[Plassegio?], who was proprieter of the Tivoli marbles when he was at Rome, has called; he provides a long account of the illness and death of
Lord Londonderry, asserting it is more accurate than any other than that of
Liverpool; the account includes details of the state of Londonderry's mind and body from the close of Parliament, it mentions that his pistols and razors were taken from him, but that he secreted a penknife at night while assuring his wife that he rose to refresh himself; he ponders the political ramifications in Britain.