In Defence of Harriet Shelley by Mark Twain

sentimental justification of Shelley’s conduct which has not a pang of

conscience in it, but is silky and smooth and undulating and pious–

a cake-walk with all the colored brethren at their best. There may be

people who can read that page and keep their temper, but it is doubtful.

Shelley’s life has the one indelible blot upon it, but is otherwise

worshipfully noble and beautiful. It even stands out indestructibly

gracious and lovely from the ruck of these disastrous pages, in spite of

the fact that they expose and establish his responsibility for his

forsaken wife’s pitiful fate–a responsibility which he himself tacitly

admits in a letter to Eliza Westbrook, wherein he refers to his taking up

with Mary Godwin as an act which Eliza “might excusably regard as the

cause of her sister’s ruin.”

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