Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 11.djvu/458

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LETTERS TO AND FROM

The gentleman you inquired after is very well now. The illness you heard he had, he has been subject to a good while. What you desire, I wish were in the power of either his brother or me; but all will go from both of us of every kind. Only they say, that the clothes upon my back I may perhaps call my own, and that's all. I was obliged to leave the country. I was so ill there, that if I had not come to the physicians, I cannot tell what might have happened. My daughter is your most humble servant, and is pretty well in health.

Am not I one of my word, and troubled you twice as long as you would have wished? But you will find by this, that a woman's pen should no more be set at work than her tongue; for she never knows when to let either of them rest. But my paper puts me in mind, that I have but just room to tell you, I wish much to see you here, if it could be with your satisfaction; and that I am, with great sincerity, sir, your faithful humble servant,





OCTOBER 23, 1716.


IT is a very great truth, that, among all the losses which I have sustained, none affected me more sensibly than that of your company and correspond-

  1. Endorsed, "Received Nov. 7, 1716."
ence;