He remained in England until 1579, when his repeated petitions for employment and reward were answered by his appointment as
provost-marshal of Munster, a new office, the functions of which seem to have been purely military. In this capacity, St Leger was actively engaged against the Irish rebels for ten years. On 7 April 1583, he was appointed an assistant to the court of high commission in Ireland, and in the following year, he visited England. While there he accused Ormond of
treason, and laid before the queen proposals for the government of Ireland. In 1585, he was elected to the Irish House of Commons as MP for
Queen's County. In November 1589 he was succeeded, probably on account of his old age, as provost marshal by George Thornton, but in 1590 he was governing Munster in the absence of the vice-president. He was in England again in 1594, and died in Cork in 1597. His will is in the
Heralds' College, London. He had literary interests, being a friend of
Edmund Spenser and
Lodowick Bryskett, and was one of the friends to whom Spenser confided his project of writing
The Faerie Queene. The
Warham St Leger who died in combat in 1600 against
Hugh Maguire, Lord of Fermanagh, was his nephew, the son of his brother William. Sir Warham St Leger was the ancestor of the St Legers of Hayward's Hill near
Cork city and of the St Legers of
Ballingarry, North Tipperary and
Shinrone,
County Offaly in Ireland. == Notes and references ==