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Court, 21; his Jests, 26; violent As-
cendency Politics; the Saurin Letter,
33; Negotiations for Resignation,
36; Consulting a Friend in India,
37; his Library, 39.

Norcott, the Barrister, turns Moham-
medan, i., 214; his Fate, 215
Norfolk, Duke of, ii., 220
Norfolk House, Dinner at, ii., 224
NORTH, JOHN H., Admiralty Judge,
Sketch of, i., 252: his Career, 252;
Bar Progress, 256; comparative Fail-
ure as a Senator, 261; his Exterior,
262; Political Neutrality, 263; Dub-
lin Theatre "Bottle Riot," 266; at
Louth Election, ii., 241

Norton, Sir Fletcher, Abuse of, ii., 292
Nugent, Lord, satirized by Canning, ii.,
208; Notice of, 352
O'Brien, Sir Edward, at Clare Elec-
tion, ii., 280

in Irish, 280; a Man of the People,
291; Elected for Clare, 302; and
Re-Election, 303

O'Connell, Maurice, Death of, i., 77
O'Connell, Miss, at the Tabinet Ball,
i., 357

O'Gorman, Nicholas Purcel, Keller's
Retort to, i., 209; his Habiliments,
ii., 120 Visit to London, 207; ap-
pointed Cursitor, 355
O'Grady, Chief-Baron (Lord Guilla-
more), i., 135; Anecdotes of, ii., 113
O'Hanlon, Mr., Speech by, ii., 223
O'Leary, Joseph, Irish Lyrist, i., 13
O'Loghlin, Sir Coleman, Irish Barris-
ter, ii., 116
O'LoGHLIN, SIR MICHAEL (Master of
the Rolls), Sketch of: Person, De-
portment, and Descent, ii., 106; Cir-
cuit Costume, 107; his Mastery of

Practice," 111; Memoir of, 116;
his Promotions, 116; his Danish An-
cestor, 117; Statue of, in the Four
Courts, ii., 116

O'Meagher, J. B., Paris Correspondent
of "The Times," i., 13
Orange Toast, ii., 132

O'Brien, William Smith, Memoir of,
ii., 287; his Penal Exile, 288
O'CONNELL, DANIEL, his Success with
Juries, i., 35; Sketch of, i., 73; his
Versatility, 74; Memoir of, 75; his
Property, 77; Merits as a Lawyer,
78; a Tribune of the People, 81; Oratory, Specimen of Forensic, ii., 157
Demeanor in Court, 82; Defence O'Regan, Counsellor, his Life of J. P.
of Criminals, 86; Duel with D'Es-
terre, 89; after Clare Election, 90;|
On Circuit, and as a Public Speaker,
93; in Parilament, 94-and before
the Privy Council, 95

Patent of Precedency to, i., 174
At Kildare-Street Meeting, 223
Versatility as a Speaker, 257;
Entrance into Wexford, 297; Par-
liamentary Contest, Mr. Doherty,
325; Entrance into Public Life, 368;
his Struggles, "within the Law,"
for Emancipation and Repeal, 369;`
on the King's Visit, drinks the Or-
ange Charter Toast, 378; founds the
Catholic Association, 379; his Man-
ner of Speaking in Public, 381; his
Costume at the Assizes, ii., 107

At Aggregate Meeting, ii., 159
En Route to London, ii., 194
Visits Dr. Milner, ii., 196; visits
the House of Commons, ii., 207
Challenged by Peel, ii., 213

Bushe's Epigram on, íi., 213
Character of his Eloquence, ii.,
221; Speech in Freemasons' Hall,
221; baffles the Reporters by a Speech

Curran, ii., 128

Oriel, Lord, Notice of, ii., 248
Ormsby, Sir Charles, and Mr. Sergeant
Goold, i., 241

Oxford University, Representation, ii.,
193

Palmer, Lady, Interview with, ii., 88
Parliamentary Billingsgate, ii., 292
Parliamentary Reform, when carried,
ii., 227

Patent of Precedency, i., 174
Peel, Sir Robert: his Business Habits
and Law Reforms, i., 327; defends
the Saurin Letter, ii., 34; defends
Lord Norbury, 37; his Early Dis-
tinctions, 193; described by Cur-
ran, 241; Attack on Hamilton Row-
an, 211; his Oratory and Appear-
ance, 212; his Challenge to O'Con-
nell, 213; Memoir of, 215
Peer, Cost of making a, ii., 249
Peerage of Ireland, degraded by the
Union, i., 159

Penal Laws, Extension of, i., 361; Op-
eration of, ii., 69; first Link of, 80;
denounced by Sir T. Butler, 83;
Enactments of, 87

INDEX.

PENENDEN HEATH MEETING, ii., 315: | Price, Dr., Notice of, i., 236

377

The Gathering, 316; the Peers and Priests, Exertions of the, at Clare Elec
the People, 318; William Cobbett, tion, ii., 284

319; Henry Hunt, 322; Lord Win-Priestley, Dr., Notice of, i., 237
chilsea and the Brunswickers, 325;"Prince's Mixture,” i., 308
Prisoners, Counsel for, ii., 51

Sheil's Unspoken Speech, 334

Pennefather, Edward, Chief-Justice, i., Prisoners' Gratitude, Anecdotes of, i.

37

188
Pennefather, Richard, Baron of Ex-Process-Servers, how treated, i., 71
chequer, i., 188

Perceval, Spencer, Notice of, ii., 289
Perjury, instant Punishment of, i., 33
Perrin, Judge, Notice of, i., 313; Char-
acter as a Lawyer, ii., 362; Private
History, 364; in Parliament, 365
Peterloo Massacre, denounced by Lord
Fitzwilliam, i., 240

Phillips, Charles, Irish Orator, Memoir
of, i., 124

Phoenix Park, Dublin, ii., 166

Physiology of Race in Ireland, i., 166
Pic-nic in the Woods of Wexford, i.,
295

Pitt, William, and Catholic Emancipa-
tion, i., 367
Plowden, Francis, the Irish Historian,
ii., 187
PLUNKET, LORD-CHANCELLOR, Sketch
of. i., 98; defends the Sheareses, i.,
99; opposes the Union, 99; accused
of unnecessary Harshness to Robert
Emmett, 101; Defence by Phillips,
102; great Chancery Practice, 103;
Rationale of his Pleading, 105; not
a Case Lawyer, 106; his Rhetoric,
107; Description by Phillips, 109;
his Style, 110; Brougham's Opinion
of, 113; Success in Parliament, 113;
Advocacy of Catholic Emancipation,
114; Anti-Union Orations, 116; his
bon-mots, 117; Memoir of, 119
Plunket, Margaret, and the Duke of
Rutland, i., 190

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Pollock, Sir Frederick, ii., 340
Pomposo, Counsellor, i., 203

Protestant Ascendency, Cause of Crime,
ii., 71; what it means, 76
Protestant Reformation, Cobbett's His-
tory of, ii., 198
Protestant Reformation Society, ii., 199
Puisne Judges, i., 176
Qualification of Members, ii., 274
"Quarterly Review," by whom estab-
lished, i., 213

Queen's Counsel (see King's Counsel),
how appointed-Precedency-Num-

bers-Advantages-and Silk-Gowns,

i., 174

Quotations, Apt, i., 257

Races, Characteristics of, in Ireland,
i., 166

Radcliffe, Dr., fees Himself, i., 136
Radnor, Earl of, ii., 318
Raglan, Lord, Cost of his Patent of
Peerage ii., 249

Rathdown, Lord, in Character, ii., 191
Rebellion of 1798, i., 154
Redesdale, Lord-Chancellor, i., 227;
his Successor, 228
Reflections on the French Revolution,
by Burke, Royal Appreciation of,
i., 239

Reform, Parliamentary, when carried,
ii., 227

Regency, Burke's Advocacy of, i., 239
Renegade, Fate of Norcott, the, i., 215
Rent, the Catholic, ii., 292
Repeal of the Union, O'Connell's Agi-
tation for, i., 369

Results of Clare Election, ii., 266
Retiring Pensions of the Judges, i., 175
Ponsonby, George, Lord-Chancellor of Revolution in Ireland, Attempt at, i., 11
Ireland, i., 129; Lord Norbury's At-Riding-House in Dublin, Tortures in-
tacks on, ii., 12; on Admission of

Catholic Barristers, 91

flicted in, ii., 22

Roche, Sir Boyle, his Bulls, ii., 10

Pope, Alexander, Satire on Lord Her- Rock, Captain, Lines on by Moore,

vey, i., 234

Potheen, why so called, i., 70

Pre-Audience at the Bar, ii., 98

Precedency, Patent of, i., 174

cery, i., 189

i., 39

Rockingham, Marquis of, brings Burke

inta Parliament, i., 239

Roden, Earl of, ii., 237

Prendergast, Mr., Registrar in Chan- Romilly, Sir Samuel, Notice of, i., 103

Rosse, Earls of, ii., 33

Rotunda in Dublin, Public Meeting in, | Scottish Judicature, i., 174

Screw, Monks of the, i., 206

i., 281; Tabinet Ball in, i., 330
ROWAN, ARCHIBALD HAMILTON, at- Scriven, Barclay, Description of, ii., 122
tacked by Peel, ii., 211; described, Sergeants-at-Law, in England-their
230; his Exile, and Pardon, 231; Standing and Precedence, i., 173
his Manly Appearance, 232; Escape Sergeants-at-Law, in Ireland, appoint-
from Prison, 233; Asylum in Amer- ed by the Crown, and their Prece-
ica, 235
dence, i., 173

Royal Visits to Ireland: by Queen Vic-
toria, i., 22; by George IV., i., 377
Russell, Lord John, and Relief of Dis-
senters' Civil Disabilities, ii., 265
Rutland, Duke of, Viceroy of Ireland,
i., 190

Saints, the Dublin, i., 322

Saints, Ireland the Island of, ii., 197
Saints, the, in Parliament, ii., 359
St. Leonards, Lord-Chancellor (Sug-
den), i., 204

St. Omer, O'Connell educated at, i.,
223

St. Patrick's Hall, in Dublin Castle,
ii., 220

Salamanca, Irish Disputants at, de-
scribed in "Gil Blas," i., 376
Salaries of the Judges, i., 175
Sarsfield, "the Gallant" Defender of
Limerick, ii., 80
Saturday Night, the Lawyer's Holyday,
i., 206

Shannon, Murder on the, i., 42; Mo-
tive of, ii., 365

Shaw, Frederick, ii., 358; appointed
Recorder, 360

Shea, John Augustus, Irish poet, i., 13
Sheareses, John and Henry, Trial of,

i., 98; legal Murder of, 99

Sheas, Burning of the, ii., 138; His-
tory of, 139; Trial for, 142; Sheil's
Speech on, 149

Sheehans, Editors of Dublin "Even-
ning Mail," ii., 176

Sheil, Richard Lalor, Memoir of, i., 5
Shelley, Mrs., Notice of, ii., 122
Sheridan, Dr., Prosecution of, i., 377
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, Notice of,
i., 138; Byron's and Moore's Opinion
of, i., 138; his Address to the Prince,
i., 371

Shifnal, Description of, ii., 201
Siddons, Mrs., Anecdotes of, ii., 218
Sidmouth, Viscount, Letter from, in the

King's Name, i., 379; his Peerage,
ii., 352

SAURIN, ATTORNEY-GENERAL, i., 150:
Huguenot Descent, 150; Business-
Habits, 153; opposes the Union, 157;
made Attorney-General, 160; Influ-
ence with Lord-Chancellor Manners,
160; opposes the Catholic Claims, ii., 77

Silk-Gowns, by whom worn, i., 174;
Partisan Disposal of, ii., 320
Singer, Dr. J. H., Bishop of Meath,

161; refuses the Chief-Justiceship, Slaney, Scenery on the River, i., 214
is taken at his Word, and loses Of-Smith, Egerton (usually called "Bot
fice, 163; Deportment and Aspect, Smith"), i,, 258

164; Skill as an Advocate, 168; Dis-Smith, S. Caterson, Irish Artist, Por-
taste for Literature, 169

Injudicious Letter to Lord Nor-
bury, ii., 33-a Bar to his Promotion,
35; Lord Manners' Friendship for,
173; rebuffed by Sir A. Hart, 238
Scanlan, John, Trial of for Murder, i.,
51; Conviction and Execution, 54;
Popular Belief of his Escape, 57;
Motive and Malice prepense of his
Crime ii., 365

Scarlett, Sir James (Lord Abinger), No-
tice of, ii., 36; at Brougham's Din-
ner, 219; at Brougham's Levee, 348
Scott, Sir Walter, describes Castlereagh
at the Coronation, ii., 118; his own
Resemblance to Cobbett, 321

trait of Sheil by, to face-i., 1
Smith, T. B. C., Master of the Rolls,
ii., 114

Smith, Sir W. Cusack, Notice of, ii.,

114

Smith, William, of Norwich, ii., 351
Smythe, Hon. Mr., a "Young Eng-
land" Leader, ii., 257
Sorbonne Doctors, Attack on Bishop
Doyle by, i., 383

Southey, Robert, his Opinion of Cob-
bett's pure English, ii., 319
Speculative Society of Edinburgh, i.,
253
Stanhope, Colonel Leicester (Earl of
Harrington), i., 350

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State, Lord Wellesley's Viceregal, i., | Torrens, Judge, ii., 31
Tower of London, ii., 205

337

STATE OF PARTIES IN DUBLIN: Mr. Towers, Dr., Notice of, i., 236

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Travelling in Ireland, i., 287
Trinity College, Dublin, i., 288

Bellew in "Silk Attire," ii., 354;
O'Loghlin and O'Gorman promoted,
355; Dublin Election: Moore and Trippier, the Parisian Avocat, i., 195
Recorder Shaw versus Harty and Troy, Dr., Archbishop of Dublin, i., 385;
Perrin, 357; Lord-Chancellor Hart, his Poverty, 386
Mr. Saurin, and the Master of the
Rolls, 359; Victory of the Liberals,
366

Staunton, Sir George, in the Embassy

to China, i., 183

Steele, Thomas, ii., 269; sent to Clare,
270; Memoir of, 272; seconds Mr.
O'Connell's Nomination, 289
Stephen's Green, Dublin, ii., 1811
Sterne, Story of the Sword, i., 300
Stothard,Thos., and Chantrey's "Sleep-
ing Children," i., 332

Stourton, Lord, a Catholic Peer, ii., 223
Strangford, Lord, ii., 257

Stuart, Villiers, defeats Lord George
Beresford at Waterford, ii., 235
Stuff-Gown, worn by Utter or Outer Bar-
risters, i., 174

Sullivan, Stephen, tried and convicted
of Murder, i., 56; his Confession, 56
"Sun, The," London Newspaper, i., 9, |
and ii., 331

Sussex, Duke of, Memoir of, ii., 219
Sutton,Charles Manners (Viscount Can-
terbury), Speaker of the House of
Commons, ii., 207; at Brougham's
Levee, 350

Tabinet Ball, the Dublin, i, 328
Tandy, Napper, a United Irishman,
ii., 9

Taylor, General Zachary, Wellington's
Opinion of, ii., 309

"Tenth, The," Anecdotes of, i., 355
Terror, Irish Reign of, ii., 14

Truro, Lord-Chancellor (Sir Thomas
Wilde), large Fee to, i.; 19; originally
an Attorney, 29

Union Debating-Clubs at Oxford and
Cambridge, i., 253

Union, the, opposed by Curran, Plun-
ket, Ponsonby, Saurin, Burrowes,
Bushe, and the Irish Bar generally,
i., 129; Barrington's Historic Me-
moirs of, 246; how the Measure was
carried, 248; opposed by O'Connell,
369; obtained on broken Promises,
ii., 98

"United Irishman, the," edited by
John Mitchel, ii., 118

Vallancey, General, the Antiquarian,
ii., 260

"Vathek," Author of, i., 193
Verdicts, Strange, i., 26
Vestris, Madame, i., 343
Vice-Queen, an American, i., 332
Victoria, Queen, visits Ireland, i., 22
Vizard, William, Attorney to Queen
Caroline, ii., 348
Voltaire, Notice of, i., 79
Volunteers, the Irish, i., 363
Walker's "Hibernian Magazine," ii.,
178

WALLACE, THOMAS, i., 269; Promotion,
270; Liberal Opinions, 270; Intel-
lectual Powers, and Appearance, 271;
on Jury-Cases, 274; Fearlessness at
the Bar, 276; Literary Taste, 285;
in Parliament, 286

Test and Corporation Acts repealed, | Walsh, John, tried at Clonmel Assizes,
ii., 315

Teynham, Lord, ii., 333

ii., 47

War, Four Years' Expenses of, ii., 341

Thurlow, Lord-Chancellor, i., 104; his | Warren, Mr. Sergeant, i., 189
Opinion of Burke, 238
"Times" Newspaper, Influence of, i., 39
Tinnahinch, Grattan's Seat, i., 115
Tipperary, Crime in, ii., 65; Antiquity
and Causes of, 66

Toler, John (Earl of Norbury), ii., 5
Tone, Theobald Wolfe, i., 363; Secre-
tary of the Catholics, 366; his Sui-
cide, ii., 9; Scene with Sir George
Hill, 31; his Eventful Career, 119

Waterford Election, ii., 235
Wellesley, Marquis, why made Irish
Viceroy, i., 178; Bottle-Riot against,
266; his Marriage, 334; at Tabinet
Ball, 335; Memoir of, 336; Assump-
tion of Regal State by, 337
Wellesley, Marchioness, suggests the

Tabinet Ball, i., 329; Memoir of, 332;
her reputed Wealth, 334; her Per-
son described, 338; Death of, ii., 365

ii., 326

Wellington, Duke of, Epigram on, i., 23; | Wilson, Sir Robert, ii., 347
Letter to Archbishop Curtis, i., 387; | Wilson, Sir T. M., High-Sheriff of Kent,
his Career, ii., 308; imputed Want
of Nationality, 309; at Lord Brough-
am's Levee, 345

Wetherell, Sir Charles, ii., 210
Wexford Assizes, Sketch of, i., 287;
Trial of Father Carroll, 304
Wexford, old Monastery of, i., 290
Peasantry of, i., 292

Massacre on the Bridge of, i., 297
O'Connell's Entrance into, i., 298
Whiteboys, why so called, i., 39
Whiteboyism, how caused, ii., 67
Whitehall, London, Government Offices
in, i., 254

Wigs, Lawyers', Differences in, i., 174
Wilde, Sir Thomas (Lord Truro), large
Fee to, i., 19

Wilkins, Mr. Sergeant, Leader of the
Northern Circuit in England, i., 174
William III., a Dutch Adventurer, i. 88
Willis, N. P., his "Pencillings by the
Way," ii., 213

Wilson, Harriet, Notice of, i., 348

Winchilsea, Earl of, ii., 325; his Kent-
ish Speech, 331

Windele, John, Irish Antiquarian, i., 13
Windham, Opinion of Burke, i., 238
Wings, the, of Emancipation Bill, i.,
7; what they were, ii., 276
Wolfe, Rev. Charles, an Orator in the
Historical Society, i., 253

Wolfe, Chief-Baron, Carelessness of
Attire, ii., 107; his Career, 119
Wolstoncroft, Mary, Author of "The
Rights of Woman,” ii., 122
Yelverton, Barry, his Career, i., 25:
Friendship for Curran, 303
Yelverton, Lawyers, the, i., 205
York, Archbishop of, ii., 345
York, Duke of, Anti-Catholic Speech
by, ii., 207

Young, Arthur, on Irish Crime, ii., 66
Young, Murdo, of "The Sun" News
paper, ii., 331

Young Ireland" Party formed, i., 369

THE END.

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