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Shelley and nonviolence
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160
OTHER
WORKS
dress
to
the
People
on
the
Death
of
Princess
Charlotte"
(1817),
"Essay
on
Christianity"
(1812-1819?),
"A
Proposal
for
Putting
Reform
to
the
Vote
Throughout
the
Kingdom"
(1817),
and
"A
Defence
of
Poetry"
(1821)
demonstrate
Shelley's
life-long
com-
mitment
to
nonviolence
and
its
promise
of
a
better
world.
While
Shelley
frequently
shifted
his
perspective
in
an
attempt
to
com-
municate
the
ethical
and
political
truths
that
he
believed
neces-
sary
for
a
better
society,
he
never
wavered
in
his
trust
that
non-
violence,
if
generally
accepted
by
the
great
mass
of
people,
could
and
would
create
that
society.
He
dedicated
his
life
to
imagina-
tively
communicating
the
human
grandeur
of
his
vision.
Table of contents
- I. Introduction
- II. Shelley and Gandhi
- History, Necessity, Will
- Love, Truth, God
- Reform, Revolution, Utopia
- III. The Prose: “An Address to The Irish People”
- IV. The Revolt of Islam
- V. Prometheus Unbound
- VI. The Dramas
- The Cenci
- Oedipus Tyrannus, or Swellfoot the Tyrant
- Hellas
- Charles I
- VII. Other Works
- The Mask of Anarchy
- “A Philosophical View of Reform”
- “Song to the Men of England”
- “Lines Written Among the Euganean Hills”
- The Triumph of Life
- VIII. Nonviolence: The Poetry of Life
- Bibliography
- Index