men of much leasure may soon exceed,
when they write of business, they having
but a little. You mention two more letters
then I send. The time was not too short
for me to have written them, (for I had an
whole night) but it was too short to work
a beleefe I me, that you could think it fit
to go two so divers ways to one end. I see
not, (for I see not the reason) how those
letters could well have concurred with
these, nor how those would well have been
drawn from them, in a businesse wholly
relating to this house. I was not lazie in
disobeying you, but (I thought) only thrifty,
and your request of those was not absolute,
but conditioned, if I had leasure. So though
that condition hinder them not, since ano-
ther doth (and you forethought, that one
might) I am not stubborn. The good
Countesse spake somewhat of your desire
of letters; but I am afraid, she is not a pro-
per Mediatrix to those persons, but I coun-
sail in the dark. And therefore return to
that, of which I have clear light, that I am
[CW: always]
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