Digital Donne: the Online Variorum

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Previous image Next image The 1654 Prose Letters  Letter 54, cont. (p.168)




Sir, it hath pleased God to adde thus much
to my affliction, that my wife hath now
confessed her self to be extremely sick; she
hath held out thus long to assist me, but is
now overturn'd, & here we be in two beds,
or graves; so that God hath marked out a
great many of us, but taken none yet. I have
passed ten daies without taking any thing;
so that I think no man can live more thrifti-
ly. I have purged and vexed my body much
since I writ to you, and this day I have
missed my fit: and this is the first time,
that I could discern any intermission. This
is enough, the rest I will spend upon the
parts of your Letter: Your Letter at Pauls
is delivered. In the History of that remove,
this onely perchance may be news to you,
that Mr Alabaster hath got of the King the
Deans best Living worth above 3oo1 l,
which the Dean had good hope to have
held a while. Of that which your writ
concerning a Book of the Nullity, I have
heard no syllable any other way. If you
have received it by good hands, I beleeve it
[CW: with]
p.168

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