Throughout the novel, Victor Frankenstein hides in constant fear of the creature he has created. However, he had one opportunity to live his life free of this constant fear. That was to simply create a partner for his creature and the creature promised to leave him alone forever. He took the agreement and began making the partner. However, in the middle of the process, he betrayed his creature’s trust in him. He destroyed what he had created and vowed to never create another creature ever again. This betrayal of the creature’s trust is what prompted the monster to continue his monstrous rampage and is what led Victor to live his life in constant fear. This one simple act of misdeed, due to the fear instilled into Victor by the creature, allows…
Victor’s rejection and abandonment of the creature and many other people’s subsequent rejection of the creature, based on appearance, reminds the reader of how society (both in Shelley’s era and in the modern day), can and do reject those who are different and Shelley cultivates more sympathy from the reader this way. Frankenstein has had love and support from family all his life, by showing us Frankenstein’s childhood and then showing us his acts toward the creature readers are positioned to think of how callous, selfish and awful Frankenstein is as he rejects the creature and does not deem him worthy. Frankenstein tells the readers of his charmed childhood and because of this the reader thinks he’s a decent man, you also admire how he loves…
Throughout the novel, The Monster is characterized as a sensitive being; he wants to be loved and resents the fact that he was rejected by Frankenstein. As he gains knowledge and begins to grow more intelligent, The Monster comes to the realization that Victor abandoned him, that he is unwanted. This frustrates him as he continually gets rejected by society. Although Victor seems to think very highly of himself, The Monster has a very low self-esteem, “I, the miserable and the abandoned, am an abortion, to be spurned at, and kicked, and trampled on” (pg #), which stems from his rejection by both Victor and society as a whole. This character trait of The Monster makes the sort of selfishness of Victor, as it shows that, in his search for fame and glory, he was uncaring of the consequences. In creating The Monster, Victor’s intentions were not what they should have been; instead of trying to create life in order to make the world better, he was doing is for the sole purpose of becoming a God-like person. His God-complex is apparent in other parts of the novel as well, when he meets The Monster in the mountains and they have a conversation about Victor’s want to destroy The…
The creature in Frankenstein is banished by De Lacy, Felix Lacy, Agatha Lacy, and Safie. The creature lives in a room next to theirs and watches them. He subtly helps them and is quite kind, but when he reveals himself they chase him away and beat him. "I do know that for the sympathy of one living being, I would make peace with all. I have love in me the likes of which you can scarcely imagine and rage the likes of which you would not believe. If I cannot satisfy the one, I will indulge the other." This is a quote by the monster showing that he is rejected by almost every person he comes in contact with in the book. The monster begins to act out after constantly being rejected and starts to kill Victor’s loved ones for…
With the creation of the Creature, a figure so rejected by society, he longs for companionship and acceptance. He was born a neutral being, into his abandoned state; “Believe me, Frankenstein: I was…
In Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein creates a creature to which he immediately abhors and detests. Frankenstein believes he is responsible for the monster’s well being, however, he states that his duty to his fellow man was more important: “My duties towards the being of my own species had greater claims to my attention because they included a greater proportion of happiness or misery” (Shelly p.207). He ran from his home leaving the creature alone to fend for himself in the world of man. Those who see the beast immediately find hatred towards it and lash out. This continues until the being finds refuge in the forests. It is here he finds a haven from man, as well as a family living in…
The monster has some similarities to Victor’s life. Victor created the monster out of loneliness. Victor thought he could create another human to fill the need that was he was lacking. Unfortunatly Victor thought his creation was hideous and turned his back on the monster thus making the monster lonely. The monster then set forth on a mission to find a companion to end his loneliness. So Victors’ creation now feels the loneliness that Victor himself…
Victor Frankenstein was always fascinated with his studies witch ultimately lead to the creation of the monster. Since Victor Frankenstein felt isolated from the outside world, one would assume that he built the monster to have a companion and to perfect humanity in the process but he ultimately fails. Even though he created the monster, Frankenstein was appalled to see he had created such a grotesque abomination and had no intension in keeping him around.…
Victor Frankenstein did not love and nurture the “monster” when he was first created or born, he felt hate, misery, and loneliness. All the monster wanted was someone to love and care for him. He wanted a friend he could talk to. He did not want humans to look at him with fearful eyes. He certainly did not want humans to scream at him and call him a monster.…
Frankenstein not only literally created the creature, but his reaction to his “birth” and subsequent neglect and abuse essentially created the psychological monster. From the moment of animation, Frankenstein was disgusted and repulsed by his creation. Rather than accept his child as he created, he abandons his newborn and all of his parental responsibilities. He never questioned where his abandoned child was and he even wished that the creature were dead. He continually refers to him as a “monster”, “fiend”, “demon” in a verbally abusive…
In Frankenstein, one of the themes involves cruelty and the mistreatment of others. This can be seen when Victor turns away from his creature and abandons him. It can also be shown through diction Victor constantly calls the creature a demon, the devil, vile, and a monster. The hurt done to the creature by Victor Frankenstein is the main cause for the plot development and rising conflicts. Realistically, if Victor had accepted and showed the creature an accepting society, there would be no story. But since he never experienced love or acceptance anywhere, he vows for revenge and death to everyone his creator loves. Because he was only shown hatred and disgust, he only shows hatred and disgust for society.…
Although the Creature later went on to commit crimes, he was not instinctively bad. Victor's Creature was brought into this world with a child-like innocence. He was abandoned at birth and left to learn about life on his own. After first seeing his creation, Victor "escaped and rushed downstairs." (Frankenstein, 59) A Creator has the duty to teach his Creature about life, as well as to love and nurture him. However, Victor did not do any of these; he did not take responsibility for his creature. One of the first things that the creature speaks of is that he was a "poor, helpless, miserable wretch; I knew, and could distinguish, nothing; but feeling pain invade me on all sides, (he) sat down and wept." (106) The Creature knew nothing when he was born. He could not distinguish rite from wrong. The only thing that he could feel was pain from being rejected by his own creator. Victor was the first to force the Creature's child-like innocence away from him. Even after being educated by the DeLacey family his child-like innocence shines through. He was reading books while he stumbled upon a story of bloodshed and he "could not conceive how one man could go forth to murder his fellow (He) turned away (from them) with disgust…
The novel opens as Victor Frankenstein recalls his curiosity and fascination with human life. Frankenstein quickly becomes obsessed with experimenting, and he attempts to create a living being out of dead body parts. He succeeds, but his creation turns into a living monster. Exclaimed by Frankenstein, “It was the secrets of heaven and earth that I desired to learn” (Shelley 33). Victor is extremely horrified by his grotesque looking creation and falls into a severe illness. While Victor is ill, the monster escapes to the woods where he watches a family and tries to befriend the humans. But once the monster makes his presence known, the family can’t accept Frankenstein’s ugly appearance. Because all humans he encountered reject him, the monster begins to hate people and believe that they are his enemies. Frustrated, the monster returns to his creator and demands that Frankenstein makes a female companion to cure his loneliness. The creature promises Victor that he will leave with his female companion, travel to South America, and never come in contact with humans again. However, two years beforehand, the creature spitefully murdered Victor 's brother William to get back at him. Holding a grudge against his monster creation for the death of William, Victor refuses to make a friend for the monster. In an effort to make Victor as miserable as himself,…
“I am alone and miserable, man will not associate with me, but one as deformed and horrible as myself would not deny herself to me” (Shelley 128). Frankenstein’s monster is isolated from society because of his ugly appearance. He craves companionship due to this unjust isolation, but no one will give him that. He believes that if another monster, one just as repulsive, is made, she will have no choice but to become his companion because society would shun her as well. Isolation has also affected Frankenstein’s monster by driving him to revenge. He says “You can blast my other passions, but revenge remains- revenge, henceforth dearer than light of food! I may die, but first you, my tyrant and tormentor, shall curse the sun that gazes on your misery” (Shelley 146). He has become so consumed with getting revenge for what society has done that it is consuming his life. “I possessed no money, no friends, no kinds of property” (Shelley ). The monster is learning language, and the importance of words. He realizes that he doesn’t know many words of which describe him, due to the isolation of him from society, making him even more hell-bent on revenge.…
His isolation came through people being scared of and not understanding him; no one places themselves around something/somebody who they fear may harm them. The difference between Victor and the monster was Victor isolation from society was chosen while the monster did not. It was forced to be alienated because of its appearance, and it could not help how you look to others. This supports the saying, “beauty is in the eye of the beholder”. The monster’s first experience of isolation comes from Victor Frankenstein, his creator, when he flees after seeing the sight of him. It states in the novel, “unable to endure the aspect of the being had created; I rushed out of the room and continued a long time traversing my bedchamber, unable to compose my mind to sleep.” (Shelley 55). Here the monster is left all alone, like a child without their mother; he had no clue what to think. Thus beginning his lifelong search for companionship and ultimately isolation. One of his next experiences of being isolated is when the monster came in contact with some human villagers and they stoned him. In the text it states, “I had hardly placed my foot within the door, before the children shrieked and one of the women fainted. The whole village was roused; some fled and some attacked me.”(Shelley 101). These actions lead to the monster running away.Though at the beginning of his creation the monster only wanted to be…