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Jane C. Loudon’s
The Mummy!
Mary
Shelley Meets George Orwell, and They Go in a Balloon
to Egypt
Lisa
Hopkins
This essay is about two
authors, Jane Loudon and Mary Shelley, and
the ways in which the one reflects upon
the other. [1]
Mary Shelley's first novel Frankenstein,
as is well known, was first published in
1818, when its author, then still Mary Wollstonecraft
Godwin, was only nineteen. It immediately
caused a stir, not least because, although
it was published anonymously, the dedication
to William Godwin (Mary's father) meant
that a number of reviewers successfully
identified its author as sharing the philosophical
and political predilections of both Godwin
and Percy Shelley (with whom Mary was cohabiting).
As the second sentence of the review in
the Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany
confidently declared, Frankenstein
'is formed on the Godwinian manner', while
Sir Walter Scott delicately circumvented
the difficulties of the situation by writing
in his review in Blackwood's Edinburgh
Magazine that 'it is said to be written
by Mr Percy Bysshe Shelley, who, if we are
rightly informed, is son-in-law to Mr Godwin'. [2]
Given that Percy Shelley was already notorious
as an atheist, it was not hard to see that
this was also the implication of Frankenstein,
a book in which a man arrogates to himself,
with at least partial success, the bestowing
of life, always before seen as the privilege
of God alone. The anonymous reviewer in
La Belle Assemblée was unusually
kind in declaring that, 'did not the author,
in a short Preface, make a kind of apology,
we should almost pronounce it to be impious';
the reviewer of the Edinburgh Magazine
simply declared that it was a novel 'bordering
too closely on impiety'. [3]
This
certainly seems to have been the message
which Jane C. Loudon found in Frankenstein,
and she did not like what she read. Like
Mary Shelley, Jane Loudon did not, at the
time when she produced her most famous work,
bear the name by which she would later become
better known. She was born Jane Webb; her
father, Thomas Webb, was initially wealthy,
but fell on hard times, which appears to
have provided the initial stimulus for his
daughter to write. (Her particular choice
of topic was no doubt influenced by the
great interest in Egypt generated by the
Napoleonic campaigns there.) She did not,
however, have a long literary career, for
her imagined invention in The Mummy!
of a mechanical milking machine attracted
the attention of the agricultural and horticultural
writer John Claudius Loudon, who requested
an introduction and subsequently proposed
to her, after which she concentrated entirely
on gardening, publishing a number of books
with titles like The Ladies' Flower Garden.
[4]
Apart from The Mummy!, her only other
work of fiction was Stories of a Bride,
published in 1829.
Loudon's
The Mummy! was first published in
1827, though reference here is to the second
edition of 1828. From the outset, it is
abundantly clear that the book owes a very
significant debt to Frankenstein.
[5]
The title page of each of the three volumes
displays the words 'Why hast thou disquieted
me, to bring me up' (I
Samuel 28. 15), recalling the cri
de coeur from Paradise Lost quoted
on the title page of Frankenstein:
'Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay
/ To mould me man? Did I solicit thee /
From darkness to promote me?' The Mummy!
returns to the territory of Paradise
Lost with Father Morris's reflection
on Cheops that 'The eternal gloom which
hangs upon his brow, seems to bespeak a
fallen angel, for such is the deadly hate
that must have animated the rebellious spirits
when expelled from heaven', [6]
and indeed Frankenstein might even
have suggested the very idea of a mummy,
since Victor observes of his Creature: 'A
mummy again endued with animation could
not be so hideous as that wretch.' [7] Certainly
Edric Montagu, the hero of The Mummy!,
traces a trajectory remarkably similar to
Victor Frankenstein's. Loudon's novel opens
in 2126, when, after several revolutions,
England is at peace under the absolute rule
of Queen Claudia. It is also Catholic, as
a result of which private confessors have
become very influential, and it is one of
these, Father Morris, confessor of the Montagus'
friend and neighbour the Duke of Cornwall,
who sets Edric along his path:
An idea, suggested by Father
Morris in one of their conferences, as to
the possibility of reanimating a dead body,
took forcible possession of his mind. His
imagination became heated by long dwelling
upon the same theme; and a strange, wild,
undefinable craving to hold converse with
a disembodied spirit haunted him incessantly.
For some time he buried this feverish anxiety
in his own breast, and tried in vain to
subdue it; but it seemed to hang upon his
steps, to present itself before him wherever
he went, and, in short, to pursue him with
the malignancy of a demon. (I,
32-33)
The term 'demon', the reanimation
of a corpse, the pursuing monster-all point
firmly in the direction of Frankenstein,
as does the dream which Edric recounts:
' "Hold! hold!" cried Edric, shuddering.
"My blood freezes in my veins, at the thought
of a church-yard:-your words recall a horrible
dream that I had last night, which, even
now, dwells upon my mind, and resists all
the efforts I can make to shake it off." '
(I, 34). He thought,
he goes on to explain, that in his dream
' "I saw a horrid charnel house, where
the dying mingled terrifically with the
dead" ' (I,
35). This too returns us to Frankenstein
and Victor's visits to 'vaults and charnel
houses' to investigate 'the change from
life to death, and death to life' (p. 79).
We
are even offered in Loudon's novel an apparent
explanation for Victor's abrupt emotional
volte-face at the actual sight of the being
to whose creation he has so looked forward:
'Is it not strange,' continued
Edric, apparently pursuing the current of
his own thoughts, 'that the mind should
crave so earnestly what the body shudders
at; and yet, how can a mass of mere matter,
which we see sink into corruption the moment
the spirit is withdrawn from it, shudder?
How can it even feel? I can scarcely analyse
my own sensations; but it appears to me
that two separate and distinct spirits animate
the mass of clay which composes the human
frame.' (I, 36-37)
This precisely describes
the contrast between Victor's anticipated
delight and actual revulsion. This seems
to be something that occupied Loudon's thoughts,
since she expands on it with two further
returns to the question of what might cause
one to reject one's own creature. First,
there is the general reflection that 'People
are thus often devotedly attached to their
protégées, as they seem, in some measure,
creations of their own, and lavish favours
upon them with a profuse hand: but they
often expect such devotion in return, that
love withers into slavery, or changes into
hatred, and what was once gratitude, soon
becomes mortification' (II,
160-61); then, towards the close of the
book, comes the comment on the story of
Father Morris and Marianne that 'he had,
in fact, first led her from the paths of
virtue, and, as is usual in such cases,
he now hated the creature he had made' (III,
281). 
Edric
also shares the grandiosity of Victor's
plans:
Driven from his father's house,
he would be free to travel-his doubts might
be satisfied-he might, at last, penetrate
into the secrets of the grave; and partake,
without restraint, of the so ardently desired
fruit of the tree of knowledge. Nothing
would then be hidden from him. Nature would
be forced to yield up her treasures to his
view-her mysteries would be revealed, and
he would become great, omniscient, and god-like.
(I, 86-87)
His companion Dr Entwerfen,
exiled German scientist, agrees: 'we shall
animate the mummies, and we shall attain
immortality' (I,
113) (we come even closer to the geographical
terrain of Frankenstein with the
De Mallets, who are Swiss).
Edric
shares not only Victor's hopes, but also
his fears:
'And what am I,' thought he,
'weak, feeble worm that I am! who dare seek
to penetrate into the awful secrets of my
Creator? Why should I wish to restore animation
to a body now resting in the quiet of the
tomb? What right have I to renew the struggles,
the pains, the cares, and the anxieties
of mortal life? How can I tell the fearful
effects that may be produced by the gratification
of my unearthly longing? May I not revive
a creature whose wickedness may involve
mankind in misery? And what if my experiment
should fail, and if the moment when I expect
my rash wishes to be accomplished, the hand
of Almighty vengeance should strike me to
the earth, and heap molten fire on my brain
to punish my presumption!' (I,
202-03)
Nevertheless, although
both he and Dr Entwerfen are horrified by
the look of concentrated hatred on the face
of the mummified Pharaoh Cheops, Edric goes
ahead with his plan:
Worked up to desperation, he
applied the wires of the battery and put
the apparatus in motion, whilst a demoniac
laugh of derision appeared to ring in his
ears, and the surrounding mummies seemed
starting from their places and dancing in
unearthly merriment. Thunder now roared
in tremendous peals through the Pyramids,
shaking their enormous masses to the foundation,
and vivid flashes of light darted round
in quick succession. Edric stood aghast
amidst this fearful convulsion of nature.
A horrid creeping seemed to run through
every vein, every nerve feeling as though
drawn from its extremity, and wrapped in
icy chillness round his heart. Still, he
stood immoveable, and gazing intently on
the mummy, whose eyes had opened with the
shock, and were now fixed on those of Edric,
shining with supernatural lustre. In vain
Edric attempted to rouse himself;-in vain
to turn away from that withering glance.
The mummy's eyes still pursued him with
their ghastly brightness; they seemed to
possess the fabled fascination of those
of the rattle-snake, and though he shrank
from their gaze, they still glared horribly
upon him. (I, 218-19)
And when, like Victor,
Edric is arrested afterwards and charged
with a crime, he tries, like Victor (although
without the same justification) to lay the
blame on mistaken identity:
'We were in the Pyramid, it is
true; but so was also this man, whom you
have brought forward as a witness against
us. Supposing it was the intervention of
some human aid that roused the Mummy from
its tomb-a fact, by the way, no means proved,
why may not he be the agent instead of us?'
(I, 237).
Finally, like Victor, he
has to admit his guilt and folly: ' "O
God! how justly am I punished, by the very
fulfilment of my unhallowed hopes!-even
now the fearful eyes of that hideous Mummy
seem to glare upon me; and even now I feel
the gripe of its horrid bony fingers on
my arm!" ' (I,
247)
Ironically,
however, Edric need not feel quite such
remorse, for the mummy he reanimates proves,
like the Creature in Frankenstein,
to be pre-eminently a child of reason and
enlightenment, delivering carefully thought-through
observations in measured Augustan periods:
'It does not appear to me,' said
Cheops still more calmly, 'that your endeavours
to preserve him are at all likely to produce
the effect you wish; for, as Lord Edmund
already believes you love the prince, and
as that belief is the reason of his hatred,
your showing a violent anxiety for his welfare
does not appear to me exactly the mode most
calculated to destroy his suspicions.' (III,
78)
Though the mummy appears
threatening and fearful, what he actually
offers people is help, and he also appears
to possess a near-omniscience which allows
him unfailingly to diagnose what kind of
help is needed in each individual case.
As with the Creature, appearances are against
him-escaping from the Pyramid by balloon
after his reanimation, he crash-lands it
on Queen Claudia and is blamed for her subsequent
death. However, at the end of the book we
learn (as we might already have suspected)
that the queen was in fact poisoned by Father
Morris, anxious for the succession of his
own supposed daughter Rosabella. It is true
that the mummy abets Father Morris in scheming
to bring this about, but this is only because
he knows that the ultimate end of wickedness
is bound to be misery, and he is equally
active in saving the life of the other candidate
for the throne, the virtuous Elvira, helping
Edric's cousin Clara Montagu to gain the
love of the captive Prince Ferdinand of
Germany, and bringing about the three happy
marriages at the end of the novel. It is
only Edric's brother, the dashing general
Lord Edmund Montagu, who really suffers
from his dealings with Cheops, and this
is because he has foolishly chosen to rely
on his own strength and judgement rather
than accepting the mummy's proffered assistance.
Finally, at the end of the novel, Cheops
also tells Edric quite plainly that pursuing
his quest to learn the secrets of the grave
will bring him nothing but misery, and when
Edric then renounces his desire, Cheops
informs him that he can now sink back into
lifelessness because he has at last met
a rational man. Indeed the calmness of Cheops's
general demeanour and the willingness of
virtually everyone to enter into conversation
with him and take his advice makes The
Mummy! at times seem like a quasi-comic
inversion of Frankenstein in which,
so far from being ostracised, the revenant
immediately becomes immersed in British
political affairs. The mummy returns indeed!
Like
Frankenstein, The Mummy! thus
ends with the death of its revenant. Strong
though the similarities with Frankenstein
are, however, there are almost equally insistent
parallels with Mary Shelley's third novel,
The Last Man (1826). [8]
Both novels represent visions of an apocalyptic
or post-apocalyptic future vouchsafed by
magical agency to someone living in the
present, and both reflect on the nature
of the political and other changes which
are likely to have taken place in the period
between the present and their imaginary
futures. In both novels, long journeys are
undertaken by balloon, though there is of
course an easily identifiable common source
here in the recent spectacular successes
of the Montgolfier brothers. In both novels,
the hero has a niece named Clara, and in
both there is plague in Constantinople;
indeed in The Mummy! this plays so
small a part, with the felucca owner merely
remarking, ' "I don't think there'll
be a vessel going out to Constantinople
for this week at least; for they've got
the plague there" ' (II,
74), that it looks for all the world as
though it is there merely to signpost the
intertext with The Last Man. Both
novels seem to reflect on the 1817 death
of Princess Charlotte, with the succession
of childless dead queens in The Mummy!
and its possibility of a German prince as
suitor, and Verney's interment of his dead
wife in the royal vault at Windsor in The
Last Man. In The Last Man, Adrian
is the son of the last king and thus the
rightful heir to the crown, but his republican
principles forbid him to seek it, despite
the pressure placed on him by his ambitious
mother; in The Mummy!, the prince
who is 'the lineal descendant of the late
royal family' (I,
7) declines the crown, but his daughter
volunteers to wear it. In both, then, a
man hangs back from the crown while an ambitious
woman pushes forward for it. Loudon even
makes use of Shelley's favourite phrase,
'self-devotion' (II, 211),
and chimes exactly with Shelley's ambivalence
about Lord Raymond's military achievements
when she observes that 'the heart of Roderick,
though a mistaken thirst for glory had made
him a conqueror, was kind and generous,
nay even tender in the extreme' (II,
297).
There
are also some very significant differences,
however. (Indeed one of them comes in the
character of Roderick, who, Alan Rauch suggests,
is indebted to Wellington rather than Byron.)
[9]
The primary impulse of The Mummy!,
despite its sensational title, is clearly
satirical, and its humour tends towards
the affectionate rather than the caustic.
There are very few hints at anything resembling
the ambiguities and emotional depths of
Frankenstein. At one point Edric
fails to listen to Dr Entwerfen's account
of his prized collection of nineteenth-century
ballads and thinks the doctor has been telling
him 'about a man killing his own father,
and putting his eyes out with a fork' (I,
125), but there is little else in the text
to support the potentially oedipal reference.
(It is true that Cheops is eventually revealed
to have killed his own father for love of
his sister Arsinoë, but the information
has more of the quality of an afterthought
than of a thematic concern, and incest is
one of the few possibilities not
touched on in the novel's dizzying realignments
of its various couples.) Moreover, whereas
Frankenstein does seem to play on
the always latent mother/mummy pun, situating
its reference to mummies immediately after
Victor's dream about his own dead mother,
The Mummy! is more interested in
a twice-repeated pun on 'mummery' when the
reanimated Cheops rather improbably dresses
up as a minstrel (III, 210).
In fact the novel generally finds its revenant
funny rather than terrifying: a mummy is
only chosen for reanimation in the first
place because Edric is nervous about touching
a dead body, and when he objects that 'mummies
are so swathed up', Father Morris reassures
him,
‘Not those of kings and
princes. You know all travellers, both ancient
and modern, who have seen them, agree, that
they are wrapped merely in folds of red
and white linen, every finger and even every
toe distinct; thus, if you could succeed
in resuscitating Cheops, you need not even
touch the body; as the clothing in which
it is wrapped, would not at all encumber
its movements.’ (I,
39)
The mummy here becomes
paradoxically a reassuring rather than a
threatening object.
The
Mummy! also has more of an interest
in technology than either of Shelley's novels:
we are actually told in some detail how
the reanimation of the mummy is accomplished-by
the use of a galvanic battery-and at one
point Loudon even anticipates space travel,
when Dr Entwerfen remarks that he has brought
'elastic plugs for our ears and noses, and
tubes and barrels of common air, for us
to breathe when we get beyond the atmosphere
of the earth' (I,
179). She also takes time to imagine the
abolition of stays and how at the court
of Queen Claudia
The ladies were all arrayed in
loose trowsers, over which hung drapery
in graceful folds; and most of them caried
on their heads, streams of lighted gas forced
by capillary tubes, into plumes, fleurs-de-lis,
or in short any form the wearer pleased;
which jets de feu had an uncommonly
chaste and elegant effect. (I,
258)
And there are numerous
pauses in the plot for the introduction
of astonishing contraptions such as the
steam-powered automaton surgeons and lawyers
(who speak briefs fed into tubes in their
bodies) and the delivery of letters by cannon-balls,
which are shot into large nets erected in
each village.
The
Mummy! also contains a large cast of
comedy servants with names like Evelina,
Cecilia, and Abelard, and it is one of Loudon's
most persistent jokes that all the lower
classes are too overeducated to take orders,
to serve in the army, or even to be intelligible,
since they all talk like grotesque parodies
of Jeeves. Sometimes, too, comedy and technology
combine, as in the scene where Dr Entwerfen
inadvertently galvanises himself (I,
111), when he reveals in the balloon that
he has also brought 'laughing gas, for the
sole purpose of keeping up our spirits'
(i, 177), or where, offered his freedom
if he can cure a general from palsy by the
use of galvanism, he misunderstands Spanish
electrics and burns the general to a crisp.
Most
importantly, Loudon's political and philosophical
agenda are very different from Shelley's.
The daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft and
William Godwin and the wife of Percy Shelley
could be little other than a radical, and
both Frankenstein and The Last
Man are clearly pleas for social change
and warnings of what may happen if it is
not forthcoming. Loudon, on the other hand,
has no illusions about the limitations and
problems of absolute, hereditary rule-she
knows perfectly well that Lords Noodle and
Doodle 'were both counsellors of state as
well as their illustrious host, and had
attained that high honour in exactly the
same way, viz. they had both succeeded their
respective fathers' (I,
178), and displays a clear-sightedness and
cynicism in her vision of future political
developments which at times make this seem
more like 1984 than The Last Man-but
nevertheless it is ultimately clear that
she endorses it. [10]
She paints a picture of a Britain which
has undergone such turmoil that it must
find peace, and peace is best to be had
where one person rules, and where there
is no competition over who that person should
be, since voters are so fickle and so easily
swayed. (Elvira is elected queen on the
sole grounds that she is unable to speak
at all during her election address, and
merely sobs instead.) After all, 'the liberty
of the republican Spaniards did not extend
to the tolerance of any opinions except
their own' (II, 194),
and as the alcaide scathingly observes,
'all is not liberty which is called so,
and [.] a mob can occasionally be as tyrannical
as an emperor' (II,
195).
For
Loudon, radical change is never really possible
because human nature is unchanging: as the
three-thousand-year-old Cheops casually
observes, 'Human nature is still the same
even in this remote corner of the globe'
(II, 45). Revolution,
as its etymology suggests, will thus inevitably
end back where it began, and the symbol
of the French Revolution is made starkly
symbolic of irrationality when the Egyptian
crowd cries that Edric and Dr Entwerfen
are ' "Sorcerers! wizards! demons in
disguise! [.] Down with them! burn them!
guillotine them! destroy them!" ' (I,
230). It is, therefore, of no avail whatsoever
that 'our happy island had been long blest
with a race of people who thought prisons
should be made agreeable residences, and
had gone on improving them till they had
ended in making them temples of luxury'
(III, 90), since
bad people will always stay bad.
Nothing
can really bring about change. Travel cannot,
as Dr Entwerfen observes:
'[A]ll the English travel. I
never knew a young Englishman in my life
who was not fond of it. The inhabitants
of other countries journey for what they
can get, or what they hope to learn; but
an Englishman travels because he does not
know what to do with himself. He spares
neither time, trouble, nor money; he goes
every where, sees every thing; after which,
he returns-just as wise as when he set out.'
(I, 113)
Literature certainly cannot.
Dr Entwerfen is very proud of his collection
of old ballads, including the 'Tragical
end of poor Miss Bailey' and 'Cherry Ripe'
(I, 120), and he
has a letter addressed to Sheridan, a tailor's
bill of Byron, and a doodle by Sir Walter
Scott (I, 126-27),
but unfortunately they have all lost their
meanings. Ironically, indeed, this is in
fact what they are prized for: Dr Entwerfen
explains to Edric, 'In the works of an ancient
author, whose poetry was doubtless once
esteemed very fine, since it is now quite
unintelligible, we find the following passage:-"And
Hodge stood lost in wide-mouth'd speculation" '
(I, 174). This is
actually a line by the satirist Peter Pindar
(1738-1819), from his 'Sir Joseph Banks
and the Emperor of Morocco', and is a slight
misquotation-the line is in fact 'Where
Hob stood lost in wide-mouth'd speculation!'-but
it might even be part of Loudon's point
that its form has not survived, since its
meaning is so irrevocably gone. By implication,
of course, the literature which incorporates
the radical vision of Mary Shelley will
also perish.
One
kind of literature is exempt from this general
ephemerality, however. Loudon's conservatism
is interestingly illustrated by her dependence
on Shakespeare. Shelley of course uses Shakespeare
too, but she uses him as she uses Milton:
he is to be engaged with, not to be listened
to uncritically, as is clearly seen in the
contested nature of the Paradise Lost
narrative as it is reworked in Frankenstein
or of the story of Milton's daughters as
it is alluded to in Valperga, and,
though of course Loudon could not have been
aware of this, in The Fortunes of Perkin
Warbeck (1830) Shelley would contradict
outright Shakespeare's entire narrative
of events in Richard III. For Loudon,
though, Shakespeare represents unquestionable
authority. The names of the characters in
The Mummy! include an Edric, an Edmund,
an Edgar, and a Duke of Cornwall, and these
function as a reliable pointer to the fact
that the novel is indeed structured by rivalry
between two sets of siblings, and will culminate,
Lear-like, in a scene in which a
previously mad father is roused to sanity
by the need to defend his daughter from
her attackers. Similarly, we might well
guess that the history of Rosabella will
eventually reveal wife-murder and accusations
of adultery from the number of references
to Othello that cluster around her,
from Marianne's suggestion that in the matter
of Edmund and Elvira, 'your jealousy may
have given weight to trifles not worthy
of serious attention' (I,
95) to Cheops' Iago-like advice to Father
Morris on how to secure Rosabella's succession:
'Do not attack Elvira openly, or assert
broadly that she loves another; but hint
it darkly, so that your victim cannot misunderstand,
and that the damning certainty may flash
upon his mind with greater force than mere
words can give' (II,
119). And like Iago's, of course, this
advice will work in the short term-'It seemed
a confirmation "strong as proofs of holy
writ" of all that had been urged against
the Queen' (II, 168)-but
fail in the long term; Shakespeare proves
an infallible guide to meaning and to likely
future developments.
Suggestively,
in view of the ultimate revelation of The
Mummy!-which I shall discuss shortly-the
concept of reanimation is particularly strongly
associated with Shakespeare. Dr Entwerfen
alludes to the Ghost's speech in Hamlet
when he speculates that 'We may be decreed
to revive their mummies, and force them
to reveal the secrets of their prison-house'
(I, 40), and the
laying of the plan is greeted by a storm
of positively Lear-like proportions:
The attention of all present
was directed to the sky as he spoke. It
was indeed become of pitchy blackness, a
general gloom seemed to hang over the face
of nature; the birds flew twittering for
shelter, a low wind moaned through the trees,
and, in short, every thing seemed to portend
a storm. (I, 46)
The pathetic fallacy, with
its suggestion of supernatural control of
the elements, is clearly well and truly
at work here, and is the first of many signs
that a higher intelligence may be controlling
events, for though Edric declares, Edmund-like,
that 'Nature is the goddess I adore' (I,
77), he also confides to Father Morris:
'If
I recollect rightly, the ancient Egyptians
did not imagine the souls of their dead
remained in their bodies, but that they
would return to them at the expiration of
three thousand years.'
'And
it is now about three thousand years since
Cheops was entombed.'
'It
is strange,' continued Edric, musing, 'what
influence your words have upon my mind:
whilst I listen to you, the racking desire
I feel to explore these mysteries becomes
almost torture; and I muse upon it till
I fancy it an impulse from a superior power,
and that I am really selected to be the
mortal agent of their revelation to man.'
(I, 106)
Dr
Entwerfen, of course, disagrees with this
viewpoint, asking:
'Do not all philosophers agree
that we receive ideas merely through the
medium of the senses? And can our senses
be operated upon otherwise than through
the influence of the nerves? Ergo, the nerves
alone convey ideas and sensations to the
mind-or rather, the nerves alone are the
mind.' (I, 240)
Dr Entwerfen believes that
no-one can come back from the dead after
the irremediable decay of the nerves-but
if we remember our Shakespeare, we know
better. We shall, therefore, be properly
prepared for the final revelation of the
novel, and the thing which sets it furthest
apart from Frankenstein. For the
wife of the atheist Percy Shelley, there
is no God, and life is a material condition
which Victor Frankenstein has successfully-albeit
unwisely-succeeded in controlling. For Jane
Loudon, there is a divine power, and it
is this, not Edric, which has effected the
reanimation of Cheops, and for an ultimately
benevolent reason, as the mummy himself
explains:
Permitted for a time
to revisit earth, I have made use of the
powers entrusted to me to assist the good
and punish the malevolent. Under pretence
of aiding them, I gave them counsels which
only plunged them yet deeper in destruction,
whilst the evil that my advice appeared
to bring upon the good was only like a
passing cloud before the sun; it gave
lustre to the success that followed. (III,
309-10)
Edric has some difficulty
grasping this, and asks ' "Was it
a human power that dragged you from the
tomb?" ', but the mummy confirms
that ' "The power that gave me life
could alone restore it" ' (III, 311),
before sinking once again into lifelessness.
The final phrase of the novel, 'no mortal
could ever more boast of holding converse
with the mummy', hammers home by its resonant
use of 'mortal' that all things are indeed
to be considered sub specie aeternatis.
God's in His heaven, all's right with
the world; the good end happily and the
bad end unhappily, that is what fiction
means-or at least that is what Jane Loudon's
sensational but ultimately pious corrective
to the pessimism and atheism of Mary Shelley
means. Hers is thus a vision worthy of
attention not only for its own playful
inventiveness and experiments with tone,
nor even just for the fact that it is
the first identifiable ancestor of the
mummy genre, but also because of what
it tells us about the contemporary reception
of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.
Notes
1. Although
both bore different names at the time when they published
their books, I shall generally be referring to both Jane
Loudon and Mary Shelley by the names by which they later
became better known.
2. Anonymous
review in the Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany
2 (Mar 1818), 249-53 (p. 249); Sir Walter Scott, review
of Frankenstein, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
2 (20 Mar-1 Apr 1818), 613-20 (p. 615).
3. Anonymous
review in La Belle Assemblée, or Bell's Court and Fashionable
Magazine n.s. 17 (Mar 1818), 139-42 (p. 139);
anonymous review in the Edinburgh Magazine and Literary
Miscellany 2 (Mar 1818), 249-53 (p. 249).
4. See
Bea Howe, Lady with Green Fingers: The Life of Jane
Loudon (London: Country Life, 1961), p. 37.
5. On
the general self-conscious literariness of the novel,
see Paul K. Alkon, Origins of Futuristic Fiction
(Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1987), pp. 232-33.
6. Jane
C. Loudon, The Mummy!: A Tale of the Twenty-Second
Century, 3 vols (1827; 2nd edn, London: Henry Colburn,
1828), ii, 24. Subsequent references are from this edition
and given parenthetically in the text.
7. Mary
Shelley, Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus,
edd. D. L. Macdonald and Kathleen Scherf (1818; Peterborough,
Ontario: Broadview, 1999), p. 86. I quote throughout
from the 1818 rather than the 1831 text since it is the
one with which Loudon will have been familiar; all subsequent
quotations are from this edition and will be given parenthetically
in the text.
8. For
the parallels between The Mummy! and The Last
Man, see also Alan Rauch, Useful Knowledge: The
Victorians, Morality, and the March of Intellect (Durham,
NC: Duke University Press, 2001), p. 74.
9. Introduction
to Jane (Webb) Loudon, The Mummy! A Tale of the Twenty-Second
Century, ed. Alan Rauch (Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 1994), p. xvii.
10.
Interestingly, Orwell's original title for 1984
was in fact The Last Man.
Copyright
Information
This article is copyright ©
2003 Centre for Editorial and Intertextual Research,
and is the result of the independent labour
of the scholar or scholars credited with authorship. The
material contained in this document may be freely
distributed, as long as the origin of information
used has been properly credited in the appropriate
manner (e.g. through bibliographic citation,
etc.).
Referring
to this Article
L. HOPKINS. 'Jane C. Loudon's The Mummy!:
Mary Shelley Meets George Orwell, and They Go
in a Balloon to Egypt', Cardiff Corvey: Reading
the Romantic Text 10 (June 2003). Online:
Internet (date accessed): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/romtext/articles/
cc10_n01.html>.
Contributor
Details
Lisa Hopkins (BA Cantab., MA PhD Warwick) is
a Reader in English at Sheffield Hallam University.
She is a Renaissance specialist whose research
interests also include Mary Shelley and Jane
Austen. She is editor of Early Modern Studies
and Associate Editor of Year's Work in English
Studies. She is currently working on a book
called The Female Hero in English Renaissance
Tragedy for Palgrave. Her other books include
Elizabeth I and her Court (1990), Women
Who Would Be Kings: Female Rulers of the Sixteenth
Century (1991), The Shakespearean Marriage:
Merry Wives and Heavy Husbands (1998), Christopher
Marlowe: A Literary Life (2000), and Writing
Renaissance Queens: Elizabeth I and Mary, Queen
of Scots (2002).

Last modified
25 January, 2006
.
This document is maintained by Anthony Mandal
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