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March 2.--The Marquis of Londonderry rose, as was understood, to present a petition. He proceeded to notice representations from the Irish newspapers respecting the emoluments and conduct of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland; he observed that the Noble and Learned Lord and his family had amongst them twenty-two places, and received £36,000 in salaries, &c. He would quote the words of Mr. O'Connell, used at a meeting in Ireland, as they pretty nearly agreed with his own opinions. There never was a worse legislator, nor a more venal politician than Lord Plunkett. He regretted that such a character was one of the Council of His Majesty; he considered that a Noble Lord was incompetent for such a post, who could give advice to His Majesty to return such an answer as had lately been given to the Corporation of Dublin. Lord Radnor here rose to order; after which the Marquis of Londonderry said he should present his petition another day. Lord Plunkett complained of this conduct, and declared that it was contrary to the forms of the House. The Marquis of Londonderry persisted in his refusal to present the petition. Amidst great confusion Lord Plunkett said he took the liberty of proposing a resolution to their Lordships upon the subject. He would move that the Noble Lord be called upon to present his petition, or be declared out of order. Lord Ellenborough said, the Noble Marquis had said at the time when he was called to order, that he intended to present a petition before he sat down; therefore he should have done so. If it was, therefore, intended by the resolution to pass a vote of censure upon the Noble Marquis, he would decidedly object to it. A number of their Lordships here rose. Earls Grey and Radnor were called for, the former of whom gave way to the latter Nobleman, who said he again rose to order, but had not said above three or four words, when Lord Ellenborough also rose to order, which called up several Lords on the Ministerial side. A scene of great confusion ensued, which was put an end to by the Lord Chancellor, who said he was perfectly aware that, as Speaker of that House, he had no power hardly even to make a suggestion. The Resolution was handed up to his Lordship, and was to the following effect:" That the Earl Vane having risen in his place without any question before the House, and having said, when called to order, that he had a petition to present, and having refused to make any motion or present that petition, was guilty of a breach of order." Lord Ellenborough again rose to order. Lord Plunkett complained of the falsehoods and misrepresentations that had been circulated respecting himself and his connexions, and recriminating that he had never solicited place or pension, or caused the declaration that his conduct was "too bad." Earl Grey eventually put an end to the altercation by proposing that the Marquis of Londonderry should apologise to the House for his disregard of its rules-a proposition that was acquiesced in.

March 5.-The Marquis of Londonderry inquired as to the authenticity of representations that Lord Ponsonby, our Ambassador at the Belgian Court, had, in the first instance, stirred up the people in favour of the Prince of Orange, and had afterwards, after His Majesty's Government had thought fit to change their policy, pursued a directly opposite course; and that his Lordship had kept back a petition, numerously signed in favour of the Prince of Orange, which ought to have been presented to the Congress. Lord Ponsonby immediately rose and denied that to which the Noble Marquis had alluded.

March 6.-The House again went into Committee on the Agricultural Labourers Employment Bill.-The Lord Chancellor next rose to move an Address to His Majesty for a Copy of the Report of the Common Law Commissioners. The Noble and Learned Lord in making this motion was anxious to state that a more important document could not be received by their Lordships. The motion was agreed to.

March 8.-The Earl of Eldon gave notice that on Monday next he should bring forward a motion regarding his own conduct while Lord Chancellor-an office that he had held for twenty-five years.-The Marquis of Lansdowne (after having had the first report of the Tithe Committee read) brought forward his promised motion on this subject; and in doing so, his Lordship declared that he thought the time had arrived for the recognition of the principles contained in the report. The resolutions were agreed to after a short debate.

March 9.-Lord Strangford moved the order of the day on the subject of the glove trade. The glove trade had, from a condition of prosperity, fallen into a state of decay even beyond all other trades; and this change was attributed by the glovers, and a great many others, to the free-trade system, and to the competition of the French, which that system had created. The Noble Lord concluded by moving, "That a Select Committee be appointed to inquire into the Causes of the Distressed State of the Glove Trade.' Lord Auckland said, the glove trade was regulated on as favourable terms as it could be. The whole annual manufacture of this country amounted to 15,000,000 of pairs; and the whole importation, during the last year, was only a little above 1,000,000. The House divided: Non-Contents, 41; Contents, 33; Majority against the Committee, 8.

March 12.-The Earl of Eldon hoped that their Lordships would consent to the

production of a Return respecting the Places he held, and which, he was convinced, would afford a triumphant answer to the calumnies that had been circulated to his prejudice. The motion was put and carried.'

MEMOIRS OF PERSONS LATELY DECEASED.

DR. BELL.

Lately, at Lindsay Cottage, Chelten ham, after a long illness, in the 80th year of his age, Dr. Bell, the author of a system of education to which his name is attached. He had the high gratification of seeing his system adopted by the National Society instituted for the education of the lower orders of the community. He had resided some time in India with due advantage, was Prebendary of Westminster, and Master of the Sherborne Institution, Durham; and in the course of his long and virtuous life had accumulated great wealth, which he munificently disposed of to various institutions to the amount of £120,000. MR. MUNDEN.

This admirable comedian breathed his last lately, after a protracted illness, at his residence in Bernard Street, Russell Square, in the 74th year of his age. It were superfluous to enter here into the merits of Munden as an actor, for they live in the memory of thousands who witnessed his inimitable personations. Mr. M. made his debut at Covent Garden Theatre, December 2, 1790, as Sir Francis Gripe and Jemmy Jumps. In the latter he succeeded the celebrated Edwin (the best comic singer on the English stage), and was eminently successful. In 1813 he accepted an engagement at Drury Lane Theatre, where he continued until his final retirement from the boards on Monday, May 31, 1824. He selected for his last appearance Sir Robert Bramble in "The Poor Gentleman," and his masterly character of Old Dozey in " Past Ten o'Clock." He attempted to deliver a farewell address, surrounded by most of the performers belonging to the theatre, and retired into private life, universally admired and respected. He was an excellent comic actor, and in some of his parts unrivalled; indeed, that of Old Dornton may be said to have died with him. In private life he was generally esteemed by a very numerous circle of acquaintance, not more on account of his convivial qualities than for others more substantial. A tendency to parsimony has, it is true, been objected to him as a failing; and several ludicrous anecdotes are in circulation of the skill and tact with which he not only contrived to evade a demand upon his pocket, but even to become a gainer by the attempt. The well-known story of the

exchange of his old cotton umbrella for the new silk one of a friend, who requested a keepsake from him, is a case in point. In the sterling qualities which constitute the character of an honest and upright man, he was, however, by no means deficient. Mr. Munden was one of those who reflect credit upon the profession, by always conducting himself with great propriety: punctual and correct in all his transactions, he brought up a numerous family, giving his children an excellent education. He has left a widow, a daughter, and a son: the latter is a gentleman of considerable literary acquirements.

REV. G. CRABBE.

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Lately, at Trowbridge, aged seventyeight, the Reverend George Crabbe. Few men of his fame were so little known personally in the literary world. Of simple and studious habits, he confined himself to the retirement of his rectory, to the unambitious fulfilment of his duties, and the education of his family. Mr. Crabbe was born in 1754, at Aldborough in Suffolk, where his father held some appointment in the Customs. It is said that he was originally intended for the medical profession, and that he served an apprenticeship to a provincial apothecary. He, however, was early won over to the Muses. He came to London at the age of twenty-four, and gained the friendship of Burke, at whose recommendation he published, in 1781, his poem of "The Library." This was quickly followed by 'The Village," which gained for his genius the high and enviable approbation of Dr. Johnson. In the mean time, Crabbe had en-. tered himself at Cambridge, had taken orders, and now accompanied the Duke of Rutland, as chaplain, upon his appointment to the vice-regal government of Ireland. Through the same patronage he afterwards obtained some small church preferment. Notwithstanding the success which had attended his earlier works, it was more than twenty years before he again ventured on publication; and we remember the no small surprise with which, in 1807, we read a collection of Poems, then wet from the press, by one who, in his associations with Burke and Johnson, seemed to belong to a past age. This work also was eminently successful; and "The Borough followed in 1810, Tales " in 1815, and "Tales of the Hall" in 1819.

1 The Historical Register will be completed in our next.

INDEX TO VOL. III.

ORIGINAL PAPERS.

Bank of England: Commerce, Currency, Finance, 229
Bankruptcy Laws, Letter on, 405

Bar Initiation-Sir Edward Sugden, 431

Benediction on Children, by T. Campbell, 326

Blondel de Nesle, 48

Boarders, The, 184

Campbell, Poem by, 92

Canning, Mr., and the South American Republics, 18

Captivity among the Rockites, 11

Cholera Consultation, 400

The Progress of, 72, 211

The Epidemic,-is it in London? 319, 438
Letter on, 333

Clavering's Auto-Biography, 266, 351

Commerce, Observations on, 36

Croker, Information for, 82

Crooked Lane, an Angler's Visit to, 166

Day at Lulworth, 177

Debates on the Reform Bill, 95

Dialogues of the Deck, No. II., 300

Dinner-Dialogue Diversities, 164

Dissection-the Sanctity of the Dead, 131

Draft of a Bill of Impeachment for Rotten Boroughs, 78

Education in Ireland, National, 409

Executions in England, 277

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Foscolo, Poem by, 149

France and England. By a Foreigner. Letter II.,

Free, Stanzas to the, 334

Historical Scenes, by Miss Mitford, No. I., 347

Irish Church and her Tithes, 218, 289

Sketches, No. III., 245

Knowledge, 362

April, 1832.-VOL. III. NO. XII.

121

L

INDEX.

Last of the Numbered, The, 7

Letters of a Foreigner on France and England, 62
Beneficed Clergyman, 396

from Scotland, by the Ettrick Shepherd, 422

Life of a Sailor, The, No. IX., 383

Malahide Castle, by Lady Morgan, 245

Mary's Garland, Flowers for, 382
Memorials of our College, No. II., 101

Music, Old English, 261

New Tory-Guide, The, No. I., 274. II., 418

Oswald the Blighted, a Tale of Ayrshire, 306, 370

Pacha of Many Tales, No. VI., 85. VII., continued, 194
Painting, The Spanish School of, 208

Parliamentary Session, Toryism, &c., 335

Party Spirit; a Dialogue, 186

Past Year, The, 288

Poetry, Uneducated, 402, 404

Power of Russia, Poem on, by T. Campbell, 92

Scientific Letters to a Lady of Quality, 50, 363

Scotland in 1831, from the Notes of a Tourist, 155

Sepulchres, The, by Foscolo, 149

Simpkin Papers, No. II., 56. III., 183. IV., 241. V., 399

Sotheby, Poetry, by William, 61

Spanish School of Painting, Account of the, 208

Sugden, Sir Edward, Account of, 431

Tale of an Old Highlander, by the Ettrick Shepherd, 113

by the author of the Kuzzilbash, 26

Tailor, a Good Story of a Glasgow one, 327
Terrible Letters from Scotland, 422

Trade in the Metropolis, State of, 282

Unlucky Star, The, 203

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Cheskian Anthology, notice of, 114
Cholera, Letter on, notice of, 115
Church Reform, Thoughts on, notice of,

48

Cicero's Orations, notice of, 48
Collings's Fables and other Pieces, no-
tice of, 40

Commercial and Money-Market Reports
26, 58, 95, 126

Companion to the Almanac, notice of
the, 16

Copland on Cholera, notice of, 45

Crabbe, Rev. George, Memoir of, 130
Cuvier's Animal Kingdom, notice of, 45
Cyclopedia of Practical Medicine, no-
tice of, 82

Deaths 32, 64, 102, 130

Dendy on Dreams, notice of, 46

Divines of the Church of England, no-
tice of, 45

Dramatic Review 20, 52, 90, 122
Druid, The, a Tragedy, by T. Cromwell

107

Education, examination at establishment
for, 24

Elective Rights, Condy's, notice of, 15
Engravings, published, account of, 89
Evergreen, notice of the, 48
Eugene Aram, notice of, 76

Family Classical Library, notice of, 47
Family Library, notice of, 12, 86
Father's New Year's Gift, notice of, 84
Figaro in London, notice of, 84
Fine Arts 20, 51, 88, 122
Flour for Sheep 56

Frame Tablets, account of, 89

Francis the First, Kemble's, notice of,

103

Funds, State of the Public, 26, 58, 95,
126

Garrick's Correspondence, notice of, 36
Geographical Annual, notice of, 17
Geological Sketches, Hack's, notice of,
16

Georgian Era, The, notice of, 34
Gilfillan's Songs, notice of, 65
Gordon's Considerations on the War in
Poland, 33

Greenwich Observatory, Height of, 23

Hall's Contemplations, Vol. II., notice
of, 15

Herbert's Country Parson, notice of, 118
Historical Register 28, 60, 97, 128
Hogarth, Anecdotes of William, Ni-
chols's, No. I. 15. II. 48

Holly, Efficacy of, in Fevers, 56

Invasion, The, notice of, 41

notice of, 81

King's Secret, notice of the, 14
Theatre, Astronomy at, 92

Ladies' Museum, notice of, 47
Lady Chapel, Meeting on the Resto-
ration of, notice of, 84

Last of the Sophis, notice of, 16
Law of Husband and Wife, notice of, 16
Leather, new mode of tanning, 55
Linton's Sketches, notice of, 89
Literary News, Works in Progress, 19,
50, 87, 120

Loire, Views on the, by Perez, notice
of, 89

Lover's Irish Stories, notice of, 78

Mackinnon's Speech, notice of, 117
Marriages 32, 64, 102

Marshall's Details of the Metropolis,
notice of, 116

Martin's Fall of Babylon, notice of, 88
Martineau's Illustrations of Political
Economy, notice of, 46

Mechanical Arts, notice of, 94

Member, The, by Galt, notice of, 74
Meteorological Journal 25, 56, 92, 93, 94,
125

Minors, account of the, 124
Munden, Mr., Memoir of, 130
Music 122

Musters, Mrs., Memoir of, 102

Nasmyth, Peter, Memoir of, 63
New Mineral discovered 23
New Publications, List of, 32, 49, 86,
119

Newton Forster; or, the Merchant Ser-
vice, notice of, 1

Nicotiana, notice of, 16

Nights of the Round Table, notice of, 47
Norman Abbey, notice of, 68
Northcote, James, Esq. R.A., Memoir
of, 31

Nosegay, The, notice of, 20
Novelist's Library, Roscoe's, notices
of, Vol. VI., 15. VII., 43
Numismatic Annual, account of, 85

Panorama of Florence 56

Paris and its Scenes, notice of, 47
Patents, New, Lists of, 25, 56
Pennie's Britain's Drama, notice of, 83
Petticoats, Apology for, 124
Pictures of the Past, notice of, 13
Poetical Ephemeras, by Brown, notice
of, 44

Political Journal 28, 60, 97, 128

Preferments 32, 49, 64, 102

Probation and other Tales, notice of, 83
Public Instruction in France 23

Publications, New, List of, 18, 49, 86,
119

Musical, 51

Irish Peasantry, Traits and Stories of, Pulmonary Consumption, Murray on,

Jukes on Lavements, notice of, 16
Juvenile Cyclopedia, notice of, 48
Keightley's Mythology, notice of, 118
Key to Parliament, &c., notice of, 85

notice of, 48

Reflections on the Politics, &c. of Afri-
ca, by Heeren, notice of, 10
Reformer's Catechism, The, notice of,
118

Revenue, State of the, 62

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