good friends with Essex, [116];
Charles II. ashamed of neglecting him, ib.;
gives Irishmen degrees at Oxford, [124];
his disputes with Orrery and Shaftesbury, [129]-[132];
his relations with the ‘Popish Plot,’ [132]-[135];
his opinion of the evidence, [138]-[140];
attacked by Anglesey, [140]-[142];
active against Tories, [142]-[145];
finally recalled and leaves Ireland, [146]-[148];
increased the revenue, [166];