wholesome affection as your other friends
send Melons and Quelque-choses from
Court and London. If I present you not as
good diet as they, I would yet say grace to
theirs, and bid much good do it you. I
send you, with this, a Letter which I sent to
the Countesse. It is not my use nor duty to
doe so, but for your having of it, there were
but two consents, and I am sure you have
mine, and you are sure you have hers. I also
writ to her Lap for the verses she shewed
in the garden, which I did not onely to
extort them, nor onely to keep my promise
of writing, for that I had done in the other
Letter, and perchance she hath forgotten
the promise; nor onely because I think my
Letters just good enough for a progresse,
but because I would write apace to her,
whilest it is possible to expresse that which
I yet know of her, for by this growth I see
how soon she will be ineffable.
[CW: Sir,]
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