Jonathan Swift was an Anglo-Irish author, clergyman, and satirist born in 1667 in Dublin, Ireland. He had a difficult childhood and schooling. He later worked as a secretary for Sir William Temple and entered the Anglican Church. As a clergyman in Ireland, he worked to improve conditions for the poor parishioners. However, he grew frustrated from not being promoted despite his talents. While he might have become a Bishop, Queen Anne objected due to doubts about his orthodoxy. He spent his last 30 years in gloom after losing political positions, and in his final years suffered from mental illness and stroke before his death in 1745.