176- ] English Literature
Shelley's remains
When
Shelley's body was cremated on the beach, his presumed heart resisted burning
and was retrieved by Trelawny. The heart was possibly calcified from an earlier
tubercular infection, or was perhaps his liver. Trelawny gave the scorched
organ to Hunt, who preserved it in spirits of wine and refused to hand it over
to Mary. He finally relented and the heart was eventually buried either at St
Peter's Church, Bournemouth or in Christchurch Priory. Hunt also retrieved a
piece of Shelley's jawbone which, in 1913, was given to the Shelley-Keats
Memorial in Rome.
Family
history
Shelley's
paternal grandfather was Bysshe Shelley (21 June 1731 – 6 January 1815), who,
in 1806, became Sir Bysshe Shelley, First Baronet of Castle Goring. On Sir
Bysshe's death in 1815, Shelley's father inherited the baronetcy, becoming Sir
Timothy Shelley.
Shelley
was the eldest of several legitimate children. Bieri argues that Shelley had an
older illegitimate brother but, if he existed, little is known of him. His
younger siblings were: John (1806–1866), Margaret (1801–1887), Hellen (1799–1885),
Mary (1797–1884), Hellen (1796–1796, died in infancy) and Elizabeth
(1794–1831).
Shelley
had two children by his first wife Harriet: Eliza Ianthe Shelley (1813–1876)
and Charles Bysshe Shelley (1814–1826). He had four children by his second wife
Mary: an unnamed daughter born in 1815 who only survived ten days; William
Shelley (1816–1819); Clara Everina Shelley (1817–1818); and Percy Florence
Shelley (1819–1889). Shelley also declared himself to be the father of Elena
Adelaide Shelley (1818–1820), who might have been an illegitimate or adopted
daughter. His son Percy Florence became the third baronet of Castle Goring in
1844, following the death of Sir Timothy Shelley.
Political,
religious and ethical views
Politics
Shelley
was a political radical influenced by thinkers such as Rousseau, Paine, Godwin,
Wollstonecraft, and Leigh Hunt. He advocated Catholic Emancipation,
republicanism, parliamentary reform, the extension of the franchise, freedom of
speech and peaceful assembly, an end to aristocratic and clerical privilege,
and a more equal distribution of income and wealth. The views he expressed in
his published works were often more moderate than those he advocated privately
because of the risk of prosecution for seditious libel and his desire not to
alienate more moderate friends and political allies. Nevertheless, his
political writings and activism brought him to the attention of the Home Office
and he came under government surveillance at various periods.
Shelley's
most influential political work in the years immediately following his death
was the poem Queen Mab, which included extensive notes on political themes. The
work went through 14 official and pirated editions by 1845, and became popular
in Owenist and Chartist circles. His longest political essay, A Philosophical
View of Reform, was written in 1820, but not published until 1920.
Nonviolence
Shelley's
advocacy of nonviolent resistance was largely based on his reflections on the
French Revolution and rise of Napoleon, and his belief that violent protest
would increase the prospect of a military despotism. Although Shelley
sympathised with supporters of Irish independence, such as Peter Finnerty and
Robert Emmet, he did not support violent rebellion. In his early pamphlet An
Address, to the Irish People (1812) he wrote: "I do not wish to see things
changed now, because it cannot be done without violence, and we may assure
ourselves that none of us are fit for any change, however good, if we
condescend to employ force in a cause we think right."
In
his later essay A Philosophical View of Reform, Shelley did concede that there
were political circumstances in which force might be justified: "The last
resort of resistance is undoubtably [sic] insurrection. The right of
insurrection is derived from the employment of armed force to counteract the
will of the nation." Shelley
supported the 1820 armed rebellion against absolute monarchy in Spain, and the
1821 armed Greek uprising against Ottoman rule.
Shelley's
poem "The Mask of Anarchy" (written in 1819, but first published in
1832) has been called "perhaps the first modern statement of the principle
of nonviolent resistance". Gandhi was familiar with the poem and it is
possible that Shelley had an indirect influence on Gandhi through Henry David Thoreau's
Civil Disobedience.
Religion
Shelley
was an avowed atheist, who was influenced by the materialist arguments in
Holbach's Le Système de la nature. His atheism was an important element of his
political radicalism as he saw organised religion as inextricably linked to
social oppression. The overt and implied atheism in many of his works raised a
serious risk of prosecution for religious libel. His early pamphlet The
Necessity of Atheism was withdrawn from sale soon after publication following a
complaint from a priest. His poem Queen Mab, which includes sustained attacks
on the priesthood, Christianity and religion in general, was twice prosecuted
by the Society for the Suppression of Vice in 1821. A number of his other works
were edited before publication to reduce the risk of prosecution.
Free
love
Shelley's
advocacy of free love drew heavily on the work of Mary Wollstonecraft and the
early work of William Godwin. In his notes to Queen Mab, he wrote: "A
system could not well have been devised more studiously hostile to human
happiness than marriage." He argued that the children of unhappy marriages
"are nursed in a systematic school of ill-humour, violence and
falsehood". He believed that the ideal of chastity outside marriage was "a
monkish and evangelical superstition" which led to the hypocrisy of
prostitution and promiscuity.
Shelley
believed that "sexual connection" should be free among those who
loved each other and last only as long as their mutual love. Love should also
be free and not subject to obedience, jealousy and fear. He denied that free
love would lead to promiscuity and the disruption of stable human
relationships, arguing that relationships based on love would generally be of
long duration and marked by generosity and self-devotion.
When
Shelley's friend T. J. Hogg made an unwanted sexual advance to Shelley's first
wife Harriet, Shelley forgave him of his "horrible error" and assured
him that he was not jealous. It is very likely that Shelley encouraged Hogg and
Shelley's second wife Mary to have a sexual relationship.
Vegetarianism
Shelley
converted to a vegetable diet in early March 1812 and sustained it, with
occasional lapses, for the remainder of his life. Shelley's vegetarianism was
influenced by ancient authors such as Hesiod, Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, Ovid
and Plutarch, but more directly by John Frank Newton, author of The Return to
Nature, or, A Defence of the Vegetable Regimen (1811). Shelley wrote two essays
on vegetarianism: A Vindication of Natural Diet (1813) and "On the
Vegetable System of Diet" (written circa 1813–1815, but first published in
1929). Michael Owen Jones argues that Shelley's advocacy of vegetarianism was
strikingly modern, emphasising its health benefits, the alleviation of animal
suffering, the inefficient use of agricultural land involved in animal
husbandry, and the economic inequality resulting from the commercialisation of
animal food production. Shelley's life and works inspired the founding of the
Vegetarian Society in England (1847) and directly influenced the vegetarianism
of George Bernard Shaw.
Reception
and influence
Shelley's
work was not widely read in his lifetime outside a small circle of friends,
poets and critics. Most of his poetry, drama and fiction was published in
editions of 250 copies which generally sold poorly. Only The Cenci went to an
authorised second edition while Shelley was alive – in contrast, Byron's The
Corsair (1814) sold out its first edition of 10,000 copies in one day.
The
initial reception of Shelley's work in mainstream periodicals (with the
exception of the liberal Examiner) was generally unfavourable. Reviewers often
launched personal attacks on Shelley's private life and political, social and
religious views, even when conceding that his poetry contained beautiful
imagery and poetic expression. There was also criticism of Shelley's
intelligibility and style, Hazlitt describing it as "a passionate dream, a
straining after impossibilities, a record of fond conjectures, a confused
embodying of vague abstraction".
Shelley's
poetry soon gained a wider audience in radical and reformist circles. Queen Mab
became popular with Owenists and Chartists, and Revolt of Islam influenced
poets sympathetic to the workers' movement such as Thomas Hood, Thomas Cooper
and William Morris.
However,
Shelley's mainstream following did not develop until a generation after his
death. Bieri argues that editions of Shelley's poems published in 1824 and 1839
were edited by Mary Shelley to highlight her late husband's lyrical gifts and
downplay his radical ideas. Matthew Arnold famously described Shelley as a
"beautiful and ineffectual angel".
Shelley
was a major influence on a number of important poets in the following decades,
including Robert Browning, Algernon Swinburne, Thomas Hardy and William Butler
Yeats. Shelley-like characters frequently appeared in nineteenth-century
literature; they include Scythrop in Thomas Love Peacock’s Nightmare Abbey,
Ladislaw in George Eliot’s Middlemarch and Angel Clare in Hardy's Tess of the
d'Urbervilles.
Twentieth-century
critics such as Eliot, Leavis, Allen Tate and Auden variously criticised
Shelley's poetry for deficiencies in style, "repellent" ideas, and
immaturity of intellect and sensibility. However, Shelley's critical reputation
began to rise in the 1960s as a new generation of critics highlighted Shelley's
debt to Spenser and Milton, his mastery of genres and verse forms, and the
complex interplay of sceptical, idealist, and materialist ideas in his work.
American literary critic Harold Bloom describes him as "a superb
craftsman, a lyric poet without rival, and surely one of the most advanced
sceptical intellects ever to write a poem". According to Donald H. Reiman,
"Shelley belongs to the great tradition of Western writers that includes
Dante, Shakespeare and Milton".
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