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...such dualizings Duke University's Newman Ivey White has long and flatly said no. To Professor White, Shelley was a child of his century, whose cradle was rocked by "the French Revolution [which] was blowing like an irresistible gale against the rotten political and social structure which the eighteenth century had considered stable and enduring." One of the two or three minds who vitally affected 19th-Century thought, Shelley was perhaps the most radical voice in poetry since Lucretius, an inexorable social revolutionist. A rhyming Marx, he urged the British masses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poet of Revolution | 12/16/1940 | See Source »

...prove his point, Dissenter White worked on a life of Shelley for some 20 years, last fortnight published it. Author White's book is a good piece of scholarship and literary organization which he somehow managed to keep lively, fluent and exciting while packing its two volumes and 1,563 pages with practically every known fact about Shelley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poet of Revolution | 12/16/1940 | See Source »

More important is Biographer White's reappraisal of Shelley as a mind. By bringing together a mass of 19th-Century critical opinion, Author White shows that Shelley's contemporaries understood him much better than Apologists Thompson, Dowden, et al. By placing Shelley squarely in his French Revolutionary context, Author White highlights Shelley's real meaning for our time. In a day when the same old exaltation of the masses, the same revolutionary terror and dictatorship, have culminated in World War II, the family line from Marat to Lenin to Mussolini to Hitler is revealed as passing through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poet of Revolution | 12/16/1940 | See Source »

Camouflaged by rainbows, skylarks, fairies, peris, sensitive plants and Epipsychidions, there was no more successful softener than Sapper Shelley. "You are a funny people, you Shelleyites," Explorer Henry M. Stanley warned an officer of the Shelley Society. "You are playing-at a safe distance yourself, maybe, with fire. In spreading Shelley you are indirectly helping to stir up the great socialist question . . . the one question which bids fair to swamp you all. . . ." Thomas Carlyle rudely cut short one Shelleyite rhapsody. "Yon man Shelley," he growled, "was just a scoundrel, and ought to have been hanged...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poet of Revolution | 12/16/1940 | See Source »

...Christianity," says Biographer White, "was for Shelley probably the greatest single despoiler of the human spirit." He liked to sign atheos (atheist) after his name in hotel registers. Other Shelley dislikes: commerce, finance, monarchy, almost any tradition, marriage. Shortly before his death, Shelley wrote Leigh Hunt: "The system of society as it exists at present must be overthrown from the foundations. . . ." Before he was tossed out of Oxford (for publishing The Necessity of Atheism), Shelley had dedicated himself to this overthrow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poet of Revolution | 12/16/1940 | See Source »

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