Digital Donne: the Online Variorum

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Previous image Next image The 1654 Prose Letters  Letter 26, cont. (p.75)




book, of Mris. Drury; if any of those censures
I do but pardon me in my descent in Printing
any thing in verse, (which if they do, they
are more charitable then my self; for I do
not pardon my self, but confesse that I did
it against my conscience, that is, against my
own opinion, that I should not have done
so) I doubt not but they will soon give
over that other part of that indictment,
which is that I have said so much; for no
body can imagine, that I who never saw
her, could have any other purpose in that,
then that when I had received so very good
testimony of her worthinesse, and was gone
down to print verses, it became me to say,
not what I was sure was just truth, but the
best that I could conceive; for that had
been a new weakness in me, to have prai-
sed any body in printed verses, that had
not been capable of the best praise that I
could give. Presently after Easter we shall
(I think) go to Frankford to be there at the
election, where we shall meet Sir H. Wotton
and Sir Ro Rich, and after that we are de-
[CW: termined]
p.75

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