Queen Mab, poem in nine cantos by Percy Bysshe Shelley, published in 1813. Shelley’s first major poem—written in blank verse—is a utopian political epic that exposes as social evils such institutions as monarchy, commerce, and religion and that describes a visionary future in which humanity is liberated from all such vices. Queen Mab, ruler of the fairies, takes the spirit of Ianthe (the name of Shelley’s first child) on a journey through time and space to reveal various human follies and errors. The poem is appended with 17 prose notes—essays on such topics as free love, atheism, republicanism, and vegetarianism, in which the influence of David Hume, William Godwin, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau are apparent. Queen Mab was very popular with members of the working-class radical movement of the 1830s and ’40s.