“…Instrumental friendships, for example-those "based on utility and mutual benefit"-could easily take on affective and sympathetic registers, and a relationship initially based on a hierarchical mentorship could also show signs of reciprocal affection. 40 As Brown notes elsewhere, Donne's relationship with the Countess of Bedford fits this description quite well. 41 It is certainly possible that the relationship between Traherne and his dedicatee in the Centuries began as a mentorship and developed into a more affective bond, or that it contained an affective bond even as it preserved the hierarchy implicit in a spiritual mentorship.…”