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Shelley: Selected Poems and Prose

Shelley: Selected Poems and Prose

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Genre(s): ,

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Number of Chapters: 50

Length: 6 hours and 59 minutes

Language: English

The English Romantic Period in literature featured a towering group of excellent poets: Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley and Keats. If we add in forerunners Burns and Blake, we have perhaps an unmatchable collection of writers for any era. Of these, Percy Bysshe Shelley was one of the brightest and best, coupling a giant intellect with a highly emotional and impetuous nature. He was always a champion of liberty, but was largely ignored when he tried to promote political and social reform. He was wise enough, however, to realize that his efforts were ineffective, and he chose instead, not to attempt to reshape society, but to transform the individual, to inspire his readers to a greater love of beauty, of nature, and especially of each other. To this end, he poured forth a profusion of gorgeous verse overflowing with brilliant imagery, all aimed at uplifting the good and the beautiful, the free and the loving, while denouncing the social forces that tended to suppress them.

Unfortunately, it was Shelley’s fate to be misunderstood by the people of his own time. He was vilified as an evil influence, a free thinker and free lover whose ideas should be abhorred. He pictured himself in his poetic tribute to Keats, “Adonais,” as an outcast or a martyr, a “phantom among men, companionless,” bearing a brand upon his brow like that of Cain or of Christ. His life was unorthodox, but his nature was highly sympathetic and filled with devotion to those who were ground down by life and the pressures of a callous society. Perhaps the greatest testimonial was paid to him in letters written by Lord Byron (who, incidentally, disagreed with his political ideas): “...he is, to my knowledge, the least selfish and the mildest of men--a man who has made more sacrifices of his fortune and feelings for others than any I ever heard of.” “Shelley...was, without exception, the best and least selfish man I ever knew. I never knew one who was not a beast in comparison.” (Introduction by Leonard Wilson)

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Hymn to Intellectual Beauty (Leonard Wilson)
Sonnet: Lift not the painted veil (Leonard Wilson)
Ode to the West Wind (Leonard Wilson)
Excerpt from Preface to Prometheus Unbound (Leonard Wilson)
Conclusion of Prometheus Unbound, Act IV, ll. 554-578 (Leonard Wilson)
The Cloud (Leonard Wilson)
Sonnet: England in 1819 (Leonard Wilson)
Song to the Men of England (Leonard Wilson)
A Summer Evening Churchyard, Lechlade, Gloucestershire (Leonard Wilson)
Mutability, 2 poems (Leonard Wilson)
Lines Written in the Bay of Lerici (Leonard Wilson)
Love's Philosophy (Leonard Wilson)
Mont Blanc (Leonard Wilson)
To Night (Leonard Wilson)
Letter to Maria Gisborne (Leonard Wilson)
Time Long Past (Leonard Wilson)
When the Lamp Is Shattered (Leonard Wilson)
Dedication of The Revolt of Islam (Leonard Wilson)
With a Guitar, to Jane (Leonard Wilson)
To-- One word is too often profaned (Leonard Wilson)
Lines Written Among the Euganean Hills (Leonard Wilson)
Ozymandias (Leonard Wilson)
Stanzas--April, 1814 (Leonard Wilson)
Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Bonaparte (Leonard Wilson)
On the Medusa of Leonardo da Vinci in the Florentine Gallery (Leonard Wilson)
The Indian Serenade (Leonard Wilson)
A Dirge (Leonard Wilson)
The Sensitive Plant (Leonard Wilson)
To Constantia, Singing (Leonard Wilson)
A Lament (Leonard Wilson)
To a Skylark (Leonard Wilson)
The Mask of Anarchy (Leonard Wilson)
To Wordsworth (Leonard Wilson)
Stanzas Written in Dejection Near Naples (Leonard Wilson)
An Exhortation (Leonard Wilson)
Excerpts from A Defence of Poetry (Leonard Wilson)
To-- When passion's trance is overpast (Leonard Wilson)
Ode to Liberty (Leonard Wilson)
To-- Music when soft voices die (Leonard Wilson)
Dirge for the Year (Leonard Wilson)
The Triumph of Life (Leonard Wilson)
The World's Wanderers (Leonard Wilson)
Hymn of Pan (Leonard Wilson)
To-- Oh! there are spirits of the air (Leonard Wilson)
Epipsychidion (Leonard Wilson)
Rarely, rarely, comest thou (Leonard Wilson)
Alastor (Leonard Wilson)
The Witch of Atlas (Leonard Wilson)
Preface to Adonais (Leonard Wilson)
Adonais (Leonard Wilson)
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