English Essays: Sidney to Macaulay. The Harvard Classics. 190914. |
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| Introductory Note |
| | | Percy Bysshe Shelley |
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| A SHORT sketch of the life of Percy Bysshe Shelley will be found prefixed in his drama of the Cenci in the volume of modern English Drama in the Harvard Classics. | 1 |
| The Defence of Poetry is by far the most important of Shelleys prose writings, and is of great value in supplementing and correcting the picture of his mind which is given by his lyrical poetry; for we can perceive from this brilliant piece of philosophical discussion that Shelley had intellect as well as imagination. | 2 |
| The immediate occasion of the essay was the publication of Thomas Love Peacocks Four Ages of Poetry, to which Shelleys work was originally a reply. In this, as in other notable respects, the treatise is parallel with Sidneys. In its present form Shelley has eliminated much of the controversial matter; and it stands as one of the most eloquent and inspiring assertions of the ideal nature and essential value of poetry. | 3 |
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