Everything about John Philpot Curran totally explained
John Philpot Curran (
July 24,
1750 -
October 14,
1817) was an
Irish orator and wit, born in
Newmarket,
County Cork. He was the son of James and Sarah Curran.
Career
A friend of the family, Rev. Nathaniel Boyse, arranged to have young John educated at
Midleton,
County Cork.
He studied law at
Trinity College, Dublin (he was described as "the wildest, wittiest, dreamiest student") and continued his legal studies at
King's Inns and the
Middle Temple. He was called to the Irish
bar in
1775. Upon his first trial, his nerves got the better of him and he couldn't proceed. His short stature, boyish features, shrill voice and a speech impediment hindered his career, and earned him the
nickname "
Stuttering Jack Curran".
However, he could speak passionately in court on subjects close to his heart. He eventually overcame his nerves, and got rid of his speech impediment by constantly reciting
Shakespeare and
Bolingbroke in front of a mirror, and became a noted orator and wit. His speeches were emotional, rather than rational.
His occasional tendency of challenging people to
duels (he fought five in all) rather than compromise his values, along with his skilful oratory, quick wit and his championing of popular Irish causes such as
Catholic Emancipation and the enlargement of the franchise, made him one of the most popular lawyers in Ireland. He also could speak
Irish, still the language of the majority at that time. He wrote a large amount of humorous and romantic poetry.
The case which cemented Curran's popularity was that of Father Neale and Lord Doneraile at the County Cork Assizes in
1780. Father Neale, an elderly
Catholic priest in
County Cork, criticised an adulterous parishioner. The adulterer's sister was mistress to
Lord Doneraile, a cruel
Protestant landlord. Doneraile demanded that Neale recant his criticism of his mistress' brother. When the priest stood by his principles, Doneraile horse-whipped him, secure in the confidence that a
jury of the time wouldn't convict a Protestant on charges brought forward by a Catholic. Curran, who had a passion for lost causes, represented the priest and won over the jury by setting aside the issue of religion. The
jury awarded Curran's client 30
guineas. Doneraile challenged Curran to a duel, in which Doneraile fired and missed. Curran declined to fire.
His Catholic sympathies earned him the nickname
The Little Jesuit of St. Omers. His drinking club
The Order of St. Patrick also included Catholic members along with liberal lawyers who then had to be Protestant. The Club members were called
The Monks of the Screw, as they appreciated wine and corkscrews. Curran was its
Prior and consequently named his Dublin home "The Priory".
Political cases and views
Curran became
member of Parliament for
Kilbeggan,
Co. Westmeath in
1784. A liberal
Protestant whose politics were similar to
Henry Grattan, he employed all his eloquence to oppose the illiberal policy of the Government, and also the Union with Britain. The
Act of Union in
1801 bitterly disappointed him; he even contemplated
emigrating to the
United States. He also visited France in the 1780s and in 1802, and considered that an Ireland ruled by the
United Irishmen under French protection would be as bad as, if not worse than, British rule.
However, he defended several of the
United Irishmen in prominent high treason cases in the 1790s. Among them were the Revd. William Jackson,
Archibald Hamilton Rowan,
Wolfe Tone,
Napper Tandy,
Lord Edward Fitzgerald,
William Orr and
William Drennan. His main argument in defence was that the government often used one witness to secure a high treason case, while in England the prosecution had to use two or more. Consequently success depended on his lengthy examination of a single witness to try to find an inconsistency.
He was appointed
Master of the Rolls of Ireland in
1806, following
Pitt's replacement by a more
liberal cabinet. He retired in
1814 and spent his last three years in London. He died in his home in Brompton in
1817. In
1837, his remains were transferred from Paddington Cemetery, London to
Glasnevin Cemetery, where they were lain in an 8ft high classical-style
sarcophagus.
Private life
He married in
1774, to his cousin Sarah Creagh (
1755-
1844), the daughter of Richard Creagh, a County Cork
physician. His eldest daughter
Amelia was born in
1775, and eight more children resulted from the union, but his marriage disintegrated, his wife eventually deserting him and eloping with Reverend Abraham Sandys, whom Curran sued afterwards in
1795.
His daughter
Sarah's brief romance with the rebel
Robert Emmet, who was hanged for treason in
1803, scandalised Curran, who had tried to split them up at one point. He was arrested and agreed to pass their correspondence on to the
attorney general. In the circumstances he couldn't defend Emmett. He was suspected with involvement in Emmet's Rebellion, but was completely exonerated. However, his friend
Lord Kilwarden was killed by the rebels, and he lost any faith in the beliefs of the United Irishmen.
Quotations
- "I have never yet heard of a murderer who wasn't afraid of a ghost."
"Assassinate me you may; intimidate me you cannot."
"His smile is like the silver plate on a coffin."
"Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty!"
"In this administration, a place can be found for every bad man."
"Twenty four millions of people have burst their chains, and on the altar erected by despotism for public slavery, have enthroned the image of public liberty" - Speaking of the French Revolution, 4 February 1790.
"It is the common fate of the indolent to see their rights become a prey to the active. The condition upon which God hath given liberty to man is eternal vigilance; which condition if he break, servitude is at once the consequence of his crime and the punishment of his guilt." -- John Philpot Curran: Speech upon the Right of Election for Lord Mayor of Dublin, 1790. (Speeches. Dublin, 1808.) as quoted in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations
"No matter with what solemnities he may have been devoted on the altar of slavery, the moment he touches the sacred soil of Britain, the altar and the god sink together in the dust; his soul walks abroad in her own majesty; his body swells beyond the measure of his chains which burst from around him, and he stands redeemed, regenerated, and disenthralled, by the irresistible genius of universal emancipation." - (Curran's speech in defense of James Somerset, a Jamaican slave who declared his freedom upon being brought to Britain [whereslavery was banned] by his master; quoted extensively by U.S. abolitionists such as Harriet Beecher Stowe in Uncle Tom's Cabin, Chapter 37. Frederick Douglass always recited this speech on stage when playing Curran.)
"Evil prospers when good men do nothing." (Also attributed to Edmund Burke; the quote can't be definitely traced to either man.)
Judge: (to Curran, whose wig was awry) Curran, do you see anything ridiculous in this wig? » Curran: Nothing but the head, my lord!
"My dear doctor, I'm surprised to hear you say that I'm coughing very badly, as I've been practising all night."
"When I can't talk sense, I talk metaphor."
"Everything I see disgusts and depresses me: I look back at the streaming of blood for so many years, and everything everywhere relapsed into its former degradation - France rechained, Spain again saddled for the priests, and Ireland, like a bastinadoed elephant, kneeling to receive the paltry rider." - Written in a letter, after the exile of Napoleon Bonaparte.
"If sadly thinking, with spirits sinking, » Could more than drinking my cares compose,
A cure for sorrow my sighs would borrow » And hope tomorrow would end my woes.
But as in wailing there's naught availing » And Death unfailing will strike the blow
And for that reason, and for a season, » Let us be merry before we go.
» To joy a stranger, a wayworn ranger,
In every danger my course of I've run » Now hope all ending, and death befriending,
His last aid lending, my cares are done. » No more a rover, or hapless lover,
My griefs are over -- my glass runs low; » Then for that reason, and for a season,
Let us be merry before we go." - ("The Deserter's Meditation")
"O Erin how sweetly thy green bosom rises, » An emerald set in the ring of the sea,
Each blade of thy meadows my faithful heart prizes, » Thou queen of the west, the world's cushla ma chree."
His witticisms
One night, Curran was dining with Justice Toler, a notorious "hanging judge". » Toler: Curran, is that hung-beef?
Curran: Do try it, my lord, then it's sure to be!
A wealthy tobacconist, Lundy Foot, asked Curran to suggest a Latin motto for his coach. "I have just hit on it!', exclaimed Curran. "It is only two words, and it'll explain your profession, your elevation, and your contempt for the peoples ridicule; it has the advantage of being in two languages, Latin and English, just as the reader chooses. Put up "Quid Rides" upon your carriage!"
Curran hated the Act of Union, which abolished the Parliament of Ireland and amalgamated it with that of Great Britain. The parliament had been housed in a splendid building in College Green, Dublin, which faced an uncertain future. "Curran, what do they mean to do with this useless building? For my part, I hate the very sight of it!" said one lord, who was for the Act of Union. "I don't wonder at it, my lord", said Curran contemptuously. "I have never yet heard of a murderer who isn't afraid of a ghost."
Curran arrived at court late one morning. The judge, Viscount Avonmore, demanded an explanation. "On my way to court, I passed through the market—"
"Yes, I know, the Castle Market," interrupted Lord Avonmore.
"Exactly, the Castle Market, and passing near one of the stalls, I beheld a brawny butcher brandishing a sharp gleaming knife. A calf he was about to slay was standing, awaiting the deathstroke, when at that moment—that critical moment—a lovely little girl came bounding along in all her sportive mirth from her father's stall. Before a moment had passed the butcher had plunged his knife into the breast of—"
"Good God! His child!" sobbed the judge, deeply affected. Curran carried on:
"No, the calf, but your Lordship often anticipates."
A prosecutor, infuriated by Curran's insults, threaten to put him in his pocket. "If you do that," replied Curran, "you will have more law in your pocket than you ever had in your head."
In debate with John Fitzgibbon, 1st Earl of Clare, Fizgibbon refuted one of Curran's arguments by saying "If that be the law, Mr. Curran, I'll burn all my law books." To which he replied "You had better read them first, my lord."
Sources
Charles Phillips, Recollections of Curran 1818 (Hookham, London; Milliken, Dublin) in 3 vols.
Further Information
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