[462b] See p. [54].

[462c] Wise.

[462d] Partly obliterated.

[462e] See p. [43].

[462f] This sentence is almost obliterated.

[463a] The MS. of this letter has not been preserved.

[463b] See p. [245].

[463c] Swift’s friend, Dr. Pratt (see p. [5]), was then Provost of Trinity College, Dublin.

[463d] Samuel Molyneux, then aged twenty-three, was the son of William Molyneux (1656–1698), M.P. for Dublin University, a writer on philosophical and scientific subjects, and the friend of Locke. Samuel Molyneux took his M.A. degree in Dublin in 1710, and in 1712 visited England. He was befriended by the Duke of Marlborough at Antwerp, and in 1714 was sent by the Duke on a mission to the Court of Hanover. He held office under George I., but devoted most of his attention to astronomical research, until his death in 1728.

[464a] Probably The Case of Ireland’s being bound by Acts of Parliament in England stated (1698).