Percy Bysshe Shelley: Difference between revisions

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== Some of his Works ==
== Some of his Works ==
'''Poetry'''
'''Poetry'''
* ''Queen Mab: a Philosophical Poem'' (1813)
* ''Queen Mab: a Philosophical Poem'' (1813), a juvenile work, described as "a philosophical poem, but set within a framework of lyrically descriptive fantasy.  It was accompanied by extensive Notes, showing wide reading.  According to [[Edmund Blunden]], "the [[Chartism|Chartists]] . . . carried it with them as their gospel in one of the many cheap impressions."<ref>Blunden, E. Shelley: a life story. Collins. 1946</ref>
* ''Alastor, or The Spirit of Solitude'' (1815)
* ''Alastor, or The Spirit of Solitude'' (1815)
* ''Mont Blanc'' (1816)
* ''Mont Blanc'' (1816)
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* ''Plato, The Banquet (or Symposium)'' - translation from [[Plato]] (1818)
* ''Plato, The Banquet (or Symposium)'' - translation from [[Plato]] (1818)
* ''A Philosophical View of Reform'' (1819)
* ''A Philosophical View of Reform'' (1819)
* ''A Defence of Poetry'' (published in 1840)
* ''A Defence of Poetry'' (published in 1840).  This contains the famous statement that "Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world."


'''Prose juvenilia'''
'''Prose juvenilia'''
* ''Zastrozzi'' (1810)
* ''Zastrozzi'' (1810)
* ''St Irvyne'' (1810)
* ''St Irvyne'' (1810)
== References ==
<references/>


==External links==
==External links==

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Percy Bysshe Shelley (4 August, 1792 - 8 July, 1822) was one of the leading poets of the English romantic movement, along with Keats and Byron. He also was involved in liberal political activism, and a number of scandalous romantic attachments (like Byron).

Shelley's poems reflect a longing for freedom and harmony and an opposition to all forms of authoritarianism. He regarded religion and law as ideological tools of governments. These views attracted a lot of criticism in his life. Despite his unconventional views and lifestyle, his poems were widely read in the more strait-laced and conventional later nineteenth century.

He is perhaps best known for his poem "Ozymandias" (1818), with its well-known lines;

My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:
Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!

Biography

Shelley was born at Field Place, Warnham, Sussex and was a member of an aristocratic family. His father was a Member of Parliament. During his time as a schoolboy at Eton College he experienced a lot of bullying. He went on to Oxford University but in 1811 was compelled to abandon his studies there after issuing a pamphlet advocating atheism, The Necessity of Atheism. In the same year he married Harriet Westbrook, his landlord's daughter, and got to know the philosopher William Godwin. He went to Ireland where he attended nationalist demonstrations and wrote a pamphlet supporting Irish independence: this attracted the attention of the British authorities.

His marriage was unhappy and he often left his wife and his daughter Ianthe. Before long he fell in love with Mary (Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, William Godwin's 16-year-old daughter, and in 1814 he travelled with her to Switzerland, accompanied by her half sister Jane (later known as Claire) Clairmont. Six weeks later the penniless trio returned to England, where William Godwin - who had earlier advocated free love - declined to give them financial help.

Two years later, in 1816, Shelley and Mary returned to Switzerland, at the invitation of Claire Clairmont who was staying there and who used their presence to lure Lord Byron to Geneva. Claire and Byron had had an affair, but he had then lost interest in her. At the end of that summer, Shelley, Mary and Claire returned to England. A few months later, in December 1816, Shelley's wife Harriet drowned herself in London, and he married Mary shortly after. As Mary Shelley she became a famous author, author of, among other works, Frankenstein. One reason for the marriage was to have custody of Shelley's children by Harriet, but in the end the courts awarded custody to Harriet's parents.

Shelley and Mary lived in Marlow, Buckinghamshire, where another friend of Shelley was also living - the novelist Thomas Love Peacock. Among his other friends were Leigh Hunt and John Keats.

In 1818 Shelley, Mary and Allegra (Claire Clairmont's daughter by Byron) traveled to Venice, where Byron was staying. Shelley lived in Italy from then until his death.

Shelley loved to sail on his schooner Don Juan; on one trip, from Leghorn to La Spezia, it was caught in a storm and sank. Shelley drowned, and his body washed ashore near Viareggio; he was cremated on the beach, and his ashes were buried in the Protestant Cemetery in Rome.

Some of his Works

Poetry

  • Queen Mab: a Philosophical Poem (1813), a juvenile work, described as "a philosophical poem, but set within a framework of lyrically descriptive fantasy. It was accompanied by extensive Notes, showing wide reading. According to Edmund Blunden, "the Chartists . . . carried it with them as their gospel in one of the many cheap impressions."[1]
  • Alastor, or The Spirit of Solitude (1815)
  • Mont Blanc (1816)
  • Hymn to Intellectual Beauty (1817)
  • Laon and Cythna (1817)
  • The Revolt of Islam (1817)
  • Ozymandias (1818)
  • Ode to the West Wind (1819)
  • The Masque of Anarchy (1819)
  • Men of England, A Song to the (1819)
  • England in 1819 (1819)
  • The Witch of Atlas (1819), a playful fantasy in 78 ottava rima stanzas
  • Julian and Maddalo (1819)
  • Prometheus Unbound (1820), an allegory of the downfall of tyranny, in dramatic form
  • To a Skylark (1820)
  • Adonais (1821), an elegy for John Keats in 55 Spenserian stanzas
  • Hellas (1821)
  • The Triumph of Life (1822, unfinished, published posthumously in 1824)

Verse drama

  • The Cenci (1819)

Prose

  • The Necessity of Atheism (1811)
  • Plato, The Banquet (or Symposium) - translation from Plato (1818)
  • A Philosophical View of Reform (1819)
  • A Defence of Poetry (published in 1840). This contains the famous statement that "Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world."

Prose juvenilia

  • Zastrozzi (1810)
  • St Irvyne (1810)

References

  1. Blunden, E. Shelley: a life story. Collins. 1946

External links