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The Monsters

Page 39

by Dorothy Hoobler


  121 “I am much afraid”: ibid.

  121 “The great object”: Garrett, 7.

  122 “I felt as if”: Minta, 181.

  122 “We were married”: BLJ, IV, 249.

  122 “[H]ad Lady B”: Longford, 71.

  122 “the treaclemoon”: BLJ, III, 175.

  122 “She—or rather”: BLJ, V, 91.

  123 “You had better”: MacCarthy, 275.

  123 “An utter stranger”: CC, I, 24-25.

  124 “I have called twice”: ibid., 27.

  124 “I am now wavering”: ibid., 30.

  124 “Lasciate ogni”: ibid., 31.

  124 “If you think ill”: ibid., 29.

  125 “I will bring her”: ibid., 36.

  125 “Will you be so good”: ibid., 39.

  125 “Mary is delighted”: ibid., 40.

  125 “Have you then”: ibid., 36.

  125 “I was young”: Graham, 760.

  126 “if a girl of eighteen”: BLJ, V, 162.

  126 “God bless you”: CC, I, n37.

  126 “I am unhappily”: MacCarthy, 273.

  126 “I assure you”: CC, I, 40.

  Chapter6: The Summer of Darkness

  127 “I busied myself”: F1831, 21-22.

  128 “echo of the Infinite”: Mellor, 70.

  128 “We have had lately”: BLJ, V, 86.

  128-29 Mount Tambora statistics: Encyclopedia Britannica, 1969 ed., XXIII, 104.

  129 “when first I stepped”: Shelley, Rambles in Germany and Italy, I, 139.

  129 “you will I suppose”: CC, I, 43.

  129 “desolate . . . sublime”: Shelley, History of a Six Weeks’ Tour, 93.

  130 “the majestic”: ibid.

  130 “I feel as happy”: LMWS, I, 18.

  130 “saluted by”: ibid., 18.

  130 “I leave this”: CC, I, 46.

  130 “the curiosity to see”: Minta, 183.

  132 “a madman”: MacDonald, 23.

  132 “You wound my heart”: ibid., 24.

  133 “The sea dashed over”: ibid., 60.

  133 “As soon as he reached”: ibid., 62.

  133 “I am very pleased”: Page, 148.

  134 “First . . . I can hit”: Eisler, 511.

  134 “not much after . . . I detest the cause”: BLJ, V, 76.

  134 “I brought away”: BLJ, V, 78.

  134 “a curst selfish”: Minta, 185.

  134 “clouds were mountains”: MacCarthy, 289.

  134 “Lake Leman woos me”: Longford, 98.

  134 “I am sorry”: CC, I, 46.

  135 “You will hardly believe”: Grosskurth, 278.

  135 “It seems to me”: BLJ, V, 131.

  136 “the author of”: Polidori, Diary, 101.

  136 “I have been”: CC, I, 47.

  136 “Now—don’t scold”: BLJ, V, 92.

  137 “We watch them”: LMWS, I, 20.

  137 “often whilst the storms”: Polidori, Vampyre, xiv.

  137 Oarsman’s account: Lovell, His Very Self, 183.

  137 “The sky is changed!”: PLB, 222.

  138 “the prettiest place”: BLJ, V, 187-88.

  138 “most intimate friends”: Lewalski, 9.

  139 “There is no story”: MacCarthy, 295.

  139 “it proved a wet”: Walling, 28.

  139 “at about a mile”: CC, I, n53.

  139 “With false Ambition”: PLB, 91.

  140 “Now you who wish”: Polidori, Diary, 123.

  140 “After a moment”: Lovell, His Very Self, 182-83.

  141 “I despair of”: Tomalin, Shelley, 55.

  141 “Beauty sat on”: JMWS, 478.

  141 “We often sat up”: Walling, 28.

  142 “the nature of”: F1831, 22.

  142 “What a pity”: Grylls, Godwin, 151.

  143 “phantasmagoria”: JMWS, 56.

  144 “excited in us”: F1831, 25.

  144 “You and I”: Sunstein, 121.

  144 “There were four”: F1831, 21.

  144 “I busied myself”: ibid., 21.

  144 “The ghost-stories begun”: Page, 49.

  145 “founded on the experiences”: F1831, 21.

  145 “more apt to”: ibid., 21.

  145 “Poor Polidori had”: ibid., 21.

  146 “In short, the man”: Blunden, 134.

  146 “Then drawing in”: Grebanier et al., English Literature, IV, 201.

  147 “. . . his lordship having”: Polidori, Diary, 128.

  147 “Have you thought of”: F1831, 22.

  148 “various philosophical . . . listener”: ibid.

  148 all, ibid., 22-23

  149 all, ibid., 23.

  Chapter7: “A hideous phantom”

  151 “Did I request thee”: Milton, Paradise Lost, Book X, ll. 743-45, 232.

  151 “thought of a story”: F1831, 23.

  151 “It was on a dreary night”: ibid., 57.

  151 “With an anxiety,” ibid., 57-58.

  152 “the wretch”: ibid., 58.

  153 “is an exceedingly”: LPBS, I, 489.

  154 “precisely in the spot”: ibid., 486.

  154 “himself quietly upon”: Moore, Thomas, II, 23.

  154 “I knew that my companion”: LPBS, 483.

  154 “a multitude of names”: LPBS, 485.

  154 “I vowed that I”: PWPBS, 531.

  156 “I eagerly inquired”: F1818, 24.

  156 “Whence, I often asked”: ibid., 33-34.

  157 “As the minuteness”: ibid., 35-36.

  157 “A new species”: ibid., 36.

  157 “Pursuing these reflections”: ibid.

  158 “Who shall conceive”: ibid., 36-37.

  158 “any person she”: Tomalin, Shelley, 58.

  158 “dreary night . . . dull yellow eye”: F1818, 38.

  158 “I thought I saw”: ibid., 39.

  159 one of Mary Wollstonecraft’s children’s books: Original Stories from Real Life, 20-27.

  159 “[H]is conversation”: F1818, 51.

  160 “with sweet laughing”: ibid., 47.

  160 “While I watched”: ibid., 56.

  161 “I considered the being”: ibid., 57.

  161 “Thou art a symbol”: PLB, 98.

  162 “Whether with particles”: Ovid, 4-5.

  163 “The day was cloudless”: JMWS, 113.

  163 “[T]his appeared the most”: ibid., 115.

  163 “[A]s we went along”: ibid.

  163 “horrid avowal”: CC, I, n53.

  163 “Nothing can be more desolate”: JMWS, 117.

  164 “I . . . write my story”: ibid., 118.

  164 “This is the most desolate”: ibid., 119.

  164 “kiss our babe”: ibid., 121.

  165 “afterwards we all”: JMWS, 125.

  166 “a good man”: BLJ, IX, 18.

  166 “that none could believe”: JMWS, 126.

  167 “was, from the first”: F1831, 20.

  167 “No father had watched”: F1818, 97.

  168 “a true history”: ibid., 104-05.

  169 “the minutest description”: ibid., 105.

  170 “Remember, I shall be”: ibid., 140.

  170 “She was there”: ibid., 165.

  170 “While I still hung”: ibid., 166.

  171 “All men hate”: ibid., 77.

  171 “My dreadful fear”: CC, I, 70.

  Chapter8: “I shall be no more . . .”

  172 “He sprung from”: F1818, 191.

  172 “Do not think”: ibid., 190.

  174 “it is of the utmost”: CC, I, 81.

  174 “stupid letter from F”: JMWS, 138.

  174 “I depart immediately”: CC, I, 85.

  174 “In the evening”: JMWS, 139.

  174 “I have long determined”: Paul, II, 242.

  174 “when I shall be”: F1818, 190.

  175 “Mr. G. told me”: Jones, Gisborne, 39.

  175 “Go not to Swansea”: JMWS, n140.

  175 “From the fatal
day”: ibid.

  176 “Her voice did quiver”: PWPBS, 546.

  176 “modify and change”: Engar, Ann, “Mary Shelley and the Romance of Science” in Dabundo, 138.

  177 “By painful experience”: Einstein, Albert, Out of My Later Years (New York: New York Philosophical Library, 1950), 144.

  178 “Is it wrong”: Blunden, 161.

  178 “I have not written”: Tomalin, Shelley, 61.

  178 “Too wretched”: Hodgart, 15.

  178 “far advanced”: LPBS, I, n521.

  179 “It seems that”: ibid., 521.

  179 “I don’t think”: JMWS, n151.

  179 “Poor Harriet”: ibid., 560.

  180 “[Y]our nominal union”: LPBS, I, 521.

  180 “Of course you are”: St. Clair, 415.

  180 “was a change”: LPBS, I, 539-40.

  180 “The piece of news”: Paul, II, 246.

  181 “a marriage”: JMWS, 152.

  181 “Another incident”: LMWS, I, 26.

  181 “sends her affectionate”: ibid., 26.

  181 “You know”: BLJ, V, 162.

  182 “a house with a lawn”: LMWS, I, 22.

  182 “A fire in his eye”: Blunden, 176-77.

  182 “Claire has reassumed”: LPBS, I, 395.

  182 “Her eyes are”: ibid.

  183 “My affections are”: CC, I, 110.

  183 “Shelley’s fullness”: JMWS, n158-59.

  184 “She loved Scythrop”: Peacock, Nightmare Abbey, 95-96.

  184 “I had a dream”: LMWS, I, 32.

  184 “My life might have”: F1818, 7.

  184-85 “I shall commit”: ibid., 8-9.

  185 “[My] ambition leads me”: Beaglehole, J. C., 365.

  185 “There, Margaret”: F1818, 5-6.

  185 “Learn from me”: ibid., 35.

  186 A modern feminist critic: Mellor, 274-86.

  186 “Frankenstein discovered”: F1818, 179.

  187 “eloquence is forcible”: ibid.

  187 “Listen to my tale”: ibid., 78.

  187 “even power over”: ibid., 178.

  187 “The ice”: ibid., 183.

  187 “I am a blasted tree”: ibid., 133.

  188 “Seek happiness”: ibid., 186.

  188 “Yet why do I say”: ibid.

  188 “demon . . . voice of”: ibid., 187.

  188 “fallen angel”: ibid., 189.

  188 “I shall ascend”: ibid., 191.

  188 “He sprung from”: ibid.

  189 “How very vividly”: JMWS, 172.

  190 “igmatic . . . enigmatic . . .” et al.: Anne K. Mellor discusses in detail the changes Percy made to Mary’s manuscript on pages 58-69 of her insightful book, Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters.

  191 “My health has been”: LPBS, I, 428.

  192 “I am just now”: LMWS, I, 46.

  192 “I am tired”: ibid., 42-43.

  192 “Poor little angel!”: CC, I, 110.

  192 “I know not”: LMWS, I, 57.

  193 “Devilman”: Peacock, Nightmare Abbey, 211-12.

  193 “Mrs. Shelley, tho’”: LPBS, I, 583.

  193 “The event on which . . .” et al.: F1818, 3-4.

  194 “[Frankenstein] is piously dedicated”: Brewer, Mental Anatomies, 17.

  195 “perhaps the foulest toadstool”: Mulvey-Roberts, Marie, “Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley.” In Thomson et al., 393.

  195 “Nothing attracts us”: Rieger, “Dr. Polidori,” 462.

  195 “It is no slight merit”: Walling, 34.

  195 “the most wonderful”: ibid., 23.

  195 “a wonderful work”: BLJ, VI, 125.

  195 “Mary has just”: CC, I, 111.

  196 “Treat a person”: Bloom, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, 27.

  196 “a thin patrician-looking”: Sunstein, 147-48.

  Chapter9: The Ghosts’ Revenge

  198 “Who telleth”: PWPBS, 524.

  198 “We are all”: LPBS, II, 1.

  198 “The country is”: JMWS, 197.

  198 “we can see”: ibid., 199.

  199 “The snows”: ibid., 201.

  199 “. . . to inform you”: LPBS, II, 5.

  199 “for fear that”: Gittings and Manton, 41-42.

  199 “You write as if”: LPBS, II, 10-11.

  200 “Shelley has got to Milan”: BLJ, VI, 37.

  200 “Remember that I am”: CC, I, 115.

  200 “They dress her”: Blunden, 212.

  200 “I could never”: JMWS, 67.

  201 “Mrs. Gisborne is”: LPBS, II, 114.

  201 “we have a small”: LMWS, I, 72.

  202 “as beautiful as ever . . . extreme horror”: LPBS, II, 36.

  202 “face had become pale”: Minta, 192.

  202 “He associates with”: LPBS, II, 58.

  202 “So we’ll go no more”: PLB, 101.

  203 “He is a person”: PWPBS, 189.

  203 “passionately attached”: ibid., 290.

  204 “I have done for”: LPBS, II, 37.

  204 “not well”: JMWS, 224.

  204 “. . . we have arrived”: LMWS, I, 78-79.

  205 “This is the Journal”: JMWS, 226.

  205 “All this is”: LPBS, II, 40-41.

  205 “I have not been without”: ibid., 42.

  206 “I sincerely sympathize”: St. Clair, 460-61.

  206 “Wilt thou forget”: PWPBS, 553.

  207 “not well”: JMWS, 246.

  208 “A most tremendous fuss”: ibid., 249.

  208 “with sweet laughing”: F1818, 47.

  209 “William is very ill”: JMWS, 265.

  209 “William is in the greatest”: LMWS, I, 99.

  209 “William is dead!”: F1818, 52.

  209 “I am going to write”: LMWS, I, 100.

  210 “I never know one”: ibid., 101-02.

  210 “Yesterday after an illness”: LPBS, II, 97.

  210 “My lost William”: PWPBS, 581.

  211 “Mourning in thy robe”: ibid., 559.

  211 “Ha! Thy frozen pulses”: ibid., 560.

  211 “My dearest Mary”: ibid., 582.

  212 “We cannot yet come”: LPBS, II, 109.

  212 “selfishness and ill humour”: Seymour, 234.

  212 “I had thought you”: Mellor, 194.

  212 “Your letters”: LPBS, II, 227.

  213 “I went to the Egham races”: Walling, 34.

  213 “What has been the fate”: LPBS, II, 103.

  213 “I begin my journal”: JMWS, 293.

  213 “That time is gone for ever”: ibid.

  214 “I am sorely afraid”: CC, I, 127.

  214 “a few days after my birth”: Shelley, Mary, Mathilda, 155.

  214 “He was a sincere”: ibid., 153.

  215 “One idea rushed on”: ibid., 173.

  215 “. . . rise from under my blighting”: ibid., 180.

  215 “His genius was transcendant”: ibid., 191.

  215 “He soon took great interest”: ibid., 195.

  215 “Woodville for ever”: ibid.

  216 “I am alone”: ibid., 151.

  216 “I go from this world”: ibid., 210.

  216 “disgusting and detestable”: Jones, Gisborne, 44.

  217 “small but healthy”: LPBS, II, 151.

  217 “he is my only one”: LMWS, I, 114.

  217 “after the frightful events”: LPBS, II, 227.

  218 “O Wild West Wind . . . Spring be far behind?”: PWPBS, 577-79.

  Chapter10: A Dose for Poor Polidori

  219 “Lord Ruthven had disappeared”: Bleiler, 283.

  219 “If there is in this world”: Bunson, xi.

  220 “But first, on earth”: PLB, 262-63.

  221 “a man of considerable”: Bleiler, 287.

  221 “his countenance”: ibid., 291.

  222 “A considerable change”: MacDonald, Polidori, 100.

  222 “sign of reconciliation”: ibid., 102.

  222 “I had no use
for”: BLJ, V, 122.

  222 “We have parted”: MacDonald, Polidori, 102.

  223 “your letter produced”: ibid., 108.

  223 “pimp”: Longford, 112.

  223 “There were fifteen”: MacDonald, Polidori, 122.

  224 “The Doctor Polidori”: BLJ, XI, 164.

  224 “It is, however”: MacDonald, Polidori, 144.

  224-25 “Instead of making out”: Lovell, Medwin’s Conversations, 107.

  225 “delicate declension”: MacDonald, Polidori, 147.

  225 “Dear Doctor—I have read your play”: BLJ, V, 258.

  227 “[Here is] a copy of a thing”: Bleiler, xxxvi.

  227 “As the person referred to”: MacDonald, Polidori, 181.

  228 “If the book is clever”: BLJ, VI, 119.

  229 “deadly hue . . . dead grey eye”: Bleiler, 265.

  229 “one whose strength”: ibid., 273.

  229 “conceal all you know”: ibid., 276.

  229 “Remember your oath!”: ibid., 279.

  230 “Lord Ruthven had disappeared”: ibid., 283.

  231 “death, he remembered”: ibid., 280.

  231 “The tale here presented”: ibid., xxxvii.

  233 “In every town”: ibid., Vampyre, 268.

  234 “departed this Life”: MacDonald, Polidori, 237.

  234 “I have been left”: ibid., 238.

  234 “I was convinced”: Lovell, Medwin’s Conversations, 104.

  235 “I then said”: MacDonald, Polidori, 241.

  Chapter11: The Littlest Victim

  236 “I am ashes”: PLB, 112.

  237 “Which ‘piece’”: BLJ, VI, 92.

  237 “She was not”: MacCarthy, 360.

  237 “My first wish”: CC, I, 127.

  238 “I wish to see”: BLJ, VI, 213.

  238 “very droll”: BLJ, VI, 223.

  238 “I was rather disappointed”: Gronow, 212.

  239 “celestial apparition”: Marchand, II, 775.

  239 “already the subject”: ibid., 775.

  239 “I was strong enough”: ibid., 777.

  239 “I am in love”: BLJ, VI, 108.

  240 “I am drilling very hard”: BLJ, VII, 28.

  241 “which shines among”: ibid., VII, 80.

  241 “I so totally disapprove”: ibid.

  241 “A letter from Mad[ame]”: JCC, 145.

  242 “she shall be taught”: CC, I, 144-45.

  242 “The woman is”: BLJ, VII, 151.

  242 “I must decline”: ibid., VII, 162.

  242 “Clare [sic] writes me”: ibid, VII, 174-75.

  243 “Each time she came”: CC, I, n130.

  244 “to become a good”: Gittings and Manton, 58.

  244 “the state of ignorance”: CC, I, 163.

  244 “The moral part”: CC, I, 165.

  245 “I am no enemy”: BLJ, IX, 119.

 

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