This poem is based on the book Frankenstein by Mary Shelley. |
Whence I came of the dark recesses Of your mind unbridled. Petrified were you of the horrors You unconscionably created. O, how I longed for and loved virtue Creating in me this passion, Satisfied only by love from one Who could never dare look upon me. The virtue I had held came to naught, Soon ousted by virulence. My friendly cottagers spurned my face I, now, to be a fiend of all men. My dear Frankenstein, I begged of you: Create for me a love, a mate. I swore to haunt your side ‘til deed done, Then I would come nigh to receive her. I suffered to wait many a month, Only to watch you lacerate my hopes. Would you had ripped my heart from body There could be no lesser pain for me. Hence, I stole every last wishful thought Bound to your dying soul. I stole your last hope of happiness The night was led to wed love and pain. You struck out a vigorous journey In search of my heightened evils. I led you to stray, in this last chase. Anon—you lost yourself to find me. This last hope of being pursued, I Stole the light of your soul And found you lost to deep weariness, Not a requiescat could revive. Now, cruelly alone in a world of Men and fears of the dark, Which comes unbidden, uncalled, descends Upon my lost happiness and dread. I was to live—no more fulfilled than I had been before— Alone, alone, alone. To you this Is inconceivable for your joys. So now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep. And if I die before I wake, ’Tis this last fortitude I slake. |