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Shelley had radical political ideas (in modern parlance he would probably be considered a communist) and one of the reasons he wrote poetry was to persuade ordinary people to realise their social oppression, and to provoke them to band together into labour unions and institute socialist societies. But poetry is not a very sensible way to preach politics to working people.

Shelley also wished to promulgate his socialist and mystical ideas among the educated classes of Europe. (Remember that Shelley grew up during the age of revolutions which followed the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars). Poetry was intensely fashionable during the first decades of the nineteenth century, and Shelley had some success with popularising a radical philosophy in such poems as Ozymandias, Ode to the West Wind, and Swellfoot the Tyrant.

And then Shelley had a taste for very young women (including Mary Shelley and her half-sister Claire Clairmont). Poetry is excellent bait for impressionable girls, and Shelley had considerable success with his tickling.

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16y ago

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