Pericles, Prince of Tyre, in Modern English
The full play, original text on one side, plain modern English on the other — every scene, free.
- Year
- 1608
- Genre
- Comedy
- Setting
- Across the eastern Mediterranean
- Acts & scenes
- 5 acts · 27 scenes
- Reading time
- ~2 hours
- Audio runtime
- ~1h 57m (in app)
What it's about
It is a tale of adventure, love, and redemption as a prince navigates treacherous seas, encounters miraculous events, and finds solace in the power of forgiveness.
It is a tale of adventure, love, and redemption as a prince navigates treacherous seas, encounters miraculous events, and finds solace in the power of forgiveness.
Study guide
Everything we have for Pericles, Prince of Tyre, all on one page.
Read
The full play, scene by scene, original beside modern English.
Characters
Who's who — and what each one wants.
Themes
What the play is about, beneath the plot.
Motifs & Symbols
Patterns Shakespeare keeps returning to.
Famous Quotes
The lines you know, paraphrased and explained.
Scene Summaries
What happens in each scene, and why it matters.
Quiz
Fifteen questions. No login.
About this Play
Year, setting, length, why people read it.
Read by scene
Tap any scene below to start reading.
Act I
- Prologue. Prologue
- Scene 1. Antioch. A room in the palace
- Scene 2. Tyre. A room in the palace
- Scene 3. Tyre. An ante-chamber in the palace
- Scene 4. Tarsus. A room in the Governor's house
Act II
- Prologue. Prologue
- Scene 1. Pentapolis. An open place by the sea-side
- Scene 2. The same. A public way or platform leading to the lists. A pavilion by the side of it for the reception of the King, Princess, Lords, etc
- Scene 3. The same. A hall of state. A banquet prepared
- Scene 4. Tyre. A room in the Governor's house
- Scene 5. Pentapolis. A room in the palace
Act III
Common questions
Is the modern English translation accurate?
Yes — every line is matched to its original. Our translations preserve meaning over cleverness: where Shakespeare uses a metaphor, we keep it; where the wordplay turns on a sound that no longer exists, we explain rather than fake it. This is a translation, not a summary.
How long does Pericles, Prince of Tyre take to read?
About 2 hours at a steady pace. With synced narration in the app, the runtime is roughly 1h 57m — and you can pause anywhere without losing your place.
Is the original text complete and unabridged?
Yes. We use the full public-domain First Folio text, with no cuts. The simplified column runs in parallel — every line of original Shakespeare has its modern English match.
Where can I listen to it?
Synced read-along narration is in the Fluid Shakespeare app on iOS and Android. Tap a line; press play; the words highlight as they're read. Get the app →