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Percy and Anecdotes
An account of one such torture-and-execution at Baroda in 1814 has been preserved in The Percy Anecdotes:
* Reuben Percy and Sholto Percy ( 1823 ) The Percy Anecdotes, 1823 ; online text.
* Section on Sir Boyle Roche from The Percy Anecdotes

Percy and published
Percy Bysshe Shelley's first published work was the Gothic novel Zastrozzi ( 1810 ), about an outlaw obsessed with revenge against his father and half-brother.
Looney's theory attracted a number of activist followers who published books supplementing his own and added new arguments, most notably Percy Allen, Bernard M. Ward, Louis P. Bénézet and Charles Wisner Barrell.
His earliest volume of verse was published in 1889 and those slow-paced and lyrical poems display debts to Edmund Spenser, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and the Pre-Raphaelite poets.
Extracts from the book were published that year in Percy Wyndham Lewis's periodical Blast, and Alfred Orage's weekly cultural newspaper The New Age.
It had also published The Yattendon Hymnal in 1899 and, more significantly, the first edition of The English Hymnal in 1906, under the editorship of Percy Dearmer and the then largely unknown Ralph Vaughan Williams.
Percy Scholes's Listener's Guide to Music ( originally published in 1919 ) was similarly brought into the new department as the first of a series of books on music appreciation for the listening public.
During his years in Oxford, Blunden published extensively: several collections of poetry including Choice or Chance ( 1934 ) and Shells by a Stream ( 1944 ), prose works on Charles Lamb ; Edward Gibbon ; Keats's publisher ; Percy Bysshe Shelley ; John Taylor ; and Thomas Hardy ; and a book about a game he loved, Cricket Country ( 1944 ).
The poem Ozymandias by Percy Shelley published in 1818, is an example of ironic double entendre.
Dupee had not had access to the James family papers and worked principally from James's published memoir of his older brother, William, and the limited collection of letters edited by Percy Lubbock, heavily weighted toward James's last years.
According to one version of the legend, found in Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry published in 1765, the beggar was said to be Henry, the son of Simon de Montfort, but Percy himself declared that this version was not genuine.
* The Boy's Percy ( published posthumously in 1882 ), consisting of old ballads of war, adventure and love based on Bishop Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry.
The Romantic period is especially associated with the poets William Blake, William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, George Byron, Percy Shelley and John Keats, though two major novelists, Jane Austen and Walter Scott also published in the early 19th century.
Australian composer Percy Grainger, an avid Kipling reader wrote a Jungle Book cycle, which was published in 1958.
* Percy Bysshe Shelley-A Philosophical View of Reform ( published in 1920 )
* Political Ballads and Carols, published by the Percy Society ( 1841 )
: First published: version of the play published in quarto in 1598 as The History of Henrie the Fourth, with the battell at Shrewsburie between the King and Lord Henry Percy, surnamed Hotspur of the North, with the humorous conceits of Sir John Falstaffe 1623 Folio text appeared under the title The First Part of Henry the Fourth, with the Life and Death of Henry Sirnamed Hot-spurre
The book, published through the efforts of writer Walker Percy ( who also contributed a revealing foreword ) and Toole's mother Thelma Toole, quickly became a cult classic, and later a mainstream success.
In 1858 he published a 3-volume edition of Thomas Percy's Reliques of ancient English poetry, consisting of old heroic ballads, songs, and other pieces from our earlier poets, authoring a prefatory ' Memoir and Critical Dissertation ' entitled ' Life of Thomas Percy, Bishop of Dromore ; with Remarks on Ballad Poetry.
The borough seal depicted a scene based on The Beggar's Daughter of Bednall Green, a poem in Percy ’ s Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, published in 1765, but probably dating from the era of Elizabeth I.
Bishop Percy was next subjected to a furious onslaught in the preface to a collection of Ancient Songs ( printed 1787, dated 1790, published 1792 ).
Laing, who counted ornithologists Percy Taverner and Allan Brooks among his friends, would become an influential voice in the nascent conservation movement over the next 50 years, with hundreds of articles published in almost every birding and nature magazine in North America.
In 1817-1818, she wrote a book which Percy Bysshe Shelley tried without success to have published.
Lewis visited Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Shelley at Geneva, Switzerland in the summer of 1816 and recounted five ghost stories which Shelley recorded in his " Journal at Geneva ( including ghost stories ) and on return to England, 1816 ", beginning with the entry for 18 August, which was published posthumously.
Percy MacKaye is considered to be the first poet of the Atomic Era because of his sonnet " The Atomic Law ," which was published in the Christmas 1945 issue of The Churchman.

Percy and 1820
Percy Bysshe Shelley composed a " Hymn of Apollo " ( 1820 ), and the god's instruction of the Muses formed the subject of Igor Stravinsky's Apollon musagète ( 1927 – 1928 ).
Posthumous Portrait of Percy Shelley | Shelley Writing Prometheus Unbound ( Shelley ) | Prometheus Unbound ( 1845 ) On 17 September 1820, Severn set sail onboard the Maria Crowther from England to Italy with the famous English poet John Keats.
In Prometheus Unbound ( 1820 ), a four-act lyrical drama, Percy Bysshe Shelley rewrites the lost play of Aeschylus so that Prometheus does not submit to Zeus ( under the Latin name Jupiter ), but instead supplants him in a triumph of the human heart and intellect over tyrannical religion.
Percy Shelley's drama Prometheus Unbound ( 1820 ) contains the following passage in Act I: " Ere Babylon was dust, / The Magus Zoroaster, my dead child, / Met his own image walking in the garden.
Mary Shelley, about 1820 It has occasionally been suggested that Clairmont was also the mother of a daughter fathered by Percy Shelley.
1820 publication in the Prometheus Unbound with Other Poems collection. 1820 cover of Prometheus Unbound, C. and J. Ollier, London. Ode to the West Wind is an ode written by Percy Bysshe Shelley in 1819 near Florence, Italy.
Love < nowiki >'</ nowiki > s Philosophy is a poem by Percy Bysshe Shelley, written in 1820.
Percy Jocelyn ( November 29, 1764 – September 3, 1843 ) was Anglican Bishop of Clogher in the Church of Ireland from 1820 to 1822.
Percy Bysshe Shelley completed the poem " To a Skylark " in late June, 1820, and forwarded it to London to be included among the verse accompanying Prometheus Unbound published by Charles and James Collier in London.
* Percy Bysshe Shelley's verse drama The Cenci: A Tragedy in Five Acts ( composed at Rome and at Villa Valsovano near Livorno, May – 5 August 1819, published spring 1820 by C. & J. Ollier, London, 1819 )
Prometheus Unbound is a four-act lyrical drama by Percy Bysshe Shelley first published in 1820, concerned with the torments of the Greek mythological figure Prometheus and his suffering at the hands of Zeus.
Both Percy and Mary Shelley were eager to hear when the book was published, and inquired Gisborne's wife, Thomas Medwin, and John Keats about its release throughout July 1820.
* Midas ( Shelley ), an 1820 play by Mary Shelley and Percy Bysshe Shelley
* Prometheus Unbound, an 1820 play by poet Percy Bysshe Shelley
The disgraced Percy Jocelyn, Bishop of Clogher, was once stationed in Kill and lived in the Glebe House there c. 1815. He was succeeded by John Warburton, son of Charles Warburton, bishop of Limerick from 1806 to 1820.
* Proserpine ( play ), an 1820 play by Mary Shelley and Percy Bysshe Shelley

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