Frankenstein Letter 4 Essay

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Curiosity, be it innocent or scientific inquiry, will run amok when man becomes spiteful of his natural limitations, as in the case of Dr. Henry Frankenstein, the subject of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. The consequences of playing God, the act of being too curious, too daring, is a theme commonly associated with the novel Frankenstein, and its telling of the tragic life of Henry Frankenstein, who invited misery after an attempt made by him to replicate life bequeathed him a “monster.” The central idea of harmful knowledge is approached early on by Shelley in the prologue section titled “Letter Four,” through the use of the literary devices: symbolism and point-of-view.
As the opening sequence of Frankenstein, the prologue titled “Letter Four” begins the novel not from the point-of-view of Dr. Frankenstein, its primary …show more content…

For all intensive purposes, Walton is a man who has lost himself to what Shelley describes as “the enthusiasm of success,” a play on both man’s mortality as well as his fear of obscurity. In this instance, the ship is symbolic for Walton’s state of mind, on the verge of madness, “So strange an accident has happened to us that I cannot forbear recording it…. we beheld, stretched out in every direction, vast and irregular plains of ice, which seemed to have no end.” The scene unfolds to reveal the plight of the thinker, the scuttled ship representing Walton’s unfulfilled mind, and the ice a representation of everything that remains beyond the reach of man’s powers. Moreover, Walton’s predicament is symbolic for the fruitless endeavor that is seeking out triumphs that were never meant to be made in man’s name. Dr. Frankenstein’s warning to Walton furthers the portrayal of this theme, “Unhappy man! Do you share my madness? Have you drunk also of the intoxicating draught? Hear me; let me reveal my tale, and you will dash the cup from your lips!” Shelley uses the “cup,” the “intoxicating draught,” as a symbols for the beguiling nature of

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