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 is engag'd too deeply, when the Cause becomes so general. And I cannot imagine it has resolv'd the Ruin of that People at home, which it has bless'd abroad with such Successes. I am therefore to conclude, that your Sufferings are at an end; and that one part of my Poem has not been more an History of your destruction, than the other a Prophecy of your restoration. The accomplishment of which happiness, as it is the wish of all true English-men, so is by none more passionately desired than by

The greatest of Your Admirers

And most humble of Your Servants,