• judge . . . misfortunes

    Behind this utterance, one can hear what is truly the locus classicus, the classic
    statement, of how one is impelled by exile to provide sympathetic assistance to other
    exiles, that of Dido before the shipwrecked Aeneas: "Non ignari mali, miseris succerere
    disco—Not ignorant of evils myself, I learn to succor the miserable" (Aeneid, I.630).
    Without question Mary Shelley's educated readers would have heard the resonance of
    this Latin tag, an allusion few women novelists of this time would have had sufficient
    classical training to make.