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 (14 page)

I selected my characters’ names
as deliberately as I chose
my children’s names.
Victor is a pen name Percy
used in his youth
and referential 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.

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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 blessed 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.

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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 children.

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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.

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THE END

May 1817

I end my book
with these lines,
“‘But soon,’ [the monster] cried,
clasping his hands,
‘I shall die, and what
I feel will no longer be felt;
soon these thoughts—these
burning miseries will be extinct.’
… [The monster] sprung
from the cabin window …
and I soon lost sight of him
in the darkness and distance.”
Shelley grasps my hand
as he reads my final words.
“The ending is the hardest part.
To leave behind a book
can feel as though
you separate a portion
of your heart
from your chest.
But my love
what you have written
is majestic.
You have served
your name well.”

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SUMMER

Summer 1817

Now that I have finished a draft
of
Frankenstein
and must send it to publishers,
I endeavor to go through
the journal Shelley and I kept
describing our elopement together
in 1814. I keep my mind
engaged in writing so I do not
worry about whether or not
Frankenstein
sees print.
I call this travelogue
History of a Six Weeks Tour
.
It should be easier to publish
as travel books are very popular.
Shelley becomes known
as the town eccentric this summer,
not because he gives blankets
and food and money to the poor,
but because he tutors a village girl, Polly Rose.
His unconventional ways of oratory
where he flails his arms around
caught up in the rapture of his ideas
frighten some of the locals.
I adore when he gets
that fire in his eyes
and his emotions
bubble over the surface.
Claire still pines after Lord Byron
like the starving eye chocolate
and only her child seems to quench
her despair over him.
My pregnancy causes
me no troubles, thank goodness.
I grow excited for the new baby.
I nest as any proper mother would,
preparing space in our home
for its arrival, readying the nursery
like a bird gathering twigs,
and putting all of my literary tasks
in order.

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A PUBLISHER

Late Summer 1817

At the end of the summer
I find a small publisher
who will bring out five hundred
copies of
Frankenstein
in the late winter.
The book will be published
anonymously,
with Shelley writing the preface
and referring to his friend
as having written the book.
As I have no stature
it would only damage the book
to attach my somewhat
notorious name to it.
Because of his contribution,
even uncredited, it may
be assumed that Shelley
wrote the book.
Still I elate, the book
that Shelley nurtured with me—
my first literary endeavor
will be published.
This book will be born.

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ANOTHER BIRTH

Autumn 1817

On the second of September
I give birth to a baby girl
we name Clara Everina,
after Claire and my mother’s sister.
I am exhausted after this birthing
and can’t seem to produce
enough milk for the baby.
I refuse to have a wet nurse though.
My mother thought
that sort of child rearing
a bad idea, so I struggle
like a mother bird
in the depth of winter
to feed my child.

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