Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein (17 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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the god in her life.
But she must accompany
him on his trip.
Claire and Shelley
depart on the seventeenth
for the Hoppners’ to assess
Allegra’s condition.
I write to the Gisbornes
to beg them come and visit
as I will be desolate here
without my Shelley
with just the servants and children.

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TRAVELING TOWARD BYRON

August 1818

Shelley writes that Allegra
remains as beautiful as ever
only taller and more pale,
but in all ways fine like porcelain.
Consul Hoppner advises Shelley
not to tell Byron
that Claire stays in Venice
as Byron often expresses
his extreme terror
of meeting her again.
For seeing Claire
might send Byron
into convulsions and panic
as though Byron suffered heart pains.
Shelley alone visits Byron
at three in the afternoon
as Byron should have risen by then.
Shelley shudders and shocks
that Byron looks older and fatter
and that he is involved in all
forms of debauchery.
This explains why
Byron does not want to see
old friends or former lovers.
Still Byron and Shelley
get on famously, riding
along the beach discussing
literature and life.
Shelley lies and says
that Claire and the children
and I are all in Padua.
Byron then invites us
to stay in Este at his summer home.
Shelley desires that I bring
the children and his servant, Paolo,
to Este in a grueling manner
and make the trip in only five days.
The visiting Gisbornes see that
Clara suffers from the heat
and is not well enough to make
the journey right now.
Only one, she cuts
her teeth with the turmoil
of one growing a horn
out of her head.
Still, we do as my Shelley bids.
The day after my twenty-first birthday
we set out for Este.
Clara never ceases crying,
and she contracts dysentery.
When we arrive in Este,
she spasms and convulses
like the monster
awaking in my book.
Claire is also mysteriously
unwell, and Shelley seems
more concerned about Claire
than his daughter. He tells
me to take Clara to Claire’s
doctor’s appointment in Padua
and he returns to Venice.
We set out at half
past three in the morning,
Shelley meets us in Padua
and finally recognizes how
ill little Clara has become.
He rushes Clara and me
back to Venice and leaves
us at an inn while he searches
out a good doctor. The baby
shakes and cries in my arms.
She boils with a temperature
hotter than the molten core of the earth.
I can do nothing to calm her
until she finally calms herself
and breathes no more.

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MELANCHOLIA

Autumn 1818

Sadness a chokehold
around the throat,
everything fails,
tastes bitter.
I try to dismiss the blame
I feel well up inside of me,
but sometimes
I am a pot of anger
boiling over the rim.
Mostly I feel tired.
I have not the energy
to smile or frown or speak.
I bury my head in books
but want little to do
with company.
I sometimes even despair
staying too close to my son,
that he too, might be snatched
soon from me.

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DISTRACTION

Autumn 1818

Lord Byron gives me
some of his poems to transcribe.
He attempts to take
my mind off the loss
of my daughter.
Mrs. Hoppner and I
visit the library
and an art gallery and go shopping.
Shelley begins a new
poetic drama,
Prometheus Unbound
.
I find little distraction
in every day; even my reading
suffers attention.
I watch Claire delight
in Allegra these two months
in Este, and my heart
aches for my baby Clara
like a thousand knives
have been thrust upon me.
I cannot be intimate
with Shelley right now,
but then fear he seeks out Claire.
I do not know where
to shelter my grief.

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THEN THERE ARE DAYS

Autumn 1818

A glance from Shelley
across the supper table
expresses not only concern,
but adoration—
a cherished look I remember
from our first meeting.
Claire, William, and I
collect flowers in the garden
and I witness my child’s
simple amazement at
simple color and fragrance.
And there is the sustenance
of my books
and my journals
and my letters to friends,
the warm candlelight
of these witching hours.

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THE BABY OF NAPLES

November 1818–February 1819

We decide to travel
to Naples by way of Rome.
Claire, Shelley, William,
Elise our nursemaid, another nanny,
and Paolo, Shelley’s manservant,
and I reach Rome on November 21.
We find the city casual
and under excavation,
still it enchants us
like a love story.
Shelley travels ahead of us
through the dangerous Appian Way
so that he can locate a house
for us in Naples on the Riviera di Chiaia,
the most expensive street of villas
in all of Europe.
We manage a frightful crossing,
but arrive in Naples safely.
I fill with excitement
for Naples is the home of Virgil,
and the birthplace of Latin literature.
We luxuriate in Naples,
a city of Goodness
until we find out
that Paolo has been
cheating us out of money
and impregnated Elise,
our nursemaid.
They get married
and are dismissed
from our service.
The drama leaves me sleepless
and angry as a tiger
with a toothache.
Then to add to the madness,
Shelley presents me
with a two-month-old child
named Elena Adelaide
whom we must register
as being born to me and him
on December 27 of last year.
I have never seen nor heard
a whimper from this baby’s mouth.
Percy brought me this baby
as a replacement
for my dear Clara Everina
saying that Elena was a foundling
that he wanted to adopt.
But I somehow wonder
if perhaps Elena is not
really Shelley’s child
by another woman.
Either way, she cannot
replace my little girl.
We leave tomorrow for Rome,
and I insist that we leave
baby Elena behind
in the care of foster parents.
I will not replace
my child like
she is a lost garment.
I cannot easily be warmed
by a newfound fur.

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SOMEONE ELSE’S BABY

February 1819

Sometimes I wonder
if Shelley would not
like to father the world.
His spirit is so generous
and all-encompassing.
I have lost two little girls
of my own, the weight
of those losses heavier
than Atlas shouldering the earth.
We see many things
at eye level, Shelley and me,
but a new baby not our own
I cannot bear.

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ROME

March 1819

It is difficult to capture
the exact beauty
and the rich history
of this place, Rome.
It is, as Shelley says,
“a city of palaces and temples
more glorious than those which
any other city contains, and that of
ruins more glorious than they.”
Shelley invites both Hunt and Peacock
to join us in Italy as he is like a knight
without his steed, so very lonesome
for his friends.
I am gladly pregnant
again and due in November.
I take drawing lessons
and write. I practice

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