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CHEAP AND VALUABLE WORKS,

Published by

J. WATSON, 15 City Road, Finsbury.

-000

POPULAR LECTURES, by MISS FRANCES WRIGHT, Now Mad. Durasmont,) in New York, Boston, Baltimore, Cincinnati, and other Cities, Towns, and Districts of the United States. With Three Addresses on various public occasions. and a Reply to the Charges against the French Reformers of 1789. Compiete in Fifteen Nos. at 2d. er Five Parts, at 6d.; or in cloth boards, 3s

A FEW DAYS IN ATHENS;

Being the Translation of a Greek Manuscript discovered in Herculaneum. By FRANCES WRIGHT. Illustrated by a fine Bust of Epicurus, engraved on steel. Price 1s. stitched, or 1s. 6d. cloth boards.

THE THEOLOGICAL WORKS OF THOMAS PAINE; In One Vol. Price 3s. neatly bound in cloth boards: or in 15 Nos, at 2d. each, or 5 Parts at 6d each. Also,

PAINE'S

POLITICAL WORKS;

Uniform with the above. Price 3s: cloth boards.

A new and beautiful Edition of

VOLNEY'S RUINS OF EMPIRES & LAW OF NATURE With 3 Copper-plate Engravings. Price 3s. cloth boards. he convenience of the Working People, this edition may be had in Nos. at 2d. each, or in 5 Parts at 6d. each.

VOLNEY'S LECTURES ON HISTORY,

With an interesting sketch of his Life and Writings Price 2s. cloth boards, or 1s. 6d. in a wrapper.

Complete in Two neat Volumes, in extra Cloth Boards, with a Memoir of the Author. Price 7s. 6d.

THE SYSTEM OF NATURE;

As Applicable to the Happiness of Man living in Society, contrasted with
Superstition and Imaginary Systems. By M. D. MIRABAUD.
This Work may be had in Numbers, at 2d. or Parts, at 6d.

THEOLOGY

DISPLAYED;

Being a Review of the Origin, Excellence, and Utility of the Christian Religion; designed to terminate Religious Controversies, by a short and easy method; to promote harmony and goodwill among men; and to advance the cause of Unity and Co-operation. By S. E. CURTIS. Price 1s.

FRUITS OF PHILOSOPHY;

Or, the Private Companion of Young Married People.

KNOWLTON, M.D. Price 6d.

MORAL PHYSIOLOGY;

Ry CHARLES

Brief and Plain Treatise on the Population Question. By RCBERT
DALE OWEN. A New Edition. Price 6d.

HOPES AND DESTINIES OF THE HUMAN SPECIES. By ROBERT DALE OWEN. Price 2d.

WATSON REFUTED,

Series of Letters. By SAMUEL FRANCIS, M.D. Price Sixpence.

CAIN;

A Mystery. By Lord BYRON. Price 6d.

HUME'S ESSAY ON MIRACLES.

Price Threepence.

QUEEN MAB;

A PHILOSOPHICAL POEM:

With Notes.

BY

PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY.

TO WHICH IS ADDED,

A BRIEF MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR.

LONDON:

JAMES WATSON, 15, CITY ROAD;

NEAR FINSBURY SQUARE.

BODLEIA

12 DEC 1939

LIBRARY

MEMOIR

OF

PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY.

FIELD-PLACE, in the county of Sussex, was the spot where Percy Bysshe Shelley first saw the light. He was born on the 4th of August, 1792; and was the eldest son of Sir Timothy Shelley, Bart., of Castle-Goring. His family is an ancient one, and a branch of it has become the representative of the house of the illustrious Sir Philip Sidney of Penshurst. Despising honours which only rest upon the accidental circumstances of birth, Shelley was proud of this connection with an immortal name. At the customary age, about thirteen, he was sent to Eton School; and, before he had completed his fifteenth year, he published two novels, the "Rosicrucian" and "Zasterozzi." From Eton he removed to University College, Oxford, to mature his studies, at the age of sixteen, an earlier period than is usual. At Oxford he was, according to custom, imbued with the elements of logic; and he ventured, in contempt of the fiat of the University, to apply them to the investigation of questions which it is orthodox to take for granted. His original and uncompromisir g spirit of inquiry could not reconcile the limited use of logical principles. He boldly tested, or attempted to test, propositions which he imagined, the more they were obscure, and the more claim they had upon his credence, the greater was the necessity for examining them. His spirit was an inquiring one, and he fearlessly sought after what he believed to be truth, before, it is probable, he had acquired all the information necessary to guide him, from collateral sources-a common error of headstrong youth. This is the more likely to be the case, as, when time had matured his knowledge, he differed much on points upon which, in callow years and without an instructor, flung upon the world to form his own principles of action, guileless and vehement, he was wont to advocate strongly. Shelley possessed the bold quality of inquiring into the reason of every thing, and of resisting what he could not reconcile to be right according to his conscience. In some persons this has been denominated a virtue, in others a sin-just as it might happen to chime in with worldly custom or received opinion. At school he formed a conspiracy for resistance to that most odious and detestable

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