- description
- # IV. iii. 45—IV. iv. 22
## Overview - What this is (type, form, dates, scope)
This is a section extracted from a text file, labeled "IV. iii. 45—IV. iv. 22". It is part of a larger chapter titled "Pericles" and was extracted on January 30, 2026. The section contains text from lines 17399 to 17440 of the source file.
## Context - Background and provenance from related entities
This section is part of the chapter [Pericles](arke:01KG6S4DVCD2PVSZ8Y9W4E8T6A) within the [PDF Workflow Main Test 2026-01-30T00:26:53](arke:01KG6NWQ2H2K4PGG7H4ZHYCZ3Y) collection. The text was extracted from the file [pdf-01KG6Q7Q25RHMFT3SJXPV18VFF.txt](arke:01KG6S2X2EBB305ENM00G16GWA). This section follows [IV. iii. 5—44](arke:01KG6S5N3J08XZG0J9FY8SBGRR) and precedes [IV. iv. 23—IV. v. 1](arke:01KG6S5N3PE7XC7CXMZ3XMBYPB) within the chapter.
## Contents - What it contains, key subjects and details
The section opens with a stage direction, "Enter Pericles at one doore, with all his trayne, Cleon and Dioniza at the other." It describes Pericles' lamentation at a tomb, his departure, and a description of Marina's epitaph. The text includes dialogue and commentary on the events, with references to characters such as Cleon, Dioniza, and Marina.
- description_generated_at
- 2026-01-30T06:26:44.182Z
- description_model
- gemini-2.5-flash-lite
- description_title
- IV. iii. 45—IV. iv. 22
- end_line
- 17440
- extracted_at
- 2026-01-30T06:24:08.808Z
- extracted_by
- structure-extraction-lambda
- start_line
- 17399
- text
- IV. iii. 45—IV. iv. 22
<!-- [Page 672](arke:01KG6QMY3YMV0NFA12712GME1Q) -->
# Pericles Prince of Tyre.
Enter Pericles at one doore, with all his trayne, Cleon and Dioniza at the other. Cleon shewes Pericles the tombe, whereas Pericles makes lamentation, puts on Jacke-cloth, and in a mighty passion departs.
Gour. See how beleefe may suffer by fowle showe,
This borrowed passion stands for true olde woe:
And Pericles in forrowe all deuour'd,
With fighes shot through, and biggest teares ore-showt'd.
Leaucs Tharsus, and againe imbarques, hee sweares:
Neuer to wash his face, nor cut his hayres:
Hee put on Jack-cloth, and to Sea he beares,
A Tempest which his mortall vefsell teares.
And yet hee rydes it out, Nowe please you wit:
The Epitaph is for Marina writ, by wicked Dioniza.
The fairest, sweetest, and best iyes heere,
Who withered in her spring of yeare:
She was of Tyrus the Kings daughter,
On whom fowle death hath made this slaughter.
Marina was shee cal'd, and at her birth,
Thetis being prowd, swallowed some part eth'earth:
Therefore the earth fearing to be ore-flawed,
Hath Thetis byrth-child on the beanens bestowed.
Wherefore she does and sweares sheele neuer stint,
Make a aging Battery upon shores of stint.
No vizor does become blacke villanie,
So well as soft and tender flatterie:
Let Pericles beleeue his daughter's dead,
And beare his courses to be ordered;
By Lady Fortune, while our Steare must play,
His daughters woe and heauie welladay.
In her vnholic service: Patience then,
And thinke you now are all in Mittelin, Exit.
Enter two Gentlemen.
8. Gent. Did you euer heare the like?
G 3
Geyer.
- title
- IV. iii. 45—IV. iv. 22