Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein (12 page)

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Authors: Stephanie Hemphill

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Biographical, #European, #Family, #General, #Love & Romance

BOOK: Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein
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to fit my plot.
Victor wants to bestow
animation upon lifeless matter
like a god, and he learns
the limitations of such an endeavor
when he finds his creation to be hideous
and out of his control.
Does not an author
wish to do the same
with her pen?
We may think ourselves
gods of creation
from time to time,
but are we not merely
humble scholars
of the word?

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TO WRITE IS TO REVISE

Summer 1816

“Writing is a calling
ordained
by the gods
of literature,
no less holy
than the martyrdom
of the saints
no less sinful
than the transgressions
of the fallen.”
Shelley examines
my latest manuscript pages,
offering small corrections
in the margins,
suggesting new words
for my text.
“I am learning that
writing requires
diligence and patience,
as well as passion,
my love.”
I marvel at the improvements
Shelley makes to my story
and at how easily
he edits my work.
“How can you see
so quickly where
to improve my language?”
“When the story shines
in so many places,
the few spots without glimmer
require little genius
to gloss,” he says.

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LEAVING GENEVA

September 1816

I have remained enchanted
these last three months,
lost in a landscape
of mountains, thunder,
ice, and wondrous writing.
Now we voyage back to England
to Bath, where Claire and I shall
live so she might reside
in fashionable seclusion,
as Claire feels entitled
to such an existence
after her affair with Byron.
But it must be a residence
where we know not a soul
for Claire shows her pregnancy
like an inflating balloon.
I take art lessons
and attend scientific lectures,
but I miss Shelley terribly
as he attends to his financial matters
in London. I contemplate
turning my story of Frankenstein
into a novel
and read the epistolary works
of Samuel Richardson
for inspiration and direction.
I also read Lady Caroline Lamb’s
book about Byron for fun.
It is rife with scandal.
Finally Shelley entreats
me to come to Marlow to see him
and stay at Thomas Peacock’s family home.
I might be reluctant to go
as Thomas has always championed
Harriet’s cause.
I fear I may be stepping
onto unstable footing
like one on the ledge
of a rocky incline.
But I miss my Shelley so.
Claire takes charge of baby William
for a few days.
I will be free of her whining,
like a child who stubbed her toe,
about Byron and his refusal
to answer her letters.
Marlow is rural and lovely,
but Peacock acts a bit chilly
to me until we discuss politics.
England is in the midst
of the Corn Laws
and quiet revolution tints the sky.
The price of bread soars
and the poor cannot but eat cake.
Thomas mocks the situation,
but Shelley and I
feel the possibility for real change.
Shelley writes to Byron
when we return to Bath together.
He describes our life here as alluring
and content. I think Shelley
exaggerates a bit, but I am so glad
to have him beside me,
I will always applaud his notions.
We tell my family
that Claire and I live in Bath
for Claire’s health,
obviously omitting the pregnancy.
Fanny, my eldest and half-sister,
quiet and melancholy,
writes to us asking for Shelley
to give my father more money
even though they know full well
that we have not straightened out
our own financial situation.
She also informs us that her aunts
have left for Dublin without her.
She will have no employment with them.
Further Fanny writes that Stepmother
has never spread scandal about us,
which I know to be false.
I find this part of Fanny’s letter
to be frivolous, and not
expressive of her honest feelings,
and it upsets me.
Shelley and I resume
our schedule of reading
and writing,
with the fervor of evangelicals.

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FANNY’S LETTER OF OCTOBER 9

October 1816

A very alarming letter arrives
from Fanny, and Shelley
departs immediately for Bristol
to look for her. Claire and I
wait up until two in the morning
pacing the rug anxious to hear news.
At first Shelley
cannot find Fanny and has no
information. Then we learn
that Fanny has died.
I feel as though
there must be a terrible mistake
and refuse to accept it.
Fanny checked into a seaside
hotel at Swansea and took
an overdose of laudanum.
She left a note on the table
next to her body which in part reads,
“I have long determined that
the best thing I could do was to put an end
to the existence of a being
whose birth was unfortunate
and whose life has only been a series of pain
to those persons who hurt their health
in endeavoring to promote her welfare.
Perhaps to hear of my death
will give you pain, but you will soon
have the blessing of forgetting
that such a creature ever existed as …”
The note was torn off there
so as to obscure the author.
Left beside the body was
the gold watch that Shelley
and I brought Fanny from Geneva.
There can be no mistake.
Why exactly Fanny did this
we will never know.
It may be partially because
our aunts retracted their offer
for Fanny to live with them.
Or perhaps our mother made suicide
seem a legitimate option for one so lost.
I break down to my core.
I fall limp as though
my bones have been removed
from my body.
I should have invited Fanny to come
visit us and provided her more family.
I should have guessed at her distress.
Shelley equally feels my pain.
Father does something I do not
understand. He finally writes to me,
but it is to ask me to hide the fact
that Fanny has committed suicide.
He bids me not to go to Swansea
and “disturb the silent dead.”
He believes Fanny wanted
to die in obscurity so we are
to leave her to be buried
in an unmarked grave.
He does not intend to inform
my brother Charles Clairmont
of her death for many months.
To avoid scandal
he will tell others later
that Fanny died a natural death,
from a fever on the way to Dublin.
I’m not sure that it is right,
but I do as Father bids.
Claire sheds not a tear for Fanny.
It is as though Fanny
were a stranger to her.
I wear clothes of mourning.
Without my Shelley
Fanny’s fate might well
have been mine.
I find some solace
in my reading and writing,
but such a kind creature
as Fanny there will never be again.

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A GOTHIC TALE

Fall 1816

The monster in my book
feeling alone and unloved
enacts vengeance
on his creator by murdering
Victor’s family.
Victor’s young innocent brother
and his wife
lose their lives at the hands
of cruel fate.
I know all too well
the horror that it is to lose
one’s sibling and one’s child.
One may become
mad at the world
and the injustice of it all,
rage with fists and fury.
But eventually you must
face your own contributions
to their sad ends.

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ACCOLADES AND CONTINUED ENDEAVORS

December 1, 1816

Leigh Hunt, the editor of
The Examiner
,
a London newspaper, publishes
an article called “Young Poets”
where he names Keats, Reynolds,
and my own Shelley as resurrecting
English poetry to the heights
of Milton and Spenser.

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