Frankenstein in the Work of Mary Shelley
FRANKENSTEIN BY MARY SHELLEY
The focus of this study is to summarize chapters 16 through 20 in Mary Shelley's and to choose two to three particularly meaningful quotes or quotes that are provocative or significant. work entitled 'Frankenstein'. Chapter 16 opens with the exclamation of "cursed, cursed creator! Why did I live?" (Shelley) This exclamation importantly sweets the scene for the dilemma in this story as Frankenstein is wailing against the unfairness of his expectance and his loneliness and lack of a companion and goes on to relate how he has been chased as a beast and forced to hide from those who intend to harm him. Frankenstein goes on to tell how he was shot in the woods and suffered there for several weeks and relates being approached by a child that was beautiful and relates killing the child and noticing portrait of a woman in a locket on the child and being enraged that he in his monstrous form would never know the love of such a woman. Frankenstein reports going into a barn and finding a young woman sleeping and waking her and telling her that she will assist in creating his companion. However he was denied by the woman to receive assistance and she stated that she could not create another evil as himself even if she was tortured. The woman relates shuddering on thinking about it but Frankenstein tries to reason with her. The woman's future husband travels...
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