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E - An Answer to Bickerstaff

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2021

Valerie Rumbold
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham
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Summary

Headnote

This piece was probably composed by Swift as a conclusion to the Bickerstaff affair, but was apparently not published. For commentary, see Ehrenpreis. The text is taken from the first printing, 1765a.

AN ANSWER TO BICKERSTAFF.

Some Reflections upon Mr. Bickerstaff 's Predictions for the Year m dcc viii.

BY A PERSON OF QUALITY.

I have not observed, for some years past, any insignificant paper to have made more noise, or be more greedily bought, than that of these predictions. They are the wonder of the common people, an amusement for the better sort, and a jest only to the wise; yet, among these last, I have heard some very much in doubt, whether the author meant to deceive others, or is deceived himself. Whoever he was, he seems to have with great art adjusted his paper both to please the rabble and to entertain persons of condition. The writer is, without question, a gentleman of wit and learning, although the piece seems hastily written in a sudden frolic, with the scornful thought of the pleasure he will have, in putting this great town into a wonderment about nothing: Nor do I doubt but he and his friends in the secret, laugh often and plentifully in a corner, to reflect how many hundred thousand fools they have already made. And he has them fast for some time: For so they are like to continue until his prophecies begin to fail in the events. Nay, it is a great question whether the miscarriage of the two or three first will so entirely undeceive people, as to hinder them from expecting the accomplishing of the rest. I doubt not but some thousands of these papers are carefully preserved by as many persons, to confront with the events, and try whether the astrologer exactly keeps the day and the hour. And these I take to be Mr. Bickerstaff's choicest cullies, for whose sake chiefly he writ his amusement. Meanwhile he has seven weeks good, during which time the world is to be kept in suspense; for it is so long before the almanack-maker is to die, which is the first prediction: And, if that fellow happens to be a splenetic visionary fop, or has any faith in his own art, the prophesy may punctually come to pass by very natural means.

Type
Chapter
Information
Parodies, Hoaxes, Mock Treatises
Polite Conversation, Directions to Servants and Other Works
, pp. 573 - 578
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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