: Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
: The Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley Collection
: Charles River Editors
: 9781531277321
: 1
: CHF 1.10
:
: Erzählende Literatur
: English
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Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley was an English author best known for the Gothic novel Frankenstein which has been made into many films.Shelley also wrote many other bestsellers in different genres.This collection includes the following:



NOVELS:

Frankenstein

The Last Man

Mathilda

Valperga

The Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck

Lodore

Falkner

 

PLAYS:

Proserpine

Midas

 

SHORT STORIES:

The Mortal Immortal

The Evil Eye

The Invisible Girl

The Dream

The Heir of Mondolfo

 

NON-FICTION:

On Ghosts

History of Six Weeks Tour Through a Part of France, Switzerland, Germany, and Holland

Notes to the Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley



BIOGRAPHIES:

Mrs. Shelley by Lucy Madox Rossetti

The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley by Mrs. Julian Marshall

LETTER 4


August 5th, 17—

To Mrs. Saville, England

So strange an accident has happened to us that I cannot forbear recording it, although it is very probable that you will see me before these papers can come into your possession.

Last Monday (July 31st) we were nearly surrounded by ice, which closed in the ship on all sides, scarcely leaving her the sea-room in which she floated. Our situation was somewhat dangerous, especially as we were compassed round by a very thick fog. We accordingly lay to, hoping that some change would take place in the atmosphere and weather.

About two o’clock the mist cleared away, and we beheld, stretched out in every direction, vast and irregular plains of ice, which seemed to have no end. Some of my comrades groaned, and my own mind began to grow watchful with anxious thoughts, when a strange sight suddenly attracted our attention and diverted our solicitude from our own situation. We perceived a low carriage, fixed on a sledge and drawn by dogs, pass on towards the north, at the distance of half a mile; a being which had the shape of a man, but apparently of gigantic stature, sat in the sledge and guided the dogs. We watched the rapid progress of the traveller with our telescopes until he was lost among the distant inequalities of the ice. This appearance excited our unqualified wonder. We were, as we believed, many hundred miles from any land; but this apparition seemed to denote that it was not, in reality, so distant as we had supposed. Shut in, however, by ice, it was impossible to follow his track, which we had observed with the greatest attention. About two hours after this occurrence we heard the ground sea, and before night the ice broke and freed our ship. We, however, lay to until the morning, fearing to encounter in the dark those large loose masses which float about after the breaking up of the ice. I profited of this time to rest for a few hours.

In the morning, however, as soon as it was light, I went upon deck and found all the sailors busy on one side of the vessel, apparently talking to someone in the sea. It was, in fact, a sledge, like that we had seen before, which had drifted towards us in the night on a large fragment of ice. Only one dog remained alive; but there was a human being within it whom the sailors were persuading to enter the vessel. He was not, as the other traveller seemed to be, a savage inhabitant of some undiscovered island, but a European. When I appeared on deck the master said, “Here is our captain, and he will not allow you to perish on the open sea.”

On perceiving me, the stranger addressed me in English, although with a foreign accent. “Before I come on board your vessel,” said he, “will you have the kindness to inform me whither you are bound?”

You may conceive my astonishment on hearing such a question addressed to me from a man on the brink of destruction and to whom I should have supposed that my vessel would have been a resource which he would not have exchan