Percy Bysshe Shelley
unequal length; the first spent at Pisa, the baths of San Giuliano, and Leghorn; the second at Lerici, on the Bay of Spezia. Without entering into minute particulars of date
ogg's account of the Oxford period, and marked by signs of more unmistakable accuracy. Not less important members of this private circle were Mr. and Mrs. Edward Elleker Williams, with whom Shelley and his wife lived on terms of the closest friendship. Among Italians, the physician Vacca, the improvisatore Sgricci, and Rosini, the author of "La Monaca di Monza", have to be recorded. It will be seen from this enumera
m to English literature. In the winter he wrote the "Sensitive Plant", prompted thereto, we are told, by the flowers which crowded Mrs. Shelley's drawing room, and exhaled their sweetness to the temperate Italian sunlight. Whether we consider the number of these poems or their diverse character, ranging from verse separated by an exquisitely subtle line from simple prose to the most impassioned eloquence and the most ethereal im
ar
great sea, who
f and loud, an
ks, and still h
h what treasure
Godwin,-great
nd fallen on ev
irits of our
read tribuna
ile Rebuke cower
oleridge-he wh
ding lustre
radiation
own internal l
through darkne
rcled meteor
gle among b
unt; one of th
lt of the earth,
d smell like wh
thers seem. Hi
ed by many a c
lowers tasteful
of bay from
reaths in neat
e most learn'd
ds, sisters-in-
he with his
ullest brain for
or money at
o use to say,
ver mood, whe
than were eve
kespere's wis
Hogg; and I c
ough I know tha
ks, then barri
they inhabi
u'll cry out w
l within an
chest of the
cock, with his
a Flamingo,
he Indian air. H
ries, dies, or
s hear no more
and will like
-white Snowdo
his camelopard
ound, the knif
learned for a
selfish bigot
he chosen spir
up for the s
ome, and find
expectation.
an knowledge,
world a busin
ed in Horace S
ptions, which
by descantin
I know i
h Hunt, dated January 25, 1822, he says: "My faculties are shaken to atoms and torpid. I can write nothing; and if "Adonais" had no success, and excited no interest, what incentive can I have to write?" Again: "I write little now. It is impossible to compose except under the strong excitement of an assurance of finding sympathy in what you write." Lord Byron's company proved now, as before, a check rather than an incentive to production: "I do not write; I have lived too long near Lord Byron, and the sun has extinguished the glow-worm; for I cannot hope, with St. John, that THE LIGHT CAME INTO THE WORLD AND THE WORLD KNEW IT NOT." "I despair of rivalling Lord Byron, as well I may, and there is no other with whom it is worth contending." To Ollier, in 1820, he wrote: "I doubt whether I shall write more. I could be content either with the hell or the paradise of poetry; but the torments of its purgatory vex me, without exciting my powers sufficiently to put an end to the vexation." It was not that his spirit was cowed by the Reviews, or that he mistook the sort of audience he had to address. He more than once acknowledged that, while Byron wrote for the many, his poems were intended for the understanding few. Yet the sunetoi, as he called them, gave him but scanty encouragement. The cold phrases of kindly Horace Smith show that he had not comprehended "Prometheus Unbound"; and Shelley whimsically complains that even intelligent and sympathetic critics confounded the ideal passion described in "Epipsychidion" with the love affairs of "a servant-gir
already quoted from his "Defence of Poetry" shows the high ideal he had conceived of the poet's duty toward his art; and it may be confidently asserted that his whole literary career was one long struggle to emerge from the incoherence of his earlier efforts, into the clearness of expression and precision of form that are the index of mastery over style. At the same time it was inconsistent with his most firmly rooted aesthetic principles to attempt composition exce
him and Medwin to the convent-parlour, where they found her more lovely than even the most glowing descriptions had led them to expect. Nor was she only beautiful. Shelley soon discovered that she had "cultivated her mind beyond what I have ever met in Italian women;" and a rhapsody composed by her upon the subject of Uranian Love-Il Vero Amore-justifies the belief that she possessed an intellect of more than ordinary elevation. He took Mrs. Shelley to see her, and both did all they could to make her convent-prison less irksome, by f
ven! too gent
h that radiant
insupporta
d love, and
emed to find it under many earthly shapes, yet has he ever been deluded. At last Emily appears, and in her he recognizes the truth of the vision veiled from him so many years. She and Mary shall henceforth, like sun and moon, rule the world of love within him. Then he calls on her to fly.
le under Io
s a wreck o
arbours are no
ld have remai
astoral people
lysian, clear,
spirit of th
irited, innoc
an girds this
ging sound and
fted sands and
nds wandering
th the undu
woods where sy
untain, rivul
s elementa
rning air. A
ks made by the
shepherd treads
es, caverns, and
th ivy, which
ith sound tha
he noonday
ce is peopled w
r element whic
the scent of
e mist laden wit
the eyelids l
oss violets an
rrowy odour th
faint with that
ion, odour, b
eep music i
ul within a s
of an ante
wixt heaven, air
hung in clear
t wandering E
soft blue ocea
red place. Fa
r, and Earthqu
in-peaks; blind
far upon the
ms, chanting th
, leave azure
, or weep them
fields and wo
and golden
a there rise, a
ar exhalations,
l, each hiding
moon or zephy
s beauty, like
ce with love
rembles at it
uried lamp, a
eart of this d
e Eternal, wh
f, and may be
ks, blue waves, a
bare and voi
in any mortal tie." In the letter of June 18, 1822, again he says:-"The 'Epipsychidion' I cannot look at; the person whom it celebrates was a cloud instead of a Juno; and poor Ixion starts from the Centaur that was the offspring of his own embrace. If you are curious, however, to hear what I am and have been, it will tell you something thereof. It is an idealized history of my life and feelings. I think one is always in love with something or other; the error, and I confess it is not easy for spirits cased in flesh and blood to avoid it, consists in seeking in a mortal image the likeness of what is, perhaps, eternal." This paragraph contain
lley "sought through the world the One whom he may love." Thus, while his doctrine in "Epipsychidion" seems Platonic, it will not square with the "Symposium." Plato treats the love of a beautiful person as a mere initiation into divine mysteries, the first step in the ladder that ascends to heaven. When a man has formed a just conception of the universal beauty, he looks back with a smile upon those who find their soul's sphere in the love of some mere mortal object. Tested by this standard, Shelley's identification of Intellectual Beauty with so man
the induction to a poem conceived and written in a different key, and at a lower level of inspiration. It has, however, this extraordinary interest, that it deals with a love which is both love
ired. No criticisms upon Shelley's works are half so good as his own. It is, therefore, interesting to collect the passages in which he speaks of an elegy only equalled in our language by "Lycidas", and in the point of passionate eloquence even superior to Milton's youthful lament for his friend. "The 'Adonais', in spite of its mysticism," he writes to Ollier, "is the least imperfect of my compositions." "I confess I should be surprised if that poem were born to an immortality of oblivion." "It is a highly wrou
e the most pathetic products of Greek idyllic poetry; and the transmutation of their material into the substance of highly spiritualized modern thought, reveals the potency of a Prospero's wand. It is a metamorphosis whereby the art of excellent but positive poets has been translated into the sphere of metaphysical imagination. Urania takes the place of Aphrodite; the thoughts and fancies and desires of the dead singer are substituted for Bion's cupids; and instead of mountain shepherds, the living bards of England are summo
s dead. There is both pathos and unconscious irony in his making these two poets the chief mourners, when we remember what Byron wrote about Keats in "Don Juan", and what Moore a
less note, cam
mong men, c
loud of an ex
is its knell.
Nature's nake
, and now he
ps o'er the wor
oughts, along
g hounds their fat
pirit beautif
esolation m
weakness; it c
f the superi
g lamp, a fa
llow;-even wh
ken? On the w
n smiles brigh
n blood, even while
ound with pans
ets, white and
ar topped with
de shaft dark
ith the forest
s the ever-
and that grasped
last, neglec
deer, struck by t
more imperial command of language than in these stanzas. If it were possible to identify that philosophy with any recognized system of thought, it might be call
rrupted by three stanzas, in which Shelley lashes the reviewer of
is not dead, he
ned from the
lost in storm
s an unprofi
e strike with ou
le nothing
in a charnel;
and consume
rm like worms with
red the shado
umny, and ha
t which men mi
not and tort
gion of the wo
, and now ca
old, a head gro
pirit's self ha
ashes load an
kes-'tis Death
Adonais.-Tho
ew to splendou
hou lamentes
d ye forests,
lowers and founta
rning veil thy s
oned Earth, no
s stars which smi
with Nature:
all her music
the song of nig
ence to be f
in light, from
f where'er that
hdrawn his be
e world with ne
m beneath, and
tion of the
made more love
the One Spirit
e dull dense worl
sions to the f
illing dross that
eness, as each
in its beauty
sts and men into t
beauty, is not enough to satisfy man's yearning after immortality. Therefore in the next three stanzas the indestructibility of the pers
s of the firm
d, but are ext
eir appointed he
a low mist wh
it may veil. Wh
heart above it
life contend
rthly doom, the
ds of light on da
rs of unfulf
hrones, built bey
Unapparent.
his solemn
m him; Sidney
, and as he li
ld, a Spirit
can, by his d
rose shrank like
whose names on
smitted efflue
e outlives the
in dazzling
ome as one of
e yon kingless
in unascen
amid an Hea
throne, thou Ves
; and those who mourn him must seek his grave. He has escaped: to follow him is to die; and where should we learn to dote on death unterrified, if not
or Adonais?
d show thyself
anting soul the
tre, dart thy
lds, until its
id circumferen
nt within our
art light, let
led hope, and lure
e, which is
, but of our j
pires, and re
the ravage the
e can lend,-t
e who made the
ered to the ki
ntion with thei
are all that c
ome,-at once
e city, and t
cks like shattere
eeds and fragra
Desolation'
Spirit of the
to a slope o
infant's smil
g flowers along th
oulder round, on
low fire upon
pyramid with
he dust of hi
for his memo
sformed to marb
read, on whic
eaven's smile the
ose with scarce ex
e graves are all
wn the sorrow
each; and if t
fountain of a
ou! too surely
full, if thou
ll. From the wo
in the shadow
is, why fear
greeted the passage of Adonais into the eternal world, is here subdued to a graver key, as befits the mood of one whom mystery and mourning still oppress on earth. Yet even in the somewhat less than jubilant conclusion we feel that highest
s, the many ch
r ever shines, Ea
dome of many-
hite radianc
amples it to f
be with that whi
ll is fled!-Ro
statues, music
ansfuse with fitt
turn back, why s
one before: fro
ted; thou shoul
st from the r
oman; and wha
sh, repels to m
les, the low win
calls! oh, ha
divide what Death
se smile kindl
which all thing
on which the e
ench not, that
the web of bei
st and earth a
r dim, as each
ich all thirst,
last clouds of
e might I have
; my spirit's
re, far from the
re never to th
h and sphered
darkly, fea
hrough the inmos
Adonais, l
e abode where t
mind, may be gathered from an incident related by Trelawny. They were bathing in the Arno, when Shelley, who could not swim, plunged into deep water, and "lay stretched out at the bottom like a conger eel, not making the least effort or struggle to save himself." Trelawny fished him out, and when he had taken breath he said: "I always find the bottom of the well, and they say Truth lies there. In another minute I should have found it, and you would have found an empty shell. Death is the veil which those who live call life; they sleep, and it is lifted." Yet being pressed by his friend, he refused to acknowledge a formal and precise belief in the imperishability of the human soul. "We know nothing; we have no evidence; we cannot express our inmost thoughts. They are incomprehensible e
Sensitive Pl
ts boughs like
ard form had
is change,
guess; but
ignorance,
g is, but al
shadows o
odest cre
if one con
death itse
the rest,
sweet, tha
t shapes and
ave never
ours, are chan
nd beauty,
eath nor chan
r organs,
eing themse
rate its author's mood of feeling about the life beyond the grave. The last lines of "Adonais" might be read as a prophecy of his
mpulse urged
eath on the dre
new that migh
erns of the p
erty" closes on
r fades with
nsect dies w
pinions disar
it closed the
ce which did its
lately paved
er's head in their
ion, near Naples", echo the th
spair itse
winds and
down like a
way the li
borne, and ye
ke sleep migh
t feel in
w cold, and
dying brain it
th a joyful and resolute voice, "Now let us together solve the great mystery!" Too much value must not be attached to what might have been a mere caprice of utterance. Yet the proposal not unreasonably frightened Mrs. Williams, for Shelley's friends were accustomed to expect the realisation of his wilde
by it. "It was written," he says, "without much care, and in one of those few moments of enthusiasm which now seldom visit me, and which make me pay dear for their visits." The preface might, if space permitted, be cited as a specimen of his sound and weighty judgment upon one of the greatest political questions of this century. What he says about the debt of the modern world to ancient Hellas, is no less pregnant than his severe strictures upon the part played by Russia in dealing with Eastern questions. For the rest, the poem is distinguished by passages of great lyrical beauty, rising at time
of Greek captive women, whose creed does not prevent their feeling a regret for the "mightier forms of an older, austerer worship." Shelley's note reminds the reader, with characteristic caution and frankness, that "the popular n
orlds are r
eation
bubbles o
bursting,
are still
h birth's o
rk chasm hurry
eir uncea
ief dust
d their chario
they stil
new laws
re they, as the
bare ribs
rom the u
an conque
iumphal p
of death
l shape
e the v
nt planet anim
, and Sla
hounds mil
l their Lord ha
on of
nd it sh
as on heaven'
leads gene
radiant sha
ose dreams
fond wretch
forth with h
so faint
s of eart
folding star
Pan, a
n Olymp
illing Truth had
and seas, a
d of thei
ned to blood, th
r the gol
ace. The prospect gave Shelley great pleasure, for he was sincerely attached to Hunt; and though he would not promise contributions to the journal, partly lest his name should bring discredit on it, and partly because he did not choose to appear before the world as a hanger-on of Byron's, he thoroughly approved of a plan which would be profitable
ciety of his two friends, the Williamses. Some of his saddest and most touching lyrics of this year are addressed to Jane-for so Mrs. Williams was called; and attentive students may perceive that the thought of Emilia was already blending by subtle transitions with the new thought of Jane. One poem, almost terrible in its intensity of melancholy, is hardly explicable on the supposition that Shelley was quite happy in his home. ("The Serpent is shut out from Paradise.") These words must be taken as implying no reflection either upon Mary's love for him, or upon his own power to bear the slighter troubles of domestic life. He was not a spoiled child of fortune, a weak egotist, or a querulous complainer. But he
stion pure and honourable. All the verses he addressed to her passed through her husband's hands without the slightest interruption to their intercourse; and Mrs. Shelley, who was not unpardonably jealous of her Ariel, continued to be Mrs. Williams's warm friend. A passage from Shelley's letter of June 18, 1822, expresses the plain prose of
beauty, and partly because they illustrate the fecundity of Shelley's genius during the m
k over the
t of
misty eas
e long and l
dreams of
thee terrib
be thy
orm in a m
inwro
hine hair th
til she be
'er city, and
l with thin
long-s
se and saw
ed for
e high, and th
heavy on fl
y Day turned
like an un
ed for
Death came
st tho
ild Sleep, t
ike a noon
estle near
ou me?"-an
not t
come when t
too
come when t
would I a
thee, bel
ine approac
soon,
nts of the poetic art will find it not uninteresting to compare the three versions of this Brid
gates of
h and beauty,
ir image l
of glassy
all thy star
weep thy h
ed the inc
air so
t see their
t Hour, and
re
tes, and ange
s, permit
to wake t
re it b
ear! what
bsence o
e a
nderful profusion in this season of his happiest fertility. A glance at the last section of Mr. Palgra
ons best illustrated his writings." "The cynic Byron acknowledged him to be the best and ablest man he had ever known. The truth was, Shelley loved everything better than himself." "I have seen Shelley and Byron in society, and the contrast was as marked as their characters. The former, not thinking of himself, was as much at ease in his own home, omitting no occasion of obliging those whom he came in contact with, readily conversing with all or any who addressed him, irrespective of age or rank, dress or address." "All who heard him felt the charm of his simple, earnest manner: while Byron knew him to be exempt from the egotism, pedantry, coxcombry, and more than all the rivalry of authorship." "Shelley's mental activity was infectious; he kept your brain in constant action." "He was always in earnest." "He never laid aside his book and magic mantle; he waved his wand, and Byron,
oing to the doorway she laughingly said, 'Come in, Shelley, its only our friend Tre just arrived.' Swiftly gliding in, blushing like a girl, a tall, thin stripling held out both his hands; and although I could hardly believe, as I looked at his flushed, feminine, and artless face, that it could be the poet, I returned his warm pressure. After the ordinary greetings and courtesies he sat down and listened. I was silent from astonishment: was it possible this mild-looking, beardless boy, could be the veritable monster at war with all the world?-excommunicated by the Fathe
odigioso"-I am translat
ead it
e masterly manner in which he analysed the genius of the author, his lucid interpretation of the story, and the ease with which he translated into our language the most subtle and imaginative pa
re is
? Oh, he comes and goes like a spi
that the man's sentence had been commuted to the galleys. The other affair brought them less agreeably into contact with the Tuscan police. The party were riding home one afternoon in March, when a mounted dragoon came rushing by, breaking their ranks and nearly unhorsing Mr. Taafe. Byron and Shelley rode after him to remonstrate; but the man struck Shelley from his saddle with a sabre blow. The English then pursued him into Pisa, making such a clatter that one of Byron's servants issued wi
returned home, and talked and read until midnight." The great wood of stone pines on the Pisan Maremma was his favourite study. Trelawny tells us how he found him there alone one day, and in what state was the manuscript of that prettiest lyric, "Ariel, to Miranda take". "It was a frightful scrawl; words smeared out with his finger, and one upon the other, over and over in tiers, and all run together in most 'admired disorder;' it might have b
: firing was called tiring; hitting, colping; missing, mancating, etc. It was in fact a kind of pigeon Italian. Shelley acquired two nick-names in the circle of his Pisan friends, both highly descriptive. He was Ariel and the Snake. The latter suited him because of his noiseless gliding movement, bright eyes, and ethereal diet. It was first giv
which cost the lives of Shelley and Willliams, and of the "Bolivar", which carried Byron off to Genoa before he finally set sail for Greece. Captain Roberts was allowed to have his own way about the latter; but Shelley and Williams had set their hearts upon a model for their little yacht, which did not suit the Captain's notions of sea-worthiness. Williams overruled his objections, and the "Don Juan" was built according to his cherished fancy. "When it was finished," says Trelawny, "it took two tons of iron ballast to bring her down to her bearings, and then she was very crank in a breeze, though not deficient in beam. She was fast, strongly built, and Torbay rigged." She was ch