ipl-logo

Consequences Of Suffering In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

426 Words2 Pages
Frankenstein is a creation story and Gothic novel written in the European Industrial Revolution Era. In Frankenstein, Mary Shelley emphasizes that every action has consequences that should be thoroughly thought about before any step is taken which helps readers understand the impact Frankenstein’s experiment had on his family, love, and health. Seeing that his brother was maliciously murdered, Frankenstein begins to reflect on who may have done this to an innocent child when a thought occurs to him; “Nothing in human shape could have destroyed that fair child. He was the murderer!” (Shelly 50) His brothers death is the first instance of suffering that Frankenstein and his family endured as a direct result of the monster he created. In creating
Open Document