Abstract

When Shelley resolved to leave England for Italy with his family, he conceived his expatriation as a voluntary exile. Yet, for several months after their arrival, the Shelleys criss-crossed the peninsula like the Grand Tourists of old, visiting all its major cities and a few minor destinations, which Shelley described at length in his correspondence and often evoked in his poetry. A peculiarity of Shelley’s travel letters is his ambivalent attitude towards Italy, revealed by his constant juxtaposition of the magnificent beauty of its art and nature and the equally striking spectacle of the Italians’ degradation. However, as the first independence movements raised the promise of the country’s political and cultural resurgence, Shelley started to develop a greater appreciation of its inhabitants. At the same time, having finally settled, he turned his attention away from the wonders and contrasts of Italy to celebrate the simple life of his exile community.
Lingua originaleInglese
Titolo della pubblicazione ospitePercy Shelley in Context
EditoreCambridge University Press
Pagine34-40
Numero di pagine7
ISBN (stampa)978-1-009-22370-6
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 2025

Keywords

  • Exile
  • Italian travels
  • Lines Written among the Euganean Hills
  • Opera
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • Pisan circle
  • Venice
  • stereotypes

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