About This Book
The study offers a psychological reading of Shelley's temperament and poetry, arguing that an all-pervasive love-interest, a tendency to idealize rather than depict physical sexual detail, and a blend of feminine and masculine traits shaped his work. It links recurring delusions and emotional variability to repressed love passions, and reads major poems (such as Prometheus Unbound, Epipsychidion, and Adonais) as exemplars of diffuse, abstract devotion that extends beyond individual bodies to nature and humanity. The author explores how this idealism opposes materialist and blood-soaked social delusions and suggests that Shelley's emotional volatility, coupled with steadfast determination, underlies his prophetic ethical vision.
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