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- Romantic Opinions in the Work of Percy Bysshe Shelley
-
- To think of something romantically is to think of it naively, in a positive
- light, away from the view of the majority. Percy Bysshe Shelley has many
- romantic themes in his plays. Educated at Eton College, he went on to the
- University of Oxford only to be expelled after one year after publishing an
- inappropriate collection of poems. He then worked on writing full-time, and
- moved to Italy shortly before his death in a boating accident off the shore
- of Leghorn. He wrote many pieces, and his writing contains numerous themes.
- Shelley experienced first-hand the French Revolution. This allowed him to
- ponder many different situations, and determine deep philosophical views -
- views that were so radically different they were considered naive at best,
- downright wrong at worst. He contemplated socialism, having for a
- father-in-law William Godwin, who was the prominent socialist in the United
- Kingdom in Shelley's time. Shelley liked Napolean, and was suspicious of both
- the Bourbon monarchy and the Directory. Most of all, Shelley felt that all
- people had the right to work for themselves; he did not support the notion
- that once one had been born into a class, one must stay in that class for the
- rest of one's life. Shelley felt that all bodies of the universe were
- governed by the same principle, completely contradicting the given theories,
- those of Aristotle. Thus, Shelley gained a romantic and rather naive view of
- the universe. In fact, Carlos Baker describes his poems as "The Fabric of a
- Vision". (Baker 1) In Percy Bysshe Shelley's poems, the author uses those
- naive, romantic opinions on the themes of romance, politics, and science.
-
- Romance is well defined as a theme choice for Shelley. Shelley uses this
- theme rather romantically; one could say that Shelley's theme in his amorous
- poetry is unrestricted passion; love, Shelley feels, can overcome all
- obstacles, distance, fear, even death. One example of this is in Shelley's
- poem which is titled by the first line: "I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden":
- "I fear thy kisses gentle maiden;/Thou needst not fear mine;/My spirit is too
- deeply laiden/Ever to burden thine/I fear thy mien, thy tones, thy
- motion;/Thou needst not fear mine;/Innocent is the heart's devotion/With
- which I worship thine" In this poem Shelley is observing that he feels
- inferior to his maiden; he "fears" her kisses because he is intimidated by
- her perfection to the point where he feels as though he is stifling her, that
- she is compromising her own value by falling in love with him; this is why
- the maiden should not fear Shelley. He emphasizes his own faults in line 3,
- by stating that his spirit is "too deeply laiden" to be good enough for his
- maiden. He also mentions that everything about her is perfect, her body
- (mien), her voice (tones), and her walk (motion). In the last line, Shelley
- asserts that he feels so inconsequential that he wishes to place his maiden
- on a pedestal and worship her, as opposed to treating her as an equal. In
- this way does Shelley show his unbounded passion for his maiden. Another
- example of this is in Julian and Maddalo, a long text wherein Maddalo is
- traveling to meet his beloved Julian. William Hazlitt reviewed as "a
- Conversation or Tale, full of that thoughtful and romantic humanity... which
- distinguished Mr. Shelley's writings." (500) The lines he most seemingly
- referred to were lines 13-19, which state "...I love all waste/And solitary
- places; where we taste/The pleasure of believing what we see/Is boundless, as
- we wish our souls to be./And such was this wide ocean, and this shore/More
- than it's billows..." Shelley is referring to the love that partners have for
- eachother; this love is boundless, with infinite possibilities for showing
- this passion, both physical and honorable. True love turns away from faults
- and inefficiencies, which bound all other virtues (talent, strength, et
- cetera); Shelley wishes that his body had that kind of freedom, the freedom
- to roam around without a care in the world, and thus the freedom to do
- whatever he chooses, knowing that nothing will be affected by the mistakes he
- makes. Lovers whose love is true have this ability, the ability to forgive
- and forget for the numerous errors that either partner commits. This is
- easily translatable to any era and any person, which is the meaning of
- Hazlitt's remark. Yet another example of this can be seen in Arethusa, with
- the lines 19-37:
-
- And now from their fountains
- In Enna's mountains,
- Down one vale where the morning basks,
- Like friends once parted
- Grown single-hearted,
- They ply their watery tasks.
- At sunrise they leap
- >From their cradles steep
- In the cave of the shelving hill;
- At noontide they flow
- Through the woods below
- And the meadows of asphodel;
- And at night they sleep
- In the rocking deep
- Beneath the Ortygian shore;
- Like spirits that lie
- In the azure sky
- When they love but live no more.
-
-
- In this poem Shelley is playing on one of the most beloved fantasies of both
- men and women, which is for the gorgeous, breathtakingly beautiful woman to
- be swiftly carried away by a tall, handsome, strong gentleman to a remote
- island where the two of them can make love in peace until the end of their
- days. Arethusa is carried by Alpheus to a luscious island where they act
- amorously until they die, their love for eachother lasting much longer than
- their mortal lives. More evidence of Shelley being the "incurable
- romanticist" comes in the poem The Dirge, which discusses a person who sees
- his significant other in a coffin: "Ere the sun through the heaven once more
- roll'd,/The rats in her heart/Will have made their nest/And the worms be
- alive in her golden hair/While the spirit that guides the sun/Sits throned in
- his flaming chair/She shall sleep." (Hazlitt 494) Again Mr. Hazlitt remarks
- that this poem "...is a fragment of the manner in which this craving...this
- desire to elevate and surprise,...leads us to overstep the modesty of nature
- and the bounds of decorum." (494). In the poem, Shelley imagines that his
- wife, Mary, in the coffin, dead; he is so deeply in love with her that he
- cannot bear the thought of her death, and the thought of worms, rats, and
- parasites decomposing her once-dazzling body; the golden hair may or may not
- refer to Mary, because it is not certain that she had blonde hair, but rather
- one find finds his significant other's hair, rather amorously, beautiful, of
- extremely fine quality, like gold. The flaming chair refers to Purgatory, the
- weigh station before a soul can pass to heaven, according to the doctrines of
- Roman Catholic Christians. The thought of the inspiration for all of his
- passion being decomposed by parasitic, filthy creatures scares Shelley, as it
- would any other man whose woman lays in a coffin. Thus, Shelley is able to
- emphasize unbridled, noble passion in his poems.
-
- Another theme Shelley exhibits in his poems is politics and social reform.
- Shelley spent many years in France during the French Revolution, at a time
- when the French did not respect any leader except Napolean. Europe set up the
- Congress of Vienna, whose job was to oust Napolean after he tried to take all
- of Europe, banish him to a remote island, and reset the borders of Europe to
- what they were before they banished him. It took them two tries to get it
- right, because Napolean returned to France, where he was still revered, and
- attempted to conquer Europe again. He was finally defeated by the same
- general, and was banished correctly. In his The Mask of Anarchy, Shelley
- asserts that "I met murder on the way- He had a mask like Castlereagh, Very
- smooth he looked, yet grim; Seven bloodhounds followed him." (ll. 8-12) Lord
- Castlereagh was the United Kingdom's representative to the Congress of Vienna
- in 1819; Castlereagh had the Congress impose harsh sanctions on France, and
- the seven that followed him were seven countries that felt the same way,
- including Austria, Prussia, and Russia, the dominant military powers of the
- time. Shelley feels that the sanctions that Castlereagh imposed were too
- severe, and thus would lead to the demise of both France specifically and
- Europe in general. Shelley proved to be a prophet, for much land was given to
- the Kaiser Wilheim II of Prussia, who then, drunk with power, formed Germany,
- a nation that then attempted - twice - to conquer all of Europe. Harold Bloom
- notes that "...the Power speaks forth, through a poet's act of confrontation
- with it that is the very act of writing his poem, and the Power, rightly
- interpreted, can be used to repeal the large code of fraud, institutional and
- historical Christianity, and the equally massive code of woe, the laws of the
- nation-states of Europe in the age of Castlereagh and Metternich..." (87).
- Shelley, in writing this poem, is attempting to reveal the corruption at the
- Congress of Vienna. Shelley's aforementioned wife, Mary, comments on her
- husband in a similar way. "...[Percy Shelley] had been from youth the victim
- of the state of feeling inspired by the French Revolution; and believing in
- the justice and excellence of his view, it cannot be wondered that a nature
- as sensitive, as impetuous, and as generous as his, should put it's whole
- force into the attempt to alleviate for others the evils of those systems
- from which he had himself suffered." (ix). Mrs. Shelley is referring to
- Percy's whole-hearted faith in Napolean; he felt abused by the monarchy and
- the National Convention, which overthrew the monarchy in favor of a republic.
- The commoners of France felt a void that only Naploean filled; Napolean gave
- the commoners a sense of nationalism and patriotism. And when Europe banished
- Napolean for a second time to a remote South Atlantic island. Shelley wrote
- this sarcastic sonnet, Feelings of a Republican on the fall of Bonaparte, in
- which a Napolean dissenter addresses the dead tyrant: "...For this I prayed,
- would on thy sleep have crept/Treason and Slavery, Rapine, Fear, and
- Lust,/And stifled thee, their minister. I know/Too Late, since thou and
- France are in the dust,/That virtue owns a more eternal foe/Than Force or
- Fraud, old Custom, legal Crime,/And bloody Faith the foulest birth of Time."
- (ll. 8-14). The Republican states that while Napolean is asleep (banished
- from France), many traits returned, such as devastation, treason, slavery,
- and crime; and the rest of Europe pinned the blame onto Napolean, which was
- unfair. Shelley supported Napolean, and wrote this poem to show the mistake
- France was making in allowing the Congress to banish him. *Shelley also had a
- strong opinion about the conditions of English laborers, which he addressed
- in his poem, Song to the Men of England. "He looked on political freedom as
- the direct agent to effect the happiness of mankind; and thus any new-sprung
- hope of liberty inspired a joy and an exulation more intense and wild than he
- could have felt for any personal advantage.", notes wife Mary. (ix) Shelley
- felt great joy in exposing the inefficiences of certain governments and their
- treatment of certain groups of people; he felt the British working class were
- losing in the capitalist parliamentary society that was in place in the
- United Kingdom at the time, and felt a great sense of pride in exposing this
- to the general public, as seen in this quote, "Men of England, wherefore
- plough/For the lords who lay ye so low?/Wherefore weave with toil and
- care/The rich robes your tyrants wear/******/Wherefore, Bees of England,
- forge/Many a weapon, chain, and scourge,/That these stingless drones may
- spoil/The forced produce of your toil." (Baker 158) Shelley is attempting to
- show the British commoners that they are working for people who think they
- are better than the commoners, and who do not care about the working class.
- He wants to stir anger against the "capitalist tyrants", perhaps under the
- influence of Godwin. He was not successful, but he proved his point. Thus
- Shelley has a romantic, naive view of politics and government.
-
- Shelley also shows his romanticism in the field of science. At the time, the
- view of the majority was Aristotelian, regardless of what others may prove.
- Shelley, however, sided with the modernists, who were able to disprove
- Aristotle but were not taken seriously, and were thought to be theologically
- backward. An example of the science entering the poem is in Notes to Queen
- Mab. Notes Desmond King-Hele: "...in 1813 [Shelley] wrote, 'I am determined
- not to relax until I have attained a considerable proficiency in the physical
- sciences' ...the first fruits of Shelley's astronomical studies appears in
- Notes to Queen Mab..." (164-165). Shelley's first note is the one that best
- exemplifies the point. "...'The sun's unclouded orb/Rolled through the black
- concave'...Beyond our atmosphere the sun would appear a rayless orb of fire
- in the midst of a black concave. The equal diffusion of it's light on earth
- is owing to the refraction of the rays by the atmosphere, and their
- reflection from other bodies." (Complete Works 135). Shelley wanted to
- dispel the belief that the sun actually shot rays of light toward the earth,
- when in fact the "rays" that we see is light from the sun being refracted by
- the Earth and many other planetary objects in space. Shelley embraced this
- view, and many other views of the modernists; and, as Desmond King-Hele
- noted, "...without understanding the science undertone, Prometheus Unbound
- loses half it's bite." (169). In fact, in that piece is the belief that
- Shelley held, which was that he "...believed that fire, light, heat, caloric,
- phlogiston, and electricity were, of not identical, merely modifications of
- the same principle...the hypothesis certainly appealed to Shelley, who made
- good use of it in Prometheus Unbound." (King-Hele 159). King-Hele uses this
- passage as his evidence (177) :
-
- The bubbles, which the enchantment of the sun
- Sucks from the pale faint water-flowers that pave
- The oozy bottom of clear lakes and pools,
- Are the pavilions where such dwell and float...
- And when these burst; and the thin, fiery air,
- The which they breathed within those lucent domes,
- Ascends to flow like meteors through the night,
- They ride on them, and; and rein their headlong speed,
- And bow their burning crests, and glide in fire
- Under the waters of the earth again.
-
-
- In the passage, Shelley shows a phenomena between meteors falling into the
- Earth's atmosphere and bubbles from decaying vegetation as having the same
- theoretical principle. Shelley sided with the modernists, with a view that
- was at the time considered novel but highly unlikely. Another piece of
- evidence for Shelley's science background comes from Ode to the West Wind, in
- which Shelley discusses clouds. "Thou on whose stream, mid the steep sky's
- commotion,/Loose clouds like earth's decaying leaves are shed,/Shook from the
- tangled boughs of Heaven and Ocean." (ll. 15-17). While his contemporaries
- felt that rain was a sign from God, Shelley had a more literal view. "As
- Shelley sees it, about two-thirds of sky is blue and about one-third, from
- nearly overhead to as far as the eye can see west, is covered by a high filmy
- layer of white, streaky mare's-tail or plume cirrus...low in the west are
- jagged detached clouds, scud or fractostratus, grey and watery, approaching
- fast in the rising wind... in the [stanza], the loose clouds shed like
- earth's decaying leaves in to the airstream, are the fractostratus clouds,
- harbingers of rain." (King-Hele 215-216). What Shelley describes in the poem
- is the last third of the sky, releasing it's rain like dead leaves off a tree
- in autumn; at the time, all things "falling from the sky" were thought to be
- a sign of God; Gallileo said it best when asked where is God. "Certainly not
- up [in the sky]." When asked then where was He, he replied, "How should I
- know? I'm a mathematician, not a theologian." Shelley showed that modernists
- like Gallileo were correct, that God could not ride a cloud around the Earth
- as Aristotle believed. Shelley shows that rain is also a scientific function,
- not a function of Him. Thus, Shelley undertones many poems with science.
-
- In conclusion, Percy Bysshe Shelley had a lifetime of adventures from which
- he was able to form naive and romantic opinions, which undertone his poems.
- For example, he feels that love can conquer all obstacles, including
- distance, like Julian and Maddalo and Arethusa, fear of inferiority, as in "I
- fear thy kisses, gentle maiden", and even death, as in The Dirge. Shelley
- also laces his political poems with his romanticist views. He shows his
- support for a tyrant who tried to conquer the known world twice in Napoleon,
- as in Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Bonaparte; he attempts to stir
- emotions towards socialism in Song to the Men of England; and he attempted to
- smite the Congress of Vienna, which for a while brought order and stability
- back to Europe, in The Mask of Anarchy. He also had what as considered naive
- views on the sciences, which admittedly are now known to be true. He shows
- that all bodies operate under the same principle in Prometheus Unbound; shows
- how rain is made, indirectly by God, directly by clouds, not the other way as
- one in the 18th or 19th century might argue, in Ode to the West Wind; and he
- explained from where the sun's "rays" are coming, and again disproved the
- notion that God directly poured them into the Earth, in his Notes to Queen
- Mab. Thus, Shelley undertones his poetry with the naive views of life he held
- during his lifetime.
-
- Bibliography
-
- Baker, Carlos. Shelley's Major Poetry. New York: Princeton Unversity Press,
- 1961.
-
- Blank, G. Kim. Wordsworth's Influence on Shelley. New York: St. Martin's
- Press, 1988.
-
- Bloom, Harold. "The Unpastured Sea: An Introduction to Shelley." The Ringers
- in the Tower: Studies in Romantic Tradition. Chicago: The University of
- Chicago Press, 1971.
-
- Cambell, Pyre, and Weaver, eds. Poetry and Criticism of the Romantic
- Movement. New York: F.S. Crofts and Comapny, 1932.
-
- Hazlitt, William. "A Review of Shelley's Posthumous Poems." Nineteenth
- Century Literary Criticism. Kansas City: Random House, January 1988.
-
- Ingpen, Peck, eds. The Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Volume I. New
- York: Gordian Press, 1965.
-
- King-Hele, Desmond. Shelley: His Thought and Work. Teaneck: Farleigh
- Dickinson University Press, 1960.
-
- Knopf, Alfred, ed. Shelley: Poems. Toronto: David Campbell Publishers Ltd.,
- 1993.
-
- "Percy Bysshe Shelley." Adventures in English Literature. New York: Harcourt
- Brace Jovanovich, 1973.
-
- Shelley, Mary. "Mrs. Shelley's Preface to the Collected Poems, 1839." The
- Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley: Poems, Vol. 1 by Percy Bysshe
- Shelley. Ingpen and Peck, eds. Toronto:
- Gordian Press, 1965.
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