'From A Reader's Book of Days'
When was Frankenstein made? (The story, that is, not the
monster.) The moment of Mary Shelley's creation has been nearly as
enshrouded in legend as the "dreary night of November" when Victor
Frankenstein gave the reanimating jolt to his monster. It was, as the
story goes, a wet and dreary June in Switzerland when
Lord Byron suggested to his guests—Dr. Polidori, who had just sprained
his ankle, and the scandalously not-yet-married couple, Percy Shelley
and Mary Godwin—that they each write a ghost story. As Mary Shelley
recalled it later, after the men told their stories she had a vision in her bedroom
of a scientist terrified by his own creation as it begins to stir with
the spark of life. Terrified too by her vision, she rose to the sight of
moonlight over the Alps, a detail that a Texas
astronomer has, with methodical literal-mindedness, traced to a single
possible hour for her inspiration, between two and three in the early
morning of June 16.
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