Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein (23 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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Captain Roberts sees
the ship take leave
and watches some ominous clouds
form on the horizon.
After an hour,
through his telescope Roberts
views a storm come up
and swears he saw the ship
take down its topsails.
But I’m not sure,
for without a deck
and with sails hard to bring down,
even a small but sudden
gust of wind could upset the
Ariel
.
And my Shelley cannot swim.

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THE MEN HAVE NOT RETURNED

July 11, 1822

Claire, Jane, and I
grow more anxious
than mothers of ailing infants.
A letter arrives
from Hunt confirming
that the
Ariel
left Livorno in a storm.
Leigh Hunt wants news
of the travelers’ safe arrival.
The suspense is as dreadful
as a nest of vicious cobras.
Jane fears the worst.
Even though I have not left
the villa for nearly a month,
and look more like
a ghost than a woman,
Jane and I depart for Pisa
immediately
and head to Byron’s.
Byron provides no news
except that Edward, Shelley,
and Charles Vivian had sailed
the previous Monday in a storm.
We cannot stop to rest,
but take a carriage to Livorno
in search of Trelawny and Captain Roberts.
Roberts tries to assure us
that he saw the topsails
being taken down, though
it must have been hard
to view anything for certain
in the haze of the storm.
Trelawny escorts us back to Lerici.
I feel as though
I shall go into convulsions.
As we cross the river
I fear I slog through
my lover’s grave.
Trelawny goes searching
for the men
and when we hear nothing
I gain a bit of hope.
No hope
only death,
as the sad news
finally reaches us
that three bodies
have been discovered.
Trelawny identified Shelley
by the volume
of Keats’s poems
found on his person.

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SHELLEY’S CALL

August 1822

I can faintly hear
my lover’s long-ago call
to join him
so that we shall never
be separated,
but united in death.
No laudanum
can bring back
my Shelley
and I cannot abandon
my child.
I close off
like a coffin lid has slid
over my senses.
Everyone sings praises of Shelley.
I find a bit of comfort in this.
I write to my father that
I feel my Shelley is ever with me.
I must live to be good and wise,
then I will deserve to join
Shelley some day.

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A FUNERAL

August 16, 1822

As I paralyze in grief,
Trelawny arranges the funeral.
Williams and Shelley
will be exhumed from
the graves on the beach
where they were found,
and they will be cremated.
As my father could not bear
to attend my mother’s funeral,
I cannot be present at my love’s burial.
I stay at home and write
a letter to Maria Gisborne.
I lament the fact that
Shelley and I were fighting
on the day he left
and that I begged him to stay.
I feel guilt and sorrow.
I miss my love
more than I can express.
Thank goodness for my little
Percy.
Shelley’s friends built a portable
crematorium
and brought frankincense,
salt, wine, and oil to sprinkle
on the bodies.
Trelawny said that
the scenery on the shore
was as lonely and grand
as Shelley’s poetry.
He and Byron and Hunt
imagined that Shelley’s spirit
soared above them.
Byron swam out to his boat,
the
Bolivar
, while Leigh Hunt
remained in the carriage
and Trelawny watched
Shelley’s body burn for four hours.
The flames were incandescent
as was Shelley, and they consumed
all of him, except his heart.
I keep Shelley’s heart
close to me always,
preserved in wine and stored
in my portable writing desk.
Whenever I need
inspiration or motivation
my dear love’s remains
will remind me
that I now have not only
my parent’s legacy to consider
but also my Shelley’s.
I must keep alight his flame.

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ELEGY FOR MY SHELLEY

1822

We built a world of words
and yet none satisfy now.
If you are ash
where do I store my heart?
If you are buried
who will teach our child
to say “yes”
in a foreign tongue?
If you are spirit
who will craft poems
that awaken the soul?
If you are memory
what lighthouse
calls your ship to shore?
I vow to lay down my life
to make your name known.

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AUTHOR’S NOTE

“Beware; for I am fearless and therefore powerful.”

—Mary Shelley from
Frankenstein

I love
Frankenstein
because of its gothic origins, its human values, its indelible characters, and its enduring heart. Many things compel an author to write a book, but in the case of
Hideous Love
, what most drew me to the subject matter was Mary’s youth and indomitable spirit. A woman of intellect, highly respected now as one of the important writers of her time, Mary broke the mold. She wrote a masterpiece of the English language in her teens. Her life challenged her with its tragedies and strife, and yet, fearlessly, she never gave up. When she left home and traveled with Shelley, a chest of her early writings was lost. This book was inspired in part by the idea that other tales of Mary’s adventures were lost along her tangled path.

After the tragic loss of Shelley, Mary spent much of her life compiling his work. In 1839, when his father finally lifted his prohibition against publishing Shelley’s writings, Mary brought out an annotated collection of her husband’s poetry. Her work helped to establish Percy Bysshe Shelley as one of the greatest poets of his period and of English literature in general. Mary never again married but devoted her life to writing, to raising her son, Percy, and to the promotion of Shelley’s work. She also continued to support her father financially. Mary died from a brain tumor in 1851 at the age of fifty-three.

Without question Mary’s most iconic and popular work, both during her lifetime and after her death, has been
Frankenstein
. The most universally read version is the 1831 edition of the novel, which Mary revised and to which she added her own introduction, though among scholars there has been some resurgence in reading the original 1818 text. Despite mixed and, sometimes, less than laudatory reviews,
Frankenstein
was a bestseller of its day. The book was even turned into a stage play during Mary’s life—the equivalent of becoming a movie today.
Frankenstein
throughout its history has been published in hundreds of editions and is often required reading in high schools and colleges.

I believe this book endures not only because of its multiple themes, its lyrical writing, its feminist principles, and its science fiction origins, but also because it creates universal and intricate characters and situations. The book causes the reader to think with gravity about the nature of life. It also bridges an important place in literary history—the transition from gothic eighteenth-century literature into the realism championed by novels of the nineteenth century. Now nearly two hundred years old,
Frankenstein
still pervades our culture, from movies to postage stamps to cereal boxes to Halloween costumes. Say Frankenstein to a young child and the vision of a monster comes to mind, just as it did for Mary that dark and rainy summer night in 1816. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley and her monster of a book fearlessly pioneered a new type of novel, one that powerfully withstands the test of time.

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CAST OF CHARACTERS
AND FAMOUS FIGURES

(in order of appearance)

MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT GODWIN SHELLEY is best known as the author of
Frankenstein
and as the wife of Percy Bysshe Shelley.

MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT GODWIN is the mother of Mary Shelley and Fanny Imlay. She was a political philosopher of the late 1700s. Often considered the first feminist, she authored the book
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
. She died eleven days after she gave birth to Mary.

WILLIAM GODWIN is Mary’s father and the father of William Godwin Jr. He made his name with his philosophical work
Enquiry Concerning Political Justice
, but wrote and published in many other formats as well, including fiction.

MARY JANE CLAIRMONT becomes Mary’s stepmother when Mary is four. She is the mother of Charles Clairmont, Clara Jane Clairmont, and William Godwin Jr.

FANNY IMLAY GODWIN is Mary’s older half-sister. They have the same mother, and after their mother’s death William Godwin raises Fanny as though she is his daughter and gives Fanny his last name.

CHARLES CLAIRMONT is Mary’s older stepbrother. Mary Jane Clairmont is Charles’s mother.

CLARA JANE CLAIRMONT (FIRST KNOWN AS JANE, BUT LATER KNOWN AS CLAIRE CLAIRMONT) is Mary’s stepsister. Only a few months younger than Mary, Claire plays a crucial role in Mary’s love life.

WILLIAM GODWIN JR. is Mary’s younger half-brother. William Godwin is his father and Mary Jane Clairmont is his mother.

ISABELLA BAXTER is one of Mary’s dearest childhood friends. Mary lives with her family when she is sent to Dundee, Scotland, at fourteen. Mary also becomes close with Isabella’s sister, Christina. Isabella Baxter marries David Booth.

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