Book-bot.com - read famous books online for free

Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer by Charles Sotheran
page 24 of 83 (28%)
Shelley, and who has been often known to pay more than the weight in
gold for Shelleyana:

"With how many garlands we can beautify the tomb. If we
begin betimes, we can learn to make the prospect of the
grave the most seductive of human visions. By little and
little we hive therein all the most pleasing of our dreams.
Surely, if any spot in the world be sacred, it is that in
which grief ceases, and for which, if the voice within our
hearts mocks us not with an everlasting lie, we spring upon
the untiring wings of a pangless and seraphic life--those
whom we love around us--our nature, universal intelligence,
our atmosphere, eternal love."

How exquisite these remarks and his description of a disembodied
spirit:

"it stood
All beautiful in naked purity,
The perfect semblance of its bodily frame,
Instinct with inexpressible beauty and grace,
Each stain of earthliness
Had passed away, it re-assumed
Its native dignity, and stood
Immortal amid ruin."

It must appear impossible to any rational mind, that, with the full
evidence before their eyes, materialists can attempt to claim Shelley
as endorsing their doctrines, for even in the "Queen Mab," which has
been considered by those not understanding it as a most atheistical
DigitalOcean Referral Badge