Hymn to Intellectual Beauty

poem by Shelley
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Hymn to Intellectual Beauty, poem in seven stanzas by Percy Bysshe Shelley, written in the summer of 1816. The poem, a philosophical musing, contains references to Shelley’s childhood, when he first recognized the intangible spirit of beauty alive in the world. By intellectual beauty Shelley refers to a mysterious, intangible awareness that is not accessible through the senses but is capable of increasing the potency of the natural world. In the first four stanzas, Shelley describes “the awful shadow of some unseen Power” that passes over the face of the earth, to which humans give the name of “God and ghosts and Heaven.” In the last three stanzas, Shelley recounts his boyhood dedication to this spirit and rededicates himself to intellectual beauty in the present.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper.