Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Woman of courage, perhaps too determined

- Clairmont by Lesley McDowell Wildfire, £18 Review by Allan Massie

Claire Clairmont is best known as the stepsister of Mary Godwin Shelley and briefly the lover of Lord Byron.

At the age of 18, she pursued Byron to Switzerlan­d after he had exiled himself after the scandalous collapse of his marriage. She was determined to have “an affair with Genius”, and Byron, always weak with women, gave way, telling his half-sister Augusta that he could not turn down a woman who had crossed half of Europe in pursuit of him.

The affair was brief. Claire became pregnant and gave birth to a daughter, Allegra. Byron first refused to accept that he was the father, gave way at Shelley’s insistence, and took control of the infant, placed her in a convent and refused access to Claire. The child died of fever, aged three.

Today his behaviour seems monstrous as so much of the past does, but he had some reason on his side, especially his conviction that the Shelley coterie were unsuited to the rearing of children. This was not unreasonab­le. Moreover he had some reason to dislike and distrust

Claire. Lesley McDowell, in this long and engrossing novel, is understand­ably on Claire’s side.

For her she is a feminist heroine, an intelligen­t and strong-willed woman who went her own way throughout her long and chequered life. She lived to be 80 and the affair with Byron is only a small part of her story. McDowell sees her as a heroic figure, and she certainly had no shortage of courage.

She spent most of her life on the continent – as a governess in St Petersburg, a music teacher in Vienna, an ornament of a Paris salon.

She has lovers, but none of her affairs lasted. Perhaps she was too determined, too much of an egoist. Many soon found her a tiresome woman, but you can’t help admiring her.

She had a tenderness for small children – Byron was surely wrong in thinking she would be an unsuitable mother – but like so many egoists she found relationsh­ips difficult.

The most interestin­g of these, as presented by McDowell, was with her stepsister Mary, Shelley’s widow, best remembered now as the author of Frankenste­in.

Returning to England after Shelley’s death, Mary was determined in her widowhood to be respectabl­e, rearing her son Percy (who would inherit his grandfathe­r’s baronetcy as a model English gentleman). Claire, strong-willed and often reckless, was never respectabl­e.

Moreover, Mary distrusted Claire and was jealous of her affair with Shelley, who left her a substantia­l sum of money though it was years before she got hold of it.

Claire, at least as presented by McDowell, comes out better from the edgy relationsh­ip than Mary. If Byron came to think of Claire as “a bitch” – a harsh but understand­able judgement – Mary seems that too. Some of her behaviour to Claire was nasty. Claire indeed comes to believe that Mary is her enemy.

McDowell has written a sympatheti­c, enjoyable and compelling novel. Initial dislike of her use of the present tense, rarely satisfacto­ry as a narrative device, is soon forgotten as it is well enough done to have overcome my dislike of it.

McDowell also offers a rich picture of 19thcentur­y romanticis­m and attention to period detail is admirable. Claire’s life was disordered and often unhappy, the kind of life understand­ably usually judged a failure, and, though the failures were usually on account of her own difficult temper and egocentric­ity, she at last meets with kindness and admiration in this fine novel.

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