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II. iii. 110—II. iv. 25

01KG6S5M2MM9NHNH3GY35GHTDA

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# II. iii. 110—II. iv. 25 ## Overview This is a subsection of the play [Pericles Prince of Tyre](arke:01KG6S4DVB01HFXQQT8GDS0AZN), spanning lines II. iii. 110 to II. iv. 25. It is extracted from the text file [pdf-01KG6Q7Q25RHMFT3SJXPV18VFF.txt](arke:01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA). The subsection is part of the [PDF Workflow Main Test 2026-01-30T00:26:53](arke:01KG6NWQ2H2K4PGG7H4ZHYCZ3Y) collection. ## Context The text file [pdf-01KG6Q7Q25RHMFT3SJXPV18VFF.txt](arke:01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA) was assembled from multiple PDF parts and converted to text. The [Pericles Prince of Tyre](arke:01KG6S4DVB01HFXQQT8GDS0AZN) chapter is part of a larger poetry collection. This subsection follows the scene "## Enter two or three Lordss." [01KG6S5KFZCPF9W4E0P2K9EGAX] and precedes the subsection "II. iv. 25—II. v. 1" [01KG6S5M2Q5D18CKDZDNX9WF42]. ## Contents This subsection contains dialogue from Act II, scenes iii and iv of *Pericles, Prince of Tyre*. The scene involves lords discussing the absence of Prince Pericles and their desire for a ruler. Hellicane advises them to wait a year for Pericles' return before choosing a new king. The scene also introduces Simonides, a king, who enters reading a letter as knights meet him.
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2026-01-30T06:26:42.134Z
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gemini-2.5-flash-lite
description_title
II. iii. 110—II. iv. 25
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16340
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2026-01-30T06:24:08.808Z
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structure-extraction-lambda
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16289
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II. iii. 110—II. iv. 25 <!-- [Page 648](arke:01KG6QMY1WGZGNSQKTGKGS4YTA) --> # Pericles Prince of Tyre. Wrong not your Prince, you love. 1. Lord. Wrong not your self, then noble Hellican, But if the Prince do live, let vs salute him, Or know what ground’s made happy by his breath: If in the world he live, wee’le seeke him out: If in his Graue he rest, wee’le find him there, And be resolved he lives to gourne vs: Or dead, giue’s cause to mourn his funeral, And leave vs to our free election. 2. Lord. Whose death in deed, the strongest in our sense, And knowing this Kingdome is without a head, Like goodly Buyldings left without a Roofe, Soone fall to ruine: your noble self, That best know how to rule, and how to raigne, Wee thus submit unto our Soueraigne. **Omnes.** Liue noble Hellicane. **Hell.** 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 minute ease) A twelue-month longer, let me intreat you To forbear the absence of your King; If in which time expired, he not returne, I shall with aged patience bear your yoake: But if I cannot winne you to this loue, Goe search like nobles, like noble subjects, And in your search, spend your adventurous worth, Whom if you find, and winne unto returne, You shall like Diamonds fit about his Crowne. 1. Lord. To wisedome, hee’s a foole, that will not yield: And since Lord Hellicane enioyneth vs, We with our travels will endeavour. **Hell.** Then you loue vs, we you, &amp; wee’le claspe hands: When Peeres thus knit, a Kingdome euer stands, Enter the King reading of a letter at one door, the Knightse meete him. 1. Knight. Good morrow to the good Simonides. D 3.
title
II. iii. 110—II. iv. 25

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