• I lived principally in the country as a girl

    For whatever reason of self-presentation or nostalgia, Mary Shelley here magnifies
    her love of and accessibility to an untrammelled natural environment. Her Scottish
    experiences occupied less than two years of her early adolescence. Prior to that time
    she was brought up in Somers Town, in that day located on the edge of the London metropolis,
    where she could divide her interests between the countryside to the north, upon which
    her father's house looked out, and the attractions of the city. Godwin's house itself
    was anything but rural, maintaining an intensely urban and intellectually sophisticated
    ambience throughout Mary Shelley's youth. There, as a child, she came into contact
    with dozens of the principal luminaries of British culture at the beginning of the
    nineteenth century. One of these was Samuel Taylor, whom she heard recite "The Rime
    of the Ancient Mariner," a poem of particular resonance for Frankenstein, where it
    is quoted twice—(see I:L2:6 and I:4:7)—and frequently functions allusively.