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THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM 25 ### Love's Labour's Lost (1598) 1. 2. cannot 1. 9. Vows are but breath 1. 10. which on my earth dost 1. 11. Exhalest 1. 12. If broken then, 1. 14. To lose an oath ### Passionate Pilgrim (1599) could not My vow was breath that on this earth doth Exhale If broken, then To breake an oath The second excerpt from *Love's Labour's Lost* stands next No. V. but one to the first. It is Dumain’s sonnet to ‘most divine Kate’ (in lines of six feet), from Act iv, Sc. 2, ll. 100–13. The different readings are:— ### Love's Labour's Lost (1598) 1. 2. Ah 1. 3. faithful 1. 4. were oaks 1. 6. Art would comprehend 1. 11. Thy eye Ioues lightning bears 1. 13. O pardon love this wrong 1. 14. That sings ### Passionate Pilgrim (1599) O constant like Okes Art can comprehend Thine eye Ioues lightning seems O, do not loue that wrong To sing The third excerpt from *Love's Labour's Lost* is Biron’s No. XVI. verse-address to Rosaline, in seven-syllable riming couplets (beginning, ‘On a day, alack the day’), from Act iv, Sc. 3, ll. 97–116. This poem is the sixteenth in Jaggard’s volume, being the second of the appended ‘Sonnets To sundry notes of Musicke’, and the sole piece by Shakespeare in that portion of Jaggard’s volume. The only difference worthy of record between Jaggard’s version and the text of the play is the omission from the former of the eighth couplet of the latter, viz.:— D
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