Percy Bysshe Shelley
Percy Bysshe Shelley was an English Romantic poet known for his famous poem 'Ozymandias' that explores the transience of power.
Poet
August 4, 1792
Leo
July 08, 1822
29
Near Sussex, England
Percy Bysshe Shelley was a prominent English Romantic poet, renowned for his bold poetic style and radical political views. Among his most famous works are “Ozymandias,” a poem that offers an ironic commentary on the transient nature of power, “Prometheus Unbound,” a lyrical drama exploring themes of rebellion and freedom, and the elegy “Adonais.” Shelley was also an active political activist, publishing essays such as “The Mask of Anarchy,” which criticized the British government. He was part of Lord Byron’s literary circle and had a significant impact on the Romantic movement. Shelley’s life was marked by controversy, including his expulsion from Oxford University for advocating atheism in a pamphlet. Tragically, he drowned at the age of 29, cutting his influential career short.