- description
- # 89
## Overview - What this is (type, form, dates, scope)
Section 89 is a text section extracted from a file, part of a larger collection. It was extracted on January 30, 2026, and labeled as "89". The text spans lines 11864 to 11887 of the source file.
## Context - Background and provenance from related entities
This section is contained within the chapter titled "# SHAKES-PRARES" ([arke:01KG6S4CPZP73GPBKD2240HQV8]), which is part of the "PDF Workflow Main Test 2026-01-30T00:26:53" ([arke:01KG6NWQ2H2K4PGG7H4ZHYCZ3Y]) collection. The text was extracted from the file "pdf-01KG6Q7Q25RHMFT3SJXPV18VFF.txt" ([arke:01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA]). Section 89 is preceded by section 88 ([arke:01KG6S5KHTY8VPAEXG399N7AEC]) and followed by section 90 ([arke:01KG6S5KHTAA3M3N4KWE5QDKKG]).
## Contents - What it contains, key subjects and details
Section 89 contains a poem that begins with the lines "S Ay that thou didst forfake mee for some fair, / And I will comment vpon that offence". The poem discusses the speaker's willingness to accept disgrace and estrangement from their beloved, even to the point of denying their acquaintance, if it pleases the beloved. The speaker vows to "vow debate" against themselves for the sake of the beloved.
- description_generated_at
- 2026-01-30T06:26:24.545Z
- description_model
- gemini-2.5-flash-lite
- description_title
- 89
- end_line
- 11887
- extracted_at
- 2026-01-30T06:24:08.806Z
- extracted_by
- structure-extraction-lambda
- start_line
- 11864
- text
- 89
S Ay that thou didst forfake mee for some fair,
And I will comment vpon that offence,
F 3
Speake
<!-- [Page 525](arke:01KG6QKCYCY9EBA92GP2GY6Z8G) -->
# SHARE-SPEAKERS
Speake of my lameneffe, and I straight will halt:
Against thy reasons making no defence.
Thou canst not(loue) disgrace me halfe fo ill,
To set a forme vpon defired change,
As ile my felfe disgrace, knowing thy wil,
I will acquaintance strangle and looke strange:
Be absent from thy walkes and in my tongue,
Thy sweet beloued name no more shall dwell,
I cast I(too much prophane) should do it wronges:
And haplie of our old acquaintance tell.
For thee, against my felfe ile vow debate,
For I must nere loue him whom thou dost hate.
- title
- 89