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Ann.

Short | India | India India S. Sea Old New 778- Stock. Ann Bonds. Stock

DAY'S PRICE OF STOCKS IN JULY, 1793. Long

Ann. Ann.

Commerce Exchequer-Bills.

New Excheq3 perCt Sep. 30 Je. 3 Mar. 31, June 30, Navy Bills. Scrip. 1791. 1793

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N. B. In the 3 per Cent. Confels, the highest and lowest Price of each Day is given; in the other Stocks the highest Price only.

THOMAS WILKIE, Stock-Broker, No. 71, St Paul's Church-yard.

LOND.GAZETTE GENERAL EVEN. Lloyd's Evening St. James'sChron. Whitehall Even. London Chren. London Evening. Le Packet-Star English Chron. Evening Mail Middlefex Journ. Courier de Lond. Daily Advertifer Public Advertiser Gazetteer, Ledger Woodfall's Diary Morning Herald Morning Chron. World.-Briton. Oracle-Times Morn. Poft-Sun 13 Weekly Papers Bath a, Bristol 4 Birmingham 2 Blackburn

Bucks-Bury

CAMBRIDGE 2

Canterbury 3

Chelmsford

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For

AUGUST,

CONTAINING

1793.

Meteorolog. Diaries for July and Aug. 1793 632 | Family of Vaux.-Famous Tomb at Howden 710
Oxford Encenia-Bp. of Dromore's Sermon 683 William de Britain -The Turkish Medallion 711
Important Advices from the Camp at Brighton 684 Mifcellaneous Remarks.-A Seal.-Font, &c. 712
Mr. Wilmot's Addrefs to the French Clergy 685
On the prefent State of Chriftianity in India 686
Remarks on Bigland's Glouceft. Collections 687
An Original Letter of the late Bishop Horne 688
Some Information on the Family of Waring ib.
Topographical Defcription of Knaresborough 689
St. Michael's Church, Coventry, to be repaired 690
Genealogical Pattage in Matthew explained 691
TheACADEMIC, N°VII-Christchurch Bells694
Farther Vindication of Harringtonian Theory 695
Miraculous Efcape recorded-Old Infcription 696
The Sufferings of Lieut. Geo. Spearing in 1769 697
Remarks on Libels and Riots-Inquifitions! 700
Duplicates of Regifters, where to be found 703
Some Remarks on Dr. Percy's Antient Ballads 74
ATwo Months Tour in Scotland continued 706
Dr. Priestley-Biblical Critique.-Su T.More737
Copper Sealexplained.-Mrs.Bofcawen, who? 708
A Moral Difquifition.-The Humane Society 709
Embellished with a Picturefque View of KNARESBOROUGH from the Banks of
the NYDDE; a beautiful Memorial of a providential Efcape;
Curiofities from ESSEX, STEPNEY, &c. &c. &c.

Anecdoteof Mr.Agecroft.-Stepney Curiofities 713
Who was the Tranflator of Greifet's Ververt? 714
A wonderful Incident-No Trees near Canals 715
The Fountain in Blenheim Gardens eluc dated 16
Church Notes at Henley, Bentington, &c. 717)
Meteorological Tour from Walton to London 720)
Account of an Election at All Souls College 721
Elector of Cologne's Letter to Dumourier 723
Some fcarce Portraits, where to be found ib.
Mr. Warner declines the Hampshire Hiftory 724
Proceedings of the laft Seffion of Parliament 725)
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS 729-746
FOREIGN LITERARY INTELLIGENCE 747
SELECT POETRY, antient and modern 748-752
National Convention in France-For. Affairs 753
Country News, and Domeftic Occurrences 762
Marriages, Deaths, Preferments, &c. 765-774
Average Prices of Corn-Theatrical Regilt. 77
Daily Variations in the Prices of the Stocks 776

By

SYLVANUS

URBAN,

Gent.

Printed by JOHN NICHOLS, at Cicero's Head, Red-Lion Paffage, Fleet-ftreet;
where all Letters to the Editor are defired to be addreffed, Post-paid. 1702

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21. Blackberry in bloom and forming fruit.-23. Water lly in bloom.-24. The ther mometer about 70 at 3 o'clock P. M. in the fhade.-28. Gathered mellow gooseberries for the first time. Fall of rain this month 2 inches. Evaporation, 3 inches 8-10ths.

Gooseberries scarce in all the country where I have travelled.-Crops of hay thin, but the grafs in good quality and well got in; many inftances of cutting one day, and housing the next *. J. HOLT, Walton, near Liverpool.

D. of

METEOROLOGICAL TABLE for August, 1793.

Height of Fahrenheit's Thermometer.

Month.

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Height of Fahrenheit's Thermometer.

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Barom. Weather
io. pts.in Aug. 1793.

,or fair

79 59 29,87 rain

73 57

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12 57
13

72

64

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58 72

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58

58

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16

62 30,12 fair

58

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60 74 62

56

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96 fair

64 81 62 29,81 rain

59 rain

56 58 fair 62 58 ,46 rain

18 53 61 55
19 53

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60 76 59 ,66 fair

59

72 63 88 rain

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59 30,02 cloudy

68 56 ,10 rain

58 29.78

71

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61

73 57 76 fair

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68

73 54 30,03

55

13 fair

74

76

565

60

923

59

,15

72

67

51 68 57 103

55 29,93 rain

54 30,04 fhowery
53 ,10 fair

W. CARY, Optician, No. 182, near Norfolk-Street, Strand.

*For the obfervations made by our Journalist from June 19 till his return to Walton, see pp. 618. 720; and in p, 620, read "fix quarters per acre." EDIT.

THE

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Mr. URBAN, Oxford, Aug. 12. *XXX*HE account given in your last (pp. 662. & feq.) of what paffed at our Encania, on the memorable event of the inftallation of the new Chancellor, is in general pretty exact; I shall only add, that the fpirit of loyalty and regard for eur happy Conftitution, in Church and State, was fo warmly and fo generally expreffed on this agreeable occafion, as could not but afford a heart-felt pleafure to all that cordially love their King and Country; and, in the public recitations, our happy ftate was fo properly contrafted with the mifery and horrors exhibited now in France, as must have made a ficong impreffion on all prefent; not lefs falutary for the younger part of the aud ence than confolatory to their venerable feniors.

And herein the Bishop of Dromore very properly took the lead, in his initiatory fermon; the conclufion of which made so strong an impreffion on myfelf and fome of my friends, that I fhall endeavour to give you, from our joint recollection, what we can remember of his Lord p's words.

Having oblerved at large how much the Chriffin religion had improved the fpirit of love and kindness among men, &c. the Bishop thas proceeded:

"In a Christian country, where the doctrines of the Gospel are conftantly taught, the most important truths, and the fublinieft morals, are fo generally known, even to the loweft of the people, that we are fcarcely fenfible of their value. Like the light of day, and the genial warmth of fpring, their benign influence is univertally diffuted; yet is tcarcely obferved, or excites attention. To eftimate them as we ought, we thould experience what we must futter from their lofs. "This is precifely our prefent cafe. That we may know and feel how much we owe to the Christian religion, we have before our eyes a great nation, our nearest and most powerful neighbours, actually deprived of this ineftimable blefling; who have expelled

PART II.

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"It had become a problem with fome, whether the fuperior comforts and happiness of modern times were not merely the refult of high civilization; whether the boasted refinement of manners, and delicacy of fentiment, which diftinguish the prefent age, were not fufficient to account for its fuper or difplay of the humane virtues, and greater fecurity of life and property; and whether Religion had any fhare in procuring to us thefe tranfcendent advant ges. Or, if it was allowed that, in the infancy of nations, Religion might be of fome ufe, in fuperadding its imaginary terrors to the obfervance of laws, and the practice of morals; yet, when these were established, and had obtained a general influence in the habits and manners of men, it was doubted whether Religion were then any longer neceffary; whether a nation could not do as well or better wi.hout it; in thort, whether it were not an useless, if not a noxious, incumbrance.

"Divine Providence hath allowed the experiment to be made. It hath permitted a people, who boafted their superior poffeffion of all thofe benefits, to be given up to the effect of their irreligion and impiety. It hath held them up for an example, for a warning to the world, that all nations may fee what the most polished people, in the moft enlightened age, may immediately become, when Religion is withdrawn, and the truths of Chribanity denied or rej-Atd.

"From the highest improvements of polifhed life, from the first line in the scale of national refinement, they are inftantly funk and degrrded below the level of civilized nations We faw them but as yesterday excelling in arts and fciences, cultivating every branch of learning, aboanding with the comforts, the elegances, the luxuries, of life; great, flourishing, powerful. Wanton in their profperity, they hit their impous hands against leaven: they rebel against God, and reject his Son! What immediately do they become? The moft wretched, the mult fal en, of all nations! Their learning gone; its profeffors fled: the fciences extinguithed: the finest productions of Art deftro ed. All their comforts vanished: every humane and estimable quality erated from their bofoms:

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and they are fast reverting to the miferies and crimes of lavage life; brutal manners, wanton cruelty, indifcriminate carnage.

"May their fad example be a warning to ourfelves, and teach us to revere and obey thofe inftitutes, which Heaven in its mercy feat for the guidance of man; to add the reftraints of conference to the public fanctions of human laws; to prevent even their operation, by training the mind to habits of virtue and goodness, by teaching it to refift ail temptations here, and to fix its final hopes on Heaven!

"These fentiments, thefe reflexions, cannot furely be deemed foreign to the fubject on which we are this day affembled. To confider the dreadful effects of caring impiety, of avowed Atheism, cannot be improper when we meet to perform one of the most fublime acts of Chriftian charity; to fupport an inftitution which flows from the genuine

fpirit of the Gospel : in which we manifeft

our obedience to the great injunction in the text, pf loving one another. For, where Christianity is extirpated, we fee fatally difplayed the want of that love; we fee fpring up in its place all thofe baleful qualities, all those works of the fleft, enumerated by the Apoftie-batred, variance, emulations, wrath, frife, feditions, brefies, envyings, murders!

Thefe are the bitter fruits of that wisdom (may we not call it that philofophy ?), which, to ufe the language of St James, is earthly, fenfual, devilish! which, fays with the fool, there is no God; and which tends to confufion, and every evil work.

"Whereas the fruit of the Spirit (may I be permitted to fay the divine fpirit of Chriftianity?) is all goodness,-righteoufnefs, and truth. That true wifdom, which is from above, is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, and caly to he intreated, full of mercy and good fruits. (James iii. 15-17.)"

Of thefe good fruits the Bishop obferved, that to heal the fick, and to relieve the miferable, were among the mott diftinguished; and thence took occafion to recommend more particularly the object of their prefent meeting, viz. the Radcliffe infirmary; concluding with the following very apt and forcible injunction of St. Paul to Timothy (1 Tim. vi. 17—19):

"Charge them that are rich in this world, that they be not high-minded, nor truft in uncertain riches, bus in the living God, who get us richly all things to enjoy; that they do good, that they be rich in good work, ready to distribute, willing to communicate; laying up in ftore for themselves a good foundation against the time to come, that they may lay hold on eternal life."

This fermon was preached on Tuef. day, July 2; and on Wednesday, July 3, the Bishop of Dromore, who had taken

his first degrees of A. B. and A. M. at Oxford, having been educated at Chriftchurch College, whereof he had been what is here called an independent member (that is, not a student on the foundation, but a commoner), and who had afterwards taken his degree of D.D. at Cambridge, was now admitted here ad eundem gradum; and this according to the ufual order of prece dence, in the first place, before the ho norary degree of DOCTOR OF LAWS was conferred on the noblemen and gentlemen enumerated in your former account in p. 662.

By inferting the above, you will o-
Yours, &c. OXONIENSIS.

blige

Mr URBAN, Brigbion Camp, Aug. 21. YOU will please to take off the cuo

tation you made before the following expreffion in my last-"the_sweating heroes of a bloodless plain"-the thought was new; and, if you could have feen the caufe which gave rife to it, I think you would have allowed the application was a strong one: the thermometer was that day at 92.

We will now proceed to inform you, the uncertain weather, after our friendly thunder-form, gave us (as Waterdownian foldiers) a defirable refpite; during which I traverfed the encampment, and perceived the neighbouring country prefented many beautiful views 1 had neither time nor inclination to

admire in the exceffive heat of our DOGDAYS. Although the rain was frequent and heavy, it took fome time before the thirty turf feemed affected by it; but, when it had reached a layer of clay, more than a foot beneath the furface, the water oozed upward, and made the ground as foft as a sponge; and, befides this wet-footed inconveni ence, many fnipes were feen. Thefe aquatic lymptoms, added to the name of Water-dorun, give us the profpect, as we are to conclude our canvas expedition upon this fwamp, that we may be regenerated into an army of frogs. Is not it faid that fheep change their na ture when they change climate and food? Very probably this may be an experiment to find if man may not too; and if water, and croaking, and et-ceteras, can make us approach the gre nouille race, what reafon is there to doubt but the trial may have the effect? SWIFT has fomewhere an allufion of there being many human frogs in Hol land, which can only be occafioned

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