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crossref-it.info - AS/A2 English Literature Study Guides - texts in context.

 

Shelley, Mary » The Byron-Shelley circle

Meeting with Percy Bysshe Shelley

In 1814, Mary met Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822), one of the leading poets of the movement now known as Romanticism. His father was an MP who was given the title of baronet. Shelley, an admirer of William Godwin, was also a controversial figure:

When Harriet Shelley drowned herself in 1816, Shelley and Mary were free to marry. Fanny Imlay, Mary’s half-sister, also committed suicide in 1816.

Mary Shelley - Marriage and parenthood

The Shelleys spent the summer of 1816 in Switzerland (see Social/political context: How Frankenstein came to be written). They had gone there so that Claire Clairmont could be with Lord George Byron (1788-1824), Shelley’s friend and fellow-poet and an equally controversial figure. Clairmont and Byron became lovers and she bore him a daughter in 1817. After a brief spell in England, the Shelleys settled permanently in Italy from 1818. They had a number of children. However:

Both parents suffered greatly from the loss of their children and Mary had a serious nervous breakdown.

Mary Shelley - A productive era

PisaFrom 1819 to 1822, the Shelleys lived in Pisa in Italy. Frankenstein, Mary’s first book, was published in London in 1819, and the next three years proved to be Percy Shelley’s most creative and productive period of writing, during which he produced several of his best known works. Byron joined them in Pisa in 1821 and they became the centre of a celebrated and controversial circle of expatriate English writers and artists.

Mary Shelley - Misfortune and death

In the spring of 1822, the family moved to the Bay of Lerici, for a brief stay which was marked by a series of painful events:

The effect of the Byron-Shelley circle on Mary Shelley

For eight years, from 1814-1822, Mary had lived at the heart of what was undoubtedly England’s leading circle of writers:

In English Literature, it denotes a period between 1785-1830, when the previous classical or enlightenment traditions and values were overthrown, and a freer, more individual mode of writing emerged.
Byron, George Gordon (1788-1824) was one of the leading Romantic poets whose scandalous personal life brought him as much notoriety as his poetry brought him fame.