You can see that these extraordinary events have brought out the best quality of Victor. Stating by his intense determination, his extraordinary intelligence and his loyalty towards his family. Victor needs to be very courageous and determined to help his brother, he is scaling the highest trees in the Strumwald, diving into the deepest lake caves, and sacrificing one's own body part. The determination of Victor was so powerful that he had to risk his life to save his…
Every criminal, even if he did the most dreadful thing or the most simple has a chance to show his or her innocence. So why not Victor's creature? Victor has had a rigid live so far with his mom dead and Justine about to die, and being depressed just about tops it. Until he finally meets his creature at the top of a snowy mountain.During the argument the creature says "human laws, bloody as they may be, to speak in their own defence before they are condemned."( Gris Grimly's Frankenstein, Volume 2 chapter 2, 14) In other words, everyone has a chance and yet you don't even want to hear him, and still you will kill him with a satisfied conscience. Victor doesn't really think about it until he stated" For the first time I felt what the duties…
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…
In this novel, Victor Frankenstein is a scientist that has a very strong passion for how the human body is put together. His passion quickly turns obsessive when he starts pondering around the idea of making a human from scratch. He locks himself away in his apartment so no one can see what he is creating. One night when the creation was finished, Victor brought the monster to life. The looks of the monster terrified Victor and he abandoned it. Throughout this story, the monster teaches himself different skills and also does a lot of horrible things that Victor Frankenstein should take the blame for since he is the creator.…
Victor Frankenstein is the main character in the novel Frankenstein. He was a young boy who grew up in Geneva. He loved to read books of ancient scientists while he was at the university of Ingolstadt. There only a few years, he learned about science and he became very smart. He wanted to know all there was to know, but through the course of the novel Victor makes 3 mistakes that eventually lead to his death.…
Victor believes that he is the true murderer, he even says, "I beheld those I loved spend vain sorrow upon the graves of William and Justine, the first hapless victims to my unhallowed arts." I think this statement is not entirely true. Victor's intentions were not the pursuit of evil, although he should have though through what he was about to do. It is true that the murders never would have been committed if Victor never created the monster, but it is not that simple. Victor had no way of knowing the monster would kill; in fact, he doesn't know that the monster has killed. I don't think that there is a yes or no answer to this question. Victor cannot be blamed for a murder he did not commit, but he cannot be entirely innocent when he unknowingly…
The monster is also a male who is quite ambitious but the difference between him and Victor is that Victor desired for power and fame and to achieve something which no one has achieved but the desire of the monster was to be accepted by the society as a fellow being. The monsters ambition can also be seen as great as Victor because even he pushes his own self in every possible way in his attempt to be accepted by the society. He kept his own self locked and hidden in a hovel, he also strove hard to learn the human language and also made several attempts to approach the humans in order to be understood and accepted but similar to victor even he did not succeed in his ambition and was always rejected by the human society. Inspite of all his attempts…
I think Victor shouldn’t create the monster for Frankenstein. I think he made the correct choice because; Frankenstein may not keep his promises. Also she may not agree with the promises. She could also reject him, and he could go crazy. Perhaps she could be stronger and be more destructive than Frankenstein. There is also a chance that Frankenstein may not like her back and feel a connection. Victor can get in big trouble if he creates the monster for Frankenstein.…
I think the risks outweigh the benefits. He could not start bringing back people from the "dead" and he had to face a lot more risks. Experimenting on corpses, living animals, living people were big risks they took that led to nothing but failure. And tonic bombs killed 100,000+ people. They caused more damage than benefit. I think they shouldn't have tried to bring back people from the dead, I think there were a lot of…
In Frankenstein, Mary Shelley tells a ghastly narrative of horrendous ramifications when man exceeds the boundaries of life, and manipulates nature itself. The young scientist plays God while learning the consequences of creating life, and the potential of permanent damage it can conflict on others. Mary Shelley, in her young adulthood, challenges both society and the individual to ponder the eternal question of whether being able to do something gives us the right to do it. Just because we have the potential to break science, and play the role of God; Should the consequences of endangering the world or society be worth it?…
Ambition is usually seen as the primary tool to promote achievement. In the novel Frankenstein, there are three outstanding examples of people with ambitions, and each person achieves their goal in a different way. Mary Shelley uses the journeys of Robert Walton, Frankenstein, and the creature to warn against ambition for the purposes of self-gratification, as they ultimately lead to the detriment of the lives of others.…
Victor Frankenstein, the main character of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein has allowed his desire for power to determine his actions. Frankenstein became obsessed with the ability to create life, believing that if he can possess the knowledge to successfully do so, he will be challenging the ideals of faith and science. Frankenstein’s desire to have power over others has caused him to create a monster and bring danger into the world. Although Frankenstein’s definition of true power stems from the understanding of science and life, his journey to possess this knowledge inevitably led to his ultimate demise. Victor Frankenstein’s desire for power is fueled by his lack of concern for legal issues, his troubled past that led to the creation of the monster, and the inability to overcome his hubris.…
His entire mood and aura changes: “Employed in the most detestable occupation, immersed in a solitude where nothing could for an instant call my attention from the actual sense in which I was engaged, my spirits became unequal; I grew restless and nervous” (120). His mood is changing and he can sense a familiar uneasy feeling of sickness growing in his stomach. His experiment continues, and deep down he understands how unethical his experiment must be: “I looked towards its completion with a tremulous and eager hope, which I dared not trust myself to question, but which was intermixed with obscure forebodings of evil, that made my heart sicken in my bosom” (120). He senses how wrong creating this creature is, and how much evil it could very likely bring. Victor is caught in a hard place and is faced with making an ethical decision. He must create a monster for the greater good of saving the people from the monster going on a depressed rage, even though he understands how much it will destroy his overall mental and physical state. This is eerily similar to what we must face on a daily basis, as we must often times make decisions regardless of the impact it has on…
He did kill people and burn houses to the ground, he did make Victor’s life horrendous but that was because that was what he learned from the books he read and the conversations he listened to. The Creation was only doing what he knew best to do. Now he told Victor that if he did one thing for him that he would leave him alone forever and Victor promised to do so. Then Victor all of a sudden broke that promise and destroyed something the creation may have loved. Victor is the true evil in this book because he was the one who did not teach the Creation good he let evil take the Creation over.…
In chapter four of Shelley’s Frankenstein, Victor is completing his intense two-year study to create the monster. As he works, he realizes that the monster would owe him its allegiance. Victor shows his excitement about completing his project. He states his feelings “bore him onwards, like a hurricane…”(55 Shelley). Victor implies that there is a force driving him through his project. We see “like a hurricane”. An uncontrollable, unpredictable, destructive force of nature. Victor says “in the first enthusiasm of success”. Victor has been straight up with what he wants to say throughout the book up until this point. Victor communicates his feelings are steering him toward the first idea of success. Victor states that “Life and death appeared…