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DEATH OF THE BISHOP OF CLOYNE.-We regret to announce the death of the cele brated Dr. Brinkley, Bishop of Cloyne. The melancholy event took place on Monday, Sept. 14th, at the house of his Lordship's brother, in Leeson-street. His Lordship was the personal friend of the late celebrated Bishop Law, who laid the foundation of his literary greatness. He was, for many years, the Professor of Astronomy in Trinity College, and the author of the Astronomy now read in our university bearing his name. His Lordship, though in a very declining state of health, had undertaken this long and fatiguing journey to be present at the late conference of the Irish Bishops. His earthly remains are deposited in the vault of Trinity College, the heads of the university being anxious to pay this tribute of respect to the memory of a true friend of science. Dr. Brinkley was appointed Bishop of Cloyne in 1826, and was formerly a Fellow of Caius College, Cambridge. B.A. 1788; M.A. 1791; D.D. 1806. According to the provisions of the Church Temporalities Bill, Dr. Kyle, Bishop of Cork and Ross, will be invested with the charge of Cloyne, in like manner as the Bishop of Ossory (Dr. Fowler) took charge of Ferns and Leighlin; and the temporalities of Cork and Ross will go to the Ecclesiastical Fund.

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Coghlan, T. L..

Gilderdale, J.

Horsfall, J.

Hyde, J..

Lee, J. P.

cum Croxton, R. Adlingfleet, V.

Stratton Audley, P.C. Eye, V.

Great Bradley, R.

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CLERICAL APPOINTMENTS.

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Appointment.

Lord Chancellor

Chaplain to the Convict Hulk, Surprise, stationed at Cove.
Afternoon Lecturer in the Church of Halifax.

Master of the Free School at Elland, Halifax.

One of the City Lecturers at Oxford.

Domestic Chaplain to the Duke of Northumberland.

Spencer, Hon. & Rev. W. H. Domestic Chaplain to the Baroness Wenman.

Chapel on Curdridge Common, Hants.

Trench, R. C.. Wordsworth, C.

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MARRIAGES.

At Baldock, the Rev. William Gould, M.A., of Whickham, Durham, to Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Vickris Pryor, Esq., of Baldock.

At St. Michael's Church, Oxford, by the Rev. Dr. Faussett, the Rev. Thomas Edward Bridges, D.D. President of Corpus Christi College, to Henrietta, daughter of the late Robert Bourne, M. D. of Worcester Coll.

Rev. William Manbey, to Theresa Matilda, daughter of the Rev. John Newman, Vicar of Witham and Childerditch, Essex.

At Liskeard, Cornwall, by the Rev. J. Lakes, M.A. Owen Flintoff, Esq., B.A. of

Trinity Coll. Cambridge, to Ann, eldest daughter of D. Alder, Esq. Middlesex.

At Brighton, by the Rev. Charles Maitland, the Rev. John Warren, Rector of Gravely, Huntingdonshire, and eldest son of the Very Reverend the Dean of Bangor, to Caroline Elizabeth, second daughter of the late Lieutenant-Colonel Warren, of the 3d Guards.

At the house of the British Minister at Berne, the Rev. Charles Lushington, M.A. Student of Christ Church, son of Sir Henry Lushington, Bart. to Susan Rose, daughter of Captain James Tweedale, late of the Hon. East India Company's Service.

At Binfield, Berks, by the Rev. J. Randall, M.A. the Rev. William Parr Phillips, B. A. of Trinity College, Rector of Woodford, Essex, to Caroline, fourth daughter of the late Lieutenant-General Sir Francis Wilder, of the Manor House, Binfield.

At Culham, by the Rev. Charles Henry Cox, M.A. late Student of Christ Church, Mayow Short, Esq. of Lincoln's Inn and the Middle Temple, Barrister-at-Law, and Student of Christ Church, to Mrs. Phillips, of Culham House, Oxfordshire.

Rev. W. Peppernell Hutton, of Northwich, grandson of Sir W. Peppernell, to Elizabeth, daughter of the Rev. J. Collins, of Frodsham, Cheshire.

Rev. William Wood, Rector of Staplegrove, Somerset, to Mary Agnes Tufnell Barrett, eldest daughter of Captain Barrett, of Bath.

At Oddington, the Rev. Alexander Cameron, of Lochiel, to Charlotte, eldest daughter of the Dean of Gloucester.

Rev. John Burder, M. A. of Stroud, to Sarah, eldest daughter of the late Andrew Pope, Esq. of Cotham, near Bristol.

At Enfield, Middlesex, by the Rev. Daniel Cresswell, D. D. the Rev. William Ellis Wall, M. A. and Gentleman-Commoner of Trinity Coll. Oxford, only son of William Wall, Esq. of Worcester, to Fanny Eliza, eldest daughter of Edward Williams, Esq. of Enfield.

At Steeple Aston, by the Rev. Joseph Burrows, B. D. the Rev. Henry Jones, M. A. of Charlton-on-Otmoor, Oxford, to Frances Ellen, youngest daughter of James Lainchbury, Esq.

Hon. and Rev. P. A. Irby, to Wilhelmina, daughter of the late David Powell, Esq. of Loughton, Essex.

Rev. John Blackburn, of Attercliffe, Yorkshire, to Sophia, youngest daughter of the late C. Rivington, Esq.

Rev. Charles Jollands, Rector of Little Munden, Herts, to Mary, eldest daughter of George Brettle, Esq. of Raleigh Lodge, Brixton.

At Stoke Climsland, in the county of Cornwall, by the Rev. Plantagenet Somerset, the Rev. George Somerset, eldest son of the late Lord Arthur Somerset, to Phillida Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Sir

William Pratt Call, Bart. of Whiteford House, in the same county.

At Walcot Church, Bath, by the Rev. Henry Barry, Rector of Draycott, the Rev. George Brown Brock, of this city, to Anne, only daughter of the late Rev. Theophilus Browne, A.M. of Bath.

At Bathwick Church, Bath, the Rev. William Gardiner, A.M. second son of the Rev. Dr. Gardiner, of that city, to Mary Windsor, only child of the late James Brownrigg, Esq. of Edenderry, King's County, Ireland.

At Bath, the Rev. Jeremiah Awdry, of Seagry House, Wilts, to Mary Sibella, eldest daughter of Jacob Wilkinson, sq. of Springfield House, Bath.

At Taunton, the Rev. J. S. Wilkins, B. A. of Queen's College, Cambridge, to Rebecca, youngest daughter of the late Robert Hart, Esq. of Bishop's Hull.

At St. Mary's, Scilly, the Rev. E. J. Willcocks, B. A. of Lincoln College Oxford, Chaplain of the Scilly Islands, to Anne, only daughter of C. Steel, Esq. Inspecting Commander of the Coast Guard.

At Hammersmith, by the Rev. T. Horn, the Rev. William G. Giles, B.A. of Wadham College, Oxford, and of Enfield, to Grace Charlotte Cooper, of Hammersmith.

Rev. H. J. Cooper, to Barbara, daughter of the Rev. Thomas Snell, Rector of Windlesham, Surrey..

Rev. William Buller, second son of Lieutenant-General Buller, to Leonora Sophia Bond, daughter of the late John Bond, Esq. of Grange, Dorset, and niece of the late Right Hon. Nathaniel Bond.

At Yarmouth, the Rev. Thomas Wall, M. A. of Caius College, Cambridge, eldest son of Robert Wall, Esq. to Louisa Elizabeth, youngest daughter of the Rev. John Forster, Vicar of Tunstead.

At St. Margaret's, Lynn, the Rev. Henry Edward Knatchbull, son of the late Sir Edward Knatchbull, of Mershamhatch, Kent, to Pleasance, youngest daughter of the late Thomas Bagge, Esq. of Stradsetthall, Norfolk.

At Thoydon Garnon, by Rev. Dr. Ainslie, the Rev. William Pratt, of Harpley, Norfolk, to Louisa, third daughter of W. Coxhead Marsh, Esq., of Park Hall, Essex.

NOTICES TO CORRESPONDENTS.

If "A Constant Reader" would interpret his difficulty by reading "do they not both happen at the same time," which is there the meaning of the question, then, as an orthodox man, he might be satisfied.

"Anti-Carolus "must count his syllables, particularly in Stanza 3.

"A Constant Reader's" queries were received too late to be answered this month.

THE

CHRISTIAN REMEMBRANCER.

NOVEMBER, 1835.

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.

1835.

Records of a Route through France and Italy, with Sketches of Catholicism. By WM. RAE WILSON, F. A. S. A. S. R. &c. Longman and Co. 8vo. Pp. 472.

WE are somewhat at a loss to account for the very general popularity which Mr. Rae Wilson has managed to obtain in this enlightened generation, for he is a Gentleman, a Conservative, and a Christian; refined in his tastes, polished in his diction, and uncompromising in avowing and defending the faith that is in him; learned without pedantry or ostentation, and religious without cant or bigotry. With all these drawbacks, his reputation as a careful observer, and a lively as well as an accurate describer, is fixed beyond controversy. Indeed, few modern books of travels have so well repaid perusal as his graphic delineations of those scenes, so interesting to every one but a modern philosopher, which he traversed in the Holy Land. If the work before us should be thought not to come fully up to the standard of its immediate predecessor, the comparative inferiority will be found to arise rather less from any diminished power in the writer, than from the reader's increased familiarity with the countries and manners which form the subject of his work. France and Italy are now almost as well known to "the general" as Yorkshire, and no common talent is required to throw any accession of light upon their scenes or habits. Yet this task has Mr. Wilson undertaken, and by looking beyond the surface of things, and considering them with reference to something more than the mere impression they may make upon the senses, has produced a volume, which will, we doubt not, find its place in the library of every one, who, while he rejoices in the beauties of this lower world, is not unmindful of their transitory condition, or indisposed to "look through Nature up to Nature's God."

That his observations will be found unpalatable to many, Mr. Wilson anticipates; and we agree with him in his conjecture, inasmuch as he

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