Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein (20 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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should have the right
to send his daughter
to a convent and bid Claire
to write an apology come April.

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SAN GIULIANO

Spring 1821

We rent a new Prini house
at San Guiliano,
with the Williamses
nearby.
Shelley writes a poem
to honor the dying John Keats
called “Adonais.”
I still labor to finish
Valperga
.
As two writers
we ripen in Italy
as does the local flora.
As a couple, though,
we coast apart
as birds fallen
out of their migratory pattern.
I watch the love
between Jane and Edward
and wish to recapture
that exuberance with my Shelley.
I feel that my concern
for our child distances
me from Shelley,
even my writing
now seems to separate us.
I cannot broach
the space between
Shelley and me.
I must find a way
to get my Shelley back.
He wanders
so far from port.

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SAILING

Summer 1821

Shelley dreams of the open seas.
He never fears
his ship will meet
rough waters
or too strong a wind.
And if he survives
the mad winds and waves,
he sees his near
misfortune
as a good omen.
I, too, dream of drifting
away with my love,
but we do not board
the same vessel lately.
I do not wish
to raise a full sail
in high wind
and risk disaster.
I want to cruise
about on days
of calm, float
paper boats together
as we did
when we first
fell in love.

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BYRON AND SHELLEY

August 1821

Shelley goes to visit Byron alone
as Byron bid him come in a letter.
I surmise
that along the way
he stops to see Claire,
who lives now in Livorno
supposedly healing from scrofulo,
a form of tuberculosis.
She has been prescribed
to bathe in the sea.
This upsets me
like a boat tossed
about by a wicked storm.
I have no recourse
and there is little I can do
but wait it out.
Claire does not know
that Shelley travels to visit Byron,
but believes that Shelley
only stops to check in on Allegra
and her well-being.
Shelley finds the four-and-a-half-year-old
spritely, treated kindly
by all of the nuns.
Byron says he has no intention
to leave Allegra indefinitely
in the convent,
which also reassures us,
and should especially
comfort Claire.
Byron remains in Ravenna
for the time being
though he has said
he wants to follow
his mistress Teresa
and her brother and father
out of town.
When Shelley arrives
in Ravenna, Byron tells
him of the terrible gossip
that the Hoppners have spread
like manure about us.
Elise, our former nursemaid,
alleges that Claire is Shelley’s mistress
and that the baby born in Naples
and left with foster parents
is the daughter of Shelley and Claire.
Further, the Hoppners claim
that Shelley tried to get
an abortion for Claire
and when that failed
Shelley tried to have the baby adopted.
Shelley begs me to write to Byron
to clear up these matters.
How could anyone suppose that Shelley
would abandon his own child?
I cry tears to fill an urn.
My face stains with sadness.
Then I take out my quill
and refute point by point
everything that Elise
and the Hoppners said.

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DOUBT

August 1821

When the winds
of a great storm
bend down trees
and uproot my garden,
I wonder if I shall
cower or stand
amidst the ferocity.
When my child,
hot with fever
and cold with tears,
calls out for aid
I wonder if I shall
hinder or help
him to recover.
When my husband
requests that I refute
rumors that
he has been unfaithful,
I wonder if
my pen lies
or tells truth.

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A LETTER FROM MY SHELLEY

Late Summer 1821

My Shelley writes
with a bit of good news,
much needed relief
amidst this landscape of disarray.
He convinces
Byron to come to Pisa
with Teresa. I delight
because Claire shall
certainly want to keep
distance between herself
and the man she so loathes
for sending her daughter
to the convent.
Lastly, Shelley suggests
that Byron and Leigh Hunt
begin a new journal called
the
Liberal
. The Hunts
will now join us in Pisa as well,
and stay with Lord Byron.
My heart expands
like a purse full of pounds.
I will see my dear friends again.

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JUGGLING MISTRESSES

Autumn 1821

Byron does not come
directly to Pisa, but remains
in Ravenna for two months.
His mistress, Teresa,
arrives straightaway
and I am the one
who is to visit her
and make her feel
welcome as the wind
on a stifling summer day
here in Pisa.
Claire is also in Pisa.
Happily we are
getting along like
rhythm and drum
as Shelley and I
entreated Byron to allow Claire
to see her daughter.
Even though we failed
to be granted permission for Claire,
Claire in a mature manner
shows gratitude.
She has been a dear
helping me with little Percy.
The only trouble is
that I must also
attend like a handmaid
to Teresa, Byron’s latest mistress.
Claire kindly assists me in choosing
furniture for our new home
on the Lung’Arno,
and for Byron’s palazzo
across the river.
She never complains
that she does work
for one she so dislikes,
but cloaks her despair
as though it were
a hideous scar.
Teresa worries that Byron
may never arrive,
as I often did with Shelley.
But come November
Byron shows up in grand fashion
complete with a traveling carriage,
mountains of baggage,
dozens of horses,
and a menagerie of exotic animals.
Claire leaves Pisa
on the day that Byron arrives.
She sees his traveling train
on the road and swears
on her daughter’s life,
it will be the last time
they cross paths.

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GATHERING A GROUP OF LIKE-MINDED MALE INDIVIDUALS

Winter 1821–1822

Shelley believes
we can put down
permanent roots in Italy now;
for like ripples in a pond,
a group of expatriates
gathers to form his
community of friends.
With the Williamses,
the Hunts, and Byron
we will be assured good company.
Byron centers the group.
He lives at the Palazzo Lanfranchi,
a cavernous Renaissance building
overlooking the Arno
that frightens his servants
with its creaks and moans
and is said to be haunted by ghosts.
When Edward Williams
meets Byron, the celebrity,
he awes over his grandeur
as one is astounded
by a great blue whale.
Shelley’s cousin, Thomas Medwin,
also arrives to join our group.
Medwin decides he will record
all of Lord Byron’s words
and thoughts. We tease him
for his incessant scribbling
and Byron says more
and more fanciful things
to aid Thomas’s pen.

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