• a singularly variegated landscape Although Mary Shelley depends for the description here principally on her own observations,
    Byron's representation of the Rhine landscape as a point in nature where one might
    observe a symbolic reconciliation of opposite powers in harmonious symmetry (see Childe
    Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto 3, stanzas 59-61) seems to touch her conception here. That
    representation, in any case, would not be far from her mind, since it was written
    in the summer of 1816 and, indeed, when the Shelleys returned to England they carried
    the manuscript of the poem with them.