Cuba... .....4 0 .....2 11 Cayenne... PITCH, per cwt. Foreign ........0 9 il 2 3 6..2 4 Com. West India 0 1 7 0 19 i 10 0..1 14 0 6 0..1 15 0 Bengal. .0 0 114 0 i 18 ROSIN, per cwt 0 1 3 .0 8 6..0 9 4 ELEPHANT'S TEETH. American.. ...0 80..0 90 l's per cwt... 9 0..01 6 RUM, per gallon 1 Jamaica low O.P. O 3 0 Leeward common 0 2 8..0 0 0 FLAX, per ton SHUMAC, cwt. 1 0 0..1 2 6 Petersburgh 12hd 3 12 0 3 14 0 STAVES FLAX-SEED per hhd. white oak pipe 1 8 0.1 12 0 American....... .6 0 0.0 0 0 red oak hhd......0 80..0 90 Canada per bush. 0 10 0..0 10 6 SUGAR, cwt. FUSTIC, per ton Muscovado Brit. P. Dabs & moist brn 3 § 0..3 14 0 Dry Brown... 3 14 0..3 19 0 .16 0 0 17 Middling.. 0..4 4 0 Brazil. 8 0 0 10 0 Good middling... 4 5 0..4 8 0 Zante... ..0' 0 0 0 Very fine. -4 12 0..4 16 0 GINGER, per cwt. Havanna, in bond 8 0..2 100 Jamaica.. 3 15 0..7 0 Yellow.. 0..2 16 0 HEMP, per ton White .3 2 0..3 12 0 Riga Rhine.....54 0 0 55 0 0 Brazil, brown, bond 2 0..2 8 Petersburg clean 52 053 Yellow 2 0..2 11 0 HIDES, per lb. White... 2 13 0..3 5 0 West India, dry..0 0 41.00 6 East-India, in bond Buenos Ayres, dryo 06.00 9 Brown... 114 0..2 0 0 Brazil, dry .......0 0 63.0 0 83 Yellow 2 3 0..2 100 LIG. VITÆ,per ton..7 0 0..100 0 White. 2 12 0..3 0 0 LOGWOOD, Camp ..10 0 0 10 10 0 Molasses, per cwt. Jamaica ......... 9 5 0..9 100 West India B.P...15 0..2 30 Hondura g........ 90 0..9 50 TALLOW, per cwt. MAHOGANY, per foot Brazil.. 4 1 0.,0 0 0 Honduras.......0 0 11..0 1 2 Petersburgh, Y.C.4 0 0..0 0 0 St Domingo......0 I 4..0 2 2 Soap 3 18 0.0 0 0 Cuba. 0 1 3..0 1 6 Archangel Soap..3 18 0 OLS, per 252 gallons TAR, per barrel Cod... 45 0 0 4 0 0 American, comm. 0 19 0..0 19 0 Seal, pale.... 54 0 0 56 0 0 Virginia 1 0 6.0 0 0 brown,....52 Stockholm 2 6..] 3 0 Linseed, per gal. 0 4 4 Archangel ...1 9..0 0 0 Rape, pale... 0 5 4 TOBACCO, per lb. brown.....0 5 2 Faded..... 0 0 6 Olive, per 236 gal. Ord. and sound.. 0 0 0 0 0 64 Gallipoli...... 100 0 0 0 0 Good and fine 0 0 7 0 0 0 Messina 90 0 0 97 Stemmed..... .0 0 80 0 103 Palm, per 20 cwt 63 0 0 0 0 0 Rappabannock If. 0 0 5.0 0 7 Tarpentine, cwt 4 2 0 Stemmed.. 0 0 8..0 0 9 PIMENTO per lb.... 0 091..0 0 10 Kentucky leaf....0 0 5 0 0 7} PINE TIMBER, pet cubic foot. TORTOISE SHELL,lb.) 0 1 1 American.. -0 2 5..0 2 8 TURPENTINE, cwt. American..... .0 18 0..0 19 0 ........ ......1 ERRATA. for placidave read placidam. R. W. W." .... PICTURESQUE SCENERY, TOPO- Solutions to the Queries, in Namber 310 Account of Handsworth.. 259 New Queries.... 311 * The Devil's Arrows, - near Borough ORIGINAL POETRY. bridge. 284 312 HISTORY OF TRADES AND MA- Sonnet to the Northern Star.. 314 NUFACTURES. Charade .. 314 315 *History of the Alam-Trade, concluded 265 The Sisters, a true Tale.... Translations from Petrarch.... 317 MISCELLANEOUS CORRESPOND- A Lady's reply to the Rev. R. W. W.!! ENCE, &c. Charade.... 318 HOURS AFTER TEA, No. III. ....... 268 ANALYTICAL REVIEW. Nottingha hire Rivers... 271 The Latitudes and Longitudes, Popu The Maid of Killarney; or Albion and 318 lation, &c.of all the Market-Towns Journal of a Tour and Residence in and principal Villages in Derbyshire.. 273 320 Singular Phenomenon of the Sun and and:1811. By Louis Simond.. Moon.. 275 LITERATURE. Examination of the common Preju Literary and Scientific Intelligence.. 324 dice in favour of the Ancients.... 276 Literary Annunciations.... 326 CONVERSATIONS ; by Mrs. Holland.. 287 | General Monthly Catalogue.... 327 Genius and Misfortune... 289 Corroborative Proofs of a General De MONTHLY CHRONICLE. luge, drawn from Subterraneous Foreign Events.. 328 Appearances.. 294 Parliamentary Intelligence.... 329 Remarks on the Influence of the Fine Domestic Occurrences, London. 331 Arts and Works of Fiction on the - General.. 332 Moral Character.. 295 Yorkshire. 333 Subterranean Forest on Hatfield Chace, &c....... 298 MONTHLY REGISTER. 334 334 · Memoir of Mr. W. Emerson......... 301 MONTHLY REPORTS. Commercial Reports... 336 tical Learning, concluded.. 306 List of Bankrupts... 336 336 SHEFFIELD: PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY BENTHAM AND RAY, HIGH-STREET, (To whom Communications, post paid, may be addressed :) SOLD, ALSO, BY BALDWIN, CRADOCK, AND JOY, LONDON; AND ALL OTHER BOOKSELLERS, WE beg Mrs. HOFLAND to accept of our warmest thanks for her enclosed and promised communications. - To F. R. S. we have to make a similar acknowledgment of obligation; and, also, to our friend X. We have received communications from Mr. LAW,- Mr. L. LANGLEY,-OBSERVER, and LIGNUM;-also, J. B.'s translation of the Latin Lines on Roche Abbey. We scarcely know how to express our obligations to V. F. F. for his very valuable Essay, which appears this month. We trust no circumstance will occur to prevent our continued and (on our part) bighly valued correspondence. We have forwarded the further queries on the effects of the intermarriage of Blacks and Whites, to Mr. BIGLAND; and the letter containing strictures on the essay “ Oa "Quackery,” (vol. i. p: 273;) to the author of that paper, as the observations are so purely personal, that they could not be generally interesting to our readers. In our next, we hope to give several interesting articles, both in the general department and the Review, which various circumstances bare prevented from appearing this month. 7 We wish our readers to understand, that information respecting literary societies, benevolent institutions, specification of new inventions or improvements, if sent (post paid) to the printer's, will be punctually inserted. Notices of new publications, or of works preparing for the press, if before the 20th of the month, will receive the same åltention. |