Shelley enters University College, Oxford
Labels: University College, Percy BysshePercy Bysshe Shelley matriculated at University College, Oxford, beginning the brief but formative period that culminated in his radical pamphleteering and expulsion.
Percy Bysshe Shelley matriculated at University College, Oxford, beginning the brief but formative period that culminated in his radical pamphleteering and expulsion.
After circulating The Necessity of Atheism and refusing to answer questions about its authorship, Shelley (with T. J. Hogg) was expelled from Oxford—an event that accelerated his break with conventional authority and shaped his public reputation as a radical writer.
Shelley eloped with Harriet Westbrook to Scotland, marking the start of his first marriage and a period in which his political activism and print pamphleteering intensified.
Shelley and Harriet Westbrook married in Edinburgh. The marriage is a key biographical anchor for his early major poem Queen Mab (dedicated to Harriet) and his early public political interventions.
In Dublin, Shelley published An Address, to the Irish People—part of his direct engagement with Irish political reform and mass persuasion via cheap print.
Shelley issued Queen Mab (with extensive prose notes) as his first large-scale poetic work, merging utopian political critique with visionary verse and establishing themes that recur across his later poetry.
Shelley wrote Alastor; or, The Spirit of Solitude in late 1815; it was published in 1816 and is widely treated as one of his first major mature poems, shifting from earlier pamphlet-driven polemic toward sustained lyrical and philosophical exploration.
During the 1816 Lake Geneva sojourn, Shelley wrote “Hymn to Intellectual Beauty” (published in 1817), crystallizing his quest for a secularized spiritual principle grounded in beauty and the imagination.
Shelley composed “Mont Blanc: Lines Written in the Vale of Chamouni” during his 1816 Alpine travels; published in 1817, it became a central Romantic meditation on nature’s power and the mind’s response to it.
Shelley departed England for Italy (with Mary Shelley and their household), beginning a self-imposed exile that shaped nearly all of his late major works and aligned his poetic production with expatriate politics and transnational literary networks.
The Shelleys reached Milan soon after entering Italy, a concrete start-point for the Italian residence that would culminate in Prometheus Unbound, The Cenci, and other major works.
Shelley published The Cenci (1819), a tragedy based on the historical Cenci family; it represents his most sustained attempt at a drama aimed at broader public impact (including, unsuccessfully, the stage).
Shelley composed “England in 1819” in the wake of domestic political crisis (including the Peterloo Massacre); the sonnet’s publication was delayed until 1839 due to censorship risk and political sensitivity.
Shelley published Prometheus Unbound (1820), a four-act lyrical drama reworking classical myth into a radical vision of liberation; it is often treated as the culmination of his mature poetic and political synthesis.
Shelley’s “Ode to the West Wind” (written 1819) appeared in the 1820 Prometheus Unbound volume, using the wind as a figure for political and poetic dissemination—an emblem of his late revolutionary rhetoric.
Shelley published Epipsychidion (1821), a long poem exploring idealized love and criticizing conventional marriage; it is closely tied to his Pisa circle and to Teresa (“Emilia”) Viviani.
Shelley wrote and published Adonais (1821) in response to John Keats’s death, producing a major Romantic elegy that also articulates Shelley’s views on poetic vocation, fame, and mortality.
Shelley published Hellas (1822), a lyrical drama written in support of the Greek War of Independence and his last work published during his lifetime.
Shelley drowned at sea off the Italian coast on 1822-07-08, ending the exile years that had produced his late pamphlet-inflected political verse, major lyrical dramas, and culminating (unfinished) work such as The Triumph of Life.
Percy Bysshe Shelley: Exile, Pamphlets, and Poetry (1810–1822)