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Letter from Mary Wollstonecraft to Catharine Macaulay

Letter from Mary Wollstonecraft to Catharine Macaulay

Charles Dickens’s reading copy of A Christmas Carol with strikethroughs and marginalia.

Charles Dickens’s reading copy of A Christmas Carol

Handwritten letter in brown ink on cream-colored paper

Letter from Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (1797–1851) to Sir Richard Phillips (1767–1840)November 14, 1823
The Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle

Letter from Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (1797–1851) to Sir Richard Phillips (1767–1840)

In Mary Shelley’s novel, Victor Frankenstein is a university student who uses chemistry to transform a patchwork of dead body parts into a living, thinking creature. Could such a thing happen in real life? In this letter, Mary Shelley expresses her doubts. Responding to a theory proposed by her father’s eccentric publisher friend, Sir Richard Phillips, she says: “I have great respect for that faculty we carry about us called Mind—And I fear that no Frankenstein can so arrange the gases as to be able to make any combination of them produce thought or even life…”

: Carl H. Pforzheimer Collection of Shelley and His Circle

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Items in The Written Word

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  • Detail of frontispiece of Shakespeare's portfolio showing an engraving of the author in 17th-century dress. Above it reads: Published according to the true original copies.

    The Written Word Introduction

  • Letter from Mary Wollstonecraft to Catharine Macaulay

    Letter from Mary Wollstonecraft to Catharine Macaulay

    Not currently on view

  • Handwritten letter in brown ink on cream-colored paper

    Letter from Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley to Sir Richard Phillips

    Not currently on view

  • Charles Dickens’s reading copy of A Christmas Carol with strikethroughs and marginalia.

    Charles Dickens’s reading copy of A Christmas Carol

    Not currently on view

  • Vladimir Nabokov's notations and detailed drawings of butterfly wings taped to a scrapbook page

    Pages from Vladimir Nabokov’s butterfly scrapbook

    Not currently on view

  • Vladimir Nabokov with butterfly book, photographed for Life magazine

    Vladimir Nabokov with butterfly book, photographed for Life magazine

    Not currently on view

  • Handwritten page from Jane Austen’s Winchester Races.

    Jane Austen’s “Winchester Races”

    Not currently on view

  • Detail of frontispiece of Shakespeare's portfolio showing an engraving of the author in 17th-century dress. Above it reads: Published according to the true original copies.

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