. A history of the County Dublin; the people, parishes and antiquities from the earliest times to the close of the eighteenth century . gated in this kingdom, giving anAccount of their Medicinal Virtues, and their Names in English, Irish, and Latin, towhich is added a Short Treatise of the Diagnostic and Prognostic Parts of Medicine :the former showing how by the Symptoms you may know a Distemper; the lattergiving an Account of the Event thereof, whether it will end in Life or Death, byJohn Keogh, , Chaplain to the flight Honourable James Lord Baron of Kingston,.Dublin, 1739. 2 William Lor


. A history of the County Dublin; the people, parishes and antiquities from the earliest times to the close of the eighteenth century . gated in this kingdom, giving anAccount of their Medicinal Virtues, and their Names in English, Irish, and Latin, towhich is added a Short Treatise of the Diagnostic and Prognostic Parts of Medicine :the former showing how by the Symptoms you may know a Distemper; the lattergiving an Account of the Event thereof, whether it will end in Life or Death, byJohn Keogh, , Chaplain to the flight Honourable James Lord Baron of Kingston,.Dublin, 1739. 2 William Lord Howth versus Eleazer Pierson, House of Lords, 1737. 140 HOWTH AND ITS OWNERS. family, and Lady Howths younger brother, Hamilton Gorges,expressed commiseration for his sister, left with no companionexcept Miss Rice, whom he characterized as a silly girl, which soenraged her uncle, Henry St. Lawrence, that he forced HamiltonGorges to fight a duel with him. It was attended with fatalconsequences to Henry St. Lawrence; but on Hamilton Gorgesbeing brought to trial, he was acquitted, and held by the jury tohave acted in Thk lIoNiihi;. William !>t. Lawkence. By the provisions of his will, which is dated January 30,1744,2 William evinced his attachment to the seat of hisancestors, as well as his care for his humble neighbours, ordering Hist. MSS. Com. Rept., 15, App. pt. vii, p. 312 ; Pues Occurrences, March22-26, 1736-7; Orrerj- Papers,!, 191 ; Will of Henry St. Lawrence in PrerogativeCollection. ^ In the Prerogative Collection. IN THE TIME OF SWIFT AND GRATTAN. 141 that during the minority of his eldest son the mansion-house,out-offices, and improvements were to be kept in very good orderand repair, and leaving a substantial sum to be distributedamongst the poor of Howth. He left also a sum of two hundredpounds for the erection of a monument to his fathers his own family, he mentions his old friend and physician,Dr. Grattan, and Dr. Grattans cousin


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