The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe ShelleyMacmillan, 1913 - 708 |
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Strona xii
... seemed to point out " mad Shelley " as a fit and proper victim upon whom the other boys might let loose their animal spirits . " I have seen him , " wrote a schoolfellow , " surrounded , hooted , baited like a maddened bull . " If it ...
... seemed to point out " mad Shelley " as a fit and proper victim upon whom the other boys might let loose their animal spirits . " I have seen him , " wrote a schoolfellow , " surrounded , hooted , baited like a maddened bull . " If it ...
Strona xiii
... seemed to bring into a certain harmony the destructive or sceptical criticism of the age and those boundless hopes for the future which sprung phantomlike from the ruins of the past . He was too young to have learned the lessons of ...
... seemed to bring into a certain harmony the destructive or sceptical criticism of the age and those boundless hopes for the future which sprung phantomlike from the ruins of the past . He was too young to have learned the lessons of ...
Strona xviii
... seemed a spent force , a withered branch , because he took little interest in meta- physical subtleties , and had lost his early confidence in the virtue of Revolutionary abstractions . A more congenial personal influence was that of ...
... seemed a spent force , a withered branch , because he took little interest in meta- physical subtleties , and had lost his early confidence in the virtue of Revolutionary abstractions . A more congenial personal influence was that of ...
Strona xxi
... seemed to be friendship , but quickly proved itself love . At the same time - if we may trust a statement of Mrs. Godwin's daughter , Claire Clairmont - Shelley had not only come to believe that Harriet had ceased to love him ; he ...
... seemed to be friendship , but quickly proved itself love . At the same time - if we may trust a statement of Mrs. Godwin's daughter , Claire Clairmont - Shelley had not only come to believe that Harriet had ceased to love him ; he ...
Strona xxiii
... seemed that Mary and he would be happier in any other country than in England , where kinsfolk and former friends averted their faces in anger or in shame . Accordingly , it was decided that trial should be made of a residence abroad ...
... seemed that Mary and he would be happier in any other country than in England , where kinsfolk and former friends averted their faces in anger or in shame . Accordingly , it was decided that trial should be made of a residence abroad ...
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art thou beams Beatrice beauty beneath blood bosom breast breath bright calm cave Cenci child Chorus clouds cold Cyclops Cyprian Dæmon dare dark dead death deep delight Demogorgon divine dream earth eternal eyes faint fair Faust fear feel fire flame fled flowers FRAGMENT gentle grave green Harvard College hast hear heart heaven hell hope human King Laon light lips living look Mephistopheles mighty mind moon mortal mountains never night o'er ocean pain pale Panthea passion Percy Bysshe Shelley Peter Bell Pisa poem Queen Mab Revolt of Islam round ruin Semichorus shadow Shelley Shelley's edition silent Silenus slaves sleep smile soft song soul sound spirit stars strange stream sweet swift tears tempest thee thine things thou art thought thro throne truth tyrant Ulysses voice wandering waves weep Whilst wild wind wings