Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein (15 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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William seems very susceptible
to the cold here this autumn,
and yet I will not ask Stepmother
to send the flannel I require for him
as she has once again been difficult,
angered like a jealous suitor
by my father’s visits
to see me.
Claire and Shelley live in London
part of the time, and I am alone
with the children like a nanny.
Shelley complains of bad health
as he did after the births
of each of our children.
I can’t fathom why
he must go through
such antics after I give birth,
perhaps he feels
sorry that he did not
have to go through
the pain of labor
and so contracts
his own feelings of distress.
I thought maybe my dear
childhood friend Isabella
might once again contact me,
but her husband, Mr. Booth,
ends that possibility
and spreads rumors that
Claire and Shelley
are having an affair,
and further that Allegra
is Shelley’s child.
We overextend ourselves
and are mired in debt again.
Shelley is arrested
because we cannot pay
all of our bills.
What shall I do if he
and I truly part?
He urges me to come
to London, but I fear
that like in Bishopsgate
if I leave the house abandoned
all of our property will be seized.
And we have so much more to lose now.
November brightens my spirit
as I let go my fears
and agree to travel
to London to be with my Shelley.
I visit Skinner Street
and the Hunts.
Also
History of a Six Weeks Tour
,
my first book, appears this month,
again with an anonymous author.

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ANONYMITY

Autumn 1817

Notoriety a distant dream
as scandal brands us
notorious,
I think that when
I can name myself
I shall use
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
in memory of my mother.
If I were a man
I might not wear the cloak
of anonymity.
The temperamental child
inside me
pounds her fists
in anger about this,
but the wiser, patient Mary
just keeps writing
without a name.

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BYRON’S REQUEST

Autumn 1817

Byron demands that we send
him his daughter.
He does not quite grasp
that shuttling a nine-month-old
off to Italy with strangers
might not be the greatest plan.
Still I will be glad to be done
with the scandal that has been caused
by having little Allegra around.
Claire will no doubt
act more sullen and complaint heavy
than she already behaves
without her little one.
But she should have known
when she became involved
with Byron
that there would be
a Faustian cost,
that she would barter away
part of her soul.

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THE RELEASE OF
FRANKENSTEIN

January 1818

Even though only five hundred copies
are published, some note
is taken of my book.
My friends shower me with praise
for my imagination and bold ideas.
The outside world
of course does not know
who authored
Frankenstein
,
only that the preface
seems masculine
and that the book is dedicated
to William Godwin,
my father.
If I receive no admiration
beyond that of my father
it would be more than enough.
He wrote that
Frankenstein
is “the most wonderful work
to have been written
at twenty years of age
that [he] has ever heard of.”
The reviews I am told
are happily mixed.
I do not read them
as we are preparing
to leave for Italy
to transport Allegra to Byron.
And honestly I can weather
no negativity at the moment.
We find someone
to take on the twenty-one-year lease
we made for Albion House.
I feel torn about leaving.
The weather chills the bones
and Shelley has been very sick here,
now with an eye infection
that makes it impossible
for him to read. However,
we took up residency here
and it was refreshing
to have a permanent address
in the country. I finished
my book in this house.
My daughter was born here.
It feels bittersweet to leave.

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RUMORS AND TRUTH

February–March 1818

I permanently board up Albion House
and join Claire, Shelley,
and the children in London.
I detest our current lodgings
but we could find nothing else.
We cannot stay at Skinner Street
as there is once again
turmoil over finances
like angry bulls huffing in a pen.
Shelley took out another
post obit loan, promising
forty-five hundred pounds
on his father’s death
for the receipt of two thousand now.
My father expected to receive
a good portion of that money.
I try not to mire myself
in money issues as I find it
a cemetery for creativity,
but I am not sure
how Father will get along
without Shelley’s help.
We can always just borrow more.
We delve into culture
and entertainment,
spend many nights with the Hunts.
We see the Elgin Marbles,
an exhibition of Salvador Rosa,
and the Appollonicon, an organ that sounds
like an orchestra. A large scenic view of Rome
makes us hunger for our trip abroad.
But rumors cast a pall
over our last days
in England. Word reaches
Stepmother and Father
that Allegra is Claire’s child,
and that Shelley is the father.
We explain that Lord Byron
is in fact the father of Allegra
and that we are taking
Allegra to him.
Stepmother yells,
“Claire’s downfall is all
the result of her following
you into hell, Mary,”
as if I had anything
to do with Claire courting Byron.
But Stepmother
must point blaming fingers
at me as she did when
I was a child in her house.

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HEAVEN OR HELL

March 1818

If there were but one
way to construct a life
perhaps the road
would be easier
for having no choice
of left or right,
but as free thinking
individuals we make
decisions.
I never chained Claire
to my leg.
She rides in the carriage
designating her own seat.
No road without gravel
and dust, no course
without twists,
the way is not always
smooth.
But the path has been
Claire’s choice,
and I respect her for it.

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A LETTER FROM CLAIRE TO BYRON

March 1818

Claire writes to Byron
of
Frankenstein
and me,
“Mary has just published
her first work … a wonderful
performance full of genius
… as no one would imagine
could have been written
by so young a person.
I am delighted and whatever
private feelings of envy
I may have at not being
able to do so well myself yet
all yields when I consider
that she is a woman
and will prove in time
an ornament to us
and an argument in our favor.
How I delight in a lovely woman
of strong and cultivated intellect.
How I delight to hear
all the intricacies of mind
and argument hanging on her lips.”
I blush and thank her
for her kindness
and we share a true
moment of camaraderie
as though the years
of swatting at each other’s hats
have been but child’s play.

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TRAVELING TO ITALY

March–April 1818

Much of the scenery

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