Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein (7 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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Claire knows it.
I think of the myriad
comments I could make
about my stepsister
and her facial features
but I just say,
“One day I hope
you experience
pregnancy and all
of its wonders too.”

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BIRTH

February 22, 1815

My baby comes early,
and I am at ease
when she arrives.
Shelley, agitated
and exhausted, paces
about the room.
We do not name her
as we were not prepared
for her to be born yet
and selected no name.
I am as though
the sun
ran through my body
and light
beams from my pores.
Being a mother delights me so.
Shelley and Claire
run about town for a cradle
and to find us a new home,
though I wonder if we should
move the baby.
We move on March 2
to Arabella Row.
When I awake on the eleventh day
of my little baby girl’s life,
I cannot stir her.
When I went to nurse
her the night before she didn’t budge
and I thought her sleeping.
She is so cold when I pick her up today
my arms ache holding her.
No breath rises in her chest.
My baby neither moves, nor screams,
nor can I.
I was a mother
and I am no longer
I was a mother
and I am no longer
repeats through my brain.
I don’t know what to do
and a heavy numbness
settles over me
like one lost
out in the cold
all night.
I cannot be moved
from bed.
I send for Hogg
to help with arrangements
and to console me.
I feel I can rely on him,
and I worry
that Shelley might not handle
what is required
or my mood right now.
My own mother
died eleven days
after my birth,
and my baby
lived only eleven days.
Shelley and Claire
resume their daily schedule
of visits to money lenders
and booksellers,
but a part of me
has died.

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MARCH

March 1815

I dream my baby girl
restores to life,
we rub her
before the fire
and she opens her eyes.
But then I awake
and the cradle lays empty.
And my heart shatters
all over again.
Shelley fears he is dying
of consumption.
He obsesses about death,
yet seems to forget
that we have just lost
a child.
Claire has no understanding.
“Why must you always
gloom about so?” she demands.
Claire must go.
I tell Shelley this.
I need to breathe.
I cannot even
see my own hands
when Claire stands in front of me.
We cannot send her
back to Skinner Street
as the family scandal
of us leaving with Shelley
cannot be condoned by Father
or it will damage
my sister Fanny’s prospects
of gainful employment
with her aunts.
Because there is nowhere else
for Claire besides among us right now,
here she remains
like a hatpin through my skull.
But another solution
will be found.

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SALT HILL

April 1815

Shelley and I travel
alone to the Windmill Inn
at Salt Hill in Buckinghamshire.
The creditors
hound my love and
we need to escape.
The inn is as pretty
as I could have imagined,
the fields greener
than emeralds,
and we steal away
from London alone,
never mind the reason.
I feel serenity and joy
for the first time
in months.
Shelley kisses me
tenderly and whispers
that perhaps we should
try to have another child.
I can think of nothing I want more.

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GOOD RIDDANCE

May 1815

We return to a new house
that Hogg finds us,
and Claire tromps about the rooms
as though she is the lady of the house.
I reach wit’s end.
Shelley retreats by reading Seneca,
while Claire and I
fight like angry hens
about every choice to be made.
My sister Fanny sneaks
out to see us from time to time,
though if my father
knew she saw us
he would string her up.
Her visits are brief as a glance,
and she often entreats Shelley
to give my father money
as she claims his situation to be dire.
Sir Timothy, Shelley’s father,
settles Shelley’s debts as well as
some of my father’s obligations.
We will finally receive
our annual allowance
of one thousand pounds,
two hundred of which
go to Harriet. At long last
we shall not be
running from creditors.
Shelley spends all morning
with Claire, all afternoon
amusing her as well
and in the evening
they share a last talk.
For tomorrow
Claire leaves for Lynmouth,
a village in Devon
on the west coast of England,
where she will reside alone.
I gavotte about the house
light as silk.
While Shelley escorts Claire
to her carriage
I await at home,
maintaining my usual schedule.
When he does not return all day
I pace the house
with tears that fail to end.
I fear that Shelley has fled
with Claire
and left me,
like he did Harriet,
for good.

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TRUST

May 1815

When I lived
on Spinner Street
with nothing but my wits,
Shelley recognized
in me a glow
of greatness.
When we eloped
to Switzerland
on nothing but our beliefs,
Shelley held
my hand promising
not to let go.
When we lost
our first child
to death’s cold silence,
Shelley vowed
to once again
create our family.
When I wait
in an empty house
for my love’s return,
I shall be vindicated.
Shelley will bound
back into my arms
as though we never
were apart.

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OUR REGENERATION

Summer 1815

Shelley more than returns
to me.
With Claire gone
we nestle into life
as a twosome.
I am pregnant
again, and happy
as my beating heart.
Health becomes paramount
as I refuse to lose this baby.
My poor Shelley
suffers from debilitating
abdominal pains
and panics that he will die
very soon of consumption.
I believe this may be somewhat
a construct of his overactive mind.
Nevertheless, we must
escape London
and salve him with the seaside.
We vacation to Clifton
and Torquay, both renown
for their health giving air.
But my Shelley stirs, restless,
even as we travel
and abandons me
to holiday alone.
He returns to London
to seek a home for us
and to see Dr. Lawrence,
who assures Shelley
that he has not contracted tuberculosis.
Lynmouth is less than a day’s walk
from here, and I fret
when Shelley leaves me,
he does so
to visit Claire.

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A HOME

August 1815

Shelley finds us a home
in Bishopsgate, near Windsor.
I love it immediately
as there is a garden
and enchanting views of the abbeys,
the heath and the lake.
I also acquire a small staff
to perform the domestic duties

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