Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 12.djvu/497

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DR. SWIFT.
485


AUG. 6, 1732.


PERMIT me to congratulate you upon the return of Mrs. Barber, with thanks for pleasures enjoyed in her company; for had she not come recommended by the dean of St. Patrick's, likely I had passed her by unheeded, being apt to follow a good author, in shunning those of my own coat. But hold; I must look if it runs not from corner to corner, which I more fear than length. For Pope says, Though sometimes he finds too many letters in my words, never too many words in my letters. So with Mr. Cæsar's, and my best wishes, thou worthy, witty, honest dean, adieu.





SIR,
AUG. 6, 1732.


I FLATTER myself, that if you had received my last letter, you would have favoured me with an answer; therefore I take it for granted it is lost.

  1. Wife to the treasurer of the navy during lord Oxford's administration, in the reign of queen Anne.
  2. Endorsed, "lady Worsley, with a present of a writingbox japanned by herself."
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