Gower, an offscene narrator, enters
to tell about the kingdom of Antioch, where king Antiochus and Antiochus's
daughter are engaging in incest. Antiochus has kept suitors from marrying her
by requiring that they answer a riddle correctly or die. Pericles, Prince of
Tyre, tries his hand at the riddle. He is successful, but discovers that its
answer reveals the incestuous relationship between father and daughter.
Pericles doesn't reveal the truth, and Antiochus gives him forty days before
his death sentence. But Pericles is sure Antiochus will want him dead for
knowing the truth, so he flees back to Tyre. Antiochus sends an assassin after
him.
In Tyre, Pericles worries that
Antiochus will take some form of revenge, whether a military attack or an
underhanded assassination attempt. Filled with melancholy, he takes the advice
of Helicanus, his councilor, to travel for a while until Antiochus is no longer
after him. Pericles first goes to Tarsus, where king Cleon and his wife Dionyza
bemoan the famine that has beset their nation. Pericles arrives with corn and
saves them. But soon a letter from Helicanus calls Pericles back to Tyre, so he
sets off.
On the way home Pericles is
shipwrecked in a storm in Pentapolis. Some fishermen tell him about king
Simonides's daughter, a lovely girl who will be married to whoever wins a
jousting contest the following day. Pericles determines to enter the contest.
Though his is the rustiest armor, Pericles wins the tournament, and dines with
Simonides and his daughter Thaisa, both of whom are very impressed with him.
Meanwhile in Tyre, Helicanus reveals
that Antiochus and his daughter have been burnt to death by fire from heaven,
so Pericles can return. Other citizens want to crown Helicanus as king, but
Helicanus insists they wait to see if Pericles returns.
In Pentapolis, Pericles hears of
recent events and determines to go back to Tyre. On board a boat with his wife
and Lychordia, a nurse, they come upon a great storm, during which Thaisa dies
in childbirth. The shipmaster insists the body be thrown overboard, or the
storm won't stop, and Pericles complies. Thaisa's body is put in a chest, which
washes up in Ephesus, where it is brought to the attention of Cerimon, a
generous doctor. He discovers that Thaisa is not dead, and revives her.
Pericles lands in Tarsus and hands
over his child, Marina, to Cleon and Dionyza, since he thinks it won't survive
the journey to Tyre. Then times passes; Pericles is king of Tyre, Thaisa
becomes a priestess for Diana, and Marina grows up. But Dionyza is jealous of
Marina, who takes all the attention away from her own daughter who is of
similar age. Dionyza plots to have Leonine murder Marina, but at the last
moment, pirates seize her, and take her to Myteline on Lesbos to sell her as a
prostitute.
Sold to a brothel run by Pander and
Bawd, Marina refuses to give up her honor, despite the many men who come
wanting to buy her virginity. She manages to convince the men who come to the
brothel that her honor is sacred, and they leave seeking virtue in their own
lives. Soon she gets work in a reputable house, educating girls. Meanwhile,
Pericles goes on a trip to Tarsus to reunite with his daughter, but Cleon and
Dionyza tell him that she has died, and show him the monument they have ordered
built in order to erase their complicity in the matter. Pericles is distraught,
and sets to the seas again.
Pericles and his crew arrive in
Myteline, and Lysimachus goes out to meet the ships. Helicanus explains that
Pericles has not spoken in three months, and Lysimachus says he knows someone
in his city who may be able to make him talk. Marina is brought to the ship,
and she tells Pericles that her own sufferings must match his. He asks her
about her birth, and she says her name is Marina. Startled, Pericles asks her
to continue, and to his surprise finds that everything Marina says matches the
story of his own lost Marina. They are reunited, but Pericles is exhausted, and
in his sleep the goddess Diana tells him to go to her temple in Ephesus and
tell of his experiences. When he wakes, he promises Marina to Lysimachus, and
they set off for Ephesus.
In Ephesus, Thaisa is a priestess at
the temple where Pericles tells his story. When she realizes Pericles is her
lost husband, she faints, and Cerimon explains that she is Thaisa. The whole
family is reunited, and overjoyed.
Gower returns to offer a conclusion,
noting that we have seen evil punished (Antiochus and his daughter have died,
and when the people of Tarsus discovered Cleon's evil, they revolted and killed
him and his wife in a palace fire), but that we have met a variety of good
people along the way, such as loyal Helicanus and charitable Cerimon. Pericles
and his family have endured the vagaries of fortune, and through it all
remained virtuous, so in the end they were rewarded with the joy of being
reunited.
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