The year after the publication of Love's Labours Lost it is used by English satirist Thomas Nashe in his 1599 pamphlet Nashe’s Lenten Stuff: Physicians deafen our ears with the honorificabilitudinitatibus of their heavenly panacaea, their sovereign guiacum. L'objet a été fabriqué vers 1400 et est conservé au V&A,,, L'année qui suit la publication de Peines d'amour perdues, il est utilisé par le satiriste anglais Thomas Nashe dans un pamphlet de 1599, Nashe’s Lenten Stuff : « Physicians deafen our ears with the honorificabilitudinitatibus of their heavenly panacaea