First of all, the Grool is a mystical character in the book, that looks like a very old sponge. But it is a creature that is a bad luck charm and if you try to throw it away you will die within a day, oh yes, it also immortal and any violent ways can't kill this creature. But the people succeed at killing him, they killed him by that they sang him songs and kissed him and he died. I don't have a lot to say about this creature, but one thing that I can say it is that it is very strange and don't have any feelings, but it also have friends, like an another creature that looks like potato but it is hot hard and can breath and have mouth full of sharp teeth.…
- Eldon Tyrell, 22:38. Discussing the goals of his company Tyrell Corporation, producers of replicants.…
I chose this quote because I believe it showed the theme of the stories in the book thus far, curiosity. With each of the four stories within the book they have all dealt with curiosity. My quote is referring to the curiosity that Snork and Moomintroll just couldn’t seem to ignore when they realized that the hat did magical things like turn you into other creatures. They decided they had to test their theory but on an enemy of course, “And now I think we’ll pour him into the hat,” said Snork. “So that he will be changed like I was,” said Moomintroll. However, as the quote I chose foreshadows, curiosity can get the best of us. Snork and Moomintroll quickly second guess this decision, “They stood in terrified silence looking at the pot”. A few…
I will use these quotes to explain how Victor’s craving for knowledge is one of the factors that results in his madness.…
* Victor earns disregard and disdain through his insufferable egotism and unprincipled and reckless judgement. Time and time again, he fails to take responsibility for his own actions, ushering in destruction as a consequence of personal inadequacy. In thinking that he could become Godlike and bestow life, he was doomed to spend his final months of life suffering the extremity of grief and social isolation.…
In the fourth letter, Walton recalls Frankenstein starting to share his tale with him. Frankenstein says, “Do you share my madness? Have you drunk also of the intoxicating drought?” (12). A drought typically resembles a long period of time. This draught that he speaks of refers to the burden that Frankenstein must carry for the remainder of his life. There is no end to his drought. He can wish for absolution, just like one might wish for rain, but for Frankenstein, a cure will never come. He is stuck in the drought of the albatross until his death.…
The intensity of this novel is finally beginning to escalate. Chapters 22 and 23 have the feeling of impending doom and a strong sense of foreboding. Mary Shelley uses a couple of different strategies to give the reader a feeling of catastrophe around the corner.…
Victor- (pg. 28) “Learn from me . . . how dangerous is the acquirement of knowledge, and how much happier that man is who believes his native town to be the world, than he who aspires to become greater than his nature will allow." Here Victor is warning Walton against following his example. This quote expresses the regrets Victor holds towards the knowledge he grasped and shows that he would have rather been naïve or less knowledgeable. It seems as though Victor believes ignorance is blissful thinking.…
In the novel “Frankenstein” revenge is a lonesome path for the characters. Victor Frankenstein and the creature choose the path of revenge after they have suffered a lot of misfortune throughout their lives. Revenge is a path of pain that a person chooses to walk in order to cause pain and suffering to the other person. The creature whose heart was the kindest whenever he met a new person, was turned into a heartless creature. The creature who is on a path of revenge, has sworn revenge on Victor.…
You are running in the forest. After running past a couple more trees, you turn around. There is nobody. But you know, there is. The man, that you could not quite make out his face, must be following you into the forest just like he did on your route back home. He was chasing you home and you dodged through the nearest yard. This is how you find yourself in the forest. You thought you lost him. It is all unknown, just like the forest is. You stop to catch your breath, as you think you have some time to spare.…
Some people argue though that one does not need to have anything do do with ones creator like in this quote,"Man need no longer be in awe of his creator; he no longer even feel grateful for being created. He can turn his back on God with a good conscience and set about charting his own course, seeking out ways to remake an imperfectly created world, even to change his own nature for the better"(Hogsette). This quote talks about how in life now we don't need a God figure in one's life today. The monster though would disagree with this. The monster was left alone for his entire life and kept looking for something to make him happy and if his creator would have been in his life he would have known a lot more and would have made his life a lot…
Some claim knowledge is power, but is it ethical to use that knowledge and tamper with nature? It has often been said that “progress is born from doubt and inquiry”, however, when the inquirer takes this knowledge and uses it to play God, can his actions be justified? That is the dilemma in the novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, where protagonist Victor Frankenstein attempts to artificially create life, only for it to end in death and tragedy. The novel blatantly displays how taking things too far and meddling with matters that are beyond human capacity is something that should never be done.…
This is a quote by Victor after the monster has killed everything that was important to him, leaving him alone and in the same situation as the monster as opposed to the beginning of the book when Victor knew no evil and was as happy as one can be. It also describes his transition into total misery and loneliness from his former ambitious and adventurous self.…
His wife had passed away before he took me in and he seemed lonely most of the time, very bitter. Sometimes I wonder what my Aunt would have been like and why she was murdered. I believe the same person killing off the town’s folk is the same person that killed my family. The creature was thinning the village out but I didn’t know the reason why.…
Mary Shelley, the author of Frankenstein and The Modern Prometheus wrote during her life in the eighteenth century. In this time she turned the phrase, “I do not wish women to have power over men; but over themselves.” These words were far before the modern twenty-first century movement of feminism. Long before her time she foresaw the problems with the movement and perceptions of it. This quote simply states, women do not need to have power of men but they need to have power over themselves.…