- Born
- Died
- Percy Bysshe Shelley was born on August 4, 1792 in Field Place, Warnham, near Horsham, West Sussex, England, UK. Percy Bysshe was a writer, known for The Cloud (1919), Le Brasier Shelley (2018) and The Burying Party (2018). Percy Bysshe was married to Mary Shelley and Harriet Westbrook. Percy Bysshe died on July 8, 1822 in at sea, off Italy.
- SpousesMary Shelley(December 30, 1816 - July 8, 1822) (his death, 3 children)Harriet Westbrook(August 18, 1811 - November 9, 1816) (her death, 2 children)
- These literary young lords and ladies were passing time one gloomy weekend in the summer of 1816 by creating and sharing scary stories. Mary claimed that the first night of their stay she had a nightmare. In this dream she saw a horrible creature at her window. The vision frightened her so much that she awoke and sleep was gone for good. She told her story to the group the next evening and Percy encouraged her to write it down. Thus was born Frankenstein and his Creature, and if you read the book, you will see how Percy Shelley contributed much of his own style, philosophy of the sublime, and autobiographical details.
- Children by Mary: William Shelley, born January 14 1816 and died June 7 1818; Clara Everina Shelley, born September 2 1817 and died September 24 1817; and Percy Florence Shelley, born November 12 1818 and died December 5 1889, who succeeded his grandfather as the 3rd Baronet Shelley.
- Bysshe Shelley, Percy's grandfather, was created Sir Bysshe Shelley, baronet, in 1806, when Percy was 14 years old.
- Around February of 1811, Percy Bysshe Shelley and his friend Thomas Jefferson Hogg wrote a treatise called "The Necessity of Atheism" and passed it to friends and other students of University College (in Oxford) to read. On 25 March 1811, Shelley and Hogg were expelled from school for refusing to answer questions about who had written it, though we may assume they were really expelled for their atheistic beliefs.
- In October of 1812, Percy met William Godwin, the father of Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin; he and the old man got on well, since Percy flattered Godwin's rhetoric in Godwin's publications reasoning that marriage is a travesty and that love should be free. Percy already had a wife, but encountering the charms of the lovely teenager Mary made him agree with Godwin's philosophy. Godwin was not pleased to discover that his prescriptions for the betterment of England were to take place at once, here, in his own home -- had in fact led to Percy and Mary deciding to elope. If Percy's ex-wife wanted to live in a bigamist home, that was her foolish business, but Godwin did not intend his own beautiful, bright darling girl to become ensnared by a man - a poet! - who believed in love and parties more than he believed in responsibility.
- Familiar acts are beautiful through love.
- Hell is a city much like London--a populous and smoky city.
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