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Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/158

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146
LETTERS TO AND FROM


last made him the instrument himself for their private profit; whereas, I believe, before, they only intended to do this after his death.





FROM MR. POPE[1].


DEAREST SIR,
MAY 17, 1739.


EVERY time I see your hand, it is the greatest satisfaction that any writing can give me; and I am in proportion grieved to find, that several of my letters to testify it to you miscarry; and you ask me the same questions again which I prolixly have answered before. Your last, which was delivered me by Mr. Swift, inquires, where and how is lord Bolingbroke? who, in a paragraph in my last, under his own hand, gave you an account of himself; and I employed almost a whole letter on his affairs afterward. He has sold Dawley for twenty-six thousand pounds, much to his own satisfaction. His plan of life is now a very agreeable one in the finest country of France, divided between study and exercise; for he still reads or writes five or six hours a day, and generally hunts twice a week. He has the whole forest of Fontainbleau at his command, with the king's stables and dogs, &c., his lady's son-in-law being governor of that place. She resides most part of the year with my lord, at a large house they

  1. The last letter he ever wrote to the dean.

have