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The Answer (Sent By Dr. Delany To Dr. Swift, In Order To Be Admitted To Speak To Him When He Was Deaf. 1724)

By Jonathan Swift

Topics: classic

The wise pretend to make it clear,     'Tis no great loss to lose an ear.     Why are we then so fond of two,     When by experience one would do?         'Tis true, say they, cut off the head,     And there's an end; the man is dead;     Because, among all human race,     None e'er was known to have a brace:     But confidently they maintain,     That where we find the members twain,     The loss of one is no such trouble,     Since t'other will in strength be double.     The limb surviving, you may swear,     Becomes his brother's lawful heir:     Thus, for a trial, let me beg of     Your reverence but to cut one leg off,     And you shall find, by this device,     The other will be stronger twice;     For every day you shall be gaining     New vigour to the leg remaining.     So, when an eye has lost its brother,     You see the better with the other,     Cut off your hand, and you may do     With t'other hand the work of two:     Because the soul her power contracts,     And on the brother limb reacts.         But yet the point is not so clear in     Another case, the sense of hearing:     For, though the place of either ear     Be distant, as one head can bear,     Yet Galen most acutely shows you,     (Consult his book de partium usu)     That from each ear, as he observes,     There creep two auditory nerves,     Not to be seen without a glass,     Which near the os petrosum pass;     Thence to the neck; and moving thorough there,     One goes to this, and one to t'other ear;     Which made my grandam always stuff her ears     Both right and left, as fellow-sufferers.     You see my learning; but, to shorten it,     When my left ear was deaf a fortnight,     To t'other ear I felt it coming on:     And thus I solve this hard phenomenon.     'Tis true, a glass will bring supplies     To weak, or old, or clouded eyes:     Your arms, though both your eyes were lost,     Would guard your nose against a post:     Without your legs, two legs of wood     Are stronger, and almost as good:     And as for hands, there have been those     Who, wanting both, have used their toes.[1]     But no contrivance yet appears     To furnish artificial ears.

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"The wise pretend to make it clear,..."

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Author:Jonathan Swift

"The wise pretend to make it clear,..." by Jonathan Swift

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Jonathan Swift

About Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift (1667–1745) was an Irish satirist, essayist, and poet. Best known for "Gulliver's Travels," his poetry includes "A Description of a City Shower" and "Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift." His sharp wit and moral indignation made him one of the greatest satirists in English.

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