358 



' OLD Q 



Lennox, Lady Emily, 69. 

 Lewkner's Lane, Drury, 52. 

 Lochmaben, Douglas at, 5. 

 Lothian, the Marquis of, dismissed 



from office, 183. 

 Louis XV. 's Consort and Madame 



de Mirepoix, 104. 



Mackay, Memoirs of, 8. 



Malmesbury, Lord, dismissed from 

 office, 183. 



Mansfield, Lord, and the March- 

 Pigot case, 137. 



March, creation of the Earldom 

 of, 6 ; death of first Earl of, 6 ; 

 Mackay's opinion of, 8 ; mar- 

 riage of second Earl of, 6 ; death 

 of second Earl of, 6 ; third Earl 

 of, and the Queensberry Duke- 

 dom, 7 ; boyhood of third Earl 

 of, 8 ; guardians of the third 

 Earl of, 9 ; his curriculum, 9 ; 

 proclivities of, 9, 10 ; initiated 

 in the 'Freemasonry' of the 

 Turf, 10; as a 'man of the 

 world,' 10 ; and Lady Cassillis, 

 1 1 ; love for cards, 1 1 ; sighs 

 for a London life, 12 ; becomes 

 a London 'lion,' 13; death of 

 the mother of, 13; receives com- 

 pensation for loss of hereditary 

 rights, 13 ; succeeds to the 

 Ruglen dignities, 13 ; the Earl 

 of, and Wemyss's action against 

 ' Old Q's ' executors, 207. 



March and Ruglen, the Earl of, 

 first racing efforts, 15 ; first 

 notice of the, in racing calen- 

 dars, 15 ; his jockeyship, 16 

 formulates the chaise match, 17 

 difficulties concerning, 18-21 



racing reputation established, 

 24 ; doubtful racing anecdote, 

 25 ; accepts a challenge, 26-29 ; 

 takes a house at Newmarket, 

 29 ; I'acing discretion, 30 ; v. 

 Sawyer, 31 ; and Catharine, 

 Duchess of Queensberry, 34 ; a 

 matrimonial bet by, 37 ; another 

 bet, 38 ; enters into another 

 match against time, 39 ; probabi- 

 lity of, 39 ; accepts Lord Orford's 

 challenge, 45 ; starts a stud farm, 

 46 ; care in making matches, 47 ; 

 noticed by W. M. Thackeray, 

 49 ; sells his stud of brood mares, 

 51 ; heir-apparent to the Qiieens- 

 berry honours, 52 ; precaution- 

 ary measures adopted by, when 

 gambling, 56, 57 ; rides a match 

 against the Duke of Hamilton, 

 57 ; takes a hoiise in Piccadilly, 

 59 ; and the Honourable Henry 

 Pelham, 59 ; captivated by Miss 

 Frances Pelham, 60 ; result 

 thereof, 61 ; claims the Earldom 

 of Cassillis, 63 ; litigation there- 

 on, 65 ; Turf ' diplomacy,' 72 ; 

 racing affairs of, 72; anecdote 



of, 73 ; and the Countess L , 



78; and H.R.H. the Duke of 

 Cumberland, 81; an 'Ixionic' 

 wager by, 83-86 ; wager with 

 Mr. R. L. Edge worth, 86 ; made 

 a Lord of the Bedchamber, 88 ; 

 the diurnal writers and, 89 ; re- 

 moves to Marylebone, 90 ; first 

 racing colours of, 90 ; and the 

 then conditions of life, 90 ; 

 George Augustus Selwyn and, 

 91 ; commencement of corre- 

 spondence with Selwyn by, 94 ; 



