Page:Narratives of the Mission of George Bogle to Tibet (1879).djvu/170

This page needs to be proofread.

DEATH OF MR. MANNING.

Bhutan, Tibet, and Tatary. In 1838 he had a paralytic stroke, and in the same year he removed to Bath, where he died on the 2nd of May, 1840, aged sixty-eight. He was buried in the Abbey Church, at Bath, on the 8th of the same month.[1]

Manning left behind him a collection of letters, and numerous writings in Chinese, but no manuscripts of his own sufficiently advanced for publication. His brother presented his Chinese library to the Royal Asiatic Society.[2]

Through the kindness of the Rev. C. R. Manning, Mr. Thomas Manning's nephew, who is now Rector of Diss, the rough notes of the remarkable journey to Lhasa have been placed at my disposal, and are now printed for the first time.

  1. Most of the above details of Mr. Manning's life, after his return from China, are from the 'Gentleman's Magazine,' xiv. N. S. p. 97. This article was written by Mr. A. J. Dunkin, of Dartford.
  2. It is still there, in a separate case, and called the "Manning Collection."