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George Lillo [1738], Marina: a play of three acts. As it is Acted at the Theatre Royal in Convent-Garden. Taken from Pericles Prince of Tyre. By Mr. Lillo (Printed for John Gray [etc.], London) [word count] [S32100].
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ACT II. SCENE I. An Apartment adjoining to a Temple at the Court of Tharsus. Enter Queen and Leonine.

Leonine.
To bury kneaded earth for dead Marina
Was a most quaint device. The cheated Tharsians
Pierced Heaven with their howlings; but suspicion,
As if Death closed her busy prying eyes
When the fair Tyrian died, still slumbers on.
The monument of Parian marble wrought,
And epitaph in characters of gold,
Were my contrivance too, and now are finish'd.
I have done all that your resentment ask'd,
And well secured your safety and your fame:
'Tis more than time you listen'd to my suit.

Q.
Can nothing but my person and my crown
Reward your service?

Leon.
I deserve them both.

Q.
Were I sole mistress of the spacious world,
I'd give it all this murther were undone.
The very Wrens of Tharsus will betray it
To Pericles, who now comes to demand her.

Leon.
That's only in my power: Give me your promise
To be my bride, and seal my lips for ever.

Q.
What! wed a murtherer!

Leon.
Who made me so?
Resolve in time ere ruin overtake you,
O'ertake us both. Your flatt'ries drew me in,

-- 24 --


You taught me to be bloody and ambitious,
And I will now partake your throne, or perish—
But not alone. You know how popular
The injur'd Prince of Tyre is here in Tharsus.
This City, now the seat of wealth and plenty,
Whose towers invade the clouds, which never stranger
Beheld but wonder'd at, as all acknowledge,
Had but for Pericles been desolate,
Forsaken, or the grave of its inhabitants,
A den for bats to build and wolves to howl in.
How many thousands, living now, remember,
When, famishing with hunger, Prince and people
Sat down and wept for bread; when tender mothers
Fed on their new born babes, and man and wife
Drew lots who first shou'd die, and furnish food
To lengthen out the life of the survivor.
This our distress brought Pericles from Tyre;
Who, bravely scorning to improve th' advantage,
And make a conquest of a prostrate land,
Did with a lib'ral hand supply our [illeg.] wants,
And turn our dying groans to songs of joy.
For this the Tharsians love him as a Father,
And as a God adore him.

Q.
Be it so:
I'm still their Queen, and hold 'em in subjection.

Leon.
Yes, while they please: As we have seen a Lyon
Held with a thread, until some accident,
Or his rash keeper's folly, rous'd his fury.
They've some regard for the good line you came of,
And yet are thereby hardly held from outrage:
So hateful have the pride and other vices,
Notorious in you, made you to the million.

-- 25 --


But shou'd they hear, or have the least suspicion
Of your foul dealing with the much lov'd daughter
Of royal Pericles, like flames let loose,
They'd in an instant make this lofty dome
Your fun'ral pile, and give the winds your ashes:
Or having torn you in ten thousand pieces,
With honest scorn, cast out your loath'd remains
For kites and crows to feed on.

Q.
'Tis too true:
Shou'd this dark deed take light, my reign were ended.
I see I must comply. She who has us'd
A wicked agent in a shameful act,
Must thenceforth be his slave. You have my word.
Now your ambition's serv'd, teach me to answer
The King of Tyre when he demands his child.

Leon.
Say she dy'd suddenly, as what's more common?
That you wept o'er her hearse, and mourn her yet;
Then show the monument and epitaph
Procur'd at your expence; and her griev'd Sire
Shall curse the cruel fates that still pursue him
With plague on plague, but ne'er suspect that you
Have been their instrument.

Q.
The deed's not mine.— (Trumpets.
Pericles comes, and I must seem content:
The Traytor's in the toils, and cannot 'scape me.
Enter Pericles, Escanes, Guards and Attendants.

Q.
Welcome, great Pericles, to mourning Tharsus.
My royal parents and your faithful friends,
Cleon and Dionysia, are no more.

Per.
Ent'ring the port I met the fatal news.
The hot salt tears this unthought loss drew from me,

-- 26 --


Are yet wet on my cheeks. O two such friends!—
But I'm a man born to adversity;
No land e'er gave me rest, and winds and waters,
In their vast tennis-court, have, as a ball,
Used me to make them sport.—But to my purpose.
'Tis more than twice seven years since I beheld thee
With my Marina, both were infants then.
Peace and security smil'd on your birth;
Her's was the rudest welcome to this world
That e'er was Prince's child: Born on the sea,
Hence is she call'd Marina, in a tempest,
When the high working billows kist the Moon,
And the shrill whistle of the boatswain's pipe
Seem'd as a whisper in the ear of Death:
Born when her Mother dy'd. That fatal hour
Must still live with me—O you gracious Gods!
Why do you make us love your goodly gifts,
And snatch them streight away? The waves receiv'd
My Queen. A sea mate's chest coffin'd her corpse;
In which she silent lies 'midst groves of coral,
Or in a glitt'ring bed of shining shells.
The air fed lamps of Heaven, the spouting whale,
And dashing waters, that roll o'er her head,
Compose a monument to hide her bones,
Spacious as Heaven, and lasting as the frame
Of universal Nature.

Esc.
Royal Sir,
This sad companion, dull-ey'd Melancholy,
So long carest, shou'd now be cast aside.

Per.
O never, never: Do not interrupt me.
In the days glorious walk, or peaceful night,
When grief shou'd seem to sleep, a welcome guest,

-- 27 --


She fills my anxious thoughts and broken slumbers
With the lov'd image of my lost Thaisa,
And prompts me to rehearse the oft-told tale
Of her disast'rous end; and chiefly now
I come to seek the Phenix that took life
From her dead ashes—But I've almost done—
We left my Princess in her wat'ry tomb,
And, as the winds gave way, arriv'd at Tharsus.
Here to your royal parents I committed
(Whose love I had experienc'd and deserv'd)
My only child, to give her education
Suiting her rank, and in some sort supply
Her pious mother's loss. And this the rather,
For that the peace of Tyre was sorely broken
By foreign foes, and treasons bred at home:
For I have drank the dregs of all misfortunes.
I vow'd too then, though it show'd wilful in me,
That all unsister'd shou'd this heir of mine
Remain till she were marry'd. Those commotions,
That long embroil'd me, being now compos'd;
I'm come to pay my thanks, and claim my daughter.

Q.
Unhappy Prince! wou'd Heaven have heard my Pray'rs,
Thy sweet Marina now by my lov'd side
Had bless'd thy longing eyes; but wretched mortals
In vain oppose the powers that rule above 'em:
Shou'd we rage loud as did the winds and seas
When she was born, things would be as they are.
Unfold those doors, and let the care-worn King
Behold the testimony of our love
To our fair foster Sister, and our grief
For her untimely fate.

-- 28 --

The Scene draws, and discovers a Temple with the Monument.

Per. (Reading)
“Here lieth interr'd
Marina, daughter to the Prince of Tyre.
O thou who gav'st me reason and reflection,
Eternal Jove, rebuke these swelling thoughts,
That wou'd dispute your goodness or your being:
Bind them in walls of brass: Let me remember
I hold my powers from thee, that earthly man
Is but a substance made for your high pleasure:
Teach me, as fits my nature, to submit
To your thrice kindled wrath.

Esc.
Let those who think
They cou'd endure his woes, speak comfort to him;
My soul is faint with terror to behold 'em.

Per.
Fire, water, earth, and air in loud combustion
Hareld my lost Marina to the light;
But dumb and speechless sorrow shall attend
Her timeless passage to the realms of death.
From this curst hour I'll never speak again,
To mock with words unutterable grief;
But make my manners savage as my fortunes,
And be as wretched as the Gods wou'd have me.
Sable shall be the ship henceforth that bears me;
No steel shall touch my face, no water cleanse it,
Nor comb be us'd to part my matted hair.
If e'er I change my raiment, galling sackcloth,
Instead of royal robes, shall gird my loins,
And ashes be my crown. I'll ne'er return,
Ne'er view thy spires again, renowned Tyre;
But wander through the world a wilful vagrant,
And ne'er taste comfort more till death relieve me,

-- 29 --


Or Jove restore to my unhoping eyes
What his vindictive hand hath taken from me.
What I have been I'll study to forget:
Do you so too. Tell who I was to no man;
What I am now, a wretch by heav'n devoted
To all distress and by himself abandon'd,
Shall evidence it self. Come, my Escanes.

Esc.
O woful, woful hour! Where shall we go?

Per.
I care not, let blind fortune be our guide:
Shun Tyre, and ev'ry other place is equal.
Fair Queen, adieu. Your kindness to my child
The Gods return you double. Yet consider
And view the frailty of your state in me.
Once Princes sate, like stars, about my throne,
And veil'd their crowns to my supremacy:
Then, like the sun, all paid me reverence
For what I was, and all the grateful lov'd me
For what I did bestow; now not a glow-worm
But in the chearless night displays more brightness,
And is of greater use, than darken'd Pericles.
Be not high minded, Queen, be not high minded:
Time is omnipotent, the King of Kings,
Their parent and their grave—Beware, beware—
Let those who drink of sweet prosperity
In flowing cups, mingle their draughts with pity;
  And think when they behold th' afflicted's tears,
  The misery of others may be theirs.
(Exeunt Pericles, Escanes, &c.

Q.
Unhappy Queen! detested Leonine!
O had I tarry'd but a little longer,
Marina had been gone without my guilt:
Or had you put me by this one bad thought,

-- 30 --


In which perhaps I ne'er shou'd have relaps'd,
I might have bless'd you as my better genius;
But now must curse you as a cruel wretch
Who seeing me unguarded, seiz'd that moment
To blast my fame, and ruin me for ever.

Leon.
Were this repentance true, 'tis now too late:
But if, as I suspect, 'tis but assum'd
(Your purpose being serv'd) to vail your falshood
(Pretending conscience for your breach of faith)
The cheat's too gross, and you may rest assur'd,
I shall see through and scorn the thin disguise.

Q.
Then here I cast it off. Shall I, who cou'd not bear
The unmeant rivalship of sweet Marina,
Resign my crown, and live a slave to thee?
A wretch whom I detest, a venal villain,
One whom I fix'd on as the worst of men,
For the worst purpose.

Leon.
Base, ungrateful Queen!
Is this all the reward I'm to expect?

Q.
Such a reward as such vile instruments
As you deserve, a murderer's reward,
Thou hast already.

Leon.
Hah!

Q.
Yes, thou art poison'd.
The subtle potion working in thy veins
Is a more certain remedy for talking,
Than all my wealth, or the rich crown of Tharsus.
Not that I fear, now Pericles is gone,
The utmost of thy malice cou'd'st thou live,
As 'tis most sure thou can'st not.

-- 31 --

Leon.
Cursed Harpy!
The loathsome grave is better than thy bed,
And Death a lovelier paramour than thee.
O! I am sick at heart.

Q.
The venom works.
How wild he looks? I will be kind, and leave him.

Leon.
Assist my feeble arm, ye righteous Gods!
Though I've offended, do not fail me now.
This cause is yours—'tis well—my hand is arm'd—
Now guide my weapon's point to her false heart,
And we shall both have justice.

Q.
Thoughtless wretch!
Where are my Guards? I shall be murder'd here.

Leon.
As sure as you contriv'd Marina's death,
As sure as you've betray'd and murther'd me. (stabs her.
I fall, but fall reveng'd. Now triumph fury.
Enter Guards and Ladies.

Q.
You come too late: The slave has pierc'd my heart.

Leon.
To wound it deeper, know, Marina lives.
The death intended her by you and me,
By Heaven is justly turn'd upon our selves.
To will or act is one at that strict audit,
Where we must soon appear—O Radamanthus
(dies.

Q.
Tear out his tongue, let not the traytor speak.

Guard.
It need not, Madam; he has spoke his last.

Q.
I shall not long survive him—Bear me hence—
Thou art the care of Heav'n, virtuous Marina;
  Its out-casts we. The Gods are just and strong;
  And none who scorn their laws, e'er prosper long.
Exeunt.

-- 32 --

SCENE II. A House in Ephesus. Enter Bawd and Bolt.

Bawd.

Where are the Gentlemen?

Bolt.

Gone.

Bawd.

Gone!

Bolt.

Ay, gone away, and left her untouch'd. With her holy speeches, kneeling, prayers, and tears, she has converted 'em to chastity.

Bawd.

The Devil she has!

Bolt.

They vow never to enter a bawdy-house again, but turn religious, and frequent the Temples: They are gone to hear the Vestals sing already.

Bawd.

What will become of me? O the wicked jade, to study the ruin of a poor Gentlewoman! (weeping) I'd rather than twice the worth of her she had never come here.

Bolt.

She's enough to undo all the Panders and Bawds in Ephesus.

Bawd.

Pox of her green sickness.

Bolt.

Ay, if she wou'd but change one for the other, there were some hopes of her. But I have good intelligence that the Lord Lysimachus will be here presently.

Bawd.

The Governor?

Bolt.

Ay, but he's a great persecutor of persons of our profession.

Bawd.

Pho, those are our best customers and surest friends in private. If the peevish baggage wou'd but hear reason now, we were made for ever. Fetch her. We'll try once more. (Exit Bolt.) She must be marble if she don't melt at the sight of

-- 33 --

so great, so rich, so young and handsome a man as the Lord Lysimachus.

Enter Lysimachus.

Lys.
Well, thou grave planter of iniquity,
Whose just returns are full grown crops of shame,
Are you supply'd with new and sound temptations?
Such as an healthy man may venture on,
And fear the loss of nothing—but his soul.

Bawd.

I'm proud to see your Lordship here, and glad your honour is so chearfully dispos'd. Venus forbid a Gentleman shou'd receive an injury in my house. No, Sir, we defy the Surgeons. And for temptation, I have such an one, if she would but—

Lys.

Prythee, what?

Bawd.

Your Honour knows what I mean well enough.

Lys.

Well, let me see her.

Bawd.

Such flesh and blood, Sir!—For red and white—Well, you shall see a flower, and a flower she were indeed, had she but—

Lys.
Why dost not speak? What is there wanting in her?

Bawd.

O, Sir, I can be modest.

Lys.
When such as these pretend to modesty,
They are then most impudent.
Enter Bolt, forcing in Marina.

Bawd.
Now, Sir, what do you think of her?
Wou'dn't she serve after a long voyage?—Ay, Sir—

Lys.
I'm lost in admiration—Here's your fee:
Away, be gone and leave us. I came hither,
O who wou'd trust his heart, bent to detect
And punish these bad people; but when sin

-- 34 --


Appears in such a form, the firmest virtue
Dissolves to air before it.

Bawd.

I pray your Honour let me have a word with her: I'll have done presently.

Lys.

Do, I beseech you.

Bawd.

First I wou'd have you take notice that this is a man of Honour.

Mar.

Grant, Heav'n, I find him so!

Bawd.

And next, that he's a great man and Governor of this country; and lastly, one I'm bound to.

Mar.
If he's greatly good
And governs well, you're bound to him indeed.

Bawd.

Pray use him kindly, or—

Lys.

Have you yet done?

Bawd.

I'm afraid your Lordship must take some pains with her, but there's nothing to be done with these unexperienc'd things without it. Come, we'll leave his Honour and her together.

(Exeunt Bawd and Bolt.

Lys.
Thou brightest star that ever left its sphere
(For sure you once shone in a higher region)
For low pollution and the depth of darkness,
How long hast thou pursu'd this devious course?

Mar.
What course d'ye mean, my Lord?

Lys.
I dare not name it:
For, loving, I am fearful to offend.

Mar.
I cannot be offended at the truth.

Lys.
How long have you been what you now profess?

Mar.
E'er since I can remember.

Lys.
Gods! what pity!
Were you a prostitute so very young?

-- 35 --

Mar.
I ne'er was other—if I am so now.

Lys.
You are proclaim'd a creature set to sale
By being here.

Mar.
And do you know this house
A place of such resort, yet venture in it?
I've heard you are of honourable rank,
And govern here.

Lys.
O, you have heard my pow'r,
And therefore stand aloof, but without cause;
For my authority shall here be blind,
Or look with kindness on thee. I've now learnt
What once seem'd strange, why rich men grasp at pow'r,
And the poor murmur at restrictive laws.
Passion wou'd have the means to work its ends,
And the fierce tumult of intemp'rate blood
Rages the more the more it is resisted.
I must and will, in spight of vain remorse
And what I have been, feast each aking sense
On thy luxurious charms. Why dost thou shun me?
Blushing I speak it, thou shalt never find
Amongst the herd whose only joy is lewdness,
A more devoted slave. Is wanton pleasure
What you affect? My youth, yet unimpair'd
By riot or disease, shall meet your wishes.
Art thou ambitious? Power and pomp attend thee.
Or if the love of Gold, that cursed bait
That ruins half thy sex, possess thy heart;
I will descend to gratify a passion
I should detest in any but thy self.

Mar.
Cou'd you do thus! O you immortal powers,
What is your influence on the heart of Man,

-- 36 --


If ev'ry slight temptation wins him from you?
Shall painted clay, shall white and red, less pure
Than that which decks the lilly and the rose,
Seduce you from the bright unfading joys
Your goodness yields! For sure your speech imports,
And I well hope, you have not yet renounc'd it.

Lys.
Thou art so fair, so exquisitely fair,
And plead'st against thy self with so much art,
That had I known thee sooner—What a thought!—
But sully'd as thou art I must possess thee,
Whate'er the purchase cost.

Mar.
To think me, Sir,
A creature so abandon'd yet pursue me,
Is sure as mean and infamous, as wicked.
What! waste your youth in arms that each lewd ruffian
Who pays the price, may fill; lavish your wealth,
And yield your sacred honour to the hand
Of an improvident and wastful Wanton,
Who does not guard her own!

Lys.
True, I came hither,
With thoughts like these—But lead me to some place
Private and dark—Alas, why dost thou weep?

Mar.
Dare not come near me.

Lys.
By the raging flame
Thy eyes have kindled here, I must enjoy thee.

Mar.
Then view my last defence.
(draws a dagger.

Lys.
What dost thou mean!

Mar.
To die if you pursue your hated purpose,
Vain, rash, mistaken man.

-- 37 --

Lys.
O hold thy hand:
By Jove she doth amaze me. Rest assur'd
I will not offer violence again
Be who or what thou wilt—But let me seize
This threat'ning steel, that fill'd my soul with terror
While levell'd at thy breast.

Mar.
O mighty Sir,
If you were born to honour show it now;
If put upon you, make that judgment good
That thought you worthy of it.

Lys.
She's in earnest.
Here is some mystery I cannot fathom.
(aside.

Mar.
Have pity on a maid, a friendless maid,
By fortune forc'd to this detested sty;
Where since I came, diseases have been sold
Dearer than physick. Wou'd the gracious Gods
But set me free from this unhallow'd place,
Though they did change me to the meanest bird
That flies in the pure air, I shou'd be happy.

Lys.
Conviction rises with each word she speaks.
She's all a miracle, as chaste as fair. (aside.
He must indeed have a corrupted mind,
Whom thy speech cou'd not alter. Here's gold for thee:
Still persevere in the clear way thou goest,
And the Gods strengthen thee. As for my self,
The short liv'd error which thy beauty caus'd,
Thy goodness and thy wisdom have corrected.

Mar.
Now you're a true and worthy Gentleman,
The gracious Gods preserve you.

Lys.
Fare thee well.
If I shou'd take thee hence, licentious tongues

-- 38 --


May wrong my fair intentions, and thy fame.
Thou art a piece of virtue, and I doubt not
But that thy birth and training both were noble.
A curse upon him, die he, like a thief,
That shall again attempt to wrong thy honour.
If thou hear'st from me, as thou may'st expect it,
And quickly too, it shall be for thy good. Enter Bolt.

Bolt.
I beseech your Honour, one piece for me.

Lys.
Avaunt, thou damn'd door keeper, pander, hence.
Your house but for this virgin that doth prop it,
Wou'd sink, and overwhelm you. (Exit Lysimachus.

Bolt.

I see we must take another course with you; or your peevish chastity, which is not worth a breakfast in the cheapest country in the universe, will undo a whole family. Come your ways.

Enter Bawd.

Bawd.

How now! what's the matter?

Bolt.

Worse and worse, Mistress. She has been talking religion to my Lord Lysimachus.

Bawd.

O abominable!

Bolt.

She makes our profession stink, as it were, in the nostrels of all who come near her.

Bawd.

Marry hang her.

Bolt.

My Lord wou'd have us'd her as a Lord shou'd use a gentlewoman, for I over heard 'em; but she sent him away as cold as a snow-ball; saying his Prayers too.

Bawd.

Take her away: use her at your pleasure.

Mar.

Hark, hark, you Gods!

-- 39 --

Bawd.

She's at her pray'rs again. Away with her. I wish she had never enter'd my doors.

(Exit Bawd.

Bolt.

Come, mistress, you shall along with me.

Mar.

O wither wou'd you have me?

Bolt.

Into the next room, to take from you by force the jewel you are so unwilling to part with.

Mar.

Pray tell me one thing first.

Bolt.

Propose your Question.

Mar.

What wou'd you wish to your worst enemies?

Bolt.

Why I wou'd wish 'em as infamous as my mistress.

Mar.
And yet that wretch is not so bad as thou art,
Since she's thy better as she doth command thee.
The place thou hold'st is such that Cerberus
Wou'd not exchange his reputation with thee,
The filthy groom, door-keeper to a brothel.
Then to the chol'rick fist of ev'ry villain
Thy ear is liable. Thy food is such
As hath been breath'd on by infectious lungs.

Bolt.

What wou'd you have me do? Go to the wars! Where a man may serve seven years for the loss of a leg, and not have money enough in the end to buy him a wooden one.

Mar.
Do any kind of thing but this thou do'st:
Empty receptacles of common filth,
Serve by indenture to the common hangman,
Or herd with swine, or beg from door to door:
The worst of these is far to be preferr'd
To what you practise. If no sense of shame,
No fear of laws, no rev'rence of the Gods
Come near thy heart; let that which doth persuade
Millions to evil, bribe thee to be good:

-- 40 --


Touch not my honour, help me to escape
This house of shame, and take the shining gold
The good Lord gave me.

Bolt.

Nay, I don't see why a man mayn't as well do a good deed as a bad one, especially when he's paid for it. And to say the truth, I think you wou'd freeze the blood of a Satyr, and make a Puritan of the Devil, if they were to cheapen a kiss of thee. Come, give me the money.

Mar.

No, first conduct me to some place of safety.

Bolt.

But shall I have it then?

Mar.
If I deceive you, take me home again,
And prostitute me to the vilest groom
That doth frequent your house.

Bolt.

Well, I'll trust you. I'll see you plac'd—

Mar.

But among honest women.

Bolt.

Troth, I've but little acquaintance amongst them. But there is one who is known to all Ephesus by fame, the holy priestess of Diana's temple: She will be proud of such a chaste companion, and has besides the power to protect you.

Mar.

O the good Gods direct me how to find her!

Bolt.

But, hark, I hear my mistress. We must be gone: This way we may avoid her.

Mar.
Jove's virgin-best-loved daughter, bright Diana,
Who shar'st with Sol the skies, chaste Queen of night,
Defend my virtue, and direct my flight.
(Exeunt Marina and Bolt. Enter Bawd.

Bawd.

Bolt, Bolt, Where are you? Secure Marina. The Governor's officers are searching the

-- 41 --

house for her: we shall have her forc'd away. Why Bolt—O the Devil! the back door is open: The villain is run away with my slave, and all the money I paid for her will be lost.

Enter Officers.

1 Off.

She's no where to be found.

Bawd.

No, no, she's gone. My man had stole her away before you came, a pox confound him and you too: I am likely to be brought to a fine pass betwixt you.

Off.

Then we must execute our other orders, which are to turn this Beldame out of doors, and then shut up the house.

Bawd.

Turn me out of doors! how must I live?

Off.

Do you take care of that. It is a favour, and a great one too, that you are not sent to prison.

Bawd.

Such Governors are enough to make a woman do what she never thought of.

Off.

Ay, do—work—that's what I dare be sworn you never thought of.

Bawd.

No, nor ever will. A Gentlewoman, and work! I'll see you all hang'd first.

Off.

Chuse, and be hang'd your self: You have long deserv'd it.

Bawd.

Have I so, scoundrel? And yet you have been glad of a cast of my office before now. While such as you are trusted with authority, as sure as thieves are honest, strumpets chaste,


  Or priests hate money; this same sinful nation
  Is in a hopeful way of reformation. (Exeunt. The End of the Second ACT.

-- 42 --

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George Lillo [1738], Marina: a play of three acts. As it is Acted at the Theatre Royal in Convent-Garden. Taken from Pericles Prince of Tyre. By Mr. Lillo (Printed for John Gray [etc.], London) [word count] [S32100].
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