PERICLES, PRINCE OF TYRE


By William Shakespeare


Dramatis Personae.

    John GOWER, as Chorus.

    ANTIOCHUS, King of Antioch.
    The DAUGHTER of Antiochus.
    THALIARD, a lord of Antioch.
    A MESSENGER of Antioch.
    Followers of Antiochus.

    PERICLES, Prince of Tyre.
    MARINA, daughter to Pericles and Thaisa.
    LYCHORIDA, nurse to Marina.
    HELICANUS,    }
    ESCANES,    } lords of Tyre.
    1st LORD, 2nd LORD, 3rd LORD, and other Lords of Tyre.
    1st GENTLEMAN, 2nd Gentleman of Tyre.
    1st SAILOR of Tyre.
    
    SIMONIDES, King of Pentapolis.
    THAISA, daughter to Simonides, later wife to Pericles.
    1st LORD, 2nd LORD, 3rd LORD, and other Lords of Pentapolis.
    1st KNIGHT, 2nd KNIGHT, 3rd KNIGHT, 4th KNIGHT, 5th KNIGHT.
    The Knight's Squires.
    1st SAILOR, 2nd SAILOR.
    1st FISHERMAN, 2nd FISHERMAN, 3rd FISHERMAN.
    A MARSHAL.
    Ladies of Pentapolis.

    CLEON, Governor of Tarsus.
    DIONYZA, wife to Cleon.
    LEONINE, servant to Dionyza.
    A LORD of Tarsus.
    Attendants on Cleon.
    1st PIRATE, 2nd PIRATE, 3rd PIRATE.

    LYSIMACHUS, Governor of Mytilene.
    1st LORD and other Lords of Mytilene.
    1st GENTLEMAN, 2nd GENTLEMAN of Mytilene.
    (2nd) Sailor of Mytilene.
    A BAWD.
    A PANDAR.
    BOULT, the Pandar's servant.

    CERIMON, a lord of Ephesus.
    PHILEMON, servant to Cerimon.
    1st GENTLEMAN, 2nd GENTLEMAN of Ephesus.
    1st SERVANT, 2nd SERVANT to Cerimon.
    1st POOR MAN, 2nd Poor Man.
    Virgins of Diana's Temple.
    Inhabitants of Ephesus.

    DIANA, Goddess of Chastity.


Scene: Dispersedly in various Countries.

+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++


ACT 1.

Antioch. Before Palace, with severed heads displayed above the gates.

Enter GOWER.

Gower    To sing a song that old was sung,
    From ashes ancient Gower is come,
    Assuming man's infirmities,
    To glad your ear and please your eyes.
    It hath been sung at festivals,
    On ember-eves and holidays;
    And lords and ladies in their lives
    Have read it for restoratives.
    The purchase is to make men glorious,
    Et bonum quo antiquius, eo melius.
    If you, born in those latter times,
    When wit's more ripe, accept my rhymes,
    And that to hear an old man sing
    May to your wishes pleasure bring,
    I life would wish, and that I might
    Waste it for you like taper-light.
    This Antioch, then; Antiochus the Great
    Built up this city for his chiefest seat,
    The fairest in all Syria - 
    I tell you what mine authors say.
    This king unto him took a peer,
    Who died and left a female heir,
    So buxom, blithe, and full of face,
    As heaven had lent her all his grace;
    With whom the father liking took,
    And her to incest did provoke.
    Bad child; worse father: to entice his own
    To evil should be done by none.
    But custom what they did begin
    Was with long use account no sin.
    The beauty of this sinful dame
    Made many princes thither frame
    To seek her as a bedfellow,
    In marriage pleasures playfellow;
    Which to prevent he made a law,
    To keep her still, and men in awe,
    That whoso asked her for his wife,
    His riddle told not, lost his life.
    So for her many a wight did die,
    As yon grim looks do testify.
    What now ensues, to the judgment of your eye
    I give my cause, who best can justify.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 1. Antioch. A Room in the Palace.

Enter ANTIOCHUS, Prince PERICLES, and FOLLOWERS.

Antiochus    Young Prince of Tyre, you have at large received
    The danger of the task you undertake.

Pericles    I have, Antiochus, and with a soul
    Emboldened with the glory of her praise
    Think death no hazard in this enterprise.

Antiochus    Music!
[Music plays.
    Bring in our daughter, clothed like a bride
    For embracements even of Jove himself,
    At whose conception, till Lucina reigned,
    Nature this dowry gave to glad her presence:
    The senate-house of planets all did sit
    To knit in her their best perfections.

Enter Antiochus' DAUGHTER.

Pericles    See where she comes apparelled like the spring,
    Graces her subjects, and her thoughts the king
    Of every virtue gives renown to men.
    Her face the book of praises, where is read
    Nothing but curious pleasures, as from thence
    Sorrow were ever razed, and testy wrath
    Could never be her mild companion.
    You gods that made me man, and sway in love,
    That have inflamed desire in my breast
    To taste the fruit of yon celestial tree,
    Or die in the adventure, be my helps,
    As I am son and servant to your will,
    To compass such a boundless happiness!

Antiochus    Prince Pericles - 

Pericles    That would be son to great Antiochus.

Antiochus    Before thee stands this fair Hesperides,
    With golden fruit, but dangerous to be touched;
    For deathlike dragons here affright thee hard.
    Her face, like heaven, enticeth thee to view
    Her countless glory, which desert must gain,
    And which without desert, because thine eye
    Presumes to reach, all the whole heap must die.
    Yon sometimes famous princes, like thyself
    Drawn by report, advent'rous by desire,
    Tell thee with speechless tongues and semblance pale
    That without covering save yon field of stars
    Here they stand martyrs slain in Cupid's wars;
    And with dead cheeks advise thee to desist
    For going on death's net, whom none resist.

Pericles    Antiochus, I thank thee, who hath taught
    My frail mortality to know itself,
    And by those fearful objects to prepare
    This body, like to them, to what I must;
    For death remembered should be like a mirror
    Who tells us life's but breath, to trust it error.
    I'll make my will then, and, as sick men do,
    Who know the world, see heaven, but feeling woe,
    Gripe not at earthly joys as erst they did;
    So I bequeath a happy peace to you
    And all good men, as every prince should do;
    My riches to the earth from whence they came,
    [To DAUGHTER.] But my unspotted fire of love to you.
    [To ANTIOCHUS.] Thus ready for the way of life or death,
    I wait the sharpest blow, Antiochus.

Antiochus    Scorning advice, read the conclusion then;
    Which read and not expounded, 'tis decreed,
    As these before thee, thou thyself shalt bleed.

Daughter    Of all 'sayed yet, mayst thou prove prosperous!
    Of all 'sayed yet, I wish thee happiness!

Pericles    Like a bold champion I assume the lists,
    Nor ask advice of any other thought
    But faithfulness and courage.

    [Reads.]    I am no viper, yet I feed
            On mother's flesh which did me breed.
            I sought a husband, in which labour
            I found that kindness in a father.
            He's father, son, and husband mild;
            I mother, wife, and yet his child.
            How they may be, and yet in two,
            As you will live, resolve it you.

    [Aside.]    Sharp physic is the last. But, O, you powers
    That gives heaven countless eyes to view men's acts,
    Why cloud they not their sights perpetually
    If this be true, which makes me pale to read it?
    Fair glass of light, I loved you, and could still,
    Were not this glorious casket stored with ill.
    But I must tell you now my thoughts revolt,
    For he's no man on whom perfections wait
    That, knowing sin within, will touch the gate.
    You are a fair viol, and your sense the strings,
    Who, fingered to make man his lawful music,
    Would draw heaven down, and all the gods to hearken;
    But, being played upon before your time,
    Hell only danceth at so harsh a chime.
    Good sooth, I care not for you.

Antiochus    Prince Pericles, touch not, upon thy life,
    For that's an article within our law
    As dangerous as the rest. Your time's expired;
    Either expound now, or receive your sentence.

Pericles    Great king,
    Few love to hear the sins they love to act;
    'Twould braid yourself too near for me to tell it.
    Who has a book of all that monarchs do,
    He's more secure to keep it shut than shown;
    For vice repeated is like the wandering wind,
    Blows dust in others' eyes, to spread itself;
    And yet the end of all is bought thus dear,
    The breath is gone, and the sore eyes see clear
    To stop the air would hurt them. The blind mole casts
    Copped hills towards heaven, to tell the earth is thronged
    By man's oppression, and the poor worm doth die for't.
    Kings are earth's gods; in vice their law's their will;
    And if Jove stray, who dares say Jove doth ill?
    It is enough you know, and it is fit,
    What being more known grows worse, to smother it.
    All love the womb that their first being bred;
    Then give my tongue like leave to love my head.

Antiochus    [Aside.]
    Heaven, that I had thy head! -he has found the meaning;
    But I will gloze with him. [Aloud.] Young prince of Tyre,
    Though by the tenor of our strict edict,
    Your exposition misinterpreting,
    We might proceed to cancel of your days,
    Yet hope, succeeding from so fair a tree
    As your fair self, doth tune us otherwise.
    Forty days longer we do respite you,
    If by which time our secret be undone,
    This mercy shows we'll joy in such a son;
    And until then your entertain shall be
    As doth befit our honour and your worth.
[Exeunt all but PERICLES.

Pericles    How courtesy would seem to cover sin,
    When what is done is like an hypocrite,
    The which is good in nothing but in sight.
    If it be true that I interpret false,
    Then were it certain you were not so bad
    As with foul incest to abuse your soul;

    Where now you're both a father and a son
    By your untimely claspings with your child - 
    Which pleasures fits a husband, not a father - 
    And she an eater of her mother's flesh
    By the defiling of her parent's bed;
    And both like serpents are, who though they feed
    On sweetest flowers, yet they poison breed.
    Antioch, farewell; for wisdom sees those men
    Blush not in actions blacker than the night
    Will 'schew no course to keep them from the light.
    One sin I know another doth provoke;
    Murder's as near to lust as flame to smoke.
    Poison and treason are the hands of sin,
    Ay, and the targets to put off the shame.
    Then, lest my life be cropped to keep you clear,
    By flight I'll shun the danger which I fear.
[Exit.
Re-enter ANTIOCHUS.

Antiochus    He hath found the meaning,
    For which we mean to have his head.
    He must not live to trumpet forth my infamy,
    Nor tell the world Antiochus doth sin
    In such a loathed manner;
    And therefore instantly this prince must die;
    For by his fall my honour must keep high.
    Who attends us there?

Enter THALIARD.

Thaliard    Doth your highness call?

Antiochus    Thaliard,
    You are of our chamber, Thaliard,
    And our mind partakes her private actions
    To your secrecy; and for your faithfulness
    We will advance you, Thaliard.
    Behold, here's poison, and here's gold;
    We hate the prince of Tyre, and thou must kill him.
    It fits thee not to ask the reason why - 
    Because we bid it. Say, is it done?

Thaliard    My lord, 'tis done.

Antiochus    Enough.

Enter a MESSENGER.

    Let your breath cool yourself, telling your haste.

Messenger    My lord, prince Pericles is fled.
[Exit.

Antiochus    As thou wilt live, fly after, and like an arrow shot from a 
well-experienced archer hits the mark his eye doth level at, so thou never 
return unless thou say `Prince Pericles is dead'.

Thaliard    My lord, if I can get him within my pistol's length, I'll make him 
sure enough. So, farewell to your highness.

Antiochus    Thaliard, adieu!
[Exit THALIARD.
                        Till Pericles be dead
    My heart can lend no succour to my head.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. Tyre. A Room in the Palace.

Enter PERICLES.

Pericles    [Calling.]
    Let none disturb us. -Why should this change of thoughts,
    The sad companion, dull-eyed melancholy,
    Be my so used a guest as not an hour
    In the day's glorious walk, or peaceful night,
    The tomb where grief should sleep, can breed me quiet?
    Here pleasures court mine eyes, and mine eyes shun them,
    And danger, which I feared, is at Antioch,
    Whose arm seems far too short to hit me here;
    Yet neither pleasure's art can joy my spirits,
    Nor yet the other's distance comfort me.
    Then it is thus: the passions of the mind,
    That have their first conception by misdread,
    Have after-nourishment and life by care;
    And what was first but fear what might be done
    Grows elder now, and cares it be not done.
    And so with me. The great Antiochus,
    'Gainst whom I am too little to contend,
    Since he's so great can make his will his act,
    Will think me speaking, though I swear to silence;
    Nor boots it me to say I honour him,
    If he suspect I may dishonour him;
    And what may make him blush in being known,
    He'll stop the course by which it might be known.
    With hostile forces he'll o'erspread the land,
    And with th'ostent of war will look so huge
    Amazement shall drive courage from the state,
    Our men be vanquished ere they do resist,
    And subjects punished that ne'er thought offence;
    Which care of them, not pity of myself,
    Who am no more but as the tops of trees
    Which fence the roots they grow by and defend them,
    Makes both my body pine and soul to languish,
    And punish that before that he would punish.

Enter HELICANUS and all the LORDS to Pericles.

1st Lord    Joy and all comfort in your sacred breast!

2nd Lord    And keep your mind, till you return to us,
    Peaceful and comfortable.

Helicanus    Peace, peace, and give experience tongue.
    They do abuse the king that flatter him,
    For flattery is the bellows blows up sin;
    The thing the which is flattered but a spark,
    To which that blast gives heat and stronger glowing;
    Whereas reproof, obedient and in order,
    Fits kings as they are men, for they may err.
    When Signor Sooth here does proclaim a peace,
    He flatters you, makes war upon your life.
    Prince, pardon me, or strike me if you please;
    I cannot be much lower than my knees.
[Kneels.
Pericles    All leave us else; but let your cares o'erlook
    What shipping and what ladings in our haven,
    And then return to us.
[Exeunt LORDS.
                            Helicanus,
    Thou hast moved us -what seest thou in our looks?

Helicanus    An angry brow, dread lord.

Pericles    If there be such a dart in princes' frowns,
    How durst thy tongue move anger to our face?

Helicanus    How dares the plants look up to heaven,
    From whence they have their nourishment?

Pericles    Thou know'st I have power to take thy life from thee.

Helicanus    I have ground the axe myself;
    Do but you strike the blow.

Pericles    Rise, prithee, rise. Sit down; thou art no flatterer.
    I thank thee for't; and heaven forbid
    That kings should let their ears hear their faults hid!
    Fit counsellor and servant for a prince,
    Who by thy wisdom makes a prince thy servant,
    What wouldst thou have me do?

Helicanus    To bear with patience such griefs as you yourself do lay upon 
yourself.

Pericles    Thou speak'st like a physician, Helicanus,
    That ministers a potion unto me
    That thou wouldst tremble to receive thyself.
    Attend me then: I went to Antioch,
    Where, as thou know'st, against the face of death
    I sought the purchase of a glorious beauty,
    From whence an issue I might propagate,
    [^     ^     ^     ^     ^     ^     ^]
    Are arms to princes and bring joys to subjects.
    Her face was to mine eye beyond all wonder;
    The rest, hark in thine ear, as black as incest;
    Which by my knowledge found, the sinful father
    Seemed not to strike, but smooth; but thou know'st this:
    'Tis time to fear when tyrants seems to kiss.
    Which fear so grew in me I hither fled
    Under the covering of a careful night,
    Who seemed my good protector; and, being here,
    Bethought what was past, what might succeed.
    I knew him tyrannous, and tyrants' fears
    Decrease not, but grow faster than the years.
    And should he doubt, as no doubt he doth,
    That I should open to the list'ning air
    How many worthy princes' bloods were shed
    To keep his bed of blackness unlaid ope,
    To lop that doubt, he'll fill this land with arms,
    And make pretence of wrong that I have done him;
    When all for mine, if I may call, `offence'
    Must feel war's blow, who spares not innocence;
    Which love to all, of which thyself art one,
    Who now reproved'st me for't - 

Helicanus    Alas, sir!

Pericles    Drew sleep out of mine eyes, blood from my cheeks,
    Musings into my mind, with thousand doubts
    How I might stop this tempest ere it came;
    And finding little comfort to relieve them,
    I thought it princely charity to grieve for them.

Helicanus    Well, my lord, since you have given me leave to speak,
    Freely will I speak. Antiochus you fear,
    And justly too, I think, you fear the tyrant,
    Who either by public war or private treason
    Will take away your life.
    Therefore, my lord, go travel for a while,
    Till that his rage and anger be forgot,
    Or till the Destinies do cut his thread of life.
    Your rule direct to any; if to me,
    Day serves not light more faithful than I'll be.

Pericles    I do not doubt thy faith;
    But should he wrong my liberties in my absence?

Helicanus    We'll mingle our bloods together in the earth,
    From whence we had our being and our birth.

Pericles    Tyre, I now look from thee then, and to Tarsus
    Intend my travel, where I'll hear from thee,
    And by whose letters I'll dispose myself.
    The care I had and have of subjects' good
    On thee I lay, whose wisdom's strength can bear it.
    I'll take thy word for faith, not ask thine oath;
    Who shuns not to break one will crack both.
    [^     ^     ^     ^     ^     ^     ^    ^]
    But in our orbs will live so round and safe
    That time of both this truth shall ne'er convince,
    Thou showed'st a subject's shine, I a true prince.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 3. Tyre. An Antechamber in the Palace.

Enter THALIARD alone.

Thaliard    So this is Tyre, and this the court. Here must I kill King 
Pericles; and if I do it not, I am sure to be hanged at home. 'Tis dangerous. 
Well I perceive he was a wise fellow and had good discretion that, being bid 
to ask what he would of the king, desired he might know none of his secrets. 
Now do I see he had some reason for't, for if a king bid a man be a villain, 
he's bound by the indenture of his oath to be one. Husht, here comes the lords 
of Tyre.
[He stands apart.

Enter HELICANUS, ESCANES, with other LORDS.

Helicanus    You shall not need, my fellow peers of Tyre,
    Further to question me of your king's departure.
    His sealed commission, left in trust with me,
    Doth speak sufficiently he's gone to travel.

Thaliard    [Aside.] How! The king gone?

Helicanus    If further yet you will be satisfied
    Why, as it were unlicensed of your loves,
    He would depart, I'll give some light unto you.
    Being at Antioch - 

Thaliard    [Aside.] What from Antioch?

Helicanus    Royal Antiochus, on what cause I know not,
    Took some displeasure at him -at least he judged so - 
    And doubting lest he had erred or sinned,
    To show his sorrow he'd correct himself;
    So puts himself unto the shipman's toil,
    With whom each minute threatens life or death.

Thaliard    [Aside.] Well, I perceive I shall not be hanged now, although I 
would. But since he's gone, the king's seas must please: he 'scaped the land 
to perish at the seas. I'll present myself.
    [Advancing.] Peace to the lords of Tyre!

Helicanus    Lord Thaliard from Antiochus is welcome.

Thaliard    From him I come with message unto princely Pericles; but since my 
landing I have understood your lord has betake himself to unknown travels, now 
message must return from whence it came.

Helicanus    We have no reason to desire it,
    Commended to our master, not to us;
    Yet, ere you shall depart, this we desire:
    As friends to Antioch, we may feast in Tyre.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 4. Tarsus. A Room in the Governor's House.

Enter CLEON the Governor of Tarsus, with DIONYZA his wife, and OTHERS.

Cleon    My Dionyza, shall we rest us here,
    And by relating tales of others' griefs
    See if 'twill teach us to forget our own?

Dionyza    That were to blow at fire in hope to quench it;
    For who digs hills because they do aspire
    Throws down one mountain to cast up a higher.
    O my distressed lord, even such our griefs are;
    Here they are but felt, and seen with mischief's eyes,
    But like to groves, being topped, they higher rise.

Cleon    O Dionyza,
    Who wanteth food, and will not say he wants it,
    Or can conceal his hunger till he famish?
    Our tongues and sorrows [ ^   ^ ] to sound deep
    Our woes into the air, our eyes to weep,
    Till tongues fetch breath that may proclaim
    Them louder, that, if heaven slumber while
    Their creatures want, they may awake
    Their helpers to comfort them.
    I'll then discourse our woes, felt several years,
    And, wanting breath to speak, help me with tears.

Dionyza    I'll do my best, sir.

Cleon    This' Tarsus, o'er which I have the government,
    A city on whom plenty held full hand,
    For riches strewed herself even in her streets;
    Whose towers bore heads so high they kissed the clouds,
    And strangers ne'er beheld but wondered at;
    Whose men and dames so jetted and adorned,
    Like one another's glass to trim them by;
    Their tables were stored full to glad the sight,
    And not so much to feed on as delight;
    All poverty was scorned, and pride so great,
    The name of help grew odious to repeat.

Dionyza    O,'tis too true.

Cleon    But see what heaven can do by this our change:
    These mouths who but of late earth, sea, and air,
    Were all too little to content and please,
    Although they gave their creatures in abundance,
    As houses are defiled for want of use,
    They are now starved for want of exercise.
    Those palates who, not yet two summers younger,
    Must have inventions to delight the taste,
    Would now be glad of bread, and beg for it.
    Those mothers who to nuzzle up their babes
    Thought nought too curious are ready now
    To eat those little darlings whom they loved.
    So sharp are hunger's teeth that man and wife
    Draw lots who first shall die to lengthen life.
    Here stands a lord, and there a lady weeping;
    Here many sink, yet those which see them fall
    Have scarce strength left to give them burial.
    Is not this true?

Dionyza    Our cheeks and hollow eyes do witness it.

Cleon    O, let those cities that of plenty's cup
    And her prosperities so largely taste,
    With their superfluous riots, hear these tears!
    The misery of Tarsus may be theirs.

Enter a LORD.

Lord    Where's the Lord Governor?

Cleon    Here. Speak out thy sorrows which thou bring'st in haste, for comfort 
is too far for us to expect.

Lord    We have descried, upon our neighbouring shore, a portly sail of ships 
make hitherward.

Cleon    I thought as much.
    One sorrow never comes but brings an heir
    That may succeed as his inheritor;
    And so in ours. Some neighbouring nation,
    Taking advantage of our misery,
    Hath stuffed the hollow vessels with their power,
    To beat us down, the which are down already,
    And make a conquest of unhappy men,
    Whereas no glory's got to overcome.

Lord    That's the least fear; for, by the semblance of their white flags 
displayed, they bring us peace, and come to us as favourers, not as foes.

Cleon    Thou speak'st like him's untutored to repeat:
    Who makes the fairest show means most deceit.
    But bring they what they will and what they can,
    What need we fear?
    Our ground's the lowest, and we are halfway there.
    Go tell their general we attend him here, to know for what he comes, and 
whence he comes, and what he craves.

Lord    I go, my lord.
[Exit.
Cleon    Welcome is peace if he on peace consist;
    If wars, we are unable to resist.

Enter PERICLES with ATTENDANTS.

Pericles    Lord governor, for so we hear you are,
    Let not our ships and number of our men
    Be like a beacon fired t'amaze your eyes.
    We have heard your miseries as far as Tyre,
    And seen the desolation of your streets;
    Nor come we to add sorrow to your tears,
    But to relieve them of their heavy load;
    And these our ships you happily may think
    Are like the Trojan horse was, stuffed within
    With bloody veins expecting overthrow,
    Are stored with corn to make your needy bread,
    And give them life whom hunger starved half dead.

All of Tarsus    The gods of Greece protect you!
    [Kneeling.] And we'll pray for you.

Pericles    Arise, I pray you, rise;
    We do not look for reverence, but for love,
    And harbourage for ourself, our ships, and men.

Cleon    The which when any shall not gratify,
    Or pay you with unthankfulness in thought,
    Be it our wives, our children, or ourselves,
    The curse of heaven and men succeed their evils!
    Till when -the which I hope shall ne'er be seen - 
    Your grace is welcome to our town and us.

Pericles    Which welcome we'll accept; feast here awhile,
    Until our stars that frown lend us a smile.
[Exeunt.

+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++

ACT 2.

Enter GOWER.

Gower    Here have you seen a mighty king
    His child, iwis, to incest bring;
    A better prince and benign lord
    That will prove awful both in deed and word.
    Be quiet then, as men should be,
    Till he hath passed necessity.
    I'll show you those in troubles reign,
    Losing a mite, a mountain gain.
    The good in conversation,
    To whom I give my benison,
    Is still at Tarsus, where each man
    Thinks all is writ he spoken can,
    And, to remember what he does,
    Build his statue to make him glorious.
    But tidings to the contrary
    Are brought your eyes; what need speak I?

Dumb Show.

Enter at one door PERICLES talking with CLEON, all the TRAIN with them.
Enter at another door a GENTLEMAN, with a letter, to PERICLES.
PERICLES shows the letter to CLEON.
PERICLES gives the GENTLEMAN a reward, and knights him.
Exit PERICLES at one door and CLEON with at another.

    Good Helicane that stayed at home - 
    Not to eat honey like a drone
    From others' labours, forthy he strive
    To killen bad, keep good alive,
    And to fulfil his prince' desire - 
    Sends word of all that haps in Tyre:
    How Thaliard came full bent with sin
    And hid intent to murder him;
    And that in Tarsus was not best
    Longer for him to make his rest.
    He, doing so, put forth to seas,
    Where when men been, there's seldom ease;
    For now the wind begins to blow;
    Thunder above and deeps below
    Makes such unquiet that the ship
    Should house him safe is wracked and split,
    And he, good prince, having all lost,
    By waves from coast to coast is tossed.
    All perishen of man, of pelf,
    Ne aught escapend but himself;
    Till Fortune, tired with doing bad,
    Threw him ashore, to give him glad.
    And here he comes. What shall be next,
    Pardon old Gower -this 'longs the text.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 1. Pentapolis. An open Place by the Seaside.

Enter PERICLES, wet.

Pericles    Yet cease your ire, you angry stars of heaven!
    Wind, rain, and thunder, remember earthly man
    Is but a substance that must yield to you;
    And I, as fits my nature, do obey you.
    Alas, the seas hath cast me on the rocks,
    Washed me from shore to shore, and left me breath
    Nothing to think on but ensuing death.
    Let it suffice the greatness of your powers
    To have bereft a prince of all his fortunes;
    And having thrown him from your wat'ry grave,
    Here to have death in peace is all he'll crave.
[Lies down.
Enter three FISHERMEN.

1st Fisherman    What ho, Pilch!

2nd Fisherman    Ha, come and bring away the nets!

1st Fisherman    What, Patch-breech, I say!

3rd Fisherman    What say you, master?

1st Fisherman    Look how thou stirrest now! Come away, or I'll fetch thee 
with a wanion.

3rd Fisherman    Faith, master, I am thinking of the poor men that were cast 
away before us even now.

1st Fisherman    Alas, poor souls; it grieved my heart to hear what pitiful 
cries they made to us to help them, when, welladay, we could scarce help 
ourselves.

3rd Fisherman    Nay, master, said not I as much when I saw the porpoise how 
he bounced and tumbled? They say they're half fish, half flesh. A plague on 
them! -they ne'er come but I look to be washed. Master, I marvel how the 
fishes live in the sea.

1st Fisherman    Why, as men do a-land: the great ones eat up the little ones. 
I can compare our rich misers to nothing so fitly as to a whale: a' plays and 
tumbles, driving the poor fry before him, and at last devours them all at a 
mouthful. Such whales have I heard on a'th' land, who never leave gaping till 
they swallowed the whole parish, church, steeple, bells, and all.

Pericles    [Aside.] A pretty moral.

3rd Fisherman    But master, if I had been the sexton I would have been that 
day in the belfry.

2nd Fisherman    Why, man?

3rd Fisherman    Because he should have swallowed me too, and when I had been 
in his belly I would have kept such a jangling of the bells that he should 
never have left till he cast bells, steeple, church, and parish, up again. But 
if the good King Simonides were of my mind - 

Pericles    [Aside.] Simonides?

3rd Fisherman    We would purge the land of these drones, that rob the bee of 
her honey.

Pericles    [Aside.] How from the finny subject of the sea
    These fishers tell the infirmities of men,
    And from their wat'ry empire recollect
    All that may men approve or men detect!
    [Advancing.] Peace be at your labour, honest fishermen.

2nd Fisherman    Honest? -good fellow, what's that? If it be a day fits you, 
search out of the calendar, and nobody look after it.

Pericles    May see the sea hath cast upon your coast - 

2nd Fisherman    What a drunken knave was the sea to cast thee in our way!

Pericles    A man, whom both the waters and the wind,
    In that vast tennis-court, hath made the ball
    For them to play upon, entreats you pity him.
    He asks of you, that never used to beg.

1st Fisherman    No, friend, cannot you beg? Here's them in our country of 
Greece gets more with begging than we can do with working.

2nd Fisherman    Canst thou catch any fishes then?

Pericles    I never practised it.

2nd Fisherman    Nay, then thou wilt starve, sure; for here's nothing to be 
got nowadays unless thou canst fish for't.

Pericles    What I have been I have forgot to know,
    But what I am want teaches me to think on:
    A man thronged up with cold; my veins are chill,
    And have no more of life than may suffice
    To give my tongue that heat to ask your help,
    Which if you shall refuse, when I am dead,
    For that I am a man, pray see me buried.

1st Fisherman    Die, quoth a'? Now gods forbid't, an I have a gown here. 
Come, put it on, keep thee warm. Now, afore me, a handsome fellow! Come, thou 
shalt go home, and we'll have flesh for holidays, fish for fasting-days, and, 
moreo'er, puddings and flapjacks; and thou shalt be welcome.

Pericles    I thank you, sir.

2nd Fisherman    Hark you, my friend; you said you could not beg.

Pericles    I did but crave.

2nd Fisherman    But crave? Then I'll turn craver too, and so I shall 'scape 
whipping.

Pericles    Why, are your beggars whipped then?

2nd Fisherman    O, not all, my friend, not all; for if all your beggars were 
whipped, I would wish no better office than to be beadle. But, master, I'll go 
draw up the net.
[Exeunt 2nd and 3rd FISHERMEN.

Pericles    [Aside.] How well this honest mirth becomes their labour!

1st Fisherman    Hark you, sir; do you know where ye are?

Pericles    Not well.

1st Fisherman    Why, I'll tell you. This is called Pentapolis, and our king 
the good Simonides.

Pericles    The good Simonides, do you call him?

1st Fisherman    Ay, sir, and he deserves so to be called for his peaceable 
reign and good government.

Pericles    He is a happy king, since he gains from his subjects the name of 
good by his government. How far is his court distant from this shore?

1st Fisherman    Marry, sir, half a day's journey. And I'll tell you, he hath 
a fair daughter, and tomorrow is her birthday, and there are princes and 
knights come from all parts of the world to joust and tourney for her love.

Pericles    Were my fortunes equal to my desires I could wish to make one there.

1st Fisherman    O, sir, things must be as they may, and what a man cannot 
get, he may lawfully deal for his wife's soul.

Re-enter 2nd and 3rd FISHERMEN, drawing up a net.

2nd Fisherman    Help, master, help! Here's a fish hangs in the net like a 
poor man's right in the law; 'twill hardly come out. Ha, bots on't, 'tis come 
at last, and 'tis turned to a rusty armour.

Pericles    An armour, friends! I pray you let me see it.
    Thanks, Fortune, yet, that after all thy crosses
    Thou giv'st me somewhat to repair myself;
    And though it was mine own, part of mine heritage
    Which my dead father did bequeath to me
    With this strict charge even as he left his life:
    "Keep it, my Pericles, it hath been a shield
    'Twixt me and death" -and pointed to this brace - 
    "For that it saved me, keep it; in like necessity,
    The which the gods protect thee from, may't defend thee!"
    It kept where I kept, I so dearly loved it,
    Till the rough seas that spares not any man
    Took it in rage, though calmed have given't again.
    I thank thee for't; my shipwreck now's no ill,
    Since I have here my father gave in's will.

1st Fisherman    What mean you, sir?

Pericles    To beg of you, kind friends, this coat of worth,
    For it was sometime target to a king;
    I know it by this mark. He loved me dearly,
    And for his sake I wish the having of it;
    And that you'd guide me to your sovereign's court,
    Where with it I may appear a gentleman.
    And if that ever my low fortunes better,
    I'll pay your bounties, till then rest your debtor.

1st Fisherman    Why, wilt thou tourney for the lady?

Pericles    I'll show the virtue I have borne in arms.

1st Fisherman    Why, do'e take it; and the gods give thee good on't!

2nd Fisherman    Ay, but hark you, my friend, 'twas we that made up this 
garment through the rough seams of the waters: there are certain condolements, 
certain vails. I hope, sir, if you thrive, you'll remember from whence you had 
it.

Pericles    Believe't, I will.
    By your furtherance I am clothed in steel,
    And, spite of all the rapture of the sea,
    This jewel holds his building on my arm.
    Unto thy value I will mount myself
    Upon a courser, whose delightful steps
    Shall make the gazer joy to see him tread.
    Only, my friend, I yet am unprovided
    Of a pair of bases.

2nd Fisherman    We'll sure provide. Thou shalt have my best gown to make thee 
a pair, and I'll bring thee to the court myself.

Pericles    Then honour be but equal to my will;
    This day I'll rise, or else add ill to ill.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. Pentapolis. Before a Pavilion overlooking the Lists.

Enter SIMONIDES, THAISA, and LORDS attending.

Simonides    Are the knights ready to begin the triumph?

1st Lord    They are, my liege,
    And stay your coming to present themselves.

Simonides    Return them we are ready; and our daughter,
    In honour of whose birth these triumphs are,
    Sits here like beauty's child, whom nature gat
    For men to see, and seeing, wonder at.
[Exit a LORD.
Thaisa    It pleaseth you, my royal father, to express
    My commendations great, whose merit's less.

Simonides    It's fit it should be so, for princes are
    A model which heaven makes like to itself.
    As jewels lose their glory if neglected,
    So princes their renowns if not respected.
    'Tis now your honour, daughter, to entertain
    The labour of each knight in his device.

Thaisa    Which, to preserve mine honour, I'll perform.

The 1st KNIGHT passes by.
His SQUIRE presents his device to THAISA.

Simonides    Who is the first that doth prefer himself?

Thaisa    A knight of Sparta, my renowned father,
    And the device he bears upon his shield
    Is a black Ethiop reaching at the sun;
    The word, Lux tua vita mihi.

Simonides    He loves you well that holds his life of you.
[Exeunt 1st KNIGHT and his SQUIRE.

The 2nd KNIGHT passes by.
His SQUIRE presents his device to THAISA.

Simonides    Who is the second that presents himself?

Thaisa    A prince of Macedon, my royal father,
    And the device he bears upon his shield
    Is an armed knight that's conquered by a lady;
    The motto thus in Spanish, Piu per dolcera che per forza.
[Exeunt 2nd KNIGHT and his SQUIRE.

The 3rd KNIGHT passes by.
His SQUIRE presents his device to THAISA.

Simonides    And what's the third?

Thaisa    The third of Antioch,
    And his device a wreath of chivalry;
    The word, Me pompae provexit apex.
[Exeunt 3rd KNIGHT and his SQUIRE.

The 4th KNIGHT passes by.
His SQUIRE presents his device to THAISA.

Simonides    What is the fourth?

Thaisa    A burning torch that's turned upside down;
    The word, Qui me alit me extinguit.

Simonides    Which shows that beauty hath his power and will,
    Which can as well inflame as it can kill.
[Exeunt 4th KNIGHT and his SQUIRE.

The 5th KNIGHT passes by.
His SQUIRE presents his device to THAISA.

Thaisa    The fifth, a hand environed with clouds,
    Holding out gold that's by the touchstone tried;
    The motto thus, Sic spectanda fides.
[Exeunt 5th KNIGHT and his SQUIRE.

Enter PERICLES in rusty armour, and presents his device to THAISA.

Simonides    And what's the sixth and last, the which the knight himself
    With such a graceful courtesy delivered?

Thaisa    He seems to be a stranger, but his present is
    A withered branch that's only green at top;
    The motto, In hac spe vivo.

Simonides    A pretty moral.
    From the dejected state wherein he is,
    He hopes by you his fortunes yet may flourish.

1st Lord    He had need mean better than his outward show
    Can any way speak in his just commend,
    For by his rusty outside he appears
    To have practised more the whipstock than the lance.

2nd Lord    He well may be a stranger, for he comes
    To an honoured triumph strangely furnished.

3rd Lord    And on set purpose let his armour rust
    Until this day, to scour it in the dust.

Simonides    Opinion's but a fool that makes us scan
    The outward habit by the inward man.
    But stay, the knights are coming; we'll withdraw
    Into the gallery.
[Exeunt.
[Great shouts within, and all cry "The mean Knight!"

+ + + + + +

Scene 3. Pentapolis. A Hall of State. A Banquet prepared.

Enter, at one door, King SIMONIDES, THAISA, LADIES, and LORDS,
at the other, a MARSHAL with PERICLES and the KNIGHTS from tilting.

Simonides    Knights,
    To say you're welcome were superfluous.
    To place upon the volume of your deeds,
    As in a title page, your worth in arms,
    Were more than you expect, or more than's fit,
    Since every worth in show commends itself.
    Prepare for mirth, for mirth becomes a feast.
    You are princes and my guests.

Thaisa    [To PERICLES.] But you, my knight and guest;
    To whom this wreath of victory I give,
    And crown you king of this day's happiness.

Pericles    'Tis more by fortune, lady, than by merit.

Simonides    Call it by what you will, the day is yours;
    And here, I hope, is none that envies it.
    In framing an artist art hath thus decreed
    To make some good, but others to exceed;
    And you're her laboured scholar. Come, queen o'th' feast - 
    For, daughter, so you are -here take your place.
    Marshal, the rest, as they deserve their grace.

Knights    We are honoured much by good Simonides.

Simonides    Your presence glads our days; honour we love,
    For who hates honour hates the gods above.

Marshal    Sir, yonder is your place.

Pericles    Some other is more fit.

1st Knight    Contend not, sir, for we are gentlemen
    Have neither in our hearts nor outward eyes
    Envied the great nor shall the low despise.

Pericles    You are right courteous knights.

Simonides    Sit, sir, sit.
    [Aside.] By Jove I wonder, that is king of thoughts,
    These cates resist me, he not thought upon.

Thaisa    [Aside.] By Juno, that is queen of marriage,
    All viands that I eat do seem unsavoury,
    Wishing him my meat.
    [To SIMONIDES.]        Sure, he's a gallant gentleman.

Simonides    [To THAISA.] He's but a country gentleman.
    H'as done no more than other knights have done;
    H'as broken a staff or so -so let it pass.

Thaisa    [Aside.] To me he seems like diamond to glass.

Pericles    [Aside.] Yon king's to me like to my father's picture,
    Which tells me in that glory once he was;
    Had princes sit like stars about his throne,
    And he the sun, for them to reverence.
    None that beheld him but like lesser lights
    Did vail their crowns to his supremacy;
    Where now his son's like a glow-worm in the night,
    The which hath fire in darkness, none in light;
    Whereby I see that Time's the king of men;
    He's both their parent, and he is their grave,
    And gives them what he will, not what they crave.

Simonides    What, are you merry, knights?

1st Knight    Who can be other in this royal presence?

Simonides    Here, with a cup that's stored unto the brim,
    As you do love, fill to your mistress' lips,
    We drink this health to you.

Knights    We thank your grace.

Simonides    Yet pause awhile;
    Yon knight doth sit too melancholy,
    As if the entertainment in our court
    Had not a show might countervail his worth.
    Note it not you, Thaisa?

Thaisa    What is't to me, my father?

Simonides    O, attend, my daughter.
    Princes in this should live like gods above,
    Who freely give to everyone that come to honour them;
    And princes not doing so are like to gnats,
    Which make a sound but killed are wondered at.
    Therefore to make his entrance more sweet,
    Here say we drink this standing-bowl of wine to him.

Thaisa    Alas, my father, it befits not me
    Unto a stranger knight to be so bold.
    He may my proffer take for an offence,
    Since men take women's gifts for impudence.

Simonides    How!
    Do as I bid you, or you'll move me else.

Thaisa    [Aside.] Now, by the gods, he could not please me better.

Simonides    And furthermore tell him we desire to know of him
    Of whence he is, his name, and parentage.

Thaisa    The king my father, sir, has drunk to you.

Pericles    I thank him.

Thaisa    Wishing it so much blood unto your life.

Pericles    I thank both him and you, and pledge him freely.

Thaisa    And further he desires to know of you,
    Of whence you are, your name, and parentage.

Pericles    A gentleman of Tyre, my name Pericles;
    My education been in arts and arms,
    Who, looking for adventures in the world,
    Was by the rough seas reft of ships and men,
    And after shipwreck driven upon this shore.

Thaisa    He thanks your grace; names himself Pericles,
    A gentleman of Tyre,
    Who only by misfortune of the seas,
    Bereft of ships and men, cast on this shore.

Simonides    Now, by the gods, I pity his misfortune,
    And will awake him from his melancholy.
    Come, gentlemen, we sit too long on trifles,
    And waste the time which looks for other revels.
    Even in your armours, as you are addressed,
    Will well become a soldier's dance.
    I will not have excuse with saying this,
    Loud music is too harsh for ladies' heads,
    Since they love men in arms as well as beds.
[They dance.
    So, this was well asked, 'twas so well performed.
    Come, sir, here's a lady that wants breathing too;
    And I have heard, sir, you knights of Tyre
    Are excellent in making ladies trip,
    And that their measures are as excellent.

Pericles    In those that practise them they are, my lord.

Simonides    O, that's as much as you would be denied
    Of your fair courtesy.
[The KNIGHTS and LADIES dance.
    Unclasp, unclasp!
    Thanks, gentlemen, to all. All have done well,
    [To PERICLES.] But you the best.
                            Pages and lights, to conduct
    These knights unto their several lodgings.
    Yours, sir, we've given order be next our own.

Pericles    I am at your grace's pleasure.

Simonides    Princes, it is too late to talk of love,
    And that's the mark I know you level at;
    Therefore each one betake him to his rest;
    Tomorrow all for speeding do their best.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 4. Tyre. A Room in the Governor's House.

Enter HELICANUS and ESCANES.

Helicanus    No, Escanes, know this of me,
    Antiochus from incest lived not free,
    For which, the most high gods not minding longer
    To withhold the vengeance that they had in store,
    Due to this heinous capital offence,
    Even in the height and pride of all his glory,
    When he was seated in a chariot
    Of an inestimable value, and his daughter with him,
    A fire from heaven came and shrivelled up
    Those bodies, even to loathing, for they so stunk
    That all those eyes adored them ere their fall
    Scorn now their hand should give them burial.

Escanes    'Twas very strange.

Helicanus    And yet but justice, for though
    This king were great, his greatness was no guard
    To bar heaven's shaft, but sin had his reward.

Escanes    'Tis very true.

Enter three LORDS.

1st Lord    See, not a man in private conference
    Or council has respect with him but he.

2nd Lord    It shall no longer grieve without reproof.

3rd Lord    And cursed be he that will not second it.

1st Lord    Follow me then. Lord Helicane, a word.

Helicanus    With me? -and welcome. Happy day, my lords.

1st Lord    Know that our griefs are risen to the top,
    And now, at length, they overflow their banks.

Helicanus    Your griefs? For what? Wrong not your prince you love.

1st Lord    Wrong not yourself then, noble Helicane;
    But if the prince do live, let us salute him,
    Or know what ground's made happy by his breath.
    If in the world he live, we'll seek him out,
    If in his grave he rest, we'll find him there;
    And be resolved he lives to govern us,
    Or dead, gives cause to mourn his funeral,
    And leaves us to our free election,

2nd Lord    Whose death indeed's the strongest in our censure,
    And knowing this kingdom is without a head,
    Like goodly buildings left without a roof
    Soon fall to ruin, your noble self,
    That best know how to rule and how to reign,
    We thus submit unto, our sovereign.

All Lords    Live, noble Helicane!

Helicanus    By honour's cause, forbear your suffrages.
    If that you love Prince Pericles, forbear.
    Take I your wish, I leap into the seas,
    Where's hourly trouble for a minute's ease.
    A twelvemonth longer let me entreat you
    To forbear the absence of your king;
    If in which time expired he not return,
    I shall with aged patience bear your yoke.
    But if I cannot win you to this love,
    Go search like nobles, like noble subjects,
    And in your search spend your adventurous worth;
    Whom if you find, and win unto return,
    You shall like diamonds sit about his crown.

1st Lord    To wisdom he's a fool that will not yield,
    And since Lord Helicane enjoineth us,
    We with our travels will endeavour it.

Helicanus    Then you love us, we you, and we'll clasp hands.
    When peers thus knit, a kingdom ever stands.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 5. Pentapolis. A Room in the Palace.

Enter SIMONIDES reading of a letter at one door. The KNIGHTS meet him.

1st Knight    Good morrow to the good Simonides.

Simonides    Knights, from my daughter this I let you know:
    That for this twelvemonth she'll not undertake
    A married life.
    Her reason to herself is only known,
    Which from her by no means can I get.

2nd Knight    May we not get access to her, my lord?

Simonides    Faith, by no means; she has so strictly tied
    Her to her chamber that 'tis impossible.
    One twelve moons more she'll wear Diana's livery;
    This by the eye of Cynthia hath she vowed,
    And on her virgin honour will not break it.

3rd Knight    Loath to bid farewell, we take our leaves.
[Exeunt KNIGHTS.

Simonides    So, they are well dispatched. Now to my daughter's letter.
    She tells me here she'll wed the stranger knight,
    Or never more to view nor day nor light.
    'Tis well, mistress, your choice agrees with mine;
    I like that well. Nay, how absolute she's in't,
    Not minding whether I dislike or no!
    Well, I do commend her choice,
    And will no longer have it be delayed.
    Soft, here he comes: I must dissemble it.

Enter PERICLES.

Pericles    All fortune to the good Simonides!

Simonides    To you as much. Sir, I am beholding to you
    For your sweet music this last night. I do
    Protest my ears were never better fed
    With such delightful pleasing harmony.

Pericles    It is your grace's pleasure to commend,
    Not my desert.

Simonides    Sir, you are music's master.

Pericles    The worst of all her scholars, my good lord.

Simonides    Let me ask you one thing.
    What do you think of my daughter, sir?

Pericles    A most virtuous princess.

Simonides    And she is fair too, is she not?

Pericles    As a fair day in summer, wondrous fair.

Simonides    Sir, my daughter thinks very well of you;
    Ay, so well that you must be her master
    And she will be your scholar; therefore look to it.

Pericles    I am unworthy for her schoolmaster.

Simonides    She thinks not so; peruse this writing else.

Pericles    [Aside.] What's here?
    A letter that she loves the knight of Tyre!
    'Tis the king's subtlety to have my life.
    [To SIMONIDES.] O, seek not to entrap me, gracious lord,
    A stranger and distressed gentleman
    That never aimed so high to love your daughter,
    But bent all offices to honour her.

Simonides    Thou hast bewitched my daughter,
    And thou art a villain.

Pericles    By the gods, I have not.
    Never did thought of mine levy offence,
    Nor never did my actions yet commence
    A deed might gain her love or your displeasure.

Simonides    Traitor, thou liest.

Pericles    Traitor?

Simonides    Ay, traitor.

Pericles    Even in his throat, unless it be the king,
    That calls me traitor, I return the lie.

Simonides    [Aside.] Now, by the gods, I do applaud his courage.

Pericles    My actions are as noble as my thoughts,
    That never relished of a base descent.
    I came unto your court for honour's cause,
    And not to be a rebel to her state;
    And he that otherwise accounts of me,
    This sword shall prove he's honour's enemy.

Simonides    No? Here comes my daughter, she can witness it.

Enter THAISA.

Pericles    Then, as you are as virtuous as fair,
    Resolve your angry father if my tongue
    Did e'er solicit or my hand subscribe
    To any syllable that made love to you.

Thaisa    Why, sir, say if you had, who takes offence
    At that would make me glad?

Simonides    Yea, mistress, are you so peremptory?
    [Aside.] I am glad on't with all my heart.
    [Aloud.] I'll tame you, I'll bring you in subjection.
    Will you, not having my consent,
    Bestow your love and your affections
    Upon a stranger? [Aside.] Who, for aught I know,
    May be, nor can I think the contrary,
    As great in blood as I myself.
    [Aloud.] Therefore hear you, mistress: either frame
    Your will to mine; and you, sir, hear you:
    Either be ruled by me, or I will make you
    Man and wife.
    Nay, come, your hands and lips must seal it too,
    And being joined, I'll thus your hopes destroy;
    And for further grief -God give you joy!
    What, are you both pleased?

Thaisa    Yes, if you love me, sir.

Pericles    Even as my life my blood that fosters it.

Simonides    What, are you both agreed?

Pericles &
Thaisa    Yes, if't please your majesty.

Simonides    It pleaseth me so well that I will see you wed,
    And then, with what haste you can, get you to bed.
[Exeunt.

+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++

ACT 3.

Enter GOWER.

Gower    Now sleep yslaked hath the rout,
    No din but snores the house about,
    Made louder by the o'erfed breast
    Of this most pompous marriage feast.
    The cat, with eyne of burning coal,
    Now couches 'fore the mouse's hole,
    And crickets sing a'th' oven's mouth
    Are the blither for their drouth.
    Hymen hath brought the bride to bed,
    Where, by the loss of maidenhead,
    A babe is moulded. Be attent,
    And time that is so briefly spent
    With your fine fancies quaintly eche;
    What's dumb in show I'll plain with speech.

Dumb Show.

Enter PERICLES and SIMONIDES at one door, with LORDS attending;
a MESSENGER meets them, kneels, and gives PERICLES a letter. 
PERICLES shows it SIMONIDES; the LORDS kneel to PERICLES.
Then enter THAISA with child, with LYCHORIDA, a nurse.
SIMONIDES shows her the letter; she rejoices.
She and PERICLES take leave of her father, and depart with LYCHORIDA.
Exeunt the Rest.

    By many a dern and painful perch,
    Of Pericles the careful search,
    By the four opposing coigns
    Which the world together joins,
    Is made with all due diligence
    That horse and sail and high expense
    Can stead the quest. At last from Tyre - 
    Fame answering the most strange enquire - 
    To th' court of King Simonides
    Are letters brought, the tenor these:
    Antiochus and his daughter dead,
    The men of Tyrus on the head
    Of Helicanus would set on
    The crown of Tyre, but he will none.
    The mutiny he there hastes t'appease,
    Says to 'em, if King Pericles
    Come not home in twice six moons,
    He, obedient to their dooms,
    Will take the crown. The sum of this
    Brought hither to Pentapolis
    Yravished the regions round,
    And everyone with claps can sound,
    "Our heir-apparent is a king!
    Who dreamed, who thought of such a thing?"
    Brief, he must hence depart to Tyre;
    His queen with child makes her desire - 
    Which who shall cross? -along to go.
    Omit we all their dole and woe.
    Lychorida, her nurse, she takes,
    And so to sea. Their vessel shakes
    On Neptune's billow; half the flood
    Hath their keel cut; but fortune's mood
    Varies again; the grizzled north
    Disgorges such a tempest forth,
    That, as a duck for life that dives,
    So up and down the poor ship drives.
    The lady shrieks, and well-a-near
    Does fall in travail with her fear;
    And what ensues in this fell storm
    Shall for itself itself perform.
    I nill relate, action may
    Conveniently the rest convey,
    Which might not what by me is told.
    In your imagination hold
    This stage the ship, upon whose deck
    The sea-tossed Pericles appears to speak.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 1. At Sea, between Pentapolis and Ephesus.

Enter PERICLES a-shipboard.

Pericles    The god of this great vast, rebuke these surges,
    Which wash both heaven and hell; and thou that hast
    Upon the winds command, bind them in brass,
    Having called them from the deep. O, still
    Thy deafening, dreadful thunders, gently quench
    Thy nimble sulphurous flashes. O, how, Lychorida,
    How does my queen? Thou stormest venomously;
    Wilt thou spit all thyself? The seaman's whistle
    Is as a whisper in the ears of death,
    Unheard. Lychorida! Lucina, O
    Divinest patroness, and midwife gentle
    To those that cry by night, convey thy deity
    Aboard our dancing boat; make swift the pangs
    Of my queen's travails! Now, Lychorida!

Enter LYCHORIDA with a baby.

Lychorida    Here is a thing too young for such a place,
    Who, if it had conceit, would die, as I
    Am like to do. Take in your arms this piece
    Of your dead queen.

Pericles    How! How, Lychorida?

Lychorida    Patience, good sir, do not assist the storm.
    Here's all that is left living of your queen,
    A little daughter. For the sake of it
    Be manly, and take comfort.

Pericles    O you gods!
    Why do you make us love your goodly gifts,
    And snatch them straight away? We here below
    Recall not what we give, and therein may
    Use honour with you.

Lychorida    Patience, good sir,
    Even for this charge.

Pericles    Now, mild may be thy life,
    For a more blust'rous birth had never babe;
    Quiet and gentle thy conditions, for
    Thou art the rudeliest welcome to this world
    That e'er was prince's child. Happy what follows!
    Thou hast as chiding a nativity
    As fire, air, water, earth, and heaven can make
    To herald thee from the womb. Even at the first
    Thy loss is more than can thy portage quit,
    With all thou canst find here. Now, the good gods
    Throw their best eyes upon't!

Enter two SAILORS.

1st Sailor    What courage, sir? God save you!

Pericles    Courage enough. I do not fear the flaw,
    It hath done to me the worst; yet for the love
    Of this poor infant, this fresh-new seafarer,
    I would it would be quiet.

1st Sailor    Slack the bow-lines there! Thou wilt not, wilt thou? Blow, and 
split thyself.

2nd Sailor    But sea-room, an the brine and cloudy billow kiss the moon, I 
care not.

1st Sailor    Sir, your queen must overboard. The sea works high, the wind is 
loud, and will not lie till the ship be cleared of the dead.

Pericles    That's your superstition.

1st Sailor    Pardon us, sir; with us at sea it hath been still observed, and 
we are strong in custom. Therefore briefly yield 'er, for she must overboard 
straight.

Pericles    As you think meet. Most wretched queen!

Lychorida    Here she lies, sir.

Pericles    A terrible childbed hast thou had, my dear;
    No light, no fire. Th'unfriendly elements
    Forgot thee utterly; nor have I time
    To give thee hallowed to thy grave, but straight
    Must cast thee, scarcely coffined, in the ooze,
    Where, for a monument upon thy bones,
    And e'er-remaining lamps, the belching whale
    And humming water must o'erwhelm thy corpse,
    Lying with simple shells. O Lychorida,
    Bid Nestor bring me spices, ink and paper,
    My casket and my jewels; and bid Nicander
    Bring me the satin coffer: lay the babe
    Upon the pillow. Hie thee, whiles I say
    A priestly farewell to her. Suddenly, woman.
[Exit LYCHORIDA.

2nd Sailor    Sir, we have a chest beneath the hatches, caulked and bitumed 
ready.

Pericles    I thank thee. Mariner, say what coast is this?

2nd Sailor    We are near Tarsus.

Pericles    Thither, gentle mariner,
    Alter thy course from Tyre. When canst thou reach it?

2nd Sailor    By break of day, if the wind cease.

Pericles    O, make for Tarsus!
    There will I visit Cleon, for the babe
    Cannot hold out to Tyrus. There I'll leave it
    At careful nursing. Go thy ways, good mariner,
    I'll bring the body presently.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. Ephesus. A Room in Cerimon's House.

Enter Lord CERIMON, with two weather-beaten POOR MEN.

Cerimon    Philemon, ho!

Enter PHILEMON.

Philemon    Doth my lord call?

Cerimon    Get fire and meat for these poor men.
[Exit PHILEMON.
    'T'as been a turbulent and stormy night.

1st Poor Man    I have been in many, but such a night as this
    Till now I ne'er endured.

Cerimon    Your master will be dead ere you return;
    There's nothing can be ministered to nature
    That can recover him.
        [To 2nd POOR MAN.]    Give this to the pothecary,
    And tell me how it works.
[Exeunt POOR MEN.
Enter TWO GENTLEMEN.

1st Gentleman    Good morrow.

2nd Gentleman    Good morrow to your lordship.

Cerimon    Gentlemen, why do you stir so early?

1st Gentleman    Sir, our lodgings, standing bleak upon the sea,
    Shook as th' earth did quake.
    The very principals did seem to rend
    And all to topple. Pure surprise and fear
    Made me to quit the house.

2nd Gentleman    That is the cause we trouble you so early;
    'Tis not our husbandry.

Cerimon    O, you say well.

1st Gentleman    But I much marvel that your lordship,
    Having rich tire about you, should at these early hours
    Shake off the golden slumber of repose. 'Tis most strange,
    Nature should be so conversant with pain,
    Being thereto not compelled.

Cerimon    I hold it ever
    Virtue and cunning were endowments greater
    Than nobleness and riches. Careless heirs
    May the two latter darken and expend,
    But immortality attends the former,
    Making a man a god. 'Tis known I ever
    Have studied physic, through which secret art,
    By turning o'er authorities, I have,
    Together with my practice, made familiar
    To me and to my aid the blest infusions
    That dwells in vegetives, in metals, stones,
    And can speak of the disturbances
    That nature works, and of her cures, which doth give me
    A more content in course of true delight
    Than to be thirsty after tottering honour,
    Or tie my treasure up in silken bags
    To please the fool and death.

2nd Gentleman    Your honour has through Ephesus poured forth
    Your charity, and hundreds call themselves
    Your creatures, who by you have been restored.
    And not your knowledge, your personal pain, but even
    Your purse, still open, hath built Lord Cerimon
    Such strong renown as time shall never raze.

Enter two or three SERVANTS with a chest.

1st Servant    So, lift there.

Cerimon    What's that?

1st Servant    Sir, even now
    Did the sea toss up upon our shore this chest.
    'Tis of some wreck.

Cerimon    Set't down; let's look upon't.

2nd Gentleman    'Tis like a coffin, sir.

Cerimon    Whate'er it be,
    'Tis wondrous heavy. Wrench it open straight.
    If the sea's stomach be o'ercharged with gold,
    'Tis a good constraint of fortune it belches upon us.

2nd Gentleman    'Tis so, my lord.

Cerimon    How close 'tis caulked and bitumed! Did the sea cast it up?

1st Servant    I never saw so huge a billow, sir,
    As tossed it upon shore.

Cerimon    Wrench it open.
    Soft! -it smells most sweetly in my sense.

2nd Gentleman    A delicate odour.

Cerimon    As ever hit my nostril. So, up with it.
    O you most potent gods! What's here, a corpse?

1st Gentleman    Most strange!

Cerimon    Shrouded in cloths of state, balmed and entreasured
    With full bags of spices! A passport too!
    Apollo, perfect me in the characters!
    [Reads from a scroll.]
        "Here I give to understand,
        If e'er this coffin drives a-land,
        I, King Pericles, have lost
        This queen worth all our mundane cost.
        Who finds her, give her burying;
        She was the daughter of a king.
        Besides this treasure for a fee,
        The gods requite his charity."

    If thou liv'st, Pericles, thou hast a heart
    That even cracks for woe! This chanced tonight.

2nd Gentleman    Most likely, sir.

Cerimon    Nay, certainly tonight,
    For look how fresh she looks. They were too rough
    That threw her in the sea. Make a fire within;
    Fetch hither all my boxes in my closet.
[Exit SERVANT.
    Death may usurp on nature many hours,
    And yet the fire of life kindle again
    The o'erpressed spirits. I heard of an Egyptian
    That had nine hours lain dead,
    Who was by good appliances recovered.

Re-enter SERVANT, with boxes, napkins, and fire.

    Well said, well said! -the fire and cloths.
    The still and woeful music that we have,
    Cause it to sound, beseech you.
[Music.
    The viol once more. How thou stirr'st, thou block!
    The music there! I pray you give her air.
    Gentlemen,
    This queen will live. Nature awakes; a warmth
    Breathes out of her. She hath not been entranced
    Above five hours. See, how she 'gins to blow
    Into life's flower again!

1st Gentleman    The heavens,
    Through you, increase our wonder, and set up
    Your fame forever.

Cerimon    She is alive! Behold,
    Her eyelids, cases to those heavenly jewels
    Which Pericles hath lost,
    Begin to part their fringes of bright gold.
    The diamonds of a most praised water
    Doth appear to make the world twice rich. Live,
    And make us weep to hear your fate, fair creature,
    Rare as you seem to be.
[THAISA moves.
Thaisa    O dear Diana,
    Where am I? Where's my lord? What world is this?

2nd Gentleman    Is not this strange?

1st Gentleman    Most rare.

Cerimon    Hush, my gentle neighbours!
    Lend me your hands. To the next chamber bear her.
    Get linen: now this matter must be looked to,
    For her relapse is mortal. Come, come;
    And Aesculapius guide us!
[Exeunt, carrying out THAISA.

+ + + + + +

Scene 3. Tarsus. A Room in Cleon's House.

Enter PERICLES, CLEON, DIONYZA, and LYCHORIDA with the baby in her arms.

Pericles    Most honoured Cleon, I must needs be gone;
    My twelve months are expired, and Tyrus stands
    In a litigious peace. You and your lady
    Take from my heart all thankfulness! The gods
    Make up the rest upon you!

Cleon    Your shakes of fortune,
    Though they haunt you mortally, yet glance
    Full wond'ringly on us.

Dionyza    O your sweet queen!
    That the strict fates had pleased you'd brought her hither,
    To have blessed mine eyes with her.

Pericles    We cannot but obey the powers above us.
    Could I rage and roar as doth the sea she lies in,
    Yet the end must be as 'tis. My gentle babe Marina,
    Whom for she was born at sea I have named so,
    Here I charge your charity withal; leaving her
    The infant of your care; beseeching you to give her
    Princely training, that she may be mannered
    As she is born.

Cleon    Fear not, my lord, but think
    Your grace, that fed my country with your corn,
    For which the people's prayers still fall upon you,
    Must in your child be thought on. If neglection
    Should therein make me vile, the common body,
    By you relieved, would force me to my duty.
    But if to that my nature need a spur,
    The gods revenge it upon me and mine
    To the end of generation!

Pericles    I believe you.
    Your honour and your goodness teach me to't
    Without your vows. Till she be married, madam,
    By bright Diana, whom we honour all,
    Unscissored shall this hair of mine remain,
    Though I show ill in't. So I take my leave.
    Good madam, make me blessed in your care
    In bringing up my child.

Dionyza    I have one myself,
    Who shall not be more dear to my respect
    Than yours, my lord.

Pericles    Madam, my thanks and prayers.

Cleon    We'll bring your grace e'en to the edge o'th' shore,
    Then give you up to the masked Neptune and
    The gentlest winds of heaven.

Pericles    I will embrace
    Your offer. Come, dearest madam. O, no tears,
    Lychorida, no tears:
    Look to your little mistress, on whose grace
    You may depend hereafter. Come, my lord.
[Exeunt.
+ + + + + +

Scene 4. Ephesus. A Room in Cerimon's House.

Enter CERIMON and THAISA.

Cerimon    Madam, this letter and some certain jewels
    Lay with you in your coffer, which are
    At your command. Know you the character?

Thaisa    It is my lord's.
    That I was shipped at sea I well remember,
    Even on my eaning time, but whether there
    Delivered, by the holy gods,
    I cannot rightly say. But since King Pericles,
    My wedded lord, I ne'er shall see again,
    A vestal livery will I take me to,
    And never more have joy.

Cerimon    Madam, if this you purpose as ye speak,
    Diana's temple is not distant far,
    Where you may abide till your date expire.
    Moreover, if you please, a niece of mine
    Shall there attend you.

Thaisa    My recompense is thanks, that's all;
    Yet my good will is great, though the gift small.
[Exeunt.
+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++

ACT 4.

Enter GOWER.

Gower    Imagine Pericles arrived at Tyre,
    Welcomed and settled to his own desire.
    His woeful queen we leave at Ephesus,
    Unto Diana there's a votaress.
    Now to Marina bend your mind,
    Whom our fast-growing scene must find
    At Tarsus, and by Cleon trained
    In music's letters; who hath gained
    Of education all the grace,
    Which makes her both the heart and place
    Of general wonder. But, alack,
    That monster envy, oft the wrack
    Of earned praise, Marina's life
    Seeks to take off by treason's knife.
    And in this kind hath our Cleon
    One daughter and a wench full grown,
    Even ripe for marriage-rite. This maid
    Hight Philoten, and it is said
    For certain in our story she
    Would ever with Marina be;
    Be't when she weaved the sleded silk
    With fingers long, small, white as milk;
    Or when she would with sharp needle wound
    The cambric, which she made more sound
    By hurting it; or when to th' lute
    She sung, and made the night-bird mute,
    That still records with moan; or when
    She would with rich and constant pen
    Vail to her mistress Dian; still
    This Philoten contends in skill
    With absolute Marina; so
    With dove of Paphos might the crow
    Vie feathers white. Marina gets
    All praises, which are paid as debts,
    And not as given. This so darks
    In Philoten all graceful marks
    That Cleon's wife, with envy rare,
    A present murderer does prepare
    For good Marina, that her daughter
    Might stand peerless by this slaughter.
    The sooner her vile thoughts to stead,
    Lychorida, our nurse, is dead,
    And cursed Dionyza hath
    The pregnant instrument of wrath
    Prest for this blow. The unborn event
    I do commend to your content;
    Only I carried winged time
    Post on the lame feet of my rhyme,
    Which never could I so convey
    Unless your thoughts went on my way.
    Dionyza does appear,
    With Leonine, a murderer.
[Exit.
+ + + + + +

Scene 1. Tarsus. Near the Seashore.

Enter DIONYZA and LEONINE.

Dionyza    Thy oath remember; thou hast sworn to do't.
    'Tis but a blow, which never shall be known.
    Thou canst not do a thing in the world so soon
    To yield thee so much profit. Let not conscience,
    Which is but cold, inflaming love in thy bosom,
    Inflame too nicely; nor let pity, which
    Even women have cast off, melt thee, but be
    A soldier to thy purpose.

Leonine    I will do't; but yet she is a goodly creature.

Dionyza    The fitter then the gods should have her.
    Here she comes, weeping for her only mistress' death.
    Thou art resolved?

Leonine    I am resolved.

Enter MARINA with a basket of flowers.

Marina    No, I will rob Tellus of her weed
    To strew thy green with flowers. The yellows, blues,
    The purple violets, and marigolds,
    Shall as a carpet hang upon thy grave
    While summer days doth last. Ay me, poor maid,
    Born in a tempest when my mother died,
    This world to me is as a lasting storm
    Whirring me from my friends.

Dionyza    How now, Marina! Why do you keep alone?
    How chance my daughter is not with you?
    Do not consume your blood with sorrowing:
    Have you a nurse of me. Lord, how your favour's
    Changed with this unprofitable woe!
    Come, give me your flowers. O'er the sea-margent
    Walk with Leonine; the air is quick there,
    And it pierces and sharpens the stomach.
    Come, Leonine, take her by the arm, walk with her.

Marina    No, I pray you; I'll not bereave you of your servant.

Dionyza    Come, come,
    I love the king your father and yourself
    With more than foreign heart. We every day
    Expect him here. When he shall come and find
    Our paragon to all reports thus blasted,
    He will repent the breadth of his great voyage,
    Blame both my lord and me that we have taken
    No care to your best courses. Go, I pray you,
    Walk and be cheerful once again; reserve
    That excellent complexion which did steal
    The eyes of young and old. Care not for me;
    I can go home alone.

Marina    Well, I will go,
    But yet I have no desire to it.

Dionyza    Come, come, I know 'tis good for you.
    Walk half an hour, Leonine, at the least.
    Remember what I have said.

Leonine    I warrant you, madam.

Dionyza    I'll leave you, my sweet lady, for a while.
    Pray walk softly, do not heat your blood.
    What, I must have care of you!

Marina    My thanks, sweet madam.
[Exit DIONYZA.
    Is this wind westerly that blows?

Leonine    South-west.

Marina    When I was born the wind was north.

Leonine    Was't so?

Marina    My father, as nurse says, did never fear,
    But cried `Good seamen!' to the sailors, galling
    His kingly hands haling ropes,
    And, clasping to the mast, endured a sea
    That almost burst the deck.

Leonine    When was this?

Marina    When I was born.
    Never was waves nor wind more violent;
    And from the ladder-tackle washes off
    A canvas-climber. `Ha!' says one `wolt out?'
    And with a dropping industry they skip
    From stem to stern; the boatswain whistles, and
    The master calls, and trebles their confusion.

Leonine    Come, say your prayers.

Marina    What mean you?

Leonine    If you require a little space for prayer,
    I grant it. Pray; but be not tedious, for
    The gods are quick of ear, and I am sworn
    To do my work with haste.

Marina    Why will you kill me?

Leonine    To satisfy my lady.

Marina    Why would she have me killed?
    Now, as I can remember, by my troth,
    I never did her hurt in all my life.
    I never spake bad word, nor did ill turn
    To any living creature. Believe me, la,
    I never killed a mouse nor hurt a fly;
    I trod upon a worm against my will,
    But I wept for it. How have I offended,
    Wherein my death might yield her any profit,
    Or my life imply her any danger?

Leonine    My commission
    Is not to reason of the deed, but do't.

Marina    You will not do't for all the world, I hope.
    You are well favoured, and your looks foreshow
    You have a gentle heart. I saw you lately
    When you caught hurt in parting two that fought.
    Good sooth, it showed well in you. Do so now.
    Your lady seeks my life; come you between,
    And save poor me, the weaker.

Leonine    [Seizing MARINA.] I am sworn,
    And will dispatch.

Enter PIRATES.

1st Pirate    Hold, villain!
[Exit LEONINE.
2nd Pirate    A prize, a prize!

3rd Pirate    Half-part, mates, half-part! Come, let's have her aboard suddenly.
[Exeunt PIRATES with MARINA.

Re-enter LEONINE.

Leonine    These roguing thieves serve the great pirate Valdes.
    And they have seized Marina, let her go;
    There's no hope she will return. I'll swear she's dead,
    And thrown into the sea. But I'll see further;
    Perhaps they will but please themselves upon her,
    Not carry her aboard. If she remain,
    Whom they have ravished must by me be slain.
[Exit.
+ + + + + +

Scene 2. Mytilene. Before a Brothel.

Enter PANDAR, BAWD, and BOULT.

Pandar    Boult!

Boult    Sir?

Pandar    Search the market narrowly; Mytilene is full of gallants. We lost 
too much money this mart by being too wenchless.

Bawd    We were never so much out of creatures. We have but poor three, and 
they can do no more than they can do; and they with continual action are even 
as good as rotten.

Pandar    Therefore let's have fresh ones, whate'er we pay for them. If there 
be not a conscience to be used in every trade, we shall never prosper.

Bawd    Thou sayst true; 'tis not our bringing up of poor bastards -as, I 
think, I have brought up some eleven - 

Boult    Ay, to eleven; and brought them down again. But shall I search the 
market?

Bawd    What else, man? The stuff we have, a strong wind will blow it to 
pieces, they are so pitifully sodden.

Pandar    Thou sayst true; there's two unwholesome, a' conscience. The poor 
Transylvanian is dead that lay with the little baggage.

Boult    Ay, she quickly pooped him; she made him roast meat for worms. But 
I'll go search the market.
[Exit.

Pandar    Three or four thousand chequins were as pretty a proportion to live 
quietly, and so give over.

Bawd    Why to give over, I pray you? Is it a shame to get when we are old?

Pandar    O, our credit comes not in like the commodity, nor the commodity 
wages not with the danger; therefore, if in our youths we could pick up some 
pretty estate, 'twere not amiss to keep our door hatched. Besides, the sore 
terms we stand upon with the gods will be strong with us for giving o'er.

Bawd    Come, other sorts offend as well as we.

Pandar    As well as we? Ay, and better too; we offend worse. Neither is our 
profession any trade; it's no calling. But here comes Boult.

Re-enter BOULT with the PIRATES and MARINA.

Boult    Come your ways, my masters. You say she's a virgin?

1st Pirate    O, sir, we doubt it not.

Boult    Master, I have gone through for this piece you see. If you like her, 
so; if not, I have lost my earnest.

Bawd    Boult, has she any qualities?

Boult    She has a good face, speaks well, and has excellent good clothes; 
there's no further necessity of qualities can make her be refused.

Bawd    What's her price, Boult?

Boult    It cannot be bated one doit of a thousand pieces.

Pandar    Well, follow me, my masters; you shall have your money presently. 
Wife, take her in; instruct her what she has to do that she may not be raw in 
her entertainment.
[Exeunt PANDAR and PIRATES.

Bawd    Boult, take you the marks of her, the colour of her hair, complexion, 
height, her age, with warrant of her virginity, and cry `He that will give 
most shall have her first'. Such a maidenhead were no cheap thing if men were 
as they have been. Get this done as I command you.

Boult    Performance shall follow.
[Exit.
Marina    Alack that Leonine was so slack, so slow!
    He should have struck, not spoke. Or that these pirates,
    Not enough barbarous, had not o'erboard thrown me
    For to seek my mother!

Bawd    Why lament you, pretty one?

Marina    That I am pretty.

Bawd    Come, the gods have done their part in you.

Marina    I accuse them not.

Bawd    You are light into my hands, where you are like to live.

Marina    The more my fault
    To 'scape his hands where I was like to die.

Bawd    Ay, and you shall live in pleasure.

Marina    No.

Bawd    Yes, indeed shall you, and taste gentlemen of all fashions. You shall 
fare well. You shall have the difference of all complexions. What, do you stop 
your ears?

Marina    Are you a woman?

Bawd    What would you have me be an I be not a woman?

Marina    An honest woman, or not a woman.

Bawd    Marry, whip the gosling! I think I shall have something to do with 
you. Come, you're a young foolish sapling, and must be bowed as I would have 
you.

Marina    The gods defend me!

Bawd    If it please the gods to defend you by men, then men must comfort you, 
men must feed you, men must stir you up. Boult's returned.

Re-enter BOULT.

    Now, sir, hast thou cried her through the market?

Boult    I have cried her almost to the number of her hairs; I have drawn her 
picture with my voice.

Bawd    And, I prithee, tell me how dost thou find the inclination of the 
people, especially of the younger sort?

Boult    Faith, they listened to me as they would have hearkened to their 
father's testament. There was a Spaniard's mouth watered, and he went to bed 
to her very description.

Bawd    We shall have him here tomorrow with his best ruff on.

Boult    Tonight, tonight. But, mistress, do you know the French knight that 
cowers i'the hams?

Bawd    Who, Monsieur Veroles?

Boult    Ay, he; he offered to cut a caper at the proclamation, but he made a 
groan at it, and swore he would see her tomorrow.

Bawd    Well, well; as for him, he brought his disease hither -here he does 
but repair it. I know he will come in our shadow to scatter his crowns in the 
sun.

Boult    Well, if we had of every nation a traveller, we should lodge them 
with this sign.

Bawd    [To MARINA.] Pray you come hither awhile. You have fortunes coming 
upon you. Mark me, you must seem to do that fearfully which you commit 
willingly, despise profit where you have most gain. To weep that you live as 
ye do makes pity in your lovers. Seldom but that pity begets you a good 
opinion, and that opinion a mere profit.

Marina    I understand you not.

Boult    O, take her home, mistress, take her home. These blushes of hers must 
be quenched with some present practice.

Bawd    Thou sayst true, i'faith, so they must, for your bride goes to that 
with shame which is her way to go with warrant.

Boult    Faith, some do and some do not. But, mistress, if I have bargained 
for the joint - 

Bawd    Thou mayst cut a morsel off the spit.

Boult    I may so?

Bawd    Who should deny it? Come, young one, I like the manner of your 
garments well.

Boult    Ay, by my faith, they shall not be changed yet.

Bawd    [Giving money.] Boult, spend thou that in the town. Report what a 
sojourner we have; you'll lose nothing by custom. When nature framed this 
piece, she meant thee a good turn; therefore say what a paragon she is, and 
thou hast the harvest out of thine own report.

Boult    I warrant you, mistress, thunder shall not so awake the bed of eels 
as my giving out her beauty stirs up the lewdly inclined. I'll bring home some 
tonight.

Bawd    [To MARINA.] Come your ways, follow me.

Marina    If fires be hot, knives sharp, or waters deep,
    Untied I still my virgin knot will keep.
    Diana, aid my purpose!

Bawd    What have we to do with Diana? Pray you, will you go with us?
[Exeunt.
+ + + + + +

Scene 3. Tarsus. A Room in Cleon's House.

Enter CLEON and DIONYZA.

Dionyza    Why are you foolish? Can it be undone?

Cleon    O Dionyza, such a piece of slaughter
    The sun and moon ne'er looked upon!

Dionyza    I think you'll turn a child again.

Cleon    Were I chief lord of all this spacious world,
    I'd give it to undo the deed. O lady,
    Much less in blood than virtue, yet a princess
    To equal any single crown o'th' earth
    I'th' justice of compare! O villain Leonine!
    Whom thou hast poisoned too.
    If thou hadst drunk to him, 't had been a kindness
    Becoming well thy fact. What canst thou say
    When noble Pericles shall demand his child?

Dionyza    That she is dead. Nurses are not the fates;
    To foster is not ever to preserve.
    She died at night; I'll say so. Who can cross it?
    Unless you play the pious innocent,
    And for an honest attribute cry out
    `She died by foul play'.

Cleon    O, go to! Well, well;
    Of all the faults beneath the heavens, the gods
    Do like this worst.

Dionyza    Be one of those that thinks
    The petty wrens of Tarsus will fly hence,
    And open this to Pericles. I do shame
    To think of what a noble strain you are,
    And of how coward a spirit.

Cleon    To such proceeding
    Whoever but his approbation added,
    Though not his prime consent, he did not flow
    From honourable courses.

Dionyza    Be it so, then.
    Yet none does know but you how she came dead,
    Nor none can know, Leonine being gone.
    She did distain my child, and stood between
    Her and her fortunes. None would look on her,
    But cast their gazes on Marina's face,
    Whilst ours was blurted at and held a malkin
    Not worth the time of day. It pierced me through;
    And though you call my course unnatural,
    You not your child well loving, yet I find
    It greets me as an enterprise of kindness
    Performed to your sole daughter.

Cleon    Heavens forgive it!

Dionyza    And as for Pericles,
    What should he say? We wept after her hearse,
    And yet we mourn. Her monument
    Is almost finished, and her epitaphs
    In glitt'ring golden characters express
    A general praise to her, and care in us,
    At whose expense 'tis done.

Cleon    Thou art like the harpy,
    Which, to betray, dost, with thine angel's face,
    Seize with thine eagle's talons.

Dionyza    Ye're like one that superstitiously
    Do swear to th' gods that winter kills the flies;
    But yet I know you'll do as I advise.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 4. Tarsus. Before the Monument of Marina.

Enter GOWER.

Gower    Thus time we waste, and long leagues make short,
    Sail seas in cockles, have and wish but for't,
    Making to take our imagination
    From bourn to bourn, region to region.
    By you being pardoned, we commit no crime
    To use one language in each several clime
    Where our scene seems to live. I do beseech you
    To learn of me, who stand wi'th' gaps to teach you
    The stages of our story. Pericles
    Is now again thwarting the wayward seas,
    Attended on by many a lord and knight,
    To see his daughter, all his life's delight.
    Old Helicanus goes along. Behind
    Is left to govern it, you bear in mind,
    Old Escanes, whom Helicanus late
    Advanced in Tyre to great and high estate.
    Well-sailing ships and bounteous winds have brought
    This king to Tarsus -think his pilot thought;
    So with his steerage shall your thoughts grow on - 
    To fetch his daughter home, who first is gone.
    Like motes and shadows see them move awhile;
    Your ears unto your eyes I'll reconcile.

Dumb Show.

Enter PERICLES, at one door, with all his TRAIN;
CLEON and DIONYZA at the other.
CLEON shows PERICLES the tomb, whereat PERICLES makes lamentation, puts on 
sackcloth, and in a mighty passion departs, followed by his TRAIN.
Then exeunt CLEON and DIONYZA.

    See how belief may suffer by foul show!
    This borrowed passion stands for true old woe;
    And Pericles, in sorrow all devoured,
    With sighs shot through, and biggest tears o'ershowered,
    Leaves Tarsus, and again embarks. He swears
    Never to wash his face nor cut his hairs;
    He puts on sackcloth, and to sea. He bears
    A tempest which his mortal vessel tears,
    And yet he rides it out. Now please you wit
    The epitaph is for Marina writ
    By wicked Dionyza.

    [Reads the epitaph.]
        "The fairest, sweetest, and best lies here,
        Who withered in her spring of year.
        She was of Tyrus the king's daughter,
        On whom foul death hath made this slaughter.
        Marina was she called; and at her birth,
        Thetis, being proud, swallowed some part o'th' earth.
        Therefore the earth, fearing to be o'erflowed,
        Hath Thetis' birth-child on the heavens bestowed;
        Wherefore she does, and swears she'll never stint,
        Make raging battery upon shores of flint."

    No visor does become black villainy
    So well as soft and tender flattery.
    Let Pericles believe his daughter's dead,
    And bear his courses to be ordered
    By Lady Fortune; while our scene must play
    His daughter's woe and heavy welladay
    In her unholy service. Patience then,
    And think you now are all in Mytilen.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 5. Mytilene. A Street before the Brothel.

Enter, from the brothel, TWO GENTLEMEN.

1st Gentleman    Did you ever hear the like?

2nd Gentleman    No, nor never shall do in such a place as this, she being 
once gone.

1st Gentleman    But to have divinity preached there! -did you ever dream of 
such a thing?

2nd Gentleman    No, no. Come, I am for no more bawdy-houses. Shall's go hear 
the vestals sing?

1st Gentleman    I'll do anything now that is virtuous; but I am out of the 
road of rutting for ever.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 6. Mytilene. A Room in the Brothel.

Enter PANDAR, BAWD, and BOULT.

Pandar    Well, I had rather than twice the worth of her she had ne'er come 
here.

Bawd    Fie, fie upon her! She's able to freeze the god Priapus and undo a 
whole generation. We must either get her ravished or be rid of her. When she 
should do for clients her fitment and do me the kindness of our profession, 
she has me her quirks, her reasons, her master-reasons, her prayers, her 
knees, that she would make a puritan of the devil if he should cheapen a kiss 
of her.

Boult    Faith, I must ravish her, or she'll disfurnish us of all our 
cavalleria, and make our swearers priests.

Pandar    Now, the pox upon her green-sickness for me!

Bawd    Faith, there's no way to be rid on't but by the way to the pox. Here 
comes the Lord Lysimachus, disguised.

Boult    We should have both lord and lown if the peevish baggage would but 
give way to customers.

Enter LYSIMACHUS.

Lysimachus    How now! How a dozen of virginities?

Bawd    Now, the gods to bless your honour!

Boult    I am glad to see your honour in good health.

Lysimachus    You may so; 'tis the better for you that your resorters stand 
upon sound legs. How now, wholesome iniquity have you, that a man may deal 
withal and defy the surgeon?

Bawd    We have here one, sir, if she would -but there never came her like in 
Mytilene.

Lysimachus    If she'd do the deeds of darkness, thou wouldst say.

Bawd    Your honour knows what 'tis to say well enough.

Lysimachus    Well, call forth, call forth.

Boult    For flesh and blood, sir, white and red, you shall see a rose; and 
she were a rose indeed, if she had but - 

Lysimachus    What, prithee?

Boult    O, sir, I can be modest.

Lysimachus    That dignifies the renown of a bawd no less than it gives a good 
report to a number to be chaste.
[Exit BOULT.

Bawd    Here comes that which grows to the stalk -never plucked yet, I can 
assure you.

Re-enter PANDAR with MARINA.

    Is she not a fair creature?

Lysimachus    Faith, she would serve after a long voyage at sea.
[Giving money to BAWD.
    Well, there's for you. Leave us.

Bawd    I beseech your honour, give me leave a word, and I'll have done 
presently.

Lysimachus    I beseech you, do.

Bawd    [To MARINA, taking her aside.] First, I would have you note this is an 
honourable man.

Marina    I desire to find him so, that I may worthily note him.

Bawd    Next, he's the governor of this country, and a man whom I am bound to.

Marina    If he govern the country you are bound to him indeed; but how 
honourable he is in that I know not.

Bawd    Pray you, without any more virginal fencing, will you use him kindly? 
He will line your apron with gold.

Marina    What he will do graciously, I will thankfully receive.

Lysimachus    Ha' you done?

Bawd    My lord, she's not paced yet; you must take some pains to work her to 
your manage. Come, we will leave his honour and her together. Go thy ways.
[Exeunt PANDAR, BAWD, and BOULT.

Lysimachus    Now, pretty one, how long have you been at this trade?

Marina    What trade, sir?

Lysimachus    Why, I cannot name but I shall offend.

Marina    I cannot be offended with my trade. Please you to name it.

Lysimachus    How long have you been of this profession?

Marina    E'er since I can remember.

Lysimachus    Did you go to't so young? Were you a gamester at five or at seven?

Marina    Earlier too, sir, if now I be one.

Lysimachus    Why, the house you dwell in proclaims you to be a creature of 
sale.

Marina    Do you know this house to be a place of such resort, and will come 
into't? I hear say you're of honourable parts, and are the governor of this 
place.

Lysimachus    Why, hath your principal made known unto you who I am?

Marina    Who is my principal?

Lysimachus    Why, your herb-woman; she that sets seeds and roots of shame and 
iniquity. O, you have heard something of my power, and so stand aloof for more 
serious wooing. But I protest to thee, pretty one, my authority shall not see 
thee, or else look friendly upon thee. Come, bring me to some private place. 
Come, come.

Marina    If you were born to honour, show it now; if put upon you, make the 
judgement good that thought you worthy of it.

Lysimachus    How's this, how's this? Some more; be sage.

Marina    For me that am a maid, though most ungentle fortune have placed me 
in this sty, where, since I came, diseases have been sold dearer than physic 
-That the gods would set me free from this unhallowed place, though they did 
change me to the meanest bird that flies i'th' purer air!

Lysimachus    I did not think thou couldst have spoke so well; ne'er dreamt 
thou couldst. Had I brought hither a corrupted mind, thy speech had altered 
it. Hold, here's gold for thee. Persever in that clear way thou goest, and the 
gods strengthen thee!

Marina    The good gods preserve you!

Lysimachus    For me, be you thoughten that I came with no ill intent; for to 
me the very doors and windows savour vilely. Fare thee well. Thou art a piece 
of virtue, and I doubt not but thy training hath been noble. Hold, here's more 
gold for thee. A curse upon him, die he like a thief, that robs thee of thy 
goodness! If thou dost hear from me, it shall be for thy good.

Re-enter BOULT.

Boult    I beseech your honour, one piece for me.

Lysimachus    Avaunt, thou damned doorkeeper! Your house, but for this virgin 
that doth prop it, would sink and overwhelm you. Away!
[Exit.

Boult    How's this? We must take another course with you. If your peevish 
chastity, which is not worth a breakfast in the cheapest country under the 
cope, shall undo a whole household, let me be gelded like a spaniel. Come your 
ways.

Marina    Whither would you have me?

Boult    I must have your maidenhead taken off, or the common hangman shall 
execute it. Come your ways. We'll have no more gentlemen driven away. Come 
your ways, I say.

Re-enter BAWD and PANDAR.

Bawd    How now, what's the matter?

Boult    Worse and worse, mistress; she has here spoken holy words to the Lord 
Lysimachus.

Bawd    O abominable!

Boult    She makes our profession as it were to stink afore the face of the 
gods.

Bawd    Marry, hang her up for ever!

Boult    The nobleman would have dealt with her like a nobleman, and she sent 
him away as cold as a snowball; saying his prayers, too.

Bawd    Boult, take her away. Use her at thy pleasure. Crack the glass of her 
virginity, and make the rest malleable.

Boult    An if she were a thornier piece of ground than she is, she shall be 
ploughed.

Marina    Hark, hark, you gods!

Bawd    She conjures; away with her! Would she had never come within my doors! 
Marry, hang you! She's born to undo us. Will you not go the way of womenkind? 
Marry, come up, my dish of chastity with rosemary and bays.
[Exeunt BAWD and PANDAR.

Boult    Come, mistress. Come your ways with me.

Marina    Whither wilt thou have me?

Boult    To take from you the jewel you hold so dear.

Marina    Prithee tell me one thing first.


Boult    Come, now, your one thing.

Marina    What canst thou wish thine enemy to be?

Boult    Why, I could wish him to be my master, or, rather, my mistress.

Marina    Neither of these are so bad as thou art, since they do better thee 
in their command. Thou hold'st a place for which the pained'st fiend of hell 
would not in reputation change. Thou art the damned doorkeeper to every 
coistrel that comes inquiring for his Tib. To the choleric fisting of every 
rogue thy ear is liable. Thy food is such as hath been belched on by infected 
lungs.

Boult    What would you have me do? Go to the wars, would you, where a man may 
serve seven years for the loss of a leg, and have not money enough in the end 
to buy him a wooden one?

Marina    Do anything but this thou doest. Empty old receptacles or common 
shores of filth; serve by indenture to the common hangman. Any of these ways 
are yet better than this, for what thou professest, a baboon, could he speak, 
would own a name too dear. That the gods would safely deliver me from this 
place! Here, here's gold for thee. If that thy master would gain by me, 
proclaim that I can sing, weave, sew, and dance, with other virtues which I'll 
keep from boast, and will undertake all these to teach. I doubt not but this 
populous city will yield many scholars.

Boult    But can you teach all this you speak of?

Marina    Prove that I cannot, take me home again and prostitute me to the 
basest groom that doth frequent your house.

Boult    Well, I will see what I can do for thee. If I can place thee, I will.

Marina    But amongst honest women.

Boult    Faith, my acquaintance lies little amongst them. But since my master 
and mistress hath bought you, there's no going but by their consent; therefore 
I will make them acquainted with your purpose, and I doubt not but I shall 
find them tractable enough. Come, I'll do for thee what I can. Come your ways.
[Exeunt.


+++ +++ +++ +++ +++ +++

ACT 5.

Enter GOWER.

Gower    Marina thus the brothel 'scapes, and chances
    Into an honest house, our story says.
    She sings like one immortal, and she dances
    As goddess-like to her admired lays.
    Deep clerks she dumbs, and with her neele composes
    Nature's own shape, of bud, bird, branch, or berry,
    That even her art sisters the natural roses;
    Her inkle, silk, twin with the rubied cherry;
    That pupils lacks she none of noble race,
    Who pour their bounty on her; and her gain
    She gives the cursed bawd. Here we her place,
    And to her father turn our thoughts again,
    Where we left him on the sea. We there him lost,
    Where, driven before the winds, he is arrived
    Here where his daughter dwells; and on this coast
    Suppose him now at anchor. The city strived
    God Neptune's annual feast to keep; from whence
    Lysimachus our Tyrian ship espies,
    His banners sable, trimmed with rich expense;
    And to him in his barge with fervour hies.
    In your supposing once more put your sight;
    Of heavy Pericles, think this his bark,
    Where what is done in action, more, if might,
    Shall be discovered. Please you sit and hark.
[Exit.

+ + + + + +

Scene 1. The Coast of Mytilene.

On board Pericles' ship.
A pavilion on deck, with a curtain before it; PERICLES within it.
Lysimachus' barge lies beside the Tyrian vessel.

Enter HELICANUS; to him TWO SAILORS, one of the Tyrian vessel, and one of the 
Mytilene barge.

1st Sailor    [To the 2nd SAILOR.]
    Where is Lord Helicanus? He can resolve you. O, here he is. [To 
HELICANUS.] Sir, there's a barge put off from Mytilene, and in it is 
Lysimachus the governor, who craves to come aboard. What is your will?

Helicanus    That he have his. Call up some gentlemen.

1st Sailor    Ho, gentlemen! My lord calls.

Enter two or three GENTLEMEN.

1st Gentleman    Doth your lordship call?

Helicanus    Gentlemen, there is some of worth would come aboard; I pray greet 
him fairly.
[GENTLEMEN go on board the barge.

Enter, from the barge, LYSIMACHUS and LORDS, with the GENTLEMEN.

1st Sailor    Sir, this is the man that can, in aught you would, resolve you.

Lysimachus    Hail, reverend sir! The gods preserve you!

Helicanus    And you, to outlive the age I am, and die as I would do.

Lysimachus    You wish me well. Being on shore, honouring of Neptune's 
triumphs, seeing this goodly vessel ride before us, I made to it to know of 
whence you are.

Helicanus    First, what is your place?

Lysimachus    I am the governor of this place you lie before.

Helicanus    Sir, our vessel is of Tyre, in it the king; a man who for this 
three months hath not spoken to anyone, nor taken sustenance but to prorogue 
his grief.

Lysimachus    Upon what ground is his distemperature?

Helicanus    'Twould be too tedious to repeat; but the main grief springs from 
the loss of a beloved daughter and a wife.

Lysimachus    May we not see him?

Helicanus    You may; but bootless is your sight; he will not speak to any.

Lysimachus    Yet let me obtain my wish.

Helicanus    Behold him.

Draws the pavilion curtain, to reveal PERICLES reclined on a couch.

    This was a goodly person till the disaster that one mortal night drove him 
to this.

Lysimachus    Sir, king, all hail! The gods preserve you! Hail, royal sir!

Helicanus    It is in vain; he will not speak to you.

1st Lord    Sir, we have a maid in Mytilene I durst wager would win some words 
of him.

Lysimachus    'Tis well bethought. She, questionless, with her sweet harmony 
and other chosen attractions, would allure, and make a battery through his 
deafened parts, which now are midway stopped. She is all happy as the fairest 
of all, and with her fellow maids is now upon the leafy shelter that abuts 
against the island's side.
[Whispers 1st LORD, who exits to the barge.

Helicanus    Sure, all effectless; yet nothing we'll omit that bears 
recovery's name. But since your kindness we have stretched thus far, let us 
beseech you that for our gold we may provision have, wherein we are not 
destitute for want, but weary for the staleness.

Lysimachus    O, sir, a courtesy which if we should deny, the most just God 
for every graff would send a caterpillar, and so inflict our province. Yet 
once more let me entreat to know at large the cause of your king's sorrow.

Helicanus    Sit, sir, I will recount it to you -But see, I am prevented.

Re-enter 1st LORD with MARINA and her COMPANION.

Lysimachus    O, here's the lady that I sent for.
    Welcome, fair one! Is't not a goodly presence?

Helicanus    She's a gallant lady.

Lysimachus    She's such a one that, were I well assured
    Came of gentle kind and noble stock, I'd wish
    No better choice, and think me rarely wed.
    Fair one, all goodness that consists in beauty,
    Expect even here, where is a kingly patient,
    If that thy prosperous and artificial feat
    Can draw him but to answer thee in aught,
    Thy sacred physic shall receive such pay
    As thy desires can wish.

Marina    Sir, I will use
    My utmost skill in his recovery, provided
    That none but I and my companion maid
    Be suffered to come near him.

Lysimachus    Come, let us leave her;
    And the gods make her prosperous!
[They withdraw. MARINA sings.

Lysimachus    [Advancing.] Marked he your music?

Marina    No, nor looked on us.

Lysimachus    See, she will speak to him.

Marina    Hail, sir! My lord, lend ear.

Pericles    [Repulsing her.] Hum, ha!

Marina    I am a maid,
    My lord, that ne'er before invited eyes,
    But have been gazed on like a comet. She speaks,
    My lord, that maybe hath endured a grief
    Might equal yours, if both were justly weighed.
    Though wayward fortune did malign my state,
    My derivation was from ancestors
    Who stood equivalent with mighty kings;
    But time hath rooted out my parentage,
    And to the world and awkward casualties
    Bound me in servitude. [Aside.] I will desist;
    But there is something glows upon my cheek,
    And whispers in mine ear `Go not till he speak'.

Pericles    My fortunes -parentage -good parentage - 
    To equal mine -was it not thus? What say you?

Marina    I said, my lord, if you did know my parentage
    You would not do me violence.

Pericles    I do think so. Pray you turn your eyes upon me.
    You're like something that -What countrywoman?
    Here of these shores?

Marina    No, nor of any shores;
    Yet I was mortally brought forth, and am
    No other than I appear.

Pericles    I am great with woe, and shall deliver weeping.
    My dearest wife was like this maid, and such a one
    My daughter might have been: my queen's square brows,
    Her stature to an inch, as wand-like straight,
    As silver-voiced, her eyes as jewel-like
    And cased as richly, in pace another Juno,
    Who starves the ears she feeds, and makes them hungry
    The more she gives them speech. Where do you live?

Marina    Where I am but a stranger. From the deck
    You may discern the place.

Pericles    Where were you bred?
    And how achieved you these endowments which
    You make more rich to owe?

Marina    If I should tell my history, it would seem
    Like lies, disdained in the reporting.

Pericles    Prithee speak.
    Falseness cannot come from thee, for thou lookest
    Modest as Justice, and thou seemest a palace
    For the crowned Truth to dwell in. I will believe thee,
    And make my senses credit thy relation
    To points that seem impossible; for thou lookest
    Like one I loved indeed. What were thy friends?
    Didst thou not say, when I did push thee back,
    Which was when I perceived thee, that thou cam'st
    From good descending?

Marina    So indeed I did.

Pericles    Report thy parentage. I think thou said'st
    Thou hadst been tossed from wrong to injury,
    And that thou thought'st thy griefs might equal mine,
    If both were opened.

Marina    Some such thing
    I said, and said no more but what my thoughts
    Did warrant me was likely.

Pericles    Tell thy story.
    If thine considered prove the thousandth part
    Of my endurance, thou art a man, and I
    Have suffered like a girl; yet thou dost look
    Like Patience gazing on kings' graves, and smiling
    Extremity out of act. What were thy friends?
    How lost thou them? Thy name, my most kind virgin?
    Recount, I do beseech thee. Come, sit by me.

Marina    My name is Marina.

Pericles    O, I am mocked,
    And thou by some incensed god sent hither
    To make the world to laugh at me.

Marina    Patience, good sir,
    Or here I'll cease.

Pericles    Nay, I'll be patient.
    Thou little know'st how thou dost startle me
    To call thyself Marina.

Marina    The name
    Was given me by one that had some power,
    My father, and a king.

Pericles    How, a king's daughter,
    And called Marina?

Marina    You said you would believe me;
    But, not to be a troubler of your peace,
    I will end here.

Pericles    But are you flesh and blood?
    Have you a working pulse, and are no fairy?
    Motion! Well, speak on. Where were you born?

    And wherefore called Marina?

Marina    Called Marina
    For I was born at sea.

Pericles    At sea! What mother?

Marina    My mother was the daughter of a king;
    Who died the minute I was born,
    As my good nurse Lychorida hath oft
    Delivered weeping.

Pericles    O, stop there a little!
    This is the rarest dream
    That e'er dull sleep did mock sad fools withal.
    This cannot be my daughter, buried.
    Well, where were you bred?
    I'll hear you more, to th' bottom of your story,
    And never interrupt you.

Marina    You scorn; believe me, 'twere best I did give o'er.

Pericles    I will believe you by the syllable
    Of what you shall deliver. Yet, give me leave:
    How came you in these parts? Where were you bred?

Marina    The king my father did in Tarsus leave me,
    Till cruel Cleon, with his wicked wife,
    Did seek to murder me; and having wooed a villain
    To attempt it, who having drawn to do't,
    A crew of pirates came and rescued me,
    Brought me to Mytilene. But, good sir,
    Whither will you have me? Why do you weep? It may be
    You think me an impostor. No, good faith,
    I am the daughter to King Pericles,
    If good King Pericles be.

Pericles    Ho, Helicanus!

Helicanus    Calls my lord?

Pericles    Thou art a grave and noble counsellor,
    Most wise in general; tell me, if thou canst,
    What this maid is, or what is like to be,
    That thus hath made me weep?

Helicanus    I know not;
    But here is the regent, sir, of Mytilene
    Speaks nobly of her.

Lysimachus    She never would tell her parentage.
    Being demanded that, she would sit still and weep.

Pericles    O Helicanus, strike me, honoured sir;
    Give me a gash, put me to present pain,
    Lest this great sea of joys rushing upon me
    O'erbear the shores of my mortality,
    And drown me with their sweetness. O, come hither,
    Thou that begett'st him that did thee beget;
    Thou that wast born at sea, buried at Tarsus,
    And found at sea again. O Helicanus,
    Down on thy knees; thank the holy gods as loud
    As thunder threatens us. This is Marina.
    What was thy mother's name? Tell me but that,
    For truth can never be confirmed enough,
    Though doubts did ever sleep.

Marina    First, sir, I pray, what is your title?

Pericles    I am Pericles of Tyre. But tell me now my
    Drowned queen's name, as in the rest you said
    Thou hast been godlike perfect, the heir of kingdoms,
    And another like to Pericles thy father.

Marina    Is it no more to be your daughter than
    To say my mother's name was Thaisa?
    Thaisa was my mother, who did end
    The minute I began.

Pericles    Now, blessing on thee! Rise; th' art my child.
    Give me fresh garments. Mine own, Helicanus;
    She is not dead at Tarsus, as she should have been,
    By savage Cleon. She shall tell thee all,
    When thou shalt kneel and justify in knowledge
    She is thy very princess. Who is this?

Helicanus    Sir, 'tis the governor of Mytilene,
    Who, hearing of your melancholy state,
    Did come to see you.

Pericles    I embrace you. Give me my robes;
    I am wild in my beholding. O heavens bless my girl!
    But hark, what music? Tell Helicanus, my Marina,
    Tell him o'er, point by point, for yet he seems to doubt,
    How sure you are my daughter. But what music?

Helicanus    My lord, I hear none.

Pericles    None? The music of the spheres! List, my Marina.

Lysimachus    It is not good to cross him; give him way.

Pericles    Rarest sounds! Do ye not hear?
[Music.
Lysimachus    My lord, I hear most heavenly music.

Pericles    It nips me unto list'ning, and thick slumber
    Hangs upon mine eyes. Let me rest.
[Sleeps.
Lysimachus    A pillow for his head. So, leave him all.
    Well, my companion friends,
    If this but answer to my just belief,
    I'll well remember you.
[Exeunt all but PERICLES.

DIANA appears to PERICLES.

Diana    My temple stands in Ephesus; hie thee thither,
    And do upon mine altar sacrifice.
    There, when my maiden priests are met together,
    [^     ^     ^     ^     ^     ^     ^]
    [^     ^     ^] before the people all,
    Reveal how thou at sea didst lose thy wife.
    To mourn thy crosses, with thy daughter's, call
    And give them repetition to the life.
    Or perform my bidding, or thou livest in woe;
    Do it, and happy; by my silver bow!
    Awake, and tell thy dream.
[Disappears.
Pericles    Celestial Dian, goddess argentine,
    I will obey thee. Helicanus!

Re-enter HELICANUS, LYSIMACHUS, and MARINA.

Helicanus    Sir?

Pericles    My purpose was for Tarsus, there to strike
    The inhospitable Cleon; but I am for other service first.
    Toward Ephesus turn our blown sails;
    Eftsoons I'll tell thee why.
    [To LYSIMACHUS.] Shall we refresh us, sir, upon your shore,
    And give you gold for such provision
    As our intents will need?

Lysimachus    Sir, with all my heart; and when you come ashore I have another 
suit.

Pericles    You shall prevail, were it to woo my daughter; for it seems you 
have been noble towards her.

Lysimachus    Sir, lend me your arm.

Pericles    Come, my Marina.
[Exeunt.

+ + + + + +

Scene 2. Ephesus. The Temple of Diana.

THAISA standing near the altar, as High Priestess;
a number of VIRGINS on each side.
CERIMON and other INHABITANTS of Ephesus attending.

Enter GOWER.

Gower    Now our sands are almost run;
    More a little, and then dumb.
    This, my last boon, give me,
    For such kindness must relieve me,
    That you aptly will suppose
    What pageantry, what feats, what shows,
    What minstrelsy, and pretty din,
    The regent made in Mytilin
    To greet the king. So he thrived
    That he is promised to be wived
    To fair Marina; but in no wise
    Till he had done his sacrifice
    As Dian bade; whereto being bound,
    The interim, pray you, all confound.
    In feathered briefness sails are filled,
    And wishes fall out as they're willed.
    At Ephesus the temple see
    Our king, and all his company.
    That he can hither come so soon
    Is by your fancies' thankful doom.
[Exit.
ITALIC ON[+ + + + + + Scene 3.]

Enter PERICLES, LYSIMACHUS, HELICANUS, and MARINA.

Pericles    Hail, Dian! To perform thy just command
    I here confess myself the king of Tyre,
    Who, frighted from my country, did wed
    At Pentapolis the fair Thaisa.
    At sea in childbed died she, but brought forth
    A maid-child called Marina, who, O goddess,
    Wears yet thy silver livery. She at Tarsus
    Was nursed with Cleon, who at fourteen years
    He sought to murder; but her better stars
    Brought her to Mytilene; 'gainst whose shore
    Riding, her fortunes brought the maid aboard us,
    Where, by her own most clear remembrance, she
    Made known herself my daughter.

Thaisa    Voice, and favour! - 
    You are, you are -O royal Pericles!
[Faints.
Pericles    What means the nun? She dies! Help, gentlemen!

Cerimon    Noble sir,
    If you have told Diana's altar true,
    This is your wife.

Pericles    Reverend appearer, no;
    I threw her overboard with these very arms.

Cerimon    Upon this coast, I warrant you.

Pericles    'Tis most certain.

Cerimon    Look to the lady. O, she's but o'erjoyed.
    Early one blustering morn this lady was
    Thrown upon this shore. I oped the coffin,
    Found there rich jewels, recovered her, and placed her
    Here in Diana's temple.

Pericles    May we see them?

Cerimon    Great sir, they shall be brought you to my house,
    Whither I invite you. Look, Thaisa is
    Recovered.

Thaisa    O, let me look!
    If he be none of mine, my sanctity
    Will to my sense bend no licentious ear,
    But curb it, spite of seeing. O, my lord,
    Are you not Pericles? Like him you spake,
    Like him you are. Did you not name a tempest,
    A birth, and death?

Pericles    The voice of dead Thaisa!

Thaisa    That Thaisa am I, supposed dead
    And drowned.

Pericles    Immortal Dian!

Thaisa    Now I know you better.
    When we with tears parted Pentapolis,
    The king my father gave you such a ring.
[Points to his ring.

Pericles    This, this! No more, you gods; your present kindness
    Makes my past miseries sports. You shall do well
    That on the touching of her lips I may
    Melt and no more be seen. O, come, be buried
    A second time within these arms.

Marina    [Kneeling.] My heart
    Leaps to be gone into my mother's bosom.

Pericles    Look who kneels here! Flesh of thy flesh, Thaisa;
    Thy burden at the sea, and called Marina
    For she was yielded there.

Thaisa    Blest, and mine own!

Helicanus    Hail, madam, and my queen!

Thaisa    I know you not.

Pericles    You have heard me say, when I did fly from Tyre,
    I left behind an ancient substitute:
    Can you remember what I called the man?
    I have named him oft.

Thaisa    'Twas Helicanus then.

Pericles    Still confirmation!
    Embrace him, dear Thaisa, this is he.
    Now do I long to hear how you were found,
    How possibly preserved, and who to thank,
    Besides the gods, for this great miracle.

Thaisa    Lord Cerimon, my lord -this man
    Through whom the gods have shown their power -that can
    From first to last resolve you.

Pericles    Reverend sir,
    The gods can have no mortal officer
    More like a god than you. Will you deliver
    How this dead queen re-lives?

Cerimon    I will, my lord.
    Beseech you first go with me to my house,
    Where shall be shown you all was found with her,
    How she came placed here in the temple;
    No needful thing omitted.

Pericles    Pure Dian, I bless thee for thy vision, and will offer 
night-oblations to thee. Thaisa, this prince, the fair betrothed of your 
daughter, shall marry her at Pentapolis. And now this ornament makes me look 
dismal will I clip to form; and what this fourteen years no razor touched, to 
grace thy marriage-day I'll beautify.

Thaisa    Lord Cerimon hath letters of good credit, sir,
    My father's dead.

Pericles    Heavens make a star of him! Yet there, my queen,
    We'll celebrate their nuptials, and ourselves
    Will in that kingdom spend our following days.
    Our son and daughter shall in Tyrus reign.
    Lord Cerimon, we do our longing stay
    To hear the rest untold. Sir, lead's the way.
[Exeunt.

Enter GOWER.

Gower    In Antiochus and his daughter you have heard
    Of monstrous lust the due and just reward.
    In Pericles, his queen, and daughter, seen,
    Although assailed with fortune fierce and keen,
    Virtue preserved from fell destruction's blast,
    Led on by heaven, and crowned with joy at last.
    In Helicanus may you well descry
    A figure of truth, of faith, of loyalty.
    In reverend Cerimon there well appears
    The worth that learned charity aye wears.
    For wicked Cleon and his wife, when fame
    Had spread their cursed deed to the honoured name
    Of Pericles, to rage the city turn,
    That him and his they in his palace burn;
    The gods for murder seemed so content
    To punish, although not done, but meant.
    So on your patience evermore attending,
    New joy wait on you! Here our play hath ending.
[Exit.