ETERNITY in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
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 Current Search - eternity in Frankenstein
1  Inflamed by pain, I vowed eternal hatred and vengeance to all mankind.
Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 16
2  All my speculations and hopes are as nothing, and like the archangel who aspired to omnipotence, I am chained in an eternal hell.
Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 24
3  But it is your happiness I desire as well as my own when I declare to you that our marriage would render me eternally miserable unless it were the dictate of your own free choice.
Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 22
4  I cannot guess how many days have passed since then, but I have endured misery which nothing but the eternal sentiment of a just retribution burning within my heart could have enabled me to support.
Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 24
5  These were wild and miserable thoughts, but I cannot describe to you how the eternal twinkling of the stars weighed upon me and how I listened to every blast of wind as if it were a dull ugly siroc on its way to consume me.
Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 17
6  It was during an access of this kind that I suddenly left my home, and bending my steps towards the near Alpine valleys, sought in the magnificence, the eternity of such scenes, to forget myself and my ephemeral, because human, sorrows.
Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 9
7  Elizabeth was sad and desponding; she no longer took delight in her ordinary occupations; all pleasure seemed to her sacrilege toward the dead; eternal woe and tears she then thought was the just tribute she should pay to innocence so blasted and destroyed.
Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 9
8  I knelt on the grass and kissed the earth and with quivering lips exclaimed, "By the sacred earth on which I kneel, by the shades that wander near me, by the deep and eternal grief that I feel, I swear; and by thee, O Night, and the spirits that preside over thee, to pursue the daemon who caused this misery, until he or I shall perish in mortal conflict."
Frankenstein By Mary Shelley
ContextHighlight   In Chapter 24