Jonathan Swift — "May you live all the days of your life."
May you live all the days of your life.
May you live all the days of your life.
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"The greatest inventions were at first but the rudiments of experiments."
"I am not for imposing any thing on the clergy, but for leaving them to their own discretion."
"I never saw, hear, nor read, that the clergy were beloved in any nation where Christianity was the religion of the country."
"I could name a country which would be glad to eat up our whole nation without salt."
"When a true genius appears in the world, you may know him by this sign, that the dunces are all in confederacy against him."
Anglo-Irish satirist and Dean of Dublin's St Patrick's Cathedral whose Gulliver's Travels (1726) and A Modest Proposal (1729) are the canonical English-language satires. Closely associated with Alexander Pope (Scriblerus Club poet and collaborator) and John Gay (Beggar's Opera author and satirical contemporary). For an intellectual contrast, see Daniel Defoe, English Whig journalist and Robinson Crusoe author (1660-1731) — Defoe's Crusoe (1719) celebrates Enlightenment self-reliance and the colonial-mercantile project; Swift's Gulliver (1726) systematically dismantles every form of human pretension Defoe celebrated. The cleanest Augustan Whig-vs-Tory literary pairing — optimistic-empirical vs misanthropic-satirical.
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