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Aging & Wisdom Quote by Robert Herrick

"Thus times do shift, each thing his turn does hold; New things succeed, as former things grow old"

About this Quote

Herrick compresses an entire worldview into two tidy lines: change isn’t a crisis, it’s the schedule. The diction is almost bookkeeping - “shift,” “turn,” “hold,” “succeed” - verbs that make time feel like an orderly procession rather than a romantic blur. That restraint is the point. Instead of pleading with the clock, he files it.

As a 17th-century poet writing through political whiplash in England (monarchy, civil war, restoration), Herrick knew that “times do shift” was more than seasonal mood. It’s a quiet acknowledgment that institutions, fashions, and loyalties are temporary arrangements. The subtext carries a double edge: comfort and warning. Comfort, because nothing terrible lasts forever; warning, because nothing stable does either. The couplet’s balance enacts its argument - each clause answers the other, like a wheel completing a rotation.

What makes it work is how it turns novelty into inevitability. “New things succeed” sounds triumphant until the second half lands: they do so only because “former things grow old.” Progress isn’t portrayed as moral improvement; it’s succession, inheritance, replacement. Even the slightly archaic “his turn” gives the world a human hierarchy, as if objects and ideas queue politely for relevance, then step aside.

Herrick’s broader poetic project often celebrates immediate pleasure under the shadow of passing time. Here, he strips away the carpe diem flirtation and offers the colder mechanism behind it: time doesn’t argue, it rotates.

Quote Details

TopicTime
Source
Verified source: Hesperides (Robert Herrick, 1648)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Thus times do shift; each thing his turn does hold: New things succeed, as former things grow old. (Poem: “The Ceremonies for Candlemas Eve” (often numbered #892 in editions); specific page varies by edition). This couplet is the closing lines of Robert Herrick’s poem “The Ceremonies for Candlemas Eve,” first published in his 1648 collection Hesperides; or, The Works both Humane and Divine of Robert Herrick, Esq. The earliest appearance is therefore in that 1648 printed book (not a speech/interview). A commonly cited early imprint is London: John Williams and Francis Eglesfield, 1648. The Wikisource page linked shows the lines in an edition layout; poem numbering/page will differ across later edited volumes.
Other candidates (1)
Robert Herrick. The Hesperides & Noble numbers: ed. by A.... (Robert Herrick, 1898) compilation95.0%
Robert Herrick Alfred William Pollard. Grown old , surrender must his place Unto the crisped yew . When yew is out .....
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Herrick, Robert. (2026, February 22). Thus times do shift, each thing his turn does hold; New things succeed, as former things grow old. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/thus-times-do-shift-each-thing-his-turn-does-hold-106125/

Chicago Style
Herrick, Robert. "Thus times do shift, each thing his turn does hold; New things succeed, as former things grow old." FixQuotes. February 22, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/thus-times-do-shift-each-thing-his-turn-does-hold-106125/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Thus times do shift, each thing his turn does hold; New things succeed, as former things grow old." FixQuotes, 22 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/thus-times-do-shift-each-thing-his-turn-does-hold-106125/. Accessed 14 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

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Robert Herrick (1591 AC - 1674 AC) was a Poet from England.

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