"More likely the cat was just unlucky" (l. 1-2). In this narrative poem "Curiosity"‚ by Alastair Reid‚ he gives a dissertation on cats and dogs. Cats are adventurous and dogs do not take chances. Reid uses symbols Have you ever heard the saying "curiosity killed the cat" (l. 1)? and allegory to disclose the theme that life can be more fulfilling if one opens the door to new and different prospects. In "Curiosity"‚ Reid describes the lives of cats and dogs as though they are everyday people
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Anastasia Shevchenko Professor Patricia Barker English 1302 15 November 2013 Frankenstein In Marry Shelley’s Frankenstein‚ Victor and the monster share similar nature. Throughout the story‚ Victor Frankenstein and his creation share hatred towards one another. The two characters have the same objective that they are trying to achieve. They each not only value their learning through reading‚ but appreciate the natural world to help them cope‚ and have a craving for revenge when they feel it is
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Compare the characters of Victor and Walton as Shelley presents them in the early parts of the novel. What similarities are there between the characters and quests? In the early chapters of Frankenstein by Mary Shelley the character of Walton is introduced through a series of letters he is writing to his sister back in London (the whole novel is an epistolary structure) as he is on a voyage to the North Pole in hope of fulfilling his goal of a breakthrough scientific discovery and “discovering
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Do you feel sorry for Victor in ‘Frankenstein’? Victor Frankenstein is the main voice in the novel ‘Frankenstein’ by Pat Barker‚ and is a complex character. On the one hand‚ I feel sorry for Victor as he spent two lonely years dedicating his hours to making this monster‚ even becoming ill because he became so focused on his project that he didnt look after himself properly. Therefore‚ its clear he had high expectations of the monster from the line “No father could claim the gratitude of his child
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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. If only the monster would have received
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Shelley explores the consequences and dealings with what happens when science is taken too far and when science goes against God and his morals. Victor Frankenstein is an avid reader and is eager to learn and has a desire to investigate things and their causes. Curiosity and research to the hidden laws of nature were his earliest interests. At an early age‚ Victor saw his mother pass away and realized he did not want to see disease stricken people. He decided to bring life on his own‚ by constructing a
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the selfishness in his veins. In the novel Frankenstein‚ the protagonist Victor Frankenstein is this particular individual whose conscience consists of much responsibility but no discipline to show for it. Although he feels responsible for deaths of many others‚ Victor never confesses when he knows the fault is his. His vengeance almost keeps him away from the people closest to him‚ and it blinds him from their safety. Throughout the novel Frankenstein‚ Victor’s dire flaw causes him to care for his
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To what extent is Victor Frankenstein a tragic hero? Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein presents the downfall of Victor Frankenstein‚ the tragic hero‚ as a result of his fatal flaw. Victor Frankenstein’s complex character‚ fits the guidelines of an Aristotelian Tragic Hero‚ which states that the hero must occupy a high status‚ epitomising nobility however‚ is not perfect - he possesses a tragic flaw‚ that is‚ an error of judgement‚ also known as harmatia. The hero also undergoes a process of self –
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Victor Frankenstein is a man of excesses. Discuss this statement in relation to the novel and its themes. Frankenstein’s narcissistic and egotistic personality has led him to react in an excessive manner. The over-adoration received as a child by his parents has resulted in Frankenstein’s adoration of oneself and obsessive desire to obtain extreme power through knowledge. The protagonist of the novel ‘Frankenstein’ Victor Frankenstein begins by telling the story of his childhood through
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As ironic as it seems‚ and for the many differences shown between Victor and the Monster in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein‚ there are also various similarities between these two characters. The way they want to learn‚ they way they used to love but now hate the world‚ and the great sense of remorse they feel at the end. Both‚ Victor and the Monster‚ had a great desire for learning. For Victor it was more about studying and becoming fully educated in the sciences. As for the monster however: he was more interested in learning about human life
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