Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 11.djvu/367

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DR. SWIFT.
355

FROM CHARLES FORD.


SIR,
LONDON, JULY 10, 1714.


WHAT answer shall I send? I am against any alteration; but additions, I think, ought by no means to be allowed. I wished I had called sooner at St. Dunstan's; but I did not expect it would have come out till Thursday, and therefore did not go there till yesterday. Pray let me know what you would have done. Barber was a blockhead to show it at all; but who can help that? Write an answer either for yourself or me; but I beg of you to make no condescensions.

Yesterday put an end to the session, and to your pain. We gained a glorious victory at the house of lords the day before: the attack was made immediately against Arthur Moore[1], who appeared at the bar, with the other commissioners of trade. The South sea company had prepared the way for a censure, by voting him guilty of a breach of trust, and incapable of serving them in any office for the future. This passed without hearing what he had to say in his defence, and had the usual fate of such unreasonable reflections. Those, who proposed the resolutions, were blamed for their violence; and the person accused, appearing to be less guilty than they made him, was thought to be more innocent than I

  1. One of the commissioners of trade and plantations, who was accused of being bribed by the court of Spain, to favour that kingdom in the treaty of commerce made between it and England.
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