英:[ˈʃeli]
美:[ˈʃɛli]
英:[ˈʃeli]
美:[ˈʃɛli]
biographical name (1)
Mary Woll*stone*craftˈwu̇l-stən-ˌkraft 1797–1851 née Godwin; wife of Percy Bysshe Shelley English novelist
biographical name (2)
Percy Byssheˈbish 1792–1822 English poet
1 Shelley's fame had spread in the walls of the college.
雪莱的名声在大学里边传开了.
2 By the time of Mary Shelley’s death in 1851 at age 53, she’d been widowed for three decades, having devoted herself to editing her late husband’s verse and prose while raising their only surviving child.
3 What started as a private collection of Himalayan art by Shelley and Donald Rubin in the mid-1970s has become a dynamic showcase for art from Asia and the Indian subcontinent, particularly that of Tibet.
4 That’s like saying there would have been no lunar landing without Jules Verne or no organ transplants without Mary Shelley.
5 Productions of Tennyson, Shelley and Swinburne remain rare.
6 Only then can one be truly inspired by Mary Shelley’s genius and her bravery.
7 "OK, I'm just going to put this out to the group and see how it lands," Shelley blurts out, apropos of nothing.
8 It is a horror movie in the tradition of Mary Shelley and yet also something of Beauty and the Beast, with the beastly father-figure turning his innocent daughter into something repulsive.
9 Mary Shelley gave us Frankenstein two centuries ago, and Charles Dickens and Henry James cast nightmare visions.
10 Initially unable to come up with an idea, Mary Shelley then had a “waking dream” in which she imagined a corpse reanimated by “galvanism,” or electricity.
11 The Daily Mail's Jim Shelley said the show was "as instantly addictive as ever, like catnip for the middle-classes, the cake equivalent of crack".
12 Shelley took over lead vocals and the Buzzcocks promptly began a barrage of perfect pop-punk singles, from the desperate sex yodels of “Get on Our Own” to the despair of “I Don’t Mind.”
13 Shelley was by this point a struggling single mother who had lost a husband and three children to tragedy.
14 In 1831, nine years after her husband’s death, Mary Shelley wrote the introduction to a revised version of “Frankenstein.”
15 The feminist movement has championed the elevation of Mary Shelley to canonical rank, says Prof John Sutherland, former Booker Prize judge and an expert on Victorian fiction.
16 While the stylistic similarity between the other literary families analyzed might be attributed to collaboration, Mary Shelley never knew her mother as she died 10 days after Mary was born.
17 It shows her being critical not just of Byron but also of Shelley, which to me was surprising.
18 A show that name-checks Socrates, Copernicus, Pythagoras, Mary Shelley and Abraham Lincoln — all in one song, yet — can only help advance an art form that often seems unable to imagine itself a new future.
19 It would have been, I believe, considered sacrilegious for any of my early English teachers to mention that a Shakespeare, a Shelley, or a Keats even considered accepting money for the words.
20 I knew theoretically about Mary Shelley and Bram Stoker – but I didn't.