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Personification Of Nature In Frankenstein

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Pugs are a very popular dog breed around the world, but as cute as they are, they spend their whole lives suffering from many genetic malfunctions that cause breathing difficulties, skin disorders, and a plethora of other problems. All these health problems are caused by the selective breeding of these dogs. By trying to control nature for their own benefit, humans have sentenced these animals to a lifetime of pain. Ethically, humans should respect the natural process of creation to avoid causing harm to other creatures. Mary Shelley presents this idea in her Gothic horror novel Frankenstein to show that nature is ideal when it is uncorrupted by society and mankind.
When men try tamper with the world’s natural state, there are extreme consequences. By unnaturally giving the creature life, Frankenstein violates the laws of nature. To discover the secret of life, he “pursued nature to her hiding places” with “unrelaxed and breathless eagerness,” (Shelley 40). The personification of nature makes the concept of nature seem like a sentient being capable of enacting revenge, which it does. It also shows how nature is the victim of violation by Frankenstein. The life Frankenstein gives to the creature “is all artificiality, the parodied handiwork of a deranged surgeon,” and defies the natural creation process, (Mishra). Due to his unnatural birth, the creature turns out monstrous in his appearance. Frankenstein tries to create something superior to humankind but man-made

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