- Oz really likes the irony of poetry. Because it quotes an ounce in such a way as to indicate his immortality. Compliments will take you anywhere. We seem to be the top of today's greatness, but if that is the fact, without understanding that our proud self-esteemed thinking will soon become a memory to fade away. Today's greatness, sorrow broke the statue in the history of 2000. What do you think will remain in New York after 4,000 years?
Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822) is often a rebel and considered a revolutionary. Therefore, "Ozymandias", one of his most famous poems, is a warning against the arrogance of the great leader. This poem is believed to be inspired by the monumental Ramses II statue purchased by the Italian explorer Giovanni Belzoni for the British Museum. It was written at the end of 1817 as part of the competition between Sherry and his friend Horace Smith and was published in The Examiner in January 1818.
August 4, 1792 - Year of fear of France - Percy Bysshe Shelley (his grandfather's "Bysshe", a member of the same field) is the son of Timothy and Elizabeth Shelley. As brothers, John and the four sisters Elizabeth, Mary, Margaret, and Helen's eldest son, Percy, not only inherited the great estate of his grandfather, but lined up to sit on Congress one day. As the oldest boy, a young Persie is their love and longing for his sister, his parents, even his early dominant servants, and a family house near Horsham in Sussex. Young lord of the field. He was full of fun and imagination, designed a game to play with the sisters, and told the ghost stories to joy and joyful crowds.
Percy Bysshe Shelley was born on Field Place on August 4, 1792. His ancestors began to be Sussex aristocrats from the beginning of the 17th century. His grandfather, Sir Byshe Shelly, made himself the most rich man in Horsham, and his father, Timothy Sherry, was a calm traditional parliamentarian. Percy Bysshe Shelly was sent to Eton for education and continued his studies at Oxford. At that time he released two spy stories and poems. In Oxford in autumn of 1810, Shelley and his best friend, Thomas Jefferson Hogg, created a booklet on the necessity of atheism and claimed that the existence of God can not prove to be the reason for experience. Sherry refused to reject the file, so Sherry and T. J. Hogg were rejected. The incident opened a violation between Sherry and his father, and his father interrupted all his relations with his son. He went to London