The Shelleys travelled around various Italian cities Spent the summer of 1819 writing a tragedy, The Cenci, in Livorno Inspired by the death of Keats, in 1821 Shelley wrote the elegy Adonais Shelley, Byron and Hunt wanted to establish a journal, that would be called The Liberal On 8 July 1822 Shelley drowned A mass of evidence that Shelley may have been murdered Was cremated on the beach near Viareggio After his death The Courier gloated: "Shelley, the writer of some infidel poetry, has been drowned, now he knows whether there is a God or not." Shelley's heart was later buried with the body of Sir Percy Florence Shelley, his son His grave bears the Latin inscription, Cor Cordium, and a few lines of "Ariel's Song" from Shakespeare's The Tempest Nothing of him that doth fade But doth suffer a sea-change Into something rich and strange. Thank you for your attention!
surreptitiously to open the safe, remove and photograph the BLACK code and its attendant superencipherment tables, and then replace them. Neither his boss, the military attache, Colonel Norman E. Fiske, nor the ambassador ever suspected a thing. Loris continued on the job.* The BLACK code, so called for the color of its binding, was a relatively new and secret military ATTACHÉ code, with its own superencipherment tables. Ambassadors may also have used it. Thus Ciano gloated in his diary on September 30, 1941, shortly after the theft: "The military intelligence service has come into possession of the American secret code; everything that [U.S. Ambassador William] Phillips telegraphs is read by our decoding offices. . . ." Soon after the S.I.M. acquired the code, it gave a copy to Germany's Abwehr. From that moment, the Axis powers —subject only to their ability to strip the superencipher-ments—were enabled to peer into the