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(Character | Pericles | |
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Gender | Male | |
Age Range(s) | Young Adult (20-35), Adult (36-50) | |
Type of monologue / Character is | Angry | |
Type | Dramatic | |
Period | Renaissance | |
Genre | Drama, Comedy | |
Description | Pericles talks about the incest and decides to leave Antioch | |
Location | ACT I, Scene 1 |
Summary
In the city of Antiochus, in Syria, King Antiochus rules the city. We learn in the prologue that he is committing incest with his beautiful daughter and is keeping all her suitors away by forcing them to answer a riddle or die. One of the suitors is Pericles who in the first scene of the play is in King's Antiochus court, determined to try and answer his riddle. When he reads the riddle he realizes that it is about the incest going on with his daughter. He then refuses to answer it saying that he knows the truth but rather not tell it. The king, who realizes Pericles knows about the incest, tells him he will be executed in 40 days.
Pericles delivers this monologue when everybody departs and is left alone. He tells the audience about the incest and is disgusted by it. He knows he will die for sure if he remains in Antioch and therefore decides to leave the city.
Pericles delivers this monologue when everybody departs and is left alone. He tells the audience about the incest and is disgusted by it. He knows he will die for sure if he remains in Antioch and therefore decides to leave the city.
Written by Administrator
Excerpt |
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PERICLES How courtesy would seem to cover sin, When what is done is like an hypocrite, The which is good in nothing but in sight! If it be true that I interpret false, Then were it certain you were not so bad As with foul incest to abuse your soul; Where now you're both a father and a son, By your untimely claspings with your child, Which pleasure fits an husband, not a father; And she an eater of her mother's flesh, By the defiling of her parent's bed; And both like serpents are, who though they feed On sweetest flowers, yet they poison breed. Antioch, farewell! for wisdom sees, those men Blush not in actions blacker than the night, Will shun no course to keep them from the light. One sin, I know, another doth provoke; Murder's as near to lust as flame to smoke: Poison and treason are the hands of sin, Ay, and the targets, to put off the shame: Then, lest my lie be cropp'd to keep you clear, By flight I'll shun the danger which I fear. |