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133:, whom Swift greatly admired. Bettesworth, infuriated, is said to have spent £1200 on trying to discover the author. He called on Swift at his home, demanded he admit his authorship, and according to Swift threatened him with "revenge". Swift said that Bettesworth, who had himself some claim to be a poet, threatened simply to use his pen, but some of Swift's friends claimed that Bettesworth threatened to stab him, or, according to
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157:, a former enemy of Swift but now on friendly terms with him, also wrote a satire on Bettesworth, "A new proposal for the better regulation and improvement of quadrille". He proposed that all disputes about the popular card game
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be referred to
Betteswworth for arbitration, but, since Bettesworth's judgment was not much regarded, Hort humorously suggested that there be a right of appeal to the "Upright Man", a wooden figure which hung in Essex Street in
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Bettesworth was the subject of numerous jeering satires by his enemies. Foremost among these was
Jonathan Swift. From the early 1730s Bettesworth, who was a
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centre, which, Hort remarked, could proudly boast that it had never given a corrupt judgment. It was printed by Swift's publisher
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of the early eighteenth century. He was a quarrelsome individual, and his list of enemies included
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party in the Irish House of
Commons, who supported moves which were likely to weaken the
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Midleton, County Cork, with which the
Bettesworth family had a long-standing association
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Members of the
Parliament of Ireland (pre-1801) for County Kilkenny constituencies
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A History of the King's
Serjeants at Law in Ireland: Honour Rather Than Advantage?
145:("that puppy pair of Dicks" as Swift called them), did not lessen with the years.
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Members of the
Parliament of Ireland (pre-1801) for County Cork constituencies
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George
Faulkner, the leading publisher, imprisoned for a libel on Bettesworth
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of the town of
Midleton in 1672, shortly after it received its
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In 1741 Bettesworth was sitting as an extra judge of
22:(1689-1741) was an Irish politician, Law Officer and
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380:Swift's Irish Writings- Selected Prose and Poetry
101:from 1727 to his death. He was appointed second
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378:Fabricant, Carole, and Mahoney, Robert
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420:. Cambridge University Press.
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390:. Dublin: Four Courts Press.
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462:Members of the Middle Temple
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331:Fabricant and Mahoney 2010
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109:Quarrel with Jonathan Swift
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457:Serjeants-at-law (Ireland)
412:Hourican, Bridget (2009).
149:Quarrel with Bishop Hort
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425:Swift, Jonathan (1734).
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352:Scott 1829 Vol.2 p.281
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210:References
95:Thomastown
320:Hart 2000
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159:quadrille
105:in 1732.
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