services he was by the late King promoted to the see
of Derry. About the same time, he wrote a book
to justify the Revolution, wherein was an account
of King James’s proceedings in Ireland, and
the late Archbishop Tillotson recommended it to the
King as the most serviceable treatise that could have
been published at such a juncture.[8] And as his Grace
set out upon those principles, he has proceeded so
ever since, as a loyal subject to the Queen, entirely
for the succession in the Protestant line, and for
ever excluding the Pretender; and though a firm friend
to the Church, yet with indulgence toward dissenters,
as appears from his conduct at Derry, where he was
settled for many years among the most virulent of the
sect; yet upon his removal to Dublin, they parted
from him with tears in their eyes, and universal acknowledgments
of his wisdom and goodness. For the rest, it
must be owned, he does not busy himself by entering
deep into any party, but rather spends his time in
acts of hospitality and charity, in building of churches,
repairing his palace, in introducing and preferring
the worthiest persons he can find, without other regards;
in short, in the practice of all virtues that can
become a public or private life. This and more,
if possible, is due to so excellent a person, who
may be justly reckoned among the greatest and most
learned prelates of his age, however his character
may be defiled by such mean and dirty hands as those
of the
Observator or such as employ him.[9]
[Footnote 2: The Provost and Fellows of Trinity
College, Dublin, had lately expelled Edward Forbes
for the cause mentioned in the text. [S.]]
[Footnote 3: Faulkner prints: “But
sufficient care hath been taken to explain it.”
[T.S.]]
[Footnote 4: Daniel Defoe (1663?-1731), the son
of a Cripplegate butcher. Entered business as
a hosier, but failed. In 1695 he was appointed
one of the commissioners for duties on glass.
Wrote “The True Born Englishman” (1701);
“The Shortest Way with the Dissenters,”
for which he was pilloried, fined, and imprisoned;
and numerous other works, including “Robinson
Crusoe;” “Life of Captain Singleton;”
“History of Duncan Campbell;” “Life
of Moll Flanders;” “Roxana;” “Life
of Colonel Jack;” “Journal of the Plague;”
“History of the Devil;” and “Religious
Courtship.” He edited a paper called “The
Review,” to which Swift here refers, and against
which Charles Leslie wrote his “Rehearsals.”
[T.S.]]
[Footnote 5: John Tutchin, a virulent writer
of the reign of James ii. For a political
work in defence of Monmouth he was sentenced by Judge
Jefferies to be whipped through several market towns.
He wrote the “Observator” (begun April,
1702), and suffered at the hands of the Tories for
his writings. He died in great poverty in 1708,
at the age of forty-seven. He was also the author
of a play entitled, “The Unfortunate Shepherd.”
Pope refers to these punishments meted out to Defoe
and Tutchin, in the second book of the “Dunciad”: