D U B L I N. 



The barracks are a vaft building, railed in 

 a plain ftile, of many divifions, the prin- 

 cipal front is of an immenfe length. They 

 contain every convenience for ten regi- 

 ments. 



June 23d. Lord Charlemont's houfe in 

 Dublin, is equally elegant and convenient, 

 the apartments large, handfome, and well 

 difpofed, containing fome good pictures, par- 

 ticularly one by Rembrandt, of Judas throw- 

 ing the money on the floor, with a ftrong 

 expreflion of guilt and remcrfe ; the whole 

 group fine. In the lame room is a portrait: 

 of Caefar Borgia by Titian. The library is a 

 moil elegant apartment, of about 40 by 30, 

 and of fuch a height, as to form a pleating 

 proportion, the light is well managed, com- 

 ing in from the cove of the ceiling, and has 

 an exceeding good efFecl ; at one end is a 

 pretty anti-room, with a fine copy of the 

 Venus de Medicis, and at the other, two 

 fmall rooms, one a cabinet of pictures, and 

 antiquities, the other medals. In the col- 

 lection alfo of Robert Fitzgerald, Efq; in 

 Merrion Square, are feveral pieces which 

 very well deferve a traveller's attention. — It 

 was the beft I law in Dublin. Before I quit 

 that city, I obferve, on the houfes in general, 

 that what they call their two-roomed ones, 

 are good and convenient. Mr. Latouche's^ 

 in Stephen's-Green, I was fhewh as a model 

 of this fort, and I found it well contrived, 

 and finilhed elegantly. Drove to Lord C. 



B 2 lemont's 



