Examples Of Blindness In Frankenstein

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Nature is a vicious creature. In the wild, the weak are killed and the strong are the only ones to prosper. Offspring that are seen as disfigured, hideous, or simply different from their siblings and their parents are often killed and abandoned, left alone to die in order to help the others survive. Nature selects for the fittest to achieve greatness and to reach adulthood, while the remaining beings wither away and die without passing their genetic info to another generation. This mechanism is what has driven evolution and the ever continuous stride towards perfection. But, as humans surely we are better than the common animal, surely we do not judge others based on their appearances, we would never ostracize and punish those that do not fit our set …show more content…

In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, the Creature’s encounters with complete strangers, those who are too appalled by his figure to attempt to know who he truly is, depicts the blindness and bias of society. All of his initial reactions with adult strangers end poorly, as best shown between his interaction with the De Lacey family and with his encounter with saving the little drowning girl. After spending months and months with the De Lacey family, assisting them in anyway he can, the Creature decides that his best opportunity to find acceptance is with a family such as this one, one that is downtrodden by society just as he is. “My heart beat quick; this was the hour and moment of trial which would decide my hopes or realise my fears,” he explained, showing his trepidation about revealing himself to this family who he had come to love. (Shelley 120) This fear is shown to be based in validity as the son quickly attacks the Creature while the women faint or flee from sheer horror. Only the blind old man seemed to not lash out

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