Digital Donne: the Online Variorum

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Previous image Next image The 1654 Prose Letters  Letter 31, cont. (p.90)




which not onely for the liberty of speaking,
but for the elegancie, and composition,
would take deep root, and make durable
impressions in the memory, no other way
hath been thought so fit to suppresse them,
as to divulge some course, and railing one:
for when the noise is risen, that libels are
abroad, mens curiositie must be served
with something: and it is better for the
honour of the person traduced, that some
blunt downright railings be vented, of
which every body is soon weary, then other
pieces, which entertain us long with a de-
light, and love to the things themselves. I
doubt not but he smoothered some libels a-
gainst him in his life time. But I would all
these (or better) had been made then, for
they might then have wrought upon him;
and they might have testified that the Au-
thors had meant to mend him, but now they
can have no honest pretence. I dare say to
you, where I am not easily misinterpreted,
that there may be cases, where one may do
his Countrey good service, by libelling a-
[CW: gainst]
p.90

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