
by Bram Stoker
The Chain of Destiny by Bram Stoker follows a line of consequence linking people, choices, and inherited burdens across a socially pressured world. Stoker uses the idea of a chain to suggest that private actions are never isolated, and the story draws tension from how one decision can bind several lives together. Every link matters to the final outcome, and the title keeps the emphasis on connection.
What stands out is the novel's concern with fate, responsibility, and the unseen links between past and present. Stoker handles the material as a drama of moral entanglement rather than simple accident, so the story becomes a study of how obligation and chance can tighten around characters until escape looks uncertain, especially when memory keeps returning.
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