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Disbursements made by me on behalf of the

Greek Committee.

To Dr. Meyer for the Greek Telegraph...
То
ditto Greek Chronicle....

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....

30 0 0

10 0 0

To the Editor of the Athens Free Press
To the Lancasterian School at Athens
To the Editor of the Ipsara paper, if pub-
lished....

To Captain Trelawny for conveying four
guns, &c. to Athens, 50 dollars....
To the payment of the Artillery corps from
the 12th of June to the 12th of July,
190 dollars..

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38 0 0

Total.. £188 0 0

In addition to these sums I have also desired the Philo-Muse Society at Athens to select and send to England some highly gifted person, for the purpose of being instructed, at the Committee's expense, in the most improved systems of education, and conveying back to and spreading in Greece this knowledge.

I must now beg of you to return my thanks to the Committee for having placed such large funds at my disposal. [Vide Appendix, No. 50.] Had I been earlier honoured with their commands on this subject, I should have expended to a larger amount. For all sums disbursed on behalf of the Committee I consider myself entirely responsible, and am ready to refund them if not fully approved by their superior judgement.

I am yours,

L. S..

Sir,

LETTER LXXXVI.

TO THE ADJUTANT-GENERAL, &c.

Downs, on board the Florida, 29th June, 1824.

ON my arrival at Zante, on the 12th May, 1824, from the Peloponnesus, Lieutenant-Colonel Sir F. Stoven put into my hands a letter from the DeputyAdjutant-General of the 19th of March last. By this communication it appeared that the King of England had cancelled the leave of absence granted to me; and that His Royal Highness the Commander-in-Chief had commanded me to proceed home by way of Corfu without delay, under pain of His Majesty's severest displeasure.

After perusing the Deputy-Adjutant-General's letter, Sir F. Stoven recommended me to go home in the Florida. I reminded him that my order was to proceed by way of Corfu. He overruled the objection, saying that I should act up to the spirit of the order, and he would take upon himself the responsibility. I thought his advice good. Two days after my arrival at Zante I reported myself ready to start in the Florida. I then did all in my power to hasten her departure, and embarked before she was ready to sail.

On the 25th of May last the Florida got under weigh for England, and I have the honour to acquaint you, for the information of His Royal Highness the Commander-in-Chief, that I reached the Downs this night.

This explanation will, I hope, prove to the Duke of York how eager I was to obey the King's mandate, and how painful was to me the threat of His Majesty's severe displeasure.

However badly I may have been represented, permit me to assure you that the first desire of my heart has ever been, in Greece as elsewhere, to deserve the esteem of mankind, my country, and my king.

I have the honour to be, Sir,

Your most humble servant,

[Vide Appendix, No. 51.]

LETTER LXXXVII.

TO J. BOWRING, ESQ.

L. S.

On board the Florida, 29th June, 1821.

My dear B.

THE under-written letter is addressed to Lord Byron's executors. I pray you to send copies of it to the Hon. Douglas Kinnaird and to Mr. J. C. Hobhouse.

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TO THE LATE LORD BYRON'S EXECUTORS.

"Dear Sirs,

"Downs, off Deal, Florida, 29th June, 1824.

"THE death of your friend Byron occasioned

a shock that was felt by every heart in Greece. "There, moved by early recollections, and surrounded

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by classic scenery, the poet's faculties expanded,"his genius glowed, and he wrote like one impassioned

" and inspired; there, too, with electric sparks, he had "roused the dormant spirit of freedom, and had sa"crificed to her his comforts, his fortune, and his life.

"After so glorious a course had terminated in death, "it was good-it was just for Greece to mourn for

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Byron, and to confer honours on his memory. All "this took place. Funeral rites and orations were pro"nounced, and Athens and Missolonghi contended for "the honour of having his remains deposited in the "land where he had flourished and sunk. Many, even "of Lord Byron's countrymen, thought that his body "should be placed in the temple of Theseus. Ulysses

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was also of this opinion, and desired me to for"ward a letter, by express, to Missolonghi, soliciting "his ashes. I did so ; but the body had then reached "Zante, and it was determined that it should be sent "to England for public burial, either in WestminsterAbbey or in St. Paul's.

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"On my arrival at Zante, I was requested, by the governor and others, to take under my care the remains of Lord Byron and his papers, and to accompany them in the Florida, to England. I accepted "the charge, and have reached the Downs.

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"The executors of Lord Byron will now be pleased "to make arrangements for the interment of his body, "and for the reception and examination of his papers.

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With respect to the funeral ceremony, I am of opinion that Lord Byron's family should be immediately consulted; that sanction should be obtained for

"the public burial of his body, either in the great

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Abbey or Cathedral of London; that the state barges "should be sent down the river to receive the corpse, "the principal mourners, and bands for the performance of sacred music; and that the aquatic procession "should pass on to Westminster-Bridge. There a "hearse should be in readiness to convey the body to "its last place of repose.

"Britons, who cherish genius and who love liberty, " will, I doubt not, crowd to the banks of the Thames, "and to her majestic bridges, to behold the passing scene, and to sigh for the mighty dead.

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"I am,

"Most faithfully, yours,

L. S.

A coffin of lead and one of wood will be required to put the body into. I think the funeral apparatus cannot be too plain, or the crowd too great. This, to my taste, would constitute true grandeur. The late Lord Byron's physician, his maître d'hotel, valet, groom, and courier, are on board the Florida.

Should you have any remittance of the loan to send out, you cannot do better than to forward it by the Florida. The captain and his ship are both excellent.

Yours,

L. S.

Creek, Florida, 31st June, 1824.

P. S. We have just reached the Creek. To-morrow morning we hope to be released from quarantine; that

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