Jonathan Swift served as an accountant early in his adulthood;
however, when he grew tired of this, he became an ordained minister,
and later served at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin. His writing
often betrays a severe dislike of humanity, visible in the final book
of "Gulliver's Travels" and culminating in his satirical "A Modest
Proposal." Late in his life, he suffered paralysis, followed by
aphasia, and finally died in 1745. The bulk of his money was left to
a psychiatric hospital after his death.
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