The Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,285 pages of information about The Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley — Complete.

The Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley — Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,285 pages of information about The Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley — Complete.

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EPIPSYCHIDION.

VERSES ADDRESSED TO THE NOBLE AND UNFORTUNATE LADY, EMILIA V—­,

NOW IMPRISONED IN THE CONVENT OF —.

L’anima amante si slancia fuori del creato, e si crea nell’ infinito un Mondo tutto per essa, diverso assai da questo oscuro e pauroso baratro.  HER OWN WORDS.

["Epipsychidion” was composed at Pisa, January, February, 1821, and published without the author’s name, in the following summer, by C. & J. Ollier, London.  The poem was included by Mrs. Shelley in the “Poetical Works”, 1839, both editions.  Amongst the Shelley manuscripts in the Bodleian is a first draft of “Epipsychidion”, ’consisting of three versions, more or less complete, of the “Preface [Advertisement]”, a version in ink and pencil, much cancelled, of the last eighty lines of the poem, and some additional lines which did not appear in print’ ("Examination of the Shelley manuscripts in the Bodleian Library, by C.D.  Locock”.  Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1903, page 3).  This draft, the writing of which is ’extraordinarily confused and illegible,’ has been carefully deciphered and printed by Mr. Locock in the volume named above.  Our text follows that of the editio princeps, 1821.]

ADVERTISEMENT.

The Writer of the following lines died at Florence, as he was preparing for a voyage to one of the wildest of the Sporades, which he had bought, and where he had fitted up the ruins of an old building, and where it was his hope to have realised a scheme of life, suited perhaps to that happier and better world of which he is now an inhabitant, but hardly practicable in this.  His life was singular; less on account of the romantic vicissitudes which diversified it, than the ideal tinge which it received from his own character and feelings.  The present Poem, like the “Vita Nuova” of Dante, is sufficiently intelligible to a certain class of readers without a matter-of-fact history of the circumstances to which it relates and to a certain other class it must ever remain incomprehensible, from a defect of a common organ of perception for the ideas of which it treats.  Not but that gran vergogna sarebbe a colui, che rimasse cosa sotto veste di figura, o di colore rettorico:  e domandato non sapesse denudare le sue parole da cotal veste, in guisa che avessero verace intendimento.

The present poem appears to have been intended by the Writer as the dedication to some longer one.  The stanza on the opposite page [1] is almost a literal translation from Dante’s famous Canzone

Voi, ch’ intendendo, il terzo ciel movete, etc.

The presumptuous application of the concluding lines to his own composition will raise a smile at the expense of my unfortunate friend:  be it a smile not of contempt, but pity.  S.

[1] i.e. the nine lines which follow, beginning, ‘My Song, I fear,’ etc.—­ED.

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The Complete Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.