broke him; for when M. Hollands company by
reason of the plague broke, the Captain sought to be at
Mris. Jones house, who in her husbands absence
declining it, he went in the night, his boy carrying his
cloakbag, on foot to the Lord of Sussex, who going next
day to hunt, the Captain not then sick, told him he
would see him no more. A Chaplain came up to him,
to whom he delivered an account of his understanding,
and I hope, of his beliefe, and soon after dyed; and my
Lord hath buryed him with his own Ancestors. Per-
chance his life needed a longer sicknesse, but a man may
go faster and safer, when he enjoyes that day light of a
clear and sound understanding, then in the night or
twilight of an ague or other disease. And the grace of
Almighty God doth every thing suddenly and hastily,
but depart from us, it inlightens us, warms us, heats us,
ravishes us, at once. Such a medicin, I fear, his incon-
sideration needed; and I hope as confidently that he
had it. As our soul is infused when it is created,
and created when it is infused, so at her going out, Gods
mercy is had by asking, and that is asked by having.
Lest your Polesworth carrier should cousen me, I send
my man with this letter early to London, whither
this Tuesday all the Court come to a Christening at
[CW: Arondell]
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