MARY SHELLEY
Mary Wollestonecraft
(Godwin) Shelley was born on August 30, 1797 in London,
England to
philosopher William Godwin and feminist Mary Wollestonecraft;
both her parents were noted writers in the 1800s. Her father’s most famous book
was Political Justice (1793), which is a critical look at society and
the ethical treatment of the masses. Godwin’s other popular book Caleb
Williams (1794) examines class distinctions and the misuse of power by the
ruling aristocracy. Mary Wollestonecraft, her mother,
was a leading feminist writer who espoused her views in her famous work A
Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792). They married in 1797 to protect
the rights of the forthcoming child. When their daughter Mary was born, William
and Mary had only been married for five months. Four weeks after giving birth,
Mary Wollestonecraft died of complications. Thus,
Mary Shelley never knew her mother. Her father remarried a woman by the name of
Mrs. Clairmont when the young Mary was four years
old.
Mary’s learned father, who had
frequent guests in their home all through her formative years, guaranteed her
education. A voracious reader, Mary borrowed books from her father’s extensive
library. She enjoyed writing at a young age, and her passion was to write
stories intended for a very limited audience. The influence of her famous
father’s home cannot be understated with a constant stream of writers,
including Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It was at home that Mary developed into a
person of letters, following in the family tradition of writers and thinkers.
Between June 1812 and March 1814,
Mary lived with relatives in Scotland.
It was upon her return visits to London
when she met Percy Bysshe Shelley, who idolized her
father, and their relationship began. Mary and Percy left England for France in June 1814 to begin a life
together. Shelley was still married to his first wife, Harriet Westbrook.
Within four years of being married, Percy met Mary, and a new marriage was
proposed as soon as the first marriage was dissolved. In late 1814, Mary and
Percy returned to England
and lived in hiding to avoid his first wife and previous back debts. It was at
this time that Percy petitioned Mary’s father William for relief of his debt.
In February 1815, Mary gave birth
to a daughter, who was born prematurely and who subsequently died in March of
the same year. The couple settled in Bishopgate, England
and a second child, William, was born.
In the summer of 1816, a tour of continental
Europe was proposed. At a stop in Switzerland,
the couple and Mary’s stepsister, Claire, rented a house near another British
writer, Lord Byron. The summer proved wet and unseasonable; Byron suggested the
group take to writing ghost stories to pass the time. It was during this summer
that the form for Frankenstein was to take shape. The story was first
only a few pages, but with the encouragement of Percy, the tale took on a
greater length. Mary’s story, the best of the group, was so frightening to
Byron that he ran “shrieking in horror” from the room. Frankenstein was
published in 1818.
In November 1816, Fanny, Mary's
half-sister, committed suicide. A few weeks later, in December 1816, Shelley’s
first wife Harriet also killed herself. Within two weeks, Percy and Mary were
married in St. Mildred’s Church in London
on December 30, 1816. Early the next year, the couple moved to Marlow, England
and a third child, Clara Everina, was born. In 1818,
the Shelley’s left England
for Italy
to escape mounting debt and to improve Percy’s health. It was during this time
that both small children died; Clara died in September
1818, and William died the following June, in 1819. Mary was miserable and
disconsolate at 21 and 22 years of age. She did recover somewhat later in
November 1819 when her son Percy was born in Florence, Italy.
He would become the only Shelley child to survive to adulthood. Mary did not
remain idle as a writer during this time, as she began a new novel, Valperga.
On July 8, 1822, Mary’s life was
forever altered when her husband was drowned at sea in a boating accident off
the coast of Livorno (sometimes called Leghorn),
Italy.
By now, her life was seemingly connected to tragedy, with the deaths of three
children, her mother, and her husband, and the suicides of Percy’s former wife
and Mary’s half-sister.
She spent the rest of her life
writing original works and tending to the works of her late husband. She became
the keeper of Percy Bysshe Shelley’s fame and was
editor of his posthumous works. This was done to raise the necessary funds to
support herself and her son. In 1824, Posthumous Poems was published,
which was edited by Mary. She had begun negotiations with her father-in-law,
Sir Timothy Shelley, who did not want his son’s works published or his family’s
name published in the press again during his lifetime. The Last Man (1826)
is Shelley's best-known work after Frankenstein because it tackles the
subject of mass catastrophe in society.
In 1841, her son graduated from Trinity College,
and he asked his mother to accompany him on a tour of Italy and Europe.
During her travels, she compiled notes about her travels. Herson
married in 1848, and Mary lived with him and his wife until she died. On
February 1, 1851 Mary died in London and was
buried in Bournemouth, England.
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