Bates - BT825 B37 1683

upon DEAlt H. 1 that he was as a weaned Child from the admir'd Vanities of the World. Cbryfoflow in äLetter to C iriacuo who was tenderlyfenfi- ble of his Banìfhment, wrote to him, You now begin to lament myBaniíhment, but I have done fo for a long time : for fince I knew that Heaven was my Country, I have esteemed the wholeEarth a plac, ofexilemenr. Con f iantinople, f, om whence I am expell'd, is as difant from Para- dife as the Defert to which they fend me. But when our affections are let upon external things, and we are irregular in our aims, in- temperate in our ufe, and immo- derate in our delights, how fenfi- ble & cutting is the divilon from them ? How bitter is Death that deprives a carnal Wretch of all the materials of his frail Felicity ? What a form ofpallions is rais'd to

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