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Hideous Love

Page 7

by Stephanie Hemphill


  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.

  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 Victor’s 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.

  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.

  He calls them the new school of poetry,

  which he claims began in excess

  like most revolutions, but now

  is “a real aspiration after real nature

  and original fancy remains

  that calls to mind

  the finer times of the English Muse.”

  My love’s work will now

  gain some publicity. And Byron

  had so fervently urged Shelley

  that he needed publicity this summer.

  I am as delighted as a kitten

  licking her milk-stained paws.

  A bit of sunlight seeps into

  what has been darkness as of late.

  Hunt and Shelley strike up

  a fine friendship and Shelley

  visits him.

  I continue with Frankenstein,

  sometimes with the aid of Shelley.

  He smiths my language

  and offers suggestions

  that push the narrative forward.

  More than four chapters complete,

  I begin to see this book take shape,

  less like the monster it describes

  pieced together from scraps,

  but more as something of a whole.

  I dream of a home

  like a proper mouse hole

  where we can retire to,

  that might have a river or a lake.

  One that would not contain Claire.

  She wears on me,

  now eight months pregnant.

  She feels a bit like prisoners’ chains,

  increasingly difficult to bear.

  Claire still writes Lord Byron,

  but he is more silent than Fanny.

  HARRIET

  December 1816

  Harriet’s body was discovered

  floating in the Serpentine

  in Hyde Park in London

  on December 10.

  I feel beyond remorse

  and reconciliation right now.

  I think that this will haunt me

  for the rest of my days.

  It is as though I helped

  push her into the cold depths

  and feel directly to blame

  for some of her misery.

  Harriet’s last letter to her sister, Eliza

  says that she forgives Shelley

  and wants him to enjoy the happiness

  she could not without him.

  She wishes her daughter,

  Ianthe, to remain with her sister.

  Nothing was explicitly indicated

  about her son, Charles.

  Harriet said she felt so wretched and tired

  and lowered in everyone’s opinion

  that she could not drag on

  a miserable existence.

  She lost hope for the future.

  The coroner found

  that she was again pregnant,

  and the baby I do not believe

  could have been Shelley’s.

  I wish we could have

  prevented this.

  Shelley takes on an attitude

  much like my father did

  after the suicide of dear Fanny.

  He blames Harriet’s family

  for her problems and says

  Harriet became a prostitute.

  There is no proof of this,

  but I do not contradict Shelley.

  Shelley files to get custody

  of his two children,

  who remain in the care

  of Harriet’s sister, Eliza.

  Shelley shows little promise

  of gaining custody however

  because we are not married.

  MARRIAGE

  December 30, 1816

  We marry at the handsome

  Wren church in London, much

  to the pleasure of my father,

  who now welcomes

  Shelley and me back

  into his Skinner Street home.

  So after years of exile

&nb
sp; now that I am married

  I am once again

  my father’s daughter.

  Whether this will strengthen

  the case against Harriet’s

  family, the Westbrooks,

  for custody of Shelley’s children

  remains a large question mark.

  I am ambivalent as the wind

  about getting married.

  In one great gust I am thrilled

  to be united with my love

  and that my children

  will now be legitimate

  and my father will accept us.

  But blown around in a second gale

  I feel that this has come about

  at too great a cost

  and may be tainted

  like a poison broth

  from the start.

  MY ESCAPE

  Winter 1816–1817

  My writing desk

  shelters me like

  a cave in a thunderstorm.

  As the torrents

  of life drop hail

  and sleet at my door

  I retreat to the world

  of my story.

  I find serenity

  as I sculpt my plot

  and search out my words.

  And for a time

  I forget the chaos

  and devastation

  that surround me.

  TOGETHER

  Winter 1817

  Does art flourish more

  when the artist works

  alone in a room with

  just her thoughts and her pen

  and little distraction

  or is it communal contribution

  that births the best work?

  Shelley has struggled

  with this dichotomy

  his whole career.

  I welcome my love’s

  input and instruction.

  I sometimes

  wish for a world

  with less personal turmoil

  but know that

  I would have less

  emotional experience

  from which to draw

  my characters.

  Shelley inserts the sentence,

  “It is even possible

  that the train of my ideas

  might never have received

  that fatal impulse which

  led me to my ruin,”

  into my manuscript

  and the paragraph springs to life.

  I wrap my arms

  around his shoulders.

  “That is precisely

  what I intended to say,”

  I tell him.

  He smiles. “I know.

  You left a tiny hole

  for me to fill,

  and I delight

  in patching your garden.”

  ALBA

  January 12, 1817

  Claire gives birth today

  to a beautiful baby girl

  she calls Alba after

  the nickname we gave

  to Lord Byron, Albe (for L. B.),

  when we were in Geneva.

  Claire hopes this baby

  will bring her closer

  to Byron, but he still

  sends no reply

  to her letters.

  Bryon acknowledges the news

  of the birth through Shelley

  and requests that Alba’s

  name be changed to

  Clare Allegra Byron,

  so we shall call her Allegra.

  Claire takes to motherhood

  like flares illuminate the sky.

  She revels in every moment

  of it, just as I do.

  Sadly my wish for a house

  absentia Claire will not be.

  Shelley believes we are responsible

  for Claire and her little one

  and after what happened

  to Fanny and Harriet

  I do not offer much complaint.

  We lease a house in Marlow,

  just far enough away from London

  to feel the countryside.

  Shelley has a library, and I have a garden.

  It is however not a quiet existence.

  We entertain many visitors,

  chief among them

  the Hunts, Leigh and Marianne

  and their many children,

  and Thomas Love Peacock,

  who has taken a liking

  to Claire and proposed to her.

  She turned him down flat,

  even though it would be

  anyone’s guess what her

  other prospects might be.

  Unfortunately,

  all her hope and ambition

  is still tangled up

  in Byron

  like one caught

  in the snares

  of a bear trap.

  PRETENSE

  Winter 1817

  Although the truth

  of Allegra

  is as well known

  among our friends

  as is her name, we act

  as though the baby belongs

  to someone else.

  And that Claire is a maiden.

  When my father

  and stepmother come to call

  we allege that Allegra

  is a cousin of the Hunts

  that Claire helps care for.

  I do not enjoy

  the deceit I must

  employ for the benefit

  of Claire. I believe this lying

  digs a moat between Shelley and me

  where he always bolsters

  Claire’s position

  and protects her like he’s the king

  of her castle, and I play the opposition.

  DEVELOPING A STORY

  Winter 1817

  I retreat to writing.

  In my book

  I selected my characters’ names

  as deliberately as I chose

  my child’s name.

  Victor is a pen name Percy

  used in his youth

  and refers to Milton’s God

  from Paradise Lost. Frankenstein

  alludes to a castle we visited

  on our elopement back when

  I was sixteen. William,

  Victor’s younger brother,

  contains multiple connotations

  for me from my father

  to my stepbrother to my son.

  William would have been my own name

  had I been born a boy.

  And Elizabeth, Victor’s adopted sister

  whom he marries, recalls

  both Shelley’s favorite sister

  and his mother.

  I base my story

  on traditional gothic folklore

  about the alchemist or sorcerer

  who relentlessly seeks knowledge

  that would best remain unknown,

  where the ego of the sorcerer

  leads to his downfall.

  I explore the renewal of life

  as I would wish

  more than anything

  to have my baby, my sister,

  my mother, and Harriet brought

  back to me, but science

  like a foundling branch

  reaches only so far.

  I also try to investigate

  how sometimes

  that which we create

  can destroy us

  or those we love.

  ALBION HOUSE

  March 1817

  As we now receive

  an annual income

  from Shelley’s inheritance

  we renovate a new home

  on West Street in Marlow

  called Albion House.

  With five large bedrooms,

  a fir-shaded garden,

  and a library that houses

  all of our books

  and two full-sized statues

  of Venus and Apollo,

  our home is blesse
d with love and poetry.

  I labor on the final

  chapters of Frankenstein.

  The novel takes

  hold of me like a carriage

  drawn by wild horses.

  I cannot stop its progress.

  It is now a story within

  a story within a story.

  The manuscript grows

  to novel length this way,

  and I also distance myself

  a bit from some of the emotion,

  as the characters sat a little too close

  to the real people in my life.

  All three of my storytellers

  are male. The first, Robert Walton,

  is an explorer seeking to reach

  the North Pole. He writes letters

  to his sister about saving Victor Frankenstein,

  the doctor who has animated a creature

  from grave-stolen body parts.

  When Walton meets Victor,

  Victor pursues his Creature

  to the end of the earth.

  Victor then recounts

  his story to Walton

  and finally within Victor’s tale

  is the story narrated by

  the monster himself,

  the tale of the monster’s plight.

  I am encouraged

  by the progress of the novel

  and think I see my way

  to the light of the end.

  CHILDREN

  March 1817

  I am pregnant again,

  the baby due

  at the end of the summer.

  The idea of increasing

  my family pleases me

  like one who does not realize

  she is hungry but then

  when presented with a well-prepared feast

  relishes in the food.

  It also inspires me to finish

  my book before the baby’s arrival.

  Shelley loses his custody

  fight for his children by Harriet,

  but so do the Westbrooks.

  Charles and Ianthe are assigned

  neutral guardians by the courts.

  Shelley is required to send them money

  and is granted visitation.

  My love’s heart pains

  over this decision,

  but then he seems

  to forget his first two children

  almost as if they have died.

  He will never again visit them.

  I cannot understand this

  as I would rather

  cut off my tongue and give up writing

  than be separated

  a day from my own child.

  MY BOOK

  April 1817

  To write a book

  for me is as to finally

  truly breathe,

  my senses

  engaging with the world.

  I cannot be assured of

  exactly what I created

  be it madness and monster

  or beauty and light,

  but I tried to apply both

  what I have learned

  and read and observed

  and that which

  I can only imagine

  and think and dream.

  And more

  than anything

  I want to make

  my father

  proud.

  THE END

  May 1817

  I end my book

  with these lines,

  “‘But soon,’ [the monster] cried,

 

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