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The Frankenstein monster: Boris Karloff Victor (Henry in the movie) Frankenstein: Colin Clive
William Godwin.
peter griffen
Matt Damon and Samuel morries
no bay to die
yes shelly atkinsons real name is sheldon bassey.
Frank brings up Mary Shellys 'Frankenstein' in conversation, which is interesting as the story has some relevance in what has happened within the play. Frankenstein's 'monster' starts out as innocent and uneducated as a child, but escapes and experiences the world, further educating himself until he becomes as proficient in the spoken word and cognitive thinking as Frankenstein himself. In a way this has happened with franks 'creation', Rita. She began innocent, and with frank guiding the first part of the journey transformed herself into and educated person in the middle class. However by doing this she distances herself from her initial 'creator'. This also bears relevance to Frankenstein, as Frankensteins monster grows to hate his creator for all the misery he has been placed through in the educating process.
Percy Shelley drowned in a storm while sailing back from Livorno to Lerici in Italy.
For written works of art, copyright generally extends to 50 years after the author dies. In Shelley's case, his work is no longer copyright protected.
I'm sorry no. I play it and most of them say only for members . By the way if your a member, and got a hair style, when your membership expired or you took it off, your hair is still the hair you got ! Like membership hair.
Percy Bryce Shelly died in a shipwreck; his schooner "Don Juan" was lost in a storm on July 8, 1922. There are some claims that he was murdered, or was killed by pirates, but there is no hard evidence to support these theories.
Both poems explore themes of decay, disillusionment, and the transience of power. "Ozymandias" uses a ruined statue to reflect on the fleeting nature of human achievements, while "The Waste Land" presents a fragmented and desolate modern world to explore the breakdown of society and culture. Both poems convey a sense of lost grandeur and the inevitable decline of human greatness.