A Preface to Shelley [1 ed.] 9780582353695


212 58 8MB

English Pages 217 Year 2014

Report DMCA / Copyright

DOWNLOAD PDF FILE

Table of contents :
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Introduction
Part One: The Writer and His Setting
Family trees
Chronological table
1 Shelley's early biographers
Schooldays: Medwin and Shelley
Oxford: Thomas Jefferson Hogg
Thomas Love Peacock: Memoirs of Shelley
Scythrop Glowry and others
Mary Shelley
The last years: Trelawny and Shelley in Italy
2 The making of a gentleman
The Sussex Squire
Financial expectations
Two gentlemen in Venice: Julian and Maddalo
3 The historical background
The Sussex Whigs
Rural England
King Ludd and the road to Reform
Peterloo
The Irish Question
The French Revolution and after
The master theme: a Vision of the Nineteenth Century: The
Revolt of Islam
'Morals and politics'
4 Shelley's philosophical beliefs
Shelley and the Enlightenment: Queen Mab and the philosophes
Godwin: the true foundation of virtue
Rousseau: the language of the heart
The Triumph of Life
Plato: 'We are all Greeks'
Immortality
The prisoners in the cave: illusion and reality
The Banquet of Plato: 'The great secret of morals is love'
Adonais: death and resurrection
Italian Platonics: Epipsychidion
Prometheus Unbound: 'The image of one warring with the Evil Principle'
Part Two: Critical Survey
5 The writer and his craft
The world of letters
Shelley and Byron
Shelley and Nature
Erasmus Darwin and the Wonders of Science
Shelley the dramatist: The Cenci
Charles the First
The art of the translator
6 A critical examination of some poetry
Alastor: or The Spirit of Solitude (lines 140-191)
'Mont Blanc'
Prometheus Unbound (Act 1, lines 380-409)
Julian and Maddalo (lines 1-35)
'Letter to Maria Gisborne'
Hellas: the last Chorus (lines 1060
to the end)
'Song'
'To Jane: The Recollection'
The Triumph of Life (lines 41-111)
Some critical judgements of Shelley
Part Three: Reference Section
The Shelley circle: family and friends
The traveller: a Shelley gazetteer
Further reading
Biography
Indices
Recommend Papers

A Preface to Shelley [1 ed.]
 9780582353695

  • 0 0 0
  • Like this paper and download? You can publish your own PDF file online for free in a few minutes! Sign Up
File loading please wait...
Citation preview

Preface Books A seriesof scholarly and critical studiesof major writers, intended for those needing modern and authoritative guidancethrough the characteristic difficulties of their work to reach an intelligent understandingand enjoyment of it. General Editor:

MAURICE HUSSEY

A Prefaceto Wordsworth A Prefaceto Donne A Prefaceto JaneAusten A Prefaceto Yeats A Prefaceto Pope A Prefaceto Hardy A Prefaceto J amesJoyce A Prefaceto Hopkins A Prefaceto Conrad A Prefaceto Lawrence A Prefaceto Forster A Prefaceto Auden A Prefaceto Dickens A Prefaceto Shelley A Prefaceto Keats A Prefaceto GeorgeEliot

JOHN PURKIS JAMES WINNY CHRISTOPHERGILLIE EDWARD MALINS I.R.F. GORDON MERRYN WILLIAMS SYDNEY BOLT GRAHAM STOREY CEDRIC WATTS GAMINI SALGADO CHRISTOPHERGILLIE ALLAN RODWA Y ALLAN GRANT PATRICIA HODGART CEDRIC WATTS JOHN PURKIS

A Preface to Shelley Patricia Hodgart

Routledge Taylor & Francis Group LONDON AND NEW YORK

First published1985 bv LongmanGroup Limited Published'2014 by Houtlcdge '2 Prtrk Square,\1ilton Prtrk, Abingdon, (hon OX14 4RN 711 Third Avenue,New York,:-JY 10017,CSA Routlc(IifC is all imprinl o{lhc 'nly/or & Fmllcis Gmup, an in/()J'fna hl1siness

reproduced CO 1985,Taylor & Francis. All rights reserved.:-Jo palt of this hook may be reprinted or reproducedor utilised in rtny form or by rtny electronic,mechanical,or other means,now known or hereallerinvented,incililling photocopying ;UH] recording,or in any infonnatioll storageor retrieval systcln, without pcnnissionin 'n-iting trOlll the publishers.

Notices Knowledgeand best practicein this licld arc const,mtlychanging.As new researchami experiencebroadenour understanding,changesin researchmethods,professionalpractices,or medical treatmentmay becoIIle necess;uy.

Practitionersand researchersmust always rely on their oml experience and knowledgein evaluatingand using any int(xmation, methods, compounds,or experimentsdescribedherein. In using such inlimnation or methodsthey should be mimlhll of their own safetyand the safetyo[ others,including parties[or whom they have a professional responsibility. To the hlllest extent of the law, neitherthe Publishernor the authors, contributors,or editors,assumeany liability [or any injmy and/or damageto personsor propelty as a l1l