Some Percy Bysshe Shelley poems Several Percy Bysshe Shelley poems read by Vincent Price. These are: Asia (from "Prometheus Unbound"); Hymn to Intellectual Beauty; Music, When Soft Voices Die; Ode to the West Wind; Ozymandias; To A Skylark; With a Guitar, To Jane.
The Demigod Files - Percy Jackson and the Olympians
How do you handle an encounter with Medusa on the New Jersey interstate? What's the best way to take down a minotaur? Become an expert on everything in Percy's world with this must-have guide to the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series. Complete with interviews, puzzles, games, and original short stories by Rick Riordan.
Percy Darling, 70, the narrator of Glass's fourth novel, takes comfort in certitudes: he will never leave his historic suburban Boston house, he is done with love (still guilty about his wife's death 30 years ago), and his beloved grandson Robert, a Harvard senior, will do credit to the family name. But Glass (Three Junes) spins a beautifully paced, keenly observed story in which certainties give way to surprising reversals of fortune. Percy is an opinionated, cantankerous, newly retired Harvard librarian and nobody's "darling," who decides to lease his barn to a local preschool, mainly to give his daughter Clover, who has abandoned her husband and children in New York, a job.
1817 and 1818 have not been good years for Matthew Hervey. His beloved wife Henrietta is dead and he is no longer in the Sixth regiment. Now he is kicking his heels in a corrupt and unruly England far removed from its once glorious past. 1819 sees Hervey in Rome with his sister Elizabeth where a chance meeting with man of letters Percy Bysshe Shelley leads him to rethink his future.
Percy Bysshe Shelley: Comprehensive Research and Study Guide (Bloom's Major Poets)Percy Shelley left an indelible mark on English romantic poetry with his enduring works, including "Ozymandias," "To a Skylark," and "Ode to the West Wind." His evolving reputation is presented here, from the commentary of those who knew him to the assessments of succeeding generations of critics and readers. This collection of diverse critical voices is enhanced by a chronology of Shelley's life, an index, and an introductory essay by esteemed scholar Harold Bloom