Theophilus Swift


Theophilus Swift was an Irish writer and poet.

Early life

He was born the son of Deane Swift of Dublin, and educated at St Mary Hall, Oxford, graduating B.A. in 1767.

Career

He studied law at the Middle Temple and was called to the bar in 1774. After practising law for a few years, he moved to live in Dublin after inheriting some property in Limerick after the death of his father in 1783. In 1789 he was wounded in a duel in London with Colonel Charles Lennox following deprecatory remarks he made in a pamphlet. In another pamphlet entitled Animadversions on the Fellows of Trinity College, Dublin he accused some of the fellows at Trinity with having broken the rule which prohibited them from marrying, earning him a twelve months' prison sentence in the Marshalsea prison for libel.
In 1800 he was awarded the Cunningham Medal by the Royal Irish Academy for his essay on The origin and progress of rhyme.

Death

He died in 1815 in Dublin.

Works

The Gamblers, a poem, 1777The Temple of Folly, in four cantos, London, 1787Poetical Address to His Majesty, 1788The Female Parliament, a poem, 1789The Monster at Large, 1791An Essay on Rime, Transactions of Royal Irish Academy, 1801The Accomplished Quack: A Treatise on Political Charlatanism, Dublin, 1811