Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 18.djvu/274

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
260
LETTERS TO AND FROM


TO THE REV. MR. WALLIS.


SIR,
MARKET HILL[1], NOV. 16, 1728.


I AM extremely obliged to you for your kind intention in the purchase you mention; but it will not answer my design, because these lands are let in leases renewable for ever[2], and consequently can never have the rent raised; which is mortal to all estates left for ever to a publick use, and is contrary to a fundamental maxim of mine; and most corporations feel the smart of it.

I have been here several months, to amuse me in my disorders of giddiness and deafness, of which I have frequent returns — and I shall hardly return to Dublin till Christmas.

I am truly grieved at your great loss[3]. Such misfortunes seem to break the whole scheme of man's life[4]; and although time may lessen sorrow, yet it

cannot
  1. The seat of sir Arthur Acheson, where the dean passed two summers. He had a farm near it, which was let to him by sir Arthur, and afterward called Drapier's hill, apparently from the poem, while Swift tenanted it.
  2. Accordingly, in his will, by which he devised his fortune to the building and endowing of an hospital for lunaticks, he restrained his executors from purchasing any lands that "were encumbered with leases for lives renewable."
  3. The death of Mrs. Wallis.
  4. Mr. Pope has so poetically expressed this idea, that we cannot resist the temptation of transcribing it: "I am sensibly obliged to you, in the comfort you endeavour to give me upon the loss of a friend. It is like the shower we have had this morning, that just makes the drooping trees hold up their heads, but they re-
" main