PITCH, per cwt. 1 11} COFFEE, per cwt. Rape, pale......0 5 10 brown.....0 5 6 Olive, per 236 gal. Gallipoli.. 120 0 Messina 0 Palm, per 20 cwt 57 0 058 0 0 Good middling...5 4 0..5 6 0 Turpentine, cwt 4 0 0 9 0 PIMENTO per lb.... 0 0 9..0 0 91 St. Domingo.. 4 14 0..5 0 PINE TIMBER, pet cubic foot. COTTON, per lb. American.. 0 2 5..0 2 6 Sea Island, fine...O 2 8..0 3 0 Good .0 2 610 2 7 Foreign . 0 9 11 1 17 0..1 19 0 Upland bowed, old 0 1 64 0 1 8} Brazil. 1 5 0..1 14 0 new 0 1 80 19 East India. 0 0..1 5 0 New Orleans. 0 1 9.,0 i 111 ROSIN, per cwt Bahia... 0 1 11..0 1 11 English. ...0 6..0 9 Maranham. 0 1 11.,0 American. ...0 8 0..0 9 0 Jamaica low O.P. 0 0 Leeward common 0 2 7..0 2 8 Surinam. 0 1 11..0 2 0f SHUMAC, cwt. Barbadoes.. 0 1 9...0 1 10 Sicily... 1 0 0..1 1 0 Com. West India 01 7..0 1 9 STAVES white oak pipe ..18 0..1 12 0 red oak hhd.,...,0 8 0.0 9 0 Surat. .0 1 33 0 1 7 SUGAR, cwt. Muscovado Brit. P. 8 0 - 2's ditto 1 8 0..1 9 0 Dry Brown. 3 9 0..3 13 0 Scrivelloes. .0 15 0..1 5 Middling. .3 15 0..4 1 0 0 FLAX, per ton Good middling....4 2 0..4 50 0 Petersburgh 12hd 3 12 Havanna, in bond FLAX-SEED per bushel Brown. 2 2 0..2 60 American........0 14 6..0 14 0 Yellow. 2 7 0..2 12 0 Canada.. ....0 10 White 2 16 0..3 8 0 FUSTIC, per ton Brazil, brown, bond 2 0 0..2 4 0 Jamaica.. 12 0 013 0 0 Yellow 2 5 0..2 9 0 Porto Rico. 0 0 14 0 0 White... 2 12 0..3 3 0 Cuba. 16 0 0 19 0 0 East-India, in bond Brown. 116 0..2 0 0 Zante... 8 0 0..9 0 0 Yellow 2 3 0..2.80 GINGER, per cwt. White. 2 10 0..2 19 0 Barbadoes 4 0 0..5 0 0 Molasses, per cwt. West India B.P...1 12 0.2 0 0 HEMP, per ton TALLOW, per cwt. Riga Rhine.....51. 0 0.52 0 0 Brazil.. 4 0 0..4 1 0 Petersburg clean49 0 050 0 0 Petersburgh, Y. C.4 1 0..4 2 0 HIDES, per lb. Soap 3 16 0..3 17 0 West India, dry..0 0 0..6 0 7 Archangel Soap..3 18 0 Buenos Ayres, dryo 0 0..8 0 10 TAR, per barrel Brazil, dry, .0 0 06] 0 8 ] American, comm. 0 19 0..1 0 0 LIG. VITÆ, per ton..8 0 0..9 0 0 Virginia 1 0 0..1 1 0 LOGWOOD, Camp..10 0 0 10 10 0 Stockholm 3 0..1 0 Jamaica.. 8 5 0..8 10 0 Archangel 1 2 9..1 3 0 Honduras. 9 0 TOBACCO, per lb. Faded.... 0 05 Honduras.. 0 011..0 1 2 Ord. and sound.. 0 0 8..0 0 63 St Domingo......0 1 4..0 2 2 Good and fine 0 0 7 } 0 0 91 Cuba. 0 1 0 0 80 0 104 OILS, per 252 gallons Rappabannock If. O 0 5..0 0 7 Cod.. 48 0 049 0 0 Stemmed.. 0 0 8..0 0 91 Seal, pale. 02 0 0 63 0 0. Kentucky leaf....0 0 4100 7 brown,....56 0 0 TORTOISE SHELL,lb.10 1 1 Linseed, per gal. O 6 TURPENTINE, cwt. American. .0 16 0.,01 3 ...12 Brazil. 3..0 Embellished with a View of an Ancient Mansion, at Norton-Lees. Astley Meanley, late Minister of Stannington, with a descriptive Sketch of that Hamlet.... 145 ORIGINAL POETRY. Noon at Sheffield. 148 The Kiss of Beauty. 150 On Shakspeare.... 150 Verses by Sir Walter Raugbley... 152 Lines written on the Parting of Three Friends in Scotland ..151 TOPOGRAPHY, ANTIQUITIES, &c. Ancient Mansion at Norton-Lees...... 93 Account of Fountains Abbey, continued.... 93 Ancient State of Doncaster and its Neighbourhood... 97 Some Account of the Parish of Marske near Richmond.... 99 MATHEMATICAL REPOSITORY. Essay on the Usefulness of Mathematical Learning... 103 On the Strength of Timber 104 Questions for Solution..... 106 HISTORY OF TRADES AND MA NUFACTURES. ENCE, &c. 110 S.I. Law on imagined Prognostications of Death. .114 On the Influence of Novel reading on Public Morals.. 116 Comparison of Virgil and Thomson; concluded... 118 On the Authors of the Spectators. 122 Sketch of the Story of Rob Roy. 126 On the Culture of Turnips... 135 HOURS AFTER TEA, No.l... 137 The Cup of Tea... 140 BIOGRAPHY, &c. Tribute to the Memory of the Rev. SHEFFIELD: (To whom Communications, post paid, may be addressed :) SOLD, ALSO, BY BALDWIN, CRADOCK, AND JOY, LONDON; AND ALL OTHER BOOKSELLERS. WE thank QUERCUS for his “Acorn:" it shall be planted next month. We are greatly obliged to SCRUTATOR for his favour, and beg to assure him that our thanks will be cheerfully given for the articles he mentions. An early account of the Jead-mines would be an additional obligation. The “ Hours after Tea ” are very acceptable to us; and we promise our fair readers, in particular, much gratification from the perasal of Q.’s monthly lucubrations. Our kind friend, Mr. Law, never forgets us; and we are glad that the duties in which he is engaged afford so favourable an opportunity of touching upon subjects, themselves interesting, in a manner that we know has given great satisfaction to our readers. The farther account of Kirkstall Abbey has been received. The author has our best thanks. We have not yet had time to give it that particular attention which is necessary to our final decision: but the injunction of the communicator shall be strictly at: tended to. We have received_Verses to Laura,- M. T.'s Geological paper,-- Elizabeth, Anne Illustrated,-a Remedy for Insects in Corn,-and Rural Life, a poem,-of which the two first we hope to insert, and if the two next do not appear, we beg our fair correspondents to attribute it to our determination not to pursue the subject, rather than our unfavourable opinion of their talents; as a proof of which we assure them we shall be most happy to receive their future favours. We are particularly obliged to EUGENIUS and Fautor: We promise ourselves much valuable assistance from our acquaintance with the latter, and is it too much to expect that the former' will continue to give his support to the Yorkshire Magazine ? The paper on “ Climbing Boys” shall have a place next month, and “speculations” from the gentleman who sent it will be always gladly received. He will see that we baye anticipated his kind intention on another subject in the present number. We are very sorry that a pacquet containing the first paper on the Age of Homer,Petrarch's Sonnets,--the Account of Bakewell, and other articles, has by some accident escaped our search, and we fear that we have no hope of regaining them, except by the kindness of our friends who sent them. Our readers will perceive that, in compliance with the urgent wishes of many judicious friends, we have opened a MATHEMATICAL REPOSITORY, and request communications for this department, which, we trust, will give satisfaction to our numerous readers. |