This carefully crafted ebook collection is formatted for your e Reader with a functional and detailed table of contents:
The Daemon of the World
Alastor: or, the Spirit of Solitude.
The Revolt of Islam
Prince Athanase
Rosalind and Helen
Julian and Maddalo
Prometheus Unbound
The Cenci – A Tragedy in Five Acts
The Mask of Anarchy
Peter Bell the Third
Letter to Maria Gisborne
The Witch of Atlas
Oedipus Tyrannus
Epipsychidion
Adonais
Hellas
Fragments of an Unfinished Drama
Charles the First
The Triumph of Life
Early Poems (1814, 1815):
Stanza, Written at Bracknell
Stanzas — April, 1814
To Harriet
To Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin
Mutability
On Death
A Summer Evening Churchyard
To Wordsworth
Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Bonaparte
Lines…
Poems Written in 1816-1822:
The Sunset
Hymn to Intellectual Beauty
Mont Blanc
Home
Fragment of a Ghost Story
Marianne’s Dream
To Constantia, Singing
To Constantia
To Music
‘Mighty Eagle’
To William Shelley
On Fanny Godwin
Death
Otho
A Hate-Song
Lines to a Critic
Ozymandias
To the Nile
Passage of the Apennines
The Past
To Mary
On a Faded Violet
October, 1818
Song for ‘Tasso’
Invocation to Misery
The Woodman and the Nightingale
Marenghi
Sonnet
To Byron
Apostrophe to Silence
The Lake’s Margin
The Vine-Shroud
Song to the Men of England
To the People of England
‘What Men Gain Fairly’
A New National Anthem
Ode to Heaven
Ode to the West Wind
An Exhortation
Love’s Philosophy
The Birth of Pleasure
Rain
A Tale Untold
To Italy
Wine of the Fairies
A Roman’s Chamber
Rome and Nature
The Sensitive Plant
A Vision of the Sea
The Cloud
To a Skylark
Ode to Liberty
Dirge for the Year
To Night
Time
The Fugitives
The Zucca
The Isle…
Translations:
Hymn to Mercury
Homer’s Hymns
The Cyclops
Epigrams from the Greek
Pan, Echo, and the Satyr
Ugolino….
Juvenilia:
Queen Mab
Verses on a Cat
Omens
Epitaphium
In Horologium
To the Moonbeam
The Solitary
Love’s Rose
The Devil’s Walk
To the Queen of My Heart…
Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things
A Defence of Poetry – Essay by Shelley
Shelley – Biography by John Addington Symonds
About the author
Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822) was one of the major English Romantic poets, and is regarded by some as among the finer lyric and philosophical poets in the English language, and one of the more influential. A radical in his poetry as well as in his political and social views, Shelley did not see fame during his lifetime, but recognition of his achievements in poetry grew steadily following his death. Shelley was a key member of a close circle of visionary poets and writers that included Lord Byron, Leigh Hunt, Thomas Love Peacock, and his own second wife, Mary Shelley, the author of Frankenstein.