Who was Percy Bysshe Shelley?
Shelley was born in Sussex, the heir to a baronetcy and a great fortune. He was educated at Eton and Oxford, but from a very early age showed a great eccentricity of character. He frequented graveyards, studied alchemy, and read books of dreadful import. While he was at the university he wrote several extraordinary pamphlets, one of which, The Necessity of Atheism, caused him to be expelled from Oxford. He had already developed extreme notions on religion, politics, and morality generally, a violence that was entirely theoretical, for by nature he was among the most unselfish and amiable of mankind. His opinions, as well as an early and unhappy marriage which he contracted, brought about a painful quarrel with his relatives. This was finally composed by the poet’s father, Sir Timothy Shelley, who settled an annuity upon his son. The poet immediately took to the life that suited him best, ardently devoting himself to his writing and wandering where the spirit led him. In 1816, his first wife committed suicide; and Shelley, having married the daughter of William Godwin, settled in Italy (1818), the land he loved the best. The intoxication of Rome’s blue sky and the delicious unrestraint of his Italian existence set his genius blossoming into the rarest beauty. In the full flower of it he was drowned, when he was only thirty years old, in a sudden squall that overtook his yacht in the Gulf of Sleazier. His body—a fit consummation—was burned on the beach where it was found, and his ashes were laid beside those of Keats in the Roman cemetery that he had nobly hymned. It is impossible to estimate the loss to literature that was caused by his early extinction. The crudeness of his earlier opinions was passing away, and his vision was gaining immeasurably in clearness and intensity.
His earliest effort of any note is Queen Mab (1813). The poem is clearly immature; it is written in the irregular unrhymed meter that was made popular by Southey. The beginning is worth quoting, for already it reveals a touch of the airy music that was to distinguish his later work:
How wonderful is Death
Death and his brother sleep!
One, pale as yonder waning moon
With lips of lurid blue;
The other, rosy as the world:
Yet both so passing Wonderful!
Alistair or The Spirit of Solitude (1816) followed. It is a kind of spiritual autobiography, in which the chief character, a shadowy projection of Shelley’s own moods, travels through a wilderness in quest of the ideal beauty. The poem is long, rather obscure, and formless, and is remembered chiefly for its lyrical passages and striking, typically Shelley, an imagery. It is written in blank verse that shows Shelley’s growing skill as a poet. After this came Leon and Catha (1817), and then The Revolt of Islam (1818). It has the fault of its immediate predecessor—lack of grip and coherence; but it is richer in descriptive passages, and has many outbursts of rapturous energy. Then, Shelley left for Italy. The first fruits of his new life were apparent in Prometheus Unbound (1818-19, published in 1820). This wonderful production is a combination of the lyric and the drama. The story is that of Prometheus, who defied the gods and suffered for his presumption. There is a small proportion of narrative in blank verse, but the chief feature of the poem is the series of lyrics that both sustain and embellish the action. As a whole the poem has a sweep, a soar, and an unearthly with spirits and demigods, and its scenes are cast in the inaccessible spaces of sky, mountain, and sea.
In The Cenci (1819) Shelley started to write formal drama. In this play, he seems deliberately to have set upon himself the restraints that he defined in Prometheus Unbound. The plot is not of the sky and the sea; it is a grim and sordid family affair; in style, it is neither fervent nor ornate, but bleak and austere. Yet, behind this reticence of manner there is a deep and smouldering intensity of passion and enormous adequacy of tragic purpose. Many of the poet’s admires look upon it as his masterpiece; but it falls short of the highest tragic level in the lack of subtlety in its character drawing and the inadequacy of its dramatic action. Even so, it stands as one of the best tragedies since Webster. The last words of the play, when the heroine goes to her doom, are almost heart-breaking in their simplicity:
Beatrice. Give yourself no unnecessary pain,
My dear Lord Cardinal. Here, mother, tie
My girdle for me, and bind up this hair
In any simple knot; ay, that does well.
The poems of this period are extraordinary in their number and quality. Among the longer ones are Julian and Modulo (1818) and The Masque of Anarchy (1819, published 1832). The latter, inspired by the news of the massacre of Petrel, expresses Shelley’s revolutionary political views, and is very severe on Lord Castlereagh. The second stanza of the poem is startling enough:
I met Murder on the way,
He had a mask like Castlereagh;
Very smooth he looked, yet grim;
Seven bloodhounds followed him.
In The Witch of Atlas (1820, published 1824) and Epipsychidion (1821) Shelley rises further and further into the ether of poetical imagination, until he becomes almost impossible of comprehension. The former, the lightest and most delicate of all Shelley’s fantasies, is rich in music and imagery, while Epipsychidion, with the same wealth of imagery, contains some of his most fervent writing Adonis (1821) is a lament for the death of Keats modeled on the classical elegy. Though there is a jarring note in the attack on the critics, the Spenserian stanza is here used with a splendid resonance and a force which increases as the poem progresses. It glows with some of the most splendid of Shelley’s conceptions.
He has outsoared the shadow of our night.
Envy and calumny and hate and pain,
And that unrest which men miscall delight,
Can touch him not and torture not again.
With the longer poems went a brilliant cascade of shorter lyrical pieces.
To name them is to mention some of the sweetest English lines. “Our sweetest songs are those that tell of saddest thought ”the constantly quoted To a skylark and The cloud are some exquisite songs such as The Indian Serenade ,Music , when soft voice die , On a Faded violet ,To Night , and the longer occasional pieces , for example .Lines written among the Eugenia Hills, and the Letter to Maria Gisborne. Of his many beautiful odes, the most remarkable is Ode to the West Wind. The stanzas have the elemental rush of the wind itself, and the conclusion, where Shelley sees a parallel to himself, is the most remarkable of all:
Make me thy lyre, even as the forest is:
What if my leaves are falling like its own!
The tumult of thy mighty harmonies
Shelley began his literary career with two boyish romances. Zastrozzi and St Irvine. These books were written when he was still at school, and are almost laughably bad in style and story. The only other prose work that is worth mention in his short essay The Defense of Poetry (1821, published 1840). The work is soundly written, and is a strong exposition of the Romantic point of view. His published letters show him to have been a man of considerable common sense, and not merely the crazy theorist of popular imagination. His prose style is somewhat heavy, but always clear and readable. His lyrical power is equal to the highest to be found in any language. It is now recognized to be one of the supreme gifts in literature, like the dramatic genius of Shakespeare. This gift is shown at its best when it expresses the highest emotional ecstasy, as in the lyrics of Prometheus Unbound. It is a sign of his great genius that, in spite of the passion that pervades his lyrics, he is seldom shrill and tuneless. He can also express a mood of blessed cheerful, a sane and delectable joy. To the Spirit of Delight he says:
I love Love, though he has wings,
And like light can flee,
But above all other things,
Spirit, I love thee.
Thou art love and life! O come,
Make once more my heart thy home.
He can also express the keenest note of depression and despair, as in the lyric O World! O Life! O Time!
Shelley’s choice of subject makes it convenient to divide his work into two broad groups, the one consisting of his visionary, prophetic works such as Alistair, or the Spirit of Solitude, The Revolt of Islam, Prometheus Unbound, and similar poems, and the other of his shorter lyrics. In almost all of the visionary poems we see the Shelley as a hero, a rebel against tyranny and a leader in the struggle which is to bring about the ultimate happiness of humanity, like the Byronic hero. These figures are, to a large extent, projections of the character of their creator. Often the symbolism of the poems is not sufficiently clear or sustained, and the result is some confusion in the mind of the reader. In the subjects of his shorter poems he differs from such a poet as Burns, who is almost the only other poet who challenges him as master of the lyric. Shelley lacks the homely appeal of Burns; he loves to roam through space and infinity. In his own words he
Feeds on the aerial kisses
Of shapes that haunt thought’s wilderness.
He rejoices in nature, but nature of a spiritual kind, which he peoples with phantoms and airy beings:
I love all that thou loves’,
Spirit of delight!
The fresh Earth in new leaves drest,
And the starry night;
Autumn evening, and the morn
When the golden mists are born.
Frequently he is concerned with the thought of death or his own sense of despair of loneliness:
O world! O life! O time!
On whose last steps I climb,
Trembling at that where I had stood before;
When will return the glory of your prime?
No more—Oh, never more!
His descriptive power at once strikes the imagination. The effect is instantaneous. His fancy played among wild and elemental things, but it gave them form and substance, as well as a radiant loveliness. His favorite device for this purpose is personification, of which the following is an excellent example:
For winter came; the wind was his whip;
One choppy finger was on his lip;
He had torn the cataracts from the hills,
And they clanked at his girdle like manacles.
The Sensitive Plant
We add another extract to show his almost unearthly skill in visualizing the wilder aspects of nature. The extreme simplicity and ease of the style:
We paused amid the pines that stood
The giants of the waste,
Tortured by storms to shapes as rude
With stems like serpents interlaced.
The Pine Forest of the Cascine near Pisa
His style is perfectly attuned to his purpose. Like all the finest lyrical styles, it is simple, flexible, and passionate. It has a direct clarity, an easy, yet striking, lucidity, and a purity of language which are peculiarly Shelley’s own.
Sometimes, as in The Cenci, It rises to a commanding simplicity. The extracts already given sufficiently show this. Shelley’s limitations are almost as plain as his great abilities.
His continual rhapsodizing tends to become tedious and baffling; in his narrative he is diffuse and argumentative; he lacks humor; and his political poetry is often violent and unreasonable.
His reputation: During his lifetime Shelley’s opinions obscured his powers as a poet. Even to Scott, who with all his Tory prejudices was liberal enough in his views on literature, he was simply, “that atheist Shelley.” After his death his reputation rose rapidly, and by the middle of the nineteenth century his position was assured. By the curious alternation that seems to affect popular taste, his fame since that time has paled a little; but no fluctuations in taste can ever remove him from his place among the great.
Category: History, Government & Society, People
