Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 5.djvu/273

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A YOUNG POET.
265

one more than usual to the number of his domesticks, and beside a fool and a chaplain (which are often united in one person) would retain a poet in his family; for, perhaps, a rhymer is as necessary among servants of a house as a Dobbin with his bells at the head of a team? But these things I leave to the wisdom of my superiors.

While I have been directing your pen, I should not forget to govern my own, which has already exceeded the bounds of a letter: I must therefore take my leave abruptly, and desire you, without farther ceremony, to believe that

I am,Sir,

your most humble servant,

December 1,
1720.

J. S.
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