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    Hideous Love

    Page 3
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      and trade the mule

      in part for a carriage.

      So we travel once again

      as we began.

      Shelley in a whirl of excitement

      like one struck by electricity

      loses touch with the ground

      on which he stands.

      I shock to discover that

      he writes to Harriet

      and invites

      her to join us on this journey,

      as a friend.

      Of course

      she would have to travel alone

      to meet us and

      is five months pregnant.

      He asks her to bring

      some legal documents.

      That Shelley’s letter to her

      receives no response

      does not surprise me.

      The majestic Alps

      embrace me like a father.

      I gasp in their presence

      and will never forget

      the power they wield

      just by existing.

      The Swiss are as clean

      and welcoming as the French

      were not. Our carriage driver

      says it is because they have

      no king to fear.

      Shelley finds

      a friendly banker,

      but the bag of coins

      he returns with still cannot

      completely fund our expedition.

      We rent a house

      on a six-month lease

      at Brunnen, but the old-fashioned

      stove that heats

      the two rooms nearly suffocates us

      when it functions.

      Shelley tells me

      as we read Tacitus

      that our sixty pounds

      have dwindled to thirty.

      We possess just enough money

      to return home to England

      if we travel up the Rhine

      through Holland.

      Jane reads King Lear

      and on the first stop

      of our journey home,

      leaps into the bed

      with us as she sees

      night visions of the dead.

      I call them Jane’s horrors.

      Shelley of course consoles her,

      and I swear I catch Jane

      wink at me

      like she plays the fox

      outwitting the hound.

      I will trap all eyes

      upon her now.

      I grow weary of this travel

      as a threesome.

      And I often fall ill

      for some reason.

      But my lover holds me dear

      on my seventeenth birthday

      and reads to me

      from my mother’s book.

      I soon forget my woes.

      THE TROUBLE WITH JANE

      August 1814

      At first I believed

      that Jane accompanied

      us just to escape

      the tyranny of the household.

      I thought that she longed to see

      the world, expand her mind,

      and be liberated from

      the society into which we

      were so assuredly to enter

      and, as women, be forced

      into the roles of wife and mother.

      Her design may have been

      larger than that.

      I notice when she eyes

      Shelley as though she might

      lick his glove.

      I do not believe I have ever

      wanted to throw

      anyone out of a carriage more.

      Perhaps we should have

      brought my sister Fanny

      along instead.

      HOMEWARD BOUND

      September 1814

      Shelley and I religiously record

      our journal

      of European travel.

      We voyage far enough

      to see Lake Lucerne

      where my father’s book

      Fleetwood was set.

      Father looked to escape

      materialism in his book,

      but unfortunately we find

      it too expensive to remain.

      We continue our practice

      of daily reading and writing.

      Lord Byron’s Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage

      fills us with the same delight

      as does a vivid painting.

      Shelley writes his novel The Assassins

      and I compose my story “Hate,”

      while Jane works on “The Ideot.”

      When we arrive in

      Rotterdam all our money

      has been spent.

      Shelley persuades the captain

      to return us to England

      on the condition

      that he will be paid

      once we arrive.

      We have traveled forty-two days

      and slept in forty-one different locales.

      We reach England

      by morning’s cry

      nearly drowned

      by the storm’s brutal winds,

      tossed about like seaweed

      on the waves.

      When we approach London,

      we row up the Thames

      in a little boat

      while Shelley desperately

      attempts to find funds

      to pay the captain

      for our crossing.

      Finally he stops

      on Chapel Street

      at Harriet’s father’s door.

      He emerges

      not with his wife

      but with finance.

      He says, “I told Harriet that

      I am united to another.

      And that she is no longer my wife.”

      He clutches my hand and says,

      “I spoke of your courage

      and told her you had resigned

      all for me.”

      And my love is correct.

      MY LOVE

      September 1814

      My love nurtures me

      like rain

      cultivates a field.

      My love astonishes me

      like light

      amazes a moth.

      My love enlightens me

      like language

      imparts meaning.

      My love changes me

      like time

      transforms a mountain.

      My love strengthens me

      like a double stitch

      reinforces a seam.

      My love perfects me

      like diligence

      rewards its student.

      RETURN TO ENGLAND

      September 1814

      I did not expect

      open arms, I suppose.

      But when I live

      according to my father’s

      philosophy of love and friendship,

      his idea that it ought be measured singly

      by what we know of its worth,

      and he refuses to see me,

      worse, disallows

      my sister and brothers

      any contact with me,

      I see his patriarchy

      somewhat as an attack

      on the principles

      set forth by my mother.

      I cry into my pillow

      like I did when I was a child,

      sob myself to sleep.

      I cannot make sense

      of his rejection

      of me when I choose

      to live my life

      in the exact manner

      he has written

      that one should live.

      Father expects

      Shelley to support him

      financially, as the rich man

      should help his poor brethren.

      Harriet requires funds, as well,

      and yet we starve, change

      our lodgings nearly nightly.

      I write to my dearest friend,

      Isabella Baxter,

      and I receive a cold letter

      from her husband

      who forbids her c
    ontact with me.

      It appears that to live out

      my parents’ ideals

      comes at heavy cost.

      I am now as notorious

      as was my mother

      and therefore chastised.

      No one comes to call

      except for Thomas Love Peacock,

      the poet and novelist

      who advocates for Harriet,

      and Thomas Hookham,

      Shelley’s publisher.

      Jane nags at me

      night and day,

      a gnat about my neck.

      I touch the small bump

      below my waist.

      There seems

      to be no doubt

      at this point

      that I am pregnant.

      My child will likely be born

      while my Shelley

      is married to another.

      My fear swells

      as does my belly.

      SUNDAY

      October 1814

      I tire, sleepy

      as an old cat.

      Shelley’s creditors

      set the bailiffs

      on him, and he can no longer

      live with me and Jane.

      He resides with Thomas Love Peacock

      when he can, or at some

      flea-infested hotel.

      He tries like a gentleman

      to arrange further loans

      to pay off his debts,

      but they often treat him

      as a beggar.

      He writes letters

      to make me sick

      with love for him

      and lonelier than a bird

      without wings.

      He says he feels

      in my absence degraded

      to the level of the vulgar and impure.

      I promise my enduring

      love and that I will

      never vex him.

      We steal conversations

      on the steps of St. Paul’s,

      but the only time I own

      with my Shelley

      is Sunday,

      when the bailiffs

      are not allowed to make arrests.

      We spend all day in bed,

      reading and talking,

      scheming his next move.

      Sundays I am alive.

      SISTERLY LOVE

      Autumn 1814

      Jane skulks about the house

      we can now sometimes share

      while Shelley and I

      stay in bed

      and read and write together—

      always

      her pouty little complaints

      like a child’s smudge

      on a pristine canvas.

      I do not trouble

      Shelley with my every ailment.

      But Jane pesters Shelley

      with her night traumas.

      Her pillow mystically

      moves from the bed to the chair.

      She acts so terrified

      that Shelley is forced to give up

      his spot in bed

      so that Jane might

      have me as companion

      while she sleeps.

      Shelley loves to scare her

      and it sometimes frightens

      me how well they get on,

      especially when I am too sick

      to take a walk

      and they gad about town

      together

      without me.

      Jane has now adapted

      her first name

      and wants to be called

      Claire Clairmont,

      as she thinks

      this makes her sound

      more literary.

      I fear my stepsister

      is not very sisterly to me

      where Shelley is concerned.

      Shelley assures me

      that Claire

      has a sincere affection

      for me.

      I respond that I

      “have a very sincere

      affection for my own

      Shelley.”

      OUR CHILD TOGETHER

      Autumn 1814

      Shelley twists a strand

      of my hair around his finger.

      “I hope our child

      has your fire of intellect

      and your fine red hair.”

      I smile and slip

      under his arm.

      “I hope our child

      has your generous spirit

      and your bold ideology.”

      He gathers me up.

      “I hope our child

      has your manners

      and my mayhem.”

      I laugh.

      “I hope our child

      has your passion

      and my patience.”

      Shelley lays his hands

      upon my belly

      like a priest.

      He whispers,

      “Hello little one,

      knowst thou

      that you are loved,”

      a prayer intoned

      for the future.

      OUR DAILY LIFE

      Autumn 1814

      We manage

      this current threesome,

      Claire, Shelley, and I,

      by rigorous study and schedule.

      In the morning

      we read and write separately.

      We always find funds

      enough for our books.

      Shelley is a devout vegetarian

      and so now are Claire and I.

      After our midday vegetarian meal,

      we shop, visit sites of interest,

      and perform house chores.

      At night we either read together

      or attend theater, opera, or a lecture.

      Shelley teaches me Greek.

      I thought that I would grow

      to my greatest capacity

      under my father’s tutelage

      and amidst his library.

      But I realize even greater zeal

      for knowledge with Shelley.

      For on top of an education

      I receive love and admiration,

      and in this atmosphere

      I run as a racehorse.

      I pick up speed around

      each new bend.

      COMMUNE

      Autumn 1814

      Shelley talks of liberating

      two of his sisters, Elizabeth and Helen,

      from boarding school

      so that they might

      join us as we form

      an association of philosophical people.

      I wonder if we should not also

      rescue my sister Fanny

      from Skinner Street, although

      it may be that Fanny prefers

      a more traditional life.

      Shelley writes to his friend

      from Oxford,

      Thomas Jefferson Hogg,

      after years of no communication.

      He tells him of our elopement

      and of how meeting me

      has changed his spirit.

      He professes that he

      has found contentment.

      Hogg might wish to become

      part of the group as well.

      I grew up in a house

      brimming with discussion

      where Father hosted

      dinners for authors,

      intellectuals, and philosophers

      of the day.

      I would like our life

      to be constructed like that.

      THE RETURN OF HOGG

      November 1814

      Hogg supplies us with

      much-needed finances

      as he is to be a barrister.

      And we supply him

      with much-needed

      intellectual stimulation.

      At first I find him dull

      as a spoon, but Shelley

      entreats me so

      to get on with Hogg

      that I look to find

      something in Thomas’s character

      I might admire.

      He is for certain persistent,


      and once he sheds his shyness

      he holds a conversation.

      Thomas seems to have taken to me

      and Shelley encourages it

      as Shelley’s principle

      of free love submits

      that constancy has nothing

      virtuous in itself.

      I try to wrap my arms

      around this concept,

      but I struggle sometimes when

      I hold my Shelley,

      and only my Shelley,

      so dear.

      Apparently Hogg also

      found Harriet to be entrancing

      and Shelley’s sister Elizabeth,

      so I am not first,

      just the latest

      of Hogg’s infatuations

      with women he knows

      through Shelley.

      I do not harbor

      feelings beyond friendship

      for Hogg, but to please Shelley

      I sometimes pretend to.

      Thank goodness

      pregnancy keeps

      the possibility

      of physical intimacy

      with Hogg impossible.

      FREE LOVE

      January 1815

      Winter gnarls at the door,

      and I struggle to keep warm.

      But the late-night talks

      about spirit worlds, ghosts,

      and forming an association

      of philosophical people

      allow me to forget

      any physical discomforts

      this pregnancy brings.

      Claire, Hogg,

      Shelley, and I

      believe an ideal society

      can be formed

      if we free human behavior

      from the restraints

      of social expectations.

      Shelley wants us to push

      at the boundaries of monogamy,

      practicing it only if

      it reflects our genuine

      passions and desires.

      We should let loose

      restrictive social conventions.

      Shelley takes up the mantle

      of my father, wants us to practice

      what my father philosophized.

      We create a small community,

      we four, but a good one to build upon.

      Or at least that is what Shelley

      believes. I question whether

      Claire and Hogg serve as worthy

      members sometimes.

      Hogg sends me a love letter.

      Without my knowledge,

      Shelley invites Hogg over

      and Shelley and Claire depart

      so that I might be alone

      with Hogg. I try not to act

      afraid or upset.

      Thomas sits too close to me

      as though he wishes to nest

      in my lap. The silence screams.

      “Thank you for the letter

      and the expression of your feelings.”

      “I meant every word,”

      he says predictably.

      “At this time

      I cannot fully return

      your feelings

      for we have known each other

      such a brief time.

      But I take it in good faith

      that our friendship will blossom

      until we are happier

      than most lovers.”

      I rub my belly

      because the baby kicks.

      “I am not an impatient man.”

      Hogg stands up and moves

      to a chair so that we face each other.

      He softens his voice.

      “How are you feeling today?”

     


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