CCXI.
MADAM,
AS I began this Book with those Letters to you, so I will End it, hoping you will Par∣don me for Mixing some other Letters with those to your self, for the Assurance and Belief of your Pardon Perswaded me to do it, they are only to my Near and Dear Relations, and Kind and Obliging Friends. But, Madam, I know your Nature and Friendship is such, that what is Fit and Convenient for me to do, you will Approve, and upon that ground, I am Con∣fident you will not be Angry with me, that I do not Joyn the Answers to those Letters, where∣in you were pleased to Propound several Phi∣losophical Questions to me to Resolve, to this Book, for truly, Madam, they are so many, and my Answers to them so Long, that if I should have Joyned them to these, it would have been as a Type, or Resemblance of Infi∣nite Nature, and I am careful not to be too Te∣dious, or Wearisom to my Readers. Besides, the said Letters containing nothing but Philo∣sophical