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  1. Sir Percy Florence Shelley, 3rd Baronet, JP, DL (12 November 1819 – 5 December 1889), was the son of the English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and his second wife, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, novelist and author of Frankenstein. He was the only child of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley to live beyond infancy. His middle name, possibly suggested by ...

    • 5 December 1889 (aged 70)
    • Percy Florence Shelley, 12 November 1819, Florence, Italy
    • 3rd Baronet of Castle Goring
  2. Percy Florence Shelley eventually inherited the Shelley estate and married Jane St. John, an admirer of both his parents, who did all she could to preserve and enshrine Shelley’s reputation. Shelley’s reputation after his death was shaped by the same extremes of worship and hatred that he and his writings had elicited during his life.

  3. Apr 8, 2024 · Percy Bysshe Shelley (born Aug. 4, 1792, Field Place, near Horsham, Sussex, Eng.—died July 8, 1822, at sea off Livorno, Tuscany [Italy]) was an English Romantic poet whose passionate search for personal love and social justice was gradually channeled from overt actions into poems that rank with the greatest in the English language.

    • Donald H. Reiman
  4. Percy Florence Shelley, 1819 -1889. Son and only surviving child of Mary and Percy Bysshe Shelley , so-named because born in Florence during their sojourn in Italy. A major reason for Mary's relocation to England was to see to his proper education and prospects in life. Like his father, he attended Eton and Oxford , though he lacked any of his ...

    • Early Years
    • Shelley's First Poems
    • "Alastor"
    • "The Revolt of Islam"
    • "Exile" and "Prometheus Unbound"
    • Drama and Social Tracts
    • Final Poems and Prose Works
    • For More Information

    Percy Bysshe Shelleywas born at Field Place near Horsham, Sussex, England, on August 4, 1792. He was the first son of a wealthy, country landowner. As a boy, Shelley felt harassed by his father. This abuse may have first sparked the flame of protest which, during his school days at Eton from 1804 until 1810, earned him the name of "Mad Shelley." At...

    Shelley attempted to communicate his views on politics other topics in the poem "Queen Mab" (1813). Though an immature poem, nevertheless, it contained the germ of his mature philosophy: that throughout the cosmos there is "widely diffused / A spirit of activity and life," an omnipresent (being everywhere) energy that, unless misguided by people's ...

    When Shelley returned to England, he was increasingly driven to the realization that paradise was not just around the corner. This may have prompted the writing of "Alastor, or the Spirit of Solitude" in December 1815. In this poem Shelley writes that poets are caught between the enticements of extreme idealism (visions for the improvement of human...

    The winter of 1816 and 1817 was a period of great emotional disturbance for Shelley. Harriet, his wife, died, presumably by suicide, in December. The courts refused to grant Shelley the custody of their two children. In addition, he was beginning to worry about his health. However, there were encouragements as well. Shelley was gaining some recogni...

    In March 1818 Percy and Mary Shelley left England, never to return. The bulk of the poet's output was produced in Italy in the course of the last four years of his short life. Though life in Italy had its obvious rewards, this period was by no means one of pure happiness for Shelley. He was increasingly anxious about his health. He was beginning to...

    Like the other romantic poets, Shelley was aware of the limitations of poetry as a medium of mass communication. He, too, struggled to deliver his message to a larger audience. He experimented with stage drama in The Cenci(1819) a tragedy which illustrates the problems caused by humans' lust for power, both physical and mental, in the sphere of dom...

    Shelley's concern with promoting the cause of freedom was genuine, but his personalityfound a more compatible outlet in his "visionary rhymes." In his poems the almost mystical concepts of oneness and love, of poetry and brotherhood are expressed. Such themes remained the source of his inspiration to the last. As he was nearing his thirtieth year, ...

    Bornstein, George. Yeats and Shelley. Chicago: University of ChicagoPress, 1970. Dowden, Edward. The Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley. London: K. Paul, Trench, and Company, 1886. Reprint, New York, Barnes & Noble, 1966. Hohne, Horst. In Search of Love: The Short and Troublesome Life and Work of Percy Bysshe Shelley. New York: Peter Lang, 2000. Hawkins,...

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  6. Narrative text reads: Throughout Mary and Shelley's creatively fruitful and loving relationship, (they finally married after Shelley's wife committed suicide), they endured the staggering succession of deaths of their first 3 children. Only their fourth child, Percy Florence Shelley, survived to adulthood.

  7. Jan 24, 2004 · In 1821 Mary still treasured a dream of going to live with Shelley and their one surviving child (Percy Florence) on a Greek island, after the war of independence.

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