Abstract
In c. 1599, the London stationer William Jaggard produced
two editions of The Passionate
Pilgrime, a collection of twenty poems best known for its inclusion of
five sonnets by William Shakespeare. Having been lengthened to include a total
of twenty-nine poems, a third edition of this printed miscellany was released
by Jaggard just over a decade later in 1612. This article centers around
Jaggards decision to repackage the expanded contents of the 1612 Passionate Pilgrime with a title
page that not only intriguingly advertises the collections inclusion of
Certaine Amorous Sonnets, betweene Venus and Adonis, but also draws
particular attention to a newly appended pair of Loue-Epistles purportedly
written by the mythological figures Paris and Helen. Taking as my particular
focus the acts of writing described on The Passionate
Pilgrimes 1612 title page, I contend that these putative acts
provide audiences with a fictitious etiology of the miscellanys origins. Like
so many other early printed miscellanies, Jaggards volume exploits the
perceived exclusivity of scribal coterie poetry; rather than positing The Passionate Pilgrimes contents
as texts commemorating actual courtly occasions between historical Tudor or
Stuart elites (as earlier printed anthologies such as Richard Tottels Songes and Sonettes often had),
however, Jaggards title page draws upon established generic conventions as
well as the literary precedent provided by Ovids Heroides to reimagine acts of literary composition transpiring
within a well-known mythological story-world.
Original language | English (Ireland) |
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Journal | Etudes Epistémè |
Volume | 21 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2012 |
Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)
- Authors
- Lindsay Ann Reid