|
MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT SHELLEY (1797-1851) , See also: English writer, only daughter of See also: William Godwin and his wife Mary Wollstonecraft, and second wife of the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, was
See also: born in See also: London on the 3oth of See also: August 1797
.
For the See also: history of her girlhood and of her married See also: life see, GODwIN, WILLIAM, and SHELLEY, P.B
.
When she was in See also: Switzerland with Shelley and See also: Byron in 1816 a proposal was made that various members of the party should write a See also: romance or tale dealing with the supernatural
.
The result of this project was that Mrs Shelley wrote See also: 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 See also: young of C. variegata when first hatched closely resemble those of C. rutila, and when the former assume their first plumage they resemble their See also: father more than their See also: 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 See also: main idea is that of the formation and vitalization, by a deep student of the secrets of nature, of an adult See also: man, who, entering the See also: world thus under unnatural conditions, becomes the terror of his See also: species, a See also: half-involuntary criminal, ,and finally an outcast whose See also: sole resource is self-immolation
.
This romance was followed by others: Valperga, or the Life and Adventures of Castruccia, See also: Prince of Lucca (1823), an See also: historical tale written with a See also: good See also: 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 See also: stilted See also: style, but possesses a particular See also: interest because See also: Adrian is a portrait of Shelley; The Fortunes of Perkin See also: Warbeck (1830); Lodore (1835), also bearing partly upon Shelley's biography, and Falkner (1837)
.
Besides these novels there was the Journal of a Six See also: Weeks' Tour (the tour of 1814 mentioned below), which is published in conjunction with Shelley's See also: prose-writings; and Rambles in See also: Germany and See also: Italy in 1840-1842-1843 (which shows an observant spirit, capable of making some true forecasts of the future), and various See also: miscellaneous writings
.
After the See also: 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 See also: pen were her only sustenance; but after a while See also: 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 See also: husband
.
In 1838 she edited Shelley's See also: works, supplying the notes that throw such invaluable See also: light on the subject
.
She succeeded, by strenuous exertions, in maintaining her son Percy at See also: Harrow and Cambridge; and she shared in the improvement of his See also: fortune when in 184o his grandfather acknowledged his responsibilities and in 1844 he succeeded to the baronetcy
.
She died on the See also: list of See also: February 1851
.
|
|
|
[back] SHELL (O. Eng. scell, scyll, cf. Du. sceel, shell, ... |
[next] PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY (1792-1822) |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.