Digital Donne: the Online Variorum

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Previous image Next image The 1654 Prose Letters  Letter 41, cont. (p.121)




so when Letters have a convenient hand-
some body of news, they are Letters; but
when they are spun out of nothing, they are
nothing, or but apparitions, and ghosts,
with such hollow sounds, as he that hears
them, knows not what they said. You (I
think) and I am much of one sect in the
Philosophy of love; which though it be
directed upon the minde, doth inhere in the
body, and find piety entertainment there: so
have Letters for their principall office, to be
seals and testimonies of mutuall affection,
but the materialls and fuell of them should
be a confident and mutuall communicating
of those things which we know. How
shall I then who know nothing write Let-
ters? Sir, I learn knowledge of enough out of
yours to me. I learn that there is truth
and firmnesse and an earnestnesse of doing
good alive in the world; and therefore, since
there is so good company in it, I have not
so much desire to go out of it, as I had, if
my fortune would afford me any room in
it. You know I have been no coward, nor
[CW: un-]
p.121

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