In the "Frankenstein" passage, Victor's creation, the creature, is the narrator. Here, a framed narrative is presented by the creature to allow his side of the story to be heard as he attempts to gain self-definition and redemption of his guilt by casting himself as the real victim to all the sufferings caused by Victor. The creature's first person narration about how he was once "nourished with high thoughts of honour and devotion" was forced to experience the tormenting hardships of being "an abortion, to be spurned at, and kicked, trampled on" aims to achieve reader's sympathy and hopes to conjure the reader's reconsideration of who the real monstrous character is in the novel. The creature's repetitive description of his initial innocent desire to be accepted by the society, his guilt towards his crimes and the injustice done to him by the society engages the reader more directly with his feelings of misery and sufferings.
Similarly for the poem extract, framed narrative is also being engaged. Two narrative voices are presented here. The first stanza of the extract is narrated by the mariner in a first person's perspective. In his narration, he is doing the teachings of his lessons on his voyages, telling the wedding guest how to lead a good life with God and to respect all God's creations. The narration switches over to a third person narrative voice that presents to us the scene of the story telling after the mariner's narration at the seventh
Bibliography: Graham, Allen. Approaching literature- Romantic Writings. Routledge, London. Great Britain:The Open University, 1998. Richard, Allen. Approaching literature- The Realist Novel. Routledge, London. Great Britain: The Open University, 1995. Mary, Shelley. Frankenstein. Oxford University Press, 1994