Digital Donne: the Online Variorum

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Previous image Next image The 1654 Prose Letters  Letter 30, cont. (p.87)




writ seldome, as Sir H. Wotton is, under the
oppression of businesse, or the necessity of
seeming so; or more then he, because I
hope you have both pleasure and businesse:
onely to me, who have neither, this omis-
sion were sinne; for though writing be
not of the precepts of friendship, but of the
counsels, yet, as in some cases to some men
counsels become precepts, and though not
immediately from God, yet very roundly
and quickly from his Church, (as selling
and dividing goods in the first time, conti-
nence in the Romane Church, and order
and decencie in ours) so to me who can do
nothing else, it seems to binde my consci-
ence to write; and it is sinne to doe against
the conscience, though that erre. Yet no
mans Letters might be better wanted then
mine, since my whole Letter is nothing
else but a confession that I should and
would write. I owed you a Letter in verse
before by mine own promise, and now
that you think that you have hedged in that
debt by a greater by your Letter in verse, I
[CW: think]
p.87

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