Fra Pandolf
"Fra Pandolf is the friar who painted the portrait of the duke's last wife, who has been eliminated in some unexplained fashion." https://homework.study.com/explanation/who-is-fra-pandolf-in-the-poem-my-last-duchess.html
Fra Pandolf
"Fra Pandolf is the friar who painted the portrait of the duke's last wife, who has been eliminated in some unexplained fashion." https://homework.study.com/explanation/who-is-fra-pandolf-in-the-poem-my-last-duchess.html
munificence
"the quality or action of being lavishly generous; great generosity."
By fearing the stranger, by abusing the vulnerable and the outcast, society creates its own monsters.
Frankenstein shows that someone can become a monster because they've been treated poorly. That builds resentment and anger towards society as a whole, which can make people do monstrous things. It's important to be kind, because you have no idea how much impact that can have. That could be one of the many lessons to take away from this story.
She was well aware that women artists were considered monstrous, as women were supposed to create babies, not art
I think its sad that Mary Shelley felt like she couldn't take credit for her work because she would be shamed and ridiculed by society. Since she was a woman, she wasn't taken seriously as a writer, so she had to downplay herself to make her writing more acceptable.
the word Frankenstein had become synonymous with monster.
Before I read Frankenstein, I thought that Frankenstein was the creature. Its amazing how many people still believe that Frankenstein is the creature. I think this is the result of people assuming that the creature is a monster, just based on looks. That point is a really important detail of the story.
Monsters, says Mary, are of our own making.
This is a really good point, and it is something to build off of when I write my unessay script. I think I can use this idea to further my points about monsters in my unessay.
Not once did she call him a monster, refusing to reinforce Frankenstein’s prejudices and asking readers to use their own judgment in assessing the creature’s behavior.
I think this is really important to the story. It allows for a more subjective interpretation of the text. I think this makes the story even more different from other books at the time. It also adds an important detail that will help me with my unessay.
Darkly I gaze into the days ahead,
the author is hopeful of America's future, even though the past hasn't been easy
"I know I used to be a puppet frog, and now I'm a robot frog, but I think I'm still a real frog. I think I always was."
I think it's interesting how Kermit knows about his past. I didn't expect him to know that he used to be just a puppet. I'm also surprised that he can be a robot and a real frog at the same time. 
She could see how happy the thought of having a theater again made Kermit, and in her head she saw the future unspooling out in front of her: their own theater, a new show every night, too many jokes and songs and unprogrammed answers to ever be faked.
I think this story has real-world implications because it shows how quickly AI can evolve and grow stronger in such a short period of time.
Only the water insisting on what it should always have, spreading its liniment over infected wounds.
I think it's really interesting that the poem compares human civilization as wounds to the environment. Every building is another injury to the ecosystems of the world.
Remember: that giants sleep too soundly; that witches are often betrayed by their appetites; dragons have one soft spot, somewhere, always; hearts can be well-hidden,
this quote emphasizes that even the scariest and most intimidating monsters still have weaknesses.
Know that diamonds and roses are as uncomfortable when they tumble from one’s lips as toads and frogs: colder, too, and sharper, and they cut.
is this a reference to another poem/story? it sounds very familiar.