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MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT SHELLEY (1797-1851)

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 827 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT SHELLEY (1797-1851)  ,
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English writer, only daughter of William Godwin and his wife Mary Wollstonecraft, and second wife of the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, was born in
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London on the 3oth of August 1797 . For the
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history of her girlhood and of her married
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life see, GODwIN, WILLIAM, and SHELLEY, P.B . When she was in
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Switzerland with Shelley and Byron in 1816 a proposal was made that various members of the party should write a
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romance or tale dealing with the supernatural . The result of this project was that Mrs Shelley wrote
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Frankenstein, Byron the beginning of a narrative about a vampyre, and Dr Polidori, Byron's physician, a tale named The Vampyre, the authorship of which used frequently ' It is further worthy of remark that the young of C. variegata when first hatched closely resemble those of C. rutila, and when the former assume their first plumage they resemble their
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father more than their
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mother (P.Z.S., 1866, p . 15o).in past years to be attributed to Byron himself . Frankenstein, published in 1818, when Mrs Shelley was at the utmost twenty-one years old, is a very remarkable performance for so young and inexperienced a writer; its main idea is that of the formation and vitalization, by a deep student of the secrets of nature, of an adult man, who, entering the
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world thus under unnatural conditions, becomes the terror of his
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species, a
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half-involuntary criminal, ,and finally an outcast whose
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sole resource is self-immolation . This romance was followed by others: Valperga, or the Life and Adventures of Castruccia, Prince of Lucca (1823), an
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historical tale written with a good
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deal of spirit, and readable enough even now; The Last Man (1826), a fiction of the final agonies of human society owing to the universal spread of a pestilence—this is written in a very
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stilted style, but possesses a particular
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interest because Adrian is a portrait of Shelley; The Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck (1830); Lodore (1835), also bearing partly upon Shelley's biography, and Falkner (1837) . Besides these novels there was the Journal of a Six Weeks' Tour (the tour of 1814 mentioned below), which is published in conjunction with Shelley's
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prose-writings; and Rambles in Germany and Italy in 1840-1842-1843 (which shows an observant spirit, capable of making some true forecasts of the future), and various
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miscellaneous writings . After the
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death of Shelley, for whom she had a deep and even enthusiastic affection, marred at times by defects of temper, Mrs Shelley in the autumn of 1823 returned to London . At first the earnings of her pen were her only sustenance; but after a while
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Sir Timothy Shelley made her an allowance, which would have been withdrawn if she had persisted in a project of writing a full biography of her
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husband . In 1838 she edited Shelley's
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works, supplying the notes that throw such invaluable
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light on the subject . She succeeded, by strenuous exertions, in maintaining her son Percy at
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Harrow and Cambridge; and she shared in the improvement of his fortune when in 184o his grandfather acknowledged his responsibilities and in 1844 he succeeded to the baronetcy .

She died on the

list of
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February 1851 .

End of Article: MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT SHELLEY (1797-1851)
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