Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 11.djvu/484

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LETTERS TO AND FROM

Michaelmas. But if you will direct to me at my house in town, your letters will be conveyed to me, wherever I am. Mr. Rochfort[1] seems to have a great many good qualities, and I am heartily glad he has met with success. Adieu.




FROM THE SAME.


LONDON, JUNE 18, 1717.


HAVING acquainted you in my letter of last post, that it was the universal opinion the commons would not proceed to the trial of my lord Oxford, I think myself obliged to tell you, that we begin now to be something doubtful; for the managers, who are twenty-seven in number, strenuously give out, that they shall be ready to proceed on Monday next. Therefore, if you have any thoughts of coming over, let not any thing, which I have said in my last, have any weight with you to alter that resolution. I am wholly taken up with the men of the law, and therefore have nothing to say to you at present upon any publick matters. I shall only just trouble you with one word relating to a private affair. My brother is chaplain to sir Charles Hotham's regiment, which is now ordered to Ireland. If you could find any young

  1. Lord chief baron of the exchequer in queen Anne's reign. See in vol. VII, "The Country Life," written by the dean while he was spending part of a summer at the house of George Rochfort, esq., son of the lord chief baron.
fellow,