The academie of eloquence containing a compleat English rhetorique, exemplified with common-places and formes digested into an easie and methodical way to speak and write fluently according to the mode of the present times : together with letters both amorous and moral upon emergent occasions / by Tho. Blount, Gent.

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Title
The academie of eloquence containing a compleat English rhetorique, exemplified with common-places and formes digested into an easie and methodical way to speak and write fluently according to the mode of the present times : together with letters both amorous and moral upon emergent occasions / by Tho. Blount, Gent.
Author
Blount, Thomas, 1618-1679.
Publication
London :: Printed by T.N. for Humphrey Moseley ...,
1654.
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Subject terms
English language -- Rhetoric -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A28452.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The academie of eloquence containing a compleat English rhetorique, exemplified with common-places and formes digested into an easie and methodical way to speak and write fluently according to the mode of the present times : together with letters both amorous and moral upon emergent occasions / by Tho. Blount, Gent." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A28452.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2024.

Pages

LX. Another to the same.

My onely dear,

THat you may see I forget you not at any time nor in any place, I present you these, and if I seem importune by my frequent addresses, you must pardon me, since I professe to receive no solace in this absence, but what the comfortable entertainment of thoughts on you affords me, and should I but as often put such thoughts in wri∣ting, as my heart presents them to my memory, I should be no day, even no houre without a pen in my hand; And I may well hope, from the excel∣lency of your nature, that you will not leave such faith, such affection, without a just retribution, nor can I despair of your remembrance of me in some propor••••on answerable to mine of you;

Page 207

so may happiness in the end crown both, and I live eternally

Yours, as at first, unal∣terable, T.B.

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