About This Book
The essay profiles Percy Bysshe Shelley as a thinker and social critic, tracing personal hardships—expulsion from university, family estrangement, and exile—and situating them alongside his ethical and political convictions. It reads his poetry and prose as expressions of a reforming zeal for liberty of conscience, social justice, and intellectual freedom, and attacks religious and legal institutions that enforced orthodoxies. The presentation blends biographical sketch, philosophical argument, and literary appreciation, and includes a dedicatory sonnet, a portrait, and a commemorative view of his tomb to underscore the mingling of personal suffering and public ideas.
About the Author
You May Also Like
6 picks
"Billy" Sunday, the Man and His Message / With his own words which have won thousands for Christ
by William T. Ellis
"Boots and Saddles"; Or, Life in Dakota with General Custer
by Elizabeth Bacon Custer
"Born of the Spirit;" or, Gems from the Book of Life
by Zenas Osborne
"Brother Bosch", an Airman's Escape from Germany
by Gerald Featherstone Knight
"Buffalo Bill" from Prairie to Palace: An Authentic History of the Wild West
by John M. Burke
"Co. Aytch," Maury Grays, First Tennessee Regiment / Or, A Side Show of the Big Show
by Samuel R. Watkins