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  • Title: Pericles, Prince of Tyre (Quarto)
  • Editor: Tom Bishop

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    Author: William Shakespeare
    Editor: Tom Bishop
    Not Peer Reviewed

    Pericles, Prince of Tyre (Quarto)

    0.1THE LATE,
    And much admired Play,
    Called
    Pericles, Prince
    0.5of Tyre.
    With the true Relation of the whole Historie,
    aduentures, and fortunes of the said Prince:
    As also,
    The no lesse strange, and worthy accidents,
    0.10in the Birth and Life, of his Daughter
    MARIANA.
    As it hath been diuers and sundry times acted by
    his Maiesties Seruants, at the Globe on
    the Banck-side.
    0.15By William Shakespeare.
    Imprinted at London for Henry Gosson, and are
    to be sold at the signe of the Sunne in
    Pater-noster row, &c.
    1 6 0 9.
    The Play of Pericles
    Prince of Tyre. &c.
    1Enter Gower.
    TO sing a Song that old was sung,
    From ashes, auntient Gower is come,
    Assuming mans infirmities,
    5To glad your eare, and please your eyes:
    It hath been sung at Feastiuals,
    On Ember eues, and Holydayes:
    And Lords and Ladyes in their liues,
    Haue red it for restoratiues:
    10The purchase is to make men glorious,
    Et bonum quo Antiquius eo melius:
    If you, borne in those latter times,
    When Witts more ripe, accept my rimes;
    And that to heare an old man sing,
    15May 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,
    Buylt vp this Citie, for his chiefest Seat;
    20The fayrest in all Syria.
    I tell you what mine Authors saye:
    This King vnto him tooke a Peere,
    Who dyed, and left a female heyre,
    So bucksome, blith, and full of face,
    25As heauen had lent her all his grace:
    With whom the Father liking tooke,
    And her to Incest did prouoke:
    Bad child, worse father, to intice his owne
    To euill, should be done by none:
    30But custome what they did begin,
    Was with long vse, account'd no sinne;
    The beautie of this sinfull Dame,
    Made many Princes thither frame,
    To seeke her as a bedfellow,
    35In maryage pleasures, playfellow:
    Which to preuent, he made a Law,
    To keepe her still, and men in awe:
    That who so askt her for his wife,
    His Riddle tould, not lost his life:
    40So for her many of wight did die,
    As yon grimme lookes do testifie.
    What now ensues, to the iudgement of your eye,
    I giue my cause, who best can iustifie.
    Exit.
    Enter Antiochus, Prince Pericles, and followers.
    45Anti. Young Prince of Tyre, you haue at large receiued
    The danger of the taske you vndertake.
    Peri. I haue (Antiochus) and with a soule emboldned
    With the glory of her prayse, thinke death no hazard,
    In this enterprise.
    50Ant. Musicke bring in our daughter, clothed like a bride,
    For embracements euen of Ioue himselfe;
    At whose conception, till Lucina rained,
    Nature this dowry gaue; to glad her presence,
    The Seanate house of Planets all did sit,
    55To knit in her, their best perfections.
    Enter Antiochus daughter.
    Per. See where she comes, appareled like the Spring,
    Graces her subiects, and her thoughts the King,
    Of euery Vertue giues renowne to men:
    60Her face the booke of prayses, where is read,
    Nothing but curious pleasures, as from thence,
    Sorrow were euer racte, and teastie wrath
    Could neuer be her milde companion.
    You Gods that made me man, and sway in loue;
    65That haue enflamde desire in my breast,
    To taste the fruite of yon celestiall tree,
    (Or die in th'aduenture) be my helpes,
    As I am sonne and seruant to your will,
    To compasse such a bondlesse happinesse.
    70Anti. Prince Pericles.
    Peri. That would be sonne to great Antiochus.
    Ant. Before thee standes this faire Hesperides,
    With golden fruite, but dangerous to be toucht:
    For Death like Dragons heere affright thee hard:
    75Her face like Heauen, inticeth thee to view
    Her countlesse glory; which desert must gaine:
    And which without desert, because thine eye
    Presumes to reach, all the whole heape must die:
    Yon sometimes famous Princes, like thy selfe,
    80Drawne by report, aduentrous by desire,
    Tell thee with speachlesse tongues, and semblance pale,
    That without couering, saue yon field of Starres,
    Heere they stand Martyrs slaine in Cupids Warres:
    And with dead cheekes, aduise thee to desist,
    85For going on deaths net, whom none resist.
    Per. Antiochus, I thanke thee, who hath taught,
    My frayle mortalitie to know it selfe;
    And by those fearefull obiectes, to prepare
    This body, like to them, to what I must:
    90For Death remembered should be like a myrrour,
    Who tels vs, life's but breath, to trust it errour:
    Ile make my Will then, and as sicke men doe,
    Who know the World, see Heauen, but feeling woe,
    Gripe not at earthly ioyes as earst they did;
    95So I bequeath a happy peace to you,
    And all good men, as euery Prince should doe;
    My ritches to the earth, from whence they came;
    But my vnspotted fire of Loue, to you:
    Thus ready for the way of life or death,
    100I wayte the sharpest blow (Antiochus)
    Scorning aduice; read the conclusion then:
    Which read and not expounded, tis decreed,
    As these before thee, thou thy selfe shalt bleed.
    Daugh. Of all sayd yet, mayst thou prooue prosperous,
    105Of all sayd yet, I wish thee happinesse.
    Peri. Like a bold Champion I assume the Listes,
    Nor aske aduise of any other thought,
    But faythfulnesse and courage.
    The Riddle.
    I am no Viper, yet I feed
    On mothers flesh which did me breed:
    I sought a Husband, in which labour,
    I found that kindnesse in a Father;
    Hee's Father, Sonne, and Husband milde;
    115I, Mother, Wife; and yet his child:
    How they may be, and yet in two,
    As you will liue resolue it you.
    Sharpe Phisicke is the last: But ô you powers!
    That giues heauen countlesse eyes to view mens actes,
    120Why cloude they not their sights perpetually,
    If this be true, which makes me pale to read it?
    Faire Glasse of light, I lou'd you, and could still,
    Were not this glorious Casket stor'd with ill:
    But I must tell you, now my thoughts reuolt,
    125For hee's no man on whom perfections waite,
    That knowing sinne within, will touch the gate.
    You are a faire Violl, and your sense, the stringes;
    Who finger'd to make man his lawfull musicke,
    Would draw Heauen downe, and all the Gods to harken:
    130But being playd vpon before your time,
    Hell onely daunceth at so harsh a chime:
    Good sooth, I care not for you.
    Ant. Prince Pericles, touch not, vpon thy life;
    For that's an Article within our Law,
    135As dangerous as the rest: your time's expir'd,
    Either expound now, or receiue your sentence.
    Peri. Great King,
    Few loue to heare the sinnes they loue to act,
    T'would brayde your selfe too neare for me to tell it:
    140Who has a booke of all that Monarches doe,
    Hee's more secure to keepe it shut, then showne.
    For Vice repeated, is like the wandring Wind,
    Blowes dust in others eyes to spread it selfe;
    And yet the end of all is bought thus deare,
    145The breath is gone, and the sore eyes see cleare:
    To stop the Ayre would hurt them, the blind Mole castes
    Copt hilles towards heauen, to tell the earth is throng'd
    By mans oppression, and the poore Worme doth die for't:
    Kinges are earths Gods; in vice, their law's their will:
    150And if Ioue stray, who dares say, Ioue doth ill:
    It is enough you know, and it is fit;
    What being more knowne, growes worse, to smother it.
    All loue the Wombe that their first beeing bred,
    Then giue my tongue like leaue, to loue my head.
    155Ant. Heauen, that I had thy head; he ha's found the mea-(ning:
    But I will gloze with him. Young Prince of Tyre,
    Though by the tenour of your strict edict,
    Your exposition misinterpreting,
    We might proceed to counsell of your dayes;
    160Yet hope, succeeding from so faire a tree
    As your faire selfe, doth tune vs otherwise;
    Fourtie dayes longer we doe respite you,
    If by which time, our secret be vndone,
    This mercy shewes, wee'le ioy in such a Sonne:
    165And vntill then, your entertaine shall bee
    As doth befit our honour and your worth.
    Manet Pericles solus.
    Peri. How courtesie would seeme to couer sinne,
    When what is done, is like an hipocrite,
    170The which is good in nothing but in sight.
    If it be true that I interpret false,
    Then were it certaine you were not so bad,
    As with foule Incest to abuse your soule:
    Where now you both a Father and a Sonne,
    175By your vntimely claspings with your Child,
    (Which pleasures fittes a husband, not a father)
    And shee an eater of her Mothers flesh,
    By the defiling of her Parents bed,
    And both like Serpents are; who though they feed
    180On sweetest Flowers, yet they Poyson breed.
    Antioch farewell, for Wisedome sees those men,
    Blush not in actions blacker then the night,
    Will shew no course to keepe them from the light:
    One sinne (I know) another doth prouoke;
    185Murther's as neere to Lust, as Flame to Smoake:
    Poyson and Treason are the hands of Sinne,
    I, and the targets to put off the shame,
    Then least my life be cropt, to keepe you cleare,
    By flight, Ile shun the danger which I feare. Exit.
    190Enter Antiochus.
    Anti. He hath found the meaning.
    For which we meane to haue his head:
    He must not liue to trumpet foorth my infamie,
    Nor tell the world Antiochus doth sinne
    195In such a loathed manner:
    And therefore instantly this Prince must die,
    For by his fall, my honour must keepe hie.
    Who attends vs there?
    Enter Thaliard.
    200Thali. Doth your highnes call?
    Antio. Thaliard, you are of our Chamber, Thaliard,
    And our minde pertakes her priuat actions,
    To your secrecie; and for your faythfulnes,
    We will aduaunce you, Thaliard:
    205Behold, heere's Poyson, and heere's Gold:
    Wee hate the Prince of Tyre, and thou must kill him;
    It fittes thee not to aske the reason why?
    Because we bid it: say, is it done?
    Thali. My Lord, tis done.
    210Enter a Messenger.
    Anti. Enough. Let your breath coole your selfe, telling
    your haste.
    Mess. My Lord, Prince Pericles is fled.
    Antin. As thou wilt liue flie after, and like an arrow shot
    215from a well experienst Archer hits the marke his eye doth
    leuell at: so thou neuer returne vnlesse thou say Prince Pe-
    ricles is dead.
    Thal. My Lord, if I can get him within my Pistols
    length, Ile make him sure enough , so farewell to your
    220highnesse.
    Thaliard adieu, till Pericles be dead,
    My heart can lend no succour to my head.
    Enter Pericles with his Lords.
    Pe. Let none disturb vs, why shold this chãge of thoughts
    225The sad companion dull eyde melancholie,
    By me so vsde a guest, as not an houre
    In the dayes glorious walke or peacefull night,
    The tombe where griefe stould sleepe can breed me quiet,
    Here pleasures court mine eies, and mine eies shun them,
    230And daunger which I fearde is at Antioch,
    Whose arme seemes farre too short to hit me here,
    Yet neither pleasures Art can ioy my spirits,
    Nor yet the others distance comfort me,
    Then it is thus, the passions of the mind,
    235That haue their first conception by misdread,
    Haue after nourishment and life, by care
    And what was first but feare, what might be done,
    Growes elder now, and cares it be not done.
    And so with me the great Antiochus,
    240Gainst whom I am too little to contend,
    Since hee's so great, can make his will his act,
    Will thinke me speaking, though I sweare to silence,
    Nor bootes it me to say, I honour,
    If he suspect I may dishonour him.
    245And what may make him blush in being knowne,
    Heele stop the course by which it might be knowne,
    With hostile forces heele ore-spread the land,
    And with the stint of warre will looke so huge,
    Amazement shall driue courage from the state,
    250Our men be vanquisht ere they doe resist,
    And subiects punisht that nere thought offence,
    Which care of them, not pittie of my selfe,
    Who once no more but as the tops of trees,
    Which fence the rootes they grow by and defend them,
    255Makes both my bodie pine, and soule to languish,
    And punish that before that he would punish.
    Enter all the Lords to Pericles.
    1.Lord. Ioy and all comfort in your sacred brest.
    2.Lord. And keepe your mind till you returne to vs
    260peacefull and comfortable.
    Hel. Peace, peace, and giue experience tongue,
    They doe abuse the King that flatter him,
    For flatterie is the bellowes blowes vp sinne,
    The thing the which is flattered, but a sparke,
    265To which that sparke giues heate, and stronger
    Glowing, whereas reproofe obedient and in order,
    Fits kings as they are men, for they may erre,
    When signior sooth here does proclaime peace,
    He flatters you, makes warre vpon your life.
    270Prince paadon me, or strike me if you please,
    I cannot be much lower then my knees.
    Per. All leaue vs else: but let your cares ore-looke,
    What shipping, and what ladings in our hauen,
    And then returne to vs, Hellicans thou hast
    275Mooude vs, what seest thou in our lookes?
    Hel. An angrie brow, dread Lord.
    Per. If there be such a dart in Princes frownes,
    How durst thy tongue moue anger to our face?
    Hel. How dares the plants looke vp to heauen,
    280From whence they haue their nourishment?
    Per. Thou knowest I haue power to take thy life from(thee.
    Hel. I haue ground the Axe my selfe,
    Doe but you strike the blowe.
    Per. Rise, prethee rise, sit downe, thou art no flatterer,
    285I thanke thee fort, and heaue forbid
    That kings should let their eares heare their faults hid.
    Fit Counsellor, and seruant for a Prince,
    Who by thy wisdome makes a Prince thy seruant,
    What wouldst thou haue me doe?
    290Hel. To beare with patience such griefes as you your
    selfe doe lay vpon your selfe.
    Per. Thou speakst like a Physition Hellicanus,
    That ministers a potion vnto me:
    That thou wouldst tremble to receiue thy selfe,
    295Attend me then, I went to Antioch,
    Where as thou knowst against the face of death,
    I sought the purchase of a glorious beautie,
    From whence an issue I might propogate,
    Are armes to Princes, and bring ioies to subiects,
    300Her face was to mine eye beyond all wonder,
    The rest harke in thine eare, as blacke as incest,
    Which by my knowledge found, the sinful father
    Seemde not to strike, but smooth, but thou knowst this,
    Tis time to feare when tyrants seemes to kisse.
    305Which feare so grew in me I hither fled,
    Vnder the couering of a carefull night,
    Who seemd my good protector, and being here,
    Bethought what was past, what might succeed,
    I knew him tyrannous, and tyrants feare
    310Decrease not, but grow faster then the yeares,
    And should he doo't, as no doubt he doth,
    That I should open to the listning ayre ,
    How many worthie Princes blouds were shed,
    To keepe his bed of blacknesse vnlayde ope,
    315To lop that doubt, hee'le fill this land with armes,
    And make pretence of wrong that I haue done him,
    When all for mine, if I may call offence,
    Must feel wars blow, who spares not innocence,
    Which loue to all of which thy selfe art one,
    320Who now reprou'dst me fort.
    Hell. Alas sir.
    Per. Drew sleep out of mine eies, blood frõmy cheekes,
    Musings into my mind, with thousand doubts
    How I might stop this tempest ere it came,
    325And finding little comfort to relieue them,
    I thought it princely charity to griue for them.
    Hell. Well my Lord, since you haue giuen mee leaue to(speake,
    Freely will I speake, Antiochus you feare,
    And iustly too, I thinke you feare the tyrant,
    330Who either by publike warre, or priuat treason,
    Will take away your life: therfore my Lord, go trauell for
    a while, till that his rage and anger be forgot, or till the De-
    stinies doe cut his threed of life: your rule direct to anie,
    if to me, day serues not light more faithfull then Ile be.
    335Per. I doe not doubt thy faith.
    But should he wrong my liberties in my absence?
    Hel. Weele mingle our bloods togither in the earth,
    From whence we had our being, and our birth.
    Per. Tyre I now looke from thee then, and to Tharsus
    340Intend my trauaile, where Ile heare from thee,
    And by whose Letters Ile dispose my selfe.
    The care I had and haue of subiects good,
    On thee I lay, whose wisdomes strength can beare it,
    Ile take thy word, for faith not aske thine oath,
    345Who shuns not to breake one, will cracke both.
    But in our orbs will liue so round, and safe,
    That time of both this truth shall nere conuince,
    Thou shewdst a subiects shine, I a true Prince. Exit.
    Enter Thaliard solus.
    350 So this is Tyre, and this the Court, heere must I kill
    King Pericles, and if I doe it not, I am sure to be hang'd at
    home : t'is daungerous.
    Well, I perceiue he was a wise fellowe, and had good
    discretion, that beeing bid to aske what hee would of the
    355King, desired he might knowe none of his secrets.
    Now doe I see hee had some reason for't: for if a
    king bidde a man bee a villaine, hee's bound by the inden-
    ture of his oath to bee one.
    Husht, heere comes the Lords of Tyre.
    360Enter Hellicanus, Escanes, with
    other Lords.
    Helli. You shall not neede my fellow-Peers of Tyre,
    further to question mee of your kings departure: his sea-
    led Commission left in trust with mee, does speake suffici-
    365ently hee's gone to trauaile.
    Thaliard. How? the King gone?
    Hell. If further yet you will be satisfied, (why as it
    were vnlicensed of your loues) he would depart? Ile giue
    some light vnto you, beeing at Antioch.
    370Thal. What from Antioch?
    Hell. Royall Antiochus on what cause I knowe not,
    tooke some displeasure at him, at least hee iudg'de so: and
    doubting lest hee had err'de or sinn'de, to shewe his sorrow,
    hee'de correct himselfe; so puts himselfe vnto the Ship-
    375mans toyle, with whome eache minute threatens life or
    death.
    Thaliard. Well, I perceiue I shall not be hang'd now,
    although I would, but since hee's gone, the Kings seas
    must please: hee scap'te the Land to perish at the Sea, I'le
    380present my selfe. Peace to the Lords of Tyre.
    Lord Thaliard from Antiochus is welcome.
    Thal. From him I come with message vnto princely
    Pericles, but since my landing, I haue vnderstood your Lord
    has betake himselfe to vnknowne trauailes, now message
    385must returne from whence it came.
    Hell. Wee haue no reason to desire it, commended
    to our maister not to vs, yet ere you shall depart, this wee
    desire as friends to Antioch wee may feast in Tyre. Exit.
    Enter Cleon the Gouernour of Tharsus, with
    390his wife and others.
    Cleon.My Dyoniza shall wee rest vs heere,
    And by relating tales of others griefes,
    See if t'will teach vs to forget our owne?
    Dion. That were to blow at fire in hope to quench it,
    395For who digs hills because they doe aspire?
    Throwes downe one mountaine to cast vp a higher:
    O my distressed Lord, euen such our griefes are,
    Heere they are but felt, and seene with mischiefs eyes,
    But like to Groues, being topt, they higher rise.
    400Cleon. O Dioniza.
    Who wanteth food, and will not say hee wants it,
    Or can conceale his hunger till hee famish?
    Our toungs and sorrowes to sound deepe:
    Our woes into the aire, our eyes to weepe.
    405Till toungs fetch breath that may proclaime
    Them louder, that if heauen slumber, while
    Their creatures want, they may awake
    Their helpers, to comfort them.
    Ile then discourse our woes felt seuerall yeares,
    410And wanting breath to speake, helpe mee with teares.
    Dyoniza. Ile doe my best Syr.
    Cleon. This Tharsus ore which I haue the gouerne-(ment,
    A Cittie on whom plentie held full hand:
    For riches strew'de herselfe euen in her streetes,
    415Whose towers bore heads so high they kist the clowds,
    And strangers nere beheld, but wondred at,
    Whose men and dames so jetted and adorn'de,
    Like one anothers glasse to trim them by,
    Their tables were stor'de full to glad the sight,
    420And not so much to feede on as delight,
    All pouertie was scor'nde, and pride so great,
    The name of helpe grewe odious to repeat.
    Dion. O t'is too true.
    Cle. But see what heauen can doe by this our change,
    425These mouthes who but of late, earth, sea, and ayre,
    Were all too little to content and please,
    Although thy gaue their creatures in abundance,
    As houses are defil'de for want of vse,
    They are now staru'de for want of exercise,
    430Those pallats who not yet too sauers younger,
    Must haue inuentions to delight the tast,
    Would now be glad of bread and beg for it,
    Those mothers who to nouzell vp their babes,
    Thought nought too curious, are readie now
    435To eat those little darlings whom they lou'de,
    So sharpe are hungers teeth, that man and wife,
    Drawe lots who first shall die, to lengthen life.
    Heere stands a Lord, and there a Ladie weeping:
    Heere manie sincke, yet those which see them fall,
    440Haue scarce strength left to giue them buryall.
    Is not this true?
    Dion. Our cheekes and hollow eyes doe witnesse it.
    Cle. O let those Cities that of plenties cup,
    And her prosperities so largely taste,
    445With their superfluous riots heare these teares,
    The miserie of Tharsus may be theirs.
    Enter a Lord.
    Lord. Wheres the Lord Gouernour?
    Cle. Here, speake out thy sorrowes, which thee bringst
    450in hast, for comfort is too farre for vs to expect.
    Lord. Wee haue descryed vpon our neighbouring
    shore, a portlie saile of ships make hitherward.
    Cleon. I thought as much.
    One sorrowe neuer comes but brings an heire,
    455That may succcede as his inheritor:
    And so in ours, some neighbouring nation,
    Taking aduantage of our miserie,
    That stuff't the hollow vessels with their power,
    To beat vs downe, the which are downe alreadie,
    460And make a conquest of vnhappie mee,
    Whereas no glories got to ouercome.
    Lord. That's the least feare.
    For by the semblance of their white flagges displayde, they
    bring vs peace, and come to vs as fauourers , not as foes.
    465Cleon. Thou speak'st like himnes vntuterd to repeat
    Who makes the fairest showe, meanes most deceipt.
    But bring they what they will, and what they can,
    What need wee leaue our grounds the lowest?
    And wee are halfe way there: Goe tell their Generall wee
    470attend him heere, to know for what he comes, and whence
    he comes, and what he craues?
    Lord. I goe my Lord.
    Cleon. Welcome is peace, if he on peace consist,
    If warres, wee are vnable to resist.
    475Enter Pericles with attendants.
    Per. Lord Gouernour, for so wee heare you are,
    Let not our Ships and number of our men,
    Be like a beacon fier'de, t'amaze your eyes,
    Wee haue heard your miseries as farre as Tyre,
    480And seene the desolation of your streets,
    Nor come we to adde sorrow to your teares,
    But to relieue them of their heauy loade,
    And these our Ships you happily may thinke,
    Are like the Troian Horse, was stuft within
    485With bloody veines expecting ouerthrow,
    Are stor'd with Corne, to make your needie bread,
    And giue them life, whom hunger-staru'd halfe dead.
    Omnes. The Gods of Greece protect you,
    And wee'le pray for you.
    490Per. Arise I pray you, rise; we do not looke for reuerence,
    But for loue, and harborage for our selfe, our ships, & men.
    Cleon. The which when any shall not gratifie,
    Or pay you with vnthankfulnesse in thought,
    Be it our Wiues, our Children, or our selues,
    495The Curse of heauen and men succeed their euils:
    Till when the which (I hope) shall neare be seene:
    Your Grace is welcome to our Towne and vs.
    Peri. Which welcome wee'le accept, feast here awhile,
    Vntill our Starres that frowne, lend vs a smile. Exeunt.
    500Enter Gower.
    Heere haue you seene a mightie King,
    His child I'wis to incest bring:
    A better Prince, and benigne Lord,
    That Will proue awfull both in deed and word:
    505Be quiet then, as men should bee,
    Till he hath past necessitie:
    I'le shew you those in troubles raigne;
    Loosing a Mite, a Mountaine gaine:
    The good in conuersation,
    510To whom I giue my benizon:
    Is still at Tharstill, where each man,
    Thinkes all is writ, he spoken can:
    And to remember what he does,
    Build his Statue to make him glorious:
    515But tidinges to the contrarie,
    Are brought your eyes, what need speake I.
    Dombe shew.
    Enter at one dore Pericles talking with Cleon, all the traine
    with them: Enter at an other dore, a Gentleman with a
    520Letter to Pericles, Pericles shewes the Letter to Cleon;
    Pericles giues the Messenger a reward, and Knights him:
    Exit Pericles at one dore, and Cleon at an other.
    Good Helicon that stayde at home,
    Not to eate Hony like a Drone,
    525From others labours; for though he striue
    To killen bad, keepe good aliue:
    And to fulfill his prince desire,
    Sau'd one of all that haps in Tyre:
    How Thaliart came full bent with sinne,
    530And had intent to murder him;
    And that in Tharsis was not best,
    Longer for him to make his rest:
    He doing so, put foorth to Seas;
    Where when men been, there's seldome ease,
    535For now the Wind begins to blow,
    Thunder aboue, and deepes below,
    Makes such vnquiet, that the Shippe,
    Should house him safe; is wrackt and split,
    And he (good Prince) hauing all lost,
    540By Waues, from coast to coast is tost:
    All perishen of man, of pelfe,
    Ne ought escapend but himselfe;
    Till Fortune tir'd with doing bad,
    Threw him a shore, to giue him glad:
    545And heere he comes: what shall be next,
    Pardon old Gower, this long's the text.
    Enter Pericles wette.
    Peri. Yet cease your ire you angry Starres of heauen,
    Wind, Raine, and Thunder, remember earthly man
    550Is but a substaunce that must yeeld to you:
    And I (as fits my nature) do obey you.
    Alasse, the Seas hath cast me on the Rocks,
    Washt me from shore to shore, and left my breath
    Nothing to thinke on, but ensuing death:
    555Let it suffize the greatnesse of your powers,
    To haue bereft a Prince of all his fortunes;
    And hauing throwne him from your watry graue,
    Heere to haue death in peace, is all hee'le craue.
    Enter three Fisher-men.
    5601. What, to pelch?
    2. Ha, come and bring away the Nets.
    1. What Patch-breech, I say.
    3. What say you Maister?
    1. Looke how thou stirr'st now:
    565Come away, or Ile fetch'th with a wanion.
    3. Fayth Maister, I am thinking of the poore men,
    That were cast away before vs euen now.
    1. Alasse poore soules, it grieued my heart to heare,
    What pittifull cryes they made to vs, to helpe them,
    570When (welladay) we could scarce helpe our selues.
    3. Nay Maister, sayd not I as much,
    When I saw the Porpas how he bounst and tumbled?
    They say they're halfe fish, halfe flesh:
    A plague on them, they nere come but I looke to be washt.
    575Maister, I maruell how the Fishes liue in the Sea?
    1. Why, as Men doe a-land;
    The great ones eate vp the little ones:
    I can compare our rich Misers to nothing so fitly,
    As to a Whale; a playes and tumbles,
    580Dryuing the poore Fry before him,
    And at last, deuowre them all at a mouthfull:
    Such Whales haue I heard on, a'th land,
    Who neuer leaue gaping, till they swallow'd
    The whole Parish, Church, Steeple, Belles and all.
    585Peri. A prettie morall.
    3. But Maister, if I had been the Sexton,
    I would haue been that day in the belfrie.
    2. Why, Man?
    1. Because he should haue swallowed mee too,
    590And when I had been in his belly,
    I would haue kept such a iangling of the Belles,
    That he should neuer haue left,
    Till he cast Belles, Steeple, Church and Parish vp againe:
    But if the good King Simonides were of my minde.
    595Per. Simonides?
    3. We would purge the land of these Drones,
    That robbe the Bee of her Hony.
    Per.How from the fenny subiect of the Sea,
    These Fishers tell the infirmities of men,
    600And from their watry empire recollect,
    All that may men approue, or men detect.
    Peace be at your labour, honest Fisher-men.
    2. Honest good fellow what's that, if it be a day fits you
    Search out of the Kalender, and no body looke after it?
    605Peri. May see the Sea hath cast vpon your coast:
    2. What a drunken Knaue was the Sea,
    To cast thee in our way?
    Per. A man whom both the Waters and the Winde,
    In that vast Tennis-court, hath made the Ball
    610For them to play vpon, intreates you pittie him:
    Hee askes of you, that neuer vs'd to begge.
    1. No friend, cannot you begge?
    Heer's them in our countrey of Greece,
    Gets more with begging, then we can doe with working.
    6152. Canst thou catch any Fishes then?
    Peri. I neuer practizde it.
    2. Nay then thou wilt starue sure: for heer's nothing to
    be got now-adayes, vnlesse thou canst fish for't.
    Per. What I haue been, I haue forgot to know;
    620But what I am, want teaches me to thinke on:
    A man throng'd vp with cold, my Veines are chill,
    And haue no more of life then may suffize,
    To giue my tongue that heat to aske your helpe:
    Which if you shall refuse, when I am dead,
    625For that I am a man, pray you see me buried.
    1. Die, ke-tha; now Gods forbid't, and I haue a Gowne
    heere, come put it on, keepe thee warme: now afore mee a
    handsome fellow : Come, thou shalt goe home, and wee'le
    haue Flesh for all day, Fish for fasting-dayes and more; or
    630Puddinges and Flap-iackes, and thou shalt be welcome.
    Per. I thanke you sir.
    2. Harke you my friend: You sayd you could not beg?
    Per. I did but craue.
    2. But craue?
    635Then Ile turne Crauer too, and so I shall scape whipping.
    Per. Why, are you Beggers whipt then?
    2. Oh not all, my friend, not all: for if all your Beggers
    were whipt, I would wish no better office, then to be Beadle:
    But Maister, Ile goe draw vp the Net.
    640Per. How well this honest mirth becomes their labour?
    1. Harke you sir; doe you know where yee are?
    Per. Not well.
    1. Why Ile tell you, this I cald Pantapoles,
    And our King, the good Symonides.
    645Per. The good Symonides, doe you call him?
    1. I sir, and he deserues so to be cal'd,
    For his peaceable raigne, and good gouernement.
    Per. He is a happy King, since he gaines from
    His subiects the name of good, by his gouernment.
    650How farre is his Court distant from this shore?
    1. Mary sir, halfe a dayes iourney: And Ile tell you,
    He hath a faire Daughter, and to morrow is her birth-day,
    And there are Princes and Knights come from all partes of
    the World, to Iust and Turney for her loue.
    655Per. Were my fortunes equall to my desires,
    I could wish to make one there.
    1. O sir, things must be as they may: and what a man can
    not get, he may lawfully deale for his Wiues soule.
    Enter the two Fisher-men, drawing vp a Net.
    6602. Helpe Maister helpe; heere's a Fish hanges in the Net,
    Like a poore mans right in the law: t'will hardly come out.
    Ha bots on't, tis come at last; & tis turnd to a rusty Armour.
    Per. An Armour friends; I pray you let me see it?
    Thankes Fortune, yet that after all crosses,
    665Thou giuest me somewhat to repaire my selfe:
    And though it was mine owne part of my heritage,
    Which my dead Father did bequeath to me,
    With this strict charge euen as he left his life,
    Keepe it my Perycles, it hath been a Shield
    670Twixt me and death, and poynted to this brayse,
    For that it saued me, keepe it in like necessitie:
    The which the Gods protect thee, Fame may defend thee:
    It kept where I kept, I so dearely lou'd it,
    Till the rough Seas, that spares not any man,
    675Tooke it in rage, though calm'd, haue giuen't againe:
    I thanke thee for't, my shipwracke now's no ill,
    Since I haue heere my Father gaue in his Will.
    1. What meane you sir?
    Peri. To begge of you (kind friends) this Coate of worth,
    680For it was sometime Target to a King;
    I know it by this marke: he loued me dearely,
    And for his sake, I wish the hauing of it;
    And that you'd guide me to your Soueraignes Court,
    Where with it, I may appeare a Gentleman:
    685And if that euer my low fortune's better,
    Ile pay your bounties; till then, rest your debter.
    1. Why wilt thou turney for the Lady?
    Peri. Ile shew the vertue I haue borne in Armes.
    1. Why do'e take it: and the Gods giue thee good an't.
    6902. I but harke you my friend, t'was wee that made vp
    this Garment through the rough seames of the Waters:
    there are certaine Condolements, certaine Vailes: I hope
    sir, if you thriue, you'le remember from whence you had
    them.
    695Peri. Beleeue't, I will:
    By your furtherance I am cloth'd in Steele,
    And spight of all the rupture of the Sea,
    This Iewell holdes his buylding on my arme:
    Vnto thy value I will mount my selfe
    700Vpon a Courser, whose delight steps,
    Shall make the gazer ioy to see him tread;
    Onely (my friend) I yet am vnprouided of a paire of Bases.
    2. Wee'le sure prouide, thou shalt haue
    My best Gowne to make thee a paire;
    705And Ile bring thee to the Court my selfe.
    Peri. Then Honour be but a Goale to my Will,
    This day Ile rise, or else adde ill to ill.
    Enter Simonydes, with attendaunce, and Thaisa.
    King. Are the Knights ready to begin the Tryumph?
    7101.Lord. They are my Leidge, and stay your comming,
    To present them selues.
    King. Returne them, We are ready, & our daughter heere,
    In honour of whose Birth, these Triumphs are,
    Sits heere like Beauties child, whom Nature gat,
    715For men to see; and seeing, woonder at.
    Thai. It pleaseth you (my royall Father) to expresse
    My Commendations great, whose merit's lesse.
    King. It's fit it should be so, for Princes are
    A modell which Heauen makes like to it selfe:
    720As Iewels loose their glory, if neglected,
    So Princes their Renownes, if not respected:
    T'is now your honour (Daughter) to entertaine
    The labour of each Knight, in his deuice.
    Thai. Which to preserue mine honour, I'le performe.
    725The first Knight passes by.
    King. Who is the first, that doth preferre himselfe?
    Thai. A Knight of Sparta (my renowned father)
    And the deuice he beares vpon his Shield,
    Is a blacke Ethyope reaching at the Sunne:
    730The word: Lux tua vita mihi.
    King. He loues you well, that holdes his life of you.
    The second Knight.
    Who is the second, that presents himselfe?
    Tha. A Prince of Macedon (my royall father)
    735And the deuice he beares vpon his Shield,
    Is an Armed Knight, that's conquered by a Lady:
    The motto thus in Spanish. Pue per doleera kee per forsa.
    3.Knight. Kin. And with the third?
    Thai. The third, of Antioch; and his deuice,
    740A wreath of Chiually: the word: Me Pompey prouexit apex.
    4.Knight.Kin. What is the fourth.
    Thai. A burning Torch that's turned vpside downe;
    The word: Qui me alit me extinguit.
    Kin. Which shewes that Beautie hath his power & will,
    745Which can as well enflame, as it can kill.
    5.Knight.Thai. The fift, an Hand enuironed with Clouds,
    Holding out Gold, that's by the Touch-stone tride:
    The motto thus: Sic spectanda fides.
    6.Knight.Kin. And what's the sixt, and last; the which,
    750The knight himself with such a graceful courtesie deliuered?
    Thai. Hee seemes to be a Stranger: but his Present is
    A withered Branch, that's onely greene at top,
    The motto: In hac spe viuo.
    Kin. A pretty morrall frõ the deiected state wherein he is,
    755He hopes by you, his fortunes yet may flourish.
    1. Lord. He had need meane better, then his outward shew
    Can any way speake in his iust commend:
    For by his rustie outside, he appeares,
    To haue practis'd more the Whipstocke, then the Launce.
    7602.Lord. He well may be a Stranger, for he comes
    To an honour'd tryumph, strangly furnisht.
    3. Lord. And on set purpose let his Armour rust
    Vntill this day, to scowre it in the dust.
    Kin. Opinion's but a foole, that makes vs scan
    765The outward habit, by the inward man.
    But stay, the Knights are comming,
    We will with-draw into the Gallerie.
    Great shoutes, and all cry, the meane Knight.
    Enter the King and Knights from Tilting.
    770King. Knights, to say you're welcome, were superfluous.
    I place vpon the volume of your deedes,
    As in a Title page, your worth in armes,
    Were more then you expect, or more then's fit,
    Since euery worth in shew commends it selfe:
    775Prepare for mirth, for mirth becomes a Feast.
    You are Princes, and my guestes.
    Thai. But you my Knight and guest,
    To whom this Wreath of victorie I giue,
    And crowne you King of this dayes happinesse.
    780Peri. Tis more by Fortune (Lady) then my Merit.
    King. Call it by what you will, the day is your,
    And here (I hope) is none that enuies it:
    In framing an Artist, art hath thus decreed,
    To make some good, but others to exceed,
    785And you are her labourd scholler: come Queene a th'feast,
    For (Daughter) so you are; heere take your place:
    Martiall the rest, as they deserue their grace.
    Knights. We are honour'd much by good Symonides.
    King. Your presence glads our dayes, honour we loue,
    790For who hates honour, hates the Gods aboue.
    Marshal. Sir, yonder is your place.
    Peri. Some other is more fit.
    1.Knight. Contend not sir, for we are Gentlemen,
    Haue neither in our hearts, nor outward eyes,
    795Enuies the great, nor shall the low despise.
    Peri. You are right courtious Knights.
    King. Sit sir, sit.
    By Ioue (I wonder) that is King of thoughts,
    These Cates resist mee, hee not thought vpon.
    800Tha. By Iuno (that is Queene of mariage)
    All Viands that I eate do seeme vnsauery,
    Wishing him my meat: sure hee's a gallant Gentleman.
    Kin. Hee's but a countrie Gentleman: ha's done no more
    Then other Knights haue done, ha's broken a Staffe,
    805Or so; so let it passe.
    Tha. To mee he seemes like Diamond, to Glasse.
    Peri. You Kings to mee, like to my fathers picture,
    Which tels in that glory once he was,
    Had Princes sit like Starres about his Throane,
    810And hee the Sunne for them to reuerence;
    None that beheld him, but like lesser lights,
    Did vaile their Crownes to his supremacie;
    Where now his sonne like a Gloworme in the night,
    The which hath Fire in darknesse, none in light:
    815Whereby I see that Time's the King of men,
    Hee's both their Parent, and he is their Graue,
    And giues them what he will, not what they craue.
    King. What, are you merry, Knights?
    Knights. Who can be other, in this royall presence.
    820King. Heere, with a Cup that's stur'd vnto the brim,
    As do you loue, fill to your Mistris lippes,
    Wee drinke this health to you.
    Knights. We thanke your Grace.
    King. Yet pause awhile, yon Knight doth sit too melan-(choly,
    825As if the entertainement in our Court,
    Had not a shew might counteruaile his worth:
    Note it not you, Thaisa.
    Tha. What is't to me, my father?
    king. O attend my Daughter,
    830Princes in this, should liue like Gods aboue,
    Who freely giue to euery one that come to honour them:
    And Princes not doing so, are like to Gnats,
    Which make a sound, but kild, are wondred at:
    Therefore to make his entraunce more sweet,
    835Heere, say wee drinke this standing boule of wine to him.
    Tha. Alas my Father, it befits not mee,
    Vnto a stranger Knight to be so bold,
    He may my profer take for an offence,
    Since men take womens giftes for impudence.
    840king. How? doe as I bid you, or you'le mooue me else.
    Tha. Now by the Gods, he could not please me better.
    king. And furthermore tell him, we desire to know of him
    Of whence he is, his name, and Parentage?
    Tha. The King my father (sir) has drunke to you.
    845Peri. I thanke him.
    Tha. Wishing it so much blood vnto your life.
    Peri. I thanke both him and you, and pledge him freely.
    Tha. And further, he desires to know of you,
    Of whence you are, your name and parentage?
    850Peri. A Gentleman of Tyre, my name Pericles,
    My education beene in Artes and Armes:
    Who looking for aduentures in the world,
    Was by the rough Seas reft of Ships and men,
    and after shipwracke, driuen vpon this shore.
    855Tha. He thankes your Grace; names himselfe Pericles,
    A Gentleman of Tyre: who onely by misfortune of the seas,
    Bereft of Shippes and Men, cast on this shore.
    king. Now by the Gods, I pitty his misfortune,
    And will awake him from his melancholy.
    860Come Gentlemen, we sit too long on trifles,
    And waste the time which lookes for other reuels;
    Euen in your Armours as you are addrest,
    Will well become a Souldiers daunce:
    I will not haue excuse with saying this,
    865Lowd Musicke is too harsh for Ladyes heads,
    Since they loue men in armes, as well as beds.
    They daunce.
    So, this was well askt, t'was so well perform'd.
    Come sir, heer's a Lady that wants breathing too,
    870And I haue heard, you Knights of Tyre,
    Are excellent in making Ladyes trippe;
    And that their Measures are as excellent.
    Peri. In those that practize them, they are (my Lord.)
    king. Oh that's as much, as you would be denyed
    875Of your faire courtesie: vnclaspe, vnclaspe.
    They daunce.
    Thankes Gentlemen to all, all haue done well;
    But you the best: Pages and lights, to conduct
    These Knights vnto their seuerall Lodgings:
    880Yours sir, we haue giuen order be next our owne.
    Peri. I am at your Graces pleasure.
    Princes, it is too late to talke of Loue.
    And that's the marke I know, you leuell at:
    Therefore each one betake him to his rest,
    885To morrow all for speeding do their best.
    Enter Hellicanus and Escanes.
    Hell. No Escanes, know this of mee,
    Antiochus from incest liued not free:
    For which the most high Gods not minding,
    890Longer to with-hold the vengeance that
    They had in store, due to this heynous
    Capitall offence, euen in the height and pride
    Of all his glory, when he was seated in
    A Chariot of an inestimable value, and his daughter
    895With him; a fire from heauen came and shriueld
    Vp those bodyes euen to lothing, for they so stounke,
    That all those eyes ador'd them, ere their fall,
    Scorne now their hand should giue them buriall.
    Escanes. T'was very strange.
    900Hell. And yet but iustice; for though this King were great,
    His greatnesse was no gard to barre heauens shaft,
    But sinne had his reward.
    Escan. Tis very true.
    Enter two or three Lords.
    9051.Lord. See, not a man in priuate conference,
    Or counsaile, ha's respect with him but hee.
    2.Lord. It shall no longer grieue, without reprofe.
    3.Lord. And curst be he that will not second it.
    1.Lord. Follow me then: Lord Hellicane, a word.
    910Hell. With mee? and welcome happy day ,my Lords.
    1.Lord. Know, that our griefes are risen to the top,
    And now at length they ouer-flow their bankes.
    Hell. Your griefes, for what?
    Wrong not your Prince, you loue.
    9151.Lord. Wrong not your selfe then, noble Hellican,
    But if the Prince do liue, let vs salute him,
    Or know what ground's made happy by his breath:
    If in the world he liue, wee'le seeke him out:
    If in his Graue he rest, wee'le find him there,
    920And be resolued he liues to gouerne vs:
    Or dead, giue's cause to mourne his funerall,
    And leaue vs to our free election.
    2.Lord. Whose death in deed, the strongest in our sensure,
    And knowing this Kingdome is without a head,
    925Like goodly Buyldings left without a Roofe,
    Soone fall to ruine: your noble selfe,
    That best know how to rule, and how to raigne,
    Wee thus submit vnto our Soueraigne.
    Omnes. Liue noble Hellicane.
    930Hell. Try honours cause; forbeare your suffrages:
    If that you loue Prince Pericles, forbeare,
    (Take I your wish, I leape into the seas,
    Where's howerly trouble, for a minuts ease)
    A twelue-month longer, let me intreat you
    935To forbeare the absence of your King;
    If in which time expir'd, he not returne,
    I shall with aged patience beare your yoake:
    But if I cannot winne you to this loue,
    Goe search like nobles, like noble subiects,
    940And in your search, spend your aduenturous worth,
    Whom if you find, and winne vnto returne,
    You shall like Diamonds sit about his Crowne.
    1.Lord. To wisedome, hee's a foole, that will not yeeld:
    And since Lord Hellicane enioyneth vs,
    945We with our trauels will endeauour.
    Hell. Then you loue vs, we you, & wee'le claspe hands:
    When Peeres thus knit, a Kingdome euer stands.
    Enter the King reading of a letter at one doore,
    the Knightes meete him.
    9501.Knight. Good morrow to the good Simonides.
    King. Knights, from my daughter this I let you know,
    That for this twelue-month, shee'le not vndertake
    A maried life: her reason to her selfe is onely knowne,
    Which from her, by no meanes can I get.
    9552.Knight. May we not get accesse to her (my Lord?)
    king. Fayth, by no meanes, she hath so strictly
    Tyed her to her Chamber, that t'is impossible:
    One twelue Moones more shee'le weare Dianas liuerie:
    This by the eye of Cinthya hath she vowed,
    960And on her Virgin honour, will not breake it.
    3.knight. Loth to bid farewell, we take our leaues.
    king. So, they are well dispatcht:
    Now to my daughters Letter; she telles me heere,
    Shee'le wedde the stranger Knight,
    965Or neuer more to view nor day nor light.
    T'is well Mistris, your choyce 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 choyce, and will no longer
    970Haue it be delayed: Soft, heere he comes,
    I must dissemble it.
    Enter Pericles.
    Peri. All fortune to the good Symonides.
    King. To you as much: Sir, I am behoulding to you
    975For your sweete Musicke this last night:
    I do protest, my eares were neuer better fedde
    With such delightfull pleasing harmonie.
    Peri. It is your Graces pleasure to commend,
    Not my desert.
    980king. Sir, you are Musickes maister.
    Peri. The worst of all her schollers (my good Lord.)
    king. Let me aske you one thing:
    What do you thinke of my Daughter, sir?
    Peri. A most vertuous Princesse.
    985king. And she is faire too, is she not?
    Peri. As a faire day in Sommer: woondrous faire.
    king. Sir, my Daughter thinkes very well of you,
    I so well, that you must be her Maister,
    And she will be your Scholler; therefore looke to it.
    990Peri. I am vnworthy for her Scholemaister.
    king. She thinkes not so: peruse this writing else.
    Per. What's here, a letter that she loues the knight of Tyre?
    T'is the Kings subtiltie to haue my life:
    Oh seeke not to intrappe me, gracious Lord,
    995A Stranger, and distressed Gentleman,
    That neuer aymed so hie, to loue your Daughter,
    But bent all offices to honour her.
    king. Thou hast bewitcht my daughter,
    And thou art a villaine.
    1000Peri. By the Gods I haue not; neuer did thought
    Of mine leuie offence; nor neuer did my actions
    Yet commence a deed might gaine her loue,
    Or your displeasure.
    king. Traytor, thou lyest.
    1005Peri. Traytor?
    king. I, traytor.
    Peri. Euen in his throat, vnlesse it be the King,
    That cals me Traytor, I returne the lye.
    king. Now by the Gods, I do applaude his courage.
    1010Peri. My actions are as noble as my thoughts,
    That neuer relisht of a base discent:
    I came vnto your Court for Honours cause,
    And not to be a Rebell to her state:
    And he that otherwise accountes of mee,
    1015This Sword shall prooue, hee's Honours enemie.
    king. No? heere comes my Daughter, she can witnesse it.
    Enter Thaisa.
    Peri. Then as you are as vertuous, as faire,
    Resolue your angry Father, if my tongue
    1020Did ere solicite, or my hand subscribe
    To any sillable that made loue to you?
    Thai. Why sir, say if you had, who takes offence?
    At that, would make me glad?
    King. Yea Mistris, are you so peremptorie?
    1025I am glad on't with all my heart,
    Ile tame you; Ile bring you in subiection. Aside.
    Will you not, hauing my consent,
    Bestow your loue and your affections,
    Vpon a Stranger? who for ought I know,
    1030May be (nor can I thinke the contrary) Aside.
    As great in blood as I my selfe:
    Therefore, heare you Mistris, either frame
    Your will to mine: and you sir, heare you;
    Either be rul'd by mee, or Ile make you,
    1035Man and wife: nay come, your hands,
    And lippes must seale it too: and being ioynd,
    Ile thus your hopes destroy, and for further griefe:
    God giue you ioy; what are you both pleased?
    Tha. Yes, if you loue me sir?
    1040Peri. Euen as my life, my blood that fosters it.
    King. What are you both agreed?
    Ambo. Yes, if't please your Maiestie.
    King. It pleaseth me so well, that I will see you wed,
    And then with what haste you can, get you to bed. Exeunt.
    1045Enter Gower.
    Now sleepe yslacked hath the rout,
    No din but snores about the house,
    Made louder by the orefed breast,
    Of this most pompous maryage Feast:
    1050The Catte with eyne of burning cole,
    Now coutches from the Mouses hole;
    And Cricket sing at the Ouens mouth,
    Are the blyther for their drouth:
    Hymen hath brought the Bride to bed,
    1055Where by the losse of maydenhead,
    A Babe is moulded: be attent,
    And Time that is so briefly spent,
    With your fine fancies quaintly each,
    What's dumbe in shew, I'le plaine with speach.
    1060 Enter Pericles and Symonides at one dore with attendantes,
    a Messenger meetes them, kneeles and giues Pericles a letter,
    Pericles shewes it Symonides, the Lords kneele to him;
    then enter Thaysa with child, with Lichorida a nurse,
    the King shewes her the letter, she reioyces: she and Pericles
    1065take leaue of her father, and depart.
    By many a dearne and painefull pearch
    Of Perycles the carefull search,
    By the fower opposing Crignes,
    Which the world togeather ioynes,
    1070Is made with all due diligence,
    That horse and sayle and hie expence,
    Can steed the quest at last from Tyre:
    Fame answering the most strange enquire,
    To'th Court of King Symonides,
    1075Are Letters brought, the tenour these:
    Antiochus and his daughter dead,
    The men of Tyrus, on the head
    Of Helycanus would set on
    The Crowne of Tyre, but he will none:
    1080The mutanie, hee there hastes t'oppresse,
    Sayes to'em, if King Pericles
    Come not home in twise sixe Moones,
    He obedient to their doomes,
    Will take the Crowne: the summe of this,
    1085Brought hither to Penlapolis,
    Iranyshed the regions round,
    And euery one with claps can sound,
    Our heyre apparant is a King:
    Who dreampt? who thought of such a thing?
    1090Briefe he must hence depart to Tyre,
    His Queene with child, makes her desire,
    Which who shall crosse along to goe,
    Omit we all their dole and woe:
    Lichorida her Nurse she takes,
    1095And so to Sea; their vessell shakes,
    On Neptunes billow, halfe the flood,
    Hath their Keele cut: but fortune mou'd,
    Varies againe, the grisled North
    Disgorges such a tempest forth,
    1100That as a Ducke for life that diues,
    So vp and downe the poore Ship driues:
    The Lady shreekes, and wel-a-neare,
    Do's fall in trauayle with her feare:
    And what ensues in this fell storme,
    1105Shall for it selfe, it selfe performe:
    I nill relate, action may
    Conueniently the rest conuay;
    Which might not? what by me is told,
    In your imagination hold:
    1110This Stage, the Ship, vpon whose Decke
    The seas tost Pericles appeares to speake.
    Enter Pericles a Shipboard.
    Peri. The God of this great Vast, rebuke these surges,
    Which wash both heauen and hell, and thou that hast
    1115Vpon the Windes commaund, bind them in Brasse;
    Hauing call'd them from the deepe, ô still
    Thy deafning dreadfull thunders, gently quench
    Thy nimble sulphirous flashes: ô How Lychorida!
    How does my Queene? then storme venomously,
    1120Wilt thou speat all thy selfe? the sea-mans Whistle
    Is as a whisper in the eares of death,
    Vnheard Lychorida? Lucina, oh!
    Diuinest patrionesse, and my wife gentle
    To those that cry by night, conuey thy deitie
    1125Aboard our dauncing Boat, make swift the pangues
    Of my Queenes trauayles? now Lychorida.
    Enter Lychorida.
    Lychor. Heere is a thing too young for such a place,
    Who if it had conceit, would die, as I am like to doe:
    1130Take in your armes this peece of your dead Queene.
    Peri. How? how Lychorida?
    Lycho. Patience (good sir) do not assist the storme,
    Heer's all that is left liuing of your Queene;
    A litle Daughter: for the sake of it,
    1135Be manly, and take comfort.
    Per. O you Gods!
    Why do you make vs loue your goodly gyfts,
    And snatch them straight away? we heere below,
    Recall not what we giue, and therein may
    1140Vse honour with you.
    Lycho. Patience (good sir) euen for this charge.
    Per. Now mylde may be thy life,
    For a more blusterous birth had neuer Babe:
    Quiet and gentle thy conditions; for
    1145Thou art the rudelyest welcome to this world,
    That euer was Princes Child: happy what followes,
    Thou hast as chiding a natiuitie,
    As Fire, Ayre, Water, Earth, and Heauen can make,
    To harould thee from the wombe:
    1150Euen at the first, thy losse is more then can
    Thy portage quit, with all thou canst find heere:
    Now the good Gods throw their best eyes vpon't.
    Enter two Saylers.
    1.Sayl. What courage sir? God saue you.
    1155Per. Courage enough, I do not feare the flaw,
    It hath done to me the worst: yet for the loue
    Of this poore Infant, this fresh new sea-farer,
    I would it would be quiet.
    1.Sayl. Slake the bolins there; thou wilt not wilt thou:
    1160Blow and split thy selfe.
    2.Sayl. But Sea-roome, and the brine and cloudy billow
    Kisse the Moone, I care not.
    1. Sir your Queene must ouer board, the sea workes hie,
    The Wind is lowd, and will not lie till the Ship
    1165Be cleard of the dead.
    Per. That's your superstition.
    1. Pardon vs, sir; with vs at Sea it hath bin still obserued.
    And we are strong in easterne, therefore briefly yeeld'er,
    Per. As you thinke meet; for she must ouer board straight:
    1170Most wretched Queene.
    Lychor. Heere she lyes sir.
    Peri. A terrible Child-bed hast thou had (my deare,
    No light, no fire, th'vnfriendly elements,
    Forgot thee vtterly, nor haue I time
    1175To giue thee hallowd to thy graue, but straight,
    Must cast thee scarcly Coffind, in oare,
    Where for a monument vpon thy bones,
    The ayre remayning lampes, the belching Whale,
    And humming Water must orewelme thy corpes,
    1180Lying with simple shels: ô Lychorida,
    Bid Nestor bring me Spices, Incke, and Taper,
    My Casket, and my Iewels; and bid Nicander
    Bring me the Sattin Coffin: lay the Babe
    Vpon the Pillow; hie thee whiles I say
    1185A priestly farewell to her: sodainely, woman.
    2. Sir, we haue a Chist beneath the hatches,
    Caulkt and bittumed ready.
    Peri. I thanke thee: Mariner say, what Coast is this?
    2. Wee are neere Tharsus.
    1190Peri. Thither gentle Mariner,
    Alter thy course for Tyre: When canst thou reach it?
    2. By breake of day, if the Wind cease.
    Peri. O make for Tharsus,
    There will I visit Cleon, for the Babe
    1195Cannot hold out to Tyrus; there Ile leaue it
    At carefull nursing: goe thy wayes good Mariner,
    Ile bring the body presently. Exit..
    Enter Lord Cerymon with a seruant.
    Cery. Phylemon, hoe.
    1200Enter Phylemon.
    Phyl.. Doth my Lord call?
    Cery. Get Fire and meat for these poore men,
    T'as been a turbulent and stormie night.
    Seru. I haue been in many; but such a night as this,
    1205Till now, I neare endured:
    Cery. Your Maister will be dead ere you returne,
    There's nothing can be ministred to Nature,
    That can recouer him: giue this to the Pothecary,
    And tell me how it workes.
    1210Enter two Gentlemen.
    1.Gent. Good morrow.
    2.Gent. Good morrow to your Lordship,
    Cery. Gentlemen, why doe you stirre so early?
    1.Gent. Sir, our lodgings standing bleake vpon the sea
    1215Shooke as the earth did quake:
    The very principals did seeme to rend and all to topple:
    Pure surprize and feare, made me to quite the house.
    2.Gent. That is the cause we trouble you so early,
    T'is not our husbandry.
    1220Cery. O you say well.
    1.Gent. But I much maruaile that your Lordship,
    Hauing rich tire about you, should at these early howers,
    Shake off the golden slumber of repose; tis most strange
    Nature should be so conuersant with Paine,
    1225Being thereto not compelled.
    Cery. I hold it euer Vertue and Cunning,
    Were endowments greater, then Noblenesse & Riches;
    Carelesse Heyres, may the two latter darken and expend;
    But Immortalitie attendes the former,
    1230Making a man a god:
    T'is knowne, I euer haue studied Physicke:
    Through which secret Art, by turning ore Authorities,
    I haue togeather with my practize, made famyliar,
    To me and to my ayde, the blest infusions that dwels
    1235In Vegetiues, in Mettals, Stones: and can speake of the
    Disturbances that Nature works, and of her cures;
    which doth giue me a more content in course of true delight
    Then to be thirsty after tottering honour, or
    Tie my pleasure vp in silken Bagges,
    1240To please the Foole and Death.
    2. Gent. Your honour has through Ephesus,
    Poured foorth your charitie, and hundreds call themselues,
    Your Creatures; who by you, haue been restored;
    And not your knowledge, your personall payne,
    1245But euen your Purse still open, hath built Lord Cerimon,
    Such strong renowne, as time shall neuer.
    Enter two or three with a Chist.
    Seru. So, lift there.
    Cer. What's that?
    1250Ser. Sir, euen now did the sea tosse vp vpon our shore
    This Chist; tis of some wracke.
    Cer. Set't downe, let's looke vpon't.
    2.Gent. T'is like a Coffin, sir.
    Cer. What ere it be, t'is woondrous heauie;
    1255Wrench it open straight:
    If the Seas stomacke be orecharg'd with Gold,
    T'is a good constraint of Fortune it belches vpon vs.
    2.Gent. T'is so, my Lord.
    Cer. How close tis caulkt & bottomed, did the sea cast it vp?
    1260Ser. I neuer saw so huge a billow sir, as tost it vpon shore.
    Cer. Wrench it open soft; it smels most sweetly in my sense.
    2.Gent. A delicate Odour.
    Cer. As euer hit my nostrill: so, vp with it.
    Oh you most potent Gods! what's here, a Corse?
    12652.Gent. Most strange.
    Cer. Shrowded in Cloth of state, balmed and entreasured
    with full bagges of Spices, a Pasport to Apollo, perfect mee
    in the Characters:
    Heere I giue to vnderstand,
    1270If ere this Coffin driues aland;
    I King Pericles haue lost
    This Queene, worth all our mundaine cost:
    Who finds her, giue her burying,
    She was the Daughter of a King:
    1275Besides, this Treasure for a fee,
    The Gods requit his charitie.
    If thou liuest Pericles, thou hast a heart,
    That euer cracks for woe, this chaunc'd to night.
    2.Gent. Most likely sir.
    1280Cer. Nay certainely to night, for looke 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,
    Death may vsurpe on Nature many howers, and yet
    The fire of life kindle againe the ore-prest spirits :
    1285I heard of an Egiptian that had 9. howers lien dead,
    Who was by good applyaunce recouered.
    Enter one with Napkins and Fire.
    Well sayd, well sayd; the fire and clothes: the rough and
    Wofull Musick that we haue, cause it to sound beseech you:
    1290The Violl once more; how thou stirr'st thou blocke?
    The Musicke there: I pray you giue her ayre:
    Gentlemen, this Queene will liue,
    Nature awakes a warmth breath out of her;
    She hath not been entranc'st aboue fiue howers:
    1295See how she ginnes to blow into lifes flower againe.
    1.Gent. The Heauens, through you, encrease our wonder,
    And sets vp your fame for euer.
    Cer. She is aliue, behold her ey-lids,
    Cases to those heauenly iewels which Pericles hath lost,
    1300Begin to part their fringes of bright gold,
    The Diamonds of a most praysed water doth appeare,
    To make the world twise rich, liue, and make vs weepe.
    To heare your fate, faire creature, rare as you seeme to bee.
    Shee moues.
    1305Thai. O deare Diana, where am I? where's my Lord?
    What world is this?
    2.Gent. Is not this strange? 1.Gent. Most rare.
    Ceri. Hush (my gentle neighbours) lend me your hands,
    To the next Chamber beare her: get linnen:
    1310Now this matter must be lookt to for her relapse
    Is mortall: come, come; and Escelapius guide vs.
    They carry her away. Exeunt omnes.
    Enter Pericles, Atharsus, with Cleon and Dionisa.
    Per. Most honor'd Cleon, I must needs be gone, my twelue
    1315months are expir'd, and Tyrus standes in a litigious peace:
    You and your Lady take from my heart all thankfulnesse,
    The Gods make vp the rest vpon you.
    Cle. Your shakes of fortune, though they hant you mor-(tally
    Yet glaunce full wondringly on vs.
    1320Di. O your sweet Queene! that the strict fates had pleas'd,
    you had brought her hither to haue blest mine eies with her.
    Per. We cannot but obey the powers aboue vs;
    Could I rage and rore as doth the sea she lies in,
    Yet the end must be as tis: my gentle babe Marina,
    1325Whom, for she was borne at sea, I haue named so,
    Here I charge your charitie withall; leauing her
    The infant of your care, beseeching you to giue her
    Princely training, that she may be manere'd as she is borne.
    Cle. Feare not (my Lord) but thinke your Grace,
    1330That fed my Countrie with your Corne; for which,
    The peoples prayers still fall vpon you, must in your child
    Be thought on, if neglection should therein make me vile,
    The common body by you relieu'd,
    Would force me to my duety: but if to that,
    1335My nature neede a spurre, the Gods reuenge it
    Vpon me and mine, to the end of generation.
    Per. I beleeue you, your honour and your goodnes,
    Teach me too't without your vowes, till she be maried,
    Madame, by bright Diana, whom we honour,
    1340All vnsisterd shall this heyre of mine remayne,
    Though I shew will in't; so I take my leaue:
    Good Madame, make me blessed in your care
    In bringing vp my Child.
    Dion. I haue one my selfe, who shall not be more deere
    1345to my respect then yours, my Lord.
    Peri. Madam, my thanks and prayers.
    Cler. Weel bring your Grace ene to the edge ath shore,
    then giue you vp to the mask'd Neptune, and the gentlest
    winds of heauen.
    1350Peri. I will imbrace your offer, come deerest Madame,
    O no teares Licherida, no teares, looke to your litle Mistris,
    on whose grace you may depend hereafter : come my
    Lord.
    Enter Cerimon, and Tharsa.
    1355Cer. Madam, this Letter, and some certaine Iewels,
    Lay with you in your Coffer, which are at your command:
    Know you the Charecter?
    Thar. It is my Lords, that I was shipt at sea I well remem-
    ber, euen on my learning time, but whether there deliue-
    1360red, by the holie gods I cannot rightly say: but since King
    Pericles my wedded Lord, I nere shall see againe, a vastall
    liuerie will I take me to, and neuer more haue ioy.
    Cler. Madam, if this you purpose as ye speake,
    Dianaes Temple is not distant farre,
    1365Where you may abide till your date expire,
    Moreouer if you please a Neece of mine,
    Shall there attend you.
    Thin. My recompence is thanks, thats all,
    Yet my good will is great, though the gift small. Exit.
    1370Enter Gower.
    Imagine Pericles arriude at Tyre,
    Welcomd and setled to his owne desire:
    His wofull Queene we leaue at Ephesus,
    Vnto Diana ther's a Votarisse.
    1375Now to Marina bend your mind,
    Whom our fast growing scene must finde
    At Tharsus, and by Cleon traind
    In Musicks letters, who hath gaind
    Of education all the grace,
    1380Which makes hie both the art and place
    Of generall wonder: but alacke
    That monster Enuie oft the wracke
    Of earned praise, Marinas life
    Seeke to take off by treasons knife,
    1385And in this kinde, our Cleon hath
    One daughter and a full growne wench,
    Euen right for marriage sight : this Maid
    Hight Philoten: and it is said
    For certaine in our storie, shee
    1390Would euer with Marina bee.
    Beet when they weaude the sleded silke,
    With fingers long, small, white as milke,
    Or when she would with sharpe needle wound,
    The Cambricke which she made more sound
    1395By hurting it or when too'th Lute
    She sung, and made the night bed mute,
    That still records with mone, or when
    She would with rich and constant pen,
    Vaile to her Mistresse Dian still,
    1400This Phyloten contends in skill
    With absolute Marina: so
    The Doue of Paphos might with the crow
    Vie feathers white, Marina gets
    All prayses, which are paid as debts,
    1405And not as giuen, this so darkes
    In Phyloten all gracefull markes,
    That Cleons wife with Enuie rare,
    A present murderer does prepare
    For good Marina, that her daughter
    1410Might stand peerlesse by this slaughter.
    The sooner her vile thoughts to stead,
    Lichorida our nurse is dead,
    And cursed Dioniza hath
    The pregnant instrument of wrath.
    1415Prest for this blow, the vnborne euent,
    I doe commend to your content,
    Onely I carried winged Time,
    Post one the lame feete of my rime,
    Which neuer could I so conuey,
    1420Vnlesse your thoughts went on my way,
    Dioniza does appeare,
    With Leonine a murtherer. Exit.
    Enter Dioniza, with Leonine.
    Dion. Thy oath remember, thou hast sworne to doo't,
    1425tis but a blowe which neuer shall bee knowne , thou
    canst not doe a thing in the worlde so soone to yeelde
    thee so much profite: let not conscience which is but
    cold, in flaming, thy loue bosome, enflame too nicelie,
    nor let pittie which euen women haue cast off, melt thee,
    1430but be a souldier to thy purpose.
    Leon. I will doo't, but yet she is a goodly creature.
    Dion. The fitter then the Gods should haue her.
    Here she comes weeping for her onely Mistresse death,
    Thou art resolude.
    1435Leon. I am resolude.
    Enter Marina with a Basket of flowers.
    Mari. No: I will rob Tellus of her weede to strowe
    thy greene with Flowers, the yellowes, blewes, the purple
    Violets, and Marigolds, shall as a Carpet hang vpon thy
    1440graue, while Sommer dayes doth last: Aye me poore maid,
    borne in a tempest, when my mother dide, this world to me
    is a lasting storme, whirring me from my friends.
    Dion. How now Marina, why doe yow keep alone?
    How chaunce my daughter is not with you?
    1445Doe not consume your bloud with sorrowing,
    Haue you a nurse of me? Lord how your fauours
    Changd with this vnprofitable woe:
    Come giue me your flowers, ere the sea marre it,
    Walke with Leonine, the ayre is quicke there,
    1450And it perces and sharpens the stomacke,
    Come Leonine take her by the arme, walke with her.
    Mari. No I pray you, Ile not bereaue you of your seruañt .
    Dion. Come, come, I loue the king your father, and your
    selfe, with more then forraine heart, wee euery day expect
    1455him 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 haue taken no care to your best
    courses, go I pray you, walke and be chearfull once againe,
    1460reserue that excellent complexion, which did steale the
    eyes of yong and old. Care not for me, I can goe home a-
    lone.
    Mari. Well, I will goe, but yet I haue no desire too it.
    Dion. Come, come, I know tis good for you, walke halfe
    1465an houre Leonine, at the least, remember what I haue sed.
    Leon. I warrant you Madam.
    Dion. Ile leaue you my sweete Ladie, for a while, pray
    walke softly, doe not heate your bloud, what, I must haue
    care of you.
    1470Mari. My thanks sweete Madame, Is this wind Westerlie
    that blowes?
    Leon. Southwest.
    Mari.When I was borne the wind was North.
    LeonWast so?
    1475Mari. My father, as nurse ses, did neuer feare, but cryed
    good sea-men to the Saylers, galling his kingly hands ha-
    ling ropes, and clasping to the Mast, endured a sea that al-
    most burst the decke.
    Leon. When was this?
    1480Mari. When I was borne, neuer was waues nor winde
    more violent, and from the ladder tackle, washes off a can-
    uas clymer, ha ses one, wolt out? and with a dropping in-
    dustrie they skip from sterne to sterne , the Boatswaine
    whistles, and the Maister calles and trebles their confusion.
    1485Leon. Come say your prayers.
    Mari. What meane you?
    Leon. If you require a little space for praier, I graunt it,
    pray, but bee not tedious, for the Gods are quicke of eare,
    and I am sworne to do my worke with haste.
    1490Mari. Why will you kill me?
    Leon. To satisfie my Ladie.
    Mari. Why would shee haue mee kild now? as I can re-
    member by my troth, I neuer did her hurt in all my life, I
    neuer spake bad worde, nor did ill turne to anie liuing crea-
    1495ture: Beleeue me law, I neuer killd a Mouse, nor hurt a Fly:
    I trode vpon a worme against my will, but I wept fort. How
    haue I offended, wherein my death might yeeld her anie
    profit, or my life imply her any danger?
    Leon. My Commission is not to reason of the deed, but
    1500doo't.
    Mari. You will not doo't for all the world I hope: you
    are well fauoured, and your lookes foreshew you haue a
    gentle heart, I saw you latelie when you caught hurt in par-
    ting two that fought: good sooth it shewde well in you, do
    1505so now, your Ladie seekes my life Come, you betweene, and
    saue poore mee the weaker.
    Leon. I am sworne and will dispatch. Enter Pirats.
    Pirat.1. Hold villaine.
    Pira.2. A prize, a prize.
    1510Pirat.3. Halfe part mates, halfe part. Come lets haue
    her aboord sodainly.
    Exit.
    Enter Leonine.
    Leon. These rogueing theeues serue the great Pyrato
    1515Valdes, and they haue seizd Marina, let her goe, ther's no
    hope shee will returne, Ile sweare shees dead, and throwne
    into the Sea, but ile see further: perhappes they will but
    please themselues vpon her, not carrie her aboord, if shee
    remaine
    1520Whome they haue rauisht, must by mee be slaine.
    Exit.
    Enter the three Bawdes.
    Pander.Boult.
    Boult. Sir.
    1525Pander. Searche the market narrowely, Mettelyne is
    full of gallants, wee lost too much much money this mart
    by beeing too wenchlesse.
    Bawd. Wee were neuer so much out of Creatures, we
    haue but poore three, and they can doe no more then they
    1530can doe, and they with continuall action, are euen as good
    as rotten.
    Pander. Therefore lets haue fresh ones what ere wee pay
    for them, if there bee not a conscience to be vsde in euerie
    trade, wee shall neuer prosper.
    1535Bawd. Thou sayst true, tis not our bringing vp of poore
    bastards, as I thinke, I haue brought vp some eleuen.
    Boult. I to eleuen, and brought them downe againe,
    but shall I searche the market?
    Bawde. What else man? the stuffe we haue, a strong
    1540winde will blowe it to peeces, they are so pittifully sodden.
    Pandor. Thou sayest true, ther's two vnwholesome a
    conscience, the poore Transiluanian is dead that laye with
    the little baggadge.
    Boult. I, shee quickly poupt him, she made him roast-
    1545meate for wormes, but Ile goe searche the market.
    Exit.
    Pand. Three or foure thousande Checkins were as
    prettie a proportion to liue quietly, and so giue ouer.
    Bawd. Why, to giue ouer I pray you? Is it a shame to
    1550get when wee are olde?
    Pand. Oh our credite comes not in like the commo-
    ditie, nor the commoditie wages not with the daunger:
    therefore if in our youthes we could picke vp some prettie
    estate, t'were not amisse to keepe our doore hatch't, besides
    1555the sore tearmes we stand vpon with the gods, wilbe strong
    with vs for giuing ore.
    Bawd. Come other sorts offend as well as wee.
    Pand. As well as wee. I, and better too, wee offende
    worse, neither is our profession any trade, It's no calling,
    1560but heere comes Boult.
    Enter Boult with the Pirates and Marina.
    Boult. Come your wayes my maisters, you say shee's a
    virgin.
    Sayler. O Sir, wee doubt it not.
    1565Boult. Master, I haue gone through for this peece you
    see, if you like her so, if not I haue lost my earnest.
    Bawd. Boult, has shee anie qualities?
    Boult. Shee has a good face, speakes well, and has ex-
    cellent good cloathes: theres no farther necessitie of qua-
    1570lities can make her be refuz'd.
    Bawd, What's her price Boult?
    Boult. I cannot be bated one doit of a thousand peeces.
    Pand. Well, follow me my maisters, you shall haue your
    money presenly, wife take her in, instruct her what she has
    1575to doe, that she may not be rawe in her entertainment.
    Bawd. Boult, take you the markes of her, the colour of
    her haire, complexion, height, her age, with warrant of her
    virginitie, and crie; He that wil giue most shal haue her first,
    such a maydenhead were no cheape thing, if men were as
    1580they haue beene: get this done as I command you.
    Boult. Performance shall follow. Exit.
    Mar. Alacke that Leonine was so slacke, so slow, he should
    haue strooke, not spoke, or that these Pirates, not enough
    barbarous, had not oreboord throwne me, for to seeke my
    1585mother.
    Bawd. Why lament you prettie one?
    Mar. That I am prettie.
    Bawd. Come, the Gods haue done their part in you.
    Mar. I accuse them not.
    1590Bawd. You are light into my hands, where you are like
    to liue.
    Mar. The more my fault, to scape his handes, where I
    was to die.
    Bawd. I, and you shall liue in peasure.
    1595Mar. No.
    Bawd. Yes indeed shall you, and taste Gentlemen of all
    fashions, you shall fare well, you shall haue the difference of
    all complexions, what doe you stop your eares?
    Mar. Are you a woman?
    1600Bawd. What would you haue mee be, and I bee not a
    woman?
    Mar. An honest woman, or not a woman.
    Bawd. Marie whip the Gosseling, I thinke I shall haue
    something to doe with you, come you'r a young foolish
    1605sapling, and must be bowed as I would haue you.
    Mar. The Gods defend me.
    Baud. If it please the Gods to defend you by men, then
    men must comfort you, men must feed you, men stir you
    vp: Boults returnd. Now sir, hast thou cride her through
    1610the Market?
    Boult. I haue cryde her almost to the number of her
    haires, I haue drawne her picture with my voice.
    Baud. And I prethee tell me, how dost thou find the in-
    clination of the people, especially of the yonger sort?
    1615Boult. Faith they listened to mee, as they would haue
    harkened to their fathers testament, there was a Spaniards
    mouth watred, and he went to bed to her verie description.
    Baud. We shall haue him here to morrow with his best
    ruffe on.
    1620Boult. To night, to night, but Mistresse doe you knowe
    the French knight, that cowres ethe hams?
    Baud. Who, Mounsieur Verollus?
    Boult. I, he, he offered to cut a caper at the proclama-
    tion, but he made a groane at it, and swore he would see her
    1625to morrow.
    Baud. Well, well, as for him, hee brought his disease hi-
    ther, here he does but repaire it, I knowe hee will come in
    our shadow, to scatter his crownes in the Sunne.
    Boult. Well, if we had of euerie Nation a traueller, wee
    1630should lodge them with this signe.
    Baud. Pray you come hither a while, you haue
    Fortunes comming vppon you, marke mee, you must
    seeme to doe that fearefully, which you commit willing-
    ly, despise profite, where you haue most gaine, to weepe
    1635that you liue as yee doe, makes pittie in your Louers sel-
    dome, but that pittie begets you a good opinion, and that
    opinion a meere profite.
    Mari. I vnderstand you not.
    Boult. O take her home Mistresse, take her home, these
    1640blushes of hers must bee quencht with some present
    practise.
    Mari. Thou sayest true yfaith, so they must, for your
    Bride goes to that with shame, which is her way to goe with
    warrant.
    1645Boult. Faith some doe, and some doe not, but Mistresse
    if I haue bargaind for the ioynt.
    Baud. Thou maist cut a morsell off the spit.
    Boult. I may so.
    Baud. Who should denie it?
    1650Come young one, I like the manner of your garments
    well.
    Boult. I by my faith, they shall not be changd yet.
    Baud. Boult, spend thou that in the towne: report what
    a soiourner we haue , youle loose nothing by custome.
    1655When Nature framde this peece, shee meant thee a good
    turne, therefore say what a parragon she is, and thou hast
    the haruest out of thine owne report.
    Boult. I warrant you Mistresse, thunder shall not so a-
    wake the beds of Eeles, as my giuing out her beautie stirs
    1660vp the lewdly enclined, Ile bring home some to night.
    Baud. Come your wayes, follow me.
    Mari. If fires be hote, kniues sharpe, or waters deepe,
    Vntide I still my virgin knot will keepe.
    Diana ayde my purpose.
    1665Baud. What haue we to doe with Diana, pray you will
    you goe with vs?
    Exit.
    Enter Cleon, and Dioniza.
    Dion. Why ere you foolish, can it be vndone?
    1670Cleon. O Dioniza, such a peece of slaughter,
    The Sunne and Moone nere lookt vpon.
    Dion. I thinke youle turne a chidle agen.
    Cleon. Were I chiefe Lord of all this spacious world, Ide
    giue it to vndo the deede. O Ladie much lesse in bloud then
    1675vertue, yet a Princes to equall any single Crowne ath earth-
    ith Iustice of compare, O villaine, Leonine whom thou hast
    poisned too , if thou hadst drunke to him tad beene a
    kindnesse becomming well thy face, what canst thou say
    when noble Pericles shall demaund his child?
    1680Dion. That shee is dead. Nurses are not the fates to fo-
    ster it, not euer to preserue, she dide at night, Ile say so, who
    can crosse it vnlesse you play the impious Innocent, and
    for an honest attribute , crie out shee dyde by foule
    play.
    1685Cle. O goe too, well, well, of all the faults beneath the
    heauens, the Gods doe like this worst.
    Dion. Be one of those that thinkes the pettie wrens of
    Tharsus will flie hence, and open this to Pericles, I do shame
    to thinke of what a noble straine you are, and of how co-
    1690ward a spirit.
    Cle. To such proceeding who euer but his approba-
    tion added, though not his prince consent, he did not flow
    from honourable courses.
    Dion. Be it so then, yet none does knowe but you
    1695how shee came dead, nor none can knowe Leonine being
    gone. Shee did disdaine my childe, and stoode betweene
    her and her fortunes : none woulde looke on her, but
    cast their gazes on Marianas face, whilest ours was blur-
    ted at, and helde a Mawkin not worth the time of day.
    1700It pierst me thorow, and though you call my course vn-
    naturall, you not your childe well louing, yet I finde it
    greets mee as an enterprize of kindnesse performd to your
    sole daughter.
    Cle. Heauens forgiue it.
    1705Dion. And as for Pericles, what should hee say, we wept
    after her hearse, & yet we mourne, her monument is almost
    finished, & her epitaphs in glittring goldeñ characters expres
    a generrall prayse to her, and care in vs at whose expence
    tis done.
    1710Cle. Thou art like the Harpie,
    Which to betray, doest with thine Angells face ceaze with
    thine Eagles talents.
    Dion. Yere like one that supersticiously,
    Doe sweare too'th Gods, that Winter kills
    1715The Fliies, but yet I know, youle
    doe as I aduise.
    Gower. Thus time we waste, & long leagues make short,
    Saile seas in Cockles, haue and wish but fort,
    Making to take our imagination,
    1720From bourne to bourne, region to region,
    By you being pardoned we commit no crime,
    To vse one language, in each seuerall clime,
    Where our sceanes seemes to liue,
    I doe beseech you
    1725To learne of me who stand with gappes
    To teach you.
    The stages of our storie Pericles
    Is now againe thwarting thy wayward seas,
    Attended on by many a Lord and Knight,
    1730To see his daughter all his liues delight.
    Old Helicanus goes along behind,
    Is left to gouerne it, you beare in mind.
    Old Escenes, whom Hellicanus late
    Aduancde in time to great and hie estate.
    1735Well sayling ships, and bounteous winds
    Haue brought
    This king to Tharsus, thinke this Pilat thought
    So with his sterage, shall your thoughts grone
    To fetch his daughter home, who first is gone
    1740Like moats and shadowes, see them
    Moue a while,
    Your eares vnto your eyes Ile reconcile.
    Enter Pericles at one doore, with all his trayne, Cleon and Dio-
    niza at the other. Cleon shewes Pericles the tombe, whereat Pe-
    1745ricles makes lamentation, puts on sacke-cloth, and in a mighty
    passion departs.
    Gowr. See how beleefe may suffer by fowle showe,
    This borrowed passion stands for true olde woe:
    And Pericles in sorrowe all deuour'd,
    1750With sighes shot through, and biggest teares ore-showr'd.
    Leaues Tharsus, and againe imbarques, hee sweares
    Neuer to wash his face, nor cut his hayres:
    Hee put on sack-cloth, and to Sea he beares,
    A Tempest which his mortall vessell teares.
    1755And yet hee rydes it out, Nowe please you wit:
    The Epitaph is for Marina writ, by wicked Dioniza.
    The fairest, sweetest and best lyes heere,
    Who withered in her spring of yeare:
    She was of Tyrus the Kings daughter,
    1760On whom fowle death hath made this slaughter.
    Marina was shee call'd, and at her byrth,
    Thetis being prowd, swallowed some part ath'earth:
    Therefore the earth fearing to be ore-flowed,
    Hath Thetis byrth-childe on the heauens bestowed.
    1765Wherefore she does and sweares sheele neuer stint,
    Make raging Battery vpon shores of flint.
    No vizor does become blacke villanie,
    So well as soft and tender flatterie:
    Let Pericles beleeue his daughter's dead,
    1770And beare his courses to be ordered;
    By Lady Fortune, while our Steare must play,
    His daughters woe and heauie welladay.
    In her vnholie seruice: Patience then,
    And thinke you now are all in Mittelin.
    1775 Exit.
    Enter two Gentlemen.
    1.Gent. Did you euer heare the like?
    2.Gent. No, nor neuer shall doe in such a place as this,
    shee beeing once gone.
    17801. But to haue diuinitie preach't there , did you euer
    dreame of such a thing?
    2. No, no, come, I am for no more bawdie houses, shall's
    goe heare the Vestalls sing?
    1. Ile doe any thing now that is vertuous, but I am out
    1785of the road of rutting for euer. Exit.
    Enter Bawdes 3.
    Pand. Well, I had rather then twice the worth of her
    shee had nere come heere.
    Bawd. Fye, fye, vpon her, shee's able to freze the god
    1790Priapus, and vndoe a whole generation, we must either get
    her rauished, or be rid of her, when she should doe for Cly-
    ents her fitment, and doe mee the kindenesse of our pro-
    fession, shee has me her quirks, her reasons, her master rea-
    sons, her prayers, her knees, that shee would make a Puri-
    1795taine of the diuell, if hee should cheapen a kisse of her.
    Boult. Faith I must rauish her, or shee'le disfurnish vs
    of all our Caualereea, and make our swearers priests.
    Pand. Now the poxe vpon her greene sicknes for mee.
    Bawd. Faith ther's no way to be ridde on't but by the
    1800way to the pox. Here comes the Lord Lysimachus disguised.
    Boult. Wee should haue both Lorde and Lowne, if the
    peeuish baggadge would but giue way to customers.
    Enter Lysimachus.
    Lysim. How now, how a douzen of virginities?
    1805Bawd. Now the Gods to blesse your Honour.
    Boult. I am glad to see your Honour in good health.
    Li. You may , so t'is the better for you that your re-
    sorters stand vpon sound legges, how now? wholsome ini-
    quitie haue you, that a man may deale withall , and defie
    1810the Surgion?
    Bawd. Wee haue heere one Sir, if shee would, but
    there neuer came her like in Meteline.
    Li. If shee'd doe the deedes of darknes thou wouldst(say.
    Bawd. Your Honor knows what t'is to say wel enough.
    1815Li. Well, call forth, call forth.
    Boult. For flesh and bloud Sir, white and red, you shall
    see a rose, and she were a rose indeed, if shee had but.
    Li. What prithi?
    Boult. O Sir, I can be modest.
    1820Li. That dignities the renowne of a Bawde, no lesse
    then it giues a good report to a number to be chaste.
    Bawd. Heere comes that which growes to the stalke,
    Neuer pluckt yet I can assure you.
    Is shee not a faire creature?
    1825Ly. Faith shee would serue after a long voyage at Sea,
    Well theres for you, leaue vs.
    Bawd. I beseeche your Honor giue me leaue a word,
    And Ile haue done presently.
    Li. I beseech you doe.
    1830Bawd. First, I would haue you note, this is an Hono-
    rable man.
    Mar. I desire to finde him so, that I may worthilie(note him.
    Bawd. Next hees the Gouernor of this countrey, and
    a man whom I am bound too.
    1835Ma. If he gouerne the countrey you are bound to him
    indeed, but how honorable hee is in that, I knowe not.
    Bawd. Pray you without anie more virginall fencing,
    will you vse him kindly? he will lyne your apron with gold.
    Ma. What hee will doe gratiously, I will thankfully
    1840receiue.
    Li. Ha you done?
    Bawd. My Lord shees not pac'ste yet, you must take
    some paines to worke her to your mannage, come wee will
    leaue his Honor, and her together, goe thy wayes.
    1845Li. Now prittie one, how long haue you beene at this (trade?
    Ma. What trade Sir?
    Li. Why, I cannot name but I shall offend.
    Ma. I cannot be offended with my trade, please you to (name it.
    Li. How long haue you bene of this profession?
    1850Ma. Ere since I can remember.
    Li. Did you goe too't so young, were you a gamester
    at fiue, or at seuen?
    Ma. Earlyer too Sir, if now I bee one.
    Ly. Why? the house you dwell in proclaimes you to
    1855be a Creature of sale.
    Ma. Doe you knowe this house to be a place of such
    resort, and will come intoo't? I heare say you're of honou-
    rable parts, and are the Gouernour of this place.
    Li. Why, hath your principall made knowne vnto
    1860you who I am?
    Ma. Who is my principall?
    Li. Why, your hearbe-woman, she that sets seeds and
    rootes of shame and iniquitie.
    O you haue heard something of my power, and so
    1865stand aloft for more serious wooing, but I protest to thee
    prettie one, my authoritie shall not see thee, or else looke
    friendly vpon thee, come bring me to some priuate place:
    Come, come.
    Ma. If you were borne to honour, shew it now, if put
    1870vpon you, make the iudgement good, that thought you
    worthie of it.
    Li. How's this? how's this? some more, be sage.
    Mar. For me that am a maide, though most vngentle
    Fortune haue plac't mee in this Stie , where since I came,
    1875diseases haue beene solde deerer then Phisicke, that the
    gods would set me free from this vnhalowed place, though
    they did chaunge mee to the meanest byrd that flyes i'th
    purer ayre.
    Li. I did not thinke thou couldst haue spoke so well,
    1880nere dremp't thou could'st, had I brought hither a cor-
    rupted minde, thy speeche had altered it, holde, heeres
    golde for thee, perseuer in that cleare way thou goest and
    the gods strengthen thee.
    Ma. The good Gods preserue you.
    1885Li. For me be you thoughten, that I came with no ill
    intent, for to me the very dores and windows sauor vilely,
    fare thee well, thou art a peece of vertue, & I doubt not but
    thy training hath bene noble, hold, heeres more golde for
    thee, a curse vpon him, die he like a theefe that robs thee of
    1890thy goodnes, if thou doest heare from me it shalbe for thy
    good.
    Boult. I beseeche your Honor one peece for me.
    Li. Auaunt thou damned dore-keeper, your house but
    for this virgin that doeth prop it, would sincke and ouer-
    1895whelme you. Away.
    Boult. How's this? wee must take another course with
    you? if your peeuish chastitie, which is not worth a breake-
    fast in the cheapest countrey vnder the coap, shall vndoe a
    whole houshold, let me be gelded like a spaniel, come your(wayes.
    1900Ma. Whither would you haue mee?
    Boult. I must haue your mayden-head taken off, or the
    cõmonhãg-man shal execute it, come your way, weele haue
    no more Gentlemen driuen away, come your wayes I say.
    Enter Bawdes.
    1905Bawd. How now, whats the matter?
    Boult. Worse and worse mistris, shee has heere spoken
    holie words to the Lord Lisimachus.
    Bawd. O abhominable.
    Boult. He makes our profession as it were to stincke a-
    1910fore the face of the gods.
    Bawd. Marie hang her vp for euer.
    Boult. The Noble man would haue dealt with her like
    a Noble man, and shee sent him away as colde as a Snowe-
    ball, saying his prayers too.
    1915Bawd. Boult take her away, vse her at thy pleasure, crack
    the glasse of her virginitie, and make the rest maliable.
    Boult. And if shee were a thornyer peece of ground
    then shee is, shee shall be plowed.
    Ma. Harke, harke you Gods.
    1920Bawd. She coniures, away with her, would she had ne-
    uer come within my doores, Marrie hang you: shees borne
    to vndoe vs, will you not goe the way of wemen-kinde?
    Marry come vp my dish of chastitie with rosemary & baies.
    Boult. Come mistris, come your way with mee.
    1925Ma. Whither wilt thou haue mee?
    Boult. To take from you the Iewell you hold so deere.
    Ma. Prithee tell mee one thing first.
    Boult. Come now your one thing.
    Ma. What canst thou wish thine enemie to be.
    1930Boult. Why, I could wish him to bee my master, or ra-
    ther my mistris.
    Ma. Neither of these are so bad as thou art, since they
    doe better thee in their command, thou hold'st a place for
    which the painedst feende of hell would not in reputation
    1935change: Thou art the damned doore-keeper to euery cu-
    sterell that comes enquiring for his Tib. To the cholerike
    fisting of euery rogue, thy eare is lyable, thy foode is such
    as hath beene belch't on by infected lungs.
    Bo. What wold you haue me do? go to the wars, wold you?
    1940wher a man may serue 7. yeers for the losse of a leg, & haue
    not money enough in the end to buy him a woodden one?
    Ma. Doe any thing but this thou doest, emptie olde re-
    ceptacles, or common-shores of filthe, serue by indenture,
    to the common hang-man, anie of these wayes are yet
    1945better then this: for what thou professest, a Baboone could
    he speak, would owne a name too deere, that the gods wold
    safely deliuer me from this place: here, heers gold for thee,
    if that thy master would gaine by me, proclaime that I can
    sing, weaue, sow, & dance, with other vertues, which Ile keep
    1950from boast, and will vndertake all these to teache. I doubt
    not but this populous Cittie will yeelde manie schollers.
    Boult. But can you teache all this you speake of?
    Ma. Prooue that I cannot, take mee home againe,
    And prostitute mee to the basest groome that doeth fre-
    1955quent your house.
    Boult. Well I will see what I can doe for thee: if I can
    place thee I will.
    Ma. But amongst honest woman.
    Boult. Faith my acquaintance lies little amongst them,
    1960But since my master and mistris hath bought you, theres
    no going but by their consent : therefore I will make them
    acquainted with your purpose , and I doubt not but I shall
    finde them tractable enough. Come, Ile doe for thee what
    I can, come your wayes. Exeunt.
    1965Enter Gower.
    Marina thus the Brothell scapes, and chaunces
    Into an Honest-house our Storie sayes:
    Shee sings like one immortall, and shee daunces
    As Goddesse-like to her admired layes.
    1970Deepe clearks she dumb's, and with her neele compo-(ses,
    Natures owne shape, of budde, bird, branche, or berry.
    That euen her art sisters the naturall Roses
    Her Inckle, Silke Twine, with the rubied Cherrie,
    That puples lackes she none of noble race,
    1975Who powre their bountie on her: and her gaine
    She giues the cursed Bawd, here wee her place,
    And to hir Father turne our thoughts againe,
    Where wee left him on the Sea, wee there him left,
    Where driuen before the windes, hee is arriu'de
    1980Heere where his daughter dwels, and on this coast,
    Suppose him now at Anchor: the Citie striu'de
    God Neptunes Annuall feast to keepe, from whence
    Lysimachus our Tyrian Shippe espies,
    His banners Sable, trim'd with rich expence,
    1985 And to him in his Barge with former hyes,
    In your supposing once more put your sight,
    Of heauy Pericles, thinke this his Barke:
    Where what is done in action, more if might
    Shalbe discouerd, please you sit and harke. Exit.
    1990Enter Helicanus, to him 2. Saylers.
    1.Say. Where is Lord Helicanus? hee can resolue you,
    O here he is Sir, there is a barge put off from Metaline and
    in it is Lysimachus the Gouernour, who craues to come a-
    boord, what is your will?
    1995Helly. That hee haue his, call vp some Gentlemen.
    2.Say. Ho Gentlemen, my Lord calls.
    Enter two or three Gentlemen.
    1.Gent. Doeth your Lordship call?
    Helli. Gentlemen there is some of worth would come
    2000aboord, I pray greet him fairely.
    Enter Lysimachus.
    Hell. Sir, this is the man that can in ought you would
    resolue you.
    Lys. Hayle reuerent Syr, the Gods preserue you.
    2005Hell. And you to out-liue the age I am, and die as I
    would doe.
    Li. You wish mee well, beeing on shore, honoring of
    Neptunes triumphs, seeing this goodly vessell ride before
    vs, I made to it, to knowe of whence you are.
    2010Hell. First what is your place?
    Ly. I am the Gouernour of this place you lie before.
    Hell. Syr our vessell is of Tyre, in it the King, a man,
    who for this three moneths hath not spoken to anie one,
    nor taken sustenance, but to prorogue his griefe.
    2015Li. Vpon what ground is his distemperature?
    Hell Twould be too tedious to repeat, but the mayne
    griefe springs frõ the losse of a beloued daughter & a wife.
    Li. May wee not see him?
    Hell. You may, but bootlesse. Is your sight, see will not
    2020speake to any, yet let me obtaine my wish.
    Lys. Behold him, this was a goodly person.
    Hell. Till the disaster that one mortall wight droue him
    to this.
    Lys. Sir King all haile, the Gods preserue you, haile
    2025royall sir.
    Hell. It is in vaine, he will not speake to you.
    Lord. Sir we haue a maid in Metiliue, I durst wager would
    win some words of him.
    Lys. Tis well bethought, she questionlesse with her sweet
    2030harmonie, and other chosen attractions, would allure and
    make a battrie through his defend parts, which now are
    midway stopt, shee is all happie as the fairest of all, and her
    fellow maides, now vpon the leauie shelter that abutts a-
    gainst the Islands side.
    2035Hell. Sure all effectlesse, yet nothing weele omit that
    beares recoueries name. But since your kindnesse wee haue
    stretcht thus farre, let vs beseech you, that for our golde
    we may prouision haue , wherein we are not destitute for
    want, but wearie for the stalenesse.
    2040Lys. O sir, a curtesie, which if we should denie, the most
    iust God for euery graffe would send a Caterpillar, and so
    inflict our Prouince: yet once more let mee intreate to
    knowe at large the cause of your kings sorrow.
    Holl. Sit sir, I will recount it to you, but see I am pre-
    2045uented.
    Lys. O hee'rs the Ladie that I sent for,
    Welcome faire one, ist not a goodly present?
    Hell. Shee's a gallant Ladie.
    Lys. Shee's such a one, that were I well assurde
    2050Came of a gentle kinde, and noble stocke, I do wish
    No better choise, and thinke me rarely to wed,
    Faire on all goodnesse that consists in beautie,
    Expect euen here, where is a kingly patient,
    If that thy prosperous and artificiall fate,
    2055Can draw him but to answere thee in ought,
    Thy sacred Physicke shall receiue such pay,
    As thy desires can wish.
    Mar. Sir I will vse my vtmost skill in his recouerie, pro-
    uided that none but I and my companion maid be suffered
    2060to come neere him.
    Lys. Come, let vs leaue her, and the Gods make her pro-
    sperous.The Song.
    Lys. Marke he your Musicke?
    Mar. No nor lookt on vs.
    2065Lys. See she will speake to him.
    Mar. Haile sir, my Lord lend eare.
    Per. Hum, ha.
    Mar. I am a maid, my Lorde, that nere before inuited
    eyes, but haue beene gazed on like a Comet:She speaks
    2070my Lord, that may be, hath endured a griefe might equall
    yours, if both were iustly wayde, though wayward fortune
    did maligne my state, my deriuation was from ancestors,
    who stood equiuolent with mightie Kings, but time hath
    rooted out my parentage, and to the world, and augward
    2075casualties, bound me in seruitude, I will desist, but there is
    something glowes vpon my cheek, and whispers in mine
    eare, go not till he speake.
    Per. My fortunes, parentage, good parentage, to equall
    mine, was it not thus, what say you?
    2080Mari. I sed my Lord, if you did know my parentage,
    you would not do me violence.
    Per. I do thinke so, pray you turne your eyes vpon me,
    your like something that, what Countrey women heare of
    these shewes?
    2085Mar. No, nor of any shewes, yet I was mortally brought
    forth, and am no other then I appeare.
    Per. I am great with woe, and shall deliuer weeping: my
    dearest wife was like this maid, and such a one my daugh-
    ter might haue beene: My Queenes square browes, her
    2090stature to an inch , as wandlike-straight, as siluer voyst,
    her eyes as Iewell-like, and caste as richly, in pace an o-
    ther Iuno. Who starues the eares shee feedes, and makes
    them hungrie, the more she giues them speech, Where doe
    you liue?
    2095Mar. Where I am but a straunger from the decke, you
    may discerne the place.
    Per. Where were you bred? and how atchieu'd you these
    indowments which you make more rich to owe?
    Mar. If I should tell my hystorie, it would seeme like
    2100lies disdaind in the reporting.
    Per. Prethee speake, falsnesse cannot come from thee,
    for thou lookest modest as iustice, & thou seemest a Pallas
    for the crownd truth to dwell in, I wil beleeue thee & make
    senses credit thy relation, to points that seeme impossible,
    2105for thou lookest like one I loued indeede: what were thy
    friends? didst thou not stay when I did push thee backe,
    which was when I perceiu'd thee that thou camst from
    good discending. Mar. So indeed I did.
    Per. Report thy parentage, I think thou saidst thou hadst
    2110beene tost from wrong to iniurie, and that thou thoughts
    thy griefs might equall mine, if both were opened.
    Mar. Some such thing I sed, and sed no more, but what
    my thoughts did warrant me was likely.
    Per. Tell thy storie, if thine considered proue the thou-
    2115sand part of my enduraunce, thou art a man, and I haue
    suffered like a girle, yet thou doest looke like patience,
    gazing on Kings graues, and smiling extremitie out of
    act, what were thy friends? howe lost thou thy name,
    my most kinde Virgin? recount I doe beseech thee, Come
    2120sit by mee.
    Mar. My name is Marina.
    Per. Oh I am mockt, and thou by some insenced God
    sent hither to make the world to laugh at me.
    Mar. Patience good sir: or here Ile cease.
    2125Per. Nay Ile be patient: thou little knowst howe thou
    doest startle me to call thy selfe Marina.
    Mar. The name was giuen mee by one that had some
    power, my father, and a King.
    Per. How, a Kings daughter, and cald Marina?
    2130Mar. You sed you would beleeue me, but not to bee a
    troubler of your peace, I will end here.
    Per. But are you flesh and bloud?
    Haue you a working pulse, and are no Fairie?
    Motion well, speake on, where were you borne?
    2135And wherefore calld Marina?
    Mar. Calld Marina, for I was borne at sea.
    Plr. At sea, what mother?
    Mar. My mother was the daughter of a King, who died
    the minute I was borne, as my good Nurse Licherida hath
    2140oft deliuered weeping.
    Per. O stop there a little, this is the rarest dreame
    That ere duld sleepe did mocke sad fooles withall,
    This cannot be my daughter, buried, well, where were you
    bred? Ile heare you more too'th bottome of your storie,
    2145and neuer interrupt you.
    Mar. You scorne, beleeue me twere best I did giue ore.
    Per. I will beleeue you by the syllable of what you shall
    deliuer, yet giue me leaue, how came you in these parts?
    where were you bred?
    2150Mar. The King my father did in Tharsus leaue me,
    Till cruel Cleon with his wicked wife,
    Did seeke to murther me: and hauing wooed a villaine,
    To attempt it, who hauing drawne to doo't,
    A crew of Pirats came and rescued me,
    2155Brought me to Metaline,
    But good sir whither wil you haue me? why doe you weep?
    It may be you thinke mee an imposture, no good fayth: I
    am the dsughter to King Pericles, if good king Pericles be.
    Hell. Hoe, Hellicanus?
    2160Hel. Calls my Lord.
    Per. Thou art a graue and noble Counseller,
    Most wise in generall, tell me if thou canst, what this mayde
    is, or what is like to bee , that thus hath made mee
    weepe.
    2165Hel. I know not, but heres the Regent sir of Metaline,
    speakes nobly of her.
    Lys. She neuer would tell her parentage,
    Being demaunded, that she would sit still and weepe.
    Per. Oh Hellicanus, strike me honored sir, giue mee a
    2170gash, put me to present paine, least this great sea of ioyes ru-
    shing vpon me, ore-beare the shores of my mortalitie, and
    drowne me with their sweetnesse: Oh come hither,
    thou that begetst him that did thee beget,
    Thou that wast borne at sea, buried at Tharsus,
    2175And found at sea agen, O Hellicanus,
    Downe on thy knees, thanke the holie Gods as loud
    As thunder threatens vs, this is Marina.
    What was thy mothers name? tell me, but that
    for truth can neuer be confirm'd inough,
    2180Though doubts did euer sleepe.
    Mar. Frist sir, I pray what is your title?
    Per. I am Pericles of Tyre, but tell mee now my
    Drownd Queenes name, as in the rest you sayd,
    Thou hast beene God-like perfit, the heir of kingdomes,
    2185And an other like to Pericles thy father.
    Ma. Is it no more to be your daughter, then to say, my
    mothers name was Thaisa, Thaisa was my mother, who did
    end the minute I began.
    Pe. Now blessing on thee, rise th'art my child.
    2190Giue me fresh garments, mine owne Hellicanus, shee is not
    dead at Tharsus as shee should haue beene by sauage Cleon,
    she shall tell thee all, when thou shalt kneele, and iustifie in
    knowledge, she is thy verie Princes, who is this?
    Hel. Sir, tis the gouernor of Metaline, who hearing of
    2195your melancholie state, did come to see you.
    Per. I embrace you, giue me my robes.
    I am wilde in my beholding, O heauens blesse my girle,
    But harke what Musicke tell, Hellicanus my Marina,
    Tell him ore point by point, for yet he seemes to doat.
    2200How sure you are my daughter, but what musicke?
    Hel My Lord I heare none.
    Per. None, the Musicke of the Spheres, list my Marina.
    Lys. It is not good to crosse him, giue him way.
    Per. Rarest sounds, do ye not heare?
    2205Lys. Musicke my Lord? I heare.
    Per. Most heauenly Musicke.
    It nips me vnto listning, and thicke slumber
    Hangs vpon mine eyes, let me rest.
    Lys. A Pillow for his head, so leaue him all.
    2210Well my companion friends, if this but answere to my iust
    beliefe, Ile well remember you.
    Diana.
    Dia. My Temple stands in Ephesus,
    Hie thee thither, and doe vppon mine Altar sacrifice,
    2215There when my maiden priests are met together before the
    people all, reueale how thou at sea didst loose thy wife, to
    mourne thy crosses with thy daughters, call, & giue them
    repetition to the like, or performe my bidding, or thou li-
    uest in woe: doo't, and happie, by my siluer bow, awake and
    2220tell thy dreame.
    Per. Celestiall Dian, Goddesse Argentine,
    I will obey thee Hellicanus. Hell. Sir.
    Per. My purpose was for Tharsus, there to strike,
    The inhospitable Cleon, but I am for other seruice first,
    2225Toward Ephesus turne our blowne sayles,
    Eftsoones Ile tell thee why, shall we refresh vs sir vpon your
    shore , and giue you golde for such prouision as our in-
    tents will neede.
    Lys Sir, with all my heart, and when you come a shore,
    2230I haue another sleight.
    Per. You shall preuaile were it to wooe my daughter, for
    it seemes you haue beene noble towards her.
    Lys. Sir, lend me your arme.
    Per. Come my Marina.
    2235Exeunt.
    Gower. Now our sands are almost run,
    More a little, and then dum.
    This my last boone giue mee;
    For such kindnesse must relieue mee:
    2240That you aptly will suppose,
    What pageantry, what feats, what showes,
    What minstrelsie, and prettie din,
    The Regent made in Metalin.
    To greet the King, so he thriued,
    2245That he is promisde to be wiued
    To faire Marina, but in no wise,
    Till he had done his sacrifice.
    As Dian bad, whereto being bound,
    The Interim pray, you all confound.
    2250In fetherd briefenes sayles are fild,
    And wishes fall out as they'r wild,
    At Ephesus the Temple see,
    Our King and all his companie.
    That he can hither come so soone,
    2255Is by your fancies thankfull doome.
    Per. Haile Dian, to performe thy iust commaund,
    I here confesse my selfe the King of Tyre,
    Who frighted from my countrey did wed at Pentapolis, the
    faire Thaisa, at Sea in childbed died she, but brought forth a
    2260Mayd child calld Marina whom, O Goddesse wears yet thy
    siluer liuerey, shee at Tharsus was nurst with Cleon, who at
    fourteene yeares he sought to murder, but her better stars
    brought her to Meteline , gainst whose shore ryding , her
    Fortunes brought the mayde aboord vs, where by her
    2265owne most cleere remembrance , shee made knowne her
    selfe my Daughter.
    Th. Voyce and fauour, you are, you are, O royall
    Pericles.
    Per. What meanes the mum? shee die's, helpe Gen-
    2270tlemen.
    Ceri. Noble Sir, if you haue tolde Dianaes Altar
    true, this is your wife?
    Per. Reuerent appearer no, I threwe her ouer-boord
    with these verie armes.
    2275Ce. Vpon this coast, I warrant you.
    Pe. T'is most certaine.
    Cer. Looke to the Ladie, O shee's but ouer-joyde,
    Earlie in blustering morne this Ladie was throwne vpon
    this shore.
    2280 I op't the coffin, found there rich Iewells, recoue-
    red her, and plac'ste her heere in Dianaes temple.
    Per. May we see them?
    Cer. Great Sir, they shalbe brought you to my house,
    whither I inuite you, looke Thaisa is recouered.
    2285Th. O let me looke if hee be none of mine, my san-
    ctitie will to my sense bende no licentious eare, but curbe
    it spight of seeing: O my Lord are you not Pericles? like
    him you spake, like him you are, did you not name a tem-
    pest, a birth, and death?
    2290Per. The voyce of dead Thaisa.
    Th. That Thaisa am I, supposed dead and drownd.
    Per. I mortall Dian.
    Th. Now I knowe you better, when wee with teares
    parted Pentapolis, the king my father gaue you such a ring.
    2295Per. This, this, no more, you gods, your present kinde-
    nes makes my past miseries sports, you shall doe well that
    on the touching of her lips I may melt, and no more be
    seene, O come, be buried a second time within these armes.
    Me. My heart leaps to be gone into my mothers bo-
    2300some.
    Per. Looke who kneeles here, flesh of thy flesh Thaisa,
    thy burden at the Sea, and call'd Marina, for she was yeel-
    ded there.
    Th. Blest, and mine owne.
    2305Hell. Hayle Madame, and my Queene.
    Th. I knowe you not.
    Hell. You haue heard mee say when I did flie from
    Tyre, I left behind an ancient substitute, can you remem-
    ber what I call'd the man, I haue nam'd him oft.
    2310Th. T'was Hellicanus then.
    Per. Still confirmation, imbrace him deere Thaisa, this
    is hee, now doe I long to heare how you were found ? how
    possiblie preserued? and who to thanke (besides the gods)
    for this great miracle?
    2315Th. Lord Cerimon, my Lord, this man through whom
    the Gods haue showne their power, that can from first to
    last resolue you.
    Per. Reuerent Syr, the gods can haue no mortall officer
    more like a god then you, will you deliuer how this dead
    2320Queene reliues?
    Cer. I will my Lord, beseech you first, goe with mee
    to my house, where shall be showne you all was found with
    her. How shee came plac'ste heere in the Temple, no
    needfull thing omitted.
    2325Per. Pure Dian blesse thee for thy vision, and will offer
    night oblations to thee Thaisa, this Prince, the faire betro-
    thed of your daughter, shall marrie her at Pentapolis, and
    now this ornament makes mee looke dismall, will I clip to
    forme, and what this fourteene yeeres no razer touch't, to
    2330grace thy marridge-day, Ile beautifie.
    Th. Lord Cerimon hath letters of good credit. Sir,
    my father's dead.
    Per. Heauens make a Starre of him, yet there my
    Queene, wee'le celebrate their Nuptialls, and our selues
    2335will in that kingdome spend our following daies, our sonne
    and daughter shall in Tyrus raigne.
    Lord Cerimon wee doe our longing stay,
    To heare the rest vntolde , Sir lead's the way.
    F I N I S.
    2340Gower.
    In Antiochus and his daughter you haue heard
    Of monstrous lust, the due and iust reward:
    In Pericles his Queene and Daughter seene,
    Although assayl'de with Fortune fierce and keene.
    2345 Vertue preferd from fell destructions blast,
    Lead on by heauen, and crown'd with ioy at last.
    In Helycanus may you well descrie,
    A figure of trueth, of faith, of loyaltie:
    In reuerend Cerimon there well appeares,
    2350The worth that learned charitie aye weares.
    For wicked Cleon and his wife, when Fame
    Had spred his cursed deede, the honor'd name
    Of Pericles, to rage the Cittie turne,
    That him and his they in his Pallace burne:
    2355The gods for murder seemde so content,
    To punish, although not done, but meant.
    So on your Patience euermore attending,
    New ioy wayte on you, heere our play has ending.
    FINIS.