Selected Poems and Prose (Penguin Classics)
A**S
The Unacknowledged Legislator of the Modern World
Shelley is well celebrated for the epigram that poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world. The irony is that much of the Western world, both for good and ill, is the result of the influence of Percy Bysshe Shelley. And much of that debt is sadly unacknowledged.Shelley called for universal suffrage, human rights for women, the end of the influence of religion on politics, the dethronement of monarchies and, to my dislike, the ending of any sort of marriage vows til death. He also argued for the, to my mind, unattainable goal of equality of resources. Not to be trite, but you can hear almost every verse of John Lennon’s Imagine in Shelley’s verse.He was, of course, not only a reformer but a poet. He saw poetry as a certain image of the world, an image by which we are drawn out of ourselves and enabled to see beyond the repetitive sensory experiences of the everyday. He thought that the poet is tuned by a higher sensitivity that enables him or her to see into nature with a power other than that of the scientist. This sensitive vision then enables the reader to respond with love towards newly discovered nature and his fellow man.Shelley was certainly something of an idealist. And his moral failings are almost as well known as his adage. But I believe that poets write the best part of themselves; they write with that ideal they’d like to be. And that ideal, though flawed, partakes in Shelley of the sublime. His particular celebration of liberty, equality and fraternity, his effort to dethrone idols to make room for freedom, his placing of outward facing love as the goal of poetry and human life—all this makes for perennially inspiring poetry. Worth reading by all who want to appreciate this unacknowledged legislator.
A**T
Truly A Great Collection
Percy Shelley's definitely one of the more underrated of the Romantic poets. He tends to be overshadowed by contemporaries like Wordsworth, Keats, Byron and (rightfully so) his wife Mary, probably because unlike them his work tends to be explicitly political. His politics are radical even by today's standards, and while I don't entirely agree with them it doesn't diminish the quality of his poems or prose. His work can be dense, and it helps to have some knowledge of both post-French Revolution England as well as Plato's philosophy (which he appropriates and modifies for his own purposes). But if you're a fan of older poetry, it's hard not to enjoy him. Shelley was a great poet, an astute political advocate and a highly original fantasist. For anyone with an interest in him and his work, this collection is an excellent purchase.
A**R
Confusing layout
This book had the strangest layout I have ever encountered. There was no white space to be found. Each page was filled with text, with no differentiation whatsoever. I could not find a table of contents that listed the poems. As a consequence, it was not clear at all to me where one poem ended and the next began. I sent the book back when it became clear to me that I had no idea which poem I was reading.
I**T
Good value
Good value
C**2
The whole works of the greatest Romantics that ever lived.
Brilliant to study the works of these three creative masters.As Shelley so correctly wrote, “Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world”Keats - “Poetry is the right words in the right order”Thoroughly recommend if you require some stimulating, creative thoughts, ideas and images.
A**R
FOR THOSE WHO LOVE POETRY LIKE ME
WHAT CAN I SAY ? FOR THOSE WHO LOVE POETRY LIKE ME. IT IS FANTASTIC !
M**W
Four Stars
My husband hasn't got into it yet. He will be doing a poetry class on Shelley
G**S
Excellent
A great anthology
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