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and clothing, free from expence. Twenty, the sons of officers actually in our service: these shall pay forty pounds per annum each, for which sum they shall receive their educa tion, board, and clothing. Thirty, the sons of noblemen and gentleinen; and, Twenty, the cadets of the East India Company's service: these shall pay ninety guineas per annum each, for which sum they shall receive their education, board, and clothing. Linen is not included under the head of clothing.

"Section the Second. No cadet shall be admitted, who is under thirteen, or above fifteen years of age, or who has any mental or bodily defect which may disqualify him for military service; and he shall produce a sufficient certificate of the time of his birth. Every candidate for admission shall be well grounded in a knowledge of grammar, and of common arithmetic; he shall likewise write a good hand. If he should be found deficient in any of these elementary parts of learning, he will not be qualified for admission; and his application will be rejected, or must be postponed. The sums directed to be paid by each cadet for education, board, and clothing, shall be paid half yearly, in advance; and should any cadet leave the college before the expiration of the half year, he shall be regularly accounted with for the six months advance. Each cadet shall nominate an army agent, in London, from whom the half yearly payments are to be received by the trea surer of the Royal Military College. No cadet shall at any time join his company with a greater sum of money in his possession, than one guinea; and this regulation is considered to be so indispensable, that the governor shall communicate it to the parents or friends of each candidate previously to his being admitted, and inform them, that any deviation therefrom will subject the cadet to be sent away from the college. The parents or friends of each cadet may, however, if they think proper, make an arrangement for his receiving an allowance not exceeding half a crown per week, for pocket money.

Section

Section the Third. The undermentioned military staff shall, for the present, be appointed to the junior department, viz. One Superintendent. This officer shall not be under the rank of captain in the army. He shall act as commandant of the department, until one is appointed. He shall receive his orders from the governor, or lieutenant-governor, of the college, and report to them accordingly. He shall also diligently superintend and direct the studies in strict conformity to the orders on that head; and shall be respon sible for the discipline, interior regulation, and government, of the department. One Inspector of a Company. This appointment shall be filled by a person not under the rank of a subaltern officer in the army. He shall command the first company of gentlemen cadets, under the orders of the superintendent. He shall attend the cadets at the hours of study, and shall in all instances act in conformity to the rules and regulations of the department. One Serjeant Major of a Company. This appointment shall be filled by a person who has served in a regiment of the line. He is to do the duty of serjeant major to the first company of gentlemen cadets.

"Section the Fourth. In order that the cadets may be instructed in military exercises and duties, they shall be formed into a military body; and those composing the first company shall be formed according to the following distribution, viz. one captain-lieutenant, two lieutenants, one ensign, five serjeants, ten tents, or squads, of nine each, one supernumerary, making a total of one hundred.

"Section the Fifth. The cadets shall be instructed in the study of mathematics, fortification, and the general principles of gunnery, and artillery service. They shall also be taught drawing of plans, military movements, and perspective; likewise the knowledge of tactics, military geography, and history; together with the German and French languages. Frequent lectures shall be given on natural and moral philosophy. Riding and fencing, the use of the sabre, and swimming, are also to be included among their acquirements.

acquirements. As the cadets intended for the service of the East India Company do not require to be instructed in the German language, provision shall be made for their instruction in the oriental languages, as better adapted to their particular service. In this, as in the senior department of the college, it shall be a fundamental principle, in conducting the instruction, to elucidate theory by practice; and, as far as circumstances will admit, invariably to regulate the progress of the one by the other. Public examinations shall, from time to time, be held for the purpose of ascertaining the progress of the cadets; and none shall be recommended from the college for a commission in the army, until he has undergone a public examination as to his sufficiency, and has obtained a certificate thereof, signed by such of the commissioners as shall be present at the examination. Any cadet, who, after having been four years at the college, has not made such a progress as to enable him to pass the required examination, and to obtain a certificate of his being fitted for our service, must quit the college; unless it shall be especially represented to the president of the supreme board, that his insufficiency arises from a continuation of ill health, or from some other unavoidable interruption, and unless he shall be licensed, by the supreme board, to prolong his stay accordingly.

"Regulations for the Formation of the Collegiate Board, with the Authorities vested in the same.

"For the interior government and better regulation of the two departments of the Royal Military College, a collegiate board shall be established, which shall consist of the governor, the lieutenant governor, and the commandants of departments; any three of whom may form a board, at which the governor, or lieutenant governor, shall always preside. All reports and returns required from the two departments, relative to the conduct and progress of officers and gentlemen cadets in their studies, shall be examined by the collegiate board; and whenever the board perceive a want of proper application in any individual under instruction, and consider his removal from the college to

be

be a necessary example, it shall be reported by the governor to the president of the supreme board, in order that our pleasure may be taken thereupon. Public examinations of both departments, on points of science, shall be held in presence of the collegiate board, according to such regulations as shall, for the present, be established by the supreme board; upon which occasions, the president shall call upon one or more members of the supreme board, to attend at the college, who are to take their seats at the collegiate board; and no examinations for certificates of qualifi cation to serve in the army as a commissioned officer can take place, without a member of the supreme board being present, The collegiate board is to be responsible, that no person belonging to the establishment shall, on any account, reside in any other place, than where the department of the college to which he belongs is fixed. No persons shall be recommended for the important situations of commandant, or superintendent of a de partment, until they have been examined by the collegiate board, and have obtained therefrom certificates of their being duly qualified, in all respects, to discharge the duties of the same, Pro fessors and masters shall be recommended to the supreme board by the collegiate board; by whom they are previously to be care fully examined, touching their abilities and capacities, in the science they severally undertake to teach. Professors and mas. ters are liable to be suspended for misconduct, by an order of the collegiate board; but every such suspension shall be reported immediately by the governor to the president of the supreme board; in order that it may be by him laid before the supreme board, for their decision thereon. The collegiate board shall examine and settle all accompts of the two departments; and shall, at the expiration of every quarter, transmit, through the treasurer to the supreme board, a statement of receipts and expenditures, accompanied by proper vouchers; and the go, vernor and lieutenant governor shall be responsible, that the ac compts are regularly inspected by the collegiate board. The su perintendents shall regulate the expences of their respective departments, according to the established regulations, and such di rections as they shall receive from time to time.

Given at our court at St. James's, this 4th day of March, 1802, in the forty second year of our reign.

By his MAJESTY's command,

C. YORKE."

The

The learned WILLIAM ALLEY, bishop of Exeter, 1560, and one of the translators of the Bible, was a native of High Wycombe; as was Mr. CHARLES BUTLER, author of a Treatise on Rhetorick, and the Female Monarchy, or Treatise on Bees.

A road through a dreary part of the county leads to

TRING, HERTFORDSHIRE.

This is the most westernly town in the county of Herts, on the confines of Buckinghamshire, at the distance of thirty-one miles from London; it stands upon a neck of land projecting into the latter county, by which it is encompassed on three sides, and therefore properly described in this place. It formerly gave name to one of the hundreds of Herts. In Domesday Book it is called TREUNG, whence its present corruption TRING.*

* Salmon observes, that "without much hardiness one may venture to say the name is originally Roman. It stands upon the Ikening Street, so called by the Saxons, by the Romans Via ad Icianos. It led, from Dorchester and beyond, to Colchester, in the imperial Itinerary, Iciani. This was one of the four grand military ways, and so accounted in that law De Pace quatuor Cheminorum. I don't pretend this was a station, here are no remains that I know of; nor do I affirm it to be a mansion; yet as it stood upon the military way from Dorchester to Dunstable, so to Royston, Linton, Haverill, Maldon, Colchester, it might serve for a mansion to lodge or take fresh horses at: or even without that, they might give it a name as it lay upon their road. Nor do I find any attempts to bring it from any other language: the etymology has either not been enquired after, or no satisfactory one been found.

"If we look into king Stephen's charter, by which he gives this manor to the monks of Feversham, in Kent, and into the confirming one of Henry II. we find it written in both, Manerium de Triungulu. This I take to be from Triangulus, which in the Saxon times might be corrupted into Treungula, and in the Norman into Treung. What this was that resembled a Triangle 'tis hard to say. It might be the figure in which the town was built then: it might be from a wood in that form above Mr. Gore's park: or from two small rivulets that are the source of the Thame here, and joining a little farther, make two sides of a triangle, if we will imagine the cross road to serve for a third. This will not seem extravagant to any one that looks at the station ad Ansam, at Tallow Wratting in Suffolk, &c."--Hist. af Hertfordshire, p. 129.

VOL.V. No. 120.

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