• a point of view to the imagination

    This diction, like the subtitle and the epigraph, is meant to drape Frankenstein with
    a seriousness of purpose not customary among popular gothic novels. To students of
    British Romanticism, it is language that is characteristic of Percy Bysshe Shelley's
    own practices in the prefatory matter to his poems. He frequently accentuates his
    attempt to transcend through imaginative means the normative, or "ordinary," thoughts
    and passions of humanity. See, for example, the first paragraph of the Preface to
    "Alastor" (published in March 1816) or his explanation of the use of dramatic imagery
    in the Preface to The Cenci (1820). The reader will discover that the uses of the
    imagination are likewise to become a recurring theme in the novel.