{"id":"01KG6QHPH0NHP4BP1H0BWBMBF3","cid":"bafkreicd4xivrva3ufespa5fet3ze4dmuew7l555luvrurr5rprbab6zoa","type":"file","properties":{"cid":"bafkreigdovh2lthrr2x22xykpo3hygkzioskwysf2rtvigehmi4gel2q5u","content_type":"image/jpeg","filename":"06_poems_pericles_facsimiles_1905_oxford_page_0427.jpg","height":2400,"key":"pdf-page-1769752548766-hc647gejy89","label":"06_poems_pericles_facsimiles_1905_oxford_page_0427.jpg","ocr_model":"mistral-ocr-latest","page_number":427,"size":498971,"text":"16\nSONNETS OF SHAKESPEARE\n\nof his mistress in refusing him her old favours. In vain he tries to blot out of his mind the joys of her past kindness and to abandon the hopeless pursuit of her affection. He is ‘a man distract’, who, striving and raging in vain to free himself from strong chains of love, merely suffers ‘change of passion from woe to wrath’. The illusion of genuine passion could hardly be produced with better effect than in lines like these:—\n\nThe thoughts of past times, like flames of hell,\nKindled afresh within my memory\nThe many dear achievements that befell\nIn those prime years and infancy of love.\n\nIt was in the vein of Raleigh’s addresses to the Queen that Elizabethan poets habitually sought, not her countenance only, but that of her noble courtiers. Great lords and great ladies alike—the difference of sex was disregarded—were repeatedly assured by poetic clients that their mental and physical charms excited in them the passion of love. Protestations of affection, familiarly phrased, were clearly encouraged in their poetic clients by noble patrons.¹ Nashe, a typical Elizabethan, who was thoroughly impregnated with the spirit and temper of the times, bore (in 1595) unqualified witness to the poetic practice when he wrote of Gabriel Harvey, who religiously observed all current conventions in his relations with patrons:—\n\n¹ I have perused vearses of his, written under his owne hand to Sir Philip Sidney, wherein he courted him as he were another Cyparissus or Ganimede; the last Gordian true loues knot or knitting up of them is this:—\n\nHarvey’s love-poems to Sir Philip Sidney.\n\n¹ The two sonnets which accompanied Nashe’s gift to the young Earl of Southampton of an obscene poem called The choosing of Valentines, sufficiently indicate the tone of intimacy which often infected ‘the dedicated words which writers used’ when they were seeking or acknowledging patrons’ favours.","text_extracted_at":"2026-01-30T06:18:18.069Z","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":"01KG6QHPPVH0W4N6EPCCPWS7FG","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG6QHPVCYMPCW08KE44EJCGK","predicate":"next"},{"peer":"01KG6R6N45APPPZF11XTSQ1W1Z","peer_label":"06_poems_pericles_facsimiles_1905_oxford_page_0427_medium.jpg","peer_type":"file","predicate":"has_derivative"},{"peer":"01KG6R6QSPSTTGBS33YPY9G1DT","peer_label":"06_poems_pericles_facsimiles_1905_oxford_page_0427_thumb.jpg","peer_type":"file","predicate":"has_derivative"},{"peer":"01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA","predicate":"has_assembly"}],"ver":7,"created_at":"2026-01-30T05:55:49.920Z","ts":"2026-01-30T06:22:50.785Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFFC4A8W8939TXGEXCK439ZK"}}