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28 pages 56 minutes read

Queen Mab: A Philosophical Poem

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1813

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Book VIChapter Summaries & Analyses

Book VI Summary

Ianthe’s spirit speaks with sadness, mourning the condition of the earth and asking if there is any hope for “so many wretched souls” (Line 6.19). Queen Mab comforts her, telling her to have hope—the spirit world will cure these evils. Power may have silenced truth, but truth will one day return and Nature will reveal to all that the “mightiest monarch” is powerless and the “priest’s dogmatic roar” is deception (Lines 6.62, 6.64).

Queen Mab continues criticizing organized religion, which has become a way of satisfying the need for destruction and the will of the powerful. This is why Christianity portrays God like earthly king who sits on a “golden throne” (Line 6.107). However, religion is now reaching its old age: It has gradually withered in strength, and now it has “gray hairs” (Line 6.139). As religion dies, there will be turbulence at first, but then a new spirit will grow in influence—the eternal spirit of Nature that will fill the world with awe. Unlike the God humans believe in, this spirit is completely impartial to human emotions, prayers, or pleas; its control of the world will be free of “revenge / And favoritism” (Lines 6.212-13). Queen Mab addresses this Nature spirit directly, praising its disinterest and lack of feeling: “thou hast not human sense, / Because thou art not human mind” (Lines 6.218-19). This spirit is indestructible, and life in its many forms will continue, regardless of what humans do.

Book VI Analysis

This section details Shelley’s philosophical views on the ideal society. The poem defies the common conception of humans as the center of the universe, depicting this as a close-minded and egocentric perspective. Because they are ruled by emotion and impulse, the structures they create will necessarily feature the temptations of greed, lust, power, and wealth. Instead, Shelley advocates for the destruction of the institution controlling morality in his day: the church. Arguing that it has misconstrued the nature of the universe, Queen Mab predicts that it will soon become obsolete. In its place, will arise a completely inhuman power—what Shelley calls the spirit of Nature. Because this force lacks any human psychological or emotional features, it will ignore prayers, bribes, and promises—unlike the Christian God, Nature will not play favorites. Instead, this impersonal energy only cares about fulfilling the philosophical concept of “Necessity” (Line 6.198), an idea championed by Mary Shelley’s father William Godwin. For Shelley, Nature’s necessity (or, its immutable and continuous action) is the constant renewal of life.

The poem contrasts this image of an emotionless controlling force and the empathy that humans feel for one another. In this section, Ianthe’s spirit speaks to Queen Mab for the second time, mourning the suffering of so many humans. Ianthe’s compassion symbolizes the positive side of human psychology, but it also offers an example of why humanity cannot guide itself or invent its own moral codes—while the evil twist morality to suit their selfishness, the good do not have the strength to do what must be done to bring about change.

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