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  1. PROLOGUE. To sing a song that old was sung, From ashes ancient Gower is come; Assuming man's infirmities, To glad your ear, and please your eyes. It hath been sung at festivals, On ember-eves and holy-ales; And lords and ladies in their lives Have read it for restoratives: The purchase is to make men glorious; Et bonum quo antiquius, eo melius ...

  2. Plot Summary. The poet Gower introduces the story and provides a commentary throughout. Antiochus has a riddle which any prince seeking the hand of his daughter has to solve, though the penalty for solving it is death, for the riddle reveals Antiochus’ incest with his daughter. Pericles of Tyre interprets the riddle, but returns home ...

  3. Pericles themes: This play deals with the unpredictable and dangerous journey through life. Appearance versus reality is a major theme of this play. Shakespeare begins to explore it right in the beginning when the beautiful and virtuous-seeming princess of Antioch is revealed as an evil young woman. Virtue versus vice pervades the play.

  4. Pericles, the Prince of Tyre, flees Antioch and goes back to Tyre, because he knows that Antiochus, the King of Antioch, is having an incestuous affair with his daughter. Antiochus is determined to kill him and pursues him. Pericles flees again, first to Tyre and then to Pentopolis. He leaves Tyre in the care of his counsellor, Helicanus.

  5. Pericles has been viewed until recent critical history as a solid member of Shakespeare’s ‘romances’, plays which combined both tragic and comic elements.However, more informed recent discussion of the late plays has acknowledged the danger in attempting at all to apply a set genre to this group of plays.

  6. Jul 31, 2015 · Act 1, 1 Chorus Gower sets the stage for Pericles’ entrance at Antioch by telling of the incest between Antiochus and his daughter, whom Pericles seeks to marry. Act 1, scene 1 Pericles risks his life to win the hand of Antiochus’s daughter, but, in meeting the challenge, he learns of the incest between her and her father.

  7. PERICLES. See where she comes, apparell'd like the spring, Graces her subjects, and her thoughts the king Of every virtue gives renown to men! Her face the book of praises, where is read Nothing but curious pleasures, as from thence Sorrow were ever razed and testy wrath Could never be her mild companion.

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