Foreshadowing In Frankenstein

854 Words2 Pages

Ten years ago, pogs swept the nation, with every child slamming pogs behind cafeteria benches during every precious recess or lunch. Just one year ago, every social media outlet found itself flooded with posts of people attempting the asinine #mannequinchallenge. Presently, students unceasingly distract teachers (as well as fellow students) by mindlessly spinning fidget spinners. Fads seem to come and go as constantly as the seasons, but one thing managed to brave the seemingly infinitesimal mindspan of the human race- literature. One of the earliest known literary works, the “Epic of Gilgamesh”, dates back to 2150 BCE, solidifying reading’s legacy as not “just a fad”. That said, why do we read? What keeps humans enthralled enough to still …show more content…

He writes to his sister of his plan to do so, but also bewails another much deeper desire- Greater than his desire of finding the NorthWest Passage, Walton yearns for a friend who shares the same desire for glory as him that “could sympathize [him] and whose eyes would reply to [his]” (4). Further foreshadowing is seen when Walton writes “I shall certainly find no friend in the wide ocean..” (5). Shelley hints that he is indeed going to meet a worthy friend, which we do eventually, in the disheveled Victor Frankenstein. Frankenstein is described as “full of grief” (11) and is hinted to be “strange and harrowing” (14). This piques the reader’s imagination, incurring them to ponder the significance of Victor Frankenstein, and leaves observers locked into the story as well as the presented themes when he details his treacherous …show more content…

On one occasion, he moralizes, saying “If the study to which you apply yourself has a tendency to weaken your affections, and to destroy your taste for those simply pleasures in which no alloy can possibly mix, then that study is certainly unlawful…” (34). Through this quote, Frankenstein explains that devoting all of one’s time to one thing and neglecting the little things in life will bring oneself’s undoing. In Frankenstein’s time spent conducting research and constructing his creature, he does exactly that, neglecting his father, friends, and other loved ones, isolating himself in his laboratory constructing the creature that came to ruin him and those he loved. Immediately following the creature’s inception, the shaken Frankenstein has a nightmare that foreshadows the horrors that soon come to reality. In the nightmare, Frankenstein embraces Elizabeth, but as he kisses her, she morphs, leaving a petrified Frankenstein and a corpse resembling his mother in his arms. This dream proves itself to be a sad premonition as the creature, Frankenstein’s own product of arduous research and labor, murders Frankenstein’s wife on their

Open Document