading of
386

Luxmoore, Bishop, family of 650
Lycophron, translations of 625
Lynn, records of the corporation 255
Mably, M. writings of 413
Macao, storm at 264

M'Culloch, Rev. T. memoir of 564
Macdonald, Lt.-Col. memoir of 85, 650
Mac Ean Family, historical notices of
117

Machecoul, Britanny, historical notices

of 311

Mac Mahon, Bp. notices of 404
M'Naghten, E. A. memoir of 563
Madynden, Kent, charter of 395
Magennis, Bp. notices of 404
Magragh, Bp. notices of 401
Mallory, Rev. J. H. memoir of 571
Malmesbury, alterations in the walls of

98. corporation of 405. witches at ib.
Mantell, Sir 7. memoir of 88, 651
Manuscripts possessed by M. Aymon 31
Maratinum, explanation of 339
Markets, prices of 95, 191, 287, 383,
479, 575

Markland, Edw, memoir of 371

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