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Hideous Love

Page 4

by Stephanie Hemphill

“I am feeling understood,”

  I say.

  SHELLEY AND CLAIRE

  January 1815

  My Shelley nicknames me

  Dormouse, Maie, and Pecksie,

  after the characters

  in a children’s book,

  but leaves me alone

  as I bleed

  with this pregnancy.

  He and Claire roam

  about town, on the walks

  I should be taking,

  but cannot as I am

  imprisoned in bed.

  I worry with silent tears

  that just like Mother bled with me

  my fate will be similar to hers,

  and when this baby comes

  I will never see my Shelley again.

  One might be angry

  with Shelley but I understand

  that he cannot be tied down.

  He is like the sun,

  sometimes shining his light upon others.

  And I cannot and will not expect

  him to give warmth to only me.

  Shelley’s grandfather dies

  and he is to receive

  one thousand pounds a year,

  one-fifth of which

  will go to Harriet and her two children,

  now that her Charles,

  my Shelley’s heir, was born.

  My, up to now, silent father

  calls loudly upon Shelley

  to make good his promise

  of support now

  that Father learns

  that Shelley comes

  into a little money.

  My father does not

  seem to care

  that he will soon be

  a grandfather

  and still will not

  speak to me or see me.

  I long so

  to see Father,

  but my father remains

  walled against me.

  The only constant one

  is Hogg. He visits me

  like a faithful pet.

  MORE THAN AN ANNOYANCE

  January 1815

  As Claire lets out

  the waist of one of my skirts

  she cannot hold back

  her tongue;

  “I would never have

  imagined how big

  one becomes

  when one is pregnant.”

  I can no longer

  see my feet when

  I look down.

  I have noticed

  that Shelley lies

  farther from me in bed lately

  as though he fears

  touching my body.

  And somehow

  Claire knows it.

  I think of the myriad

  comments I could make

  about my stepsister

  and her facial features

  but I just say,

  “One day I hope

  you experience

  pregnancy and all

  of its wonders too.”

  BIRTH

  February 22, 1815

  My baby comes early,

  and I am at ease

  when she arrives.

  Shelley, agitated

  and exhausted, paces

  about the room.

  We do not name her

  as we were not prepared

  for her to be born yet

  and selected no name.

  I am as though

  the sun

  ran through my body

  and light

  beams from my pores.

  Being a mother delights me so.

  Shelley and Claire

  run about town for a cradle

  and to find us a new home,

  though I wonder if we should

  move the baby.

  We move on March 2

  to Arabella Row.

  When I awake on the eleventh day

  of my little baby girl’s life,

  I cannot stir her.

  When I went to nurse

  her the night before she didn’t budge

  and I thought her sleeping.

  She is so cold when I pick her up today

  my arms ache holding her.

  No breath rises in her chest.

  My baby neither moves, nor screams,

  nor can I.

  I was a mother

  and I am no longer

  I was a mother

  and I am no longer

  repeats through my brain.

  I don’t know what to do

  and a heavy numbness

  settles over me

  like one lost

  out in the cold

  all night.

  I cannot be moved

  from bed.

  I send for Hogg

  to help with arrangements

  and to console me.

  I feel I can rely on him,

  and I worry

  that Shelley might not handle

  what is required

  or my mood right now.

  My own mother

  died eleven days

  after my birth,

  and my baby

  lived only eleven days.

  Shelley and Claire

  resume their daily schedule

  of visits to money lenders

  and booksellers,

  but a part of me

  has died.

  MARCH

  March 1815

  I dream my baby girl

  restores to life;

  we rub her

  before the fire

  and she opens her eyes.

  But then I awake

  and the cradle lies empty.

  And my heart shatters

  all over again.

  Shelley fears he is dying

  of consumption.

  He obsesses about death,

  yet seems to forget

  that we have just lost

  a child.

  Claire has no understanding.

  “Why must you always

  gloom about so?” she demands.

  Claire must go.

  I tell Shelley this.

  I need to breathe.

  I cannot even

  see my own hands

  when Claire stands in front of me.

  We cannot send her

  back to Skinner Street

  as the family scandal

  of us leaving with Shelley

  cannot be condoned by Father

  or it will damage

  my sister Fanny’s prospects

  of gainful employment

  with her aunts.

  Because there is nowhere else

  for Claire besides among us right now,

  here she remains

  like a hat pin through my skull.

  But another solution

  will be found.

  SALT HILL

  April 1815

  Shelley and I travel

  alone to the Windmill Inn

  at Salt Hill in Buckinghamshire.

  The creditors

  hound my love and

  we need to escape.

  The inn is as pretty

  as I could have imagined,

  the fields greener

  than emeralds,

  and we steal away

  from London alone,

  never mind the reason.

  I feel serenity and joy

  for the first time

  in months.

  Shelley kisses me

  tenderly and whispers

  that perhaps we should

  try to have another child.

  I can think of nothing I want more.

  GOOD RIDDANCE

  May 1815

  We return to a new house

  that Hogg finds us,

  and Claire tramps about the rooms

  as though she is the lady of the house.

  I reach wit’s end.

  Shelley retreats by reading Seneca,


  while Claire and I

  fight like angry hens

  about every choice to be made.

  My sister Fanny sneaks

  out to see us from time to time,

  though if my father

  knew she saw us

  he would string her up.

  Her visits are brief as a glance,

  and she often entreats Shelley

  to give my father money

  as she claims his situation to be dire.

  Sir Timothy, Shelley’s father,

  settles Shelley’s debts as well as

  some of my father’s obligations.

  We will finally receive

  our annual allowance

  of one thousand pounds,

  two hundred of which

  go to Harriet. At long last

  we shall not be

  running from creditors.

  Shelley spends all morning

  with Claire, all afternoon

  amusing her as well,

  and in the evening

  they share a last talk.

  For tomorrow

  Claire leaves for Lynmouth,

  a village in Devon

  on the west coast of England,

  where she will reside alone.

  I gavotte about the house

  light as silk.

  While Shelley escorts Claire

  to her carriage

  I await at home,

  maintaining my usual schedule.

  When he does not return all day

  I pace the house

  with tears that fail to end.

  I fear that Shelley has fled

  with Claire

  and left me,

  like he did Harriet,

  for good.

  TRUST

  May 1815

  When I lived

  on Spinner Street

  with nothing but my wits,

  Shelley recognized

  in me a glow

  of greatness.

  When we eloped

  to Switzerland

  on nothing but our beliefs,

  Shelley held

  my hand promising

  not to let go.

  When we lost

  our first child

  to death’s cold silence,

  Shelley vowed

  to once again

  create our family.

  When I wait

  in an empty house

  for my love’s return,

  I shall be vindicated.

  Shelley will bound

  back into my arms

  as though we never

  were apart.

  OUR REGENERATION

  Summer 1815

  Shelley more than returns

  to me.

  With Claire gone

  we nestle into life

  as a twosome.

  I am pregnant

  again, and happy

  as my beating heart.

  Health becomes paramount

  as I refuse to lose this baby.

  My poor Shelley

  suffers from debilitating

  abdominal pains

  and panics that he will die

  very soon of consumption.

  I believe this may be somewhat

  a construct of his overactive mind.

  Nevertheless, we must

  escape London

  and salve him with the seaside.

  We vacation to Clifton

  and Torquay, both renown

  for their health-giving air.

  But my Shelley stirs, restless,

  even as we travel

  and abandons me

  to holiday alone.

  He returns to London

  to seek a home for us

  and to see Dr. Lawrence,

  who assures Shelley

  that he has not contracted consumption.

  Lynmouth is less than a day’s walk

  from here, and I fret

  when Shelley leaves me;

  he does so

  to visit Claire.

  A HOME

  August 1815

  Shelley finds us a home

  in Bishopsgate, near Windsor.

  I love it immediately

  as there is a garden

  and enchanting views of the abbeys,

  the heath, and the lake.

  I also acquire a small staff

  to perform the domestic duties

  I do not adore.

  We establish a routine

  of reading, writing, and talking.

  My hands plunged

  into the earth,

  cradling a book,

  or even better moving

  a pen across paper,

  I am at home.

  A MUSE

  August 1815

  Without Claire

  I hear thoughts

  as music.

  My mind frees

  to once again

  delve into learning.

  I read everything

  within reach

  knowing

  that this prepares

  me for later writing.

  Shelley has picked

  up his pen here

  in Bishopsgate,

  and he calls me

  his lovely muse.

  VISITORS TO OUR HOME

  August 1815

  Hogg visits infrequently.

  Claire gratefully does not call upon us.

  But Thomas Love Peacock

  takes up residence in Marlow

  and will make the long walk

  up the Thames to stay with us

  from time to time.

  He advises Shelley

  on his writing and career

  as he is seven years his senior

  and then becomes his agent

  and business adviser.

  We argue into the night

  about vegetarianism,

  the return of the French monarchy,

  the disrepair of the government,

  and Thomas encourages

  us to read classical texts again.

  Peacock convinces

  Shelley to change his diet

  of bread, butter, and lemonade

  and finally eat a pork chop.

  Shelley loses his pallid complexion

  and starts to feel markedly better.

  My brother Charles Clairmont

  also frequents our home

  as he is now free to do so.

  But, to my sorrow,

  Father still will not

  acknowledge me.

  Charles concocts many ideas

  for his future, but they

  all require funding from Shelley.

  Thomas provides us

  some relief from Charles

  by chaperoning him on long walks.

  One night after reading Peacock’s poem

  “The Genius of the Thames,”

  we four decide to embark

  on a boating expedition

  up the river. I enjoy

  the old houses surrounded by

  purple loosestrife and golden water-irises.

  The slow row of the boat

  through the locks soothes me.

  I lounge back and smell

  peace in the air.

  We discuss history,

  politics, and literature

  with vigor and ambition.

  We spend the day

  wandering Oxford

  and stand in Shelley’s

  old room at University College.

  Magic occurred here,

  an alchemy of spirit

  pushed at the boundaries

  of human knowledge.

  This is where my Shelley and Hogg

  threatened the world

  to open its eye,

  and for such blasphemy

  were expelled.

  We travel ten days

  but no more

  even though we thoug
ht

  to try and reach Wales

  and the Lake District.

  We haven’t adequate funds,

  and the water lowers

  so shallow, we must

  carry the boat

  above our heads.

  We merrily voyage home.

  BISHOPSGATE

  Autumn 1815

  Shelley finds great inspiration

  and harmony here

  in Bishopsgate.

  He embarks on a new poem

  even more ambitious

  than Queen Mab.

  Peacock suggests

  he call it Alastor

  or The Spirit of Solitude.

  It tells the story of a poet who

  leaves his home

  to wander the world,

  and ends with the poet’s solitary death

  which is then mourned

  by nature and the narrator.

  I help him copy the poem out

  and praise the work

  as genius.

  In Alastor Shelley raises the question

  of whether a poet

  needs companionship

  or solitude to produce great work.

  I am never certain

  which best serves Shelley himself.

  Inspired, I find that I must

  study Latin again

  as we have many classical

  discussions, and I want

  to be active in the conversation,

  not just one taking notes.

  I apply myself to daily exercises

  and Shelley is impressed

  by my quick progress.

  This pregnancy feels

  more stable, too,

  like a boat on still water.

  I begin to have faith

  that the baby will be fine.

  WILLIAM SHELLEY

  January 24, 1816

  Born this day

  a baby boy.

  We name him William

  after my father.

  I cradle my baby

  in my arms

  and hope that Father

  will wish to do the same.

  William appears healthy

  and strong as the sea.

  As I nurse him for

  the first time

  I know for certain

  I wish us to never part.

  Claire comes to helps me

  with the birth and the baby,

  but she is determined

  not to stay with me and Shelley.

  She seeks more independence.

  This is good,

  because I am determined

  not to let her stay.

  THE INFAMOUS POET

  Winter–Spring 1816

  Where Claire has lived

  these past few months

  seems a bit of a mystery.

  She stays out of touch

  until she requires something of me.

  Claire writes many letters

  of late, and thankfully

  not to my Shelley

  as in the past.

  She decides to correspond

  with another more infamous

  and yet celebrated poet,

  Lord Byron.

  Much gossip

  surrounds Byron

  and I cannot truly distill

  what is truth,

  but it appears he

  recently legally separated

  from his wife

  as he had an affair

  with his half-sister.

  I care little for scandal

  and those who spread it;

  what matters to me

  is that Byron’s poetry is triumphant,

 

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