Victor does not die.
Victor and the monster in Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein have a lot of internal conflict happening inside both of their heads. They both are dealing with this sort of half demon and half human side to them. Victor thinks of science as this wonderful thing and puts all of his heart and soul into, not to mention he self thought all that he knows. This all conflicts when he creates the monster, b/c now this wonderful thing that he did all the time that he once thought was beautiful has now turned into this awful creature. He even foreshadows his own fate by saying “natural philosophy is the genius that regulated my fate” (Shelly, 46). He foreshadows his own death and the death of those around him a number of time just in the first couple of chapters. The reader knows that something immensely catastrophic is going to happen in the next couple of chapters by what is says this first ones.
So he talks about he fate and dying and all that but the real conflict is while the monster is alive for Victor. First he has his own brother die and we as the reader might think that that was what we were waiting for but then Victor gets very ill due to the guilt by which comes over him when Justine is killed. Here his is having this inner conflict of this monster that he created. He thought it was something beautiful but it came back to haunt him and now he has no way out. He is thinking of the demon inside of himself because he knows that this creature is not good and how could he create such a horrible thing when all he wanted was to create something beautiful.
Victor now sees knowledge as a curse rather than a gift. The monster begins to agree with him because he is beginning to wish he hadn‘t known any of this. He would have been much happier living in stupidity. The monster says, “Of what a strange nature is knowledge! It clings to the mind, when it has once seized on it, like a lichen to a rock.” (Shelly, 109)
So, now all the reader can see is how could, Victor, this perfectly good human make something so dreadful and awful. So, for the reader the human and softer side of Victor is very hard to see clearly. Victor just leaves he monster and runs away from it just as everyone else does and he is the creator of this monster. It’s like if a mother abandoned her child, the child would grow up not like the other kids and have a hard time loving others because the one person that is supposed to love them unconditionally could really care less about them.
Now the monster is outcast from society and has no one to lean on. This makes the monster not only lonely and is search of affection but also very mad. He takes out all that anger on Victor, but he doesn’t do what most people would think he would do. The monster is also self educated and he is smarter than that. So instead of taking his anger out on his directly he takes it out on all his loved ones. This now makes Victor in the same boat as the monster. He is alone in search of love and affection and no one to give it to him. So they both die a miserable lonely death.
. Comparing himself to both Adam and Satan, perceiving himself as both human and demonic, the monster is poised uncomfortably between two realms. "Like Adam," he says, "I was created apparently united by no link to any other being in existence," but "many times I considered Satan as the fitter emblem of my condition; for often, like him, when I viewed the bliss of my protectors, the bitter gall of envy rose within me." (Shelly, Scolded like Adam and cursed like Satan, the monster is painfully aware of his creator's utter disdain for him. This passage let’s the reader know why the monster was so angry and why he lashed out the way he did. They are both on the verge of insanity at this point. The monster has no one and lashes out and kills all of Victor’s loved ones, and Victor has no one and continues to get very ill and because of that he eventually dies.
So, now I come to the conclusion that the monster and Victor represent a lot of the same emotions. They want to be loved by other, they feel lonely and angry and one another, and so they die alone and still with those emotions fresh in their heads. They can’t help but feel this way. But we see Victor’s demon side come out more than his human side as we get farther on into the book, and as we go we also see the monster’s human side more dominant. By this I mean that the monster is seeking love and shows deep emotion as we go on Victor becomes heartless and more cold, which makes him an unlikable character. So, in the end it is a sad tale of a guy and his monster who just want to be loved in the worst way possible.
**cheat the teacher.
Good luck
2007-04-07 04:59:32
·
answer #1
·
answered by ari-pup 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
"Victor tracks the monster ever northward into the ice. In a dogsled chase, Victor almost catches up with the monster, but the sea beneath them swells and the ice breaks, leaving an unbridgeable gap between them. At this point, Walton encounters Victor, and the narrative catches up to the time of Walton’s fourth letter to his sister.
Walton tells the remainder of the story in another series of letters to his sister. Victor, already ill when the two men meet, worsens and dies shortly thereafter. When Walton returns, several days later, to the room in which the body lies, he is startled to see the monster weeping over Victor. The monster tells Walton of his immense solitude, suffering, hatred, and remorse. He asserts that now that his creator has died, he too can end his suffering. The monster then departs for the northernmost ice to die."
For the whole plot summary - and a summary of chapters, plus much more, please go to the link below.
2007-04-07 11:52:01
·
answer #2
·
answered by johnslat 7
·
1⤊
0⤋