segunda-feira, abril 07, 2008

Selected Poetry of Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)


Selected Poetry of Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)
from Representative Poetry On-linePrepared by members of the Department of English at the University of Torontofrom 1912 to the present and published by the University of Toronto Press from 1912 to 1967.RPO Edited by Ian LancashireA UTEL (University of Toronto English Library) EditionPublished by the Web Development Group, Information Technology Services, University of Toronto Libraries© 2007, Ian Lancashire for the Department of English, University of Toronto

Index to poems
Music, when soft voices die, Vibrates in the memory--Odours, when sweet violets sicken,Live within the sense they quicken. (Music when Soft Voices Die (To --), 1-4)

Biographical information
Given name: Percy Bysshe

Family name: Shelley
Birth date: 4 August 1792
Death date: 8 July 1822
Pseudonym: Hermit of Marlow
Nationality: English
Family relations
father: Timothy Shelley
mother: Elizabeth Shelley
wife: Harriet Shelley (from 28 August 1811)
wife: Mary Shelley (from 30 December 1816)
sister: Elizabeth Shelley
son: Charles Bysshe Shelley
son: Percy Florence Shelley
son: William Shelley
daughter: Ianthe Esdaile
daughter: Clara Shelley
grandfather: Bysshe Shelley
cousin: Harriet Grove
Languages
English
Greek
Education
Instruction from Rev. Thomas Edwards, Horsham
Sion House Academy, Brentford: 1802
Eton: 1804
University College, Oxford: 10 April 1810 to 25 March 1811
Politics: Whig
Literary period: Romantic
Residences
Bishopgate, near Windsor Forest
Rome to June 1819
Field Place, Warnham, near Horsham: 4 August 1792
15 Poland Street, London: 1811
Keswick: 1811 to 1812
Lynmouth, North Devon: 1812
Tanyrallt, near Tremadoc, North Wales: 1812
Bracknell, Berkshire, near Windsor Forest: July 1813
Switzerland: 1814
Bath: 1816
Este: 1818
Turin: 31 March 1818
Pisa: 26 January 1819
Lerici, near Spezzia: April 1822
Illness: Consumption: 1815
Cause of death: Drowning
Buried at: Cremated remains in the protestant cemetery at RomeFirst
RPO edition: 1997

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