{"id":"01KG6QFYGEH0XJW6G1NTXX28TX","cid":"bafkreiabwwqxp2ned3ju65hxzs2rxianf5qzc7zsyohmk4d5upmbwsomju","type":"file","properties":{"cid":"bafkreidxkqlv5giznyswkdwfyu7yswka6eedtyhhuw7r2d7tflqel2dede","content_type":"image/jpeg","filename":"06_poems_pericles_facsimiles_1905_oxford_page_0330.jpg","height":2400,"key":"pdf-page-1769752492148-stcjbag0x0a","label":"06_poems_pericles_facsimiles_1905_oxford_page_0330.jpg","ocr_model":"mistral-ocr-latest","page_number":330,"size":454298,"text":"41\n# THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM\n\nBut colde December dwelleth in her heart;\nBlest be the months, that sets my thoughts on fire,\nAccurst that Month that hindreth my desire.¹\n\nIn Greene’s second tract, *Alcida*, the verses beginning:\nBeauty is vaine, accounted but a flowre,\nWhose painted hiew fades with the summer sunne.²\n\nadumbrate Jaggard’s thirteenth poem:\nBeauty is but a vaine and doubtful good...\nA flower that dies when first it ’gins to bud.³\n\nAgain, the ironical advice to the wooer, which constitutes Jaggard’s poem XVIII, is little more than a repetition of passages in two poems in the six-lined stanza, which were already in print.\n\n¹ Greene’s Works, ed. Grosart, vii. 90.\n² Ib. ix. 87.\n³ There are endless Elizabethan poems in the six-lined stanza which are in sentiment and phrase as well as metre hardly distinguishable from this effort of *The Passionate Pilgrim*. The stanza numbered xxxiii in the ‘Sonnets’ appended to J. C.’s *Alcilia*, which appeared in 1595, runs:\nThough thou be fair, think Beauty but a blast!\nA morning’s dew! a shadow quickly gone!\nA painted flower, whose colour will not last!\nTime steals away, when least we think thereon.\nMost precious time! too wastefully expended;\nOf which alone the sparing is commended.\n\nCf. the sonnet attributed to Surrey in *Tottel’s Miscellany* (p. 10), headed ‘The frailtie and hurtfulness of beautie’, which opens:\nBrittle beautie, that nature made so fraile,\nWherof the gift is small, and short the season.\n\nIn Davison’s *Poetical Rhapsody* (1602) was first printed ‘An invective against love’, which contains the stanza:\nBeauty the flower so fresh, so fair, so gay,\nSo sweet to smell, so soft to touch and taste,\nAs seems it should endure, by right, for aye,\nAnd never be with any storm defaced;\nBut when the baleful southern wind doth blow,\nGone is the glory which it erst did show.\n\nDavison assigns this poem to the unidentified contributor ‘A. W.’, and it was appropriated by the publisher of the second edition of *England’s Helicon* (1614).\n\nF","text_extracted_at":"2026-01-30T06:16:43.749Z","text_extracted_by":"ocr-service","text_has_content":true,"text_images_count":0,"text_source":"ocr","uploaded":true,"width":1750},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG6Q7Q25RHMFT3SJXPV18VFF","predicate":"derived_from"},{"peer":"01KG6NWQ2H2K4PGG7H4ZHYCZ3Y","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG6QFYRF50PHGRNQAE1DKXS1","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG6QFYG0Y0500J3ZXHYNJGZ2","predicate":"next"},{"peer":"01KG6R3SDW57R00379YZNN2CHW","peer_label":"06_poems_pericles_facsimiles_1905_oxford_page_0330_medium.jpg","peer_type":"file","predicate":"has_derivative"},{"peer":"01KG6R3VMRKHND8XBHT3JKWCVX","peer_label":"06_poems_pericles_facsimiles_1905_oxford_page_0330_thumb.jpg","peer_type":"file","predicate":"has_derivative"},{"peer":"01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA","predicate":"has_assembly"}],"ver":7,"created_at":"2026-01-30T05:54:52.558Z","ts":"2026-01-30T06:22:49.450Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFFC4A8W8939TXGEXCK439ZK"}}