Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 6.djvu/86

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64
A VOYAGE

last undeceived and reconciled to her, yet I lost all credit with him, and found my interest decline very fast with the emperor himself, who was indeed too much governed by that favourite.





CHAP. VII.


The author, being informed of a design to accuse him of high-treason, makes his escape to Blefuscu. His reception there.


BEFORE I proceed to give an account of my leaving this kingdom, it may be proper to inform the reader, of a private intrigue, which had been for two months forming against me.

I had been hitherto, all my life, a stranger to courts, for which I was unqualified by the meanness of my condition. I had indeed heard and read enough of the dispositions of great princes and ministers; but never expected to have found such terrible effects of them, in so remote a country, governed, as I thought, by very different maxims from those in Europe.

When I was just preparing to pay my attendance on the emperor of Blefuscu, a considerable person at court (to whom I had been very serviceable, at a time when he lay under the highest displeasure of his imperial majesty) came to my house very privately at night, in a close chair, and, without sending his name, desired admittance: the chairmen

were