Read Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein Online

Authors: Stephanie Hemphill

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Biographical, #European, #Family, #General, #Love & Romance

Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein (3 page)

BOOK: Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein
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I am happier now
than ever I have been,
more joyous
than when I am reading
my favorite book.

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HarperCollins Publishers

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IS THERE ONLY ME?

June 1814

My feelings overtake me
more swiftly than quicksand
and I tend to forget
that I alone do not grace
Mr. Shelley’s life.
His wife Harriet came before me
when she was but my age
and Shelley unburdened
her from her life of confines
as he promises to do for me.
I may be many things,
but I wish never to be a fool.

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AT MY MOTHER’S GRAVE

June 26, 1814

The stone reads
Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin.
I learned my alphabet
under the shade of this willow
spelling out letter by letter
the name Mother.
Jane finally retreats
like a sad pup
and leaves Shelley and me alone.
Shelley grasps my hand.
“I have been on a long quest
for love. You are a dear friend
to me, but dearer more than that.”
He pauses, his piercing blue eyes ignite.
“I was an unhappy boy at Eton,
bullied and misunderstood.
I have a father who thinks
me mad for my principles
and at times would have liked
to commit me to an asylum.
I have been tempted and obsessed
with magic, with chemical experiments,
and with death,
and shall likely always be.
But all of this has made me
the man that I am—
one now devoted to you.”
I feel light-headed
as though I
hang upside down.
I almost don’t want to ask,
but I must know.
“What of your wife, Harriet?”
He tucks the hair
behind my ear and whispers,
“I am not sure that she
is so devoted to me anymore.
I can’t even be certain
that the baby she carries is mine.”
He sits up straight
and adjusts his collar.
“We are no longer married
in mind nor spirit,
nor love.
We never were a true match.”
As these words
trickle from his lips
he looks deflated,
like someone draws
blood from his face.
My mother wrote
about the constraints
of marriage and warned
against its conventions
and restrictions, for women especially.
This love I feel
for Shelley may come
but once,
and I wonder, Mother,
what to do?
I wrap my arms
around his wiry frame
and confess,
“I am completely yours.”

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JANE

Summer 1814

My stepsister plays a role
she seems to well like,
the conduit for the love
that Shelley and I have found.
She is a river
that brings Shelley and me together
by chaperoning our time.
Her generosity
might be perplexing
except that she
loves a good romance novel,
and in this affair
she is like the paper
upon which we
write our story.
She is necessary
to us right now,
and it seems
Jane loves little more
than to be needed.

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FATHER FIGURE

July 6, 1814

Father is outraged.
The house quakes
with anger
as though we have
upset a hive
of frightened wasps.
Shelley asks my father today
to be with me
and a resounding “No!”
echoes through all chambers.
Father must have
forgotten his own
principles of free love
and his proclamations
about the absurdity of marriage.
He banishes Shelley
from ever seeing me
as Shelley is married to Harriet.
Always more God
than man
today Mr. Godwin decides
to act as any ordinary
father.
I am perplexed.
Stepmother must be at root.

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LAUDANUM

July 1814

Letters pass
as I am trapped in the tower
of our home and Shelley
is forbidden to see me.
Jane secures our secret notes,
our wily messenger pigeon,
while Fanny frets
that we will be found out.
My brothers, as usual, pay no mind
to anything not concerning them.
I miss the smell of Shelley,
the earthy, mad look in his eye.
He sends me his book-length poem,
Queen Mab
, inscribes the book to me,
renouncing Harriet again.
“Love is free,
to promise forever to love
the same woman is not less absurd
than to promise to believe
the same creed: such a vow,
in both cases, excludes us
from all enquiry.”
Shelley finally cannot be held back.
He dashes into the schoolroom
of our Skinner Street home
with a wild look.
He holds out a bottle of laudanum
and brandishes a small pistol.
“Swallow this bottle,” he pleads,
“and we shall be united in death.”
The color drains from my face
as though my love shoots
a bullet into my heart,
tears plunge down my cheeks.
“Please don’t harm yourself.
Go home,” I beg.
“I am eternally yours already.
I pledge you fidelity forever
if you will only see reason.”
Shelley looks mystified
as though he may have ingested
the poison before arriving here.
Still he tucks the pistol
in his belt and, deflated,
ambles to the door.
He leaves the bottle of laudanum behind.

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WITHOUT ME

July 1814

I hear that my love
takes an overdose
of laudanum,
and the doctor has been called.
I hold tight the bottle
Shelley left for me
and wonder if I should,
in some Shakespearean manner,
swallow its contents as well.
I learn Shelley will survive,
but Jane and I
are trapped,
not allowed
to breathe fresh air
as though we are
petty criminals.
Fanny tries to cheer me
with news of Shelley,
and the porter of our
little bookshop
exchanges letters for us,
but this will not suffice.
I must see his fragile face,
know for certain
that he will thrive.
Sleep is beyond me.
Food holds no luster.
One could drink my daily tears
by the teacup.
Father and Stepmother
know nothing of love,
know nothing of the pain
it feels to have one’s limb
separated from one’s body.
This will not do.

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ESCAPE

July 24, 1814

Black bonnets strapped
to our chins,
silk traveling gowns
corseting our ribs,
Jane and I cat out
into the dark morning.
The air at four a.m.
is wet with heat.
Our nerves charged
and excited as a murder
of crows after shotgun fire.
Shelley’s velvet arm
dangles over the carriage door.
His left boot taps
impatient, impatient, impatient,
as a child
awaiting our arrival,
eager for our departure.
He settles Jane
like a delicate vase
carefully into her chaise.
I think I hear
boots on the cobblestone,
think I distinguish
the faraway echo
of my father’s voice,
but it is only horse hooves.
With one hoist into that carriage,
my lover orphans me.
He cloaks me in the cushion
of his arms and we race
away from Spinner Street
on the bumpy road to Dover.

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A BOAT TO CALAIS

July 1814

Weak from carriage travel,
I collapse, limp as wilted greens.
Shelley was certain
we would be pursued
BOOK: Hideous Love: The Story of the Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein
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