P. B. Shelley, 'An Address To The People On The Death of The Princess Charlotte'
P. B. Shelley, 'An Address To The People On The Death of The Princess Charlotte'
P. B. Shelley, 'An Address To The People On The Death of The Princess Charlotte'
AN
ON
BY
joy and hope, when life should succeed to life, and the
assembled family expects one more, the youngest and the
best beloved, that the wife, the mother she for whom —
each member of the family was so dear to one another,
should die !
—Yet thousands of the poorest poor, whose
for mankind ;
its character ought to be universal, not
particular.
birth neither made her life more virtuous nor her death
more worthy of grief. For the public she had done
nothing either good or evil ;
her education had rendered her
DEATH OF THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE. 105
groans and the hootings which told them that the mangled
and distorted head was then lifted into the air. The
sufferers were dead. What is death ? Who dares to say
that which will come after the grave ?^ Brandreth was
calm, and evidently believed that the consequences of our
errors were limited by that tremendous barrier. Ludlam
and Turner were full of fears, lest God should plunge them
in everlasting fire. Mr. Pickering, the clergyman, was
evidently anxious that Brandreth should not by a false
confidence lose the single opportunity of reconciling him-
self with the Euler of the future world. None knew
what death was, or could know. Yet these men were
presumptuously thrust into that unfathomable gulf, by
other men, who knew as little and who reckoned not the
present or the future sufferings of their victims. Nothing
is more horrible than that man should for cause shed
any
the life of man. For all other calamities thereis a remedy
of this system is, that the day labourer gains no more now
DEATH OF THE PKINCESS CHARLOTTE. 109
1
No doubt the contemporary Digging three graves. Of coffin shape they
press searched would yield
if
\^^% ^^^^
j,^^ comxAe.,, must enter there
plenty of evidence ot the hatred with unblest rites. The shrouds were of
and contempt with which this that cloth
weaveth in her blackest
government spy was regarded. ^^'^^rath''-^^''
Perhaps one of the most note- The ^dismal tmet oppress'd the eye, that
worthy utterances which he helped dwelt
to inspire was Charles Lamb's Upon it long, Uke darkness to be felt.
^
grim poem TU Three Graves, pub-
rp-L^ ir-L^„^ n^^^.^c r^,,v^ Thc piUows to thcsc balsful bcds wsrc toaos,
^^^^^^ jj^.^,^^ jj^j^^ melancholy loads,
lished in The Poetical Recreattons of Whose softness shock'd. Worms of all m on-
the Champion in the year of Shel- strous size
known ^""^ ^""^ upcoild, which
ley's death, and not as well
'
^^^"^^ever Xs^
as it deserves to be, though given ^ doleful bell, inculcating despair,
in Mr. Charles Kent's excellent Was always ringing in the heavy air.
edition of Lamb's Works (Rout- And all about the detestable pit
^ '' '
' ""
ledge's -Popular Centenary Edi- ^'^^^m.^Sd mt ;
tiou," without a date). I need not Bivers of blood,' from living traitors
r, Sunday, Nov. 9.
These expressions are taken from the Examiner,
2
[Shelley's Note.]
DEATH OF THE PRINCESS CHARLOTTE. 113
PROSE. VOL. IL I
114 AN ADDRESS TO THE PEOPLE, &C.
like her that should have ruled over this land, like
FINIS.