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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
Late in 1817, while residing at Great Marlow, Shelley wrote out the fragment known as Prince Athanase, presenting the characteristically Shelleyan hero, imbibing “philosophic wisdom, clear and mild” from an old hermit named Zonoras.
1 Poetical Works, 1839. i. 376.
2 Works of Shelley, 1880. iii. 138, n.
3 Life of Shelley, 1847. i. 44.
4 Shelley Memorials, 1859. p. 9.
5 Memoir of Shelley, 2nd ed. 1886. p. 9.
6 Life of Shelley, 1886. i. 34.
7 Shelley in England, 1917. p. 69.
8 Shelley the Man and the Poet, rev. ed. 1923. p. 10.
9 Life and Letters of M. W. Shelley, 1889. i. 109.
10 Ibil., i. 123.
11 Life of Shelley, 1847. i. 29-30.
12 “Shelley's Zastrozzi and St. Irvyne” in Mod. Lang. Review, Cambridge, 1912.
13 The Radicalism of Shelley and Its Sources, 1912. pp. 53-64.
14 Rinaldo Rinaldini, iii. 144.
15 The Last Man, 1826. ii. 233.
16 Life of Shelley, 1847. i. 31.
17 Rin. Rin., i. 247.
18 Ibid., iii. 50-51.
19 Sometimes called The Revolt of Islam; pub. 1818.
20 By Coleridge, pub. 1817.
21 By Charlotte Byrne, pub. 1806.
22 “The Nascent Mind of Shelley,” in Mod. Lang. Rev. 1912.
23 Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, 1889. i. 124.
24 Ibid. i. 241.
25 Ibid. i. 156.
26 Ibid. i. 245.
27 Ibid. i. 146-7. There are other references to the reading of Curtius in entries for Wednesday, August 7, Friday, August 9, Saturday, August 10, Friday, August 16, Sunday, August 18, and Tuesday, August 20; Saturday, October 5, Monday, October 7, and Wednesday, October 9, 1816. (Life and Letters of M. W. Shelley, i. 147 and 156.)
28 Dowden, Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley, ii. 75.
29 Rin. Kin., iii. 10. 30 Rin. Rin., iii. 58.