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- Edition: Pericles
Pericles, Prince of Tyre (Quarto)
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389Enter Cleon the Gouernour of Tharsus, with
390his wife and others.
392And by relating tales of others griefes,
393See if t'will teach vs to forget our owne?
396Throwes downe one mountaine to cast vp a higher:
399But like to Groues, being topt, they higher rise.
401Who wanteth food, and will not say hee wants it,
402Or can conceale his hunger till hee famish?
404Our woes into the aire, our eyes to weepe.
405Till toungs fetch breath that may proclaime
406Them louder, that if heauen slumber, while
407Their creatures want, they may awake
408Their helpers, to comfort them.
410And wanting breath to speake, helpe mee with teares.
413A Cittie on whom plentie held full hand:
416And strangers nere beheld, but wondred at,
418Like one anothers glasse to trim them by,
420And not so much to feede on as delight,
422The name of helpe grewe odious to repeat.
423Dion. O t'is too true.
426Were all too little to content and please,
427Although thy gaue their creatures in abundance,
432Would now be glad of bread and beg for it,
433Those mothers who to nouzell vp their babes,
434Thought nought too curious, are readie now
435To eat those little darlings whom they lou'de,
436So sharpe are hungers teeth, that man and wife,
438Heere stands a Lord, and there a Ladie weeping:
441 Is not this true?
447Enter a Lord.
448Lord. Wheres the Lord Gouernour?
453Cleon. I thought as much.
454One sorrowe neuer comes but brings an heire,
455That may succcede as his inheritor:
457Taking aduantage of our miserie,
459To beat vs downe, the which are downe alreadie,
460And make a conquest of vnhappie mee,
461Whereas no glories got to ouercome.
464bring vs peace, and come to vs as fauourers , not as foes.
467But bring they what they will, and what they can,
468What need wee leaue our grounds the lowest?
469And wee are halfe way there: Goe tell their Generall wee
470attend him heere, to know for what he comes, and whence
471he comes, and what he craues?
472Lord. I goe my Lord.
475Enter Pericles with attendants.
477Let not our Ships and number of our men,
478Be like a beacon fier'de, t'amaze your eyes,
479Wee haue heard your miseries as farre as Tyre,
481Nor come we to adde sorrow to your teares,
482But to relieue them of their heauy loade,
483And these our Ships you happily may thinke,
485With bloody veines expecting ouerthrow,
486Are stor'd with Corne, to make your needie bread,
487And giue them life, whom hunger-staru'd halfe dead.
489And wee'le pray for you.
493Or pay you with vnthankfulnesse in thought,
494Be it our Wiues, our Children, or our selues,
497Your Grace is welcome to our Towne and vs.