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been extorted, it would have been more disgraceful to the selfishness of those who obtained it, than to the weakness of him who gave it.

But what shall we say of the Marquess of Londonderry, who withholds his name from the County Down address, and declares that "Sir Robert Peel's government ought to be watched?" What of the Dublin Grand Jury, that likewise threatened to withhold their address? Above all, what of the City of Dublin Conservative Registry Association, who threatened to dissolve themselves in their wrath at the serjeant's coif being bestowed on Mr. Warren? We shall be very brief, for all that can be said upon the matter amounts to this:"Gentlemen, there is no doubt that if you choose to desert your leaderif you choose not to submit to that degree of subordination necessary to insure success—if you leave him as you once did before in 1830, and deserting to the opposite party from a most paltry motive of spite, increase their forces whilst you leave your own general without means of resistance, there is no doubt but that you may break up the government. You have done so once already, and nothing but the steady patriotism and immense talents of your present leader, who built up your party again, has saved yourselves and the country from all the horrors and calamities of a complete revolution. You may now, if you please, requite him with ingratitude, and destroy all chance of your own principles ever again obtaining weight in the constitution. We can only argue with you, but

suicide is in the power of every man and every party."

We shall say no more--the subject is a disagreeable one- but we could not, and ought not to say less. We trust sincerely that the bitter lessons of the past shall not be wholly lost on those who, with honest hearts but mistaken views, cling to old principles and bygone feelings utterly incompatible now with the existence of an independent government. We will even go farther, and express our belief that there is no hazard of similar ebullitions of petty and unworthy resentment. Common sense must tell every Conservative that his best hopes are based on the continuance of Sir Robert Peel's power. Can the Duke of Richmond, the Marquess of Londonderry, or the Evening Mail, point out the man who could hope successfully to contend with the scattered, but annihilated remains of an opposition, that might yet be called into another terrible combination, in the event of Sir Robert Peel and the Duke being forced to resign? Till they can shew us that the great Conservative cause would not suffer by such an event, we assert that they are no true upholders of its principles who would even wag a finger to endanger the security of the present government. We have now filled our allotted space; let us conclude with hoping that, like the present ill-got-up grievances of Ireland, the late misunderstanding amongst those who ought to be most firmly united may turn out after all any thing but a snug or comfortable lining to the present DUBLIN MAYOR'S NEST.

INDEX TO VOL. XXIV.

ACTORS, Anecdotes of, 179.

Bannister
and Heath, 181-Bannister and his
Toupée, 184-Suett's Funeral, 187—
Mr. Quick and his Spoiled Child, 188
-George Frederick Cooke in London,
474; in America, 477; and in Scot-
land, 478-Henry Siddons and Ma-
thews, 684-Claremont and John
Kemble, 685-Mathews and Spring,
686-Dignum, 688

Advertisement. Wanted a Clerk, 675
Ad Vulgo Vocatum Dan O'Connell, 694
Age, the, we Live in, 1

Anecdotes of Actors, 179. Bannister

and Heath, 181-Bannister and his
Toupée, 184-Suett's Funeral, 187—
Mr. Quick and his Spoiled Child, 188
-George Frederick Cooke in Lon-
don, 474; in America, 477; and in
Scotland, 478-Henry Siddons and
Mathews, 684- Claremont and John
Kemble, 685-Mathews and Spring,
686-Dignum, 688
Armiger's, Laurentius Little, Transla

tion from the original of Berni, 25
Athens and Sparta. Greece at the break-
ing out of the Peloponnesian War, 127
Autumn in the Country, the Journal of
an, in Three Parts. Part I. 269;
Part II. 455; Part III. 524
Autumn Leaves, 309

Battle of Waterloo, 505
Beginning, the End of the, 253
Blue Jacket of the Belle Poule Frigate,
his Budget; or, Journal of the Journey
from Toulon to St. Helena, and thence
to the Invalides at Paris. Chap. I.
297; Chap. II. 428; Chap. III. 545.
Bonaventure's Psalter; or, Romish
Idolatry, 218

Budget of a Blue Jacket of the Belle
Poule Frigate; or, Journal of the
Journey from Toulon to St. Helena,
and thence to the Invalides at Paris.
Chap. I. 297; Chap. II. 428; Chap. III.
545

Case of M'Leod, 492
Chambermaid, the Scotch, 140
Chapter on Tailors, 288

Chapters on the Dogs of several of my
Acquaintances. Chap. I. Mr. Wad-
dilove's Fidelio, 578; Chap. II. Mr.
Helvetius Partlett's Snob, 581; Chap.
III. Mr. Delastro's Toby, 702; Chap.
IV. Mr. Bramble's Nero, 711
Chess-bishop, Ruy Lopez, the: a Legend
of Spain, 168

Chinese, and our Great Plenipotentiary,
612

Clergy, Sir Robert Peel's Claims to the
Confidence of the, 379

Clerk Wanted: an Advertisement, 675
Coats and Men, 208

Condemned Cells, the, from the Note-
book of the Ordinary. Chapter IX.
The Approver, 32; Chap. X. Re-
ceivers of Stolen Goods, 663
Confusion worse Confounded, 198
Convention, the Dissenting, at Man-
chester, 361

Dissenting Convention at Manchester,
361

Dogs of several of my Acquaintances,
Chapters on the. Chap. I. Mr. Waddi-
love's Fidelio, 578; Chap. II. Mr.
Helvetius Partlett's Snob, 581; Chap.
III. Mr. Delastro's Toby, 702; Chap.
IV. Mr. Bramble's Nero, 711
Dublin Mayor's" Nest, a, 735

Education, a Radical System of; or,
Free and Easy, 584

End, the, of the Beginning, 253
Epistles to the Literati, No. XVIII. R.A.
Willmott to Oliver Yorke, Esq. 178
Epochs, the Three Great; or 1830,
1840, and 1850. Book I. 1830. Chap.
XIII. 58; Chap. XIV. 4; Chap.
XV. 148; Chap. XVI. 153; Chap.
XVII. S10; Chap. XVIII. 315;
Chap. XIX. 559; Chap. XX. 567

Felo de Se of the Whigs, 237
Fraser, the late Mr. 628

Free and Easy; or, a Radical System of
Education, 584

Friends, Old, 399
Furze, 147

German Opera, rambling Remarks with
reference to, 69

Graves (Dean), bis Life and Writings,
76

Great Reformation. Part I. Its Prepar
atives, 479

Greater and Lesser Stars of Old Pall
Mall. Chap. XIII. 88; Chap. XIV.
648; Chap. XV. 649; Chap. XVI.
652; Chap. XVII. 656; Chap. XVIII.
661

Greece at the breaking out of the Pelo-
ponnesian War, 127

Hewell and Sewell; or, the Rival Shop-
keepers. A Tale of the Times, 159
History of Samuel Titmarsh and the
Great Hoggarty Diamond. Edited
and Illustrated by Sam's Cousin,
Michael Angelo. Chap. I. 324 ;
Chap. II. 327; Chap. III. 332;
Chap. IV. 338; Chap. V. 340; Chap.
VI. 389; Chap. VII. 393; Chap.
VIII. 594; Chap. IX. 598; Chap. X.
605; Chap. XI. 717; Chap. XII.
722; Chap. XIII. 729

Hoggarty Diamond, the Great, and His-
tory of Samuel Titmarsh. Edited and
Illustrated by Sam's Cousin, Michael
Angelo. Chap. I. 324; Chap. II.
327; Chap. III. 332; Chap. IV. 338;
Chap. V. 340; Chap. VI. 389; Chap.
VII. 393; Chap. VIII. 594; Chap.
IX. 598; Chap. X. 605; Chap. XI.
717; Chap. XII.722; Chap. XIII.729
Holiday, a Summer; Morning, Noon,

and Evening. Part I. Morning; Coun-
try Walks, 190-Part II. Noon; Gar-
dens, 631

Hook, Theodore Edward, 518

Journal of an Autumn in the Country,
in Three Parts. Part I. 269; Part 11.
455; Part III. 524

Kirk, Parties in the; with a Note to
Sir Robert Peel from Oliver Yorke,
Esq. 677

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--

XIII. 58; Chap. XIV. 64; Chap. X V.
148; Chap. XVI. 153; Chap. XVII.
310; Chap. XVIII. 315; Chap. XIX.
559; Chap. XX. 567. Confusion
worse Confounded, 198 - Felo de Se
of the Whigs, 237-The End of the
Beginning, 253-The Dissenting Con-
vention at Manchester, 361-Sir Ro-
bert Peel's Claims to the Confidence
of the Clergy, 379-M'Leod's Case,
492-Free and Easy; or, a Radical
System of Education, 584-Chinese
and our Great Plenipotentiary, 612-
Parties in the Kirk; with a Note to
Sir Robert Peel from Oliver Yorke,
Esq. 677-Signs of the Times, 698 —
A Dublin" Mayor's" Nest, 735
Press, to the Messieurs of the Diurnal.
An unpublished Letter found in the
Desk of a deceased Editor, 234

Queen, our True British, 683

Rambling Reflections, 167

Remarks with reference to the
German Opera, 69
Reformation, the Great, Part I.; its Pre-
paratives, 479

--

Reviews: The last new Life of Shak-
speare, by Thomas De Quincey, 48-
Life and Writings of Dean Graves, 76
-Thirlwall's History of Greece, vol. vii.
127-Bonaventure's Psalter, 218
D'Aubigné's History of the Great Re-
formation, 479-Horne's History of Na-
poleon, 505- Davis's Chinese, 612-
Noel's Plea for the Poor, 695
Rival Shopkeepers ; or, Sewell and
Hewell. A Tale of the Times, 159
Roman Catholic Institute. I. Bonaven-

ture's Psalter, or Romish Idolatry, 218
Rustic Controversies, No. VII. Will-o'-

Wisp Wednesday, 16; No. VIII. The
Water- Kelpie, 344; No. IX. The
Scotch Jacobite, 571

Ruy Lopez, the Chess-bishop: a Legend
of Spain, 168

Scotch Chambermaid, 140

Scotch Non-intrusionists' Sayings and
Doings. Reviewed by a Strathbogie
Churchman, 112

Serio-comic Review of the Sayings and
Doings of the Scotch Non-intrusionists
in, and connected with, the last General
Assembly. By a Strathbogie Church-
man, 112

Sewell and Hewell; or, the Rival Shop-
keepers. A Tale of the Times, 159
Shakspeare, last new Life of, 48
Shrift, the Limerick, 359
Signs of the Times, 698

Sir David Wilkie and his Friends, 443
Sir Robert Peel's Claims to the Con-
fidence of the Clergy, 379
Sonnet :
: on the Redbreast's Song in No-
vember, 427
Sparta and Athens.

Greece at the break-
ing out of the Peleponnesian War, 127
Stories of Science; an Historical Tale of
the Sixteenth Century, or thereabouts.
Translated from the original Italian of
Berni. By Laurentius Little, Armiger,

25

Strathbogie Churchman's Serio - comic
Review of the Sayings and Doings of
the Scotch Non-intrusionists in, and
connected with, the last General As-
sembly, 112

Summer Holiday. Morning, Noon, aud
Evening. Part I. Morning; Country
Walks, 190: Part II. Noon; Gardens,

631

Tailors, a Chapter on, 288

-

Tales and Narratives: Rustic Contro-
versies, No. VII. Will-o'-Wisp Wed-
nesday, 16; No. VIII. The Water-
Kelpie, 344; No. IX. The Scotch
Jacobite, 571-Condemned Cells, from
the Note-book of the Ordinary, Chap.
IX. The Approver, 32; Chap. X. Re-
ceivers of Stolen Goods, 663 - The
Three Great Epochs; or, 1830, 1840,
and 1850. Book I. 1830. Chap.
XIII. 58; Chap. XIV. 64; Chap. XV.
148; Chap. XVI. 153; Chap. XVII.
310; Chap. XVIII. 315; Chap. XIX.
559; Chap. XX. 567. Greater and
Lesser Stars of Old Pall Mall,
Chap. XIII. 88; Chap. XIV. 648;
Chap. XV. 649; Chap. XVI. 652;
Chap. XVII. 656; Chap. XVIII. 661;
On Men and Pictures; à propos of a
Walk in the Louvre, 98 — The Scotch
Chambermaid, 140 Sewell and
Hewell; or, the Rival Shopkeepers. A
Tale of the Times, 159- Ruy Lopez,
the Chess-bishop: a Legend of Spain,
168-Anecdotes of Actors, 179; Ban-
nister and Heath, 181; Bannister and
his Toupée, 184; Suett's Funeral, 187;
Mr. Quick and his Spoiled Child, 188;
George Frederick Cooke in London,
474; in America, 477; and in Scotland,
478; Henry Siddons and Mathews, 684;
Claremont and John Kemble, 685;
Mathews and Spring, 686; Dignum,
688 Summer Holiday. Morning,

-

-

-

Noon, and Evening. Part I. Morning.
Country Walks, 190; Part II. Noon.
Gardens, 631-Men and Coats, 208
-To the Messieurs of the Diurnal
Press. An unpublished Letter found
in the Desk of a deceased Editor,
234 The Journal of an Autumn
in the Country. In Three Parts.
Part I. 269; Part II. 455; Part III.
524 Chapter on Tailors, 288
Budget of a Blue Jacket of the Belle
Poule Frigate; or, Journal of the
Journey from Toulon to St. Helena and
thence to the Invalides at Paris, Chap.
I. 297; Chap. II. 428; Chap. III.
545-History of Samuel Titmarsh and
the Great Hoggarty Diamond. Edited
and Illustrated by Sam's Cousin,
Michael Angelo, Chap. I. 324; Chap.
II. 327; Chap. III. 332; Chap. IV.
338; Chap. V. 340; Chap. VI. 389;
Chap. VII. 393; Chap. VIII. 594;
Chap. IX. 598; Chap. X. 605: Chap.
XI.717; Chap. XII. 722; Chap. XIII.
729― Notes on the North What-d'ye-
callem Election. Being the Personal
Narrative of Napoleon Putnam Wig.
gins, of Passimaquoddy. Letter I. 352;
Letter II. 356; Letter III. 413; Let-
ter IV. 420-Sir David Wilkie and his
Friends, 443-Theodore Edward Hook,
518-Chapters on the Dogs of several of
my Acquaintances, Chap. I. Mr. Wad-
dilove's Fidelio, 578; Chap. II. Mr.
Helvetius Partlett's Snob, 581; Chap.
III. Mr. Delastro's Toby, 702; Chap.
IV. Mr. Bramble's Nero, 711
The Three Great Epochs; or, 1830, 1840,

and 1850. Book I. 1830. Chapter
XIII. The Fragments of Reform, 58;
Chap. XIV. Plots and By-plots, 64;
Chap. XV. Family Discussions and
Arrangements, 148; Chap. XVI.
"Love's Young Dream," 153; Chap.
XVII. Parental Solicitude, 310; Chap.
XVIII. Things will take their own
course, 315; Chap. XIX. There are
more ways than one of shewing our
Loyalty, 559; Chap. XX. What must
be, must be, 567

Theodore Edward Hook, 518

Thirlwall's History of Greece, vol. vii.;
review of, 127

Titmarsh (Samuel), the History of, and the
Great Hoggarty Diamond. Edited and
Illustrated by Sam's Cousin, Michael
Angelo, Chap. I. 324; Chap. II. 327;
Chap. III. 332; Chap. IV. 338;
Chap. V. S40; Chap. VI. 389; Chap.
VII. 393; Chap. VIII. 594; Chap.
IX. 598; Chap. X. 605; Chap. XI.
717; Chap. XII.722; Chap. XIII.729
To the Messieurs of the Diurnal Press.
An unpublished Letter found in the
Desk of a deceased Editor, 234

Wanted a Clerk: an Advertisement, 675
Waterloo, the Battle of, 505
Whigs, the Felo de Se of, 237
Wiggins, Napoleon Putnam, of Passima-
quoddy, the Personal Narrative of.
Letter I. 352; Letter II. S56; Letter
III. 413; Letter IV. 420

Wilkie, Sir David, and his Friends, 443
Willmott, R. A., to Oliver Yorke, Esq.

178

END OF VOL. XXIV.

LONDON:

MOYES AND BARCLAY, CASTLE STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE.

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